How Writing Online Will Make You A Millionaire - Nathan Barry

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There are loads of people out there who want to be become online creators, but they’re not sure how to get going, or if their business will be a success. It can be a super confusing world to navigate - but once you unlock it you can find financial freedom and a fulfilling career. Today’s guest is Nathan Barry, an online writer and software developer who created Convertkit, a product that helps people with online newsletters reach new audiences. We’re going to be talking all about how to build an online creator business, how to make writing a habit, and you’ll see exactly how Nathan built his ebook empire. Enjoy!
Season 7 Episode 11
00:00 Intro
02:05 Making money is a skill
10:20 Having a job vs. having a business
17:58 You set the pace
25:39 Do you need to level up your skills?
32:57 Setting big goals
41:55 Nathan's first apps
46:43 Getting into ebooks
58:30 Writing 1000 words a day
1:07:18 Working in public
1:15:56 How to make writing a habit
1:26:17 Publishing and managing your projects
1:31:06 Running a personal blog
1:44:15 Being honest about yourself online
1:58:19 The ladders of wealth
2:11:16 The billion-dollar creator
2:22:54 The three laws of flywheels
2:36:28 Final words of advice
🔗 CONNECT WITH NATHAN
💻 Website - nathanbarry.com/
👥 Linkedin - / nathanbarry
🐦 Twitter - / nathanbarry
🔗 CONNECT WITH ALI
📲 Join My Telegram Community - t.me/+bH5gLHty5kBiOGZk
🎥 KZread Channel - / aliabdaal
🐦 Twitter - / aliabdaal
📸 Instagram - / aliabdaal
💻 Website - aliabdaal.com
👥 Linkedin - / ali-abdaal
📚 RESOURCES MENTIONED
Nathan Fried - world.hey.com/jason
David Heinemeier Hansson - dhh.dk/
Authority by Nathan Barry - geni.us/PKXUGz
The Art of Non-Conformity by Chris Guillebeau - geni.us/NOiLgk
A Brief Guide To World Domination by Chris Guillebeau - chrisguillebeau.com/a-brief-g...
279 Days to Overnight Success by Chris Guillebeau - archive.chrisguillebeau.com/o...
Designing Web Applications by Nathan Barry - nathanbarry.com/webapps/
Nick Huber - sweatystartup.com/
Show Your Work by Austin Kleon - geni.us/AiZD7
Jocko Podcast 394: Lessons from the Stoics. Discipline, Leadership, Life. With Ryan Holiday. - • Jocko Podcast 394: Les...
Sasha Grief blog post - blog.asmartbear.com/perfect-p...
Jarrod Drysdale blog post - blog.asmartbear.com/higher-pr...
The Ladders of Wealth Creation by Nathan Barry - nathanbarry.com/wealth-creation/
Billion Dollar Creator - www.billiondollarcreator.com/
ConvertKit - convertkit.com/
📄SHOW NOTES & TRANSCRIPT
Visit the website for the transcript and highlights from the conversation - aliabdaal.com/podcast/
🎙 ABOUT THE PODCAST
Deep Dive is the podcast that delves into the minds of entrepreneurs, creators and other inspiring people to uncover the philosophies, strategies and tools that help us live happier, healthier and more productive lives.
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PS: Some of the links in this description are affiliate links that I get a kickback from 😜

Пікірлер: 175

  • @BrendanEvan
    @BrendanEvan5 ай бұрын

    I had a similar light bulb moment with “the faster you get it done the faster you get to choose what you do next” when I was a kid scrubbing our bathtub. I scrubbed it once, and said I was done. My mom inspected it and said I’m not done until it’s clean. Somehow I had thought rubbing some chemicals on the tub was the goal. Getting it done with excellence was the actual goal

  • @jeremyorwhatever
    @jeremyorwhatever5 ай бұрын

    “Teach everything you learn”…Jesus that’s a wild game changer.

  • @kngpatt

    @kngpatt

    4 ай бұрын

    I agree!

  • @zeepickens9049

    @zeepickens9049

    3 ай бұрын

    *#Totally**!!!* 💡

  • @El_Diablo_12
    @El_Diablo_125 ай бұрын

    3:50 skills in making money 7:45 how eyes track across the page 9:40 what a good ebook looks like 27:00 extra $3-5k per month 27:50 business hustle/side-hustle teaches you all the ways value is being created outside your niche cog role 29:00 new skill sticks with you for life, that’s extremely valuable 34:00 going from 40M to 100M annual revenue, who you have to become/skills to achieve this goal 36:00 it takes 10x longer and is 10x harder to do than you always think. You have to really want it, to stick with it when things get hard 40:20 having a monthly ‘hardest problem’ journal. That way you can retrospect and see your growth as an entrepeneur and problem solver 45:40 he made $3k per month before leaving the job 49:50 how Nathan marketed his ebooks

  • @functionoflightone

    @functionoflightone

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Super helpful

  • @speakingscripts

    @speakingscripts

    4 ай бұрын

    LOVE it!!! Thank you so much!!!

  • @BillionDollarCreator_
    @BillionDollarCreator_5 ай бұрын

    Thanks for having me on Ali! Really enjoyed it. Nathan

  • @GrantStinnett

    @GrantStinnett

    5 ай бұрын

    Dude! Absolutely loved your perspective. Well done. Cool to see you’re just beginning to build this new channel. I am now subscriber number 36! Haha. Best of luck! (I know it’s not luck. Looking forward to seeing the value you bring to it!!)

  • @Penfriendrocks

    @Penfriendrocks

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you both for this episode - I started writing 1000 words per day last Wednesday and just filed my 10,722nd word and sent a thoughtful email to my member's club subscribers. I used Sunday's words to apply for a funding opportunity. My sense of overwhelm is much reduced: ideas aren't jumping around my brain at the same rate, and I don't feel stuck any more. My old motto is back: "Do stuff, and stuff happens." Thank you for the nudge!!

  • @fittogethernow

    @fittogethernow

    2 ай бұрын

    Nice job man! Loved the interview

  • @racqueldunn7195

    @racqueldunn7195

    Ай бұрын

    You really helped me to sort out the creative in my head. Thanks 😅

  • @20_andredwiprayoga2
    @20_andredwiprayoga25 ай бұрын

    I love everytime Ali talks about writing. Full of new insights

  • @wealthpotion
    @wealthpotion4 ай бұрын

    I’ve never heard Nathan Barry talk and *not* thought “wow, what a down to earth and thoughtful entrepreneur”. Solid content.

  • @TheodoreExplore
    @TheodoreExplore5 ай бұрын

    This is gold. Never heard of Nathan Barry before, but this video intrigued me to look him up. Incredible story, relatable and inspiring.

  • @Alwaysbmoving
    @Alwaysbmoving4 ай бұрын

    You set the pace - I needed to hear that, right now. Thank you! Learning and growing and healing, and earning money, it can happen as fast or as slow as You want it to happen.

  • @SonalChhajed
    @SonalChhajed5 ай бұрын

    I loved the content. And the fact that you are so confused about a lot of stuff makes this thing so real. Thank you to both of you !!

  • @TheReadWellPodcast
    @TheReadWellPodcast4 ай бұрын

    This is a needed episode for me. I’ve been writing on my blog daily and it’s starting to make a massive difference in my life. This was fuel for the fire.

  • @brianmcfadden1573
    @brianmcfadden15733 ай бұрын

    I know I’m late to the party but this was a great conversation. Like Nathan mentioned in the interview regarding another author I’ve recently discovered him and have been in a rabbit hole with his work. He hasn’t disappointed me yet with each piece of content I’ve consumed thus far. I must say out of all the content I’ve consumed this interview was the best. I learned so much and has me inspired to pursue some of the ideas I’ve been putting off. Ali I know you mentioned your switching the format of the channel and understood why but I truly appreciate the channel and your willingness to take me on a journey with either the subject you want to cover or your guests. I always come out enlightened and inspired thank you 🙏🏽.

  • @ChicagoRealEstateAgent
    @ChicagoRealEstateAgent5 ай бұрын

    I don’t often comment on youtube videos but this conversation was literally SO good. I have pages of notes and have shared this video with atleast 10 other people. Thanks for putting out great content, and Nathan has a very unique way of making complex concepts simple which I love. Simple but not easy :)

  • @stephenarnold8867
    @stephenarnold88675 ай бұрын

    Best take away for me is why complain just do it. Enjoy being able to do anything set in front you. Enjoy the journey and completion of said task. Enjoy being able to learn something new

  • @danmartell
    @danmartell5 ай бұрын

    Nathan! Awesome interview.

  • @LeighaMason88
    @LeighaMason885 ай бұрын

    "disconnect your knowledge from your time" - so interesting! thanks for sharing this conversation

  • @Richardscholtz07
    @Richardscholtz075 ай бұрын

    This resonated on so many levels.....Appreciated the content. Thank you. Myplan for 2024 is those 3 Mantras - create every day teach everything you know and work in public....

  • @RPBSpeaks
    @RPBSpeaks4 ай бұрын

    So grateful I came across this video today! I've been struggling writing a novel for the last few years and hearing the 1K words a day really resonated with me. I'm setting some clear goals, figuring out who I need to become to reach them and making the commitment now. I need to bookmark this video so I can come back and share my progress!! A lot is going to change for me in 2024! THANK YOU for sharing this information!!!

  • @marianalohinova3831
    @marianalohinova38315 ай бұрын

    Absolutely enjoyed the interview! Big thanks for that!

  • @GrantStinnett
    @GrantStinnett5 ай бұрын

    I was homeschooled too. Love the freedom and ability to go at your own pace. Now I’m using these videos and interviews to go back to school in the free hours so I might expand my possibilities. Thanks guys for the great value content.

  • @delorispenn8976

    @delorispenn8976

    4 ай бұрын

    This part of the interview really resonated with me, too, because I homeschool my daughter for this very reason! There's always a little voice in the back of my head that asks am I doing the right thing, but hearing others' stories reminds me that we made the right choice :)

  • @vancouvervixen4253
    @vancouvervixen42535 ай бұрын

    I’m going to do this. It will absolutely change my life for sure … as Ali said it will move the needle on every single thing that is important to me at this point in time. But, I’ll keep in mind that this doesn’t need to be perfection. Not writing a masterpiece every single day.

  • @purpleguddess
    @purpleguddess3 ай бұрын

    He seems like such a great guy. Super down to earth and kind.

  • @hfortenberry
    @hfortenberryАй бұрын

    This was a great conversation! Thanks to these guys. I’m especially excited about writing 1,000 words per day and flywheels. On a different note, it just amazes me how all these high level writers still have not removed the superfluous usage of “right?”, “right” and “like” from their sentences. Why are people constantly asking each other if they’re right? If you don’t know what you’re saying then don’t bother saying it. Don’t ask the listener if you’re right or not. You should know. And if you’re the listener, don’t be so arrogant as to tell the other person what they’re saying is right. I’ve even seen people doing this to someone who’s sharing an extremely vulnerable story of trauma and the listener kept saying “right”, as if to tell them they are correct in their feelings (which they can’t know) or to show impatience or a judgment or that they knew how the sufferer felt even more than the sufferer themselves. Where did this annoying and rude speech habit come from? It seems to me to be an overly-desperate attempt to create connection with the person. It needs to go. It makes people sound either really insecure or unsure of themselves or arrogant or impatient. And before 15 years ago, literally nobody used the term “but like” and they only said “like” when they were saying they like something or someone (e.g. “I like chocolate”). Now it’s being incorrectly used pervasively in place of “as if”. It really comes off as amateurish, which I know they are not. It grinds my nerves the same as when people say “ax” instead of “ask” or use “uhhh” and “ummm” a lot. These writers must know their grammar. I wish they’d be more professional and level up on that.

  • @user-ki1yv3mg3d
    @user-ki1yv3mg3d4 ай бұрын

    Absolutely love this episode!!

  • @annabenzreichenauer
    @annabenzreichenauer4 ай бұрын

    Wow! What a great podcast! Loved every minute of it and wrote down tons of very useful tips. Thank you so much Nathan and Ali!

  • @longstrideillustration
    @longstrideillustration5 ай бұрын

    What a motivating individual!

  • @drmarymkandawire
    @drmarymkandawire5 ай бұрын

    Powerful! So much value 🤯

  • @inthemakingca
    @inthemakingca5 ай бұрын

    Absolutely indispensable knowledge shared thank you 🙏🏼

  • @foremarke
    @foremarke5 ай бұрын

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:41 🖼️ *Nathan shares his three mantras: "Create every day, teach everything you know, and work in public," highlighting the value of consistent creativity, sharing knowledge, and transparency.* 01:22 📚 *Nathan mentions his upcoming book, "Feelgood Productivity," and offers a live exclusive event for those who pre-order, focusing on annual planning, goal setting, and reflection.* 02:32 💡 *Nathan's motivation to make money stems from his childhood experiences, witnessing financial struggles in his family, and later recognizing that making money is a learnable skill.* 06:00 🏗️ *Nathan discusses the importance of recognizing and developing various skills, using examples from web design and speed efficiency in work.* 11:03 💼 *Nathan explains why he chose entrepreneurship over a job, emphasizing the limitations of earning potential in a job and the desire to achieve higher income levels.* 20:08 🎓 *Flexible High School Learning: Nathan's homeschooling experience revealed that high school wasn't a fixed time but based on completing the curriculum, allowing him to graduate early at 15, highlighting the importance of setting one's pace.* 22:04 🚀 *Setting Your Learning Pace: Nathan stresses the importance of setting the pace in education and life, drawing parallels with Derek Sivers' experience at Berkeley School of Music, emphasizing the impact of personal speed on achievement.* 26:32 🤔 *Balancing Day Job and Side Hustle: The conversation delves into the balance between a fulfilling day job and having a side hustle, emphasizing that happiness and contentment should be the primary goals, with entrepreneurship being one of several paths.* 37:43 🎯 *Focus on the experience and learning rather than just achieving goals. Nathan Barry emphasizes falling in love with the process of building and scaling a company.* 39:18 📓 *Writing out encountered problems and looking back on past progress helps stay grounded and navigate through current challenges.* 46:37 💼 *Nathan quit his day job after earning about $3,000 per month from selling three iOS apps, realizing the potential of self-publishing and creating digital products.* 50:28 💡 *Nathan's first self-published book, "The App Design Handbook," earned $12,000 on launch day, leading him to shift focus from freelance design work to self-publishing.* 52:16 🚀 *Nathan's habit of writing 1,000 words a day for 600 days led to the creation of three self-published books, including "Authority," and significantly contributed to his career growth.* 56:24 🛠️ *Kajabi, a platform for creators, has been valuable for Nathan, offering tools for courses, memberships, communities, and coaching, contributing to his business's success.* 58:05 🎙️ *Kajabi offers free access to a keynote recording, available to podcast listeners, by heading to kajabi.com.* 59:00 ✍️ *Nathan Barry used Ulysses and later Scrivener to write 1,000 words a day, organizing content with outlines and folders.* 01:00:54 📚 *The habit of writing 1,000 words daily, including editing and notes, helped Nathan effortlessly create books and marketing copy.* 01:03:39 📖 *Writing helps unpack and teach concepts, turning intuition into teachable knowledge, as demonstrated in Austin Kleon's "Show Your Work."* 01:14:03 💡 *Writing consistently, even about Niche topics, helps document processes, lessons, and insights, providing long-term value and preventing repeated mistakes.* 01:16:51 📉 *Balancing commercial incentives and personal interests in writing can be challenging; prioritizing what truly matters to you is essential for long-term fulfillment.* 01:17:32 📝 *Nathan Barry emphasizes the value of collaborative idea generation, citing an experience where James Clear's input significantly improved an article during a bachelor party weekend.* 01:18:56 🧠 *The ultimate engine driving a business, according to Nathan Barry, is idea generation and writing. He highlights the importance of prioritizing writing and sharing ideas consistently.* 01:26:28 🗓️ *When it comes to publishing, Nathan suggests picking a consistent frequency, balancing quality and quantity. He recommends focusing on flagship content for high-intent search terms while maintaining a personal touch in less frequent, raw musings.* 01:38:14 💌 *To address the new challenges of earning $500,000 a year, Nathan Barry created a paid newsletter called "Secret Money Newsletter," targeting a specific audience making over $200,000 annually.* 01:38:53 💡 *Nathan Barry utilized an email course format for his newsletter, allowing him to write once, maintain an ongoing relationship, and explore niche topics without the pressure of consistent weekly content.* 01:40:02 📈 *Nathan Barry shares stories about reframing money, like a friend who grew a Vanguard investing account to $5 million, emphasizing that the account functions the same at different levels.* 01:41:39 🌐 *Nathan Barry discusses the struggle of balancing personal transparency on lifestyle expenses, recognizing the potential attention gained by sharing certain aspects of his life, like a friend who bought a plane.* 01:46:04 🤔 *Nathan Barry emphasizes that content creators don't owe continued content creation to their audience and suggests being aware of the balance between sharing inspiring stories and avoiding creating envy.* 01:49:28 💬 *Nathan Barry discusses the dilemma of sharing lifestyle aspects, such as fancy houses or expensive purchases, weighing the marketing benefits against potential negative reactions or perceptions of wealth.* 01:51:32 📚 *Nathan Barry appreciates the power of sharing diverse success stories, highlighting the impact of representation, and inspiring others by demonstrating that individuals similar to them can achieve success.* 01:57:15 👋 *Getting recognized in public is enjoyable for the speaker, especially when it's educational content, as it often attracts like-minded individuals.* 01:58:36 📊 *The ladders of wealth creation include time for money, your own services business, productized services, and selling pure products.* 01:59:04 ⏰ *In the "time for money" ladder, skills involve following processes, being reliable, and consistency, starting from hourly jobs to salaried positions.* 02:00:13 🤝 *In the services business ladder, skills extend to forming a company, working with accountants, writing contracts, and progressing from hourly work to charging by the project.* 02:02:34 🔄 *Product as services involves standardizing processes to create a more scalable business, like the speaker's "hey friends" agency.* 02:11:34 💡 *"The Billion Dollar Creator" concept emphasizes using attention to not just sell affiliate products or courses but to create consumer products at a massive scale, potentially reaching billion-dollar valuations.* 02:14:48 📈 *Creators can achieve billion-dollar valuations by strategically channeling attention into products with broad appeal, focusing on high-value or recurring purchases, similar to successful celebrities like Ryan Reynolds.* 02:16:12 🚀 *The speaker illustrates applying the "Billion Dollar Creator" concept to his own journey, channeling attention into building ConvertKit as a software company.* 02:16:41 🌐 *Nathan Barry aims to build a billion-dollar company, inspired by successful entrepreneurs like Sahil Lavingia.* 02:17:24 🏗️ *Consider directing attention and traffic to businesses or equity stakes, as it can yield significant returns beyond traditional online courses.* 02:18:32 🚀 *Avoid jumping into ambitious ventures prematurely; iteratively build skills, teams, and business understanding to increase chances of success.* 02:20:50 🔄 *Achieving success with a business that requires minimal personal time involvement is possible, as demonstrated by Nathan Barry's experience with Paperboy.* 02:21:44 🛠️ *Reflect on how a business could be more successful with less personal involvement; explore empowering the team, clarifying the vision, and stepping away from day-to-day tasks.* 02:23:08 🔄 *Nathan Barry explains the concept of flywheels in business, emphasizing the importance of a continuous loop that gets easier with each rotation and produces more results.* 02:26:52 🌐 *Implementing a flywheel in content creation involves collecting audience frustrations, turning them into content, reaching more subscribers, and generating a continuous loop.* 02:32:41 📐 *Nathan Barry suggests mapping out and sketching flywheels, exploring different constraints, and forcing creative thinking to simplify and optimize business processes.* 02:35:46 📝 *Nathan Barry encourages the commitment to creating a daily habit of writing a thousand words, which can improve various content outputs like newsletters, captions, and progress on book ideas.* 02:36:56 🚀 *Key advice: Create every day, continuously learn, and focus on habits. Strategy follows these foundational practices in the entrepreneurial journey.* Made with HARPA AI

  • @naphtalieh.gbolahan2568

    @naphtalieh.gbolahan2568

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @nekishalewis9779

    @nekishalewis9779

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this breakdown 😊

  • @speakingscripts

    @speakingscripts

    4 ай бұрын

    LOVE it!!! Thank you so much!!!

  • @geotoursolutions5434

    @geotoursolutions5434

    4 ай бұрын

    A lot of mistakes. Feel Good Productivity is a book written by Ali Abdaal.

  • @kieranbeckles
    @kieranbeckles5 ай бұрын

    Great interview. I’ve been writing 1000 words a day for the past 15 years and it has changed my life in the sense that I’ve been able to be my own boss. But I don’t think I fully appreciated the value of this habit until watching this video. It made me appreciate how it has changed my life. I hadn’t heard of Nathan Barry before this interview but I found it really motivating and powerful. Brilliant guest Ali.

  • @GrantStinnett

    @GrantStinnett

    5 ай бұрын

    This is awesome! What kind of things do you write? I am very interested in starting this writing journey as well and am curious. What kind of things have happened because of the habit?

  • @ryanbrownx1

    @ryanbrownx1

    5 ай бұрын

    Don't think this is true!

  • @zetaforever4953

    @zetaforever4953

    5 ай бұрын

    The important question is have you been publicly sharing what you write? Anyone can write a stream of consciousness journal every single day. People have been maintaining decade-long diaries for many centuries. And while that's all great, you need to also SHARE 1000 words of content every single day in order to build an audience. Which is what these people are talking about.

  • @kieranbeckles

    @kieranbeckles

    5 ай бұрын

    @@GrantStinnett i've built 3 websites with my friend in sport, pet and health & wellness through writing 1k most days.

  • @kieranbeckles

    @kieranbeckles

    5 ай бұрын

    @@zetaforever4953 I have 4 websites that I run along with social media so I was referring more to that in terms of writing 1k a day to build a business and a content website.

  • @germaineludik
    @germaineludik2 ай бұрын

    Such valuable sound bite about productive time and how you can decide to work faster vs just coasting

  • @aubreyquinney5157
    @aubreyquinney51575 ай бұрын

    "create everyday" love it! 🥺

  • @nekishalewis9779
    @nekishalewis97795 ай бұрын

    Thank you Nathan Barry! You have a massive amount of experience.😊

  • @jayorban
    @jayorban5 ай бұрын

    Great interview

  • @deborahgepp1436
    @deborahgepp14364 ай бұрын

    I bought your book received it today so excited to get started 🙂

  • @the_artisan
    @the_artisan5 ай бұрын

    Great interview, Nathan gives some great advice here.

  • @louisemoulin4704
    @louisemoulin47044 ай бұрын

    Listened to it all. Long vids are great.

  • @InvestorCenter
    @InvestorCenter5 ай бұрын

    I listened to a podcast Nathan did about 12-18 months ago and it completely changed how I think about my KZread channel as a business

  • @KhaazRaMaaRanu

    @KhaazRaMaaRanu

    5 ай бұрын

    Can you share the name of that podcast episode?

  • @InvestorCenter

    @InvestorCenter

    5 ай бұрын

    @@KhaazRaMaaRanu yeah search “my first million” podcast with Nathan Barry, convertkit

  • @Lifescapers
    @Lifescapers5 ай бұрын

    Incredibly interesting and useful article. I feel challenged and energized.

  • @StephenLee529
    @StephenLee5295 ай бұрын

    Awesome….deep share gentlemen..

  • @honeymatrix6689
    @honeymatrix66894 ай бұрын

    Wow. I learned so much from this episode, thanks a lot Ali and Nathan!

  • @ashiftylad
    @ashiftylad5 ай бұрын

    The running out of ideas thing hits me allthe time. I am finding that if I dont have anything I can think of writing, then im just going to COPY something else I've read that I really enjoyed or resonated. Im currently going through the greatest copy writing pieces and re writing them out (like Gary Halbert, or the Avis ads).

  • @fyolin7266
    @fyolin72665 ай бұрын

    Love this

  • @ghod2114
    @ghod21145 ай бұрын

    These are few of the best ads I have ever seen. They are interesting and even useful) Besides the video being a total killer already at 32m mark

  • @user-bo5ue8em3l
    @user-bo5ue8em3l4 ай бұрын

    Best yoga class on KZread! Thanks so much

  • @pavelbosovik
    @pavelbosovik4 ай бұрын

    Great work!

  • @Allmadiaa
    @Allmadiaa5 ай бұрын

    This is good!

  • @chrysistef4514
    @chrysistef45145 ай бұрын

    Homeschooled- I’m sure this had something to do with his success. It’s a way of thinking! 💭

  • @RiseWithRaina
    @RiseWithRaina5 ай бұрын

    I don’t think I had heard Ali drop an F bomb before this so that’s what’s up. I use to write all the time when I was younger & I guess I’ve been flexing that in the comments lately but not much more than that.. I can definitely see how 1,000 words a day could be a beautiful way to build momentum.

  • @kinolima235
    @kinolima2355 ай бұрын

    🎉 Thank you very much 🎉

  • @karanranaofficial
    @karanranaofficial5 ай бұрын

    Two of my favourite creatorpreneurs in one frame! Learned KZread from one…now learning Newsletters from the other. Who’s gonna teach Community Building is yet to be discovered 😜

  • @CreateSmarter

    @CreateSmarter

    5 ай бұрын

    Jay Clouse of Creator Science.

  • @karanranaofficial

    @karanranaofficial

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@CreateSmarter Aah, yes! Have been nerding out over Jay's essays & pods. Discovered him on YT & have been uncovering how deep the man has been into Community & Business. What do you think about Pat Flynn?

  • @temitopebolawole5616
    @temitopebolawole56163 ай бұрын

    Whewww! Simple, not easy.

  • @theplaylabchicago
    @theplaylabchicago4 ай бұрын

    So many gems!

  • @BillionMoonshots
    @BillionMoonshots5 ай бұрын

    set your own pace!

  • @bigbendstrength
    @bigbendstrength4 ай бұрын

    I really enjoy the episodes where you have writers! Hopefully this becomes more of a trend, and if there are any more episodes like this and the Ryan Holiday episode, please let me know!

  • @Kaylaanngrace
    @Kaylaanngrace5 ай бұрын

    Side note: Ali I would use your productivity app. Just received your book in the mail :)

  • @itsdhanvi.
    @itsdhanvi.5 ай бұрын

    Lots of love from India 🩷🇮🇳

  • @mindflow007
    @mindflow0075 ай бұрын

    Great video does your team know where to get angel investors to create apps to shorten the learning gap

  • @rateloveable
    @rateloveable5 ай бұрын

    That is so true

  • @user-ou3ku4zb7p
    @user-ou3ku4zb7p5 ай бұрын

    good one \

  • @GrantStinnett
    @GrantStinnett5 ай бұрын

    Ali, fear is the indicator pointing to the path you need to walk down. The knights of the round table, in their quest to find the holy grail, had to enter the forest at the point which seemed darkest to each of them. It sounds like that business thing you’re afraid of is exactly what you need to grow. Just my 2¢.

  • @wakeup632
    @wakeup6324 ай бұрын

    I'm a content writer and I'm writing 3+ article (600+ words - per article) everyday for more than 3 month

  • @LaTonyaBooker
    @LaTonyaBooker2 ай бұрын

    Nathan said create everyday, teach everything you know, work in public. Enough said, let’s go!

  • @RajivSahadevan
    @RajivSahadevan4 ай бұрын

    I am wondering about the camera and the Mic you are using. Any help?

  • @braydendilworth4123
    @braydendilworth41235 ай бұрын

    What’s the habit tracker he made? I’m interested!

  • @deeepakchandola6769
    @deeepakchandola67695 ай бұрын

    Next Guest: Dan Koe Please (Love Writers Story)

  • @ryanchia7142
    @ryanchia71425 ай бұрын

    an absolute gold mine. thanks so much.

  • @ryanspriggs7605
    @ryanspriggs76055 ай бұрын

    I was actually listening to this today, and have a question. 1000 words a day? Like all on one subject or just random whatever you want or to reach a certain goal. Like can I write about what I did at work one day and then Write about a new thing I learned?

  • @danieljoachimnielsen6379
    @danieljoachimnielsen63795 ай бұрын

    Lads, I think you just changed my life.

  • @cherithr9139
    @cherithr91395 ай бұрын

    Excellent! Questions: Maybe I didn’t catch it but, what platform did Nathan use to write his thousand words per day? Has it remained the same from the start or did he switch as his audience and revenue grew? Thank you! So much useful info here - very appreciated!

  • @Nassaldromus

    @Nassaldromus

    5 ай бұрын

    He said that he used Scrivener at the start because it was the best thing at keeping his different ideas organized but separate, while still being able to compile it into a book later. I don't think I heard anything about whether he still uses it or has moved on to something else, but the way he spoke about it in the past sense made me think that he changed. Now, I may have missed something. It's two and a half hours, after all.

  • @cherithr9139

    @cherithr9139

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Nassaldromus Thank you! Appreciate your help

  • @Lavinialav1

    @Lavinialav1

    5 ай бұрын

    Excelente!

  • @cupidok2768

    @cupidok2768

    5 ай бұрын

    I like this guy where can i get morr info of this guy

  • @Naescent
    @Naescent2 ай бұрын

    I was writing 2k words per day for a week and I gotta say, it's really hard. I burned out and seriously I can't imagine writing 1k words for 600 days, that is some dedication and willpower right there!

  • @suzpeden
    @suzpedenАй бұрын

    @deepdivewithaliabdaal how’s the 1000 words a day challenge going? I’m think of starting this.

  • @theritaradar
    @theritaradar4 ай бұрын

    I feel most of this discussion is over my head. I am trying really hard to keep up with this discussion. I am really lost.

  • @playlistgoats

    @playlistgoats

    2 ай бұрын

    Keep watching, all will change soon

  • @muoziiy
    @muoziiy5 ай бұрын

    It's best into so far 😂

  • @dankelly
    @dankelly5 ай бұрын

    Re: @2:18:00 Ali, just buy a business that you can push traffic to. Skip all of the hard steps of starting a business... unless you find that part fun.

  • @Bailiol
    @Bailiol5 ай бұрын

    Surely a near-redundant video given projected advances in LLMs?

  • @user-zo9ce2pv2z
    @user-zo9ce2pv2zАй бұрын

    I see, the sims 4 didn't lie to us. Writing books is a super flexible and lucrative career in the sims 4.

  • @danieljoachimnielsen6379
    @danieljoachimnielsen63795 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I'm 2hrs 34min in and it's now a full blown man-crush on Nathan

  • @epi_sto_letes
    @epi_sto_letes3 ай бұрын

    16 minutes in the discussion seems to revolve around web design. When do they start talking about writing?

  • @janaina.jensen
    @janaina.jensen5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for bringing Nathan to share his inspiring journey. Just one suggestion, could you not say bad words? Thank you, your content would increase in quality.

  • @MOMO-YYDS
    @MOMO-YYDS5 ай бұрын

  • @Zainabtriesit
    @Zainabtriesit4 ай бұрын

    Okay but what about AI?

  • @jacktomlinson4357
    @jacktomlinson43574 ай бұрын

    The secret to success in almost all fields is large, uninterrupted blocks of focused time.... It is literally impossible to do it all.... Just say no! - Ryan Holiday

  • @epi_sto_letes
    @epi_sto_letes3 ай бұрын

    30 minutes in. Still no word on writing.

  • @chipcook5346
    @chipcook53465 ай бұрын

    One thing worth doing if you are older: Shut your mouth and learn from people who are younger than you are. Ali, I learn so much from your interview. You are all younger than I am. There have been many lessons in Barry's and Cole's discussions, but the biggest of all is to be brave. I don't think you guys ever say it out loud, but it's in the room in both interviews. By the way, I'm old enough to know that nowadays, older means about half my age.

  • @joniwest5328
    @joniwest532814 күн бұрын

    I thought this was great, UNTIL we found out that one of the results of this kind of churn was a case of shingles. They sure moved off that aspect quickly. Shingles is often the result of stress.

  • @spiritandsoulofgod
    @spiritandsoulofgod5 ай бұрын

    The historical origin and significance of gold foil notes as legal tender. How the US Federal Reserve determines the value and legitimacy of gold foil notes. The religious iconography and symbolism associated with gold foil notes featuring images of Christ. The role of Brent James Schoning in the production and distribution of gold foil notes. The popularity and demand for gold foil notes among collectors and investors. The legal and financial status of gold foil notes in the US and other countries. The potential risks and controversies surrounding gold foil notes as an alternative form of currency.

  • @kevinturton3310
    @kevinturton33105 ай бұрын

    I get it but honestly it just isn’t likely most will become a millionaire from writing online.

  • @illuminated2438

    @illuminated2438

    5 ай бұрын

    This is the spirit of the loser mentality. This is why you are currently poor. Fortunately you can change.

  • @JanMarieKellyAuthor
    @JanMarieKellyAuthor19 күн бұрын

    You can have 'talker's block' it's just never called that - you can not have anything to 'say' (in fact I'm better at writing things than saying them.

  • @Ranjitapoudel
    @Ranjitapoudel5 ай бұрын

    ❤❤

  • @riot.9
    @riot.928 күн бұрын

    Thank you for this. It would also be interesting to see podcasts with ppl who have made it by businesses that make "real" stuff, like, for example, painters or ppl who grow fruit. Maybe you've done those podcasts and I just haven't listened to those yet...

  • @user-kx3js2gx5t
    @user-kx3js2gx5t3 ай бұрын

    Bro, 1000 a day is insane!!! 😂

  • @RoseSmith-999
    @RoseSmith-9994 ай бұрын

    ❤😊

  • @abdirahman125
    @abdirahman1255 ай бұрын

    I dont know why they keep ,the secret or steps that they make money !? Can someone share us step by step guide that help us to make money !??

  • @illuminated2438

    @illuminated2438

    5 ай бұрын

    Not possible. Every place, every time, every situation, every man is different. You will never get a step-by-step guide to being wealthy. Never. It is impossible for such a manual to exist. So stop looking, you are wasting your time & energy. Direct your time and energy to being Law unto yourself and making the most of yourself.

  • @williss1192
    @williss11924 ай бұрын

    As much as I like taking notes. Can't you do one based on Fiction Writing, instead of content writing or am I the only fiction writer here? Lol

  • @levoN2420
    @levoN24205 ай бұрын

    Isn't the way to make money on the Internet selling courses and books on how to make money on the internet? Asking for a friend. Where are all the ebooks on Amazon - Barry has two books, doesn't look like they were smash hits.

  • @mhd_lams
    @mhd_lams5 ай бұрын

    Hit me up of you didn't understand

  • @official4thewords
    @official4thewords3 ай бұрын

    1,000 words a day will absolutely change your life 💙

  • @yaz6758
    @yaz67585 ай бұрын

  • @JanMarieKellyAuthor
    @JanMarieKellyAuthor3 ай бұрын

    That’s why your fast food order is always wrong because the people inside are playing around worrying about speed instead of quality

  • @johnpinheiro6211
    @johnpinheiro62115 ай бұрын

    Ali, the f nomb its not ok on the pod,man. Keep it up !!!