Pratica di Shadowing: How To Articulate Your Thoughts Intelligently (Talk Like This) - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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When I was young, I was always drawn to people that sounded intelligent.
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When I was young, I was always drawn to people that sounded intelligent.
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People like Alan Watts, Jordan Peterson,
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Daniel Schmachtenberger, or other individuals who could explain deep ideas in an exciting yet palatable way.
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Most of the time I didn't understand what they were saying,
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either because I was too young and dumb or they were just over-complicating what they were saying,
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but they sounded smart and articulate,
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so I gave them my respect.
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Now the thing is, I never thought that I could do the same.
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I never thought that I could be articulate.
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I I thought that those people were just inherently more intelligent than I was.
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I honestly didn't think that my brain could do that.
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I was a smart kid in school,
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but being good at taking tests is a lot different from being good at stringing together coherent thoughts
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and articulating them to someone else.
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I felt like I had to memorize entire books worth of information
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so that I could recite it on the spot because I was trained to learn that way.
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But now, over a decade later,
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and without really trying to become articulate,
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people ask me how I write and speak so well.
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Now, I'm my own worst critic.
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I don't think I'm the best writer or speaker at all.
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But over the past six years of me doing this,
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millions of people have chosen to hit the follow or subscribe button on my social accounts,
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newsletter, and YouTube channel.
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I'm not an entertainer.
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I'm not that funny.
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I'm actually quite boring, which I like.
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I wouldn't even say that my content is eloquent or revolutionary.
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I can, however, attribute most of
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that success to being able to articulate valuable ideas in a way that people are drawn to.
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And that's not very difficult to do.
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So maybe you're a new creator who wants to stand out.
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Maybe you're going on a podcast and don't want to stumble over your words
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because you don't have a script when you're on a podcast.
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Maybe you want to command respect in a company meeting or a sales call.
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Or maybe you just want to be a more interesting person.
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Now I have three methods that I want to share with you that will help you articulate yourself more intelligently.
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And I've ordered them from beginner or two advanced so that you can practice and you can get started right now.
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These are the methods that I use when it's time to speak
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or when it's time to write or when it's time to write a CV for a job application,
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if that's something that you're going to do,
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or when you're just trying to explain yourself in an argument and get your point across.
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But there's something more important to that that has to come before because you need something to articulate.
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So first, we need to build our inner album of greatest hits.
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If you want to articulate yourself intelligently,
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you need a pool of eight to ten of your biggest ideas that can be connected to almost any topic.
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Then, when it's time to write or speak in any situation,
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you have a starting point that you've already thought through hundreds of times before.
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I've been getting invited onto more podcasts,
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but these aren't the types of podcasts that I was invited onto as a beginner.
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When you're a beginner, you kind of just get on the podcast with a friend.
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He asks you some questions.
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He's trying to build the podcast and need someone to come onto the episode.
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And it's just a good way of,
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I guess, like making friends or making connections.
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But now getting into, I guess,
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the big leagues, quote unquote,
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where people spend thousands to tens of thousands of dollars on the production quality of their actual podcast,
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that's nerve wracking.
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And there's a lot on the line.
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And since hundreds of thousands of people may be tuning in to listen to that podcast,
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I feel like I need to provide a ton of value.
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I better be able to articulate myself.
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Now, I'm not the best podcast guest yet,
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not by a long shot.
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If you watch any of the podcasts that I'm on,
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it's definitely not as articulate as this YouTube video because Devin's in control of the editing here.
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I'm in control of the key points.
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I get to choose what I'm talking about.
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It's kind of premeditated, but when you're on a podcast,
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sometimes they give you the outline,
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but usually you're just riffing.
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When I listen back to the podcasts that I do go on,
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after I listen to them,
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I'm just like kicking myself because I knew that I could have responded to certain questions better.
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And that leads to the exact problem.
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I've written two books.
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I've written hundreds of newsletters.
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I've created hundreds of YouTube videos.
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I've written thousands of social posts.
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It's obvious to me which ideas are the most valuable.
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It's obvious which ideas have led to the most DMs of people telling me that that idea changed their life.
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It's obvious that I really only have eight to ten big ideas that illustrate the value that my brand provides.
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I've spent countless hours refining those ideas.
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I wake up in the morning and write for two hours.
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And they're usually has something to do with those eight to 10 big ideas.
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Those are the ideas people want to hear.
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Those are the ideas that introduce new listeners to who I am.
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But that's my biggest mental hurdle.
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I don't want to sound like I'm repeating myself.
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So when I get on a podcast or when I'm asked to speak in front of a crowd,
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I avoid saying the things that I've already said well.
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My mind kind of goes blank
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and I feel like I have to force something out just to avoid having an awkwardly long pause.
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It's like I want to to somehow have this mind-blowing idea on the spot when I know that's not how ideas work.
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Ideas require time to dissect and explore.
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They have to be a part of you.
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Jordan Peterson, regardless of your opinion,
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is known for his articulation.
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It's captivating when you listen to him.
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Why?
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If you look at his body of work, it's obvious.
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He has a body of work.
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If you wish to articulate yourself and you do not have a body of work
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that is continuing to be refined and continues to grow,
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then you have a of work to do before you can actually be naturally articulate.
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Now a question to further hammer this home.
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Why do you listen to your favorite musician?
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Because they have a specific sound or style that you enjoy.
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Most of their music sounds the same with slight variations here and there.
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You can listen to a few seconds of their song and know exactly which artist plays it.
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If an EDM artist immediately decided to switch to country music,
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their first track would be horrible,
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as most first iterations are,
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and most of their audience would not like it.
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The same applies to being a creator,
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a speaker, a writer, or just a person who wants to be able to articulate themselves.
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You need to write or speak thousands of times until your best ideas are obvious.
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By nature, you must repeat yourself because the most important ideas deserve to be repeated,
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and how else are you going to refine them?
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Now, you can think of these big ideas as tweets, right?
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These are the big ideas that you use when it's time to speak.
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So in my own writing,
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I have a few topics or content pillars that I go to all the time.
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These are the things that I write about.
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It's like the one-person business model,
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lifestyle design, how to get what you want in life,
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how to master your mind,
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and now I'm talking more about AI.
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For each of those content pillars,
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I have just a few,
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a handful of tweets that I've written that hit hard and have been validated by the market.
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They get a lot of engagement,
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and they're just good ideas.
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Now, when I think about it and when I actually study how a podcast guest responds to the host,
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the best speakers don't answer the question that the podcast host asks directly.
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They don't say, um, well, good question.
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Let me think about this for a bit.
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Oh yeah.
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And then they go on.
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That's not what they do.
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Instead, they just speak their best idea,
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the best idea that relates to that question with confidence,
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and then they expand on it with a few supporting points.
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Now, not only does this keep the listener engaged,
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leading to the podcast doing better and then more podcasts wanting you to have on increasing your success,
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but it's also a clippable moment.
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So if that idea has already gone viral or has been validated when it's clipped and posted on social media,
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it's going to again, and that's only going to compound your success more.
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If you've watched any podcasts with Alex Tormozzi,
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you know that he's very good at this.
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So if a podcast host were to ask him,
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what's the greatest skill that someone can learn right now?
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Hormozy could say, oh, learn sales or learn offer creation,
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but he understands that there are levels to this game.
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So he would probably respond with his literal second most viral tweet,
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which is,
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the single greatest skill you can develop is the ability to
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stay in a great mood in the absence of things to be in a great mood about.
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That's very eloquent.
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That's a great quote that has nothing to do with actual like skill acquisition that's on people's minds.
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So that's a pattern interrupt as well.
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So by Hormozy just making the decision to say that idea,
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he sets himself and the podcast host up for a very interesting conversation on a topic
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that he's probably very fresh on and can talk about nonstop.
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And not to mention that tweet has 105,000 likes.
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So when it's clipped, that simple decision from Hormozy to actually say
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that idea is going to pay back tenfold because it's going to go viral again.
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So all of that makes sense.
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But how do you actually start practicing this?
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Once you have a few ideas that you're ready to articulate,
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how do you actually articulate them, right?
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Because that's also a part of the process of getting these ideas right.
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So I'm not just giving you frameworks for how to articulate yourself.
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I'm giving you frameworks for tweets or social posts or something that could potentially go viral.
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So that's what we need to talk about is the three methods to articulate yourself intelligently.
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If you don't know what to learn, start writing.
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Not because writing is some shortcut you can't stop looking for,
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but because writing teaches you how to think,
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how to learn, and how to inspire people to care about what you do.
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Now, I call myself a writer,
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but I wouldn't actually consider myself one.
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I don't care about grammar.
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I don't care about how clever I sound most of the time.
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And when I start paying too much attention to being more clever,
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my articulation tends to suffer a lot.
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I also don't care if my sentences run on or if I don't say something the best way it could be said.
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This actually helps me stand out against AI.
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My writing isn't that polished.
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Yet, as I said before,
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millions of people have chosen to hit the follow or subscribe button because they found some form of value in that writing.
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Now, throughout my journey as a writer,
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I've realized that writing is so much more than writing.
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It's not only just putting letters on a page.
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If you want to become articulate,
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you should probably start writing.
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That is, you should start writing intentionally because you already write every single day.
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You text your family and friends,
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you email your prospects, clients,
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and co-workers, and depending on your work,
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you may write project outlines, feedback, proposals, and more.
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If you really think about it,
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the foundation of media, which is how you
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or your employer gets your work in front of other people
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and persuades them to care about your work so you can survive and get paid, is writing.
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Now, media has evolved.
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If you want to succeed in any venture,
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you must go where the attention is.
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Right now, most of the attention is on social media,
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YouTube, podcasts and advertisements like Facebook ads,
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all of which require you to articulate persuasively in the form of video scripts,
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posts, sales copywriting, post captions,
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and anywhere else that someone is reading a written post or spoken script,
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which is nearly everything.
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That's personally why I write one to two hours every morning.
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It's because that's the foundation of literally my survival and everything I do.
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If I don't write on social media or my newsletter or YouTube script or emails to prospects,
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how am I going to ever get a customer for my own work?
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That's why I created Two Hour Writer.
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That's my writing system.
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But by writing, that's how you practice articulating your ideas from the start.
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It's like a first draft,
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and then you refine it,
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and then you practice speaking it,
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and then you get really good at it.
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And as a bonus, by posting your ideas in public,
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you get direct feedback in the form of engagement so that you know which ideas are the most impactful.
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And building an audience from that also doesn't hurt.
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So with that said, how do you actually start practicing articulation in the form of writing?
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That's what we're going to do is we're going to start with writing.
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So here are three frameworks.
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The first is beginner level,
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and I'm calling it the micro story because the human mind is a story engine.
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Humans can't help but pay attention to a story,
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especially if it's short and impactful.
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Once you learn how to do it well,
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you can effectively short circuit someone's brain into being interested in the topic you were talking about.
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The foundation of a story is transformation.
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This does not have to be a transformation about a specific
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person a transformation can be as simple as introducing a problem and giving a solution.
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And that's exactly what this is.
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So if you want to make that a bit more impactful,
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being able to just write a tiny,
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tiny story that isn't necessarily about a character or anything,
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it's just a transformation, then you structure it like this.
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You start with a problem.
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So you state a relatable problem or pain point that you've observed or experienced before.
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Then you amplify the problem.
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So you illustrate how that problem leads to a negative outcome if it is not solved.
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And then you give a solution.
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So you state the solution to the problem and in something like a short social media post,
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this can be one sentence or a short bullet point list.
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In a long newsletter or script,
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this can be all of the key points with their explanations.
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The problem in amplification would account for the hook.
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So this section of the video would be the solution section of the micro story framework
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because I'm just going through the key points of how to actually solve the problem of not being able to articulate yourself.
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Now, if you've studied copywriting at all,
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you've seen this framework before.
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It's called the PAS framework.
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And after six years of doing this, that's still my go-to.
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If I'm just like lost and don't know what to talk about,
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how to articulate it, whatever,
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I just go to this framework,
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PAS, start with the problem.
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Okay, what's a problem?
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You don't know how to articulate yourself.
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Okay, how do you amplify that?
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What does that lead to down the road?
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You won't get the girl.
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You won't land the job.
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You won't be able to start your own business.
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You're going to live in your mom's basement for the rest of your life.
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Okay, what's the solution?
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Use the PAS framework.
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That's a tweet.
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It would actually probably do pretty good.
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You could expand that into a newsletter.
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You can turn that into a YouTube video.
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Or you can say it on a podcast.
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When someone says, what's the greatest skill to learn?
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You say articulation.
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Why?
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Because most people don't know how to articulate themselves.
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Go into the amplify solution.
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Do you see what I'm getting at?
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Now, of course, with all of this,
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this is assuming that you already have an idea to write about.
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If you have an idea,
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then just think of the problem.
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What's the problem?
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Okay, amplify it.
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Okay, what's next?
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Give the solution.
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Boom.
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And if you don't have an idea,
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you need to hunt for them.
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You need to read old books,
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go down rabbit holes on a topic,
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listen to a new podcast,
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or just sit with your thoughts and follow them until you reach a compelling insight.
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When you hunt for an idea,
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you aren't just letting the information go in one ear and out the other.
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You are listening intently for an idea that you wish you wrote.
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Then you jot it down so you don't lose it.
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Then you articulate it in your own words using these frameworks so it takes a new shape.
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Now, the intermediate framework is called the Pyramid Principle.
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The Pyramid Principle is a communication framework that structures ideas in a hierarchical,
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logical way to make information more palatable and persuasive.
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And it's pretty simple.
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You start with the main idea,
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the key conclusion or recommendation.
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You support it with key arguments,
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usually three to five key points.
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You provide detailed evidence, so data, examples, or analysis.
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And unlike most content today
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that waits to give you the answer until the end of the video or newsletter or whatever it is,
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this takes an answer-first approach.
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Now this works perfectly with the example from before with Hormozy,
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where if his answer to the question,
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what is the greatest skill you can learn,
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is the ability to stay in a great mood in the absence of things to be in a great mood about,
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that can serve as the top of the pyramid.
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You're not starting with a problem.
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You're not starting with anything else.
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You're starting with the idea, the conclusion, the answer.
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Then he could support that argument or
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that idea with key arguments as to why he thinks that's the best skill to learn.
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All you have to do is ask why three to five times and come up with a compelling answer.
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And then after that, he can give examples from his own life,
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data about being in a great mood if he has the data
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or statistics on hand or just anecdotes from people in his life or clients or customers.
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I've also seen this framework be used in YouTube videos as well.
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If you are scrolling the YouTube timeline,
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try to pay attention to this.
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Try to notice these frameworks.
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You'll see some titles that just state the problem.
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You'll notice some titles that just state like a really big idea.
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And once you understand these frameworks,
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you can just see them everywhere.
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So for the pyramid principle,
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you start with a great idea,
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you make an argument about it,
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and then you support it with data.
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Now, if you struggle to continue writing or speaking
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or you just get stuck or feel like you have writer's block or speaker's block,
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this next framework is really going to help.
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But this is the advanced framework,
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which is just cross-domain synthesis.
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And this one is my favorite because I have multiple interests.
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It's hard for me to stick to one topic or niche.
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I want to weave things in, right?
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I'm reading things throughout the week.
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I'm watching videos throughout the week.
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I'm studying new things throughout the week.
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I want to incorporate those in my life somehow beyond just like consuming information.
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I love studying psychology, philosophy,
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health, business, design, tech, and really anything that gives me the tools to live a better life.
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So this framework is how I tend to structure most of my newsletters,
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not all of them, but most,
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and outside of the ones where I'm just focused on a
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singular tactical topic like this one where I'm just teaching something to do.
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So here's the framework.
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First is problem and amplify.
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Your introduction should state a relatable problem and illustrate what happens if that problem is not solved.
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Second is cross-domain synthesis, so you know patterns or concepts from your other interests that help support your argument.
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If I'm talking about deep work,
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I can use the concept of entropy from physics to illustrate how distractions work.
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This teaches my audience something new,
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and I can sleep well knowing that all other deep work content out there does not do this.
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And third, you have a unique process or solution,
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so you give a list of ideas or steps that best solve the problem you introduced at the beginning,
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solidifying the transformation.
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These should come from your own contemplation rather than someone else's prescription.
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What I mean there is you should actually think through,
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okay, what is the best way to solve the problem and reach the solution rather than,
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okay, I watched this YouTube video.
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He had a good solution.
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He had a good how-to or step-by-step advice.
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I'm going to take that and put it in mind.
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So in practice, let's say you're writing a newsletter with this
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or an article or a Twitter thread or an Instagram carousel
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or a YouTube video script or something longer form so that you can articulate for 10 to 20 minutes.
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So you'd have the title of your piece,
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the introduction with the problem,
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a section that teaches a concept from another interest or discipline,
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then a unique way to solve the problem in the form of multiple sections describing each key point.
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Now the problem here is that this leads to something very long,
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like a newsletter, book chapter,
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YouTube video, or even a solo podcast.
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And if you're just starting out,
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you'll be staring at a blank screen because you don't know how to fill in each section.
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Now luckily, writing is like Legos with ideas,
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and ideas come in predictable forms.
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If you understand those forms,
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you can guide your mind to brainstorming what to write next.
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And here are a few easy ones.
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You can use a pain point.
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So if I don't know how to start a section,
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I start with a relevant pain point and ideas start to flow from there.
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There's an example.
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So once I've started a section,
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you can throw an example in anywhere.
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This grounds what you're saying.
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You can use a personal story.
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So think to a time in your life that relates to what you're writing about.
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This can go anywhere.
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You can use a statistic.
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So research a truthful statistic that adds more authority to your point.
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You can use a metaphor.
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So explain a complex idea as if you're talking to a child.
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Alan Watts is incredible at this.
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You can use a quote where you include a quote that justifies what you're saying.
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Quotes are easy because they're almost always great ideas.
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You can use a reframe.
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So give people a different perspective on the point you just discussed.
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Or you can just ask what, how, or why.
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Because when all else fails,
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writing and speaking are just thinking and thinking is questioning.
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So if you didn't screenshot those,
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you probably should because that's like, those are the Legos.
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Writing is Legos with ideas,
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and those are the Legos that you piece together to articulate sentence after sentence or paragraph after paragraph.
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And if I don't know what to write or what to say next,
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I tend to cycle through those in my head or latch onto the closest one and then give that.
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And once you get the hang of this,
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as with any skill, it becomes second nature and your thinking process starts to evolve.
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I hope that was helpful enough to get you started.
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I would highly recommend joining the paid tier of my sub stack.
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If you scroll through and look at the paid posts,
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there are many drills and techniques and courses on writing and marketing and business and everything that we talked about today.
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So check those out, like,
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and subscribe before you leave because they're just a button click,
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and I'll see you in the next video.
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Bye.

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Contesto & Sfondo

Nel mondo della comunicazione e dell'espressione verbale, ci sono persone che riescono a colpire gli ascoltatori grazie alla loro capacità di articolare i pensieri in modo chiaro e intelligente. Per molti, ascoltare figure come Alan Watts o Jordan Peterson ispira il desiderio di migliorare la propria comunicazione. Quando si è giovani, può sembrare che questi oratori siano semplicemente più intelligenti di noi, ma ciò che spesso non si comprende è che l'abilità di esprimersi bene è una competenza che si può sviluppare con la pratica e la giusta mentalità. Affrontiamo quindi alcune strategie per migliorare la propria pronuncia inglese e il modo di esprimersi.

Le 5 Frasi Fondamentali per la Comunicazione Quotidiana

  • "Posso condividere un'idea?" – Iniziare una conversazione aperta permette di mostrare sicurezza.
  • "Come la vedi?" – Invita l'altra persona a offrire il proprio punto di vista, dimostrando interesse.
  • "In base a ciò che ho appreso..." – Collega le tue affermazioni a nozioni precedentemente elaborate, conferendo credibilità.
  • "Un aspetto importante è..." – Aiuta a focalizzarsi sui punti chiave, rendendo la comunicazione più efficace.
  • "In sintesi..." – Perfetto per concludere il discorso e riassumere i punti salienti.

Guida Passo dopo Passo per il Shadowing

Per affrontare la difficoltà di articolare i pensieri come nei video, è utile utilizzare la tecnica dello shadowing in inglese. Ecco una guida semplice per iniziare:

  1. Ascolta attentamente: Scegli un breve segmento del video. Concentrati sulla pronuncia e sull’intonazione dell’oratore.
  2. Ripeti a voce alta: Utilizza la tecnica shadowspeak per ripetere ciò che hai ascoltato, cercando di imitare il tono e il ritmo.
  3. Analizza i vocaboli: Identifica parole e frasi che ritieni utili per migliorare la tua comunicazione quotidiana. Scrivile e ripetile.
  4. Pratica regolarmente: Dedica un po' di tempo ogni giorno alla pratica di conversazione in inglese. Anche pochi minuti possono fare la differenza.
  5. Richiedi feedback: Parla con qualcuno che conosce bene l’inglese e chiedi un parere sul tuo modo di esprimerti.

Attraverso questi passaggi, sarai in grado di migliorare la tua pronuncia e aumentare la tua confidenza quando parli inglese, rendendo le tue conversazioni più interessanti e fluenti.

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

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