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  • We're living in a world of information overload.

  • Over 4 million blog posts are published every day.

  • There are more than 800,000 podcasts and more than 30 million podcast episodes available.

  • Countless emails land in our inbox daily with 'COVID-19' or 'webinar' somewhere

  • in the subject line.

  • A 12-year-old with an internet connection today has more access to information than

  • Bill Clinton had during his term in the White House.

  • But too much of anything is simply too much, and trying to keep up with all of this information

  • can be exhausting.

  • But here's the thing.

  • We shouldn't be trying to keep up at all.

  • Instead of keeping up, we should leverage information to level up.

  • Find the Signal in the Noise.

  • Here's how you can cut through the noise and find the proverbial signal.

  • What are your goals?

  • Is it short-term marketing success?

  • Is it long-term financial success?

  • Is it optimal health, or an optimal romantic relationship?

  • Whatever steps you're taking, you need to have a directional lighthouse you're moving

  • towards to help you chart your course.

  • If it's financial success, shortlist a number of people that have attained the kind of wealth

  • that you too are aspiring to.

  • Did they come from similar beginnings as yours?

  • Was their success based on the quality of their decisions or did they benefit from chance

  • shocks to the global economic, social or political system, or just plain luck that they've

  • been milking ever since?

  • An inheritance, or maybe a lucky investment early on in life?

  • If so, then they may not be the most believable people, but rather riding the coat-tails of

  • circumstance.

  • Seek out people whose circumstances, as much as it is possible, best align with yours when

  • they were in your position.

  • If you don't have access to said believable people, seek out their recommendations through

  • blog posts or podcast episodes they've been featured in.

  • Sure, you could just review book recommendations on Amazon, but you don't know anything about

  • the people providing these recommendations.

  • They might be flush with cash, or on the same journey as you, so we really don't know

  • if they are in a position to judge whether or not the advice provided is credible, actionable

  • or valuable.

  • This is why seeking out believable people is key.

  • You want to look for believable people whose outcomes are a byproduct of decisions they

  • made, and continue to make.

  • A quick search for 'Warren Buffet's favourite finance books' reveals in an article, the

  • Benjamin Graham classic The Intelligent Investor, a book Buffet picked up when he was just 19.

  • I'd repeat this for a handful of people whose opinions are believable and credible

  • in this space, and identify the book or content that everybody seems to be on the same page

  • about.

  • It turns out that Tim Ferriss and Bill Gates are also huge fans of Graham's book.

  • Applying the same thinking leads me to conclude the following:

  • For a philosophy book: Most great thinkers recommend Marcus Aurelius' Meditations.

  • For a tech business model newsletter: Many tech luminaries are subscribed to Ben Thompson's

  • Stratechery.

  • For a decision-making podcast: Many high-stakes decision makers listen to Shane Parrish's

  • The Knowledge Project.

  • If it becomes apparent that the book or material doesn't apply to your unique circumstances,

  • know when to fold 'em and move on to other material.

  • If it's a book, try the '100 minus your age' rule.

  • If I'm 36, then that's 64 pages I should read before determining whether or not it's

  • worth my reading the rest of the book.

  • If by this point, I'm not getting any valuetime to fold.

  • Just because it worked for someone else, it doesn't mean that it'll work for you.

  • Everybody's circumstances are different, and a book that was written in the 1940s may

  • no longer be relevant today.

  • As such, you'll want to extract key insights, find ways to test them in your own life, determine

  • whether or not they're worth doubling down on or discarding.

  • The faster you do this the faster you can hone in on practices that are beneficial to

  • you, and the faster you can reach your goals.

We're living in a world of information overload.

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如何對抗資訊過載(How to Beat Information Overload)

  • 24 1
    李奕婕 發佈於 2022 年 08 月 23 日
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