Business Lessons Are Never A Bad Investment
Spending money to learn what you don’t want is a good investment for time-strapped founders.
…has moved to Substack! This archive will not be updated.
Spending money to learn what you don’t want is a good investment for time-strapped founders.
What the response to Musk’s Twitter acquisition reveals about entrepreneurship’s existential crisis.
In order for knowledge work to survive—and with it any hint of respect for the necessity of thought in the development of a better world—we must make work that can’t be done solely by a machine.
It’s only when information is put into conversation, when it does draw on our memory, when it activate aliveness and be rematerialized again.
You can read an article or listen to a podcast without a desired outcome. But for research, we are processing with a goal: to secure information and develop new ideas towards some future production.
Productivity trends have moved towards a kind of anti-capture stance, saying that the tendency to over-save is getting in the way and creating noise. This is your chance to make your own feed using the original algorithm: your mind.
Research can become an obsessive errand, a way to hedge against potential criticisms. How can you know when you’ve done enough?
Join 5,000 visionary founders and deep thinkers building the future of work who get the Think Piece newsletter direct to their inbox.
Log in to the Sarah M. Chappell Program Portal.
Log in to the Holistic Business Academy Member’s Portal.
Yes, I want to be the first to know when Sarah is accepting new coaching clients!