Mark Manson dropped a truth bomb that’s been rattling around in my head for weeks:
“A solution to one problem is the creation of another.”
And honestly? He’s right.
We solved the problem of scarcity. Now we’re drowning in abundance.
We solved the problem of access. Now we’re competing with the entire planet.
We solved the problem of manual labor. Now we’re questioning what makes us human.
But here’s what most people miss: This isn’t a bug. It’s a feature.
Every massive shift in human history has followed this pattern. The printing press democratized knowledge but created information overload. The internet connected everyone but fragmented attention. Social media gave everyone a voice but turned conversation into performance.
The question isn’t whether this is good or bad. The question is: What are you going to do about it?
Back in the day, success meant doing more with less. Limited resources, limited competition, limited options.
A storeowner who started a small hardware store in 1952. His competition? The guy three blocks away. His marketing? Word of mouth and a yellow pages ad. His inventory? Whatever he could fit in 800 square feet.
Today? You need to do more with MORE.
More information. More competition. More choices. More noise.
Your local bakery isn’t just competing with the shop down the street anymore. They’re competing with Instagram influencers selling cake decorating courses, AI generated recipe content, global food delivery apps, and some kid in their bedroom who went viral making sourdough during lockdown.
The barriers to entry have collapsed. Anyone can start a business, create content, or build an audience. That’s the good news.
The bad news? Everyone else can too.
Convenience isn’t the enemy here. But it’s created a monster most people refuse to acknowledge.
You might disagree with me. That’s fine. But I’m not here to whine about how hard things are. I’m here to show you the way forward.
Because while everyone’s complaining about the game changing, smart people are learning the new rules.
While everyone’s panicking about AI taking over, I see opportunity. Here’s what separates the winners from the casualties:
But first, let me tell you what ties all of these together.
Creativity.
Not the artsy-fartsy kind that people roll their eyes at. I’m talking about the ability to generate new ideas, concepts, or solutions by combining existing elements in novel ways. To think outside of established norms when everyone else is following the same playbook.
Here’s the trap most people fall into: They think it’s binary. Either you embrace technology completely or you reject it entirely.
Wrong.
Failure to use technology leaves you behind. But using it blindly makes you an observer of life rather than a maker.
You become someone who consumes instead of creates. Someone who follows instead of leads. Someone who reacts instead of responds.
The sweet spot? Using technology as a tool for your creativity, not a replacement for it.
Now, here are the four pillars:
This isn’t about being smarter than everyone else. It’s about being able to cut through the noise.
When everyone’s regurgitating the same talking points, can you analyze information rationally? Can you spot the gaps in logic? Can you form your own judgment?
Most people consume information like junk food. They swallow whatever’s served without questioning the ingredients.
You need to become the person who reads the label.
I watch people share articles they haven’t read, repeat statistics they haven’t verified, and make decisions based on headlines they haven’t questioned. It’s intellectual laziness at scale.
Meanwhile, the people who actually think for themselves are cleaning up.
They’re the ones asking:
Critical thinking isn’t about being negative. It’s about being accurate. And in a world of infinite information, accuracy is the ultimate competitive advantage.
Here’s what most people get wrong about “unique perspectives” – they think it means being contrarian for the sake of it.
That’s not it.
Your unique perspective comes from the specific combination of information you consume, experiences you’ve had, and problems you’ve solved.
Nobody else has your exact mix. Use it.
I know a guy who spent 10 years as a corporate lawyer before becoming a fitness coach. His approach to nutrition isn’t just “eat less, move more.” It’s contract negotiation principles applied to your relationship with food. It’s risk assessment frameworks for choosing supplements. It’s due diligence processes for evaluating fitness claims.
Is it weird? Absolutely. Is it effective? His clients think so.
Your perspective isn’t just about what you know. It’s about how you connect things that others keep separate.
The magic happens in the intersections:
This is where most content creators fail spectacularly.
They’re teaching theory they’ve never tested. Sharing advice they’ve never followed. Solving problems they’ve never faced.
Real world experience isn’t optional anymore. It’s your credibility.
When you’ve actually fixed something, built something, or survived something, people can feel it in your words.
There’s a difference between someone who’s read 50 books about entrepreneurship and someone who’s actually started a business. The first person knows what should work. The second person knows what actually works.
Your scars are your credentials. It’s not something I’m ashamed of it’s something I leverage.
When I tell someone their business idea won’t work, they listen. Not because I’m smarter than them, but because I’ve been where they are.
Real world experience gives you:
Here’s the thing about human connections they’re not scalable, and that’s exactly why they matter.
What resonates with you can resonate with others. But only if you’re willing to be genuinely human about it.
Stop trying to appeal to everyone. Start connecting with someone.
I used to think I needed to be professional all the time. Corporate speak. Sanitized opinions. Perfectly polished content.
Know what happened? Nobody cared.
Then I started being honest about my struggles. My failures. My weird obsessions. My unpopular opinions.
Suddenly, I wasn’t just another business account. I was a person. And people connect with people, not brands.
The most successful creators I know aren’t the most talented. They’re the most relatable. They’re willing to be vulnerable, specific, and real.
They share:
Human connection isn’t about having the right strategy. It’s about having the right heart.
Problems will always exist. They will always need solving.
But here’s what’s changed: The tools to solve them are more powerful than ever.
AI can generate information with minimal input. Automation can handle routine tasks. Technology can amplify your reach.
The question isn’t whether these tools are powerful. The question is: Who are they for?
What value does it provide that isn’t already out there?
How unique is your input?
And here’s what you’ll realize when you ask these questions honestly:
Your oversight is needed. Your unique input is needed.
AI Agents & ChatGPT can write a decent blog post about productivity in 30 seconds. It can research topics, structure arguments, and even add personality.
But if AI is so smart, why does it need hundreds of people training it, “this is an image of a car,” over and over, when even the least bright student doesn’t need that level of input to get the point?
The AI provides the scaffolding. You provide the soul.
This is what I mean by crisis equals opportunity. The same technology that threatens to replace you can actually amplify you if you know how to use it.
Everyone’s worried about competing with AI.
Wrong enemy.
You’re competing with apathy. With generic thinking. With people who’ve outsourced their humanity to algorithms.
We’re caught up in a rut. Some people reject technology entirely and get left behind. Others use it blindly and become observers of life rather than makers.
The winners? They’re the ones who use technology to amplify their creativity, not replace it.
While everyone else is trying to optimize their way to success, you can differentiate by being irreplaceably human and strategically enhanced.
The market doesn’t need another productivity hack. It needs your specific take on productivity based on your real experience, enhanced by the right tools.
The world doesn’t need another business framework. It needs your perspective on business filtered through your unique lens, powered by technology but not enslaved by it.
Stop trying to be everything to everyone.
Start being irreplaceably you to the right people.
Use the tools. Embrace the convenience. But never forget that your human judgment, your unique perspective, your real experience, and your creative ability to combine them in novel ways are your competitive advantages.
Don’t become an observer of life. Become a maker.
The future belongs to people who can think critically, see uniquely, act authentically, connect genuinely, and create boldly.
Everything else can be automated.
You can’t.
But here’s the thing most people won’t tell you: This isn’t just about business success. It’s about staying human in an increasingly automated world.
When you outsource your thinking, you lose the ability to think. When you outsource your creativity, you lose the ability to create. When you outsource your connections, you lose the ability to connect.
The convenience trap isn’t just about competition. It’s about what kind of person you want to be.
Do you want to be someone who uses technology to become more human? Or someone who uses technology to become more machine?
The choice is yours.
But choose quickly. The world is moving fast, and the gap between makers and observers is widening every day.
Here’s what I want you to do right now:
The world doesn’t need another copy. It needs the original you.
The convenience trap is the tendency to prioritize speed and ease through automation or shortcuts, often at the expense of deeper engagement, creativity, and quality. While convenience can improve efficiency, over-reliance can erode skills, reduce critical thinking, and disconnect us from meaningful work.
Excessive automation can reduce opportunities for genuine human connection by replacing conversations, creative problem-solving, and personalized experiences with impersonal processes. While automation saves time, it can also diminish trust and the unique value humans bring to interactions.
In a digital world saturated with automated tools, the human touch is important because it brings empathy, creativity, intuition, and adaptability that machines cannot replicate. It helps build trust, fosters authentic relationships, and enables personalized experiences that resonate with people.
To avoid the convenience trap:
Yes, too much convenience can harm productivity in the long run by making you dependent on tools and shortcuts while weakening your problem-solving skills and focus. Balancing convenience with intentional effort ensures that you remain engaged and continue growing in your craft.
Skills that matter more than automation include:
Balance convenience with the human touch by:
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