The Focused Mind

Staying focused is easy when you care about what you’re doing. Your concentration improves if you are emotionally invested. When you’re focused, the output of whatever you are doing improves. You get things done quicker and easier with less stress.

Your level of motivation aside, why is focusing sometimes easy and at other times impossible? We’ll uncover that and many other facts about focus in this course. Just know there is hope if you struggle to focus, so keep reading.

This course provides practical strategies and resources to enhance your concentration. By the end of the course, you can create an on-demand focus you can turn to at any time. You’ll learn to minimize distractions and ignore them when they can’t be eliminated. This can help you achieve your professional and personal goals in any area of your life.

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Blog Posts That Sell Checklist

If you want to make money with your blog, then you need to learn how to create blog posts that sell. Use this checklist to create content pieces that boost your conversion rates. Take a look…

Create Useful Yet Incomplete Content

The idea here is to create a useful piece of content that solves part of your prospect’s problem, but then directs him to a paid solution to solve the rest of his problem.

For example:

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How To Get ChatGPT To Create Royalty-Free Images Based On Non-Royalty Free Ones

Royalty-free images have always been a bit of an annoyance for online content creators because, quite frankly it’s a bloody minefield.

I personally know more than one marketer who’s been landed with an out-of-the-blue demand for several thousand dollars because he’s unknowingly used an image that was owned by one of the big stock image companies such as Getty, Shutterstock or iStock.

Now with AI it’s a lot easier to create images you can freely use (although do your due diligence on this because I’m no legal professional and I’m not giving legal advice here) even if you can’t copyright them.

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How to Boost Your Energy So You Can Get More Done

You’re feeling very low energy these days. Your energy’s nowhere near what it used to be for you. In days past, you’d get up early, get a ton done before lunch, enjoy a nice break, and then finish off the day with the energy of a teenager.

You’d even have time left over to have fun and do what you wanted to in the evenings. Life was good. These days, it’s nothing like that.

These days, you’re lucky to get half the things done that are on your daily to-do list. You’re really struggling. You’re super unproductive. Your to-do list is passing you by and you aren’t sure what to do about it.

If only get back half of the energy you used to have, then you might have a chance.

Is it even possible?

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Mini-Case Study – Creating a New Product

You get an idea for a product, you build the product based on that idea, you launch your product to the world and make a ton of sales. Right?

Except it almost never works that way.

Here’s what BlaxkmanJr says about creating the app they’re about to launch – emphasis is mine:

After 8 months of talking to users, going through multiple iterations and speaking to professional researchers, I can proudly say that me and my co-founder have created an app that’ll be released on the App Store in December!

MyndMap started as an idea to me, and it’s crazy to see how far it’s come when you don’t let self-doubt and perfectionism cloud your eyes (which I think a lot of first time founders do) and focus on the one true thing that matters – user feedback and iteration. A great idea is nothing without iteration, and so if you’ve got something that you think will be a good idea, go ahead and do it!

Notice the key points here: Talking to users and creating multiple versions until they (hopefully) got it right, according to user feedback.

When you’re creating a brand-new product, ideally you want to make successive refinements or improvements to that product based on user feedback. The goal of having several product iterations is to enhance the product’s features, functionality, and overall performance to better meet customer needs and preferences.

And this process can be used not just for software, but for any product including information products. That’s why courses are often developed in conjunction with beta users, so that user input can strengthen and improve the course as well as providing the first testimonials.

BlaxkmanJr also mentions overcoming self-doubt and perfectionism, two things that probably kill 95% of product ideas. Not believing in yourself or trying to create the ‘perfect product’ can stop you from building or finishing your new product. You can overcome self-doubt by focusing on the product and your users instead of focusing on yourself. And you can overcome perfectionism by acknowledging in advance your product will not be perfect because (spoiler alert) it never will be.

Finally, they mention focus – getting that minimum viable product out there, letting users try it, getting feedback and repeating the process over and over until they get it right. They could have given up and tried something else, but instead they stayed focused on the goal and got it done.

Incidentally, the app is called MyndMap and it’s designed to… help individuals, especially those with ADHD, to better manage their daily lives. It’s a digital platform that combines task management, mood tracking, and personalized reminders with AI-driven insights.

The idea behind MyndMap is to provide a structured yet flexible framework that assists users in organizing their tasks, setting priorities, and keeping track of their emotional well-being. It’s not just about getting things done; it’s about understanding how different aspects of your day affect your mood and productivity.

They’re launching in the App Store in December and releasing an android version the following month.