
DipDeeper
14.4K posts

DipDeeper
@Senssay
Global Markets Trader, Crypto, Venture Capitalist. Always on the fence so re/tweets do not necessarily represent a view. 0xD9B4BEF9 is the magic number.




A MIT professor gave a 1-hour lecture in 2019 that has 18 million views. He died 5 months after recording it. It was his final gift to the world. Patrick Winston taught at MIT for 50 years. The smartest engineers on earth sat in his classroom. And he spent his last lecture teaching them the one skill their degrees never covered. How to speak. 15 lessons that will change how you communicate forever: 1. Never open with a joke. Your audience is not ready to laugh yet. Open with a promise of what they'll know by the end. 2. Your ideas are like your children. You're too close to them. What's obvious to you is invisible to everyone else. Explain the obvious. 3. The 5-minute rule. The first 5 minutes of any talk decide whether people listen for the next 55. Spend more time on your opening than anything else. 4. Repeat your most important idea 3 times in 3 different ways. Once is never enough. 5. Build a fence around your idea. Tell people what it is NOT before you tell them what it IS. 6. Verbal punctuation. Pause. Let the idea land before moving to the next one. 7. Ask questions nobody will answer. Then wait 7 seconds. The silence isn't awkward. It's processing. 8. Never read your slides. Your audience can read. They can't listen and read simultaneously. 9. Use the board not the slides. Writing forces you to slow down. Slowing down forces clarity. 10. Inspire before you inform. Nobody learns from someone they're not inspired by. 11. End with a contribution not a summary. Tell them what you gave them. Not what you said. 12. Never say thank you at the end. It's weak. End with something that lands. 13. Stories make ideas stick. Data makes ideas understood. You need both. In that order. 14. The quality of your communication determines the quality of your ideas in the eyes of the world. Not the ideas themselves. 15. Practice is not preparation. Practice IS the skill. Patrick Winston understood something most people spend their entire careers missing. Your ideas are only as powerful as your ability to transfer them into someone else's mind. You can be the smartest person in the room and be completely invisible. Or you can master communication and make average ideas feel like breakthroughs. He chose to spend his last lecture teaching this. Watch it tonight. Bookmark this first. Follow @codewithimanshu for more lessons from the people who built the future.














Anthropic's applied AI team just dropped a 24-minute workshop on how to actually prompt Claude properly. Free. From the people who built it. You've been prompting Claude for months without the 6 elements they teach in this. I built a skill that applies them automatically. Full guide below. Save This. Watch This Today. Start Building This Weekend. Follow @codewithimanshu for more high-signal content that actually moves your skills forward.











