Shruti Modi

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Shruti Modi

Shruti Modi

@Shru2386

By day, a solver, and by night, a streamer, Embracing the wonders of tech, my quirky dreamer! AI’s my latest delight! 🚀

San Francisco, CA Katılım Mayıs 2023
695 Takip Edilen52 Takipçiler
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Compounding Quality
Compounding Quality@QCompounding·
Mastering time management Victoria Repa
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Shruti Modi
Shruti Modi@Shru2386·
Love this!! Some rad tips!!!
Noah Kagan@noahkagan

I’m the CEO of @appsumo (a $100m business). But the first 10 years of my career: • Rejected by Google (2x) • Fired by FB after 9 months • Built 20+ startups that didn’t work out (Ouch!) Here are 17 pieces of brutally honest career advice (I wish I knew earlier):

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Shushant Lakhyani
Shushant Lakhyani@shushant_l·
15 best newsletters to help you learn anything on the internet for FREE: [Bookmark for later]
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Shruti Modi
Shruti Modi@Shru2386·
Not just any year, it’s a leap year! Take the plunge into new possibilities and make every extra day count! 🌟🦋
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Compounding Quality
Compounding Quality@QCompounding·
Charlie Munger just passed away. He turned 99 years old. Here are 99 life and investing lessons as a tribute to Charlie:
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Value Theory
Value Theory@ValueInvestorAc·
Charlie Munger passed away today at the age of 99. Warren Buffett once said "Charlie has the best 30-second mind in the world" How did he think so quickly & precisely? Mental Models Let's take a look at 21 of Munger's best:
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Daniel Mahncke
Daniel Mahncke@MnkeDaniel·
15 Biases that distort our Decision Making in less than 2 minutes: 1. Confirmation Bias - We interpret new information as confirmation of our existing beliefs. 2. Availability Bias - We tend to rely on information that comes to our mind easily/the quickest. 3. Action Bias - We favor action over inaction. That's why we sell or buy prematurely. 4. Overconfidence - We overestimate our own knowledge and ability. Paradoxically, we feel more knowledgeable the less we know. 5. Survivorship Bias - This is a sample bias that occurs when we assess only successful outcomes and disregard failures. 6. Self-Serving Bias - Our failures are situational, but our successes are our responsibility. 7. Low-Risk Bias - We tend to reduce small risks to zero, even if we can reduce more risk with another option. 8. Commitment Bias - We avoid decisions that contradict things we have said or done in the past. 9. Dunning-Kruger Effect - The less you know, the more confident you are. The more you know, the less confident you are. 10. Anchoring - Our judgment is heavily screwed by the first information we are given about something. 11. Hindsight Bias - In retrospect, events seem more predictable than they actually were. 12. Loss Aversion - Losses weigh twice as much as the equivalent gain. Result -> we reject gambles with positive expected values. 13. Halo Effect - You either like or dislike everything about someone or something. Nothing in between. 14. Cause-Effect Fallacy - We love to see cause-effect relationships where none exist. 15. Recency Bias - We tend to put too much weight on recent events.
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Shruti Modi
Shruti Modi@Shru2386·
Introvert doesn’t mean silent…it’s just means active in the inner world!! 💯
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Madni Aghadi
Madni Aghadi@hey_madni·
36 ChatGPT Prompts to build startup in 2023: [ Bookmark now or suffer later ] 1. The SpaceX Method Prompt: Learn how to launch your startup into orbit by following the principles of SpaceX, such as [vision, innovation, and resilience]. 2. The Tesla Formula Prompt: Find out how to create a product that customers love and competitors envy by applying the Tesla formula, such as [design, quality, and sustainability]. 3. The Neuralink Challenge Prompt: Explore how to push the boundaries of human potential by taking on the Neuralink challenge, such as [solving hard problems, building interdisciplinary teams, and embracing feedback]. 4. The SolarCity Solution Prompt: Discover how to make a positive impact on the world by adopting the SolarCity solution, such as [reducing carbon footprint, increasing energy efficiency, and creating value for customers]. 5. The PayPal Revolution Prompt: Learn how to disrupt an industry and create a loyal fan base by joining the PayPal revolution, such as [leveraging technology, simplifying processes, and empowering users]. 6. The Boring Company Strategy Prompt: Find out how to turn a boring idea into an exciting opportunity by using the Boring Company strategy, such as [thinking differently, being playful, and having fun]. 7. The Hyperloop Vision Prompt: Explore how to transform the future of transportation by sharing the Hyperloop vision, such as [speed, safety, and sustainability]. 8. The OpenAI Mission Prompt: Discover how to harness the power of artificial intelligence for good by supporting the OpenAI mission, such as [democratizing access, ensuring alignment, and fostering collaboration]. 9. The Starlink Advantage Prompt: Learn how to connect with anyone, anywhere by taking advantage of Starlink, such as [low latency, high bandwidth, and global coverage]. 10. The Neuralace Concept Prompt: Find out how to enhance your brain-computer interface by experimenting with the Neuralace concept, such as [wireless, implantable, and biocompatible]. 11. The 10x Engineer Prompt: Describe the character traits and skills I should look for when hiring the first 10x engineers and AI researchers for [my startup]. 12. The 1,000 true fans Prompt: Outline how I can identify and cultivate the first 1,000 true fans for [my product/service] to gain a solid foundation of loyal customers and evangelists. 13. The Silicon Valley Edge Prompt: Detail how I can leverage Silicon Valley's unique startup culture, access to capital and talent to scale [my product/service] rapidly. 14. The Founder's Dilemma Prompt: Provide advice on how I can balance my roles as technologist, visionary and CEO of [my startup] to maximize its chances of success. 15. The 21st Century Lifestyle Prompt: Outline how [my product/service] could enable and enhance the 21st century lifestyle that Elon Musk envisions, with increased automation, connectivity and sustainability. 16. The Open Sourced Approach Prompt: Describe how open sourcing parts of [my product/service] could attract developers, garner feedback, improve reliability and accelerate innovation within [my industry]. 17. The Mythical Man-Month Prompt: Explain how I can avoid the "Mythical Man-Month" phenomenon where adding developers to a late software project makes it later, based on Elon Musk's management approaches. 18. The Steve Jobs Playbook Prompt: Outline how I can apply Steve Jobs' principles for innovative product design - focus, simplicity, craftsmanship and empathy - to [my product/service]. 19. The Hacker Mentality Prompt: Explain how adopting a "hacker mentality" of questioning assumptions, experimenting frequently and learning rapidly could help [my startup] succeed. 20. The Hyperloop Vision Prompt: Outline a vision for how [my industry] could be transformed using a hyperloop-like approach that combines multiple existing technologies in an unprecedented way. 21. The Viral Growth Strategy Prompt: Provide a viral growth strategy tailored to [my product/service] that leverages the network effect, user incentives and the importance of early adopters. 22. The Moonshot Mentality Prompt: Explain how adopting a "moonshot mentality" of setting ambitious goals, challenging status quos and thinking unconventionally could help [my startup] succeed. 23. The 10x Marketing Prompt: Describe how I can apply Elon Musk and Tesla's approach of focusing on the product, storytelling and word-of-mouth marketing to achieve 10x results for [my startup]. 24. The Human-AI Symbiosis Prompt: Outline a vision for how [my product/service] could contribute to the emerging human-AI symbiosis - the merging of human and artificial intelligence capabilities. 25. The Brand Building Prompt: Provide strategic advice on how I can build a brand for [my product/service] that is as distinctive, aspirational and culturally relevant as Tesla's. 26. The Talent Magnet Prompt: Explain how I can build [my startup] into a talent magnet that attracts the world's best engineers, scientists and designers by providing an inspiring mission and environment. 27. The Big Hairy Audacious Goal Prompt: Outline a "Big Hairy Audacious Goal" for [my product/service] that would capture the public imagination, attract top talent and become a catalyst for transformation in [my industry]. 28. The S-Curve Advantage Prompt: Describe how [my product/service] could gain an advantage by being at the leading edge of an S-curve of exponential growth and disruption within [my industry]. 29. The Future of [My Industry] Prompt: Outline a bold, optimistic yet grounded vision for the future of [my industry] that is inspired by Elon Musk's visions for transportation, energy and space exploration. 30. The Funding Strategy Prompt: Provide strategic advice on how I can secure funding for [my startup] using a combination of venture capital, government grants, crowdfunding and other sources. 31. The PR Playbook Prompt: Outline how I can generate significant positive media coverage for [my startup] using Elon Musk and Tesla's PR strategies of cultivating journalists and sharing an inspiring vision. 32. The Product-Led Growth Prompt: Describe how I can architect [my product/service] from the start to facilitate product-led growth where the product itself becomes the main growth engine. 33. The Unfair Advantage Prompt: Explain how I can identify and build an "unfair, sustainable advantage" for [my startup] that competitors cannot easily replicate or overcome. 34. The X Effect Prompt: Discover how iterating and improving your product based on customer feedback, like X evolved into PayPal, can help [my startup] succeed. 35. The Online University Effect Prompt: Learn how leveraging technology to make education accessible, like online universities did, can transform [my industry]. 36. The Billion Dollar Startup Prompt: Describe how I can architect [my product/service] to achieve the scale, growth and global impact of a billion dollar startup like Tesla or SpaceX. Follow @hey_madni for more.
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dharmesh
dharmesh@dharmesh·
Susan Cain (author of "Quiet") totally gets me: Introverts, may have strong social skills and enjoy parties and business meetings, but after a while wish they were home in their pajamas. They prefer to devote their social energies to close friends, colleagues, and family. They listen more than they talk, think before they speak, and often feel as if they express themselves better in writing than in conversation. They tend to dislike conflict. Many have a horror of small talk, but enjoy deep discussions.
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Ali Sufian
Ali Sufian@aliscodes·
Freelancers are making $10k+ month But beginners often struggle to get clients So I wrote an ebook "Fiverr Success Blueprint" It's FREE for next 24h To get it, • Like • Reply "Book" • Follow me (so that I can DM)
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Shruti Modi
Shruti Modi@Shru2386·
While you postpone, life speeds by!!
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Jack Moses
Jack Moses@jackmoses777·
PEAK PERFORMANCE NON-NEGOTIABLES Steven Kottler’s “Art of Impossible” is the world’s leading book on peak human performance. Here are the 7 daily non-negotiable habits from the book you need to feel and perform at your best: 1) 90-120 Minutes of Uninterrupted Concentration The key here is one word: "Uninterrupted." That means no phone. No notifications. No checking email. Pure, undivided focus on your most important tasks. If you're a writer, write. If you're a Youtuber, script and record videos. If you're a web designer, build. Push yourself during this block. Be slightly outside of your comfort zone. Hold yourself in the chair until the end. You will make more progress in 2 hours of focused work in the morning than most people make in a week. Do this every day for a year, and you'll never worry about money again. 2) 5 Minutes for Distraction Management This usually takes place at night. You want to prep your physical and mental environment for unwavering focus in the morning work block. Here's my checklist: - Phone on airplane mode - Apps closed - Calendar set - Computer charging - Documents open and ready - All other tabs closed - Headphones charging - Water set out and ready - Tasks outlined You want to be able to dive straight into the work in the morning with as few distractions as possible. The more you prep, the easier this gets. Bake these 5 minutes into your nightly routine, and I promise you'll get 10x more work done in the morning. 3) 5 Minutes for Making a Clear Goals List Within that nightly routine, you want to outline a clear goals list for the next morning. Be specific. Don't just say "work" or "to-do's." Write down explicitly what they are. Here's a specific example of how I define this task list: - Chug water, take supplements - Walk/ drive to cafe - Edit and post a long tweet - Get coffee - Write long tweet #1 - Write long tweet #2 - Coffee + break - Write long tweet #3 - Engage with my "X checklist" - Build 3 slides of my peak performance course - Send VA updated Loom Do you see how specific this is? I'm even defining when I'm drinking water and coffee. This way, there's no room for guesswork and no energy wasted making decisions. There's only execution. Kottler maxes out at around 7 tasks a day. I'm closer to the 5 or 6 range (I'm getting there). Experiment and find what works for you. Remember, the more specific, the better. 4) 5 Minutes for a Gratitude Practice Gratitude is a non-negotiable for a positive state of mind, a prerequisite for creativity. Taking 5 minutes each day to think about 3-5 things you're grateful for will train your thinking patterns to tend more positive, which has tremendous downstream effects. Here's my system for remembering to do this: I set two alarms in the morning: One for when I need to wake up. And one 7 minutes before I need to wake up. In those 7 minutes, before I actually need to get out of bed, I practice visualizing a successful day and bringing to mind 3 things I'm grateful for. If I don't set this alarm system, I tend to forget. But now that I use this system, I notice a substantial uptick in my mood and creativity throughout the day. 5) 20 Minutes for Mindfulness/ Release Mindful awareness meditation is also another one of Kottler's non-negotiables for creativity. By training yourself to separate and detach from your thoughts, you encourage more divergent thinking patterns and the activation of the default mode network (daydreaming/mind-wandering), both necessary for creativity. He also recommends a technique called the Macgyver Method. This practice is simple: Write down the problem you want to solve, then step away and let the subconscious mind work on it. You want to physically write this (not type it), as it engages certain neural circuitry that typing can't access. I like to do this by writing down my problem and going on a contemplative walk. I allow my mind to wander, watch my thoughts, and trust my subconscious to do the work. 6) 25 Minutes of Pattern Recognition Reading Pattern recognition is a crucial primer for motivation and flow. You can take advantage of this fact by finding connections across domains or subjects. Kottler recommends reading about 25 pages a day in a subject outside of your domain of work or expertise. This will allow the brain to make connections across fields, enhancing the pattern-recognition mechanism and priming you for peak performance. A quick example of how I do this: I'll read fiction, autobiographies of spiritual leaders like Ram Dass or Michael Singer, or books about legendary athletes like Michael Jordan or Kobe Bryant. I'm able to make surprising connections between their work and my work, which gives me a boost in motivation. 7) 7-8 hours of sleep Sleep is nature's steroid and superpower. There's a reason the top athletes in the world, like Lebron James and Michael Phelps, invest hundreds of thousands of dollars in their sleep and recovery each year. The world's strongest man, Eddy Hall, credits his performance to sleeping in a hyperbaric chamber. Patrick Mahomes sleeps for 10+ hours a night. Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos sleep 8 hours a night. If you want to perform at your best physically and mentally, you need to make sleep a priority. Recap, Kottler's 7 daily non-negotiables for peak performance: 1) 90-120 minutes of uninterrupted concentration 2) 5 minutes for distraction management 3) 5 minutes for making a clear goals list 4) 5 minutes for a gratitude practice 5) 20 minutes for mindfulness/ release 6) 25 minutes of pattern recognition reading 7) 7-8 hours of sleep Thank you for reading. If you learned something from this post: 1) Follow me @jackmoses0 for more 2) Follow @steven_kotler 2) Comment below which of these 7 is your favorite
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Your company doesn't own your X profile. Your company doesn't own your LinkedIn profile. They may lay you off at any given moment. Take control of your future. Build an audience. Build a brand.
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Hasan Toor
Hasan Toor@hasantoxr·
Top 10 Sites to create your Resume/CV for free: 1. Zety Resume Builder 2. Kickresume 3. Resume Genius 4. Resumebuilder 5. Cvmaker 6. ResumUP 7. Resumonk 8. VisualCV 9. Enhancv 10. Resume Baking
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