My father once told me that when everyone gives up you need to give in.
And at the moment i see a place where everyone has already given up.
I think i should do it, one last shot to change the trajectory.
Forget TikTok.
Forget YouTube.
Forget Instagram.
Amazon can pay you $3,000/month to start AI publishing.
It’s boring... but if you start today, you could make $3,000 by the end of March.
I’ll send you a free course showing exactly how to do it.
Just like this post and comment “Send.”
(Make sure you follow.)
Testing new approaches leads to unexpected discoveries. The key is staying curious about what might work differently.
Most people stick with what they know works. It's safer, more predictable, and requires less mental energy. But that safety comes at a cost. You miss out on potential breakthroughs that only come from trying things that might fail.
The best testing mindset treats everything as an experiment. This marketing channel, that workflow, this way of structuring meetings. Instead of committing fully to one approach, you run small tests to see what actually moves the needle.
Curiosity is the engine that makes this work. When something doesn't go as expected, instead of writing it off as a failure, you ask what you can learn from it. What assumptions were wrong? What variables did you miss? How could you modify the approach?
I've seen businesses completely transform by testing things that conventional wisdom said wouldn't work. And I've seen others stagnate because they were too afraid to challenge their existing methods.
The most successful people I know are always running little experiments. They're not reckless, but they're willing to be wrong if it means they might discover something better.
Thirty years ago today former @AlabamaMBB star and Linden native Roy Rogers recorded his first triple-double in a 68-55 loss against Georgia in Athens on Feb. 10, 1996.
Rogers scored 15 points, grabbed 12 rebounds and set the Alabama single-record game record for blocked shots with 14, delivering more rejections than the Harvard applications office.
The 6-foot-10 center finished with a record 156 blocks in the 1995-96 season and earned All-SEC honors. His 266 career blocks trails only Robert Horry with 286.
After playing in the shadows of Antonio McDyess and Jason Caffey for two years, Rogers used his defensive prowess his senior season to transform into an NBA first-round pick by the Vancouver Grizzlies.