Modern Creator
Mental Quest · YouTube

Why Successful People Suddenly Disappear

Alex Hormozi on the social calculus of ambition — and why cutting the people who slow you down is the most productive thing you can do.

Posted
4 days ago
Duration
Format
Essay
educational
Views
18.1K
507 likes
Big Idea

The argument in one line.

Serious ambition demands a deliberate social disappearance because every friendship that increases your probability of failure is costing you statistical ground on your goal — and treating that math honestly is the only way to close the gap.

Who This Is For

Read if. Skip if.

READ IF YOU ARE…
  • You're in a transitional season where your old circle doesn't understand what you're building and you feel pulled in two directions.
  • You've been told your goals are too big by people whose lives you don't actually want.
  • You're trying to establish a deep work discipline — daily protected hours — and keep letting obligations eat into it.
  • You're early enough in a skill that the work isn't yet rewarding in itself and you need a framework for pushing through that gap.
SKIP IF…
  • You're looking for a nuanced take on relationships — this is a binary filter framework, not a guide to navigating complex loyalties.
  • You want to hear from the speaker directly; this is a third-party compilation channel cutting Hormozi audio over cinematic footage.
TL;DR

The full version, fast.

The reason high-performers seem to vanish is that they've run a brutal audit on their social environment and eliminated anyone who statistically reduces their odds of success. Hormozi frames friendship as a probability calculation: each person in your circle either increases or decreases your chance of hitting your goal — there's no neutral. The video extends this into a mastery argument: once you've cleared the environment, you protect a fixed daily block for your most important skill, grind through the early phase where the work isn't yet rewarding, and hold the line until the work becomes intrinsically reinforcing. The payoff isn't fast, but getting it right — not just done — is where the durable results live.

Free for members

Chat with this breakdown — free.

Sign in and you get 23 free chat messages on us — ask for the hook, quote a framework, find the exact transcript moment, generate a markdown action plan. Bring your own key when you want unlimited.

Create a free account →
Chapters

Where the time goes.

00:0001:14

01 · Why Successful People Go Quiet

Opens with the core argument — a real friend decreases your probability of failure — and sets up the auditing framework.

01:1403:13

02 · What You Do Matters More Than How You Feel

Hormozi's personal reframe: he didn't need pure intentions or good character to get a good outcome — he just needed to do the things. Introduces future-pacing pain as a motivational technique.

03:1304:34

03 · The Friends Who Quietly Hold You Back

The probability math: three friends with 30% failure drag each = ~27% chance of hitting your goal. Cut the ones who move your odds in the wrong direction.

04:3405:36

04 · There Are No Social Obligations

The reframe: social consequences (being avoided, uninvited) are a win — they save you future time and eliminate unwanted obligations automatically.

05:3606:08

05 · Why Cutting People Off Moves You Forward

Extends the second-order logic: what looks like losing a friend often resolves to more time and better odds.

06:0806:30

06 · Stop Taking Advice From Lives You Don't Want

The filter rule: if you don't want their life, ignore their advice. Simple as that.

06:3007:02

07 · The Lonely Middle Path

Names the transitional season — too different for old friends, not yet at the next tier. Reframes loneliness as time, the only asset available when you're starting from zero.

07:0207:34

08 · Own Your Life and Use What You Have

Hard accountability: your life is your fault. Use anger, shame, or pain as fuel — don't wait for passion or purpose.

07:3407:58

09 · Protect Yourself From Being Pulled Back

As you start taking action, people around you will try to pull you down. The defense: increase self-approval and decrease how much their opinions register.

07:5808:49

10 · The Best in the World Has Already Sacrificed Everything You Haven't

Being the best requires assuming the top person has genetic advantage, environmental alignment, and has sacrificed everything not relevant to the goal. If you're not in that boat, you won't be the best — and that's fine.

08:4910:24

11 · The Deep Work Protocol

Hormozi's personal system: writing is the pillar of everything, so the first six hours of every day go to writing — nothing else, no meetings, no interference. Do this for five years.

10:2413:15

12 · When the Work Itself Becomes the Reward

Mastery defined: the transition from external motivator (status, ranking) to the work itself being intrinsically rewarding. Masters find it easier because the internal reinforcement loop is running. Warning: you can also over-prepare past peak.

13:1513:55

13 · Clear Beats Clever — Getting It Right vs. Getting It Done

The editor dialogue: if you had two more hours, what would you do? Go do it. Repeat until you hit the floor. The payoff is in refusing to ship until it's right.

13:5515:12

14 · The First One Is Always the Hardest

Closes on the first-goal problem: you can't see it working until it works once. Bridge to that moment with the fact that you're getting better, even when nobody cheers. Focus is a mathematical necessity — doing one thing right takes so much time you can't do more than one.

Atomic Insights

Lines worth screenshotting.

  • A friend who increases your probability of failure is not a friend — they are a statistical liability attached to your goal.
  • Three friends each adding 30% failure probability turn a 100% shot at your goal into a 27% shot.
  • There are no social obligations, only social consequences — and if the consequence of missing a party is never being invited again, that's a win.
  • The lonely middle path — too different from your old life, not yet successful enough for the next one — is when time is most abundant. Use it.
  • You don't need passion or purpose to start. Anger, shame, and pain are valid fuels — they move you just as well.
  • Everything about your current life is your fault. Rejecting that means staying exactly where you are.
  • Use what you have, not what you wish you had. Waiting for the right circumstances is just waiting.
  • The transition from novice to master is the moment the work itself becomes the reward — external motivators become irrelevant.
  • Masters find the work easier than novices because the intrinsic reward has replaced the artificial carrot.
  • You can over-prepare. There's a point past peak where you recognize so many patterns you start confusing yourself.
  • Protecting six hours of daily deep work on your one most important skill, for five years, produces genuine expertise.
  • Getting it done and getting it right are not the same goal — and all the money is in getting it right.
  • The standard you maintain should be yours first. If the world also approves, that's a bonus — not the target.
  • The first goal you actually stick out is the hardest, because you have no reference point that sticking out works.
  • Focus isn't a virtue in itself — it's a mathematical necessity. It takes so much time to do one thing right that you can't do more than one.
Takeaway

The math of who belongs in your orbit.

WHAT TO LEARN

Every person in your environment is statistically moving your odds of success in one direction — and treating that as a real input, not a social feeling, is the difference between the people who build and the people who stay.

  • Evaluate relationships by a single binary question: does this person increase or decrease the probability that I reach my goal? There is no neutral.
  • Three friends who each add 30% failure probability compound — you can go from a 100% shot to a 27% shot by who you choose to keep around.
  • Social punishment for missing events (being uninvited, avoided) often resolves to more time and fewer unwanted obligations — the thing you were trying to protect in the first place.
  • The transitional season — too changed for the old circle, not yet arrived at the next — is when you have the most time. It is also when most people waste that advantage on misplaced loyalty.
  • You do not need the right emotions to start. Anger, shame, and frustration are valid inputs; the action they produce is identical to action produced by passion.
  • Mastery crosses a threshold where the work itself becomes intrinsically rewarding — external validation becomes optional. Getting to that threshold requires pushing through the early phase when it isn't.
  • Getting it done and getting it right are different targets. The durable results — the ones that compound — live in the second category, which is slower and less comfortable than the first.
  • Protecting a fixed daily block for your most important skill — non-negotiable, nothing else scheduled — is the operational form of focus. Without the block, focus is just an intention.
  • The first goal you stick out is the hardest because you have no evidence yet that sticking out works. You cross that gap on faith and get evidence on the other side.
  • Focus isn't a mindset virtue — it's a capacity constraint. Doing one thing right takes enough time that you genuinely cannot do more than one thing.
Glossary

Terms worth knowing.

Probability of failure filter
Hormozi's binary test for relationships: does this person increase or decrease the chance I miss my goal? There is no neutral — every person in your environment is moving your odds in one direction.
The middle path
The transitional period between outgrowing your old social circle and earning access to the next tier — characterized by loneliness, but also by available time that can be invested in skill-building.
Social consequences vs. social obligations
Hormozi's reframe: no one is truly obligated to attend social events; they only face consequences (being excluded, avoided) for not attending. When the consequence is fewer invitations, that's often a desired outcome.
Intrinsic work reward
The state a practitioner reaches after sustained skill development where the act of doing the work itself produces satisfaction — distinct from external motivators like status, money, or validation.
Future-pacing pain
A deliberate mental exercise: vividly imagining the painful future you'll experience if you don't change now, with the goal of making that imagined future pain feel more uncomfortable than your current comfort.
Resources

Things they pointed at.

01:42channelTony Robbins — pain vs. comfort change model
Quotables

Lines you could clip.

00:00
A friend who supports you is someone who deliberately decreases the possibility of failure.
Complete standalone thesis, no setup needed, high shareabilityTikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
04:42
There are no social obligations, only social consequences.
Tight, contrarian, aphorism-length — works without contextIG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
06:13
If everyone around you has a life you don't want, then don't listen to any of their advice.
Blunt, complete, immediately applicablenewsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
06:46
That middle path is very lonely. But the good thing about loneliness is you've got time.
Emotional reframe — acknowledges pain before flipping itTikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
11:53
Everybody just wants to get it done rather than get it right. And getting it right is where all the money is.
Punchy contrast with a payoff — standalone clip goldIG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
11:53
I'm trying to write these books to be bestsellers when I'm dead.
Unexpected standard — stakes the long game in one sentencenewsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
The Script

Word for word.

Read-along

Don't just watch it. Burn it in.

See every word as it's spoken — crank it to 2× and still catch all of it. The same dual-channel trick behind Amazon's Kindle + Audible.

analogystory
00:00A friend who supports you is someone who deliberately decreases the possibility of failure. If everyone around you has a life you don't want, then don't listen to any of their advice.
00:11You have to put blinders on because there is a period of time where you're not gonna be successful enough for the next tier of friends, but you're too different from the friends that used to have. So that middle path is very important. Everybody just wants to get it done rather than get it right.
00:23That's why you become an expert at pursuing goals because you have pursued goals in the past.
00:29I never thought that I deserved the good life. I never thought I didn't think I deserved the happy ending. The thing that got me through that was the idea, and this felt like honestly like gaming the system, so like from the evil side, was that I could still get the good guys ending if I just did the thing that they do to get the ending.
00:50So I didn't have to do it with pure intentions. I didn't have to do it as a great guy.
00:55But if I just still did the things, I could still get the getting. And I think for me that that realization has been why my ruthless focus on like, well, what did you do?
01:06And to everyone who listens to my stuff, like, it's like, great. Throw the emotions out, throw the spiritual energy vibrations out. What do you do?
01:16Patience is just figuring out what to do in the meantime. Like, courage is acting as though you weren't afraid.
01:23Like like, what do you do? And then eliminating everything else and then just doing that. And then doing whatever mental tricks you have to do, which is like, there were slaves who were seven days a week, so can I?
01:33Catastrophizing the alternative path, which is that if I do not do anything, this is what will happen eventually.
01:41That pain in the future will be my pain today, and then actively thinking about what that pain would be like, and then seeing if that can make you more uncomfortable than the comfort that you're in. And I think I mean, I think Tony Robbins says this.
01:53Says, change happens when the pain of staying the same Sorry. When the pain of change is less than the pain of staying the same. And so if you're comfortable in staying the same, the point is to make yourself more in pain to get yourself to move.
02:07And so I think there's a skill in being able to future pace and think through what pain you're going to go through. Like if you're like, man, okay, I have gained five pounds a year, and it has been four years, so I'm 20 pounds up.
02:21Well, if four years from now, I'm another 20 pounds heavier, and imagining the snide comments at the holiday party, or the if you're a girl, the guy who says, man, she'd be really cute if she lost 40 pounds.
02:34Or like even like, I'm I'm going girl's perspective here. A guy who says something that's like, I would be with her, but she's just she's just too fat.
02:43She's just not cute enough. And you're like, wow, that's so politically incorrect. Deal with it.
02:48But the thing is is like your thoughts don't need to be politically correct. They're your thoughts. They're no one else's thoughts.
02:52And so whatever you have to do to get yourself there, for me, the idea that a girl that I would wanna be with would be like, I just don't think he's ambitious enough. I don't think he's successful enough. Like that, those ideas killed me.
03:02And so I never wanted to be denied entry to somewhere because I didn't have these things. Now, do I believe that people should be denied entry?
03:10No. But I also realized that's the way the world is. And so you I think you can balance both beliefs.
03:14Like I'd love things to be different, but I accept the fact that they're not. A friend who supports you is someone who deliberately decreases the possibility of failure.
03:23And so if you look at your friends and you ask yourself, does this person increase or decrease the possibility of failure with my goal? It's very easy to answer that question.
03:33It's yes or no. It's increase or decrease. There's no in between.
03:35Do they increase or they decrease my possibility that I get to my goal? If the answer is decrease, then get rid of them. Because imagine that you have a 100% chance of hitting your goal, and you have three friends that have a 30% decrease.
03:47Like, you might now have a have a, you know, whatever third times three is, whatever, 27% chance of hitting your goal now because you have three terrible friends. It's like getting In video games, it's like you've got somebody who's casting like a slow spell on you. And you're like moving so slow and you're like weak and like all your all your hits have like half power.
04:04Like a lot of people need to shed friendships, But the thing is is that it's more that they call them friends, but they're not really friends. They're just there. And they're there because they've always been there.
04:13But not because they should be there, but because they're gonna help you get to where you wanna go. They're just they're just there. They exist.
04:19They're not going anywhere. They don't have goals. And they're in a different part in their journey.
04:23There's nothing wrong with that. But if you're gonna start the path of of of drinking glass and starting to to to double time, you gotta live your life, you gotta live tomorrow's life, the next day's life, and start dragging that towards you, they're going to be upset about it. And so one of the sayings I recently have that I I like a lot, which is there are no social obligations, only social consequences.
04:44And the people who want to deliver those consequences often do it by talking to you less and by avoiding you more.
04:52They try to spend less time with you and talk to you less, to punish you for the fact that you missed the party, you missed the going out, you didn't show up to their wedding, you didn't show up to their dogs christening or whatever. But the crazy thing is is that if you felt obligated to go, then it means you didn't want to go.
05:08And if me that means that if you didn't want to go, and the punishment of not going is that you don't have to go more in the future because they avoid you, they don't invite you anymore, then to me that's a win win. You save time today and you save time tomorrow. And I don't understand why people are not willing to deal with that.
05:23Like just looking at what happens rather than whatever emotional noise they make with their face at you, like moving past that grit, you expelled air at me. Understood. Got it.
05:31But the outcome is you will no longer invite me, which is what I want. Great. I feel like we won here.
05:36And so thinking second and third order outcomes from what happens when I quote break up with this friend, or what happens when I offend this friend.
05:44A lot of times, it's you closer to your goal, and I've always been okay with that. The moment I have seen somebody as decreasing the likelihood that I hit my goal, I am happy to tell them that. Like, I think I think you are not good for me.
05:57I don't think you helped me hit what I want to hit. And they'd like, well, then they'll try and downgrade your goals and say you shouldn't believe this way, and then they'll cast their beliefs on you. And for me, it's like, that's amazing that you believe that.
06:07I don't believe that, and I don't really want to believe what you believe, because then I would have your life and I certainly don't want that. And so, like, again, I I I make these tweets about this, but it's like, if you don't like their life, don't listen to what they say. Like, don't take their advice if you don't like what you see.
06:21And so, if everyone around you has a life you don't want, then don't listen to any of their advice. Like, and hopefully, you're listening to this and watching if there's some element of my life or whatever that you find awesome, cool. Then maybe some element of what I can share is helpful for you.
06:35But you have to put blinders on because there is a period of time where you and I mean, I've said this, but you're gonna be successful enough for the next tier of friends, but you're too different from the friends that you used to have. And so that middle path is very lonely. But the good thing about loneliness is you've got time.
06:49And right now, time is what you need. Because you gotta learn stuff. You gotta get the skills so you can start trading that for more and more money.
06:54And then you can take the money and trade that for more money. But in the beginning, you just have time, and that's what you have to spend. And so if you are broke or you are poor and wish to no longer be broke and poor, the first is owning the fact everything that has to do with your life is your fault.
07:08And a lot of people will reject that. And you're right. Stay poor.
07:12You're totally right. You'll never be successful. You're totally right.
07:15I believe you. The next step is being willing to use what you have rather than what you think you should have or what you wish you had. The circumstances, the connections, the money, the passion, the purpose, the meaning behind the work.
07:29You can wish for all that stuff, but you don't have it. So you have to use what you have. It could be anger, could be shame, could be pain.
07:34As soon as you start taking action, everyone around you will collapse and try to pull you down. And so the only way to protect yourself against that is to increase your own approval of self and decrease how much their opinion of you matters.
07:47Which means that you have to be you have to be proud of you for taking the step and actively look at their lives and think, I want what they have? The answer is no. Then do not listen to what they say.
07:58And then when you do that, you keep walking, keep taking steps no matter how painful it is, and you never stop. And if you do that, you will get there. Everything that you are not willing sacrifice to be the best, the person who's best in the world is willing to and already has sacrificed.
08:13And so, I'm not saying good or bad, do whatever you want. But if you wanna be number one, and a lot of people say, I wanna be the best, it's no. You wanna be better?
08:23And you can be really good. You can be really good and not sacrifice plenty of things. But if you wanna be the best, then you just have to assume that the best person in the world has the genetic predisposition, has all the environmental cues aligned with their ultimate goal, and is willing to give up everything that is not achieving that goal.
08:42And if you're not in that boat, then you're not gonna be the best. People just like saying because it makes it feel good, but it's false.
08:49And so in terms of aligning the environment, if you know what they put out of question So for me, it's writing right now is the season that I'm in because writing kind of is the the pillar of everything else we do content wise, internal communications, the books, everything comes from me taking time to write.
09:06Because I'm I organize my thoughts better that way, not because I've become skilled at writing. So it's the best way. It's the most succinct way that I can communicate.
09:14And so there's a reason that the first six hours of my day, when I'm freshest, most well rested, I have no meetings, and I have only one thing that I do, which is right.
09:26There's nothing else. And so if you know what the impetado equation is, find the time, the four to six hours a day, every day, that you can do that, and then allow nothing to interfere with it.
09:39And that's it. Like nothing interferes with it. And if you do that for five years, you'll be really good.
09:45And you'll be useful, and you'll feel good about it. Because the thing is at a certain point, the work itself becomes reinforcing. Like when editors edit, and then they make a change, and then the and then the the story goes, or the video goes the way they want it to, it's like boom, that was reinforcing.
09:59And if I like work really hard on a paragraph and I could just shrink it to one sentence, I'm like, yeah. And that might take that literally might take two hours to just keep beating it down until I get it to like the one most succinct thing.
10:12But that's satisfying. And so the beginning you suck and you do the reps so that you can learn the skills so that eventually you do the work itself because the work itself is rewarding. But that takes time to get to.
10:21In the beginning you start the the start the journey because you have this big ultimate pay off you wanna have, but that's way too far out to actually wait. Like, have to be an exceptional person who's who's been reinforced in the past for waiting for a very long period of time. That's why I say the athletes thing is kind of interesting because they've had to wait a long period of time, and so they have to practice for a long period before they get the thing.
10:40Um, but typically, they get enough reinforces early on that that the act itself becomes reinforcing. And that's that's that's what mastery is.
10:49Is that you transition from having some sort of external motivator to external. I believe all motivators are external. From the work itself being intrinsically rewarding versus having a carrot of some kind that's been artificially put there like status or an award or number one or a ranking.
11:03And masters can Masters enjoy the work more than novices do. So it's actually easier for masters. I would say the hard thing that I have now is that my level of quality, the standard that I have, is only mine.
11:16Like, know that I could probably put out the first draft and it would probably be a bestseller. It's just that I would know that it could have been better, and that would eat me alive. And so the hard part is still maintain so it's actually the hard part for me now is that I maintain my standard as the number one standard that I optimize for.
11:33And if the world so chooses to also like it, great. But it also divorces me somewhat from the outcome. Because if it were just about getting the best selling book, then I would publish it on the first shot.
11:44Because at this point, I do have enough skill that probably would be a bestseller on its own. But I also think there's a difference between being a bestseller for a season and being a bestseller for a hundred years. And so I'm trying to write these books to be bestsellers when I'm dead.
11:57Because even at a certain point, when you if you get past a certain point of practicing, you start you start knowing it almost too well that you start cutting corners because you're like, it it gets too natural. Like, actually I borderline over prepared for the GMATs. I like peaked.
12:11I like because I I I took tests every week and my math score Sorry. My English score peaked before my math score did. So my math score peaked at the test.
12:20But my English score, I had done it so many times where you're like, shoot. And I've done You've You you recognize so many patterns that you're like, man, which pattern is this one? Because like, I'm so good at all of my stuff.
12:29Remember what Like, it it it you peak. Right?
12:34So there is a point where where it's not even diminishing returns, you actually start getting worse. At least in my opinion, at least in my experience. And so if you if you if you regress something down to a simple form and then I just cut the sentence in half, I lose material.
12:47I lose stuff that would that needs to be there. And so, you get it as simple as possible, but no. So, if a video editor comes to me and says, hey, do you like this clip?
12:55And I say, yeah, I do like the clip. If you had another two hours to work on it, what would you do? And they're like, well, I had another two hours, I'd do this, this, and this.
13:03I'm like, okay, go do that, come back. They come back and I'm like, do you think it's better? And they say, yeah, they showed it to me, I'm like, it is better.
13:10Okay. Now, if you had another two hours, so what'd you do? They're like, do this, this, this?
13:13I'm like, okay. Cool. They go, they come back, same conversation.
13:16They're like, okay. If you had a week, what would you do?
13:21Well, then they're like, well, shit. I would I'd probably scrap this whole style overall and I actually make a a totally new framework for how I'd approach the video. Um, and I'd wanna come at it from this angle altogether.
13:30Would just take, you know, a lot more work, but I think it would still make a better outcome. It's like, okay. So that idea, just do it on five years.
13:38Everybody just wants to get it done rather than get it right. And getting it right is where all the money is. That's why, like, you become you become an expert at pursuing goals because you have pursued goals in the past.
13:47I just use writing as an example, but I've pursued goals in the past and sticking it out has had big payoffs. And so when I feel like I'm sticking it out again, I'm reminded of the past times I've stuck it out and it's been worth it. The hard part is for the people who haven't stuck anything out because they've never they've never seen it work.
14:03And so the first one's always the hard one. It's like you just have to have faith on some level. You just have to believe that it'll work out.
14:11And the the thing that carries you over the bridge in the short term is that you are getting better. And if you can just focus on that, then even if the the crowd doesn't cheer when you give your presentation or you don't sell books or whatever it is, you'll know. And so it's funny because I look back at the presentation that I gave five years ago, and I really am embarrassed.
14:30But I'm not embarrassed at the effort I put in then. Because the effort I put in then, I really did think it was really good.
14:38I just didn't know what good could be. Because I also gave myself twenty hours rather than two hours. And so if I only had twenty hours, maybe that is the best I can do.
14:46And maybe today, that's still the best I could do. I just give myself way more time. But the problem with giving yourself way more time once you see how much good good can be, is that you realize how few projects you can do.
14:56Which is why you just have to be that's why, like, the biggest guys and biggest business titans in the world talk so much about focus because it's not it's not that, like, focus is the thing. It's just that it takes so much time to do something right that you can't do more than one thing.
The Hook

The bait, then the rug-pull.

The title asks a question most people have felt but never solved: where do driven people go? The answer in the first three seconds is the entire thesis — support isn't encouragement, it's probability math. Everything that follows is the proof.

Frameworks

Named ideas worth stealing.

00:00model

Probability of Failure Filter

  1. Ask: does this person increase or decrease my probability of failure?
  2. If increase: remove them
  3. If decrease: keep them
  4. No neutral zone exists

A binary audit for every relationship — each person in your environment statistically moves your odds toward or away from your goal.

Steal forAny decision about who to spend time with during a high-stakes build phase
01:40concept

Future-Pacing Pain

Deliberately imagining the specific painful future you'll inhabit if you don't change now — making that future pain vivid enough to outweigh current comfort and force movement.

Steal forBreaking inertia when comfort is the barrier
08:49model

Deep Work Anchor Block

  1. Identify your single most important skill
  2. Find 4-6 hours per day when you are freshest
  3. Schedule nothing else in that block
  4. Protect it absolutely for five years

Hormozi's personal productivity protocol: six hours of uninterrupted writing at the start of every day as the non-negotiable anchor.

Steal forAnyone building a skill-based output business (writing, content, code, design)
CTA Breakdown

How they asked for the click.

VERBAL ASK
13:55next-video
implicit — video ends without explicit CTA; the channel's MQ branding appears throughout

No explicit CTA in the audio or on screen. The channel relies on retention and the algorithm rather than a spoken ask.

FROM THE DESCRIPTION
OTHER LINKSAlso linked in the description.
Storyboard

Visual structure at a glance.

open — city rooftop
hookopen — city rooftop00:00
what you do matters
valuewhat you do matters01:14
three terrible friends
valuethree terrible friends03:13
don't want their life
valuedon't want their life06:30
blinders on — middle path
valueblinders on — middle path06:46
deep work protocol
valuedeep work protocol08:49
editor dialogue
valueeditor dialogue13:55
close — get it right
ctaclose — get it right15:12
Frame Gallery

Visual moments.

Watch next

More from this channel + related breakdowns.