@@HighLifeWorkout going to sound ridiculous here, but me and 100k plus gamers have put in over 10k hours into videogames. we are not good enough to be professional video game players. others put in way less and just have the natural skill pretty fast to be a pro and win tournaments. thats not a talent? why isnt every gamer who put in over 10k hours winning tournaments. also this you need money to make money thing. i hear tate talking about buying crypto and stock? crypto and stock is gambling. you dont know which ones will fail and which ones will make you money. so those things are gambling technically. thats luck not skill. i understand he did other stuff that isnt gambling but i will argue that stocks and crypto are gambling. theres no way to know which ones will make money.
@@WM44444 you are right. There is no way for you to succeed. Is that want you to want me to say to you? also, I know some pro gamers. they have over 10k hours on ONE GAME. You know you dont have that. Don't lie to me
I knew one guy who got scoured for a gaming team for call of duty. And he was on his way to become a full time gamer. They gave him a schedule of 40+ hours a week. The same game, same maps, same thing over and over again. Where he could only take one day off a month. He realised that wasn't what he had in mind, they was actually working. It took the fun out of gaming but that's why theses guys were getting paid to play games. They train like casual gamers won't. He enjoyed gaming with his friends instead non seriousily. And decided to go back to playing casually.
Notes I took away from this crazy valuable video that may help you: Wealth comes from exploiting leverage: money, media, or skills. This video focuses primarily on skill acquisition and how rewards are distributed based on your position in the skill hierarchy. People who are bad, fall out the bottom. No results. People who are good, skill wise, don't get good results- they get poor results, because the average participant in a skill hierarchy is good (too much competition to reap substantial rewards). If you're outstanding, you get good results. You're notably better than someone who is good. But Elite? At that level you're one who sets/holds the standard for the hierarchy as a whole. You get everything in regard to reward (and by that Brandon seems to mean you get as much out of the skill as one possibly could. As much money, as much opportunity, as much notoriety, ect). In climbing the skill hierarchy, Brandon doesn't believe talent is a factor. He references a book that asserts the concept that 10,000 hours makes you Elite at any skill... as well as the underlying belief that with time and effort, anyone can become Elite. He has a chart he made himself that shows what the timeline for this looks like 15:58 If you put in the time and effort, you will inevitably improve. The sooner you invest the time, the sooner you get to the rewards (he shows footage of Steph Curry being trained at a SUPER young age. He began his investment young, so of course he reaped the rewards of that earlier in his life). A regiment will prove helpful to getting good at something. Rather than judging your current outcomes/results, judge yourself by your leading indicators (did I practice today, did I put in enough time today) because those will give you the most accurate assessment in the long-term of where you are and where you're headed. Thanks Brandon for another banger and best of luck to all of us striving. We got this shit man ✊🏾
Your chart makes 100% sense that's why I see all the great muay thai fighters in their 40s and 30s because they had to spend a minimum of 10 years to become some of the best then another 10 to be the best like Saenchai and Buakaw
This sums of my theory of 1000, repetitions of something will get you to mastery(10000 repetitions) from the outliers book. Very Virgo like in this video. Appreciate the value. Every 1000 repetitions it starts to become second nature.
I agree with this, when I was 14 I started hustling and building gaming computers and at first I was pretty shit and it took me 2-4 hours to assemble one, install windows and post it for sale Fast forward 3 years and I’m now 17 and I can put one together in 20 minutes and then list it for sale that same hour
This was such an awesome video Brandon, I've put well over 10,000 hours into guitar and have had a similar story to yours doing sales since I was 16 with my dad, getting into many industries and leadership roles until I eventually struck out on my own 4 years ago. Starting my own businesses running multiple gigs at a time as a freelancer and driver in my city working almost 7 days a week as I have gotten more and more focused. A big part of that was my upbringing with how my dad (he runs his own businesses and started from nothing) was so focused on getting my mind sharp and curious so that I could be dedicated to anything and not give up. Now I'm 28, keeping myself on top of my game mind body and money and loving your motivation and tips, they are helping me stay on top as a 1 percent delivery driver performer I'm doing everything in my power to leverage that income to my businesses. Thank you for making these, you are awesome man.
Have you thought of the triangle as a venn diagram? Makes sense, you can fill the slots. Like without media, a company can be big but not huge. Like HAAS machining, they advertise in F1, just to be in the middle of the venn diagram. Then you got like no skills and money with media, they're one hit wonders. Without money with media and skills, you're a child star right? :D But yea umm you make great points, and the "theory" you've established must have a lot of truth in it. Now, this is from previous research "in my 20s", but how i gathered was; There is this polyphasic sleep called "the uberman", it consists of 6 small dreams, one rem per, and thus enables one to practice more; BECAUSE it is only the first 15 minutes per cognitive stress per subject you can take into your brain, before you have to process it in your dreams. These are the rem sleep dreams, the processing of information parsed during the day. So keeping it sane, like having a nap, then practicing mornings and evenings. This is the most optimal, and i'd wager it being better than 1 hour a day. So sleeping after practice is makes something efficient. So like point being, that 4 hours a day (like pure practice) is something i'd find exessive, especially within one subject. But like, if you got 4 hours for skillset improvement alltogether, 1 hour a subject with breaks sure if you got 4 subjects. And that 15 mins is what is optimal, so ofc every time that 15 mins should be 30, but 15 mins is optimal, thereafter the efficiency drops off and after 2 hours, who could even focus on learning..? If you still practice guitar, i'd advise using your left pinky more. They're on the same ligament with the ring finger, but not utilizing it is nerfing one quite a bit. Like in music, there is theory, and application of theory, and pure "skill", that meaning dexterity and ability to "be fast and powerful". So like, without theory, it's hard to apply fingerskills, but fingerskills require no theory. Goin 0 1 2 3 4 on every string. But the vid had great points, breaking it down, making it systematic really and not just a routine.
I’m telling you if you got a budget you can be on a the music and that’s a beautiful thing i do t have a budget yet but I’m working on it the most immediate thing i can do is get more jobs so i did thanks b
Thanks bro, am too lazy, guess what my progress is slow, the minute I start grinding for few months, I start to see results. So consistently is key for me.
I love this chart. I track all my skills because of this chart. Whether it's professional semi driving, working on engineering skills, guitar skills, bass skills, languages. ANYTHING I track it with this method.
Also time investments are as flexible as our commitment to developing a particular skill. I like to split practice time or work periods into two sessions like an hour in the morning and an hour before bed, then scale the amount of time up or down depending on what other things I've got going on.
Maybe contradictory. But I'd say stay on the course. Your only going to get better at that skill. If you put in 100 hours in one skill then change and put another 100 to another skill. You'll never master anything. If steph curry did 100 hours basketball then switched to golf and then switched again he would have never got those 10, 000 hours in basketball. The key is to get 10,000 hours in that one skill. Stay on course!
great video bro! thanks for the information! just a heads up - your editor had some sloppy editing that disturbed the flow of the video, apart from that, great visuals! (like the frame cut at 2:29)
i know you don't believe in born talent , but one Talent i think is good, is learning on how to become a FASTER LEARNER some of the reasons i became a fast learner was because i had to adapt an survive in sports more because i was sometimes shorter or younger competing with the older kids but Also when i did construction you better learn fast the fore man dosent like to repeat him self the first time they said it you better get it or they will replace you. so clear you mind Listen . you need to listen to become a fast learner be A SPONGE willing to soak up valuable information. LOVE AN PEACE BRANDON THANK YOU
fast learners learn stuff quickly and have more time to practice being good, so Whatever I do My hours are worth more , i get more because ima fast learner, everyone i would wish you good luck but you need skill.
an fast learners aren't scared to fail, the first time. if you touch something one time an fail and get scared that's your fault for not analyzing and reassessing your action to win, or get closer to your goals.
As a barber for 20 Years I’ve invested over 30,000 hours in my craft. That said I 100% agree!
🏆
@@HighLifeWorkout going to sound ridiculous here, but me and 100k plus gamers have put in over 10k hours into videogames. we are not good enough to be professional video game players. others put in way less and just have the natural skill pretty fast to be a pro and win tournaments. thats not a talent? why isnt every gamer who put in over 10k hours winning tournaments. also this you need money to make money thing. i hear tate talking about buying crypto and stock? crypto and stock is gambling. you dont know which ones will fail and which ones will make you money. so those things are gambling technically. thats luck not skill. i understand he did other stuff that isnt gambling but i will argue that stocks and crypto are gambling. theres no way to know which ones will make money.
@@WM44444 you are right. There is no way for you to succeed. Is that want you to want me to say to you?
also, I know some pro gamers. they have over 10k hours on ONE GAME. You know you dont have that. Don't lie to me
I knew one guy who got scoured for a gaming team for call of duty. And he was on his way to become a full time gamer.
They gave him a schedule of 40+ hours a week. The same game, same maps, same thing over and over again. Where he could only take one day off a month.
He realised that wasn't what he had in mind, they was actually working. It took the fun out of gaming but that's why theses guys were getting paid to play games. They train like casual gamers won't. He enjoyed gaming with his friends instead non seriousily. And decided to go back to playing casually.
@@WM44444 Sun, Diet, nutrients, environment, mental, loads of things go into it. pretty sure DNA is a factor too
Notes I took away from this crazy valuable video that may help you:
Wealth comes from exploiting leverage: money, media, or skills. This video focuses primarily on skill acquisition and how rewards are distributed based on your position in the skill hierarchy.
People who are bad, fall out the bottom. No results. People who are good, skill wise, don't get good results- they get poor results, because the average participant in a skill hierarchy is good (too much competition to reap substantial rewards). If you're outstanding, you get good results. You're notably better than someone who is good. But Elite? At that level you're one who sets/holds the standard for the hierarchy as a whole. You get everything in regard to reward (and by that Brandon seems to mean you get as much out of the skill as one possibly could. As much money, as much opportunity, as much notoriety, ect).
In climbing the skill hierarchy, Brandon doesn't believe talent is a factor. He references a book that asserts the concept that 10,000 hours makes you Elite at any skill... as well as the underlying belief that with time and effort, anyone can become Elite.
He has a chart he made himself that shows what the timeline for this looks like 15:58
If you put in the time and effort, you will inevitably improve. The sooner you invest the time, the sooner you get to the rewards (he shows footage of Steph Curry being trained at a SUPER young age. He began his investment young, so of course he reaped the rewards of that earlier in his life). A regiment will prove helpful to getting good at something. Rather than judging your current outcomes/results, judge yourself by your leading indicators (did I practice today, did I put in enough time today) because those will give you the most accurate assessment in the long-term of where you are and where you're headed.
Thanks Brandon for another banger and best of luck to all of us striving. We got this shit man ✊🏾
Its crazy that some people are masters at Netflix
Lol
I enjoyed this. Breaking the numbers down makes it so simple
man brandon you the only one in the game who keeps it real and we should respect you for that 💪🔥
They should show this in school
School doesn’t want you to be successful and rich they want you to be a company worker
consistency, effort, and quality always wins
11:50 “it wasn’t his kid but he loved him “ 😂😂😂😂😂
BIG BRANDON CARTER BACK PREACHING THE GOOD WORD OF THE THREE M’S🏆🏆🏆
If you smart, you can achieve what used to take 20k hrs within 5k hrs or even less. Just gotta go ZEN MODE 🎯
thank you for all your videos Brandon. Life changing genuinely. Hope you have an awesome day man💪💪
PUT IN THE WORK PUT IN THE HOURS AND TAKE WHAT'S OURS!
Your chart makes 100% sense that's why I see all the great muay thai fighters in their 40s and 30s because they had to spend a minimum of 10 years to become some of the best then another 10 to be the best like Saenchai and Buakaw
This sums of my theory of 1000, repetitions of something will get you to mastery(10000 repetitions) from the outliers book. Very Virgo like in this video. Appreciate the value. Every 1000 repetitions it starts to become second nature.
I agree with this, when I was 14 I started hustling and building gaming computers and at first I was pretty shit and it took me 2-4 hours to assemble one, install windows and post it for sale
Fast forward 3 years and I’m now 17 and I can put one together in 20 minutes and then list it for sale that same hour
Is this method applicable to learning details on written work such as learning to write a different language?
This video was so inspiring!😁
This was such an awesome video Brandon, I've put well over 10,000 hours into guitar and have had a similar story to yours doing sales since I was 16 with my dad, getting into many industries and leadership roles until I eventually struck out on my own 4 years ago. Starting my own businesses running multiple gigs at a time as a freelancer and driver in my city working almost 7 days a week as I have gotten more and more focused. A big part of that was my upbringing with how my dad (he runs his own businesses and started from nothing) was so focused on getting my mind sharp and curious so that I could be dedicated to anything and not give up. Now I'm 28, keeping myself on top of my game mind body and money and loving your motivation and tips, they are helping me stay on top as a 1 percent delivery driver performer I'm doing everything in my power to leverage that income to my businesses. Thank you for making these, you are awesome man.
By far one of the best most knowledge dense video
Thanks Carter🎉🎉🎉
“You motherf*clefs are so eager to argue for your own limitations.” 🎯🎤 drop!💯smh
Have you thought of the triangle as a venn diagram? Makes sense, you can fill the slots. Like without media, a company can be big but not huge. Like HAAS machining, they advertise in F1, just to be in the middle of the venn diagram. Then you got like no skills and money with media, they're one hit wonders. Without money with media and skills, you're a child star right? :D
But yea umm you make great points, and the "theory" you've established must have a lot of truth in it. Now, this is from previous research "in my 20s", but how i gathered was; There is this polyphasic sleep called "the uberman", it consists of 6 small dreams, one rem per, and thus enables one to practice more; BECAUSE it is only the first 15 minutes per cognitive stress per subject you can take into your brain, before you have to process it in your dreams. These are the rem sleep dreams, the processing of information parsed during the day.
So keeping it sane, like having a nap, then practicing mornings and evenings. This is the most optimal, and i'd wager it being better than 1 hour a day. So sleeping after practice is makes something efficient. So like point being, that 4 hours a day (like pure practice) is something i'd find exessive, especially within one subject. But like, if you got 4 hours for skillset improvement alltogether, 1 hour a subject with breaks sure if you got 4 subjects. And that 15 mins is what is optimal, so ofc every time that 15 mins should be 30, but 15 mins is optimal, thereafter the efficiency drops off and after 2 hours, who could even focus on learning..?
If you still practice guitar, i'd advise using your left pinky more. They're on the same ligament with the ring finger, but not utilizing it is nerfing one quite a bit. Like in music, there is theory, and application of theory, and pure "skill", that meaning dexterity and ability to "be fast and powerful". So like, without theory, it's hard to apply fingerskills, but fingerskills require no theory. Goin 0 1 2 3 4 on every string.
But the vid had great points, breaking it down, making it systematic really and not just a routine.
Brandon Carter was that shot of sperm that knew "hustle" while looking for the egg.
I have £2k to invest. Anyone have any recommendations as good investments?
I’m telling you if you got a budget you can be on a the music and that’s a beautiful thing i do t have a budget yet but I’m working on it the most immediate thing i can do is get more jobs so i did thanks b
Brandon really out here giving us major keys for free 💯🔥
I think that doing the correct kind of practice is very important too. Like doing deliberate practice.
now imagine doing 8 hours+ a day. How good you get depends on the pace at which youre doing it .
4:05 Why is your mentor dead? What happened to him?
Thanks bro, am too lazy, guess what my progress is slow, the minute I start grinding for few months, I start to see results. So consistently is key for me.
Bro you need to make a video about “total emergence “.
Following the footsteps, great vid 🔥🥊
Good nigaa vibe. I love this dude energy
Great video pimp you already knew that though
I love this chart. I track all my skills because of this chart. Whether it's professional semi driving, working on engineering skills, guitar skills, bass skills, languages. ANYTHING I track it with this method.
How can I be apart of your sales team?
Great video. I appreciate the skill rating method, simple and clear.
Also time investments are as flexible as our commitment to developing a particular skill. I like to split practice time or work periods into two sessions like an hour in the morning and an hour before bed, then scale the amount of time up or down depending on what other things I've got going on.
You know Larry! Go Cardinals
🔥🔥🔥 thanks B
Knowledge droppin AF
Some guy breaking into your house at 3 AM and putting a gun to your head: “DO A HANDSTAND PUSH-UP!”
You keeping it real on this one my negus
I guess one of my biggest fears is taking the time to get good at something only to realize down the road that i should have chosen another path
Set milestones
If u dont see enough progress… switch
I’d work on something for 3-6 months before thinking abt switching
Maybe contradictory. But I'd say stay on the course. Your only going to get better at that skill.
If you put in 100 hours in one skill then change and put another 100 to another skill. You'll never master anything. If steph curry did 100 hours basketball then switched to golf and then switched again he would have never got those 10, 000 hours in basketball.
The key is to get 10,000 hours in that one skill. Stay on course!
great video bro! thanks for the information! just a heads up - your editor had some sloppy editing that disturbed the flow of the video, apart from that, great visuals! (like the frame cut at 2:29)
Damn bruh, this was excellent. I watch a lot of your videos, and this was one of the best, fo sho.
Dope
man thank you for inspiring me to be a greater man. i was falling off track till i saw this video. thank you for everthing brandon
You’re the MF 🐐.
God bless you BBC
Outstanding !
Is Mastery by Robert Greene a good book too or nah?
Remember there is also labor leverage and also code
@focus8400 100% agree
One of the best videos I’ve seen all year.
THIS
This is one of my favorite videos it’s so good
This is a great video no joke
IT'S ABOUT DRIVE.IT'S ABOUT POWER!
i know you don't believe in born talent , but one Talent i think is good, is learning on how to become a FASTER LEARNER some of the reasons i became a fast learner was because i had to adapt an survive in sports more because i was sometimes shorter or younger competing with the older kids but Also when i did construction you better learn fast the fore man dosent like to repeat him self the first time they said it you better get it or they will replace you. so clear you mind Listen . you need to listen to become a fast learner be A SPONGE willing to soak up valuable information. LOVE AN PEACE BRANDON THANK YOU
fast learners learn stuff quickly and have more time to practice being good, so Whatever I do My hours are worth more , i get more because ima fast learner, everyone i would wish you good luck but you need skill.
an fast learners aren't scared to fail, the first time. if you touch something one time an fail and get scared that's your fault for not analyzing and reassessing your action to win, or get closer to your goals.
Tony Robbins Jr over here
Good Video Brandon!
Simp
love this video man
Mastery! It pays off.
Thanks Brandon!
great video
Well said and well presented!
🤍