How to Invest Your Time, Attention, Effort, (& Money) More Wisely
Seneca’s Barbell: The Power of Binary Thinking
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This is an excerpt from The Coaching Business Prescription.1
Seneca was a well-known (some would say “notorious”) businessman, political advisor, and writer who lived during Nero’s rule of the Roman empire.
He even served as an advisor to Nero before the emperor sentenced him to die by slitting his own wrists.
But that’s a story for another time.
What’s pertinent about Seneca’s life for our purposes is his approach to considering business ideas that have potential and efficiently crafting them into proven assets that create prosperity.
In his books The Black Swan and Anti-Fragile, Nassim Taleb repurposed Seneca’s approach and called it “Seneca’s Barbell.”
I’m sharing an interpretation I developed based on a presentation by Nic Peterson.
Seneca’s Barbell is an approach to developing business ideas, navigating risk, and improving system reliability.2
Here’s how it looks.
The first iteration of my coaching business existed as an idea with potential.
I turned it into a proven business asset earning a return on my investment of time and effort by simply:
Creating an offer
Defining an audience
Executing a direct sales strategy
I moved my coaching business idea across the barbell efficiently and effectively by focusing only on what was essential and doing it as effortlessly as possible.
So how’d I muck this up?
I listened to and emulated all the gurus, influencers, and experts and added unnecessary marketing components.
Here’s a list of all the things I began spending my time, attention, energy, and money on.
A logo
A website
An email list
A lead magnet
Content creation
Posting on social media platforms
A video channel
Mini-workshops
Webinars
Books
In short order, my barbell came to look like this.
Developing new business and marketing ideas is fine.
But suppose you don’t develop each one into a proven asset delivering a return on investment (saving time or earning me money).
In that case, you create what programmers call “cruft”3 (unnecessary or outdated code that slows down and even breaks a system).
Put another way, by adding a bunch of marketing tactics to my sales strategy, I reduced the efficiency (and effectiveness) of achieving my goal (making a bigger difference while making a better living as a coach).
Bluntly stated, I went from spending most of my time doing the work I love (coaching) to spending most of my time doing the work I hate (marketing).
Does any of this resonate?
Does it make any sense?
Why do so many promising and talented difference-makers do this to themselves?
Turns out it’s not our fault.
(Learn why here.)
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