Ask what your 20-year-old self would think of you today; we invite you to think about what your 70, 80 or 100-year-old self would think of you now.”
What is it that remains essentially you?
Lynda Gratton & Andrew Scott: The 100-Year Life. Living and Working in an Age of Longevity
As cloning beautifully proves, our cells retain their youthful digital information even when we are old. To become young again, we need to find some polish to remove the scratches.
David A. Sinclair, Lifespan: Why We Age—and Why We Don't Have To
Earn with your mind, not your time.
As David Sinclair proves in his last book, we will live longer and healthier lives . More time to think, create, share the results of those creations with others, and build a digital legacy of experiences and learnings that will support our continuous reinvention; we should reinvent ourselves several times because we are obliged to reinvent ourselves.
Why not build such a digital asset library to support others who will follow us?
Why not transform part of our synchronicity into a timeless share of knowledge?
Productising our knowledge to become exponential is how we can build that legacy.
We used to read many books. The truth is that our attention bandwidth is no longer wide enough. Concise, succinct, relevant and to the point, digital assets are the books of tomorrow. Let’s build them together. We’ve spent years improving our thoughts and delivering them mostly “live”. Synchronicity limits audience, exposure and reputation.
Whether you are an expert educator who trains hundreds of executives every year or an executive who leads a company of thousands: think about encapsulating your models , tools, frameworks and methodologies and making them available on a global basis for those needing such learnings today, but also for those coming after us.
What if the byproduct is building a passive income that will support your constant reinvention?