Career Strategy For People With Too Many Interests
By Knowspire
Summary
Topics Covered
- Multipotentialites Have Strategy Problem
- Categorize Interests into Three Buckets
- Allocate 80% Energy to Money Maker
- Schedule Soul Stuff Like Appointments
- Build One Thing First Then Expand
Full Transcript
You know what's funny? Most people spend their whole lives trying to figure out what they're passionate about. They're
searching soulsearching taking personality tests, asking themselves, "What's my purpose?" And then there's you. You don't have that problem. Your
you. You don't have that problem. Your
problem is the complete opposite. You're
interested in everything. You want to learn guitar and start a podcast and get into digital marketing and maybe learn to code and you've been thinking about that photography course. And what about
starting that blog you've been planning for 2 years? Yeah, that's the problem, isn't it? People call it being a multi-
isn't it? People call it being a multi- potentialite or a scanner or a renaissance person and they make it sound cool and special, but let's be real for a second. Most of the time it
just feels like you're scattered. Like
you're standing at a buffet with a 100 dishes and you're trying to eat everything at once and you end up tasting nothing properly. I've been
there. I've started so many things I was passionate about. I've got halffinish
passionate about. I've got halffinish courses. I have personally tried machine
courses. I have personally tried machine learning, web development, graphic designing e-commerce digital marketing, and many failed YouTube channels. At one point, I was convinced
channels. At one point, I was convinced I was just lazy or broken or something.
But here's what I figured out, and this is probably going to save you years of frustration. You don't have a passion
frustration. You don't have a passion problem. You have a strategy problem.
problem. You have a strategy problem.
The real issue nobody talks about. See,
the world is designed for specialists.
The whole system, school, career, success stories, they're all built around people who pick one thing and go deep. Be a doctor, be a lawyer, be a
deep. Be a doctor, be a lawyer, be a software engineer, pick your lane, stay in it, become the best. That works great if you're wired that way. But what if you're someone with multiple interests?
The system makes you feel like you're doing it wrong, like you need to just pick something and stick with it. And so
you try, you pick something, let's say graphic design. You go hard for 3
graphic design. You go hard for 3 months. You're learning Photoshop,
months. You're learning Photoshop, watching tutorials, doing practice projects. You're feeling good. Then you
projects. You're feeling good. Then you
get curious about something else. Maybe
it's video editing or writing or investing [music] and that new thing feels exciting and fresh and the graphic design starts feeling like a chore. So,
you switch and the cycle repeats. Now,
pay close attention to this though. The
problem isn't that you have too many interests. The problem is you're
interests. The problem is you're treating them all like they're supposed to become your career. And that's the trap. You think every interest needs to
trap. You think every interest needs to turn into something big. Every hobby
needs to be monetized. Every skill needs to become your identity. And when you can't commit to one thing 100%, you feel like a failure. But there's a different way to look at this. All right, I will
share the strategy. It's stupid simple, but it works. Step one, stop trying to pick one thing. I know, I know everyone's telling you the opposite.
Find your niche. Focus is everything.
But listen, you've tried that, right?
How'd that work out? You're fighting
your nature. It's like telling a dog not to chase squirrels. You can train it.
Sure, but it's going against instinct.
Instead, accept that you're someone with multiple interests. That's not a bug and
multiple interests. That's not a bug and think of it as a feature. The goal isn't to kill off your other interests. The
goal is to organize them in a way that actually moves your life forward. Step
two, separate your interests into three categories. Grab a piece of paper.
categories. Grab a piece of paper.
Seriously, do this. List out all the things you're interested in or want to learn. Everything. Don't filter
learn. Everything. Don't filter
yourself. Now, put them into three buckets. Bucket one, the money maker.
buckets. Bucket one, the money maker.
This is the one skill or interest that has the most realistic potential to pay your bills in the next 1 to 3 years.
Notice I didn't say your passion. I
didn't say the thing you love most. I
said the thing that can make money. This
might be something you're already decent at. Maybe it's writing, coding, video
at. Maybe it's writing, coding, video editing, or sales or marketing. Pick the
one that checks these boxes. You're
already somewhat good at it. There's
actual demand for it. You don't hate it.
That's your anchor. the thing you're going to prioritize above everything else for the next year or two. Bucket
two, the soul stuff. These are the things you do purely because they make you feel alive. Maybe it's painting.
Maybe it's hiking or cooking or reading philosophy. What is important here is
philosophy. What is important here is that you are not trying to monetize these. These are not side hustles. These
these. These are not side hustles. These
are the things that keep you sane. These
are your hobbies and hobbies are allowed to just be hobbies. I know the internet tells you to turn your passion into profit, but honestly, that's how you ruin the things you love. Let some
things just be for you. Bucket three,
the curiosity shelf. Everything else
goes here. All those random interests you want to explore someday. Learning
Japanese, getting into astronomy, studying stoicism, whatever, these stay on the shelf. You're not saying never.
You're saying not now. And that's okay.
They'll still be there when you have more time and mental space. Step three,
go all in on bucket one. This is where most people with multiple interests mess up. They try to give equal attention to
up. They try to give equal attention to everything. They split their time 5050.
everything. They split their time 5050.
Yeah, I know the math doesn't work.
That's exactly the problem. You can't
build momentum that way. You can't get good at anything that way. So, what I want you to do is for the next 6 to 12 months, your bucket one skill gets 80% of your productive energy, maybe more.
That doesn't mean you work on it 80% of your waking hours. It means that when you sit down to actually work on building your future, that's where your focus goes. Let's say you have two hours
focus goes. Let's say you have two hours a day for productive work. Give 90
minutes to your money maker skill. Take
courses, do projects, build a portfolio, network with people in that field. Treat
it like it matters because it does. This
is the thing that's going to give you freedom. Once you're making decent money
freedom. Once you're making decent money from this skill, whether it's freelancing, a job, or a small business, you buy yourself options. You buy
yourself time to explore other things later. Step four, schedule your bucket,
later. Step four, schedule your bucket, too. Stuff like appointments. Now, our
too. Stuff like appointments. Now, our
soul stuff, the things that make life worth living. You don't abandon those,
worth living. You don't abandon those, but you also don't let them eat up all your productive time. Put them in your calendar. Literally, Sunday morning
calendar. Literally, Sunday morning journaling and Wednesday evening painting. Friday night reading. Treat
painting. Friday night reading. Treat
these like non-negotiables, but also recognize what they are. They're
recovery. They're the things that keep you from burning out on your main focus.
And you know what's the beautiful part?
When you stop pressuring these activities to become something bigger, you actually enjoy them more. You read
books because it feels good, not because you're trying to become some motivational speaker or guru, though they are not bad. Step five, revisit and rotate. Here's where it gets
rotate. Here's where it gets interesting. You're not locked into this
interesting. You're not locked into this forever. This isn't a prison sentence.
forever. This isn't a prison sentence.
Once you've built some real momentum with your bucket one skill, once you're making money, once you've got some stability, you can reassess. Maybe in a year you decide to shift focus. Maybe
your money maker becomes something you can do in less time and you pull something off the curiosity shelf into bucket one. Maybe you combine two
bucket one. Maybe you combine two interests in a way that creates something new. The point is you're not
something new. The point is you're not trying to do everything at once anymore.
You're being strategic. You're building
in sequence, not in chaos. So why this actually work? Let me tell you what
actually work? Let me tell you what happens when you do this. First, you
stop feeling guilty all the time. You
stop beating yourself up for not focusing because you are focusing just on one main thing while keeping space for the rest. Second, you actually start getting good at something. When you give one skill 80% of your attention for 6
months, you make real progress. You go
from interested in marketing to I can run Facebook ads that actually convert.
That's the difference between dabbling and developing expertise. Third, you
build confidence. Every little win in your main area gives you proof that you're not just a scattered mess. You're
someone who can commit and deliver. Like
that confidence bleeds into everything else. And fourth, this is the big one.
else. And fourth, this is the big one.
You create options for yourself. Money
gives you options. Skills give you options. Once you've got those, you can
options. Once you've got those, you can start playing with your other interests from a position of strength. Not in
desperation like, "Oh, that guru said there's more money in this or that field." Now, listen closely because this
field." Now, listen closely because this is something no one tells you. I'm going
to level with you. If you try to chase every interest equally, you're going to be 35 years old, still figuring things out, still jumping from thing to thing, still broke, still frustrated. I'm not
saying that to be mean. And I'm saying it because I've watched it happen. Hell,
I almost let it happen to me. The people
you admire who seem to do everything.
The ones with multiple businesses and hobbies and skills, they didn't start that way. They built one thing first.
that way. They built one thing first.
They got good at one thing. They made
money from one thing. Then they
expanded. So now you're not behind or broken. But you do need to make a choice
broken. But you do need to make a choice about what gets your focus right now. So
here's what you're going to do after this video. Grab that piece of paper.
this video. Grab that piece of paper.
Make those three buckets. Be honest with yourself about what goes where. Pick
your bucket one, the thing that's going to be your main focus for the next 6 to 12 months. Not forever, just for now.
12 months. Not forever, just for now.
Then set up your week. Block out time for your money maker. Schedule your soul stuff. Let everything else rest on the
stuff. Let everything else rest on the shelf. And then, this is the hardest
shelf. And then, this is the hardest part. Actually stick to it. Not forever,
part. Actually stick to it. Not forever,
just for this week, then next week, then the week after that. You don't need to have it all figured out. You just need to stop trying to do everything at once.
Your interests aren't going anywhere.
They'll be there, but your time, energy, and that one shot at building something real, that's limited. So, use it strategically.
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