Hi,
With every single new advancement in technology and tools, people are wise to wonder if that thing is going to
completely wreck some other thing.
The answer is, the vast majority of time...it depends.
Helpful, I know.
Some people don't adapt to the changes. They stay stuck in their rut. They bury their head in the sand and hope the sea change just passes them by.
Try that next time
you're standing ashore when the tsunami warning sirens begin blaring. Just stand there. Don't react. Don't make any plans. Just wait for the tide to come in.
And then tell the world "I knew that was going to happen" after the water is pumped outta your lungs and you dry off.
This shift will be completely obvious--in hindsight--after it happens.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
You know why?
People hate change. So they avoid it. They don't even address the potential (for good or bad).
Some even pretend it's not happening. Change doesn't always have to be BAD.
Take ChatGPT. Or Artificial Intelligence, or "AI."
While many of us are experimenting with it to see if, in fact, it can help us do what we do even bigger, faster, or better...
And some of us have already published full courses on how to do some thing bigger, faster,
or better...and are using it to its current fullest potential...
Most of us just stand on the sidelines waiting (or wading, to keep the water analogy going), I guess, for Tom Brady to throw us the ball?
I dunno. I've never understood it. I always jump in, albeit sometimes (actually, often) in the shallow end.
It doesn't matter if it's cold, if I've got a suit, or if I just ate and subscribe to the old wives' tale that I'll probably die of cramps...
Why don't you join me? It's nice here.
Next video on ChatGPT drops today, barring any unforeseen tsunamis.
Stay tuned.