Over 60% of Americans feel more uncomfortable talking about money than politics or religion.
This silence is programming you to stay poor.
A thread on breaking free from wealth-limiting beliefs:
I found a coin right as I started writing about money - funny coincidence.
For many, this topic is forbidden, complex, uncomfortable.
It depends on the environment you grew up in. Mine taught me wealth requires dishonesty or connections.
Total bullshit.
My childhood understanding: money comes from work, goes to bills, never excessive.
When I asked about serious wealth, the answer was always the same:
"Impossible for normal people."
We accept these beliefs without questioning why.
"Money can't buy happiness" is another lie.
As soon as I built a safety cushion of savings, I became calmer and happier.
Not worrying about bills shifts your focus to things that actually bring joy.
Money buys freedom to pursue happiness.
Mark Twain flipped conventional wisdom:
"The lack of money is the root of all evil"
Research backs this up - 75% of financially secure Americans rate their mental health as "excellent" or "very good."
Poverty causes misery, not wealth.
First step: identify your negative money beliefs.
- "Rich people must have done something unethical"
- "I don't deserve to be wealthy"
- "Money is the root of all evil"
Just writing these down once with the counter statements begins reprogramming your subconscious.
Next, reset your emotional triggers.
Notice when money discussions cause anxiety, shame, or fear.
Pause. Breathe. Replace with new belief.
Your brain literally performs better when financial stress is removed.
Understand Kiyosaki's Cashflow Quadrant:
Employee → Self-Employed → Business Owner → Investor
The path to freedom is moving from left to right.
Your IT job can be your "backup airfield" while building your business.
For digital nomads, the one-person business is your perfect vehicle.
The internet removed the need for capital, connections, or inheritance.
The formula: solve problems, create value, build systems to deliver repeatedly.
Before aggressive growth, establish your safety cushion.
My stress dropped dramatically once I had several months of expenses saved.
Start by automatically saving 10% of income.
This mental space allows you to see opportunities instead of threats.
As Seneca said: "It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor."
Your mindset determines your wealth more than circumstances.
The pen to rewrite your relationship with money is in your hand.
____________________________________
Want to continue the conversation?
Read the full article here: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/money-is-not-evil-and-other-lies?r=1m5hbt
This silence is programming you to stay poor.
A thread on breaking free from wealth-limiting beliefs:
I found a coin right as I started writing about money - funny coincidence.
For many, this topic is forbidden, complex, uncomfortable.
It depends on the environment you grew up in. Mine taught me wealth requires dishonesty or connections.
Total bullshit.
My childhood understanding: money comes from work, goes to bills, never excessive.
When I asked about serious wealth, the answer was always the same:
"Impossible for normal people."
We accept these beliefs without questioning why.
"Money can't buy happiness" is another lie.
As soon as I built a safety cushion of savings, I became calmer and happier.
Not worrying about bills shifts your focus to things that actually bring joy.
Money buys freedom to pursue happiness.
Mark Twain flipped conventional wisdom:
"The lack of money is the root of all evil"
Research backs this up - 75% of financially secure Americans rate their mental health as "excellent" or "very good."
Poverty causes misery, not wealth.
First step: identify your negative money beliefs.
- "Rich people must have done something unethical"
- "I don't deserve to be wealthy"
- "Money is the root of all evil"
Just writing these down once with the counter statements begins reprogramming your subconscious.
Next, reset your emotional triggers.
Notice when money discussions cause anxiety, shame, or fear.
Pause. Breathe. Replace with new belief.
Your brain literally performs better when financial stress is removed.
Understand Kiyosaki's Cashflow Quadrant:
Employee → Self-Employed → Business Owner → Investor
The path to freedom is moving from left to right.
Your IT job can be your "backup airfield" while building your business.
For digital nomads, the one-person business is your perfect vehicle.
The internet removed the need for capital, connections, or inheritance.
The formula: solve problems, create value, build systems to deliver repeatedly.
Before aggressive growth, establish your safety cushion.
My stress dropped dramatically once I had several months of expenses saved.
Start by automatically saving 10% of income.
This mental space allows you to see opportunities instead of threats.
As Seneca said: "It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor."
Your mindset determines your wealth more than circumstances.
The pen to rewrite your relationship with money is in your hand.
____________________________________
Want to continue the conversation?
Read the full article here: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/money-is-not-evil-and-other-lies?r=1m5hbt
Substack
Money Is Not Evil (And Other Lies You’ve Been Told About Wealth)
What if money isn’t evil? This article challenges deep-rooted beliefs and shows how mindset can unlock lasting financial freedom.
🔥1🙏1
The Hidden Money Operating System
Money attitudes are deeply rooted in our upbringing, culture, and social norms – often in ways we don’t consciously realize. Think of it as an operating system running in the background of your mind, silently determining every financial decision you make.
Growing up, I understood that to achieve financial security, I needed to follow the “safe” path – get a job with a guaranteed salary that would allow me to survive. This was always my fallback plan, a place I could land if everything else failed. And that’s exactly what happened.
Today we’re talking more about attitudes toward money, why many families even prohibit discussions about it. It’s considered sacred, unacceptable, and all this comes from upbringing, religion, and the culture in which you develop, where there are certain rules about how to relate to money.
In some cultures, money is considered sinful; in others, it’s taboo. Typically, these beliefs are passed down from generation to generation. And since these basic religious or cultural principles generally aren’t questioned but simply accepted as given, questions about why we relate to money in a particular way don’t arise.
There are certain cultures where, conversely, the attitude toward money from early childhood is formulated in exactly the opposite way, where money is a measure of value, and you can and should earn this money if you bring value to your community – for example, Jewish families. If you were born there, you’re very lucky because you have a healthy attitude toward money.
If not, you’ll have to do the work yourself to unravel the ball of negative attitudes and wrap new ones that you’ll need to live with. There’s no sense in denying the importance of money or turning away from it because our society, in which we now live and develop, is based on money.
Some might say that money can’t buy happiness, that happiness isn’t in money, or that there are many things you can’t buy with money. I fundamentally disagree. In modern society, you can buy absolutely everything with money.
You can literally buy yourself a new body, you can buy yourself health if you know who and where to approach. Today you can even buy yourself mobility, for instance, if your body is paralyzed. This isn’t some sci-fi; it’s quite practical.
As strange as it sounds, you can buy love. Yes, maybe at first it will be somewhat artificial, but if you put effort into developing the relationship, it’s quite possible that you can build a healthy relationship from it, even if it was previously based on money.
And if not, then these are transactional relationships, exactly the same as any other type of relationship where you give something, acquire something.
I actually have a whole article around that topic, if want to argue with me about it, read it first: “Money Buys Everything (Despite What They Tell You): The Uncomfortable Truth About Modern Freedom”.
The idea that happiness isn’t in money is actually a belief that practice shows isn’t true.
First, as soon as I started to have money, as soon as I began to have a certain safety cushion of savings, I started to become much calmer and happier because now I don’t have to think about how I’ll pay bills.
If I have a certain reserve for several months of life ahead, I feel calm, and I can focus on other things that actually bring this happiness. Yes, the mere presence of money in your account may not make you happy, but the state you acquire from having this money in your account quite brings happiness, pleasure, and shifts the focus of attention from money to other things that are the basis of happiness, good mood, calmness, absence of stress, and everything related to it.
And finally, with money, you can acquire what will make you happy, and in such a ratio as you need. If travel makes you happy, for instance, it’s your inner need, then having a lot of money, you can travel freely, live wherever you want, you can buy yourself citizenship in countries that allow you to travel without borders, without getting visas, without extra hassle.
Money attitudes are deeply rooted in our upbringing, culture, and social norms – often in ways we don’t consciously realize. Think of it as an operating system running in the background of your mind, silently determining every financial decision you make.
Growing up, I understood that to achieve financial security, I needed to follow the “safe” path – get a job with a guaranteed salary that would allow me to survive. This was always my fallback plan, a place I could land if everything else failed. And that’s exactly what happened.
Today we’re talking more about attitudes toward money, why many families even prohibit discussions about it. It’s considered sacred, unacceptable, and all this comes from upbringing, religion, and the culture in which you develop, where there are certain rules about how to relate to money.
In some cultures, money is considered sinful; in others, it’s taboo. Typically, these beliefs are passed down from generation to generation. And since these basic religious or cultural principles generally aren’t questioned but simply accepted as given, questions about why we relate to money in a particular way don’t arise.
There are certain cultures where, conversely, the attitude toward money from early childhood is formulated in exactly the opposite way, where money is a measure of value, and you can and should earn this money if you bring value to your community – for example, Jewish families. If you were born there, you’re very lucky because you have a healthy attitude toward money.
If not, you’ll have to do the work yourself to unravel the ball of negative attitudes and wrap new ones that you’ll need to live with. There’s no sense in denying the importance of money or turning away from it because our society, in which we now live and develop, is based on money.
Some might say that money can’t buy happiness, that happiness isn’t in money, or that there are many things you can’t buy with money. I fundamentally disagree. In modern society, you can buy absolutely everything with money.
You can literally buy yourself a new body, you can buy yourself health if you know who and where to approach. Today you can even buy yourself mobility, for instance, if your body is paralyzed. This isn’t some sci-fi; it’s quite practical.
As strange as it sounds, you can buy love. Yes, maybe at first it will be somewhat artificial, but if you put effort into developing the relationship, it’s quite possible that you can build a healthy relationship from it, even if it was previously based on money.
And if not, then these are transactional relationships, exactly the same as any other type of relationship where you give something, acquire something.
I actually have a whole article around that topic, if want to argue with me about it, read it first: “Money Buys Everything (Despite What They Tell You): The Uncomfortable Truth About Modern Freedom”.
The idea that happiness isn’t in money is actually a belief that practice shows isn’t true.
First, as soon as I started to have money, as soon as I began to have a certain safety cushion of savings, I started to become much calmer and happier because now I don’t have to think about how I’ll pay bills.
If I have a certain reserve for several months of life ahead, I feel calm, and I can focus on other things that actually bring this happiness. Yes, the mere presence of money in your account may not make you happy, but the state you acquire from having this money in your account quite brings happiness, pleasure, and shifts the focus of attention from money to other things that are the basis of happiness, good mood, calmness, absence of stress, and everything related to it.
And finally, with money, you can acquire what will make you happy, and in such a ratio as you need. If travel makes you happy, for instance, it’s your inner need, then having a lot of money, you can travel freely, live wherever you want, you can buy yourself citizenship in countries that allow you to travel without borders, without getting visas, without extra hassle.
Mark Twain flipped conventional wisdom on its head when he said,
– a striking contrast to the biblical warning about money being evil. Twain recognized that poverty and financial insecurity, not wealth itself, cause much of life’s misery.
This perspective is supported by modern research. A 2023 survey by the American Psychological Association found that about 40% of people said money worries caused them more stress than work, politics, or even global events. On the flip side, the Financial Health Network discovered that 75% of Americans who consider themselves financially secure also rate their mental health as “excellent” or “very good.”
So now I don’t understand all these negative attitudes toward money, except that it’s more from ignorance because if you don’t know how to handle money, how to earn it, then for you it’s a closed, taboo topic because you simply don’t have information about something else, and you only have these negative attitudes on which your relationship is based.
It can be directed in another direction and flip all these attitudes, which I recommend doing first.
“The lack of money is the root of all evil”
– a striking contrast to the biblical warning about money being evil. Twain recognized that poverty and financial insecurity, not wealth itself, cause much of life’s misery.
This perspective is supported by modern research. A 2023 survey by the American Psychological Association found that about 40% of people said money worries caused them more stress than work, politics, or even global events. On the flip side, the Financial Health Network discovered that 75% of Americans who consider themselves financially secure also rate their mental health as “excellent” or “very good.”
So now I don’t understand all these negative attitudes toward money, except that it’s more from ignorance because if you don’t know how to handle money, how to earn it, then for you it’s a closed, taboo topic because you simply don’t have information about something else, and you only have these negative attitudes on which your relationship is based.
It can be directed in another direction and flip all these attitudes, which I recommend doing first.
Anticodeguy
Money Buys Freedom - Here’s the Part They Never Say Out Loud
You’re not trapped by life - you’re trapped by the cost of exit.
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Read more about Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
🔥1
The Million-Dollar Product Launch Mistake You're About to Make (And How to Avoid It)
You just bought a domain name and finished your website. This time you did everything right. The state-of-the-art design is ready. The copywriting is exceptional. Your lead generation funnel is configured and tested multiple times without fail. Payments on the site work perfectly. Everything is there. You've registered an LLC. You have a bank account set up. You've integrated with Stripe, which is waiting to receive the first money. All contracts with suppliers are signed, and they're waiting for their first customers that you'll provide them.
Everything is at the starting line. All set to begin the journey toward your first million dollars. You launch the site and check the statistics. Zero visitors. A day passes. Zero visitors. No customers. You have nothing to tell your suppliers who were ready to work since yesterday. But apparently, the launch didn't happen. Zero customers.
You decide to do something about it and frantically start sending the website link to your friends and acquaintances, announcing that you've launched a new product, a new business. They immediately visit your site, look at it, some even write feedback about what to fix here and there.
And now you're sitting at midnight, making changes to the site based on feedback from friends and acquaintances. Now it should work, right? But nothing happens. A week passes, a random user visits the site, naturally buys nothing. And everything continues as before. You have no business.
You haven't moved even a fraction of a percent toward the million dollars that was planned in your carefully developed business plan. The bank account remains at zero dollars, just as it was. Familiar situation?
This is actually a bit sugar-coated, and I've softened the story for understanding, but in my case, for example, I also had people working who I had to pay salaries to. As a result, my budget went into negative debt to banks because I paid them by taking loans.
And now I not only have no business, but I also have debts that I need to pay off. This is an insanely frightening situation that I wouldn't wish on anyone, but probably only by experiencing it firsthand can you understand that you're doing something wrong.
You just bought a domain name and finished your website. This time you did everything right. The state-of-the-art design is ready. The copywriting is exceptional. Your lead generation funnel is configured and tested multiple times without fail. Payments on the site work perfectly. Everything is there. You've registered an LLC. You have a bank account set up. You've integrated with Stripe, which is waiting to receive the first money. All contracts with suppliers are signed, and they're waiting for their first customers that you'll provide them.
Everything is at the starting line. All set to begin the journey toward your first million dollars. You launch the site and check the statistics. Zero visitors. A day passes. Zero visitors. No customers. You have nothing to tell your suppliers who were ready to work since yesterday. But apparently, the launch didn't happen. Zero customers.
You decide to do something about it and frantically start sending the website link to your friends and acquaintances, announcing that you've launched a new product, a new business. They immediately visit your site, look at it, some even write feedback about what to fix here and there.
And now you're sitting at midnight, making changes to the site based on feedback from friends and acquaintances. Now it should work, right? But nothing happens. A week passes, a random user visits the site, naturally buys nothing. And everything continues as before. You have no business.
You haven't moved even a fraction of a percent toward the million dollars that was planned in your carefully developed business plan. The bank account remains at zero dollars, just as it was. Familiar situation?
This is actually a bit sugar-coated, and I've softened the story for understanding, but in my case, for example, I also had people working who I had to pay salaries to. As a result, my budget went into negative debt to banks because I paid them by taking loans.
And now I not only have no business, but I also have debts that I need to pay off. This is an insanely frightening situation that I wouldn't wish on anyone, but probably only by experiencing it firsthand can you understand that you're doing something wrong.
🔥1
You just launched your "perfect" product.
Website done. Copywriting polished. Payment system works flawlessly.
A day passes. A week passes. Zero visitors. Zero customers.
The million-dollar mistake that's killing your business before it starts:
I've been there. Built an entire product with a team I had to pay salaries to.
Everything was perfect - except no one came.
Not only did I have no business, I had debts from loans I took to pay my team.
This is an insanely frightening situation I wouldn't wish on anyone.
The fatal trap was my belief that I needed to create a product first, then market it.
"Build something valuable and they will come!"
This advice is everywhere - in books, courses, everywhere.
And it's completely backward.
- Justin Kan, co-founder of Twitch
My most painful lesson: No matter how good your product is, without distribution, it's invisible.
You can't have profit without purchases.
You can't have purchases without interest.
You can't have interest without eyeballs.
You can't have eyeballs without distribution.
The equation is brutally simple.
It would seem...
"But what about viral products? What if I create the next Facebook?"
Even Zuckerberg launched on a university campus - a pre-built distribution channel.
He didn't launch "in a vacuum."
The 2-piece distribution puzzle that changed everything for me:
1. Traffic - People who see your offer
2. Brand - Why they trust and listen to you
Without solving both, your perfect product dies in silence.
Here's what no one tells you: your personal brand IS your distribution.
I never spent a penny on marketing my development services.
For years, clients came through recommendations.
Word of mouth is distribution on autopilot.
The network effect multiplies this power.
When you share content, your audience sees it.
When they share it, THEIR audience sees it.
This creates exponential reach that paid marketing can't match.
And you own this traffic.
How do you prefer to approach this?
The correct order:
1. Build [personal] brand (traffic engine)
2. Create offers that convert
3. THEN build the product
You can even pre-sell before creating. Revolutionary concept, right?
Your bank account is the only true indicator of your business.
$0 = no business
Negative = definitely no business
By following distribution-first, money flows BEFORE extensive resource commitment.
On my own journey, I discovered something: creating content consistently is the foundation.
But it shouldn't consume all your time.
That's why I built a system for myself to maintain my authentic voice while accelerating output.
Your future customers are waiting.
____________________
Read the full article: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/the-million-dollar-product-launch?r=1m5hbt
Website done. Copywriting polished. Payment system works flawlessly.
A day passes. A week passes. Zero visitors. Zero customers.
The million-dollar mistake that's killing your business before it starts:
I've been there. Built an entire product with a team I had to pay salaries to.
Everything was perfect - except no one came.
Not only did I have no business, I had debts from loans I took to pay my team.
This is an insanely frightening situation I wouldn't wish on anyone.
The fatal trap was my belief that I needed to create a product first, then market it.
"Build something valuable and they will come!"
This advice is everywhere - in books, courses, everywhere.
And it's completely backward.
"First-time founders are obsessed with product. Second-time founders are obsessed with distribution."
- Justin Kan, co-founder of Twitch
My most painful lesson: No matter how good your product is, without distribution, it's invisible.
You can't have profit without purchases.
You can't have purchases without interest.
You can't have interest without eyeballs.
You can't have eyeballs without distribution.
The equation is brutally simple.
It would seem...
"But what about viral products? What if I create the next Facebook?"
Even Zuckerberg launched on a university campus - a pre-built distribution channel.
He didn't launch "in a vacuum."
The 2-piece distribution puzzle that changed everything for me:
1. Traffic - People who see your offer
2. Brand - Why they trust and listen to you
Without solving both, your perfect product dies in silence.
Here's what no one tells you: your personal brand IS your distribution.
I never spent a penny on marketing my development services.
For years, clients came through recommendations.
Word of mouth is distribution on autopilot.
The network effect multiplies this power.
When you share content, your audience sees it.
When they share it, THEIR audience sees it.
This creates exponential reach that paid marketing can't match.
And you own this traffic.
How do you prefer to approach this?
The correct order:
1. Build [personal] brand (traffic engine)
2. Create offers that convert
3. THEN build the product
You can even pre-sell before creating. Revolutionary concept, right?
Your bank account is the only true indicator of your business.
$0 = no business
Negative = definitely no business
By following distribution-first, money flows BEFORE extensive resource commitment.
On my own journey, I discovered something: creating content consistently is the foundation.
But it shouldn't consume all your time.
That's why I built a system for myself to maintain my authentic voice while accelerating output.
Your future customers are waiting.
____________________
Read the full article: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/the-million-dollar-product-launch?r=1m5hbt
Substack
The Million-Dollar Product Launch Mistake You’re About to Make (And How to Avoid It)
You built the product. Nobody came. This guide reveals the #1 launch mistake founders make – and how to fix it fast.
🔥1
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Read more about Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
🔥1
The Fatal Product-First Approach
Numerous books, training programs, courses, and so on unanimously insist that you need to create a product that people need. You need to make it, give people value, and they will come to you on their own. If your product is viral, it will spread itself. But in reality, it doesn't work that way.
If someone had told me this or if I had read information about this many years ago, I think I would have saved a tremendous amount of money, nerves, years of my life, and probably would have already earned my first million dollars.
Something is off here. And that something is the absence of distribution, absence of marketing, which should go first before the product itself. No matter what product you have, what value it provides, how viral it is, you need to find some way to distribute it.
You need to place it in front of a large number of people so that some of them become interested. Some of those interested would then look more closely, learn some details, and even fewer would become buyers. This is called conversion, which represents a certain average percentage of people who, in principle, saw your offer and agreed to make a purchase and actually made it. Because the best indicator of your business is the bank account.
If it's $0, you have no business. If it's negative, you also have no business - because business is a system of profit extraction. No profit = no business. You won't have profit until you have people seeing, interested in, and buying your product.
This may sound obvious to some now, and that's great. But for me, for some reason, it seemed like such a strange thing at the time. Marketing and distribution always came after the product.
For some reason, I was convinced that to sell something, I needed to have that product. It seems obvious. Because I can't go to a store and buy emptiness in the hope that the supplier will deliver it someday. No. I go in, I see the product. The product is already there. And I can pay money for it.
But the internet gives us slightly different possibilities. And here the logic works a bit differently. Plus, a large number of products or values that we sell via the internet, that modern internet business creates, aren't physical things. It's not a physical product you can touch. The product is usually virtual.
Yes, it continues to represent value, but it doesn't exist in reality. It exists only on computer screens, in memory, and in the form of pixels.
Let's cure the cancer
In MJ DeMarco's book "The Millionaire Fastlane," there's an excellent example of a highly valuable product. Imagine you invent a cure for cancer. A product that represents enormous value, and what marketing would you need for such a product?
A hypothetical example is given. And as soon as the first patient sees the result, how long would it take for all other people to find out about it? Most likely, very little. Information about this product would spread at tremendous speed.
This is an ideal example in a vacuum of how a viral product can be created. If its value is so great that a person who received this value will independently, without any pushing from you, spread information about it.
But let's look at things more pragmatically. You don't have a cure for cancer. You don't have a product that's so viral that you want to tell everyone about it left and right. If you have the skills to create such a product, that's wonderful.
But even in this case, you need to somehow deliver it to at least that first patient who will try it. And you also need to somehow persuade them to do so. Because a huge number of obstacles arise here. They'll need to ask if it's medically proven, if it's been researched scientifically, what side effects there are, if there are any risks, and so on.
Numerous books, training programs, courses, and so on unanimously insist that you need to create a product that people need. You need to make it, give people value, and they will come to you on their own. If your product is viral, it will spread itself. But in reality, it doesn't work that way.
If someone had told me this or if I had read information about this many years ago, I think I would have saved a tremendous amount of money, nerves, years of my life, and probably would have already earned my first million dollars.
Something is off here. And that something is the absence of distribution, absence of marketing, which should go first before the product itself. No matter what product you have, what value it provides, how viral it is, you need to find some way to distribute it.
You need to place it in front of a large number of people so that some of them become interested. Some of those interested would then look more closely, learn some details, and even fewer would become buyers. This is called conversion, which represents a certain average percentage of people who, in principle, saw your offer and agreed to make a purchase and actually made it. Because the best indicator of your business is the bank account.
If it's $0, you have no business. If it's negative, you also have no business - because business is a system of profit extraction. No profit = no business. You won't have profit until you have people seeing, interested in, and buying your product.
This may sound obvious to some now, and that's great. But for me, for some reason, it seemed like such a strange thing at the time. Marketing and distribution always came after the product.
For some reason, I was convinced that to sell something, I needed to have that product. It seems obvious. Because I can't go to a store and buy emptiness in the hope that the supplier will deliver it someday. No. I go in, I see the product. The product is already there. And I can pay money for it.
But the internet gives us slightly different possibilities. And here the logic works a bit differently. Plus, a large number of products or values that we sell via the internet, that modern internet business creates, aren't physical things. It's not a physical product you can touch. The product is usually virtual.
Yes, it continues to represent value, but it doesn't exist in reality. It exists only on computer screens, in memory, and in the form of pixels.
Let's cure the cancer
In MJ DeMarco's book "The Millionaire Fastlane," there's an excellent example of a highly valuable product. Imagine you invent a cure for cancer. A product that represents enormous value, and what marketing would you need for such a product?
A hypothetical example is given. And as soon as the first patient sees the result, how long would it take for all other people to find out about it? Most likely, very little. Information about this product would spread at tremendous speed.
This is an ideal example in a vacuum of how a viral product can be created. If its value is so great that a person who received this value will independently, without any pushing from you, spread information about it.
But let's look at things more pragmatically. You don't have a cure for cancer. You don't have a product that's so viral that you want to tell everyone about it left and right. If you have the skills to create such a product, that's wonderful.
But even in this case, you need to somehow deliver it to at least that first patient who will try it. And you also need to somehow persuade them to do so. Because a huge number of obstacles arise here. They'll need to ask if it's medically proven, if it's been researched scientifically, what side effects there are, if there are any risks, and so on.
🔥1
... Or invent Facebook
So, it's not as simple as it seems. You could be Zuckerberg and create, for example, Facebook or a new social network. But if we look at how Facebook was created, we'll see that its launch didn't happen somewhere in a vacuum, but on a university campus.
That is, it's already a certain area where a huge number of people are present, in front of whom you can present it. Yes, the product has a viral system built in. And it's more interesting to use the product when your friends are there. And the more of them there are, the more interesting the product becomes for you.
Therefore, it's in your interest to invite users there, to invite your friends. Again, if you have a similar kind of viral product, then this note will hardly help you. Go and conquer the world, earn your trillion dollars.
But I assume that we're talking here from the perspective of ordinary people who want to earn a living online at the very least. And also arrange the desired lifestyle for themselves. And in this case, we need distribution.
We need people who will see your product, whatever it may be. Viral, non-viral, digital, or physical. I mean, if you sell it online. If you sell offline, that's a slightly different story. But the principle, by the way, remains exactly the same.
Because the same store where you physically take the product and carry it to your home is located somewhere near your house, it's located somewhere near, for example, a bus stop, where there's high pedestrian traffic, that is, where people already walk and see this store.
And it's more convenient, for example, when returning home from work to stop by the store, buy a product, and then go home. It doesn't take much time, so they're called convenience stores.
But don't lose control of it
We need to do roughly the same thing with any product that relates to you on the internet. That is, we need to place it where a large number of people pass by, which is called traffic.
If you can find such a place for yourself, these are usually some marketplaces, for example, Etsy, Gumroad, or sites that specialize in selling, usually in a certain category of goods and services or several categories, or, for example, it could be Upwork, where you put up your services.
But this is, in general, a site that people visit in order to find these products or services. This is ready-made traffic. Or you somehow find a way to attract this traffic to your product.
The first approach is definitely good, and, of course, you can use it, and people build full-fledged businesses on such a flow. That is, they place their product in places where there's already traffic, and this is an excellent method.
The only disadvantage of this method - and probably the biggest one - is that this traffic isn't controlled by you, and this platform doesn't belong to you. And any day something can go wrong, the platform can close, the business can fold, traffic can leave from there, they can ban you, block your products for one reason or another, and the entire business will be destroyed in an instant.
It's good if by that time you've already accumulated some resources that will allow you to get out of the situation, but in any case, ending up in it is not a pleasant matter.
So, it's not as simple as it seems. You could be Zuckerberg and create, for example, Facebook or a new social network. But if we look at how Facebook was created, we'll see that its launch didn't happen somewhere in a vacuum, but on a university campus.
That is, it's already a certain area where a huge number of people are present, in front of whom you can present it. Yes, the product has a viral system built in. And it's more interesting to use the product when your friends are there. And the more of them there are, the more interesting the product becomes for you.
Therefore, it's in your interest to invite users there, to invite your friends. Again, if you have a similar kind of viral product, then this note will hardly help you. Go and conquer the world, earn your trillion dollars.
But I assume that we're talking here from the perspective of ordinary people who want to earn a living online at the very least. And also arrange the desired lifestyle for themselves. And in this case, we need distribution.
We need people who will see your product, whatever it may be. Viral, non-viral, digital, or physical. I mean, if you sell it online. If you sell offline, that's a slightly different story. But the principle, by the way, remains exactly the same.
Because the same store where you physically take the product and carry it to your home is located somewhere near your house, it's located somewhere near, for example, a bus stop, where there's high pedestrian traffic, that is, where people already walk and see this store.
And it's more convenient, for example, when returning home from work to stop by the store, buy a product, and then go home. It doesn't take much time, so they're called convenience stores.
But don't lose control of it
We need to do roughly the same thing with any product that relates to you on the internet. That is, we need to place it where a large number of people pass by, which is called traffic.
If you can find such a place for yourself, these are usually some marketplaces, for example, Etsy, Gumroad, or sites that specialize in selling, usually in a certain category of goods and services or several categories, or, for example, it could be Upwork, where you put up your services.
But this is, in general, a site that people visit in order to find these products or services. This is ready-made traffic. Or you somehow find a way to attract this traffic to your product.
The first approach is definitely good, and, of course, you can use it, and people build full-fledged businesses on such a flow. That is, they place their product in places where there's already traffic, and this is an excellent method.
The only disadvantage of this method - and probably the biggest one - is that this traffic isn't controlled by you, and this platform doesn't belong to you. And any day something can go wrong, the platform can close, the business can fold, traffic can leave from there, they can ban you, block your products for one reason or another, and the entire business will be destroyed in an instant.
It's good if by that time you've already accumulated some resources that will allow you to get out of the situation, but in any case, ending up in it is not a pleasant matter.
❤1
Systems Analysis 101: The IDEF0 Secret Weapon That Will Transform Your Business Thinking
You’ve mapped out your business workflows, but something still feels off. You have a vague idea of how your processes work, but when you try to optimize or delegate them, things get messy. You end up micromanaging, constantly putting out fires, and feeling stuck in your business instead of scaling it.
This is exactly why 75% of organizations struggle with standardizing and automating their processes, according to recent BPM maturity research. Most entrepreneurs can describe what they do but fail to visualize how everything fits together, who’s responsible for what, and under which conditions tasks should happen.
If you’ve been following along with my previous articles on Systems Thinking and the Black Box Method, you’re already ahead of the curve. You understand how to see the whole system and how to break down processes into inputs and outputs. But now we need to fill in the crucial missing pieces: the who, the how, and the when of your business processes.
Today, I’m sharing the next level of systems analysis – the IDEF0 framework – a powerful yet simple modeling technique that big consulting firms use to transform chaotic businesses into streamlined operations. This is a practical skill that will give you the same analytical superpowers that consultants charge hundreds of thousands of dollars to apply.
The Four-Component Framework That Brings Order to Chaos
By now, you’re familiar with the basic system components we covered previously: elements (the objects or nouns in your system) and functions (the verbs or actions that transform inputs into outputs). You already know how to visualize these as “black boxes” with inputs going in and outputs coming out. (Again, read my previous articles if you have no clue what I’m talking about here, it will set the foundation for this material.)
But if you’ve tried mapping your business this way, you’ve probably noticed that many crucial elements don’t fit neatly into this input-output model. What about the people who perform the tasks? The tools they use? The rules they follow? The triggers that start each process?
This is where IDEF0 comes in, filling these gaps with two additional components that complete the picture: mechanisms and controls.
Let me explain each part of the IDEF0 model:
1. Functions (the black boxes) – These are the activities that transform inputs into outputs, represented as rectangles with a verb phrase describing what happens.
2. Inputs (arrows from the left) – These are the materials or information that get transformed by the function.
3. Outputs (arrows to the right) – These are the results produced by the function, the transformed inputs.
4. Mechanisms (arrows from the bottom) – This is the secret sauce. Mechanisms are the people, tools, or resources that perform the function. They answer the question: “Who or what does this?”
5. Controls (arrows from the top) – These are the rules, constraints, or triggers that govern when and how the function is performed. They answer the question: “Under what conditions does this happen?”
For example, let’s say you create content for your business. One function might be “Edit Video.” The input would be raw footage, and the output would be the finished video. But the mechanism would be the editor (person) and editing software (tool). The control might be your content calendar that triggers the editing process one week before publication.
You’ve mapped out your business workflows, but something still feels off. You have a vague idea of how your processes work, but when you try to optimize or delegate them, things get messy. You end up micromanaging, constantly putting out fires, and feeling stuck in your business instead of scaling it.
This is exactly why 75% of organizations struggle with standardizing and automating their processes, according to recent BPM maturity research. Most entrepreneurs can describe what they do but fail to visualize how everything fits together, who’s responsible for what, and under which conditions tasks should happen.
If you’ve been following along with my previous articles on Systems Thinking and the Black Box Method, you’re already ahead of the curve. You understand how to see the whole system and how to break down processes into inputs and outputs. But now we need to fill in the crucial missing pieces: the who, the how, and the when of your business processes.
Today, I’m sharing the next level of systems analysis – the IDEF0 framework – a powerful yet simple modeling technique that big consulting firms use to transform chaotic businesses into streamlined operations. This is a practical skill that will give you the same analytical superpowers that consultants charge hundreds of thousands of dollars to apply.
The Four-Component Framework That Brings Order to Chaos
By now, you’re familiar with the basic system components we covered previously: elements (the objects or nouns in your system) and functions (the verbs or actions that transform inputs into outputs). You already know how to visualize these as “black boxes” with inputs going in and outputs coming out. (Again, read my previous articles if you have no clue what I’m talking about here, it will set the foundation for this material.)
But if you’ve tried mapping your business this way, you’ve probably noticed that many crucial elements don’t fit neatly into this input-output model. What about the people who perform the tasks? The tools they use? The rules they follow? The triggers that start each process?
This is where IDEF0 comes in, filling these gaps with two additional components that complete the picture: mechanisms and controls.
Let me explain each part of the IDEF0 model:
1. Functions (the black boxes) – These are the activities that transform inputs into outputs, represented as rectangles with a verb phrase describing what happens.
2. Inputs (arrows from the left) – These are the materials or information that get transformed by the function.
3. Outputs (arrows to the right) – These are the results produced by the function, the transformed inputs.
4. Mechanisms (arrows from the bottom) – This is the secret sauce. Mechanisms are the people, tools, or resources that perform the function. They answer the question: “Who or what does this?”
5. Controls (arrows from the top) – These are the rules, constraints, or triggers that govern when and how the function is performed. They answer the question: “Under what conditions does this happen?”
For example, let’s say you create content for your business. One function might be “Edit Video.” The input would be raw footage, and the output would be the finished video. But the mechanism would be the editor (person) and editing software (tool). The control might be your content calendar that triggers the editing process one week before publication.
🔥1
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Read more about Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
🔥2
75% of businesses can't standardize processes.
They describe WHAT they do but can't visualize HOW it all connects.
Here's a secret framework that consultants charge $100k+ to apply:
Do you want to transform a chaotic process into a streamlined machine?
Use IDEF0 modeling.
Most entrepreneurs see business as inputs → outputs, but miss the two critical components that actually move the needle.
You're trapped in your business because your processes depend on you making decisions constantly.
When you map your workflow using IDEF0, you can realize that you labeled yourself as the mechanism for nearly every function!
No wonder I felt overwhelmed.
The Black Box model shows part of your system:
- Inputs (what goes in)
- Functions (what happens)
- Outputs (what comes out)
But it misses who does the work and under what conditions it happens.
IDEF0 adds two components:
1. Mechanisms (arrows from bottom) = who/what performs each function
2. Controls (arrows from top) = rules/triggers that govern when and how
Visualizing these unlocks delegation and automation.
Seems like something so simple couldn't be that powerful, right?
Because it separates you from your business.
When you label a role ("Editor") instead of a person ("Me"), you suddenly see where you can delegate.
It's like stepping outside the matrix.
Red flags to spot in your process maps:
- Controls labeled "my decision" (should be clear rules)
- Your name as mechanism for everything (delegation needed)
- Missing controls (undefined triggers)
- Bottlenecks (where outputs feed multiple functions)
How to create your first IDEF0 model:
1. Choose a chaotic process
2. List all objects and functions
3. Draw function boxes
4. Connect with arrows
5. Identify mechanisms (who/what)
6. Define controls (rules/triggers)
7. Analyze for opportunities
Connect your processes together:
Make the output of one function become the control for the next.
This creates a flow where each step's completion triggers the next - without you manually intervening.
That's a working system.
Organizations using process modeling increase project success by 70% and save 10%+ on costs.
This is how you build a business that works for you, not the other way around.
Start small - map one process that's currently time-consuming.
You'll be amazed what becomes obvious once you see the whole system.
Grab a pen. Map you first process.
__________________________________
For more detailed explanation read the article: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/systems-analysis-101-the-idef0-secret?r=1m5hbt
They describe WHAT they do but can't visualize HOW it all connects.
Here's a secret framework that consultants charge $100k+ to apply:
Do you want to transform a chaotic process into a streamlined machine?
Use IDEF0 modeling.
Most entrepreneurs see business as inputs → outputs, but miss the two critical components that actually move the needle.
You're trapped in your business because your processes depend on you making decisions constantly.
When you map your workflow using IDEF0, you can realize that you labeled yourself as the mechanism for nearly every function!
No wonder I felt overwhelmed.
The Black Box model shows part of your system:
- Inputs (what goes in)
- Functions (what happens)
- Outputs (what comes out)
But it misses who does the work and under what conditions it happens.
IDEF0 adds two components:
1. Mechanisms (arrows from bottom) = who/what performs each function
2. Controls (arrows from top) = rules/triggers that govern when and how
Visualizing these unlocks delegation and automation.
Seems like something so simple couldn't be that powerful, right?
Because it separates you from your business.
When you label a role ("Editor") instead of a person ("Me"), you suddenly see where you can delegate.
It's like stepping outside the matrix.
Red flags to spot in your process maps:
- Controls labeled "my decision" (should be clear rules)
- Your name as mechanism for everything (delegation needed)
- Missing controls (undefined triggers)
- Bottlenecks (where outputs feed multiple functions)
How to create your first IDEF0 model:
1. Choose a chaotic process
2. List all objects and functions
3. Draw function boxes
4. Connect with arrows
5. Identify mechanisms (who/what)
6. Define controls (rules/triggers)
7. Analyze for opportunities
Connect your processes together:
Make the output of one function become the control for the next.
This creates a flow where each step's completion triggers the next - without you manually intervening.
That's a working system.
Organizations using process modeling increase project success by 70% and save 10%+ on costs.
This is how you build a business that works for you, not the other way around.
Start small - map one process that's currently time-consuming.
You'll be amazed what becomes obvious once you see the whole system.
Grab a pen. Map you first process.
__________________________________
For more detailed explanation read the article: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/systems-analysis-101-the-idef0-secret?r=1m5hbt
Substack
Systems Analysis 101: The IDEF0 Secret Weapon That Will Transform Your Business Thinking
Learn how IDEF0 process mapping helps you spot gaps, automate tasks, and delegate effectively to scale your business.
From Visualization to Automation: Your Path to Freedom
The power of IDEF0 modeling goes far beyond making pretty diagrams. It creates a shared understanding of how your business actually works – not how you think it works.
When you look at your completed model, you’ll see your business in a new light. You’ll identify:
- Functions that could be delegated to team members or contractors
- Manual controls that could be replaced with automated triggers
- Mechanisms (people) that are overloaded with too many responsibilities
- Missing or unclear controls that cause confusion and delays
This visualization is the first step toward true business freedom. As systems theorist Russell Ackoff noted,
IDEF0 helps ensure you’re optimizing the right processes in the right ways.
I’ve used this exact technique to transform a lot of processes at my previous jobs. By identifying each function, mechanism, and control, I could see exactly where was the bottlenecks and the opportunities to improve.
If you’ve been following my systems thinking series, you now have a complete toolkit for analyzing and optimizing any process in your business or life:
1. From “The Power of Systems Thinking,” you learned to see the whole instead of just the parts.
2. From “The Black Box Method,” you mastered the input-output model of process definition.
3. And now, with IDEF0, you can map the complete system, including who does what and under what conditions.
The consulting firms of the world charge hundreds of thousands for this kind of analysis, but you now have the framework to do it yourself. This is a practical skill that will transform your business thinking and execution.
Start small. Pick one process that’s currently chaotic or time-consuming. Map it out using the steps above. Then look for opportunities to delegate, automate, or eliminate unnecessary steps. You’ll be amazed at what becomes obvious once you see the whole system laid out in front of you.
Remember, as Peter Drucker wisely said,
IDEF0 helps you not only do things right but ensure you’re doing the right things.
Your freedom comes from building systems that work for you. This framework is your secret weapon for creating those systems.
Now grab that pen and paper, and start mapping.
The power of IDEF0 modeling goes far beyond making pretty diagrams. It creates a shared understanding of how your business actually works – not how you think it works.
When you look at your completed model, you’ll see your business in a new light. You’ll identify:
- Functions that could be delegated to team members or contractors
- Manual controls that could be replaced with automated triggers
- Mechanisms (people) that are overloaded with too many responsibilities
- Missing or unclear controls that cause confusion and delays
This visualization is the first step toward true business freedom. As systems theorist Russell Ackoff noted,
“The righter we do the wrong thing, the wronger we become.”
IDEF0 helps ensure you’re optimizing the right processes in the right ways.
I’ve used this exact technique to transform a lot of processes at my previous jobs. By identifying each function, mechanism, and control, I could see exactly where was the bottlenecks and the opportunities to improve.
If you’ve been following my systems thinking series, you now have a complete toolkit for analyzing and optimizing any process in your business or life:
1. From “The Power of Systems Thinking,” you learned to see the whole instead of just the parts.
2. From “The Black Box Method,” you mastered the input-output model of process definition.
3. And now, with IDEF0, you can map the complete system, including who does what and under what conditions.
The consulting firms of the world charge hundreds of thousands for this kind of analysis, but you now have the framework to do it yourself. This is a practical skill that will transform your business thinking and execution.
Start small. Pick one process that’s currently chaotic or time-consuming. Map it out using the steps above. Then look for opportunities to delegate, automate, or eliminate unnecessary steps. You’ll be amazed at what becomes obvious once you see the whole system laid out in front of you.
Remember, as Peter Drucker wisely said,
“There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.”
IDEF0 helps you not only do things right but ensure you’re doing the right things.
Your freedom comes from building systems that work for you. This framework is your secret weapon for creating those systems.
Now grab that pen and paper, and start mapping.
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Read more about Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
Micro-Systems: How Daily Habits Create More Flexibility, Not Less
Throughout my life, for as long as I can remember (except maybe very early childhood), I've had various habits. Over time, I've become more conscious about them, and now I build a set of habits that align with my goals, with what I want to achieve, and so they help me on my journey.
When I talk to people, they tell me they can't start a habit, or they can't quit one, or do something else. This always surprises me a bit because my method of creating habits, if I need something, doesn't cause much discomfort. I don't have a pattern of falling off track or giving up on a new habit. No, it's all fairly easy.
Honestly, I don't know what the secret is, but I'll try to figure it out here. I call these things micro-systems, and I've surrounded my life with them from practically every angle. They give me flexibility in my actions while keeping me on track. And this doesn't happen because I have to force myself to do something with willpower – no, it all happens automatically and naturally.
This isn't just my personal experience. Research from Duke University found that about 45% of our daily actions are habitual – performed in consistent contexts without active decision-making. In other words, nearly half of what we "decide" to do each day isn't really decided at all – it's governed by memory and environmental cues. These small routines ("micro-systems") can powerfully steer our lives for better or worse.
My Very First Micro-System
Let me tell you specifically what I'm talking about. In childhood, I saw my father do morning exercises every day. I asked him why he did it, and he told me that, first, it's an excellent way to wake up, physical activity, and second, it allows him to stay in shape.
I think this served as an example for me that stuck with me for life, and I later started applying it myself. I didn't start doing it right away, but looking back, I realize how much it influenced me because since I started exercising at 15, I adopted this habit from him and also began doing morning exercises, and for more than two decades since then, I've continued doing it every day.
As a rational person, my brain needs a logical explanation to justify an action I'm taking. I have a huge number of logical chains that explain what I do in my head.
And naturally, justifying daily exercise is quite easy for me. There are many positive aspects; I don't think there's a need to discuss them here. But basically, once a logical chain or pattern of explanation settles in my head about why I need to do something, the habit stops being questioned. I can just do it without any hesitation, doubt, or obstacles.
In other words, I don't need to explain it to myself each time; I just do it automatically. First thing, after I go to the bathroom in the morning, I do my exercises. And this habit lives with me regardless of where I am.
Throughout my life, for as long as I can remember (except maybe very early childhood), I've had various habits. Over time, I've become more conscious about them, and now I build a set of habits that align with my goals, with what I want to achieve, and so they help me on my journey.
When I talk to people, they tell me they can't start a habit, or they can't quit one, or do something else. This always surprises me a bit because my method of creating habits, if I need something, doesn't cause much discomfort. I don't have a pattern of falling off track or giving up on a new habit. No, it's all fairly easy.
Honestly, I don't know what the secret is, but I'll try to figure it out here. I call these things micro-systems, and I've surrounded my life with them from practically every angle. They give me flexibility in my actions while keeping me on track. And this doesn't happen because I have to force myself to do something with willpower – no, it all happens automatically and naturally.
This isn't just my personal experience. Research from Duke University found that about 45% of our daily actions are habitual – performed in consistent contexts without active decision-making. In other words, nearly half of what we "decide" to do each day isn't really decided at all – it's governed by memory and environmental cues. These small routines ("micro-systems") can powerfully steer our lives for better or worse.
My Very First Micro-System
Let me tell you specifically what I'm talking about. In childhood, I saw my father do morning exercises every day. I asked him why he did it, and he told me that, first, it's an excellent way to wake up, physical activity, and second, it allows him to stay in shape.
I think this served as an example for me that stuck with me for life, and I later started applying it myself. I didn't start doing it right away, but looking back, I realize how much it influenced me because since I started exercising at 15, I adopted this habit from him and also began doing morning exercises, and for more than two decades since then, I've continued doing it every day.
As a rational person, my brain needs a logical explanation to justify an action I'm taking. I have a huge number of logical chains that explain what I do in my head.
And naturally, justifying daily exercise is quite easy for me. There are many positive aspects; I don't think there's a need to discuss them here. But basically, once a logical chain or pattern of explanation settles in my head about why I need to do something, the habit stops being questioned. I can just do it without any hesitation, doubt, or obstacles.
In other words, I don't need to explain it to myself each time; I just do it automatically. First thing, after I go to the bathroom in the morning, I do my exercises. And this habit lives with me regardless of where I am.
45% of what you "decide" to do each day isn't decided at all.
It's automatic. Habitual. On autopilot.
Most digital nomads struggle with consistency, but micro-systems changed everything for me:
For 20+ years, I've done morning exercises every single day.
Not because I force myself with willpower.
But because I've created a micro-system that works regardless of where I am - Singapore rooftop, Bali guesthouse, or Amsterdam hotel.
Seemingly, daily habits should restrict freedom.
In fact, they create it.
When habits become automatic, they free your mental energy for things that actually matter.
The less you think about routine tasks, the more creativity you have for meaningful work.
Why most digital nomads struggle with consistency:
- They believe changing locations means changing routines.
- They overcomplicate simple habits with unnecessary tools.
- They wait for "perfect timing" (Monday, new month, New Year).
- They rely on motivation instead of systems.
Your brain loves habits.
The neural pathway: cue → routine → reward
After enough repetitions, your brain "chunks" behaviors into automatic sequences to save energy.
This is why brushing teeth requires zero willpower, but new habits feel like a struggle at first.
I don't just exercise daily. I clean with a system too.
Each dish has its place on the drying rack.
Each cleaning task follows an algorithm.
Each action happens without decision fatigue.
While my hands work, my mind can absorb podcasts or generate ideas.
Most people think creating habits takes 21 days of suffering.
I started walking 10,000 steps daily with zero preparation.
No special shoes.
No fancy tracker.
No counting down days.
Just a clear "why" and immediate action.
I simplified everything:
I need exercise that straightens my back from computer work.
I love exploring new places on foot.
I have two legs. That's all I need.
The less requirements you attach to a habit, the more sustainable it becomes.
Digital nomads often try to replicate their entire home setup everywhere.
It's better to create location-independent micro-systems.
Morning routine takes 15 minutes?
Walking habit needs just sandals?
Perfect.
These follow you anywhere.
Want to start? Pick ONE micro-system:
1. Define it in one sentence
2. Make it doable anywhere
3. Create a logical (if you rational type) or emotional (if you emotional type) "why" that convinces your brain
4. Start TODAY (not Monday)
5. Remove all unnecessary barriers
The universal law is tendency toward entropy.
Your focus and productivity will scatter without systems.
But rigid routines kill the freedom you seek as a nomad.
Micro-systems are the middle path - the framework that actually sets you free.
___________________________
Dive deeper into the topic: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/micro-systems-how-daily-habits-create?r=1m5hbt
It's automatic. Habitual. On autopilot.
Most digital nomads struggle with consistency, but micro-systems changed everything for me:
For 20+ years, I've done morning exercises every single day.
Not because I force myself with willpower.
But because I've created a micro-system that works regardless of where I am - Singapore rooftop, Bali guesthouse, or Amsterdam hotel.
Seemingly, daily habits should restrict freedom.
In fact, they create it.
When habits become automatic, they free your mental energy for things that actually matter.
The less you think about routine tasks, the more creativity you have for meaningful work.
Why most digital nomads struggle with consistency:
- They believe changing locations means changing routines.
- They overcomplicate simple habits with unnecessary tools.
- They wait for "perfect timing" (Monday, new month, New Year).
- They rely on motivation instead of systems.
Your brain loves habits.
The neural pathway: cue → routine → reward
After enough repetitions, your brain "chunks" behaviors into automatic sequences to save energy.
This is why brushing teeth requires zero willpower, but new habits feel like a struggle at first.
I don't just exercise daily. I clean with a system too.
Each dish has its place on the drying rack.
Each cleaning task follows an algorithm.
Each action happens without decision fatigue.
While my hands work, my mind can absorb podcasts or generate ideas.
Most people think creating habits takes 21 days of suffering.
I started walking 10,000 steps daily with zero preparation.
No special shoes.
No fancy tracker.
No counting down days.
Just a clear "why" and immediate action.
I simplified everything:
I need exercise that straightens my back from computer work.
I love exploring new places on foot.
I have two legs. That's all I need.
The less requirements you attach to a habit, the more sustainable it becomes.
Digital nomads often try to replicate their entire home setup everywhere.
It's better to create location-independent micro-systems.
Morning routine takes 15 minutes?
Walking habit needs just sandals?
Perfect.
These follow you anywhere.
Want to start? Pick ONE micro-system:
1. Define it in one sentence
2. Make it doable anywhere
3. Create a logical (if you rational type) or emotional (if you emotional type) "why" that convinces your brain
4. Start TODAY (not Monday)
5. Remove all unnecessary barriers
The universal law is tendency toward entropy.
Your focus and productivity will scatter without systems.
But rigid routines kill the freedom you seek as a nomad.
Micro-systems are the middle path - the framework that actually sets you free.
___________________________
Dive deeper into the topic: https://anticodeguy.substack.com/p/micro-systems-how-daily-habits-create?r=1m5hbt
Substack
Micro-Systems: How Daily Habits Create More Flexibility, Not Less [Part 1]
Discover how micro-systems turn small daily habits into a source of freedom, not restriction, and keep you consistent anywhere.
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Read more about Beyond Niching Down: The Multi-Interest Personal Brand Business
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
Watch more videos like that on my YouTube @anticodeguy
Why Most Digital Nomads Struggle with Consistency (And How Micro-Systems Fix This)
Because as a digital nomad, I travel and change my living location quite often compared to a settled person. And this doesn't hinder me. Rather, it's the opposite – I've created a set of exercises that are, first, universal, and second, I can do them anywhere, I don't need any equipment or anything else, I literally just need my body. Ok, and a hard floor.
So wherever I am, whether in Singapore, living on the last of my saved money on the roof of a condo where I rented a room with Asian students, or in a guesthouse in Bali where a room cost $300 a month, or in a house in Thailand, or in a hotel in Amsterdam – I can do these exercises, it absolutely makes no difference.
And most importantly, it allows me to stay on this line, understanding that I'm at least monitoring myself to stay in shape, paying attention to it every day, every morning, I have this wake-up methodology.
And this is one of the morning rituals that disciplines – because if you do one thing every day, regardless of what's happening in your life, it allows you to put yourself back on track, back on the path you're following.
Because it's something that remains unchanged, it means that even if you've gone off track somewhere, you continue going in the right direction. At minimum, that's the feeling this approach gives.
This is more powerful than most people realize. Behavioral research emphasizes that much of our behavior is driven by habit rather than conscious decision. The classic habit loop of cue, routine, reward explains why micro-habits are so effective. Each repetition strengthens the association between the cue and the behavior in our neural pathways. For example, the sight of your workout clothes laid out (cue) leads to exercising (routine) because you anticipate feeling energized (reward).
When behaviors are repeated, the brain "chunks" them into automatic sequences to save energy – this is the essence of automaticity. Waking up and immediately doing 5 minutes of yoga can become as reflexive as brushing your teeth. The benefit is that automatic habits consume far less cognitive bandwidth and willpower than actions that must be consciously willed each time.
Because as a digital nomad, I travel and change my living location quite often compared to a settled person. And this doesn't hinder me. Rather, it's the opposite – I've created a set of exercises that are, first, universal, and second, I can do them anywhere, I don't need any equipment or anything else, I literally just need my body. Ok, and a hard floor.
So wherever I am, whether in Singapore, living on the last of my saved money on the roof of a condo where I rented a room with Asian students, or in a guesthouse in Bali where a room cost $300 a month, or in a house in Thailand, or in a hotel in Amsterdam – I can do these exercises, it absolutely makes no difference.
And most importantly, it allows me to stay on this line, understanding that I'm at least monitoring myself to stay in shape, paying attention to it every day, every morning, I have this wake-up methodology.
And this is one of the morning rituals that disciplines – because if you do one thing every day, regardless of what's happening in your life, it allows you to put yourself back on track, back on the path you're following.
Because it's something that remains unchanged, it means that even if you've gone off track somewhere, you continue going in the right direction. At minimum, that's the feeling this approach gives.
This is more powerful than most people realize. Behavioral research emphasizes that much of our behavior is driven by habit rather than conscious decision. The classic habit loop of cue, routine, reward explains why micro-habits are so effective. Each repetition strengthens the association between the cue and the behavior in our neural pathways. For example, the sight of your workout clothes laid out (cue) leads to exercising (routine) because you anticipate feeling energized (reward).
When behaviors are repeated, the brain "chunks" them into automatic sequences to save energy – this is the essence of automaticity. Waking up and immediately doing 5 minutes of yoga can become as reflexive as brushing your teeth. The benefit is that automatic habits consume far less cognitive bandwidth and willpower than actions that must be consciously willed each time.
It's Cleaning Time!
Probably the second similar reason I saw in childhood was regular cleaning. Every Saturday, my mom cleaned our house, and I helped her. That is, whatever I could do there, I don't remember, vacuuming, dusting. The specifics aren't important, but it was my responsibility. To clean and tidy up.
Because, as we know, the universal law of the universe is the tendency toward entropy. And this applies to your living space as well. If you don't look after it for a long time, it will be subject to the tendency toward chaos. Consequently, all things start to be scattered, dust and dirt accumulate. And if you don't make efforts to clean and clear all this out, over time it turns into a dirty mess that's unpleasant to be in.
I wrote a separate article on how to organize your mind - "The Hidden Mental System Behind a Successful Life", please read it. And an important part here is precisely organizing the space around you. Which is what such regular cleaning allows.
This formed another habit for me. I don't always clean now, for example. I can, if I don't have time for it but have money, pay a cleaner who will do it all for me. But I prefer to maintain order by distributing it into micro-systems.
For example, right after eating, I wash the dishes, thus keeping things tidy. And when I do this, I do it according to a certain system. For example, I have specific places for each item on the drying rack. For each procedure, there's a specific algorithm of actions.
For instance, which items I wash first, which I wash last. They probably don't have any special meaning in terms of logic or some impact on the result. But essentially, it doesn't matter, because for me, it's just a system that allows me to perform all these tasks without thinking.
I don't have to think about them and somehow make decisions while performing these actions, what should I do. There's a certain algorithm that I follow unquestionably, and there's no variability here. It will be performed the same way each time, and each time it will bring the same result.
What does this give me? Besides the fact that I don't have to worry about what I need to do and how I need to do it, my mental energy isn't spent on this. All of this is performed on complete autopilot, and it means I can, for example, spice it up with something useful.
Like listening to a podcast, which I'm listening to now, and getting some new information I want. These are basic and obvious examples that give an understanding of how you can arrange your habits.
Probably the second similar reason I saw in childhood was regular cleaning. Every Saturday, my mom cleaned our house, and I helped her. That is, whatever I could do there, I don't remember, vacuuming, dusting. The specifics aren't important, but it was my responsibility. To clean and tidy up.
Because, as we know, the universal law of the universe is the tendency toward entropy. And this applies to your living space as well. If you don't look after it for a long time, it will be subject to the tendency toward chaos. Consequently, all things start to be scattered, dust and dirt accumulate. And if you don't make efforts to clean and clear all this out, over time it turns into a dirty mess that's unpleasant to be in.
I wrote a separate article on how to organize your mind - "The Hidden Mental System Behind a Successful Life", please read it. And an important part here is precisely organizing the space around you. Which is what such regular cleaning allows.
This formed another habit for me. I don't always clean now, for example. I can, if I don't have time for it but have money, pay a cleaner who will do it all for me. But I prefer to maintain order by distributing it into micro-systems.
For example, right after eating, I wash the dishes, thus keeping things tidy. And when I do this, I do it according to a certain system. For example, I have specific places for each item on the drying rack. For each procedure, there's a specific algorithm of actions.
For instance, which items I wash first, which I wash last. They probably don't have any special meaning in terms of logic or some impact on the result. But essentially, it doesn't matter, because for me, it's just a system that allows me to perform all these tasks without thinking.
I don't have to think about them and somehow make decisions while performing these actions, what should I do. There's a certain algorithm that I follow unquestionably, and there's no variability here. It will be performed the same way each time, and each time it will bring the same result.
What does this give me? Besides the fact that I don't have to worry about what I need to do and how I need to do it, my mental energy isn't spent on this. All of this is performed on complete autopilot, and it means I can, for example, spice it up with something useful.
Like listening to a podcast, which I'm listening to now, and getting some new information I want. These are basic and obvious examples that give an understanding of how you can arrange your habits.
Anticodeguy
The Mental Clarity System That Changes Everything
Feeling foggy? Here’s the system that clears it — and keeps it clear.
Micro-Systems: The 5 Nails You Need To Nail to Create Micro-Systems That Follow You Anywhere
Nail 1: Identify High-Impact Areas for Automation
So, how to apply this in practice? Try to develop some micro-system that you will follow blindly and automatically.
Naturally, there should be the stage of choosing the habit itself, that is, just think about what you would like to do, what will improve your life and start bringing it in order.
So, the first step in creating micro-systems is identifying which areas of your life would benefit most from automation. For digital nomads, this typically includes physical routines (exercise, sleep), work startup sequences, environmental organization, and relationship maintenance.
Look for areas where you experience the most friction or where inconsistency causes the biggest problems. These are prime candidates for micro-systems. As a digital nomad, consistency becomes even more crucial because your environment is constantly changing.
Remember that your micro-systems should be location-independent by design. They need to function whether you’re in a luxury condo in Singapore or a budget guesthouse in Bali. The goal is to create habits that travel with you rather than being tied to specific places or equipment.
Nail 2: Logical Validation and Self-Justification
Then, determine how self-motivation happens for you.
For me, for example, it’s a logical explanation, because I think rationally. That’s how my brain works; if I don’t explain to myself logically why I need this, it won’t happen. Perhaps you, for example, think more visually, and you need to draw some picture, maybe a vision board that will help you justify the need to make this habit. Do it.
For me, the logical justification of a habit is critical. If my rational brain can’t understand the purpose and benefit, the habit won’t stick.
Take some time to articulate exactly why a particular habit matters to you. Write it down. Make it personal and meaningful. For example, with my daily walking habit, I recognized that:
— It helps counterbalance the hours I spend sitting at my computer
— It prevents back problems by strengthening my spine and posture
— It gives me time to think and process ideas, and create content (I dictated this article during my walking session)
— It allows me to explore and connect with new places
Once your logical brain is convinced, the habit faces much less internal resistance. You’ve essentially created a self-persuasion mechanism that makes compliance feel natural rather than forced.
This also builds discipline, because once you learn to do this automatically, performing other tasks that you need to do with willpower becomes roughly just as not particularly costly. That is, you don’t need to use willpower.
I’m not saying I’ve completely gotten rid of this, but I have no problems with starting to work on something if I already have a developed mechanism or algorithm for how I do it. That is, for example, I sit down at the computer, open certain programs, and immediately start working.
There’s again a certain algorithm of actions, what I do first, for example, since I record these notes during walks, add material here, the first thing I do is save these notes to the computer, transcribe them, and then work with the text.
Save it in the right format in my notes system. Then look at my post schedule and so on; in general, this is also a micro-system within the work system that allows me to do these tasks on complete autopilot without any distractions and without thinking about what I need to do at the next stage. No, all this happens almost automatically.
If you’re a more emotional person than rational, then maybe you need to create some emotional attachment to justify a reason why you need this particular micro-system in your life. Or maybe some visualization could work as well. That’s a black box for me, so I leave this part for you to handle.
Nail 1: Identify High-Impact Areas for Automation
So, how to apply this in practice? Try to develop some micro-system that you will follow blindly and automatically.
Naturally, there should be the stage of choosing the habit itself, that is, just think about what you would like to do, what will improve your life and start bringing it in order.
So, the first step in creating micro-systems is identifying which areas of your life would benefit most from automation. For digital nomads, this typically includes physical routines (exercise, sleep), work startup sequences, environmental organization, and relationship maintenance.
Look for areas where you experience the most friction or where inconsistency causes the biggest problems. These are prime candidates for micro-systems. As a digital nomad, consistency becomes even more crucial because your environment is constantly changing.
Remember that your micro-systems should be location-independent by design. They need to function whether you’re in a luxury condo in Singapore or a budget guesthouse in Bali. The goal is to create habits that travel with you rather than being tied to specific places or equipment.
Nail 2: Logical Validation and Self-Justification
Then, determine how self-motivation happens for you.
For me, for example, it’s a logical explanation, because I think rationally. That’s how my brain works; if I don’t explain to myself logically why I need this, it won’t happen. Perhaps you, for example, think more visually, and you need to draw some picture, maybe a vision board that will help you justify the need to make this habit. Do it.
For me, the logical justification of a habit is critical. If my rational brain can’t understand the purpose and benefit, the habit won’t stick.
Take some time to articulate exactly why a particular habit matters to you. Write it down. Make it personal and meaningful. For example, with my daily walking habit, I recognized that:
— It helps counterbalance the hours I spend sitting at my computer
— It prevents back problems by strengthening my spine and posture
— It gives me time to think and process ideas, and create content (I dictated this article during my walking session)
— It allows me to explore and connect with new places
Once your logical brain is convinced, the habit faces much less internal resistance. You’ve essentially created a self-persuasion mechanism that makes compliance feel natural rather than forced.
This also builds discipline, because once you learn to do this automatically, performing other tasks that you need to do with willpower becomes roughly just as not particularly costly. That is, you don’t need to use willpower.
I’m not saying I’ve completely gotten rid of this, but I have no problems with starting to work on something if I already have a developed mechanism or algorithm for how I do it. That is, for example, I sit down at the computer, open certain programs, and immediately start working.
There’s again a certain algorithm of actions, what I do first, for example, since I record these notes during walks, add material here, the first thing I do is save these notes to the computer, transcribe them, and then work with the text.
Save it in the right format in my notes system. Then look at my post schedule and so on; in general, this is also a micro-system within the work system that allows me to do these tasks on complete autopilot without any distractions and without thinking about what I need to do at the next stage. No, all this happens almost automatically.
If you’re a more emotional person than rational, then maybe you need to create some emotional attachment to justify a reason why you need this particular micro-system in your life. Or maybe some visualization could work as well. That’s a black box for me, so I leave this part for you to handle.