Accessible text version of Day 4 · Your Perspective Is Your Superpower. View the rich illustrated version →

Part 1: Your Perspective Is Your Superpower — Concept

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You've spent years thinking your experience was just… your experience. But what if the very thing that feels ordinary to you looks like genius to someone else?

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Most people chase credentials and certifications, trying to look like experts. Meanwhile, they ignore the one thing nobody else on earth can replicate — the specific way they see the world.

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Here's what nobody tells you: your perspective isn't one thing — it's a combination. Your experiences, your instincts, and your hard-won insight braided together into something no algorithm or competitor can copy.

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Think of it like a fingerprint. Millions of people have marketing skills. Thousands know your industry. But only one person lived your exact sequence of failures, breakthroughs, and observations — and that sequence is what makes your judgment valuable.

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Marcus spent two years trying to teach social media strategy like everyone else online. Then he stopped hiding the part where he'd failed running his family's restaurant — and started advising restaurant owners on what he wished someone had told him. His waitlist filled in six weeks.

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Your perspective already exists. You don't need to build it — you need to see it clearly. In Part 2, you'll practice mapping the unique combination of experiences, instincts, and insights that only you carry. See you there.

Part 2: Your Perspective Is Your Superpower — Practice

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Your perspective — that specific blend of what you've lived, what you notice, and what you know in your bones — is the thing nobody else can replicate. So let's put it on paper.

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Most people try to figure out what makes them special by staring at a list of skills. But skills are common — thousands of people share yours. That's not where the gold is.

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The gold is in the intersection — where your experiences collide with your instincts and produce a way of seeing that belongs only to you. Today's exercise maps that intersection.

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It's called the Perspective Map. Draw three columns: 'What I've Lived,' 'What I Always Notice,' and 'What I Know Before I'm Told.' Fill each with five honest answers. Then look for the surprising connections between them.

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Maria tried it and wrote 'grew up translating for my parents' under Lived, 'I always notice when someone feels left out' under Notice, and 'I know how to make complex things simple' under Know. She stared at those three lines and realized she'd just described her dream business.

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Your Perspective Map is waiting. Fifteen honest answers, five minutes of looking for connections — and you'll start to see the shape of something only you can build.