Tech billionaires and their outdated iPhones


Hi Reader,

We're wishing you a Rad Weekend and welcome to our new subscribers from my recent talk at USC's Marshall School of Business. I just received my new iPhone 13 Pro and then learned that Peter Thiel still uses an iPhone 8. (What does that tell us about Shiny New Toys?)

I'm also excited to announce our (free) RadReferrals Program which enables you to collect RadRewards for sharing the newsletter with your friends, colleagues (and frenemies).

It's simple (and there's something in it for you); all you have to do is share your RadReferral Link: [RH_REFLINK GOES HERE]

After referring 2 friends, you'll receive your first RadReward, my personal Weekly Review Cheatsheet (a fail-safe way to add a $10K activity into your routine).

We'll be rolling out a longer list of rewards and tiers. Stay tuned, fam.


Tech billionaires and their outdated iPhones


Supply chain issues be damned. After what seemed like an endless wait, it finally arrived.

My sleek new iPhone 13 Pro.

Sexy black Graphite.

3 Cameras.

4K video.

Ridiculous battery life.

Everything necessary to take RadReads to the next level, amirite?

The warm glow of this Shiny New Toy had yet to wear off when I stumbled upon this tweet from Noah Kagan:

twitter profile avatar
Noah Kagan
Twitter Logo
Twitter Logo
@noahkagan
November 8th 2021
131
Retweets
1,788
Likes

It turns out that my office is a graveyard of Shiny New Toys.

Shiny New Toys that never delivered on their life-changing promises.

There are Moleskines, iPads, fitness trackers, supplements, camera lenses, foam rollers and fancy whiteboards.

Would things be the same for my new iPhone 13 Pro?


Here are this week's top reads:

// one

The nothingness of money

6 minutes | More To That

Imagine being an alien and realizing the impact of a green rectangular piece of paper. Wars, environmental damage, broken relationships only scratch the surface of how money permeates our everyday activities. This article explores another frightening tension: Money is a required pursuit for life, but a pointless pursuit upon death. (Pairs well with last week's most-read post on the marginal utility of a dollar.)

Read the post

// two

How to create psychological safety for high-performing teams

5 minutes | Harvard Business Review

While some Boomers may be rolling their eyes at the concept of psychological safety at work, it is the centerpiece of how we run our growing RadReads business. When our colleagues feel safe to make mistakes, speak their minds, and be creative, our business thrives. Full stop. How can you increase this feeling on your own teams? Embrace conflict, speak human-to-human and ask for feedback.

Read the article

// three

I’m a life coach, you’re a life coach: the rise of an unregulated industry

15 minutes | The Guardian

One of the best ways to fast-track your personal development is to get a coach. There's just not enough time to figure everything out on your own and coaches are excellent reflection/accountability partners. But whether you're coaching or looking to be coached, this article is a reminder that with great power, comes great responsibility.

Read the article

// four

Fix burnout—without blowing up your life

5 minutes | The Wall Street Journal

Burnout is abuzz. I'm burnt out, your colleague's burnt out. Heck, your boss is probably burnt out. But do we have to quit our jobs to combat burnout? No, use these tools instead: take a personal inventory, have a plan of attack, adjust your goals and expectations, think "we" instead of "me," and learn how to say "no" more often.

Read the article

// five

Write 5x more but write 5x less

1 minute | Mike Crittenden

The ability to write well is a true compounding skill that transcends industry and profession. But how do you actually improve your writing? There's a ton of advice out there, but few as concise as this: write more, but write less. After this short read, you'll know why this advice is less contradictory than it seems and what the 80/20 rule can tell us about writing.

Read the post


// from our community

Looking to learn something new or level up your skills?


Check out Discover Fest 2021 from our friends at Teachable. It’s a week of free live workshops from November 15-19 designed to help you learn new skills for your life and your business. Instructors will teach you everything from the best practices for online course building to podcasting to food photography and more. It's totally free and you can sign up here.


Below the fold

LAST WEEK'S MOST READ

And finally, this dad surprising his son from deployment — I can't. Get the Kleenex ready.

With gratitude,

Khe

PS Refer two friends and receive our free Weekly Review Cheat Sheet. Here's your unique link: [RH_REFLINK GOES HERE]

PPS Did someone rad forward this to you? Subscribe here.

Instagram | Twitter | YouTube | LinkedIn | Facebook

RadReads by Khe Hy

Ready to achieve your goals and get more out of life? Join 50,000 ambitious professionals who are pursuing productivity, growing their career and creating financial freedom.

Read more from RadReads by Khe Hy

One of the cardinal rules of investing is: If it’s too good to be true — it probably is. When it comes to AI, I don’t think it falls in the “too good to be true” category. Yet. But it’s damn good. And I use it all the time. Yet I don’t want to be blind and naive about its limitations. And while I want to understand what is happening under the hood — I have no appetite for the super technical details. Andrej Karpathy was on the founding team of OpenAI and has the most incredible video primer...

Hey Reader, We made it back stateside after an incredible trip to Japan. Lisa and I even managed to squeeze in an Omakase date night in Tokyo. Here's one of our last pics from a swanky rooftop bar. I'm starting a small mastermind for finance professionals looking to master AI. Learn more about the program below ⤵️ Apply for the Mastermind → Here are this week's top reads: // one What happens when you leave your career (and identity) behind 20 minutes | Andy Johns Substack Occasionally, I...

Hey Reader, Greetings from Japan. We're fully immersed in yakitori, micro pig cafes, Zen gardens and 7-11 pork buns. It's awesome. I've also been writing two posts a week on AI developments over at Future-Proof Your Career with AI. It's totally free, check it out (it's a separate newsletter). Sign up for free → Here are this week's top reads: // one You should be setting rejection goals 10 minutes | Vox What would life look like if we didn’t take rejection so damn personally. Our fear of...