Skip to content
Go back

20 Tools of Titans

Published:  at  05:49 PM

The book Tools of Titans is based on interviews with nearly 200 guests on Tim Ferriss’s podcast The Tim Ferriss Show. It is organized into three sections: Health, Wealth, and Wisdom, covering topics such as fitness, time management, investment strategies, decision-making, and cognitive improvement. I have carefully read the Wealth and Wisdom sections and summarized 20 tools that I find most useful.

1. Strong Views, Loosely Held

You want to look for as both a founder and as an investor is things that are out of consensus, something very much opposed to the conventional wisdom.

But what happens when the world changes? What happens when something else happens?

That’s where “loosely held” comes in. People everywhere hate changing their minds, but you need to be able to adapt in light of new information.

2. Don’t Overestimate the People on Pedestals

Everything around you that you call ‘life’ was made up by people that were no smarter than you.

3. Busy = Out of Control

Lack of time is lack of priorities.

If I’m “busy,” it is because I’ve made choices that put me in that position.

4. Four Commonalities Across the Best Investors

5. “Productivity” Tricks for the Neurotic, Manic-Depressive, and Crazy

What, if done, will make all of the rest easier or irrelevant?

What you do is more important than how you do everything else, and doing something well does not make it important.

6. On Vetting the Best Employees or Partners

You know it if they don’t just accept the strategy you hand them.

They should suggest modifications to the plan based on their closeness to the details.

7. Systems Versus Goals

You choose options that allow you to inevitably “succeed” over time, as you build assets that carry over to subsequent projects.

Losers have goals. Winners have systems.

8. Double or Triple Threat

If you want something extraordinary, you have two paths:

  1. Become the best at one specific thing.
  2. Become very good (top 25%) at two or more things.

The first strategy is difficult to the point of near impossibility. The second strategy is fairly easy.

9. The Law of Category

In the world of ideas, to name something is to own it.

When you launch a new product, the first question to ask yourself is not “How is this new product better than the competition?” but “First what?”

In other words, what category is this new product first in?

10. 1,000 TRUE FANS

“Success” need not be complicated. Just start with making 1,000 people extremely, extremely happy.

True fans are not only the direct source of your income, but also your chief marketing force for the ordinary fans.

You do not have to sacrifice the integrity of your art for a respectable income. You just need to create a great experience and charge enough.

11. The Canvas Strategy

Great men have almost always shown themselves as ready to obey as they afterwards proved able to command.

Helping yourself by helping others.

The person who clears the path ultimately controls its direction, just as the canvas shapes the painting.

12. Stone Soup

A hungry traveler used a “stone” to coax the villagers into adding ingredients to the pot, and eventually everyone worked together to make a delicious soup.

A children’s story that is the best MBA degree you can read.

13. The Benefits of Thinking 10X Versus 10%

14. Discipline Equals Freedom

If you want freedom in life—be that financial freedom, more free time, or even freedom from sickness and poor health—you can only achieve these things through discipline.

15. A Running List of Three People

16. Write to Get Ideas, Not to Express Them

I’d say, ‘I think I have an idea,’ but when I begin to write it, I realize, ‘I have no idea.’

I don’t actually know what I think until I try and write it.

17. “Consensus” Should Set Off Your Spidey Sense

You should learn that people don’t naturally come to high levels of agreement unless something is either absolutely clear, in which case consensus isn’t present, or there’s an implied threat of violence to livelihood or self.

“Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it’s time to pause and reflect.” — Mark Twain.

18. Change Your Words, Change Your World

Ludwig Wittgenstein: “The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.”

19. Naval’s Laws

20. “GOOD”

When things are going bad, there’s going to be some good that will come from it:

Summary

Tools of Titans is a hefty book of nearly 700 pages, and reading it feels like panning for gold. The entire experience can be summed up by a short review I came across: “The book is full of treasures—you just have to find them yourself.”



Next Post
Connect Local and Development Environments via Proxy