How to be Everything (Emilie Wapnick, 2017)
Review: How to be everything doesn’t teach you to be everything but understanding why someone does everything. Very insightful book to learn different way someone can be multi-talent and how to maximise their potential. Rated: 9/10
- Classifications:
- Multipotentialite: someone with many interests and creative pursuits
- Polymath: someone who knows alot about many different things or a person of encyclopedic learning
- Renaissance person: a person who is interested in and knows a lot about everything
- Jack-of-all-trades: a person who can do passable work at various tasks; a handy, versatile person
- Generalist: one whose skills, interests, or habits are varied or unspecialised
- Scanner: someone with intense curiosity about numerous unrelated subjects
- Puttylike: able to embody different identities and perform a variety of tasks gracefully
- Multipotentiaialite superpowers:
- Idea synthesis
- Rapid learning
- Adaptability
- Big-picture thinking
- Relating and translating
- Work model:
- The group hug approach: have one multifaceted job or business that allows you to wear many hats and shift between several domains at work
- The slash approach: have 2 or more part-time jobs and/or businesses that flit between on a regular basis
- The einstein approach: have one full-time job or business that fully supports you, while leaving you with enough time and energy to pursue your other passions on the side
- The phoenix approach: working in a single industry for several months or years and then shifting gears and starting a new career in a new industry
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