Yoked AI and niche programming

Submit to the machine

If it bleeds, we can automate it

Alex Hormozi, the most yoked millionaire on the planet (sorry Arnie), challenged his team to automate themselves.

And they did it. Partially. I mean, they cut out a few hours a day of their tasks but they lacked the courage to fully submit to the machine. Still.

This is what life has been like in Big Tech for years. It’s expected that you will automate your job and move on fast. Now the rest of the world is following suit. Everything is about to speed up and speed needs…

Grease:

  • Pick a niche and play this game. Then sell the results.

  • Set up a service to help companies do this.

  • Personal service that helps individuals automate. Like a VA but one-off.

  • Find where people can’t automate and build services to fill in the gaps

Let’s make music

This is actually impressive. ChatGPT codes a guitar pedal that works.

Why so cool? VST coding isn’t exactly common. VST frameworks even less so. And yet ChatGPT handles both. In terms of getting starter code for a project, this could save someone who was just getting started in this space a week of hunting through tutorials. Which…damn.

Grease:

  • Every obscure programming topic just went from $20k for an expert to $100 for a fiverr ChatGPT wrangler. Short term: play the arbitrage game.

  • Long term: set up an agency that exploits this.

  • Long long term: build all the things.

  • Extract tutorials from ChatGPT and own the long tail.

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