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I share what I learn each day about entrepreneurship—from a biography or my own experience. Always a 2-min read or less.
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Last Week’s Struggles and Lessons (Week Ending 3/2/25)
Current Project: Reading books about entrepreneurs and sharing what I learned from them
Mission: Create a library of wisdom from notable entrepreneurs that current entrepreneurs can leverage to increase their chances of success
What I struggled with:
- At the conference I attended, the goal was to show off an early version of the software and an MVP of a book directory built on my blog (My Learning Library). The blog feature was done, and people were impressed when I showed it to them. The software was finished the morning of the conference, but it was designed to run locally, and we couldn’t get it to run on my computer. It was frustrating to not be able to show it to people. I had to pitch it without demoing it, which went over decently. A few people are interested in seeing the demo.
What I learned:
- I tested a name at the conference, “I Study Entrepreneurs,” and it did well. I’m definitely using that name in the future.
- Discovery platforms and relationship platforms are materially different. Discovery platforms have algorithms that help people find you. Think TikTok or Instagram. The downside is that you don’t own the relationship with the user. It’s borrowed distribution, meaning someone can change your ability to reach people anytime. Relationship platforms give you a direct relationship with a user that you own, but discoverability is much harder. Think blogs, newsletters, or SMS. This is owned distribution, meaning no one but you can change your ability to reach users (mostly).
- Several entrepreneurs’ entire business model revolves around creating content that’s a deep dive on a person, industry, or topic. I met a few of them at the conference.
- Buying local newsletters that people are running as side projects and scaling them is a strategy that can do well.
- A newsletter can be a great growth engine if you sell products or software. If you’re savvy, you can convert your newsletter marketing from a cost center to a profit center by paying to acquire subscribers and getting paid to make them aware of other products or services.
- I learned a ton more from conversations and presentations!
Those are my struggles and learnings from the week.
New: Book Profiles and Connections is Live
I’ve been working on a project to share more about the books I’m reading. It all started with my frustration around how painful it was to share the books I’d read in 2024 (see my post here). Two days ago, I shared a list of the 52 books I read in 2024, sorted by month (see my post here). Yesterday, I shared My Learning Library, a searchable list of all the books I’ve read, and I’ll update it weekly (see my post here).
Those were all lists of books, but I built something else, too. Today, I’m sharing the third part of this project: Book Profile Pages. Each book I’ve read has a dedicated page on my blog that includes a description, my notes, and other information about the book. The stories of entrepreneurs often overlap. It’s common for entrepreneurial biographies to describe deals or battles with other entrepreneurs. They also mention other books (I find most books I read this way). But it wasn’t easy for me to see those connections visually, so I built Book Profile Pages to solve this problem. It’s something I hope other people find helpful because it makes it easier for them to discover books and other information about people they’re interested in learning more about.
To see examples of book profile pages, check out the page for The Gambler, a biography about Kirk Kerkorian. This biography helped me discover another entrepreneur, Billy Wilkerson, and I read two biographies about him. Another example is A Passion to Win, the autobiography by Sumner Redstone. See the profile page for A Passion to Win here.
This is the third part of this project that I’ve shared this week, but the project isn’t done yet. I need to do more work on other parts before sharing them, which I hope will be in a few weeks. In the meantime, I hope the book profile pages and other pages I launched this week are useful!
New: My Searchable Book Library is Live
In yesterday’s post, I shared that my 2024 reading list is live and that creating that list led to a much bigger project. I realized I don’t just want to share my reading list at the end of each year; I want to share it in real-time. I want people to know what I’m reading every week, not once a year. I want people to be able to see the personal library I’m building to help me learn.
So, today I’m sharing the second part of this project: My Learning Library. This is a searchable list of all the books I’ve read, and I’ll be updating it weekly. It includes a description of each book, my notes about it, and when I read it (some I’ve read multiple times).
If you want to see a list of the books I’ve read in 2024 and 2025, check out my learning library here!
This is the second part of a bigger project, but there’s still more that I’ll share in the coming days.
2024 Reading List: See All 52 Books, Finally!
On January 3, I shared my reading stats for 2024 (see here). After I wrote that post, I realized I wanted to share a list of the individual books—and how hard it is to do that (see here). I tried creating lists in GoodReads and played with creating something in Airtable, but I didn’t like those options. I wanted something that didn’t require updating another platform and that would look good visually on my blog. So, I ended up building something, which turned into a bigger project than I’d planned for.
To create this reading list, I had to create a database with lots of details on each book. Some of that I shared here. But the thing I underestimated most was creating descriptions for each book (see here). Most of that tedious work is now done (I still have a few descriptions I need to clean up).
I’m sharing the first part of this project today: my much-promised 2024 reading list. This is a list of every book I read; it includes a description of each book, my notes on each book, and the month I read it.
So, if you’re interested in seeing the 52 books I read in 2024 and what they’re about, take a look here!
Like I said, this is just the first part of a bigger project. I’ll share the rest of it in the coming days, but hopefully this 2024 reading list will be helpful.
Weekly Update: Week 256
Current Project: Reading books about entrepreneurs and sharing what I learned from them
Mission: Create a library of wisdom from notable entrepreneurs that current entrepreneurs can leverage to increase their chances of success
Cumulative metrics (since 4/1/24):
- Total books read: 51
- Total book digests created: 15
- Total blog posts published: 322
- Total audio recordings published: 103
This week’s metrics:
- Books read: 1
- Book digests created: 0
- Blog posts published: 7
- Audio recordings published: 0
What I completed this week (link to last week’s commitments):
- Read Taken at the Flood: The Story of Albert D. Lasker, a biography of Albert Lasker
- With the help of my developer friend, added the ability to run multiple functions in sequence
- Created a process for creating book descriptions optimized for the value the books will provide to entrepreneurs
- Got feedback from two more people on the desktop and mobile layout of the book-list page
- Tweaked the desktop and mobile layout of the book-list page to optimize for descriptions
- Did discovery meetings with two entrepreneurs; the focus was on why they don’t read more books
What I’ll do next week:
- Read a biography, autobiography, or framework book
- Attend conference
- Share software with five people at the conference
- Launch 2024 books-read page
- Launch page that will list every book I read going forward
- Finalize descriptions of every book I’ve read
Asks:
- None
Week two hundred fifty-six was another week of learning. Looking forward to next week!
Last Week’s Struggles and Lessons (Week Ending 2/23/25)
Current Project: Reading books about entrepreneurs and sharing what I learned from them
Mission: Create a library of wisdom from notable entrepreneurs that current entrepreneurs can leverage to increase their chances of success
What I struggled with:
- It’s been significantly harder than I expected to create descriptions of books. This threw off my schedule for the week. So, I haven’t gotten as much done as I planned, and my deadline for the conference I’m attending is this upcoming week.
What I learned:
- People know the benefits of exercise but often don’t make the time. Trainers can help them exercise. Similarly, entrepreneurs know the benefits of reading but don’t make the time. I see an opportunity to help entrepreneurs read more as a way to solve problems faster.
- There’s also an opportunity to create better descriptions of books—descriptions that appeal to what entrepreneurs want to know about books before they read them.
- Adding user comments and insights to a book library would enrich the data and make it more valuable to entrepreneurs.
- Linkages between various data sources on my blog are valuable to readers because they can easily follow the connections, but creating them is time-consuming. It needs to be done programmatically to make it scalable.
Those are my struggles and learnings from the week!
Amazon Book Descriptions Suck
I’ve been working on new parts of my website where I can share a list of all the books I read in 2024 (more here) and, going forward, a cumulative reading list updated weekly. I thought these would be live already, but I hit a hurdle (fingers crossed in the next few days). One of the things that’s taking a ton of time is creating descriptions of the books. This pain led to a few insights.
When I purchase books, I never read descriptions. I usually buy a book because it was mentioned in another book or because someone credible mentioned it. I never thought about descriptions until this project. So, I started reading the descriptions on Amazon of books I own. I was shocked. The descriptions are horrible. There’s no consistent formatting or length. Some pump up the author, which I don’t care about.
As an entrepreneur, I want to read books that teach me things that will help me solve problems or understand concepts. The descriptions of books on Amazon don’t help me with this at all. To get around the issue, I usually read reviews for clues. But reading reviews can be hit or miss.
I played around with using AI to generate book descriptions. The results weren’t bad, but they weren’t stellar either. This is without creating enhanced prompts or system instructions. If I went that route, I probably could make them better, but still I don’t think AI-generated descriptions would be stellar, from an entrepreneur’s perspective, for various reasons.
So, what’s my takeaway from all this? Descriptions of biographies and other books that entrepreneurs would be interested in suck. There’s an opportunity to create better descriptions that would help entrepreneurs find the right books at the right time.
Weekly Update: Week 255
Current Project: Reading books about entrepreneurs and sharing what I learned from them
Mission: Create a library of wisdom from notable entrepreneurs that current entrepreneurs can leverage to increase their chances of success
Cumulative metrics (since 4/1/24):
- Total books read: 50
- Total book digests created: 15
- Total blog posts published: 315
- Total audio recordings published: 103
This week’s metrics:
- Books read: 1
- Book digests created: 0
- Blog posts published: 7
- Audio recordings published: 0
What I completed this week (link to last week’s commitments):
- Read Direct from Dell: Strategies That Revolutionized an Industry, the autobiography of Michael Dell
- With the help of my developer friend, added function calling to the code base
- Created schema for book information in website CMS
- Uploaded information about all the books I’ve read into the website CMS
- Created a test blog page listing all the books I’ve read; got feedback from four people
- Finalized the desktop and mobile layout of the book-list page and what information will be displayed on it
- Finished linking all related blog posts and the relevant books on my blog
What I’ll do next week:
- Read a biography, autobiography, or framework book
- Launch 2024 books-read page
- Launch page that will list every book I read going forward
- Finalize descriptions of every book I’ve read
Asks:
- None
Week two hundred fifty-five was another week of learning. Looking forward to next week!
Last Week’s Struggles and Lessons (Week Ending 2/16/25)
Current Project: Reading books about entrepreneurs and sharing what I learned from them
Mission: Create a library of wisdom from notable entrepreneurs that current entrepreneurs can leverage to increase their chances of success
What I struggled with:
- No material struggles this week
What I learned:
- We might be able to launch this software’s MVP without having every table I envision built into the database if the system instructions are strong. We’ll test to confirm.
- How good a book is isn’t just a function of what was written. It’s also a function of what the reader is looking for (i.e., what problem they’re trying to solve). A poorly written book that explains a superior solution to a reader’s pressing problem is a stellar book for that reader, while others might say it’s mediocre.
- Quantifying the results of an entrepreneur’s efforts in bullet points—companies founded, sold, acquired, and invested in—makes people want to learn more about the entrepreneur. Adding dollar amounts helps too (e.g., sold XYZ company for $X million).
- Less is more when communicating information about a lot of people in a directory format. Reducing the description of a book to as few words as possible isn’t easy.
- Sharing my deadlines with people close to me but not involved in my work enhances accountability and makes me more focused.
- There’s an art to arranging text and images in a way that resonates quickly with people. I wasn’t blessed with that gift.
- Figuring out how to display the information I want to know about books, entrepreneurs, and the link between the two has helped me crystallize what data needs to be stored in our database and confirm what type of information needs to be extracted.
Those are my struggles and learnings from the week!
My Book List Project: Coming Soon!
Last month I shared my stats about my reading in 2024 (see here). I wanted to share the list of books, too, but it’s a pain (see here). I said I would share my book list manually in a blog post, but when I started working on that, I didn’t like the result. I looked at different ways to do it in a single blog post, but I didn’t like any of the options. I was hopeful that Airtable or Notion would work, but I didn’t like the idea of managing another external tool solely to house my reading list.
I think there’s another path that will enable me to share not only my 2024 reading list but all the books I read going forward. It’s more involved to set up, but I think it’ll be a better long-term solution and more helpful to anyone looking for biographies to read.
I needed to aggregate all the data from my reading list to do this correctly using this new path. So, last week and this weekend, I cleaned up the reading list I manage in Google Sheets. I did the following:
- Amazon affiliate links weren’t formatted consistently, which meant some links weren’t sending people the correct books (i.e., the edition I read). I formatted this correctly for each book and updated my spreadsheet. I also reviewed each blog post containing an Amazon link to a book and updated each one.
- I noted the edition, format (paperback, hardcover, or Kindle), and publication date of each book in my spreadsheet.
- I added to my spreadsheet a link to the blog post series I wrote about each book. Now I can quickly find my writing about a specific book instead of having to search the site.
- I updated the links to the posts on my blog. For each book, all posts related to that book are now linked.
This was a decent amount of tedious work. I went through every blog post I wrote in 2024, updated links, and added information from posts to my spreadsheet. The exercise wasn’t fun, but now I think it was worth it. The next step is to take the book-list information for past and future books and present it in a way that’s valuable to others.