If You Have Multiple Interests, Do Not Waste the Next 2-3 Years
From Dan Koe's article "If you have multiple interests, do not waste the next 2-3 years"
The Core Insight
They want to put you in a box. Don't let them. This is your last advantage.
Multiple interests aren't a weakness. In the AI age, they're your unfair advantage.
Specialists are getting commoditized. AI can replicate single-domain expertise. What AI can't replicate: your unique combination of interests, experiences, and perspective.
The Problem with "Pick a Niche"
Traditional advice: Pick one thing. Go deep. Become the expert.
Why it fails now:
- AI can generate specialist content instantly
- Single-skill paths are easily replicated
- You get bored and burn out
- It fights your nature as a curious person
The new reality: Your unique combination is the niche.
The Generalist Triad
The three eternal markets that never go away:
- Health - Physical, mental, emotional wellbeing
- Wealth - Money, career, business, financial freedom
- Relationships - Love, friendship, family, social skills
Every profitable niche connects to these.
If you have multiple interests, you likely have perspectives across these domains. That's valuable.
The Value Web
Instead of a niche (single topic), build a value web (connected interests).
Example - Dan Koe's web:
- Philosophy (how to think)
- Psychology (how humans work)
- Business (how to earn)
- Writing (how to communicate)
- Fitness (how to maintain energy)
- Spirituality (how to find meaning)
These connect into a coherent worldview. Each interest enhances the others.
Your web:
- List all your genuine interests
- Find the connections between them
- Identify the unique perspective that emerges
- That intersection is your positioning
Niche by Perspective, Not Topic
Topic-based niching: "I teach Instagram marketing"
- Easy to replicate
- Commoditized by AI
- Boxes you in
- Gets boring
Perspective-based niching: "I help creative polymaths build businesses that don't require them to be someone they're not"
- Can't be replicated
- Your experiences are unique
- Allows evolution
- Stays interesting
The formula: Your unique perspective + The transformation you enable = Your positioning
The Development Path
Why Generalists Win
- Cross-pollination: Ideas from one field spark innovation in another
- Adaptability: When one skill becomes obsolete, you have others
- Novel combinations: Unique intersections that no one else occupies
- Compound learning: Each new skill makes learning others faster
The Skill Stack
Don't abandon breadth. Stack skills strategically:
Foundation skills (everyone needs):
- Writing/communication
- Marketing/persuasion
- Basic technology
- Psychology/human behavior
Domain skills (your interests):
- Whatever you're genuinely curious about
- Things you'd learn even if not paid
- Areas where you have natural advantages
Combination skills (your edge):
- Where your domains intersect
- Unique applications others miss
- Your "personal monopoly"
The 2-3 Year Opportunity
Why now matters:
AI is commoditizing single-skill experts. The copywriter who only writes copy? AI can do that. The copywriter who understands psychology, business strategy, and design? Can't be replaced.
The window:
- 2-3 years to position yourself at unique intersections
- Before others realize generalists win
- While you can still build reputation and audience
What to do:
- Stop trying to pick one thing
- Document your learning across interests
- Find the connections
- Build in public at the intersections
- Let your positioning emerge
How to Talk About Multiple Interests
Don't say: "I'm interested in too many things" Say: "I help [audience] achieve [transformation] by combining [interest 1], [interest 2], and [interest 3]"
Don't say: "I can't pick a niche" Say: "My niche is the intersection of [X] and [Y] for people who [share your journey]"
Don't say: "I'm a generalist" Say: "I'm a [made-up title that captures your combination]"
The Polymath Advantage
Historical polymaths succeeded BECAUSE of multiple interests:
- Leonardo da Vinci: Art + Science + Engineering
- Benjamin Franklin: Science + Politics + Writing
- Steve Jobs: Technology + Design + Liberal Arts
They didn't succeed despite multiple interests. They succeeded because of them.
Modern examples:
- Naval Ravikant: Philosophy + Investing + Technology
- Tim Ferriss: Self-improvement + Business + Lifestyle
- Joe Rogan: Comedy + MMA + Conversation
Framework for Combining Interests
Step 1: Map Your Interests
List everything you're genuinely curious about. No judgment.
Step 2: Find the Unexpected Connections
- How does interest A inform interest B?
- What patterns appear across domains?
- What would someone who combined these uniquely see?
Step 3: Identify Your Transformation
What change can you help create by combining these?
Step 4: Define Your Audience
Who shares your combination of interests? Who would you have been 5 years ago?
Step 5: Create at the Intersections
Write about the connections others miss. That's your content goldmine.
The Mission-Based Alternative
If you can't find one niche, find one mission.
Mission: The transformation you want to create in the world Content: Anything that moves people toward that transformation Products: Tools that accelerate the transformation
A mission is bigger than a topic. It contains all your interests naturally.
Dan's mission: Help people become future-proof (valuable, adaptive, free)
- Allows philosophy, business, psychology, fitness, AI, anything
- United by single transformation
Common Objections
"But experts make more money" Narrow experts in commoditizing fields make less over time. Unique combinations become more valuable.
"I'm not expert enough in any one thing" You don't need to be the best at any one thing. You need to be the best at your combination.
"People won't understand my positioning" The right people will. And they're the only ones who matter.
"I should focus before diversifying" You can develop multiple skills in parallel. Learning compounds across domains.
Key Quotes
"They want to put you in a box. Don't let them."
"Your unique combination is the niche."
"You don't niche down by topic. You niche down by perspective."
"Multiple interests aren't a weakness. In the AI age, they're your unfair advantage."
Action Steps
- List all interests - No filtering, no judgment
- Map connections - How do they relate?
- Define your perspective - What do you see that others miss?
- Identify your transformation - What change do you enable?
- Start creating at intersections - This is your content strategy
- Let positioning emerge - Don't force it, discover it