Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - How To Finally Write That Book & Make it a Bestseller w/ Keith Ferrazzi | EP #59
Episode Date: August 17, 2023In this episode, Peter and Keith discuss the significance of writing a book as a means to establish one's brand and positioning in the world. They share about the intricacies of writing, publishing, a...nd promoting a book, highlighting the importance of authenticity and genuine intent over mere commercial success. 24:50 | Chat GPT Writing - Pros & Cons 54:28 | Defining Your Brand With Books 1:17:15 | Book Writing in 20 Years Keith Ferrazzi is an American author, entrepreneur, and recognized global thought leader in the relational and collaborative sciences. He is the founder and CEO of Ferrazzi Greenlight, a Los Angeles-based research and consulting firm. He has written several New York Times bestselling books, including “Never Eat Alone” and “Who’s Got Your Back?”. Ferrazzi has introduced a new transformational operating system he calls co-elevation that leads to exponential change and value Check out Keith’s latest book, Competing in the New World of Work _____________ I only endorse products and services I personally use. To see what they are, please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: Experience the future of sleep with Eight Sleep. Visit https://www.eightsleep.com/moonshots/ to save $150 on the Pod Cover. _____________ I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now: Tech Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots and Mindsets Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Echo, thanks for presenting Partners Sun Life.
How do you fundamentally put a footprint in the sand around who you are?
How are people going to know you?
You should be asking yourself, is my positioning in this world about my business and my leadership?
You can develop that in what we're going to be talking about today.
The title and the cover.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
So important.
Some guy had gone to the back of the room
and just taken an ugly orange color
and wrote, never eat alone on it.
And so that ended up being the cover for Never Eat Alone.
Don't think of a book as this crazy Mount Everest thing
that only special people do.
Think of a book as your heartfelt ability
to sit and be contemplative about what really matters to you, who you are,
what do you want to project to the world? It's a forcing mechanism, an accountability
mechanism to focus on your brand and what you have to say to the world.
Keith, welcome to Moonshots. It's great to have you here, pal.
Any conversation with you is a blessing.
It's great to have you here, pal.
Any conversation with you is a blessing.
Thank you.
Let's jump into this conversation, which is for entrepreneurs, for CEOs, for thought leaders who've never written a book but want to write a book.
Our goal here is in service to them, teach them how do you write a New York Times bestseller?
Maybe how do you write a number one New York Times bestseller?
Each of us have written one of those.
And the question of, does it really actually matter? So let's actually start with that. Do you think it matters that your book is in your times bestseller? Let me
wind this back a second. Okay. I think it's a little different position. One is that I think
it's important that everybody write their book. I don't care if you publish it because what I'm about to suggest
is that you writing your book
is you putting a footprint in the sand around your brand.
What matters to you?
What are you trying to tell the world?
You talk about an MTP, right?
I think everybody should manifest.
And again, the way in which one quote writes a book
is the same way as in which you develop your positioning
your thought leadership your brand right so if any ceo out there you should be asking yourself
is my positioning in this world about my business is my positioning around my leadership is my
positioning around whatever you can develop that in what we're going to be talking about today
so whether or not you're shooting for the new New York Times list or whether or not you want to see your book on Amazon, it's kind of irrelevant
because what we're really talking about is how do you fundamentally put a footprint in the sand
around who you are. All right. So let's dive into all these parts, which is how do you decide
what book you're going to write? And then how do you write?
And then how do you get it published?
And then how do you promote it?
And how do you get on the list?
And does that list really matter?
And I think your point is right.
It doesn't matter if you're a number one in New York Times. It might matter for you as an ego to be able to claim that.
I mean, let's not take it away from me that I've gotten one.
So I don't want to say that it doesn't matter at all.
You have one too.
You just have it in partnership.
Yeah, I got to number two twice.
And then I had Tony Robbins as like, you know,
the master promotional engine of the world.
What we're about to tell these folks is
you use any leverage you can, right?
So it doesn't matter.
You've got a number one, I've got a number one.
And has it changed our lives?
Abso-fucking-lutely not.
Yeah.
At the end of the day, you write a book for a number of reasons.
And let's talk about that because I think it's important, folks, to realize.
I mean, you said the first one, right?
Developing and promoting your brand.
How are people going to know you?
Right?
So, for me, when I wrote Abundance with Stephen Kotler back in 2012 and got in the TED
stage and gave that opening keynote, it really was a pivot moment for me. And I became Mr. Abundance
and all of a sudden good news was cool. And we'll talk about a second reason, not in this podcast,
but later, but you don't make money on the book or the book advances you make money on
you make money on speaking speaking yeah and and and the tipping point for you you know abundance
was a big success yeah but the ted talk like we should talk about that when we get to our the
second half of our work together today which is going to be speaking yeah but the ted talk is
instrumental too it was it was
and and the value of that and does it matter if you're on a tedx talk or in the ted main stage
and we'll talk about that in our second podcast we're going to do which is on how to build a
speaking business but look yeah i agree let's go back why do you write a book so if i'm talking to
any of my clients i coach executive teams right and a number of my clients, you know, I often ask them, I said, do you have a book in you?
And I'd say half of them say yes.
And the other half say not interested at all.
The ones that say yes, I put them through a simple exercise because I'm curious why
they have a book in them.
It's interesting because some people have a book in them and it has nothing to do with
their workplace.
some people have a book in them and it has nothing to do with their workplace it's because they're a christian and they believe in financial um success for for the underprivileged and they want to write
a book about being a christian and having financial success right i get surprised sometimes
by whatever somebody comes at me what really matters to them just like when you're trying
to design somebody's mtp sure but
then there are others who are like i have no interest at all and when the ones who say i have
no interest at all i push them a little bit and i said well how do you represent yourself to your
employees how do you represent yourself to the world how do you represent yourself to your
shareholders who are you what matters yeah and i said let's let's think about writing a book
who are you? What matters? And I said, let's think about writing a book. Now, a book to me starts with the simplest thing in the world because most people see this Herculean effort
of Mount Everest that they someday have to climb. No, you don't. You don't even have to get the
base camp. All you got to do is, and what I always say is, go on a piece of paper and write 10
sentences that define for you what you have to teach the world or what
you want the world to do differently. Just 10 things, right? And try to make them in some order
of flow. And what would those be? And then what you do is you write those 10 things and then show
them to a few friends and talk about them, have a dinner about them. Sure. And then once you muse on that with somebody else,
then go from 10 sentences to 10 sections with three sentences.
So sort of flesh it out.
Flesh it out a little bit more, three sentences.
And then show that to a few friends and get a bunch of musings back.
And then maybe you get to the stage where you write 10 paragraphs.
By the time you've done that you've started to structure
both what you think you have to share with the world and what the world resonates with or at
least the people who have a sense of who you really are what they resonate with once you
get to that i think you've got the bones of what is most important which is starting to structure
your your what you have to share in the world i I mean, at the end of the day, a book is moving someone through a sequence of thoughts and feelings.
So they come out the other end,
understanding the point you want it to make, right?
And you and I, one of the things I think books fail to do,
and this is something that I've lived my life on.
I think if there's a core element of my brand
that I'm starting to realize about myself,'s not was whether i was the relationship guy
with never alone or the future of teams you know with competing in the new world of work and other
things i think the core of my brand is something very different it's high return practices i'll
explain what i mean by that i i had a remember pocket coach yeah i remember i was an investor
and lovely failure six million6 million of loss.
It was a great idea.
It was a great idea.
And it still remains a great idea.
And the idea was that there was extraordinary things we all needed to not just learn, but
to do differently.
Yes.
Different habits.
Different habits, rituals, practices.
And by the way, like atomic habits.
It proved.
Amazing success.
Right. Yeah. But my idea was, okay, if you read Good to Great, you would know what a great leader is like,
but would you really know what to do? So my idea was I was going to go and take all the great
books. Originally the book, it was called Pocket Coach. And the idea was that I was going to take all the great books, turn them into practices,
so that along with the book, you would get dosed practices and on an ongoing basis. And what I
found, interestingly enough, was that there were basically no practices in most books.
Yeah.
There were a lot of concepts. There were a lot of learning. There were a lot of inspiration.
A lot of story.
There's a lot of ideas, a lot of storytelling. but the what you fucking do day to day differently yeah what are the practices and how do i they weren't there
all of my books are practice-based yeah and that's just my brand right my brand i think if anything
else it's a highly practical practice-based well for those who don't know you fully i mean you
began as a fortune 500 executive you were were CMO at Starwood Hotels.
Deloitte, yeah.
And then at Deloitte.
And today, I view you as what Tony Robbins does for individuals, coaching individuals,
you do for executive teams, right?
You come and coach teams for high performance.
And there's a lot of practices, a lot of this is how you get to that end point.
Yeah.
And I agree. I mean, a book where I is how you get to that end point. Yeah. And, and I agree.
I mean, a book where I can learn something and it changes my
behavior, um, is, is really important.
And I wouldn't say that.
Yes, that's my brand, but there are others where you read a
book and you're inspired.
Or entertained.
Entertained.
Right.
So all of those are good.
Um, I just want to suggest that the key to your success as you start to think about
this is these are the questions you should be asking yourself you should be
asking yourself is my brand what and how does a person when I have in when I have
communicated on paper or on stage with an audience what does that audience look
like so let's go into the basics who am I speaking to that's. You speak to entrepreneurs. Now the overlap of that is that you also inspire
and speak to Fortune 500 CEOs, but that's not your core audience.
Yeah. My mission, my MTP, inspire and guide entrepreneurs to create a hopeful, compelling,
and abundant future. I want to go back to why write a book. And you said something a
little bit ago. I mean, first of all, we book. And you said something a little bit ago.
I mean, first of all, we talked about what you said about creating, defining your brand.
Yeah.
Right.
Because if you have a book that really defines your brand, your employees, and again, speaking to entrepreneurs, a great book can launch a company, right?
A great book can launch you as an entrepreneur, as a CEO, can align your organization.
Tony Hsieh, Delivering Happiness.
And then Exponential Organizations that I recently wrote with Salim or EXO2.
It also can allow you to pivot, right?
And this is something that you've used in your life.
Yeah.
So you and I were talking about this yesterday when we were having lunch.
I like to use books to learn, not to read and learn, but to write and learn.
To force you to learn.
It's a forcing mechanism.
So when I wrote my first book, Never Eat Alone, it was an accident.
I always had a book in me.
You want to hear the funny little story?
Yeah, I want to hear it.
Why did you write that book?
Yeah. So I always write that book? Yeah.
So I always had a book in me.
And remember, I had been the chief marketing officer of two companies.
And I thought my book...
And pretty significant companies.
Big companies.
And I thought my book was going to be about marketing.
Sure.
And I came out to Los Angeles and I was an entrepreneur.
I had left marketing because I wanted to be a CEO.
I was working for Michael Milken and I was running
one of the companies in his portfolio. And somebody came to me and said, we would like to
write an article about you on your success. You had such crazy success. You were a Fortune 500
executive by the time you were 30. And then you're now you're a ceo blah blah
blah and so we wrote they wrote an article about me and it was about my perspective and this is
very important for anybody thinking about um writing your book again when when this when
this journalist came to me and said i want to write an article about your success. I stopped and I didn't want the narrative to be run by him.
I stopped and I said, give me 24 hours
and I'm going to write for you the 10 things
that I think defined my success.
Okay.
And I delivered those to him 24 hours later
after thinking about them.
And he called me back and he said,
you've just written my article.
My article is going to
be those 10 things and we're just going to go in more detail now right so the structure i commanded
my own narrative and it was about really it was about things like deepening relationships with
individuals being authentic being generous all those things um and then when i published that
when that article got published, somebody reached out to me
and said, you should write a book on that. Now, remember my head. I want to be a CEO of a major
company. I'm a marketer. That's where I am. And somebody comes along and says, you should write
a book about this world of networking and career development, et cetera. And I said, no, I said,
I don't want to do that. That's not my brand.
I'm a corporate guy.
I'm going to be a CEO.
And they said, we'll give you a quarter of a million.
And I'm like, I'll do it.
So it was.
And we'll talk about advances and how much is real and so forth.
You know, I had a not too dissimilar story on my first book.
It was just after the X Prize. No, the X Prize had reached some
level of popularity, but had not been won yet. And I read an article that a guy, Stephen Kotler,
wrote about me. He wrote one in GQ and one in, I think it was Wired at the time.
one in, I think it was Wired at the time. And when I read this article, I was so enthralled by his writing, not what he said, but the way he wrote was so incredible. I did something unusual. I
called him up and I said, Stephen, would you give me writing lessons? I want to learn how to write
like you. And because the book I had in me was I wanted to write a book about space, right? I'd
been a space cadet for 20 years.
And it was like, I'm going to write about the future of humanity in space and this and that.
And so I took writing lessons.
I wrote a book proposal on space, didn't go anyplace, and I put it aside.
And then here comes 2009.
And I am at Singularity University in the first year.
nine and i am at singularity university in the first year and i'm having a conversation i'll never forget with neil jacob stein and with ray kurzweil about the idea that technology was
turning things that were scarce into abundance and the that word abundance just grabbed me and
i started thinking about that and it became so powerful inside me.
I called up Steven and I said, Steven, you and I are writing a book together and it's
going to be called Abundance.
Right.
I was like that committed.
And lo and behold, I got a quarter million dollars advance that I split with Steven.
It was very difficult to do coming out of the shoot on a first book for anybody.
Yeah.
I mean,
so just to manage expectations,
even who had been a writer,
a successful writer was getting like 60 K advances.
And,
um,
and,
but it was our partnership. And sometimes someone who's got a wider reach and someone with writing
skills.
And we'll,
we'll talk about,
do you write with somebody on your own?
I know that that's probably in the sequence later, but let's use this as a moment.
Neither of us would have had the success we had in our first books if it wasn't for an
extraordinary writing partner.
Yes.
I just want to note that.
So there's two ways to think about this.
One is if what you're writing your book for is to document your positioning and to put a footprint in your brand and further explore it, fine.
But if you're going to put things out to the world, there is a skill set called extraordinary writing, which is rare.
And I would never have had Never Eat Alone as a success if it wasn't for Tal Ross, who was my co-writer.
Right.
And similarly, with Abundance, you wouldn't have had the same if it wasn't for Stephen.
I'm an incredible storyteller.
And as good as chat GPT is today, it just doesn't come close.
Maybe GPT-5 or 6 will come close.
But we'll talk about that a little bit later as well. I just think it's important to note that neither of us believes that you do everything alone.
Yeah.
Building the right team.
And we'll get to that later.
But I just wanted to note how important it was.
You don't have to think.
I would imagine it would be daunting for most people to think of writing a book.
You don't have to write the book.
You have to be the quarterback.
You have to be the leader of the book.
And there's a whole set of assets that you'll be leveraging to make that happen, which
we can talk about in a moment, but I want to get over that hurdle. Yeah. And you can write with a
co-author where you're both named as the authors. You can have a ghost writer who comes in and
interviews you and writes the book in your voice. And just on that, I'm often, I'm intrigued by your thought.
So Tal and I had an extraordinary writing partnership for Never Eat Alone.
And by the time these days, I always make a habit of making sure that the person who's
writing with me is on the cover.
Yes, 100%.
And the reason I do that is because I want them on saturday night when they're
trying to decide whether they have an extra glass of wine or do they turn to the book yeah if they're
their their their name is going to be on it just with mine i think it's important and i don't think
i don't think an author loses anything i lost by sharing the cover yeah and and so abundance was written in my voice, I, first person voice and so forth.
And then Stephen and I had continued our partnership in our second book, Bold,
and our third book, A Future is Faster Than You Think. And those were jointly voiced books,
right? And at the end of the day, it's been incredible. You will, if you have a co-author, it's a very intimate relationship.
We used to joke that we were each other's lovers, you know, in terms of, because we'd
be up at five in the morning writing for two hours.
Yeah.
And it's, you know, you go deep in that regard.
We'll talk about, you know, writing styles.
So why write a book, brand, build a speaking career.
Learning and curiosity.
Learning and curiosity. Learning and curiosity.
I think launching your business,
you talked about speaking as a business,
but you're right.
Right now, ironically of all, I've written four books.
None of them are on the subject
that I actually make my money from.
I make my money coaching executive teams.
And so I'm now cultivating the 20 years
of work in a new book around high-performing executive teams. And that book will be out next
year. And it's going to be important for the business that I have, which I have had for years,
to take that business to scale. So is there any other reasons you write a book?
So is there any other reasons you write a book?
You know, like I said, there are people who have a book in them about something meaningful in the world.
When Abundance came to mind, it's like it was bursting from me.
It was like I had no other choice.
I had to write that book.
It was like something that was new and true. And, you know, and you sort of using
Peter Thiel's, you know, what's your thesis that you think is absolutely true and no one else
agrees with. When you feel that sort of that feeling, getting it out in a book can be a very
powerful means. So, you know, for me, I love your process and I agree with it. You know, when I start
sitting down to write a book, it is outlining the argument flow in terms of the chapters.
And one of the things I think is very important in books is storytelling. I think that books that
are really engaging, we as humans, you you know we receive and we communicate
information in terms of stories yeah and so when you open a chapter and it is a
compelling story about an individual infer you know it's very different than
there's a bunch of data yeah yeah I have asked I have helped my many of my
friends write their books. Peter Guber
is a dear friend of mine. And when I remember one time sitting out on my balcony for a dinner party
and Peter Guber, who mostly known these days as one of the owners of the Warriors, who really
helped turn that franchise around, the Dodgers helped turn that franchise around, but also an Oscar winning
movie producer. Peter and I were sitting and I asked him, I said, what is your great dream?
What's next? And he said, you know, I have made a legacy in my product that people will always
remember some of the movies that got Oscars. He said, but there's something underneath it that I
want to leave as a real legacy, which is helping the world tell better stories. And so I helped
coach him through the process of writing his book on storytelling. And from his perspective,
it was legacy. He was writing a book for legacy. Sure. And, and he did, you know, we helped get
that to be a number one New York times bestselling book. Peter doesn't lose in anything, whether it's
a pennant, you know, an Oscar or a number one New York times bestselling book. Another reason to
write a book is to tell your side of the story. Ooh. Right. So Paul Allen writes the idea man,
which is his side of the Bill Gates, Paul allen microsoft founding right yeah and so that's
interesting i think uh writing a wrong or telling your side because you know a lot of times the
person who is the most vocal stories out there and a book is a way to provide a consolidated
approach to the data backed approach so so now that we have some hopefully what we've done at
this stage is
we've helped our listeners awaken to the idea that maybe they should have a book in them.
Yeah. I think everybody can have a book. What does it take and how do you do it? What kind of
commitment? So I was never a good writer in high school or in college. my love of writing actually developed later in life.
And I actually love writing.
I get up, I like, I'm excited when I get my, wake up before my alarm because I have extra
time to write in the morning.
And I write almost every single morning, first thing in the morning where I'm super, super
clear.
Still.
Today.
And it's either writing a blog or writing,
and I'm always working on multiple books.
So right now, we just published EXO2,
Peter's Longevity Practices is coming out next.
And then with Cheo, Rose Washington,
who my head of research,
we're going to be putting out a book,
which is the follow on to abundance.
And then there's a book on mindsets after that. And so it's just, it's a, I've turned it into a
day to day activity and I'll write for an hour. Stephen Kotler once taught me that if you can
write a single finished page per day, that would put you at the most productive book writers out
there. So that's not my process. What do you do? Yeah. I need designated sitting time to write my
books, to write anything. So I have a writing day. So my Fridays, it took me a long time
to block off my Fridays.
And today is a Friday and I'm doing this for you.
Thank you.
And also for our listeners. Right.
And for our listeners, I'm doing this for you.
Yeah, I'm doing this for you.
But the the Fridays are my writing days.
Yeah.
So my team knows that they're not allowed to block my Fridays
for anything other than my writing.
Yeah. And it's it's the if I can't, I gotta get into a writing groove.
I can't just go grab an hour to write.
Yeah.
My head's not there.
Yeah.
And I got, maybe, maybe I've got more monkey mind than you do, but I've
gotta get quiet in the groove, focused and ready to really think and iterate.
Um, that's just me.
I totally love the idea of doing it for an hour every day.
And if that works for you, that's great.
But I block the time.
The other thing that I think is really important-
But can I ask you,
when you were an undergrad at Harvard,
you were writing then?
Yeah, so I was an undergrad at Yale. How dare you, right?
I'm thinking of Eric Foy, who was at Harvard. I was Harvard Business School.
Harvard Business School, okay. But no, when I was, yeah, it's interesting, maybe a little bit
vulnerable revealing. So I grew up kind of thinking I was smart until I went to Yale.
I grew up kind of thinking I was smart until I went to Yale. And then everybody there,
because I had not gone to the kind of schools that all these kids had, because I wasn't literate and I hadn't been steeped in the literature, I didn't feel smart. And as a result, it really
stymied me a bit. I didn't think I was smart enough. And it took me a while to regain again
my confidence in my intellect because I was smart in a different way.
It's shocking to me since I've never seen any aspect other than the brilliant intellectual.
Well, you see it and I guess it was always there. But when you've got a bunch of people,
these erudite philosophers who have read all of Kant
and Nietzsche, and I hadn't done that,
I felt minuscule.
So it set me back.
But when I graduated from Yale, I got into business
and I started writing about the things I cared about.
I started writing manuals in manufacturing
for continuous process improvement down at the
plant front line so i wrote my first book right out of yale working at a manufacturing company
about worker empowerment so soon as i started getting practical my writing started to show up
and you enjoyed it i loved it i loved it and that's when i knew i had a book in me and i knew that my intellect wasn't this erudite stuff it was very practical in nature and i wanted to
crack the code of continuous process engineering of changing the way the world works that's always
been my core so here's the question of the times of course is the use of chat gpt in writing
right so uh it's not cheating i think it's ridiculous
no i'm not calling you but no but i think a lot of people have been saying that i don't get it
i think listen if you say to chat gpt write me a book on this topic and it spits out you know
uh a you you probably can get it to write you an outline and then say please flesh out chapter one
for me and then flesh it out again.
And you can probably get a book written.
And what's wrong with that?
Well, my question is, is it your thoughts versus the consumed thoughts of the internet?
But what's wrong with that?
If the intention is to be a service to a community, you know, you and I had played
the other day with some really interesting prompting theories.
Prompting is a clever thing to do.
Sure.
And if you get really clever at sequentially asking better and better prompts, which get
chat GBT to write a better and better book or a better and better whatever um and look maybe
your point is and you should say co-authored by chat gbt i think at a minimum you should you should
disclose that no problem with that i mean for me right now and i've seen i've seen long form
content generated by chat gT and it was missing.
But that's another thing, which is if you create a book with ChatGPT and it gets out there,
you have to suffer the consequences of a mediocre piece that hasn't been fully fleshed out with your own ideas, right?
But at the same time, one of the challenges people have is staring at a blank page.
Which is a great way to start.
And I find Chat chat gpt as a
mechanism to say okay uh you know give me ideas you know what you're going to write about in this
chapter conceptually and you know if you can outline like you did here's the key points i
want to make can you provide some content on top of this it can break a log jam and give you an
ability to get started i want to take you and to take you and the viewers into a very terrified moment I had less than a few
months ago where I hadn't been fully immersed in the prompting within ChatJBT.
I knew it was there.
I hadn't the time to really play with it.
And here I was right in the middle of my major book,
my tone, my legacy of high-performing teams.
This is going to be the most important book
that I've written, perhaps aside from Never Eat Alone.
Thus far.
Thus far.
I'll get many, many more.
You do.
And we'll talk about the pivots.
But I got scared shitless
because I sat there and I thought,
wait a second. I didn't ask chat gbt
what it has to think about this book that i have now structured and formalized and ready to ship
what if chat gbt could make it fundamentally better yeah i'm i'm feeling castrated by the
fact that i didn't co-author it with chat gPT. And it scared the shit out of me because I thought, damn, I've done an injustice
to the world publishing my tome
without the universe of all writing in it
as with my partner of ChatGPT.
Fascinating.
And so I actually, I put a pause in the book.
I said, we're not publishing the book.
We're going through a rewriting process I put a pause in the book. I said, we're not publishing the book.
We're going through a rewriting process that we'll think about, you know, remember I was,
and here's something I did the other day.
I just said, I've always, again,
I'm all about high-performing teams.
I always thought, well, what would it be
if I had actually read all the great works of philosophy,
not philosophy, but of psychology,
Freud's great works, et cetera.
So I started asking ChatGBT, what does Freud have to say about high-performing executive teams? the great works of philosophy not philosophy but of psychology freud's great works etc so i started
asking chat gbt what does freud have to say about high performing executive teams and and it gave me
some very interesting stuff and i said what does young have to think about high performing
executive teams and i asked more questions and more questions and it made me realize there is
a body of knowledge that i can give to my readers that was not there before.
The way I think about it is as a writer, as an entrepreneur, as an executive, you only know how to think the way you know how to think.
Yeah.
And having ChatGPT in the conversation can give you massively different perspectives.
And especially if you're prompted properly and saying, you know, take on the mantle of Freud.
I'm an author trying to write about this.
How would Freud look at it?
And then the ability to prompt it and say,
make it more compelling, make it more data-driven,
make it more whatever.
I had played with this idea by talking to a bunch of shrinks
over the last five years about their perspective
on executive teams.
Anything?
Barely. Barely. And in three hours, I got this deluge. of shrinks over the last five years about their perspective on executive teams barely barely and
in three hours yeah i got this deluge and then i started doing the same thing like i chased after
the the woman who was the coach for the women's soccer team that won the nationals i got to sit
with coach k asking him questions so now then i did a whole separate thing about you know successful uh sports teams
coaches right so all of this again is is powerful now the the question you were asking is um chat
gbt and book writing i i think they're they're going to be massively integrated so the question
because so listen at the end of the day if there are there are 10x or 100x more books going out into
the market because it's easier, because an individual can now use AI to write their book,
the question becomes, what distinguishes your book?
And is the future of books going to be this hard cover or soft cover or digital?
Aren't those two different questions, right?
They are.
They are.
Because I think at the core, how you differentiate your book from other books, obviously the
quality is going to be important.
Both Abundance and Never Read Alone were extraordinary books.
And they had viral appeal such that when somebody read them, they wanted to pass them along.
Yeah.
The number of times I've heard, and I'm sure you have, I bought somebody read them, they wanted to pass them along. Yeah.
I mean, the number of times I've heard, and I'm sure you have, I bought a hundred copies
and gave it out to all my teams.
Exactly.
It's all I've been doing is getting your book out and I've been doing it for 20 years.
So there's that.
You've got to write a great book and we know that ChatGPT will write a mediocre book.
You've got to write a great book.
But then the next question is the brand.
Peter Diamandis has how many followers? Keith has how many followers?
As a result, our books get seeded into the world in a different way. So if you really want your
book to differentiate, then you need to build a media company. And you and I were talking about
this the other day. You need to build a media company around who you are now your media if you want your book
to inspire your employees which is perfectly fine and a great purpose for a book and a great purpose
for a book then you probably don't need a media company yeah if you want your book to have ripple
effects around the world and change a state of the universe then you probably need a media company
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transformed my sleep and will for you as well. Now back to the episode. Let's dive into a few of the
other fun subjects. We talked about writing process. I'm
every day, you're on Fridays. I used to, one of the things I loved in writing with Stephen Kotler
is the back and forth, right? I would write a chapter and he would write a chapter. We'd
exchange them and edit them. And then the thing I found really powerful was we'd get on back then it was Skype we would get on with every morning
and we'd read the chapter out loud and reading the chapter out loud really is for me the way
to take a chapter to finish because it's got to sound compelling and not boring to you
and when you read it it's very different when you when you speak it. So I think we have, again, we have a very different way.
Yeah.
You seem to write from the beginning with an expectation that what you're writing is somewhere in the direction of final.
I do not.
You explore.
I write in a radically agile process.
So I expect my chapters to be rewritten 20 times, significantly rewritten 20
times. So first thing, as I said, I did is remember, so think about how I'm writing books.
I'm writing 10 sentences to 10 paragraphs, right? And I'm iterative, iterative. And every one of
those is a turn. Once you get to a chapter and you've got the first paragraph, now it's, for me, it's throw
up on the page, anything you would want free form, free form writing, anything you'd want
to think about in this.
Then what I do, because I'm not expected to be the expert in writing where you, it's the
difference between you and me.
You went out and said, teach me how to write.
I went out and I said, how to write i went out and i said tall write this right so i did i abdicated the the need to be the writer i have a writing partner
so my job was to throw the stuff on the page that i think were was important and then recognize that
my writing partner knew how to read that and restructure it. So that's the way I do it.
And I think that's what Tony Robbins does, too.
You're saying he speaks to it.
He's in the writing.
Yeah.
When Tony and I wrote Life Force, it was an unusual process, to say the least.
And we had like five or six authors on the book.
Right.
And I wrote my own chapters and rewriting, but Tony works with a
team of writers that will, uh, shape what he says and put into content. Let's talk about, um, how
you go from your idea, uh, to getting a publisher and a con and a, and a publishing deal. So did
you have a literary agent when you went out with your books? I have. I've had three literary agents over my four book trajectory. And my first one
was exceptional. One of the things that I look for in an agent is somebody who cares about the content. And my agent, my agent number one and my agent number three
have all been richly interested in the content
and hands in the content.
In fact, my first agent sat with Tal and I
for many days in his office in New York
and helped combat and structure.
You remember their name?
I don't remember my first agent.
I don't think he's in the business any longer.
But I do remember the other ones.
Yeah, I had John Brockman as my agent.
John's great.
John's amazing.
His son, Max Brockman, has taken over Brockman Inc.
at this point.
And I met him at TED and he approached me one day.
He says, when you're ready for your book, contact me.
And then i did on
abundance it's interesting right so uh an agent will typically take a fixed percentage of the
deal and so they're motivated and that percentage can be like 10 15 oh higher i think 20 20 25 okay
um and they're motivated to get the maximum advance from a publisher. Now, interestingly, for a fiction book, if you're ready.
Can I?
Yeah, please.
Let me debate that.
So my agent now, so my three agents, the first agent was a small, single, shingle guy.
Yeah.
And he really got in and every loan wouldn't be successful without him.
Got it.
We ended up not needing an agent because we went with the first person who helped us birth the book somebody who just read the article and said
you should write a book then we went and got an agent we shopped it around but we came back to
the person who discovered me so to speak sure then what i decided to do is i wanted a named agent
after that i thought i'm a big shot now so i went to william morris agency which is now william morris endeavor yeah and i got one of these big named agents and i remember um ari emmanuel calling
me when we hit number one new york times bestseller i'd never i didn't know who he was i didn't know
his i'm not an entertainment guy he's like who's got your back baby i'm like who is this he's like
google me what do you mean who is this he that. I know Ari. And it's like my experience with Ari is being in his office, having a conversation, and
him having a conversation on two different phones at the same time.
I call you right back.
And I just like.
For those who don't know Ari Emanuel, he's the guy who was the Ari in the series Entourage.
Yes.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Very cool.
But what I found out about that whole thing, interestingly enough, was that person
didn't care about my book.
Yeah.
That person was-
It was all about maximizing money.
Maximizing the income for the book.
And frankly, because I was a business book and business hadn't gotten cool and there
was no Netflix, et cetera, there was no tale.
There was no movie for Never Eat Alone, that sort of thing.
So I think today, by the way, there could be.
I think there's a genre now emerging.
Like you see Brene Brown has her TV series
and all that kind of stuff.
But today, Esmond Harmsworth, he is a gem.
He works in the detail of the content with us.
And what I was going to say is,
he, in my last book,
he agreed we went with Harvard Business School
as a publisher.
And this is important.
Most publishers don't matter.
Harvard Business School does.
Harvard Business School has a category around the world
that if your book is published on Harvard Business Review,
Harvard Business School,
people know that it has had peer review. It's had some degree of academic pressure to it. And as a result, there are
business people in China and Vietnam who will go to their catalog and use their book. And as a
result, speaking engagements go up on an international basis because you've got a
Harvard Business School book. So I just wanted to put that out there.
Esmond took probably a quarter of a million dollars less on that book
because he knew long-term it was better for me to have a Harvard Business School book.
As compared to if Simon & Schuster or...
Right.
So a few data points here.
So a literary agent is not necessary but if if you've
got a great literary agent they will maximize your income potential by and so what what john
brockman would do is he would have an auction so their proposal i was amazed so if you're writing
a fiction book you typically have to write the entire book and turn in a complete manuscript on a fiction book.
On a nonfiction book, you write a book proposal.
And a book proposal is typically an outline of each of the chapters, what it's going to mean, and how you're going to market it.
And it may or may not include a chapter.
It should include two chapters.
Well, these days you don't, but Abundance did.
No, Abundance did not.
Did not. Did not.
Did not.
Brockman did not want a chapter.
Interesting.
And so he went out to bid, and Simon & Sister won the bid for $240,000, which was like,
wow, it was like an amazing amount of money for me back then.
And by the way, when people hear about your advance, just to be clear,
that number 240,000 is split over three payments, right?
So you get a third upfront before you start writing,
a third when you deliver the manuscript,
and a third when the soft cover comes out.
So it's not all upfront.
That was my deal.
Yeah, they're all different.
I mean, most of the time,
it's a third, a third, a third,
and a third, third has something to do with the success of the book or some delivery of some
aspect of the book. But let me go back. I think what's important for our listeners is number one,
if you want your book to be a big success out in the world, having an agent is one path.
And we'll talk about another path, which is self-publishing. But having an agent is one path. And we'll talk about another path,
which is self-publishing. But having an agent is one path. But please make sure that you find
an agent that you love and they love you and they love your ideas. They want to get involved.
And they get their hands dirty. That's my big recommendation. The next piece then is what is
a book proposal? You should write a book proposal, which is you write the introduction, which is
telling somebody what the book's all about.
And again, in a sense, that's the first chapter.
You write about the book and then you write a structured outline of the book with half
a page per.
Now, that's one version of it.
And I've often been told that you need one or two full chapters because they don't know
if you're a good writer.
They don't know if-
Yeah, and maybe in my case-
You had Steve Kotler.
Steven Kotler was a known writer.
And I was a known marketer, promoter, entrepreneur.
They just want to see that you could structure a chapter
that's pretty good, right?
So they want to see that on paper.
And that's what you're selling.
What a lot of people think they have to do
is they have to go out and write a book
and then sell a book.
Only in fiction do you do that. In this case uh fiction or a biography i suspect a biography you might
want to write the book yeah but in the case of a book proposal so that's your next step is write
your book proposal and your edit your agent will bust their ass to make sure it's a good proposal
my agent has rewritten my book proposals so me and and my co-writer. Which is how they earn
their money. That's how they earn their money. And then what they have that you don't is they
have the network of the 10 people that they're going to go pitch your book to. You do not know
the 10 publishers that would buy your book tomorrow. They do. And so that's the idea that
they're out pitching your book to people that they know who they are.
So you're going to sell a book with certain rights.
And one of the things to think about is there's audible rights. There's the spoken book.
And there's international rights.
And when you sell your book to a publisher, they may say, we want U.S. rights only.
We want global rights.
Usually try to get it all.
They do. And I've in both ways sold it just US rights and then had bids for rights around the
world in translations, right? So like abundance.
And again, this is where your agent coaches you.
Yeah. And the agents incentivize to maximize your income. It was always fun to get like, oh, here's another language.
I like abundance.
And like, yeah, exactly.
And all these languages.
So you write the proposal, you submit it again.
You know, whether you're going with a known publisher or a press
or Amazon entered the business and disrupted the business in some interesting ways,
they're now buying books.
So, Leo, let's talk about that.
So the publisher piece is first.
I'm sorry, agent and going direct to a normal publisher.
That's there.
Why do you want to do that?
Well, you want to do that if you think you can get an advance
which allows you to pay for your writing partner,
which allows you to pay for your writing partner which allows you to pay for
your marketing right and you also want to do it similar to why you some i some entrepreneurs want
to bring investors you want accountability you want to have a third party giving you some pressure
you know they've invested in your book so they're going to be expecting shit back from you and
you also might want to do it because there's a group of people coaching you just like an like if you bring in an investor your investors are now your coaches
because they put money in you and they're going to tell you you know what they expect from you so
there's a lot of reasons to do still traditional publishing but every author knows that it's a very
challenging and vacuous process in many ways the The publisher does not do much for you.
Can we put a giant exclamation point on this? You think the publisher is going to promote the book
and create press and really drive sales. And in the final result, they don't.
They do their best.
They do, but they have a thousand books.
They have a thousand books etc so you you
are going to drive your the reason people love for ozzy is because when i came out with never
with who's got your back yeah reason it was number one new york times bestseller
was i had a successful book they gave you know 240 000 i think they get they give me close to
a million for my second book because off the back of the first one, they're expecting this, you know, this go to the next level.
And they give you a year to do it.
Yeah.
Right.
The first book, how long did it take?
Well, my first book took me 35 years to write because it was the book about my life.
It took, Abundance took about 18 months to write.
The Futurist Bowl took about a year and the future is faster
about a year but it's interesting once you turn in your book then it's a year it's another problem
with going with a traditional publisher so i mean don't think you're going to get it published the
next month that's the big problem if you like i'm worried about my team's book because for the sake
of my business and where i'm going right now with scaling my business, I want my team's book in the market now.
Yeah.
And I know that the team's book is going to take,
once I'm done with it,
it's going to take another fucking year.
If you go with a publisher versus self-publish, right?
Which is the next side of the equation.
So let's talk about self-publishing.
But you know more about than I do.
So just to be clear,
I went with Simon and Sister for the first four books the the fourth
one was life force with tony we got a multi-million dollar advance was huge and i didn't
pocket a dime of it either to tony that money was spent on writers it was spent on promoting the
book uh significantly and we donated millions of dollars to health and longevity
research so it was great i loved it um the book we i just published with saleem exponential
organizations 2.0 we decided to self-publish um and how was the process the technology is a lot
better so there's a gentleman named uh of carrie uhary Oberbrunner who runs a company called Igniting Souls.
And he is a complete turnkey self-publication.
So he has writers, promoters, translators, everything on staff.
And it's just a lot faster.
And so,
does he get distribution in independents and bookstores as well as on Amazon?
He does to some degree.
Not as much as a publisher would.
And also he does have international outreach and so forth.
Probably not as much as a publisher would as much as a problem but at the end
of the day it is a fixed price with him and all revenues from the book come to the authors yeah
right so that's by the way when you get in advance when you get in advance a quarter million dollars
or a million dollars you gotta earn that up you have to you have to sell a million dollars earn that up you have to sell a million dollars of profits which almost no books
do yeah very few books earn their advance earn their advance did uh did uh abundance yeah but
all the books have so far yeah and so did so did mine the the but that's a big deal and then you
don't have to give the advance back right it's important to know it's like you get a quarter of
a million you're pocketing that and that's the bet that the publisher has made on you and if you don't sell a quarter when when you
say you don't sell a quarter of a million dollars for the books you're getting 15 20 percent of a
book i forget the math right when a book sells for 20 dollars yeah or whatever 20 right you get
a nickel i've there it's a really ridiculous small amount of money.
Right. And that's what gets credited to your advance. The piece that you got, not the 25 bucks,
but the piece that you got gets credited to your advance. You have to sell exponentially that many
books to earn up your advance. A quarter million books to earn back the quarter million dollars of events right right it's crazy and so um the the challenge i think you know so the math on that is a little bit weird and
then you get you get spiffs for international publication but you don't get advances on you
don't get royalties on those like if you if every time your book gets published in vietnam you get
five thousand bucks okay it's a one-time thing.
They buy the rights.
They buy the rights and they buy them outright.
And that goes to you as cash in your account somehow.
That's all you see.
That's all you see.
You don't get the tail.
Now, and most books don't have tail.
You know, most books don't have tail.
The self-publishing is very interesting because to your point you're paying a one-time fee
of x tens of thousands of dollars to this person yes and every bit of the book that you sell you
set the price 20k 20 20 bucks 25 bucks that's all coming to you yeah i'll tell you the thing i love
most isn't that yeah it's the speed yeah i get this and when i'm writing about exponential
technologies and entrepreneurs i can't publish this thing it's a year out of date it's the speed. Yeah, I get this and when I'm writing about exponential technology and entrepreneurs
I can't publish this thing. It's a year out of date. It's like that ridiculous
That's look you and I both take our full advance and we pour it back into marketing and then some yes
Right you and I pour it back into writing partners research and then some but there are some people that watching this that could think
Of this as an income stream again It can. And if you do self-publishing, you could probably do a better business that way, particularly
if you've built your media company.
And that's the point, which is if you go self-publishing, you're getting nothing from the publisher.
So we don't give the publishers too much credit for doing a ton, but they do some.
Now it's all on you, right?
It's all on you if you self-publish.
You have an extraordinary book list.
You have an extraordinary presence.
You snap your fingers and your team lines up
20 of the most important podcasts
that you're going to go hawk your book on.
And as a result, it sells.
I just want to make sure that we're balancing
for folks who are watching who don't have a media business. the books don't sell themselves you have to you have to sell every
book it becomes it's packaged now which i want to talk about putting your marketing plan together
for your book i i have a a good old school from back in the you know in the in the time when I published my book, a binder with tabs.
And here's a tab on podcasting.
Here's a tab on, you know, et cetera.
Right?
Doing your book,
we could probably do an entire podcast
just on the book marketing.
Absolutely.
That's an entire thing.
And it's critically important.
I'm going to hit a couple of other things here.
The title and the cover. Oh my God. Yeah. So important. I'm gonna hit a couple of other things here. The title and the cover.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
So important.
It is and battles and battles and battles.
Oh yeah.
I literally, the only time I lost my cool
in Never Eat Alone was over the cover of Never Eat Alone.
Funny story.
So Never Eat Alone comes out. The book's done.
So here's the thing.
Make sure that you write in your contract.
Yes, you have control.
You have control.
Yeah.
Because most of the time you do not.
There's a lot of times in the book contract,
the publisher owns the control.
I didn't realize international covers are-
Different.
Are different and they're controlled by the local they're not
there there are publishing there are title there are book covers out there that look like crap and
I have nothing I can do about it the English book title for never eat alone I hate um so the book
cover was a guy's hand with a business card on on top of a white plate as if like i'm handing you a business card at lunch
now you laugh because you know that that couldn't be further from who i am and what i wanted like
i looked at that and i should have been a credit card i flipped the fuck out i was like are you
kidding me that is transactional networking smarmy bullshit i'm all about authentic generous relationships that are
life-changing for both parties and i said and so i i puffed and puffed and said no and
said no and said no and the publisher got so pissed at me that they said well you this is
supposed to be out tomorrow i'm like i said i'm not going to promote it because i didn't have any
rights yeah i didn't have any rights they could do if i and i said fine then i'm not going to promote it because I didn't have any rights. Yeah. I didn't have any rights. They could do it.
And I said, fine, then I'm not going to promote it.
I said, you want to fucking have rights over my book cover?
I'm not promoting it.
Fuck you.
And so they said, well, fuck you.
Here's your book cover.
Some guy had gone in the back of the room and just taken an ugly orange color and wrote,
never eat alone on it.
And they said, fuck you you here and I'm like good
it's done it's better than that other thing and so that ended up being the cover that's hilarious
yeah so I I I basically um I fight over or spend countless hours on the book title and then on the
imagery on it because it's like yeah it's like if you think
about when it's you know the movie poster is the same example right you've got like
one image and like one statement to capture people's attention yeah um and it's important
one of the things i would do is do a b testing by google ads of different book names and covers and see what people would click
on. But to your point, the reason we both care goes back to the very beginning of our talk.
It's your brand. It's who you are. It's how you represent yourself in the world.
Yeah. If it really is a book that is meant to represent you, every aspect has to represent you.
You know, let's talk a little about the marketing so the
uh to get to a new york times bestseller list i'm gonna give some numbers here that my team
researched so right now uh to get onto the new york times bestseller list not to get to number
one uh is you have to sell between 5 000 and and 10,000 books in your first week.
That's the current rough number.
I would be surprised that that's enough.
OK, but it's just on the list, right?
And so there's many lists.
There's fiction lists.
There is nonfiction lists.
There's children lists.
There's monthly lists.
And by the way, when people say I've got a best-selling book, there's a thousand lists out there. We are the Wall Street Journal
of USA Today, all of that stuff. It's funny. I was looking at somebody's bio the other day. I had
set up a call with somebody and I was looking at their bio and it said bestseller, you know,
and when I finally got underneath it, literally was nothing it was they one day on
amazon they had hit the top 10 of their category yeah which might say and by the way you could be
in a subcategory of atomic physics exactly physics and you were number three on atomic physics
and that that so i think what's important is we spend a lot of time and have both
of us have spent a lot of time sweating yeah this idea of our bestseller lists yeah and i would
argue ego driven yeah and the question is does it matter i mean at the end of the day one of the
realizations i had a while ago was i'm never going to put on the book number two New York
Times bestseller right you're either on the bestseller list or you're number one but you
even just said it right now you didn't even say New York Times you just said bestseller list yeah
so for the I really think the answer is if you don't hit number one none of it matters right
because you will always be able to say bestseller with some moderate degree of integrity
because you're not putting a predecessor. You're not saying Wall Street Journal bestseller or
Joe's blog bestseller, right? You could probably say that you're a bestselling author no matter
what. In some subcategory. In some subcategory with some degree of integrity uh and if you're not number one
then you probably doesn't matter and then just look at the amount look at the net present value
of the energy oh that you and i put into being number one crazy and the favors and the money
and the favors etc but you just don't know but listen for those and the likelihood but nothing
but for those who want to go for the gold ring let me hit a let me hit a few data points and please add to them so um if you want to hit number one the
number of pre-sales are probably in the 50 to 100 000 uh in the first week to get somewhere on the
list the number is five to ten thousand you might be number ten on the list you might be on a
secondary new york this is the new york, which is for some reason, the list everyone cares about.
Well, let me also suggest that I have seen people get those numbers that you're talking
about and not make the list.
And the reason they don't is because the New York Times finally has an arbitrary ability
to say, I don't trust your numbers.
I think that you don't have the pedigree. I mean,
there is no open algorithm. Let's repeat that. It's editorial. It's subjective. It's not objective.
You can hit those numbers and not gain the list. And one of the things they also do,
if you look at the list and you see a double dagger next to a book it is if you look at what that means it means
that this book reached the number of sales but it was in a fashion that doesn't represent public
interest it was some individual got tens of thousands pre-sold to their friends which is
what you do to get on the list yeah no i think, I think, I think where, by the way, I'd let, I want to hear
more about this double dagger.
Yeah.
Um, where I think it is unethical and I've seen, I've heard of people doing it.
I've never, I don't know anybody directly who's done it, but people who are rich
and buy 50,000 books and they send them to their warehouse. Yep.
And now they recognize that the way there's a very intricate process,
which is probably inside baseball. But if you go on the Amazon and you buy five books, it counts as one.
So Amazon reports a transaction of a book purchase.
Yes.
And so what was happening for a period of time is there were agencies that were created.
Yeah, I remember them.
I hired one.
Yeah.
And it would be your, like I had friends of mine who had companies that wanted to support.
And they would buy 100 books or 500 books.
And the agency would take the money.
Right.
Would buy the books individually.
And ship them to each individual. And then ship them to the employees of the company which you know from that actually i actually don't mind that yeah because
that feels a degree of integrity there are a hundred people getting your book right now they
didn't individually buy it their boss bought it but they're getting your book. I'm talking about people would buy 50,000 books,
go to that agency and have it shipped 50,000 times to people who never got the book, right?
So that's, I consider low integrity. And there were some people that got caught doing that and
some articles written about them. The challenge is that the only way you get to tens of thousands of sales in the first week is if you're, you know,
President Clinton or if you are a famous actor and it's on the shelf and people know you and
they want that inside story. I, what I was about to share. How'd you do it? Yeah, what I was about
to share. Again, this was back in an era. Yeah. When what I cared about was the list right so when i was trying to make the list
i went out and found a partner uh back in the day you remember university of phoenix i do um
i was doing some consulting yeah sure i was doing some some work with university of phoenix yeah and
um they really believed in the book who's got your back Because I was helping them design peer-to-peer coaching groups,
young kids that at the university would be in small peer-to-peer coaching groups
as a part of the learning experience.
And alumni that would be in peer-to-peer coaching groups
in some part of their career development.
And so when Who's Got Your Back came out, they're like, that's an amazing book.
We should get it for all of our students.
And let's go on a book tour around the country.
And so I ended up raising $2 million with University of Phoenix to just support my book launch.
Amazing.
Right?
And it got number one New York Times bestseller.
It's non-traditional marketing and thinking.
That's fascinating.
So that's the point, which is book marketing isn't just your advance. It's not just your own money. It's partnerships,
working with partnerships with outside organizations. I'll tell you what I did on Bold
to drive it again to number two. And both for Abundance and Bold, it was some
for abundance and bold it was some uh sequel to a fiction book you know sort of like i think it was 50 shades of gray was like hitting number one oh i thought you were like bold was like 50 shades
of gray i'm like i'm gonna go back and reread that i don't remember that it was like the follow-on to
50 shades of gray that was number one it was like no, no way I was going to beat it. I mean, I don't care how many I sold. But what I did with Bold was I did something unique and interesting.
I went out to my community and I built a community through Singularity University
and through XPRIZE. And I said, I'm going to create a program. It was called the Vanguard
program. And I said, I'm looking for 200 members of my community
who are going to go out and sell 100 copies of the book.
Yeah, that's great.
And if you do that...
I think Gary Vaynerchuk did something like that recently.
It was a big deal.
If you do that, I will give you an invitation
to come and join me and Ray Kurzweil for a day
to talk about exponential
technologies at Singularity University, either by remote viewing or in person.
And it worked great.
And so I had a small army of people who care deeply about exponential tech and entrepreneurship
who went into this.
So that was an interesting thing to do.
Yeah, I want to pause on that because I feel like that philosophy,
which is, I think if you are really going to go big
on a book,
you need to think of yourself as a movement leader.
Yes.
And if you think of yourself as, again,
there's a difference between you doing it all yourself
and a movement leader
movement leaders realize there they go i must follow them for i am their leader that was the
gandhi phrase right you need to marshal volunteers and as a movement leader i start to marshal
volunteers in the writing process i go out to people who care about what i care about because
they've been following me and i ask for case studies, examples.
I ask for volunteers for people who are curious about a topic that they would go spend a month doing research on the side for and deliver it to me.
So I get people involved.
That's what happened in EXO 2.0.
Salim had built OpenEXO as a large community of thousands of entrepreneurs, and they contributed
ideas, they reviewed chapters, and then they were there to promote the book.
The day we launched the book, we did a five-hour free global webinar teaching everything that
was in the book, and then offered the book at 99 cents on amazon
for the digital copy for two weeks really for for those individuals um you know it really is about
getting creative these days and you have to care about the book content because you're going to
spend a lot of energy it's it's not a financial transaction it's something that represents your
heart and your soul um let's talk a little bit about a's something that represents your heart and your soul.
Let's talk a little bit about a lifetime of book writing.
You and I have done that now.
We both started and we keep going.
You seem to have these short, agile sprints of writing a book.
A book might take you a year or two to be done.
I have a long-tail perspective.
I've been writing one book now for 10
years. And- Need some help?
I have had help. I've had lots of help, but it's a very, it's a pivotal book for me.
And I'm not worried about publishing it right away because to me, it's about the learning.
And I keep rewriting it and I keep reworking it and I'm not ready to
let it go into the world yet but it's it's a it's a beautiful ongoing learning path that I've had
with two writing partners yeah and so I just want people to think a little differently about it and
the other thing I want you to think about is the pivots so when I was when I wrote Never Eat Alone
it was serendipitous.
You, here's an, there was an article about how you had your career be so successful.
Would you write a book about how other people can be successful? Never Eat Alone about networking
relationships. Great. But that's not what I wanted my brand to be, right? All of a sudden I had this
amazing success of a brand around networking that I was actually
pushing away from.
Because in my head, my friends were Peter Diamandis, who was a thoughtful scientist
changing the world.
My friends were my CEO friends who were changing major corporations.
I didn't want to be the networking guy.
Yeah. who were changing major corporations, I didn't want to be the networking guy.
Yeah.
And so I never captured the momentum of Never Eat Alone.
I feel that. You had a trajectory that if you held on to that.
Could have been game changing.
Yeah, it's well.
In different ways.
I mean, I would have, it would have been different.
I mean, this was back at a day pre Tim Ferriss.
Yeah.
This was a day.
You could have been the ultimate podcaster from day one. All of those things. I mean, this was back at a day pre-Tim Ferriss. This was a day pre- You could have been the ultimate podcaster from day one.
All of those things. I chose not to.
I had to let go of space, which I had spent 20, 25 years developing all the relationships,
building companies there when I switched over to exponential tech and sort of abundance thinking.
And it's really about constantly reinventing yourself.
Right.
Right.
Which is a fun thing to do.
Yeah.
And that's what I've done with my books.
Yeah.
So if you look at my books,
and it's interesting because I may now come back around to that self-help space.
It's a space that I abandoned at a time
when my sense of self and ego and other things
didn't want to be all in.
I didn't want that to be my brand.
I wanted to be respected by presidents
and CEOs and thought leaders.
And you are.
And ironically, I am.
And they still respect me for the networking thing.
I mean, I've helped presidents build their networks
during campaigns.
And it's ironic that people want to keep pulling
me back into that core. And I had fought it for a while. Hey everybody, this is Peter. A quick
break from the episode. I'm a firm believer that science and technology and how entrepreneurs can
change the world is the only real news out there worth consuming. I don't watch the crisis news
network. I call CNN or Fox and hear every devastating piece of news on worth consuming. I don't watch the crisis news network I call CNN or Fox
and hear every devastating piece of news on the planet. I spend my time training my neural net
the way I see the world by looking at the incredible breakthroughs in science and technology,
how entrepreneurs are solving the world's grand challenges, what the breakthroughs are in
longevity, how exponential technologies are transforming our world.
So twice a week, I put out a blog.
One blog is looking at the future of longevity, age reversal, biotech, increasing your health span.
The other blog looks at exponential technologies, AI, 3D printing, synthetic biology, AR, VR, blockchain.
These technologies are transforming what you as an entrepreneur can do.
If this is the kind of news you want to learn about and shape your neural nets with,
go to demandist.com backslash blog and learn more.
Now back to the episode.
So you're going to get to a point, your book is published, you get the galleys,
you're going to go out there and look for book blurbs
right so what's a book blurb a book blurb is uh getting someone on the back of the cover who has
some notoriety to say this is a great book buy it right which probably the author has written and
handed to the blurber and it is a hundred percent what happens right i mean yes it's like it's like
you don't actually send them the full book and say,
can you read it and give me two sentences.
People do.
They do.
And nobody does.
And nobody.
So when someone asks me for a book blurb, you know, if I know the person,
I will do it.
I will still ask for a summary of the book because I'm not going to have a
time to really just slot it in and read it.
You just want to make sure it's not weirdly...
And what's its purpose?
And then how does it connect to me?
Right?
And then I will say, then write me three or four draft blurbs and I'll modify one.
Right.
Are you abundant with your blurbing of other people's books?
Because I know some people, I like to say their names, but they are very stingy with it i know there are others in the middle someplace i have been careful not to just
accept everybody but there are those people who i know through singularity or x-prize who i respect
um but i'm not i'm not that stingy with it but but I get, I probably get a hundred requests a year
and I'll probably accommodate 20. My view is I don't get the stinginess because it's not like
any human will have seen the 10 things that you've blurbed. Yeah. I just want to make sure
it's authentic for me yeah right authenticity in that
regard so you get the book blurbs um you get your book jacket you get your final hard copy
and you're going to have a launch event of some type which used to be in person my first abundance
launch event was uh Steve Forbes threw me a party and Ariane Huffington threw me a party and that
was Ari has the best book launches she She threw me mine too, right?
And then you're on a press tour.
Which by the way,
first of all,
I think a book launch party is useless.
It doesn't.
It doesn't do anything
other than makes you feel good.
It's like a birthday.
Yeah, it's like a birthday.
It's like,
do I have a party
or do we not have a party this year?
Well, I'll have a party.
Okay, that's as important.
Don't spend any money.
It's not going to drive anything.
If you want to celebrate
like a decade of work and your friends are there, have a party
for that purpose.
Right, right.
And then you start your media.
Then you start your book marketing.
Yes.
And at that point-
It is eyeballs.
It's getting on.
NPR is probably the best thing you can get on.
You know, and that changes.
So when Never Eat Alone came came out i had a relationship
that got me on the new york time on on the today show and at that time not today show yeah today
show the morning tv show right today's show made number one that was it and today's oprah will make
you a number one does it anymore oh well maybe at least two i mean like i mean does she even have
your book club anymore?
I don't...
We don't know.
We got to be careful we don't say that.
I don't watch Oprah.
I'm not sure.
Well, I don't think she has a show anymore, Peter.
Oh, come on.
She's had to.
Does she?
Oh, well, we'll find out.
Anyway.
I don't know.
Anyway.
Regardless, but you're...
The PR, you know...
But I think the...
Look, what are the categories?
This is any media person.
There's the newspapers, which do do reviews,
and I don't think they matter as much anymore,
except for New York Times doing a review is a big deal still, I think.
You've got the morning shows.
You've got radio, which still has impact.
Bob Pittman keeps reminding me who owns iHeartMedia
how important radio is, and I really think it is.
But I think the biggest issue are podcasters.
Yeah.
So today it's going on a podcast tour.
It's really speaking about your book.
And people are like, I don't want to give it away.
Bullshit.
What do you mean?
I mean, you want to talk about it as much as give everything away.
And then a lot of people will buy the book just to have it on their shelf
so they can refer back to it well you know what portion of books that are bought or read oh god
what do you remember percent what less than 10 percent wow i mean the reality is you're anyway
i'm not even going to go there i was about to be we're about to take this whole reason for watching
this podcast and flush it down the toilet. Because no one fucking reads it anymore.
Well, that's the big question.
It's like, what's next for books?
Well, I'll tell you what's next.
And we did this with EXO 2.0.
We basically trained a GPT-4 model on the book and all the research.
And you're talking to the big query.
Is that the thing I was talking to Peter Bott?
That's a different version. And Peter bot is trained on all of my books yeah and you can ask it concrete questions
like you know how do i develop an abundance mindset or an exponential mindset whatever it
might be or how do i i'm in a cement business in in uh sao paulo uh how do I turn myself into an exponential organization? And the book will give you context and a reason.
Your books, I hope my books deserve to be read beginning to end from people who really
believe in what we're writing about.
If somebody wants to, I'm about to write the most important consummate book today of high
performing teams. The last team's book
was 20 years ago. Wow. Which was Pat Lencioni's Five Dysfunctions of a Team, which everybody
still refers to. Yes. But think about what's changed in 20 years. So my book that we're about
to publish is going to be very meaningful and important in the world.
Most books don't have that gravitas about them.
You need to ask yourself again, what are you writing for?
Sure.
I'll tell you one thing that I've done recently is as I'm writing a book, I will release chapters
or portions of chapters as blogs.
I was going to talk about that. Test them. I ask for feedback. release chapters or portions of chapters as blogs. Right?
And I ask them and I ask for feedback.
And I develop an audience on that way.
Andy Weir, who wrote the Martian
and wrote like my favorite book of the decade,
Hail Mary, both fiction books,
what had came out of no place.
And he wrote his book, the Martian
and released it as chapters on the internet for for
feedback and people get afraid yeah if they do that they're giving it away and no one's going
to buy the book it just doesn't work that way no abundance it works in this regard so give the
information away get the feedback develop people who want the next chapter in that regards and i
think that's really uh you know important so what do we have to say
in summary which feels like yeah let's wrap this up um you know uh i'll one last thing do you read
your own books on audible oh great question yeah and so when abundance came out and they chose the
uh the reader and i listened to it was like i wasified. I was like, oh my God, I could not listen to this person for a chapter.
You'd rather Peterbot read it.
Oh my God.
So I ended up reading with Steven, read Bold and Future is Faster.
You like the process?
I do.
I enjoy reading it because I can put the inflection into it.
It takes a day and a half, two days to read a book.
Yeah, I hate it.
I know.
Well, the thing that's interesting is you don't have to actually read it perfectly.
But you have to read it three times.
You read a sentence and then you fubbed it and you read it again.
I mean, my skin is crawling thinking about it.
So the answer is I've not read any of mine okay well i'll tell you uh we just trained up my voice model on 11
labs and it feels really good and i'm sure without with not the inflection but not with the meaning
right of the personal story that goes like oh my god you know when you really when you convey it
in that regard but it will get there yeah but the meantime, here's what I say to reading your book. I think it's a beautifully
generous gift to give your readers that I've never given them because when I've tried,
it drove me crazy. I sat, I said, okay, you know what? This next book, I'm going to do it. And I
sat there and I started practicing
and I realized I have three days of this ahead of me. And I said, no. What I did do is I interviewed
the readers. So I got my publisher to give me three potential readers and I listened to all
of them and I found one that I thought was good. And then I had a meeting with them.
Interesting.
I said, listen, let me explain to you. I'm going with you instead of myself.
I'd like you to understand why this book's important to me.
I love that.
I want you to understand.
And I want to talk to you about some of the stories.
I want to tell you.
I'm going to tell you the inflection point that matters to me.
I coached them.
Yes, nice.
And I think it got better as a result of that.
But I agree I should be a more generous, better human and read him myself.
I'll tell you something that is interesting, that David Sinclair, when he wrote Lifespan, and he had a co-author on that, in between the chapters, not all chapters, but in between the chapters, when on the Audible, there was a conversation between David and the author about the chapter about the
content of the chapter like has how that was amazing and how fast it's changed
and that gave a little intimacy so at a minimum if someone else is reading your
book yeah getting into an audio and recording having a conversation with that person about the chapter.
I thought about that.
So we, of course, when I'm working with my co-writers,
I had a co-writer that I did two books with.
His name is Noel Wyrick.
Amazing co-writer.
He was great.
He and I would get into some really, like,
knock-down, drag-out fights.
Like, he'd be like, you you know that doesn't make any sense
i'm a book writer i know what this is like but that but you've turned it into mush and like we're
yelling at each other and i would sometimes just laugh and i said we've got to publish this as a
part of the book right no all the soup that you know that the ingredients that go into the soup
that makes it i think we will by the, see books that are written in this multimedia fashion
where the making of the book is all recorded.
The filmed even perhaps when they're together on Zoom
talking about it.
Imagine the richness of that.
Sure.
You've got the book and then you've got all the stuff
that went into it.
I mean, it would be powerful.
So, ladies and gentlemen, our next book writers here, Keith Ferrazzi, author of Never Eat Alone, Who's Got Your Back, Leading Without Authority, Competing in the New World of Work.
Keith, which social media platform are you mostly active on these days?
I'd say LinkedIn.
LinkedIn.
LinkedIn is the right place.
And you're, it's at Keith Ferrazzi at at linkedin at keith ferrazzi but wait before we we can't just close
we can't we've got to say something poignant okay i thought we i thought we did i don't know we
were just no no okay we had an hour worth of poignance bring it in then so like both of us
should give a reflective comment about the rapper
of the all right so uh you want to do yours no no you go first okay that's fair um don't think of a
book as this crazy mount everest thing that only special people do think of a book as your heartfelt ability to sit and be contemplative about what really matters to you.
Who you are.
What do you want to project to the world?
And it doesn't have to be something that you're on deadline.
It can be something that you evolve.
But it's a forcing mechanism, an accountability mechanism to focus on your brand
and what you have to say to the world. And then I would also recommend that you get a coach.
And that coach could be a co-writer or something so that you keep on and you work it through.
And you get to the end.
And you get to the end. And you've got something for your legacy. And
at a minimum, your grandkids will love
to see yeah you know um that was beautiful that was beautiful okay that was beautiful i felt the
need to do something pointed your birth to that uh understanding why you're writing the book is
really important right i think the why is is key and i remember the difference between I'm going to write a book about space because I'm
the space guy to, oh my God, there's this incredible truth in the universe about technology
making everything more abundant and where humanity was going. And I want everyone to know about it.
And the level of emotional energy that drove that was night and day. So hopefully,
energy that drove that was night and day. So hopefully, folks listening can find that book inside them that really has this... We're emotional entities, right? You need that emotional
drive. I found the book writing process incredibly meaningful and creative, and it's artistry and you know
it can it changed my life abundance as a book launched launched me in a brand new
direction as did never eat alone for you and at end of the day it's gonna become
easier to write a book.
Use the tools. I think we had an interesting debate and discussion about
using ChatGPT. Use the tools, but make sure that if you're using ChatGPT that
it isn't plain vanilla, that you're adding your own stories, that what is on the page there is meaningful to you.
But at the end of the day, we're going to see a lot of books.
And people say, I'm going to write a book to make money.
Well, guess what?
That's not where you make your money.
You make your money in the speaking business if that's what you want to do.
And that's going to be the subject of our next podcast.
We talked about you're on LinkedIn,
at Keith Ferrazzi, two R's, two Z's.
And what if they want to reach you
for having you speak or coach their executive team?
Where do they go for that?
The company's called Ferrazzi Greenlight.
So go to Ferrazzi Greenlight
and you can get in contact with us there.
Awesome.
Thank you, brother.
This was fun.
Always.