特定知识具有高度创造性或技术性
特定知识具有高度创造性或技术性
特定知识具有高度创造性或技术性
特定知识处于技术、艺术和传播的前沿
Naval: 就特定知识被传授的程度而言,它是在工作中进行的。它是通过学徒制进行的。这就是为什么最好的企业、最好的职业是学徒制或自学的职业,因为这些是社会上尚未弄清楚如何培训和自动化的事物。
这里的经典案例是沃伦·巴菲特从学校毕业后去找本杰明·格雷厄姆。本杰明·格雷厄姆是《聪明的投资者》的作者,并在某种程度上现代化或创建了价值投资这一学科。沃伦·巴菲特去找本杰明·格雷厄姆,提出免费为他工作。
格雷厄姆说:“实际上,你定价过高,免费就是定价过高。“格雷厄姆完全正确。当涉及到像格雷厄姆将要给予巴菲特的那种非常有价值的学徒经历时,巴菲特本应支付他很多钱。这本身就告诉你,这些技能是值得拥有的。
特定知识通常具有高度创造性或技术性
特定知识也往往是技术性和创造性的。它处于技术的前沿,处于艺术的前沿,处于传播的前沿。
即使在今天,例如,互联网上可能有一些表情包大师能够创作出令人难以置信的表情包,将想法传播给数百万人。或者非常有说服力——斯科特·亚当斯就是一个很好的例子。他通过有说服力的论证和视频做出准确的预测,基本上正在成为世界上最有信誉的人之一。
这是他多年来积累的特定知识,因为他年轻时对催眠术着迷,他学会了通过漫画进行交流,他很早就接受了Periscope,所以他一直在练习大量的对话,他阅读了所有关于这个主题的书籍,他在日常生活中运用了这些知识。如果你看他的女朋友,她是一位美丽的年轻Instagram模特。
这是一个在其职业生涯过程中积累了特定知识的人的示例。它具有高度的创造性,其中包含技术元素,并且是永远不会被自动化的事物。
没有人会从他那里夺走这一点,因为他还在斯科特·亚当斯这个品牌下承担责任,并且他利用Periscope的媒体杠杆作用,绘制呆伯特漫画和写书。他在该品牌之上拥有巨大的杠杆作用,如果他想要积累超出他已经拥有的财富,他可以从中创造财富。
特定知识对个人和情境具有特异性
Nivi: 我们应该称它为独特知识吗?还是特定知识在某种程度上更有意义?
Naval: 你知道,我在非常年轻的时候就想出了这个框架。我们谈论的是几十年前。它现在可能已经有30多年的历史了。所以,在当时特定知识一直伴随着我,这就是我思考它的方式。
我没有试图改变它的原因是,我发现的每一个其他术语都以不同的方式被过度使用。至少特定知识没有那么常用。我可以重新定义它。
独特知识的问题是,是的,也许它是独特的,但如果我从别人那里学到它,它就不再是独特的,那么我们俩都知道它。所以,与其说它是独特的,不如说它对情境高度特定,它对个人特定,它对问题特定,并且只能作为更大痴迷、兴趣和在该领域花费时间的一部分来构建。
它不能直接从一本书中读出,也不能在一门课程中教授,也不能被编程到单一算法中。
你不能过于刻意地组装特定知识
Nivi: 说到斯科特·亚当斯,他有一篇关于如何通过在三件或更多事情上达到前25%来建立你的职业生涯的博客文章。通过这样做,你成为世界上唯一能在前25%水平上做这三件事的人。
所以,与其试图成为一件事上最好的人,你只需努力在三件或更多事情上变得非常、非常好。这是构建特定知识的一种方式吗?
Naval: 我实际上认为最好的方法就是追随你自己的痴迷。在你的脑海深处,你可以意识到,实际上,我喜欢这种痴迷,我会留意它的商业方面。
但我认为,如果你过于刻意地去构建它,如果你过于以金钱为目标导向,那么你不会选择正确的事情。你实际上不会选择你热爱做的事情,所以你不会深入其中。
斯科特·亚当斯的观察是一个很好的观察,基于统计数据。假设今天对人类种族有价值的知识领域有10,000个,这10,000个位置中的第一名已经被占据。
除非你恰好是世界上最痴迷于某事的10,000人之一,否则其他人很可能成为这10,000个领域中的每一个的第一名。
但是当你开始组合时,嗯,第3,728名拥有顶尖的销售技巧和非常好的写作技巧,并且非常了解会计和财务的人,当对这种交叉点的需求出现时,你已经通过组合数学从10,000扩展到数百万或数千万。所以,它变得竞争性小得多。
此外,还有收益递减。所以,在三到四件事上成为前5%比在某件事上成为真正的第一名要容易得多。
在你天生擅长的领域构建特定知识
我认为这是一个非常务实的方法。但我认为重要的是,不要过于刻意地开始组装事物,因为你确实想要选择你天生擅长的领域。每个人在某些方面都是天生的。
我们都熟悉那个短语,天生的。“哦,这个人在结识男性或女性方面是天生的,这个人是天生的社交名流,这个人是天生的程序员,这个人是天生的读者。“所以,无论你在哪方面是天生的,你都应该加倍投入。
然后可能有多件事你是天生的,因为个性和人类非常复杂。所以,我们希望能够将你天生擅长的事物结合起来,这样你自动地,仅仅通过纯粹的兴趣和享受,最终在三到四件事上达到前25%、前10%或前5%。
Specific Knowledge Is Highly Creative or Technical
Specific Knowledge Is Highly Creative or Technical
Specific knowledge is on the bleeding edge of technology, art and communication
Naval: To the extent that specific knowledge is taught, it’s on the job. It’s through apprenticeships. And that’s why the best businesses, the best careers are the apprenticeship or self-taught careers, because those are things society still has not figured out how to train and automate yet.
The classic line here is that Warren Buffett went to Benjamin Graham when he got out of school. Benjamin Graham was the author of the Intelligent Investor and sort of modernized or created value investing as a discipline. And Warren Buffett went to Benjamin Graham and offered to work for him for free.
And Graham said, “Actually, you’re overpriced, free is overpriced.” And Graham was absolutely right. When it comes to a very valuable apprenticeship like the type that Graham was going to give Buffet, Buffet should have been paying him a lot of money. That right there tells you that those are skills worth having.
Specific knowledge is often highly creative or technical
Specific knowledge also tends to be technical and creative. It’s on the bleeding edge of technology, on the bleeding edge of art, on the bleeding edge of communication.
Even today, for example, there are probably meme lords out there on the Internet who can create incredible memes that will spread the idea to millions of people. Or are very persuasive – Scott Adams is a good example of this. He is essentially becoming one of the most credible people in the world by making accurate predictions through persuasive arguments and videos.
And that is specific knowledge that he has built up over the years because he got obsessed with hypnosis when he was young, he learned how to communicate through cartooning, he embraced Periscope early, so he’s been practicing lots of conversation, he’s read all the books on the topic, he’s employed it in his everyday life. If you look at his girlfriend, she’s this beautiful young Instagram model.
That is an example of someone who has built up a specific knowledge over the course of his career. It’s highly creative, it has elements of being technical in it, and it’s something that is never going to be automated.
No one’s going to take that away from him, because he’s also accountable under one brand as Scott Adams, and he’s operating with the leverage of media with Periscope and drawing Dilbert cartoons and writing books. He has massive leverage on top of that brand and he can build wealth out of it if he wanted to build additional wealth beyond what he already has.
Specific knowledge is specific to the individual and situation
Nivi: Should we be calling it unique knowledge or does specific knowledge somehow make more sense for it?
Naval: You know, I came up with this framework when I was really young. We’re talking decades and decades. It’s now probably over 30 years old. So, at the time specific knowledge stuck with me so that is how I think about it.
The reason I didn’t try and change it is because every other term that I found for it was overloaded in a different way. At least specific knowledge isn’t that used. I can kind of rebrand it.
The problem with unique knowledge is, yeah, maybe it’s unique but if I learn it from somebody else it’s no longer unique, then we both know it. So, it’s not so much that it is unique, it’s that it is highly specific to the situation, it’s specific to the individual, it’s specific to the problem, and it can only be built as part of a larger obsession, interest, and time spent in that domain.
It can’t just be read straight out of a single book, nor can it be taught in a single course, nor can it be programmed into a single algorithm.
You can’t be too deliberate about assembling specific knowledge
Nivi: Speaking of Scott Adams, he’s got a blog post on how to build your career by getting in, say, the top 25 percentile at three or more things. And by doing that, you become the only person in the world who can do those three things in the 25th percentile.
So, instead of trying to be the best at one thing, you just try to be very, very good at three or more things. Is that a way of building specific knowledge?
Naval: I actually think the best way is just to follow your own obsession. And somewhere in the back of your mind, you can realize that, actually, this obsession I like and I’ll keep an eye out for the commercial aspects of it.
But I think if you go around trying to build it a little too deliberately, if you become too goal-oriented on the money, then you won’t pick the right thing. You won’t actually pick the thing that you love to do, so you won’t go deep enough into it.
Scott Adams’ observation is a good one, predicated on statistics. Let’s say there’s 10,000 areas that are valuable to the human race today in terms of knowledge to have, and the number one in those 10,000 slots is taken.
Someone else is likely to be the number one in each of those 10,000, unless you happen to be one of the 10,000 most obsessed people in the world that at a given thing.
But when you start combining, well, number 3,728 with top-notch sales skills and really good writing skills and someone who understands accounting and finance really well, when the need for that intersection arrives, you’ve expanded enough from 10,000 through combinatorics to millions or tens of millions. So, it just becomes much less competitive.
Also, there’s diminishing returns. So, it’s much easier to be top 5 percentile at three or four things than it is to be literally the number one at something.
Build specific knowledge where you are a natural
I think it’s a very pragmatic approach. But I think it’s important that one not start assembling things too deliberately because you do want to pick things where you are a natural. Everyone is a natural at something.
We’re all familiar with that phrase, a natural. “Oh, this person is a natural at meeting men or women, this person is a natural socialite, this person is a natural programmer, this person is a natural reader.” So, whatever you are a natural at, you want to double down on that.
And then there are probably multiple things you’re natural at because personalities and humans are very complex. So, we want to be able to take the things that you are natural at and combine them so that you automatically, just through sheer interest and enjoyment, end up top 25% or top 10% or top 5% at a number of things.