Why I Chose to Write a Book Instead of Just Teaching the Concepts Live
Long before Doing What You Know was a manuscript, the ideas were being shared in conversations, coaching sessions, small groups, and late night phone calls with people who were tired of being stuck. I could have kept it that way. I could have continued teaching the concepts live and never written a single chapter. But I knew something would be missing.
Live teaching inspires people. It creates energy. It sparks excitement in the moment. The problem is what happens after the moment passes. Without something tangible to return to, most people slip back into their patterns. They remember pieces, but not the process. They remember inspiration, but not the steps. They feel the motivation fade and assume the opportunity passed with it.
A book changes that. A book becomes a mirror. A reminder. A tool readers can revisit when the invisible barrier shows up again. It creates consistency that live teaching alone can’t sustain. It travels farther than I can. It sits on desks, nightstands, and kitchen tables, waiting for the moment a reader is ready to confront their reality and take the next step.
I wrote this book because I wanted the message to outlive a conversation. I wanted it to reach people I may never meet. And I wanted readers to have something solid to lean on when their motivation drops and their old identity tries to take over.
A live moment can start the fire. A book can keep it burning.
Get the book and join the Challenge at https://doingwhatyouknow.com/amazon.