Why Good Ideas Keep Dying in Decks

 
 

The way we communicate our work has stopped working. Static decks. Long documents. PDFs no one opens. They stopped landing before AI made them cheap. AI just made it super obvious.

We already know how to communicate differently. Video won social media years ago. YouTube became the de facto destination for tutorials. Zoom and Google Meet replaced audio-only conference calls. We watch, react, scroll on.

Work communications are the last place still trying to make largely static formats do the work of interactive ones we know are more effective, have greater impact, and are easier to remember.

What resonates more now is something someone can interact with and react to. A video. Something clickable. A working, interactive prototype. Something they can touch and push back on, respond to because it’s more real, build on, or say “no, not that, more like this.”

I designed Build Like A Pro for researchers to stop recommending and start showing. Turns out this is NOT just a researcher problem. It’s a LARGER communication problem that extends well beyond product development, desk jobs, and knowledge work.

Underneath, yes, judgment matters more than ever. AI's made recommendations cheap. Anyone can generate a plausible strategy in minutes. What did NOT get cheaper is knowing which version or idea is right. That decision is trained. But it does not travel well in a deck.

That's the course. A 3-hour live session, capped at 8, where you turn an idea or recommendation into something real enough for someone to react to the same day. Not polish. Proof.

You leave with something you built.

This Saturday. $197. Two seats left.

If you are between roles and want to join, one seat per session is 50% off. DM or email me for the discount code.

Can’t make Saturday? There is a 2nd session on July 21st, 3-6pm PT.

Who is this for? Anyone whose good ideas keep dying in decks. Anyone whose meetings moved to video but whose communication style did not. Anyone who prefers to interact with information, not just read it. Anyone who thinks visually.



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