Alexa Lombardo

Posted on Jan 03, 2022Read on Mirror.xyz

It's time to learn šŸ“š

In April 2020, Marc Andreessen called on us to build. Iā€™m calling on us to learn.

The particular essay I reference sparked a lot of debate. Iā€™m not saying I agree with everything Andreessen said - but his words inspired me to get to work. And I did, for a little over a year. Then, I lost sight of the purpose, and the only thing to get me past this hurdle was learning.

Here, I go through the fundamentals of how we learn, my personal stages of learning, my learning slump, how I found my way to the other side, and why itā€™s more important than ever for us to embrace a new age of learning if we want to build anything meaningful.

At the end, I share all of my favorite resources for learning (reading, writing, newsletters, note taking, networking and more).

If you already like where this is going, subscribe.

First, how do we learn?

When I started typing this, I realized I didnā€™t know much about how humans learn. So I asked Google, ā€œhow do we learn?ā€ Without spending too much time I selected the below image. This pyramid was popularized by American psychologist William Glasser as part of an initiative aimed at optimizing the retention of content by students. While there are some educators who will dispute this, itā€™s helpful for the sake of this essay.

via Agile Lean Life

The 95% retention rate on what we teach to others astounded me. If youā€™re in the same boat, take a look at these studies:

I thought about my learning experiences, which can be broken down into three time periods: elementary student era, college student era, corporate job era, entrepreneur era. Each era was a different type of learning, noted below:

via Me

As an entrepreneur I made it to the bottom half of the pyramid. I was primarily learning by doing and teaching. I felt energized and stimulated.

2020: A year of building, seeing & hearing

When COVID hit and we were forced to stay home, I was happy to have my own business as a distraction. Per Andreessenā€™s request, I embraced ā€œbuilding,ā€ which meant taking on new clients and passion projects.

I attempted to take advantage of other forms of learning as a means of distraction. I took online classes at Harvard and sat in on endless webinars. After a while, I caught Zoom fatigue and abandoned my studies.

Then there was the rise of new(er) social platforms. Tiktok was a great tool for learning via sight and sound. It made education fun and entertaining; you could how to dance, cook, and run a startup in 15 seconds or less. Even so, my adoption was slow and short lived.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90624117/tiktok-future-of-education-learning

Clubhouse also became a real champion. I tuned in for a while, but then became overwhelmed with information. Most of made me think I wasnā€™t doing enough, rather than inspire me.

These new tools for learning werenā€™t making me better at ā€œbuilding.ā€ They lacked practical application, so I quit them. Looking back, I acknowledge how they changed our world, the ways we engage with each other, how we consumer information and how we share knowledge, forever. If I had spent more time seeing & hearing, perhaps my learning renaissance would have started sooner.

Early 2021: A learning slump

For the better part of 2021, I was in a rut. Even though I was still ā€œbuilding,ā€ it felt slow, monotonous and sometimes purposeless. There were missed milestones caused by supply chain delays, growth struggles, budget constraints, funding stress.

Like many of us, I thought the lack of motivation was a side effect COVID and then, a side effect from the vaccine. As I was writing this I started digging through old emails and notes from that time period in search of an illustrative example. Hereā€™s a screen shot of a note I wrote in July:

via my Notes

In reality, I had become complacent. Complacent with lack of groundbreaking creativity, with an insular network, with unfulfilling projects. Complacency, as Andreessen pointed out, is the enemy of building. In my opinion, itā€™s not the enemy of building. You can build complacently. Thatā€™s why there are so many copycat brands and companies lacking true innovation. Complacency, as it turns out, is the enemy of learning.

Late 2021: A new community of knowledge-sharing peers

In Fall 2021, something shifted. I attribute that shift to several things:

  • The increased public frustration with privacy abuse and mistrust of major media players (including the companies that work with them, sparking anxiety)
  • The return of IRL conferences and trade shows
  • The introduction of new tools / functionality for publishing, sharing and discussing content
  • The rapid surge of activity, investment and onboarding in blockchain, crypto, Web3, NFTs and the metaverse

The public frustration and mistrust led me to seek out new tactics for community building - finally, something we could do without VC backed budgets.

In November, the NFT.NYC conference brought activity and excitement to the entire city. I wasnā€™t attending the conference but it was impossible to escape the attendees. I had limited knowledge of NFTs and the adjacent areas (blockchain, crypto, defi, Web3, metaverse), but after several conversations I was intrigued. I saw the huge opportunity this could represent (for my clients and for me). I didnā€™t realize this would become the answer to my learning problem.

I asked my new acquaintances for their favorite resources and was shocked by the amount of knowledge they had to share. They didnā€™t give me the names or links of books to buy. They didnā€™t tell me to sign up for a specific class. They didnā€™t tell me which podcast to listen to. Instead, they told me who to follow on Twitter, the blogs to read, the Newsletters to subscribe to, the Discord channels to join, the apps to download (see below, Iā€™ll share a few of my favorites). They introduced me to their friends.

This was decentralized, peer to peer knowledge sharing with community at the core. Armed with their recommendations, I found myself learning across every level of that learning pyramid. I was reading, writing (youā€™re reading exhibit A right now), seeing and hearing, discussing, doing and finally, teaching. Even better, it was nearly all new material.

Together, the above brought me out of my learning slump and reignited my excitement about building (something critical to have when actually trying to build with meaning.)

2022: A time to learn, together

Todayā€™s tools enable a learning renaissance powered by accessibility, individual contributors, and interconnected community, where knowledge is more readily created, discussed and distributed. This ignites creativity and unlocks potential creation, making us more capable of rising to Andreessenā€™s original challenge. It also prevents us from building for the sake of building, which I can tell you from experience, is not the answer to how we change the world or create a better future.

So, in 2022, I encourage you to always be learning and asking others, ā€œwhat are you learning?ā€ and ā€œhow can I help you learn?ā€ Then, start building.

Currently, Iā€™m learning from Candace, Caroline, Avery, Gaby, Yaron, Rob, Ray and Thomas at Blanksoles, Cathy Hackl, Seth Godin, Dan Runcie at Trapital, the team at Samsung Next, the team at Invisible North, the crew at Betaworks, plus a growing list of others. Below are my favorite tools for learning. If you have others, please let me know at [email protected] or @alexa_lombardo

šŸ“š Reading

  • Matter - My absolute favorite app for reading. It lets you bookmark things you want to read later, becomes a central location for all your newsletters (getting them out of your inbox), enables you to follow writers wherever they publish, has an awesome highlight and save function, and seamlessly transitions to audio.
  • Upnext - Spotify for reading. Upnext might overtake Matter for me. It lets you save all the articles, tweet threads, PDFs and Wikipedia pages into your library. Then, you can follow other users to see what they're saving, or check out what a curator thinks you might be into. The more you read, the more the app begins to understand you so it can make its own recommendations.
  • Pocket - A bookmarking app that helps you keep track of things youā€™ve read that you want to refer back to, discover related content, and save pages for future reading.

āœļø Writing

  • Medium - A social publishing platform for writers and readers. For creators, itā€™s great for creating and styling blogs, publications, and newsletters with built-in features like responses, emails, and stats. Readers can follow authors, topics or create a reading list, all which populate a Twitter like feed.
  • Mirror - A decentralized blockchain and crypto-based publishing platform that aims to connect creators directly with their audience. It has tools for writers to crowdfund their projects through the sale of NFTs and through the creation of DAOs. More to come on this one.

šŸ“ Newsletters

  • Buttondown - Started and still run by one person who calls it a ā€œtool, rather than an ecosystem,ā€ built for those who want a newsletter editor thatā€™s easy to use and that prioritizes privacy and transparency.
  • Substack - Makes it simple to start an email newsletter that makes money from subscriptions. It provides web and newsletter publishing tools that are purpose-built for paid subscriptions.
  • Ghost - An open source blogging platform for writers and journalists. It boasts a minimalist and straightforward user interface that simplifies blogging for its users. Ghost offers SEO tools and plugins that are built into the software, making it easy for users to optimize their content.
  • Honorable mention and one to watch: Revue

šŸ““ Note Taking

  • Obsidian - Unlike other apps like Google Keep or Apple Notes, Obsidian offers multiple ways to link your notes and calls itself a ā€œsecond brain.ā€ As someone who likes to think they naturally draw connections between thoughts and ideas, I was skeptical. But it actually works. By identifying those links, it helps you see patterns emerge, and those patterns allow you to see how some notes relate to each other in ways you never imagined.
  • Mem - Similar to Obsidian but with more functionality. Mem also allows you to sync your calendar, create custom templates from your ā€œmemsā€, create notes in a timeline, save notes into inbox and even use spotlight to copy and paste mems and lots more. For me, itā€™s a bit much, but I have a lot of new friends who use it.
  • Miro - More of a moodboarding tool, I use Miro for visual note taking and when collaborating with cross-functional teams. Think of it as a digiital whiteboard.

šŸŒ Networking

  • Upstream - A networking app focused on generating meaningful connections between its members by hosting digital events that start with a speaker, followed by breakout matched sessions; they also facilitate expert led office hours
  • Meetup - The OG IRL networking service. I abandoned Meetup a while back but post learning slump rejoined and was astonished by the number of relevant groups hosting in-person and virtual events for people with similar interests. Fun fact: Meetup and LinkedIn were founded the same year - 2002.
  • Eventbrite - Although itā€™s primary purpose isnā€™t for networking, I use Eventbrite all the time to notify me about local events on topics Iā€™m curious about.
  • Mentorpass - Good for anyone who isnā€™t as comfortable with cold outreach, these guys position themselves as a lower-cost, lower-commitment alternative to startup accelerators and MBA programs with a network of vetted mentors you can access via subscription.

šŸ« Social Learning

Not going to go into detail here - but there are some really great reads out there that will explain how to optimize your social platforms for learning/teaching about different topics (and avoiding distraction)

Special thanks go to my past and present teachers (my Mama, my team at Atomic NĀ°8, Candace, Caroline, Avery, Gaby, Yaron, Rob, Ray and Thomas at Blanksoles, Cathy Hackl, Seth Godin, Dan Runcie at Trapital, the team at Samsung Next, the team at Invisible North, the crew at Betaworks, etc.)

As I keep learning I hope to keep writing. You can subscribe here. If you have any tips or feedback, you can reach me at [email protected] or @alexa_lombardo.