Dan Sullivan and Joe Polish go live in front of a live audience in the Zoom room for this 10x Talk, joined by Babs Smith and Dean Jackson and hosted by Paul Colligan. Dan compares AI to the invention of zero, a cognitive shift that took Europe roughly 300 years to absorb, and reveals the daily scoring system he has run for 217 straight days. Joe explains why the $2 million marketing archive sitting in his rented house has generated over $3 billion in tracked sales, and why no version of AI will ever replace a hug. Here's what you're about to discover in this conversation: Why Dan Sullivan says AI is the biggest cognitive disruption since the invention of zero, and how a concept dreamed up by philosophers in India took 300 years to reach Europe once it did.The $2 million marketing archive sitting inside Joe Polish's rented house, why it looks like hoarding from the outside, and how it has generated over $3 billion in tracked sales for his Members and Clients.Why Dan has scored every single day for 217 days straight on a scale of 1, 5, and 10, and what his highest day (250 points) actually looked like hour by hour.The direct mail letter Joe wrote for Bill Phillips back in 1998 that got reposted on Facebook decades later and pulled in $20,000 in sales in under an hour.Dr. Ned Hallowell's "right difficult" framework, and why finding yours might matter more than any AI tool on this list. If you'd like to join world-renowned Entrepreneurs at the next Genius Network® Event, apply today for your invitation to attend at geniusnetwork.com. Show Notes: AI as a Cognitive Disruption: The Invention of Zero Dan compares AI's arrival to the introduction of zero into mathematics, invented in India but not adopted in Europe until around 1200 AD, once Arab traders carried it west. Once zero arrived, it made double-entry bookkeeping possible and let European commerce and science take off. Dan's takeaway: it took 300 years for zero to become widely accepted, and nobody actually knows how fast AI adoption will play out. "It's all guesses and bets." The $2 Million Swipe File Living in a Rented House Joe describes the marketing library and swipe file he has collected over decades, roughly $2 million in courses, books, and direct mail archives housed in a rented property.Properly organized and applied, that archive has generated over $3 billion in tracked sales for Joe's Members and Clients.He compares it to a goldmine that, until AI came along, was nearly impossible to organize and distribute at scale. Digitizing Decades of Marketing History Joe used Claude to convert old Flip Video files from the early 2000s that would not open in QuickTime.He interviewed Mark Rukavina of iMemories, a media digitization company later sold to Ancestry.com, about digitizing consumer photos, film, and tape at scale.How a 1998 direct mail letter Joe wrote for Bill Phillips (Body For Life) generated $20,000 in sales in under an hour on Facebook. The Ocean Metaphor: You Cannot Get to All the Water Dan's analogy: you step out of the ocean, someone asks how the water was, and you realize you only touched a fraction of it.AI opportunity works the same way. It is vast, and no one will ever capture all of it.The real skill now is deciding which part of the water actually matters to you, instead of chasing every possible use case. Working Wiser: Quarterly Books and Claude 4.6 Dan has written a new small book every quarter since he started at age 70. This conversation covers book number 47.Structuring a book idea used to take about three weeks. With AI, the same process now takes about three hours.He started with Perplexity, then switched to Claude 4.6 for the quality of language it produces. The Hospitality Business: Humans for Hugs, AI for Thinking Joe's operating philosophy for Genius Network: let AI absorb everything that can be done with AI, finance, marketing, and calculations, so the Team is freed up to do only what humans can do."Until I can figure out how to have AI give somebody a hug, I want a human that's actually caring to give somebody a hug." Handwritten Thank You Cards and the Return to Real Connection At recent Genius Network meetings, Members were asked to hand-write three thank you cards, no AI, and mail them from a mailbox outside the office.One Member in his mid-30s did not know how to address an envelope.Joe's point: as AI-generated content becomes ubiquitous, genuine human touch points become an unfair advantage. Yesterday Creates Tomorrow: The 217 Day Scoring System Dan's daily practice: score every activity 1, 5, or 10 points, built around one morning question. What can I do today so that tomorrow, looking back, this was a great yesterday?He has done this 217 days straight. His highest day scored 250 points.He credits it with reduced anxiety about the future and a near total elimination of what he describes as ADD-like scattering, chasing 20 imagined future outcomes that compete for today's attention.The idea anchors his ...
Show More
Show Less