- Joined
- Jul 26, 2018
- Messages
- 434
I've always loved my job. For the last ten years I've been coaching pickup, and to a smaller degree, dating and relationships. I love coaching, I'm gifted at it, but I'm getting ... shall we say, bored.
Learning pickup is what I'd consider the gateway drug to self-development. For a new guy who just wants to get hotter girls, it's like a discovering magic is real. It opens up all sorts of intellectual and even spiritual pathways. As a teacher my greatest fulfillment came from watching a student over come their AA and go get a phone number, or more. It's awesome. But then what?
Being a digital nomad these last few years (ten countries visited in 2019) I switched more to phone coaching. Most of the guys with aa (90%) I noticed even though they paid me a significant amount of money, no matter how much motivational speeches I gave them, without me being physically there to stand behind them, they don't take action. All they need to do is go to the mall, and approach a girl, record it and bring it back. The only guys who seemed able to do this, were the ones who had already been doing it. But I'm just not willing to fly across the world to help one guy with his AA. Not for less than a lot of money.
I realized most of these guys if they can't even approach a girl at the mall, probably suffer in so many other areas of their lives. Most of them have good jobs (looking at you engineers) but have very few friends. "Social Anxiety" is one of their problems, but the dating "coaching" when I looked deeper often turned into "counselling" and often "therapy" and the students often fall into reliving past traumas, having to do with their perception of bad parenting.
Anyway... for myself I haven't been fascinated by pickup for a long time. But psychology, hell yes. At the moment I'm power reading three different books on psychology, philosophy and peak performance, as well as taking an online "life coaching" course, which is going to greatly enhance my coaching abilities. I love this stuff.
Business wise, the Tony Robbins "I can help you achieve anything!" model is a very tough sell. Few niches have the sexiness of a pickup coach. Pickup coaches aren't full coaches; they're more consultants. Coaches don't really give advice as much as guide people to make better decisions and take better actions.
I'm thinking I'll niche down, just for marketing sakes. Probably for anxiety. Not necessarily social anxiety, but more likely anxiety for digital entrepreneurs, which is something I know a lot about. The skills I've learned in a decade of teaching gives me quite an edge.
Anyway, I'm thinking out loud. Question: Have any of you ever worked with a life coach, outside of the pickup niche? How was the experience for you?
Learning pickup is what I'd consider the gateway drug to self-development. For a new guy who just wants to get hotter girls, it's like a discovering magic is real. It opens up all sorts of intellectual and even spiritual pathways. As a teacher my greatest fulfillment came from watching a student over come their AA and go get a phone number, or more. It's awesome. But then what?
Being a digital nomad these last few years (ten countries visited in 2019) I switched more to phone coaching. Most of the guys with aa (90%) I noticed even though they paid me a significant amount of money, no matter how much motivational speeches I gave them, without me being physically there to stand behind them, they don't take action. All they need to do is go to the mall, and approach a girl, record it and bring it back. The only guys who seemed able to do this, were the ones who had already been doing it. But I'm just not willing to fly across the world to help one guy with his AA. Not for less than a lot of money.
I realized most of these guys if they can't even approach a girl at the mall, probably suffer in so many other areas of their lives. Most of them have good jobs (looking at you engineers) but have very few friends. "Social Anxiety" is one of their problems, but the dating "coaching" when I looked deeper often turned into "counselling" and often "therapy" and the students often fall into reliving past traumas, having to do with their perception of bad parenting.
Anyway... for myself I haven't been fascinated by pickup for a long time. But psychology, hell yes. At the moment I'm power reading three different books on psychology, philosophy and peak performance, as well as taking an online "life coaching" course, which is going to greatly enhance my coaching abilities. I love this stuff.
Business wise, the Tony Robbins "I can help you achieve anything!" model is a very tough sell. Few niches have the sexiness of a pickup coach. Pickup coaches aren't full coaches; they're more consultants. Coaches don't really give advice as much as guide people to make better decisions and take better actions.
I'm thinking I'll niche down, just for marketing sakes. Probably for anxiety. Not necessarily social anxiety, but more likely anxiety for digital entrepreneurs, which is something I know a lot about. The skills I've learned in a decade of teaching gives me quite an edge.
Anyway, I'm thinking out loud. Question: Have any of you ever worked with a life coach, outside of the pickup niche? How was the experience for you?