Should you become an All-rounder or Expert? | Generalist vs. Specialist Research & Debate

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Till Musshoff

Till Musshoff

Күн бұрын

The question of wether to be an expert or all-rounder is highly contextual and everyone should find their own answer through their world view and goals. I believe humans are highly multivariate with multiple interests instead of a singular niche attraction which makes us generalists or all-rounders instead of specialists by design. We can’t be reduced to a single characteristic or interest.
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Follow me on Twitter: / bpgtill
Or Instagram: / tillmusshoff
The video is based on my own experiences as well as the following books:
Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World, David Epstein
Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less, Greg McKeown
Mastery, Robert Greene
Outliers: The Story of Success, Malcolm Gladwell
My productivity software: www.controlconsole.io/learnmore
FIFA coaching website: coaching.bpartgaming.de/?lang=en
Chapters:
0:00 Intro & Summary
2:48 Specialists
5:20 Generalists
9:46 Specialized Generalist & My Model
13:24 Courage beats Credentials

Пікірлер: 480
@user-my4tp6yg1l
@user-my4tp6yg1l 3 жыл бұрын
When you eventually have hundreds of thousands of subs, just wanna say I was here before 1k. Also this video was awesome. As a fellow generalist seeing the way you illustrated and visualised the ways in which you’re able to combine and utilise skills like that was really thought provoking.
@tillmusshoff
@tillmusshoff 3 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your faith in me 🙏🏻🚀
@jayarikishii
@jayarikishii Жыл бұрын
I found this channel at 10k
@panshul520
@panshul520 Жыл бұрын
I'm here at 13.2k but hey still early
@chesterchualpc
@chesterchualpc Жыл бұрын
@@tillmusshoff This video resonates with me. I’m a generalist too. With vast array of skills. Above average at most. 7-8/10 of mastery. I felt bad lately that I won’t amount to anything with this approach. But your video made me realize being a generalist is like a Mixed Martial Artist.
@ROBERUSAN
@ROBERUSAN Жыл бұрын
Now there are more than 24,600 subscribers. Keep going!
@ToanduE
@ToanduE Жыл бұрын
The problem is it is very hard for people to tell the difference between a generalist who genuinely has knowledge and skills across multiple disciplines and fields and a con-artist who just pretends to be one. Most of the time when I met someone who seems to be a generalist, after a while, I realized most of them are just empty tanks who love to brag about something they don't really understand. And it is dangerous to put trust, time, and money into those people.
@smirkdogeface
@smirkdogeface Жыл бұрын
Same thing can go for experts tho, I've seen people claiming to be experts at something, but turns out the "professional information" they offered can be literally Googled with the right keywords.
@edwardrocca
@edwardrocca Жыл бұрын
It's all "show dont tell" in the end right? Someone claiming to be a generalist but has nothing to show for it can't really claim to be anything. They might have a broad array of interests, but that doesn't mean they have any level of skill within the domains they're interested in.
@PutineluAlin
@PutineluAlin Жыл бұрын
Look for the most "tired of this stuff" and you will find that unicorn.
@ToanduE
@ToanduE Жыл бұрын
@@smirkdogeface it is easier to spot the fake expert because after a short while, you can see the fake expert clearly doesn't have the depth that an expert supposed to have. But the strength of a generalist is not the depth but the width, and someone can talk about a lot of topics for a long period of time while still appear that they quite know what they're talking about.
@draco147
@draco147 Жыл бұрын
​@@smirkdogeface Isn't that the point? He has the information right away to make decisions after another while a non-expert will have to google each problem they find and make sense of the new info. You become an expert for having knowledge, not for making new knowledge that google can't find.
@kidstories124
@kidstories124 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes my curiosity scares me. I always want to learn everything that piques my interest. In effect, I feel like falling behind in my career. I feel I should only focus on one thing and be perfect at it. This leads to depression. Suppressing my desire to learn new things and only focusing on one makes me not want to do anything at all. This video has opened my eyes. Thank you for this amazing lesson. I can now go ahead and do what I like, not what I think I must do. I think it will be fun knowing a handful of skills. I don't want to be an expert. I don't want to be perfect. All I want is to be content with whatever I do.
@realglutenfree
@realglutenfree Жыл бұрын
If you wanna watch some more interesting videos about generalists and organizing, I would recommend you this channel: www.youtube.com/@elizabethfilips Her videos have helped me a lot over the last couple of months and are actually helpful for living a chaotic life that is still somehow organized.
@gior987
@gior987 Жыл бұрын
Your comment was very insightful and made me relate so hard to "Suppressing my desire to learn new things and only focusing on one makes me not want to do anything at all"! Thanks for sharing!
@thaivunguyen8728
@thaivunguyen8728 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for insight. Im in the same position as you and understand the feeling completely
@hackedtechnothief
@hackedtechnothief Жыл бұрын
same here. I was searching for answers on the internet and ended up here. I'm glad to say that I will keep on learning and challenging myself to feel better about myself. I don't care to be an expert, I care to experience things. that's what keeps me want to live.
@Alex-ns6hj
@Alex-ns6hj Жыл бұрын
You’re not alone bro, I definitely feel like I fell behind one year. This last year, I went to college because I was forced to by my parents. I had no idea what I wanted to do. So I spent it trying to make a business and decided school doesn’t know how to actually start a business, which is the degree I went for. I barely passed my classes, all Cs cuz I was tryna do business, reading, and learning everything I could. School was very boring cuz it didn’t help me accomplish anything I wanted. During this whole year, I basically used ChatGPT to do test which were online and projects I cared less about that didn’t teach me anything. I learned basically the courses through reading books and my own efforts. So then recently I got excited and obsessed over engineering. Everything about it. I want to make stuff and with my newfound business knowledge I learned such as copywriting (now with ChatGPT lol), marketing funnels, sales, website design, etc, I can start a business with some engineering knowledge I put to use for a future company. Still have entrepreneurial skills and vision. Don’t let your parents make you feel like you’re failing, it just takes longer for some people to know what they want to study and/or do with their life. I learned what it takes and means to be creative, a deep thinker, and fast learner through reading specific books and extensive research. This is a single year that school can never teach me and that anyone can take away from me. Same to you.
@mr.winter538
@mr.winter538 Жыл бұрын
In case anyone is interested I will leave some more thoughts I had about this subject here. First I would like to make the point that the logic presented in the video can be reversed and applied to specialists as well. Any specialist will also be a generalist because having a lot of knowledge about a certain topic also gives you the ability to master various skills and gain a lot of basic insight into other topics. For example a degree and experiences in physics can lead to understanding things varying from parts of engineering such as electrical engines to space travel and rocket science. Elon Musk used this concept to build up successful companies in these exact regions. With this in mind I would say that while neither being an expert nor specializing is objectively better, both have their advantages and disadvantages. I would like to list some with regards to two things: security and efficiency of time use. In both of them both specialists and generalists are facing unique problems. The security of a specialist is mostly threatened by a lack of diversity. If the field he is an expert in has trouble, he has no ability to move to other fields because his abilities are too focused. For example if someone who is the best at designing new cars is in a situation where cars have been entirely replaced by public transport, they will lose their career. On the other hand, a generalist’s security is mostly threatened by too much competition. Since they are not experts in any of the fields they are in, if the fields suddenly become very popular no one will need them anymore because others who are more efficient will simply be used instead. This has already happened with a big part of the programming world, were programmers are often replaced by people from India who will do more work for less. Next I would like to take a look at efficiency. Here the specialist has a problem with the translation of expertise to new skills. If this translation would be described by a function, it would be a logarithmic one. Most skills one gains from knowing things about a certain topic are acquired in the early stages of learning. However a specialist will continue to learn about a topic, even if this stage is surpassed and the amount of extra knowledge required to gain new skills starts to increase. For example if someone learns the basics of video editing, it won’t take long for them to be able to do things such as cutting parts out or editing in basic text. However these things are what will be needed the most for editing most videos. Anything going beyond this such as making transitions incredibly smooth or knowing when to add in some stock footage to make things more interesting require quite a bit of learning while not adding as much to the viewer experience. The generalist on the other hand has a problem with inefficient topics. Learning about some things, such as how to learn more effectively, is vastly more efficient and helpful than learning about other things, such as how to read hieroglyphs. While in these two examples the difference is obvious, a lot of the time it is hard to distinguish between topics which are very useful and other which are not. For example learning a new language might seem less useful since English can be used in most parts of the world, however after doing so one might realize that they can suddenly understand and use vastly more internet resources, scientific papers, get more and more varied opinions and so on. On the other hand learning to play chess might seem like a good idea because it can be used to brag to friends and it helps train intelligence, however in actuality it is difficult to brag with being good at chess as soon as there is a single person better than you and the part of intelligence that is being trained is mostly pattern recognition which our brains are already naturally good at. Because this difficulty to estimate the usefulness of topics the generalist, who chooses topics to learn about vastly more often than the specialist, is taking the risk of learning about topics which aren’t that useful far more often, which is likely to waste time in the long run. So to summarize, specialists can have advantages of generalists and vice versa. Just like specialists tend to have more problems with gaining new skills through their expertise and have bigger problems when sectors they rely on struggle or close, generalists are more likely to be outcompeted by people who are more efficient in specific topics which a lot of the topics they know about rely on and they have a higher chance of wasting time learning about topics which translate to comparably few skills. Of course everything is more complicated than presented here. Specialists also face competition and generalists can also learn so much about topics that their learning starts becoming inefficient. However I would argue that the trends listed here at least give some good direction to what the two groups are good at and what they tend to struggle with. Thank you to everyone who took the time to read through all of this.
@tashfeenomran3888
@tashfeenomran3888 Жыл бұрын
Very informative and well thought off!
@adedejijubril8048
@adedejijubril8048 Жыл бұрын
This very insightful. Thanks a lot
@khalidyousef9065
@khalidyousef9065 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this!
@sinfinite7516
@sinfinite7516 Жыл бұрын
Great comment
@zhouyuelin6618
@zhouyuelin6618 Жыл бұрын
Amazing comment bro
@ktonickss
@ktonickss Жыл бұрын
"When you have attained the way of strategy there will be not one thing that you cannot understand. You will see the way in everything." - Miyamoto Musashi
@ktvx.94
@ktvx.94 Жыл бұрын
I'm 28 and have reached very similar conclusions to yours. I found that the accelerating returns are only a part of the learning curve. The first few steps are hard and slow, then you "click" and massively accelerate the learning, but after a while it starts slowing down as you need an increasing amount of effort to refine a skill further, and then burnout hits. I found that not only is it more efficient to switch around fields of expertise, but also sometimes you just learn passively when you stop trying, and when you get back to what you were practicing, you're instantly better. Accelerating adaptation + riding the learning curve for the maximum amount of learning over time is the way to go for me.
@aimee9478
@aimee9478 Жыл бұрын
Turned 29 recently and reached the absolutely same conclusion! More people should see this comment.
@spookyplaystation
@spookyplaystation Жыл бұрын
Yeah I found my skill to increase in various creative fields literally by doing nothing other than not trying. Very strange and almost a bit frustrating because prior to recognizing this I could spend excessive amounts of time practicing something without seeing any improvement. It seemed to be the thing that allowed me to advance from that lull in growth was to take a break. I have no idea materially how this would make any difference, yet somehow it does.
@exmodule6323
@exmodule6323 Жыл бұрын
Is there more literature on this? (Especially the passive learning part)
@firstever27
@firstever27 4 ай бұрын
"Learn passively when you stop trying, and when you get back to what you were practicing, you're instantly better" - brother i´m 38 and still my inner child is here cause i love learning, and its changed my lige and still is changing
@chesterchualpc
@chesterchualpc Жыл бұрын
12:52 This quote is spot on. Being a top 25% means you must be an 8/10 in your skill level to that profession. Make it 3-5 interconnected skills. Not the best but not average. Dang.
@Hamzus97
@Hamzus97 Жыл бұрын
I always wanted to be a generalist, unfortunately a lot of people tells me that is not the way to become a "professional" and it won't take you places, I tried to specialize and just focus on just one topic but that was not fun for me and I learned that there is no issue with being "specialized generalist like you said" having an in-depth knowledge about a topic and still act really fine with many others and that helps learning new topic and the best part is you can switch your main subject and get in-depth in any other topic when you want to. I LOVE BEING GENERALIST
@AltruisticWarrior
@AltruisticWarrior Жыл бұрын
The only downside with being a specialist, if you're not able to do that job anymore, you're useless. A generalist can adapt and transition well enough in so many areas and knowing other things outside of that duty can serve you more than you know even when seemingly unrelated. It's all about adaptation. Much the same, I'm proud to be a generalist.
@aena5995
@aena5995 Жыл бұрын
@@AltruisticWarrior what about studying something specialised like business data analytics instead of something like CS in the bachelor's ?
@scepticalchymist
@scepticalchymist Жыл бұрын
While it is true that early specialization can bring one into a job, it can be the wrong thing to do, when one realizes ten years later that this specialization, lacks the possibility of expansion. One might should try to do both. Specialize on a topic, but generalize your skills, so that the topic can be switched at some time later.
@Dismiazs
@Dismiazs Жыл бұрын
This probably what I needed the most right now. Thank you!! I've always been torn between doing several things that I love to do or specialize in one of them in order to be successful. I hope one day I'll come back to this video to tell my story. Good luck for other generalist fellows
@rift4984
@rift4984 3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing content my man. Please keep them coming!
@williammyers8240
@williammyers8240 3 жыл бұрын
Already one of my favorite channels! Thanks for your work, really excited to see what you have in store for us in the future.
@zhouyuelin6618
@zhouyuelin6618 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Till! You really have the production quality and insights of someone that is deserving of so much more. Excited to see where you go in the future!
@cyong
@cyong Жыл бұрын
Great video! Personally, I'd prefer to become a generalist, but current society rewards specialists more than generalists. Your model has made me think differently about how to survive in this world
@alexandersen4888
@alexandersen4888 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. You’re the last piece of the puzzle to push me into being a KZbinr. I’ve also read “Range” and nodded a lot of times during the video. Now I’m definitely going to read “Mastery” as well 👌🏼🧐
@Gaphalor
@Gaphalor Жыл бұрын
I am 26 years old now and I always struggled because I know I am a Generalist but tried so hard to be a specialist. I broke up my degree to go into a different direction just to find myself in a different specialist direction. I ditched it aswell and only now I found a degree who actually suits me: a technical designer, a mix between engineer and designer. (I did car design first stopped and went into engineering and stopped it aswell and only then found this special degree in my country who is actually advertised to be for generalists. I am 26 and thought I failed but it's just that it took me so long to find the suitable place for me to flourish.
@zhouyuelin6618
@zhouyuelin6618 Жыл бұрын
Keep going dude! Never settle
@Gaphalor
@Gaphalor Жыл бұрын
@@zhouyuelin6618 thanks man God bless you
@KhmerTarotReading
@KhmerTarotReading Жыл бұрын
Let you shine in your spotlight ❤ ✨ Thank for surviving champ
@Gaphalor
@Gaphalor Жыл бұрын
@@KhmerTarotReading thanks buddy appreciate it!
@robbedeguytenaer4306
@robbedeguytenaer4306 Жыл бұрын
Haha i’m doing the same study as you (industrial design) for the same reason (generalize)
@konofx_
@konofx_ Жыл бұрын
I really liked your video so I will share my knowledge about this topic if anyone wants to read it, this might help you take a route in your life. I am a specialized generalist. I always say that generalists and specialists need each other. Business owners are usually generalists, while they hire specialists. If it wasn't this way, the world wouldn't function. I often discuss this with my father. People who give their all to one single task exist to assist or be assisted by those who grasp more things, in this case, the generalists. For example, if you are good at drawing, but only at drawing, you risk not being able to scale because the only thing you know how to do is draw. If you can't sell your drawings, you may struggle financially. (I don't mean this literally, as there are many successful artists, but more in the sense that if you make $200,000 a year from drawing, but your only source of income is from your drawings, you are dependent on that one skill and may be at risk if sales of your artwork ever stop) so even if you think this is more stable you're still at constant risk you just feel it less. On the other hand, if you are good at drawing but you have this partner (in this case, it's the company you work for or your business partner) who has general abilities such as persuasion, marketing, and branding skills, they can take your drawings and convince others that they need what you produce, capitalizing on your work 100 times more than what you could have done in a lifetime on your own. This is because you lack the necessary skills to sell your artwork. Now, if you are decent at drawing and have good persuasion, marketing, and branding skills, you become a "specialized generalist" which is IMO the best of them all if you want to be a business owner or make lots of money even being employed because you know how the game works, so you"ll be a more valuable asset to your company resulting in a higher pay and you can also do something on the side that earns you more money in the long run. This type of person knows many skills, but has them well balanced. It's like a video game: you start with AGI 0, STR 10, SPD 3. Your goal should be to make AGI and SPD close to STR, to be a better player. If you only raise STR, that will doom your character because you are putting all your eggs in one basket. resulting in you having to have a party (in this case your job/partner) to do the dirty job for you. This is why business owners keep getting wealthier and people with a lot of talent stay at the bottom, because they only care about one skill and don't learn how to be well-rounded. when In reality, human life is designed to be well-rounded, not specialized. (They're more like solo players that then make parties to be able to do twice the amount of what they can achieve in less time, resulting in higher quantities. aka. more money) Because dude think about it, in order for you to take care of others you must take care of yourself, in order for you to eat you must know how to kill which confirms, which ironically this is taught in school and it's even a scientific method we just don't get it addressed correctly, FOR DOING SOMETHING GENERAL YOU MUST DO SOMETHING SPECIFIC. Our life is something full of generals that include specifics. not just a single specific. If you take away all modern distractions and imagine we are placed in the real world, in order to survive, you need to know how to make fire, kill an animal, create a shelter, take care of basic hygiene and more. If there are two people in a cold place, and one only knows how to kill an animal, while the other knows all of the things mentioned, it's clear who will survive. So if you don't care for learning more in life and you just want to do nothing, this person with general skills will take your skills and leverage them 100 times. If you want to be wealthy, I recommend learning multiple things, but not just for the sake of knowing them. Instead, aim to mix them together and create something scalable. This will also teach you how to gather a good team. It's not the same owning a bakery and hiring someone to do the accounting if you know nothing about numbers, compared to owning a bakery and being able to do intermediate accounting yourself. If you know the rules of accounting, you will be able to judge the skills of the person you hire. But if you don't have that knowledge, anyone could scam your business and you would have to learn the hard way. It makes sense that it's this way, because In the past, greedy people liked to keep their workers ignorant so they could keep them in check, which is how we are educated in school. (this is why history is important) But if wealth is what you are seeking, this is not enough. If you are okay with just having a decent up & down life, then that's fine. But if you want more than that, you need to learn new things every day. We humans either grow or deteriorate, there's no staying the same. you either advance or go back, if time passes and culture changes you stay behind others keep moving forward, if you only learn how to use machines manually someone will invent a way of making the machine work by itself and basically kill what you've been doing for years in an instant. you need to constantly seek for knowledge. I think where school fails is saying "don't learn multiple things, specialize in something because if you want to learn multiple things you'll end up mediocre" they should say "Master something, and THEN learn something else because if you want to learn everything at once you will be mediocre at them all" the problem is not wanting to learn more guys, it's wanting to do it all at once. Success for every one of y'all! 🧐🧐
@joshuangugi6774
@joshuangugi6774 Жыл бұрын
This is deep. Thank you for taking your time to share this information. I will keep on getting the skills and practicing them.
@palesamphatsoe959
@palesamphatsoe959 Жыл бұрын
I feel like this is a sign, and I was meant to read this. Thank you so much 😭
@iamcmac
@iamcmac 3 жыл бұрын
Found you from r/entrepreneur. 2 minutes and I'm digging this. Subbed! Good luck in the growth of your AWESOME channel :)
@firstlegende
@firstlegende 3 жыл бұрын
Creativity, depth and interesting topics. Never subcribed that fast
@khalidaser1430
@khalidaser1430 Жыл бұрын
Great video. I love your editing skills and you fun and clear delivery.
@KingJellyfishII
@KingJellyfishII Жыл бұрын
The idea of a special generalist resonated with me a lot. I have a wide range of things I know a reasonable amount in, like cooking, sailing, mathematics, biology, woodworking, engineering... and a few things I have deeper knowledge of like CS, physics, chemistry and electronics. I'm by no means a specialist in any of those things but I would say I am above average in at least some of them
@viickytea2933
@viickytea2933 Жыл бұрын
i wrote my college applications about this very topic, but i felt like they weren't as in-depth as i really wanted them to be. this was a great video and i wish i found it sooner.
@tillmusshoff
@tillmusshoff 3 жыл бұрын
I hope you enjoyed the video and took something out of it. Please subscribe to the channel of follow me on Twitter (@bPGTill) if you are interested in more in-depth content. Thanks! Twitter: twitter.com/bPGTill
@lars_vs
@lars_vs Жыл бұрын
Great video. For a long long time I’ve felt like I was always finishing second, but now I understand that that can be a very good thing.
@adamcummings2051
@adamcummings2051 2 жыл бұрын
This was a very insightful perspective on this question. I definitely think there is a place for both, but I'm definitely in the generalist boat.
@breddafredda
@breddafredda 3 жыл бұрын
Dein Content is hammer. Total inspirierend und interessant. Ich freu mich sehr auf mehr :)
@y_22606
@y_22606 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the vid. I always asked myself this question not knowing its answer, but you really helped me find it 🤗
@olawaleadegoke3782
@olawaleadegoke3782 Жыл бұрын
Just halfway through and I find we have a lot in common. Subscribed now and hope to learn more with and about you Tim. Cheers
@crown_420
@crown_420 Жыл бұрын
The video is well crafted. You explained the topic after considering almost all the related possible factors! Eventhough it's underviewed, it is well researched💯
@wolvenedvard3049
@wolvenedvard3049 Жыл бұрын
This video is so damn well edited and clear.
@ammarreda39
@ammarreda39 Жыл бұрын
" Monetize ur learning curve " Thats one of my main takeaways man , thanks، really an eye opening video 💜
@metalmonkey128
@metalmonkey128 3 жыл бұрын
This really imspired me to plan on bulding my own Start-Up in the future when I have enough time to work on my ideas and involve others. Thank you very much!
@tillmusshoff
@tillmusshoff 3 жыл бұрын
That‘s awesome to hear! Go for it!
@sketchflix6425
@sketchflix6425 Жыл бұрын
Wow. Never knew there was ideals of this name. I knew I was intrested in many things and would love to work on everything, but wasn't aware of the ideal of Generalism. Nor the ideal of Specialism. Thanks for doing a video on this. Hope my algo gives more insightful videos like this in the future. Keep on thriving❤️.
@lanzcordero2132
@lanzcordero2132 Жыл бұрын
As a 21 year old with lots of interests and passion, this is perfect. Thank you for this. 💯
@raoulberret3024
@raoulberret3024 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting! Thank you for the video essay!
@rwong1984
@rwong1984 Жыл бұрын
I don't normally comment on KZbin videos, but your videos are real gems. Great work.
@tillmusshoff
@tillmusshoff Жыл бұрын
Thank you! 🙌
@vlaad2799
@vlaad2799 Жыл бұрын
Seeing how many books you read, I would absolutely love a video where you talk about the books which have had the biggest impact on you!
@cliveandersonjr.8758
@cliveandersonjr.8758 Жыл бұрын
Great video! Thank you for making it. 🙏
@notsoluna3356
@notsoluna3356 Жыл бұрын
you definitely exceptional in specializing in reverse engineering and the skills you have developed throughout the time, very influential thank you for this!
@tonatiuhl.8433
@tonatiuhl.8433 Жыл бұрын
This is something i needed to watch, ive always had the idea that having "enough" knowledge to get by a lot of topics its really useful SPECIALLY during this times, like, i may dont know the exact answer, but i know how to direct you to find it, or i know who can provide that answer, then i can lear that answer as well and thats free knowledge and experience for everyone involved
@justinmyheadspace
@justinmyheadspace Жыл бұрын
Wow! This is the best video I have seen on KZbin and I can so well connect with it. Good to have seen this video early this year: Jan/05/2023 I have been a generalist all my life and I really long to be specialised in a field but find it very difficult
@PerfectSense77
@PerfectSense77 Жыл бұрын
I went down an Id Software rabbithole recently and John Carmack vs John Romero is the perfect example of specialist vs generalist while they were working together.
@deescafeinado
@deescafeinado Жыл бұрын
Awesome work dude! I’m from Brasil and love your content
@aldorodriguez7310
@aldorodriguez7310 Жыл бұрын
What a great question. And the book references are on point.
@danalvatv
@danalvatv Жыл бұрын
This is the most underrated KZbin channel of all time.
@NairbRevilo
@NairbRevilo Жыл бұрын
Well done 👏 and good timing as I am battling whether I should niche down to messaging on my website
@knoxy3200
@knoxy3200 Жыл бұрын
I really liked this new video structure 🙌🏻
@naafizrahman6538
@naafizrahman6538 Жыл бұрын
You are an amazing content creator. I vibe with your methodology.
@sadattahmeed7462
@sadattahmeed7462 Жыл бұрын
Came for the GothamChess twin in thumbnail. Stayed for the content.
@ramchandravarshney4149
@ramchandravarshney4149 Жыл бұрын
Me too
@lfk4981
@lfk4981 Жыл бұрын
I haven't seen this depth knowledge of any other content creator. Thanks Till Great video.🥰🥰
@tillmusshoff
@tillmusshoff Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@user12345654
@user12345654 2 жыл бұрын
Generalist vs specialist vs generalized specialist. A really nice video. 👍
@luckyluke4276
@luckyluke4276 3 жыл бұрын
Dude, second video I watched and I already love your channel, so interesting!
@tillmusshoff
@tillmusshoff 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot! Look out for more 😁
@luckyluke4276
@luckyluke4276 3 жыл бұрын
@@tillmusshoff Sure thing
@Brainbytemedia
@Brainbytemedia Жыл бұрын
A very helpful video! ❤ And generalism is the way for me. I have never been the one to obsess over any particular thing but I have always been fascinated with a lot of different things. I like living life holistically and full of meaning through all of the things that I enjoy doing.
@LePeppino
@LePeppino Жыл бұрын
Sehr beeindruckendes Video. Habe an mehreren Stellen zustimmend nicken müssen und die Struktur war exzellent. Die verschiedenen Definitionen aus der Literatur und Interviews aufzugreifen und dann dein eigenes Modell bzw. deine Sichtweise einzubringen, war sehr schlüssig und interessant. Es hat teilweise in Worte gefasst, was ich seit Jahren gedacht, mir aber nie hundertprozentig bewusst gemacht habe. Daumen hoch und Abo ist raus!
@rishabhdidwania9710
@rishabhdidwania9710 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this amazing piece of content Till. I have been confused to a great extent about becoming a specialist in a certain field, all because I used to think that we need to specialize in a certain field whereas I certainly realized after watching that I can generalize as well. I have been interested in psychology, designing, coding, marketing, logistics, operations, and management. I was totally confused by seeing the people around me only pursuing a certain think whereas I was looking into each of these field. One thing I also wanted to know that can you tell that how to particularly be indulged in one task and focused for a long duration of time, that is approximately 3-5 hrs or even more. I just lose focus to a lot of extent and many time repeatedly. Thank you Till.
@teguhimanullah
@teguhimanullah Жыл бұрын
Hi, Till! Indonesian here. I found your video is so intriguing and fascinating. Also I agree with your model and it's really important, for me, atleast, because for this last 2 years, I've been trying to find which kind of model that suits to me. Thank you, once again! You're new subs here!)
@werwardas1
@werwardas1 Жыл бұрын
Strongly relate. Great video, thanks!
@melihdd6314
@melihdd6314 Жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks Till !
@CypherHive
@CypherHive 3 жыл бұрын
Wow! Great content! I've been a generalist for most of my life (I've even been called "Chuck of all Trades") but struggled with the societal notion that I must be a specialist or I will fail to succeed. I started making Bitcoin KZbin videos a few months ago to challenge myself publicly and expand my horizons. To be honest I became very jealous of the instant success of your last video because of the slow progress I have been making. Makes sense now given all of your experience in the content creation field. Even before you released this video I decided to just take it as an example of what is possible if I put my mind to it. Your quality of content is spectacular. You deserve every Sub and more. Thank you for the inspiration and the thought provoking content! Looking forward to your next video. Cheers!
@tillmusshoff
@tillmusshoff 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Chuck! Just keep doing what you are doing and try to improve the production quality of your videos here and there over time. It really is not magic, but a very approachable field you can learn through tutorials on KZbin. The internet is the best private school on earth. The videos I make take a lot of time, so I appreciate everyone who supports me! :)
@monkeeseemonkeedoo3745
@monkeeseemonkeedoo3745 Жыл бұрын
I think ideally, it's a mix of both. For example, I like to gain more knowledge about the world from experts in areas like history, politics, religion, physics, philosophy, etc. But I also work to deepen my knowledge of the field I have specialized in, which is math, because I still have passion for it, and it can be used to model so many things. With more time, I'm hoping to add some areas of physics to my specializations, since this is also very interesting to me. Having watched more of the video, I guess the specialized generalist would be what I think is ideal.
@learnfrenchwithmervine
@learnfrenchwithmervine Жыл бұрын
Hey Till, I found this video very insightful. I came across the concept of polymath this year in February (through a TED Talk about Multipotentialites) and it spoke to my soul on such a high level. There's often this debate around being generalist VS specialist. I consider polymath as MULTI-SPECIALISTS. Personally, I am a full time senior legal counselor, I teach French online, I run a web design agency (a career that itself implies wearing many hats!!), I'm a freelance copywriter and I'm working on building my personal brand. I always believed that the human brain could handle multiple tasks and various careers. The truth is, there are so many things to learn, we live in a knowledge era and it's often very easy to spread too thin and get your attention scattered... They KEY SKILL for polymaths, at least to me, is to learn of to plan and organize your day into several blocks of deep work, otherwise it's wayyyy too complicated.... Anyways, not gonna keep going, otherwise I'm gonna make this comment a blog post lmfaooo Keep up the good work man!
@user-kn8ee9fy4h
@user-kn8ee9fy4h Жыл бұрын
Hi,I want to be a polymath too. But I am not good at planning and organizing my schedule. I totally agree with you. Can you recommend some strategies for me. It will be big help
@afroking2935
@afroking2935 Жыл бұрын
@@user-kn8ee9fy4h Same here
@lumisho
@lumisho Жыл бұрын
I am happy I stumbled upon this channel.
@sumitsagarg
@sumitsagarg 3 жыл бұрын
You need to make more videos on learning mate. Would love to learn from you. I'd love to know you better. Thanks mate.
@beautyreaccaped5579
@beautyreaccaped5579 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video by the way thank you for making this type of video
@digitalsupplychain3076
@digitalsupplychain3076 Жыл бұрын
Really great insights! Thank you.
@gbaked
@gbaked 6 ай бұрын
Awesome video. Thank you for sharing.
@drewmetra
@drewmetra Жыл бұрын
dont stop making videos! so great
@beingmechon
@beingmechon Жыл бұрын
Man thank you so much. I don't know how youtube suggested me this video but I wanna thank you and youtube algorithm. I have a frustration and thought that I have been living my life wrong these days. From this is video i got inspiration and motivation. That neural network graph you made is what perfectly defines me. Thank you so much. Pls suggest me some good books that you've read. ❤️❤️❤️
@tevinkamau7627
@tevinkamau7627 Жыл бұрын
It's amazing how you delved into the two concepts and how you backed up your own view with facts. Great video and looking forward to more great content👍.
@Sterh20
@Sterh20 Жыл бұрын
Nice touch with vertical bar in quotes. Like in The Economist
@khier-eddinehennaoui9783
@khier-eddinehennaoui9783 Жыл бұрын
Damn that phrase "I aim to be sufficiently good to create meaningful results " will be hopefully coded in my brain, it's makes us remember why we learn in the first place and that the dichotomy of expert/generalist is "fabricated". Thanks for enlightening me.
@sagarsingh4951
@sagarsingh4951 Жыл бұрын
Great work brother!
@ultiumlabs4899
@ultiumlabs4899 2 жыл бұрын
I've watched many videos generalist vs specialist, up to now I think this is the most balanced way to compare both. I'm a generalist too btw.
@mihaidavici4047
@mihaidavici4047 Жыл бұрын
great video! really resonates with me! :)
@DerBarde2012
@DerBarde2012 2 жыл бұрын
Fast 40 und ein 20er erklärt mir die Welt. Danke dafür!
@kelvingitari
@kelvingitari Жыл бұрын
I think what the generalist idea is describing is multipotentiality. I recently discovered/realized that I am a multipotentialite after a deep reflection on what I want to identify as. This was such a relatable video.
@bulagazibaggy1511
@bulagazibaggy1511 Жыл бұрын
Willl say always had an issue with myself since people I can't do all and I always surprised them with the results. My self debate was that exactly. How do I specialize when I find pleasure in new problems and information. This has surely made my day.
@albratgaming2348
@albratgaming2348 Жыл бұрын
I love this video... I am definitely a Generalist. I have worked as a Mechanical Fitter for over 10 years. The job was very different from day to day. My hobbies introduced me to computers and train simulators... Which got me into presentation and hosting at model railway shows and from that I also got into computer programming... A long road but I have also done electrical work, wood working and many other things. Currently I am a content creator and Twitch streamer. I have done audio editing, video editing and a few other skills. I do computer repair and work a lot with problem solving. I have also done some things in mathematics and working out formula (before google existed.) working in MS office excel to make a spreadsheet formula to calculate a set of numbers from a set of measurements. (we used to manually type the sheets on a typewriter before the formula and print from computer.) The only thing I am bad at... is playing musical instruments. You can not really read your way to being good with a piano or flute...
@FansOfCrypto
@FansOfCrypto Жыл бұрын
I am a generalist who is now on a mission to become a specialist. The world is full of generalists - and that just makes you expendable. I came to the conclusion recently, that it's best to start as a generalist, with the goal to eventually pick your lane.
@felicianothorpe8998
@felicianothorpe8998 Жыл бұрын
I agree 100%
@truthseeker7815
@truthseeker7815 Жыл бұрын
Curious, I thought the world was full of ignorants
@Ivan-bg1jp
@Ivan-bg1jp Жыл бұрын
I agree that domain expertise is a must, then from there it will be all about how well you can learn a particular thing.
@Alchimistje
@Alchimistje Жыл бұрын
This video makes so much sense to me. I'd consider myself a specialized generalist as you put it. I am a one man company in media design. But nainly focussed on video and animation. Though making this company was only possible due to my experience in learning how to make websites, how to invest, and several internships where i have been in different scales of companies. Im not the best at everything I offer, but by doing stuff thats passable often enough, and having it judged by the public. I will improve more
@Willg95
@Willg95 Жыл бұрын
I'm a generalist. Ive worked in hotel maintenance, shift manager for a local gas station company, tow truck operator and learned vehicle repair from my dad.
@charbeleeid
@charbeleeid Жыл бұрын
where was this masterpiece hidden all my life
@KManAbout
@KManAbout Жыл бұрын
This articulated a lot the thoughts I had.
@eruditox
@eruditox Жыл бұрын
I was always struggling with being a "generalist" as I don't get to keep focus on one skill only. Actually I believe the broader your experimetal skills horizon is, the higher your sky of creations will be. - Abdelkader Haddag
@The_preserver_x16
@The_preserver_x16 Жыл бұрын
I believe in the principle of relative versatility. If the fields overlap in someway, then it’s valuable because you can utilize it to build a ideal path.
@Airsoftshowoffs
@Airsoftshowoffs Жыл бұрын
The comment on neural network and how skills build as a generalist to solve tasks really echos my view. Good work
@WahabAwudu
@WahabAwudu Жыл бұрын
I feel proud now to be a generalist. I'm gonna wear that badge with courage going forward!
@jeffreyonuigbo
@jeffreyonuigbo Жыл бұрын
It's like I just found someone that get's it Thanks Till
@dinoscheidt
@dinoscheidt Жыл бұрын
What you describe is “Skill Stacking”. Love the neural network like illustration.
@Thakko
@Thakko Жыл бұрын
After watching this video, I am really buff. Wow, du bist ein Vorbild für mich (obwohl ich gerade erst nur dieses eine Video von dir geschaut habe...)
@Roeebenshoshan
@Roeebenshoshan Жыл бұрын
so after a few good minutes into the video i thought to myself - "Who's this guy and why im not a subscriber? he must be big" just to be hit with the fact you've got 27k followers. You're videos look great as if you have 1M subscribers and have been doing it fork ages. loved the contant, Keep up the good work! im 100% sure you'll be huge!
@albiebaggins8644
@albiebaggins8644 3 жыл бұрын
liked this one dude
@indigofranz8845
@indigofranz8845 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video, I agree that it's the best to be a general specialist.
@Riccardopelle98
@Riccardopelle98 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video, instant follow
@mechanicalechineseenglish6872
@mechanicalechineseenglish6872 Жыл бұрын
your video gave me great insights thank you
@tonyb9290
@tonyb9290 Жыл бұрын
This popped up for me today out of the blue, and I gotta say well put. I’m more of a generalist in IT, no degree and turns out my certs are invalid because the army didn’t want to pay for it (I didn’t learn this till it was too late for me to fix or pay for myself) so no certs either. I can work on just about any kind of project, troubleshoot a much wider array of things than many people I know and work with. I’ve got a reasonable background in network administration, hardware and software troubleshooting, hell I can troubleshoot down to component level most of the time (though these days it’s more cost effective to just replace the part than fix it with our advanced manufacturing). I’ve even got my fingers into programming, which really helped me understand software related issues a lot better even though I’m a novice programmer. Having such a wide scope compared to most of my peers has allowed me to quickly make connections to seemingly unrelated changes and effects from security policies to updates/missing updates. I was able to look at a laptop model we were going to use and I nailed every single major hardware issue we would have and after two years I have been proven 100% correct on my predictions, which I already had worked out potential patches did until a new model was chosen. I’ve even taken in the last year to training and teaching others, which really made me refine each area i draw upon. So, I consider myself an advanced IT generalist. Not far enough down any field in IT to be a specialist, but too far down multiple fields to be just a generalist.
@vampfoxilli7127
@vampfoxilli7127 Жыл бұрын
3:49 This is such a impactful quote... dammit man its both! Ive been stuck in Apprenticeship roles i always feel stuck, but alongside directed study it really cracks through the wall.
@tropicalsunshine4689
@tropicalsunshine4689 2 жыл бұрын
This vid was remarkable 👏
@pickupmasterygame1991
@pickupmasterygame1991 Жыл бұрын
Really cool ideas and story!
@jhoncadalin5887
@jhoncadalin5887 Жыл бұрын
One of the best way to find a field that suits you and spend the rest of your life to be an expert is to take a personality test and answer it honestly and look for career suggestion based on your personality. I switched major a year ago because I like the first one but it didn’t suit me, but I LOVE the one I am taking now because it suits my personality very well.
@johngallagher72
@johngallagher72 9 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right ..tbh I think the video presenter is a bit incorrect when he says your personality changes over time ..ive taken personality tests multiple times since early 20s and now at 50 nothing has changed ...still INFJ ..still Holland Cod ESC (social and conventional very close) still very high in openness, conscientious ness, moderate agreeableness and neuroticism and low in extraversion (the big 5) ...tbh I don't think these change they haven't at least in my expereince. Not sure if u follow Jordan Petersen but I think he said these traits remain stable and don't change over someone's lifetime. You make a great point about the importance of personality tests in career planning.
@mgtowvalues
@mgtowvalues Жыл бұрын
As a committed generalist with 10 years of university, the ability to build bridges across many disciplines and do so with understanding has been a key element of my career success. I recommend having a solid background in formal/symbolic logic and grammar. All channels of communication should be well practiced as should empathy. Grounding all of this for me is an understanding of the state of metaphysics, and thus, the difficulty of any person in any field to establish sufficient grounding for any opinion, judgment or assessment.
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