Gagan Biyani ๐Ÿ›
Gagan Biyani ๐Ÿ›

@gaganbiyani

14 Tweets 13 reads Sep 24, 2020
Yesterday I made a major life announcement: Iโ€™m starting a NewCo after 3 years of exploring
More of you cared than I expected; thanks for the support! ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿพ
What the hell did I do for 3 years?
Thought Iโ€™d share the back-story...
**Read On**
In 2017, my life blew apart as I shut down @sprig. Shock + relief.
Even as we shut down, new opportunities were coming my way.
Funders for new ventures. Hotshot CEOs asking me to be an exec.
Thereโ€™s always opportunity in SV.
What opportunities would I miss by stepping away?
After some good advice, I needed to resist the FOMO.
I know people who grinded for 20 years straight, constantly chasing more success and more money. That wasnโ€™t for me.
I decided on the first rule of my transition: GET AWAY.
I packed my bags, left SF and went nomadic.
The second rule: Donโ€™t obsess over โ€œWhatโ€™s next?โ€
If I dwelled on โ€œwhatโ€™s nextโ€ every day, it would drive me mad.
It can be so unsettling to be without work, without purpose.
Yet that was what I needed, so I leaned in and forced myself to be present.
In the background, my mind churned.
I spent my 20s building. Non-stop grinding. Finally, I took time off.
I was reclaiming my personal and social life. I fed my non-work passions: learning, reading, and connecting with humans from all walks of life.
I followed my instincts and channeled my inner hippie backpacker. ๐Ÿ˜‰
I traveled to places that evoked my curiosity. And I stayed (relatively) true to one rule:
No work.
No public speaking.
No โ€œcoffees.โ€
No networking.
This freed my time for more creative pursuits
After 18 months of travel, I found myself. Nothing had changed but everything had changed.
The freedom opened me up to new things. The most important things.
I met a girl in Kigali and fell in love. I donโ€™t think this wouldโ€™ve been possible if I hadnโ€™t gone on this journey.
She started at Oxford MBA in Sept 2019. After 2 years as a nomad, I was ready to start working.
This was a big decision.
@naval advised me not to rush such a big decision.
I made a hard rule: I would not make long-term work commitments for 12 months.
Over that 12 months, living between Oxford and Austin, I explored lots of ideas.
Every few weeks I was doing something new:
- I wrote the first draft of a memoir.
- I launched 2 online courses (and took 4).
- I mentored entrepreneurs.
- I interviewed for potential roles.
There was no โ€œprocess.โ€ For me, my creative brain needed the freedom to flit from thing to thing.
Yet, there was intention: I gave myself 12 months to figure out whatโ€™s next.
Instead of over-planning this, the intention was enough.
Slowly, my interests started to converge.
I noticed themes amongst the various projects Iโ€™d worked on.
By month 6, I was exploring a few ideas:
starting an education venture studio,
building courses for entrepreneurs,
or joining an existing high-profile education business.
By month 9, all of those had fallen through.
A studio would be too much stress: one company is enough!
Teaching wasn't enough: I wanted to build!
Joining wouldn't work either: I love partners, but need to be there from the beginning.
Just as it felt like things were falling apart, I figured out the pattern and the mystery was solved.
In Sept 2020, exactly 12 months later, I decided on an idea.
I don't know if it will work. But I made this decision clear-eyed and clear-headed. Thatโ€™s the best I could do.
Thanks for the continued support. You can hear more about my journey / follow along via my newsletter:
gaganbiyani.com
And feel free to ask questions in the comments!
๐Ÿคœ๐Ÿพ๐Ÿค›๐Ÿพ

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