I never wanted to be "famous"

You don't need to either

Me in my studio, looking awkward

It’s true: I never had any ambitions of being a public figure for its own sake. And really, I still don’t.

I started my YouTube channel back in 2017 for a very simple reason: nobody knew who I was, or what I did.

It was insanely frustrating, because I’d done a lot of stuff that I thought was pretty cool: websites for Nike and Nintendo, product design for Swiffer and Febreze, marketing for Abercrombie & Fitch, etc…

And yet nobody gave a shit, or even knew that I existed.

Some of the Hollister shirts I designed

Applying for jobs was a pathetic joke (rarely even got a rejection email), my network was terrible, and my resume was a scattered mess.

I felt stuck, like I was always going to be invisible forever and I’d have to settle for whatever jobs I managed to sneak my way into— all the while watching people who kinda sucked at their jobs get opportunities that I know I would have been much better at.

(as you can tell, I’m still a little salty about that 😅)

But instead of extending the pity party, I decided to take matters into my own hands, and make the world notice me.

And another 33 million views on my other channel

I started my YouTube channel in September of 2017, my second channel sometime in 2019, and to make a long story short… I don’t feel invisible anymore.

Now, literally millions of people all over the world know my name and face.

(super weird to think about that… but it’s true)

They know that I grew up in the Seattle area, that I was on the debate team in high school, that my wife is Vietnamese, and tons of other details about me— and what do you think that does for my ability to network and create opportunities for myself?

If anything, now I have MORE attention than I want… which is great problem to have!

My point: I never wanted to be a public figure for ego validation or anything like that. I just didn’t want to stay invisible forever.

If you don’t like the spotlight, that’s OK… I don’t really like it either.

But I’m here to tell you that you NEED to be in the spotlight, even if it’s a little uncomfortable.

Because the simple fact is that opportunities usually go to the people who are the most visible, not to the people who “deserve” them.

Building an audience is like oxygen for your career (and life in general).

It brings opportunities to your door, puts you in the same conversation as the people you admire, and positions you as one of the leading voices in your field.

And it feels pretty f***ing good.

PS - Here’s the part where I try to sell you something… if you want to work with me to grow on YouTube or LinkedIn, just reply to this email or set up a call here