Most courses fail. And it’s probably not your fault. Like me, you probably have half a dozen unfinished courses sitting in your “I’ll get to that later” pile. Most people don’t fail courses because they lack ability, they fail because the learning experience creates friction. Why? The biggest reason is simple: Most courses don’t teach enough to create momentum. They teach enough to sell the product. Then you’re left to figure out the rest yourself. That’s not a “you” problem. That’s a design problem. Then there’s another issue. Most training is painfully boring. Long videos. Slow explanations. Repetition. No feedback. Watch enough of them and your brain starts leaking out your ears. People also learn differently. Personally, I’d rather read a PDF than watch a 2-hour video. Give me both and I’m happy. Then come the other problems: “No time.” “I’ll do it tomorrow.” “What do I do next?” “How does this even help me?” That’s where most people stop. Not because they’re lazy. Because there’s no momentum. No clarity. No quick win. So here’s what I do now. I give the course material to AI tools. NotebookLM works well. If it can’t transcribe the videos properly, use Rev first. Upload: the videos the PDFs the notes Then ask for: summaries action steps key insights Now instead of drowning in content, you get the useful parts quickly. Every course has a valuable nugget hidden inside it. The trick is extracting it efficiently. Regards, |
