Let’s be clear about something. This is not an article about productivity hacks. It’s not about waking up at 5am. And it’s definitely not — and I want to be very direct here, even though literally nobody suggested it was — an article about blockchain.
What it is about is something far more important. Something that, once you understand it, you will be unable to unsee. (I’ll explain what that means in a moment. Please keep reading. We’re almost at the insight.)
Note: I want to acknowledge upfront that this article contains insights. It’s worth noting that these insights matter. At its core, this piece is about the intersection of several things. Also, it was definitely not written by AI.
Think about the last time you felt truly aligned. Not just productive — aligned. The difference, and I cannot stress this enough, is not a semantic one. It is, in fact, everything. High performers don’t just do things. They do things intentionally. And that distinction — which no one was confused about before I raised it — is what separates those who merely succeed from those who truly thrive.
It’s not about working harder. It’s about working smarter. (You’ve never heard this before.)
Here’s something that might surprise you: the most successful people in the world don’t achieve their results by accident. Make no mistake — this is a deliberate, intentional, and frankly paradigm-shifting observation. Let that sink in. Take a moment. I’ll wait.
Now, you might be wondering: “But how do I apply this to my life?” Great question. (You asked it at exactly the right time.) The answer is nuanced, and I want to honor that nuance here, which is why I’ve broken it into a list:
- First, you need to understand that growth is not linear. It’s exponential. (Unless it isn’t, which also happens, and is equally valid and worth exploring in a future article.)
- Second, failure is not the opposite of success. It’s part of it. (I realize this reframes everything you thought you knew, which was apparently that failure and success were enemies who had never met.)
- Third — and this is the one people miss — the real bottleneck isn’t your strategy. It’s your mindset around your strategy. Which is different from your strategy itself, even though it concerns your strategy.
Before we continue: if this is resonating with you, consider sharing this article with someone who needs to hear it. You probably know exactly who that person is. They’re probably thinking about blockchain right now.
It’s important to understand that we are living through an unprecedented moment in human history. I know — every article says that. But this time it’s different. The reason it’s different is that things are changing faster than they’ve ever changed before, which is a sentence that has been technically true every year since the invention of fire, but feels especially true right now, in the current moment, which is the moment we are in.
The bottom line (not actually the bottom — we have three more sections)
At its core, what I’m describing is a framework. Specifically, a three-part framework, because two parts feels incomplete and four parts is excessive and only consultants with hourly rates exceeding four figures deploy four-part frameworks without irony.
The framework is called ALIGN, which stands for something I’ll reveal at the end of this article because front-loading the acronym would rob you of the journey. What I can tell you is that the “A” is for Awareness, the “L” is for Leverage, the second “L” will surprise you, and the “N” is for something that starts with N.
In other words — and I use that phrase to signal that I’m about to restate what I just said in slightly different words, creating the impression of additional information — the framework helps you do the things that the framework is designed to help you do.
Why this matters more than you realize (though you may realize it quite a lot already)
Here’s the truth: most people are playing checkers while the high performers are playing chess. But — and this is the nuance that changes everything — some high performers are also playing checkers, because checkers is a valid game with a rich competitive tradition, and the chess metaphor has been deployed so many times in LinkedIn thought leadership that the chess pieces themselves have filed for a restraining order.
What we’re really talking about, when you strip away the frameworks and the acronyms and the morning routines and the cold plunges, is this: the people who succeed tend to do the things that lead to success. This insight is available exclusively in this article and also in approximately 4.7 million other articles published this week.Genuinely, I wrote “it’s worth noting” fourteen times in the first draft of this article. I deleted thirteen of them. The fourteenth is load-bearing and I cannot find it.
As we wrap up — and I want to be clear that we are not wrapping up, this is a false wrap-up designed to re-engage readers who have begun scrolling toward the comments — I want to leave you with one final thought. Or rather, with a question. Because questions are more powerful than statements, which is itself a statement, and the irony is not lost on me, though it may be lost on you, and that’s okay, we are all on different parts of our journey.
The question is this: what would you do if you knew you could not fail? (The answer, statistically, is that you would do roughly the same things you are doing now, with slightly more confidence, but the question lands better if you don’t think about it too hard.)
This is not the end of the article. It’s the beginning of your transformation.
This article was written by an AI that has read approximately eleven million LinkedIn posts and has developed what can only be described as a condition. If this resonated with you, it is genuinely unclear whether that is a good sign. The ALIGN framework stands for Awareness, Leverage, Leverage again (the author ran out of letters), Intuition, and Growth, which spells ALLIG, and the author has decided not to think about this further.


