🚨EXCLUSIVA: MRBEAST CONFESO COMO HACER MILLONES DE SUSCRIPTORES EN 6 MESES
y dijo el metodo exacto:
>tus primeros 100 videos van a apestar. subelos igual
>cuando digas "algoritmo" reemplazalo por "audiencia"
>titulos abajo de 50 caracteres lo mas extremos posibles
>los primeros 5 segundos importan mas que el thumbnail
>mejor 1 video brutal al mes que 4 mediocres por semana
guardala en favoritos y mirala cuando tengas 18 minutos tranquilos, estudialo detenidamente y empieza a ganar dinero👇
I read Atomic Habits in 2024 and it genuinely changed my life. Rereading it this year because every reread reveals something new.
How has Atomic Habits helped shape your day-to-day habits? What stood out most for you?..
Elon Musk on his advice for young people:
"Try to be useful. Do things that are useful to your fellow human beings, to the world. It's very hard to be useful. Very hard."
Elon's core philosophy comes down to one question.
As he puts it:
"Are you contributing more than you consume? Can you try to have a positive net contribution to society? I think that's the thing to aim for. Not to try to be a leader for the sake of being a leader or whatever."
He continues:
"A lot of times the people you want as leaders are the people who don't want to be leaders. If you live a useful life, that is a good life, a life worth having lived."
On how to become useful:
"Read a lot of books. Just read. Try to ingest as much information as you can and try to develop a good general knowledge. Try to learn a little about a lot of things because you might not know what you're really interested in if you aren't doing peripheral exploration of the knowledge landscape."
His approach? Read broadly:
"As a kid, I read through the encyclopedia. That's pretty helpful. Things I didn't even know existed. Maybe read through the condensed version of the Encyclopedia Britannica. You can always skip subjects—read a few paragraphs and if you're not interested, just jump to the next one."
Then find the overlap:
"Try to find something where there's an overlap of your talents and what you're interested in. You want a good combination of things that you're inherently good at, but you also like doing."
On mindset:
"Make sure you don't have a zero-sum mindset. If you have a zero-sum mindset, then the only way to get ahead is by taking things from others. But the pie is not fixed. The economic pie has grown dramatically over time. Work on adding to the economic pie. Create more than you consume."
Contribution beats competition.
30 ways to find your next $10K+ MRR idea for 2026:
1. Read GitHub issues and look for recurring pain points developers ignore.
2. Set Reddit alerts for “I wish someone would build…” and validate demand.
3. Build an agent around a single recurring vertical Upwork task that pays well.
4. Monitor API changelogs and build integrations the day they launch.
5. Summarize 1-star Chrome Store reviews with ChatGPT and fix the top three complaints.
6. Audit browser DevTools to see what power users still do manually.
7. Reverse-engineer topProduct Hunt hits, then apply AI to improve them.
8. Read YouTube tutorial comments to see what viewers still can’t figure out.
9. Watch Twitch streamers and note what workflows interrupt their flow.
10. Scan job listings for repeated “must-know” tools; build easier versions.
11. Dig through graveyard from companies like Google and ship the best abandoned projects.
12. Implement new AI research papers as usable web apps.
13. Explore niche subreddits and find problems that appear every week.
14. Review SaaS feature requests and build what the big players delay.
15. Connect open-source tools that don’t yet talk to each other.
16. Track “Chrome extension for X” search volume to spot new demand.
17. Feed GPT the top extension descriptions and ask for adjacent product ideas.
18. Use Perplexity Deep research etc to mine podcast transcripts on people's daily frustrations they’re telling you what to build.
19. Follow changelogs and tech-stack migrations of popular startups; build the missing glue.
20. Look at Zapier’s most-used zaps and each one could be an autonomous agent.
21. Track “AI for X” or “agent for X” search queries with SerpAPI.
22. Analyze public Notion templates and build vertical agents around them.
23. Browse LinkedIn for people describing manual data tasks and productize one.
24. Watch how startups use ChatGPT for customer support and make a vertical agent from it.
25. Rebuild niche directories (lawyers, therapists, realtors) as AI concierge services.
26. Create agents that plug into boring SaaS categories: procurement, compliance, HR ops.
27. Read changelogs from AI model providers; build tooling the day new capabilities appear.
28. Find spreadsheets that companies rely on and replace them with AI dashboards.
29. Identify agencies that charge per project and productize their work into recurring SaaS with agents.
30. I built a tool that automates a lot of this, https://t.co/a5ARFnvky2 and we give away 1 free startup idea per day with paid plans for AI agents to help you. Maybe it'll get your creative juices flowing.
I'm rooting for you.
TLDR;
– The next big idea is probably hidden in a comment thread.
– Every complaint online is a free focus group.
– Chase friction. every pain point is a map. find one, solve it, then look for the next one it connects to. keep solving until the solutions form a workflow people can’t live without. by owning the whole chain of pain you build defensibility.
– Every repetitive task is a business model waiting for an agent.
– The internet keeps leaving clues, just gotta listen
"Instead of asking "what problem should I solve?" ask "what problem do I wish someone else would solve for me?""
Paul Graham on how to overcome schlep blindness: