The best knowledge I've ever received didn't come from a LinkedIn post. It didn't come from a thread. It didn't come from an influencer with 200K followers telling me how to "10x my productivity."
It came from discussions behind a closed door.
A dinner with someone who's been through hell building a company. A private call where someone shared exactly how they closed a deal — the ugly parts included. A WhatsApp message at midnight from a founder who said "don't do what I did."
That kind of knowledge is not politically correct. It's not packaged for engagement. It doesn't have a catchy hook or a carousel format. It's raw, unfiltered, and it comes from people who have actual skin in the game.
I'll make one exception here: Ratchisky. Exceptional content creator. But he's the exception, not the rule.
Here's something I noticed about my own journey. When I was an executive, I used to share a lot. Lessons learned, frameworks, strategies — you name it, I posted it. I even wrote a book of what actually worked for the Marketing team to scale and succeed. I was open about what worked and what didn't. I genuinely enjoyed it.
Now, as a founder, I share almost nothing.
Not because I became a different person. But because I realized that the truly valuable insights — the ones that give you an edge — stay within the inner circle. They have to. The market is competitive, the stakes are higher, and the knowledge that actually moves the needle is not the kind you broadcast.
The real playbook is never public.
Think about the people you admire most in business. Not the ones with the biggest audience. The ones with the biggest results. Most of them are in silent mode. They don't post. They don't engage in debates. They build. They ship. They let the product do the talking.
Kudos to every builder out there operating in silence. The ones who wake up, do the work, solve the hard problems, and let their service and product speak for them.
The loudest room is rarely the smartest one.
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