Jay Yang — Author of You Can Just Do Things
Author of You Can Just Do Things
Jay Yang ranks #443 of 14,983 LinkedIn creators in Publishing, and is a standout voice in United States. They have 10.1K followers and published 50 posts in the last 30 days at a 0.6% average engagement rate.
- 10.1K followers
- 50 posts / 30d
- 0.6% avg engagement
- — follower growth / 30d
The roast
Jay titled his book You Can Just Do Things, which is a bold strategy for a guy whose primary career achievement is holding the coat for people who actually built a million-dollar business. He’s spent thirty days and fifty posts trying to convince us he’s a strategist, but the only thing he’s mastered is the art of being the world's most over-caffeinated middleman.
About Jay
Jay Yang is an entrepreneur, author, investor, and media strategist.He writes The Spark, a weekly newsletter on marketing, strategy, and personal growth read by over 50,000 subscribers.His debut book, You Can Just Do Things, became an Amazon bestseller.Jay has served as Head of Content for Noah Kagan, helping launch the New York Times bestselling book Million Dollar Weekend, and as Written Media Strategist at Acquisition.com.Today, he writes books, consults founders and CEOs on creative strategy, and invests in early-stage media and creator-led companies.
Highlights
- Consistent Creator — 50 posts in 30d · top 5%
- Top 5% in United States — Ranked #167 of 5205 creators
- Top 25% in Publishing — Ranked #4 of 32 creators
- Big Audience — 10,133 followers · top 25%
Recent posts
50 Hook Formulas That Work: 1. Harsh truth: 2. Brutal truth: 3. Hard truth: 4. A lesson I wish I learned earlier: 5. A lesson that took me too long to learn: 6. Hot take: 7. A hill I’ll die on: 8. Life hack: 9. Life cheat code: 10. Life pro tip: 11. A major cheat code in life: 12. Trust me: 13. Trust me on this: 14. I’m [age]. Trust me on this: 15. Reminder: 16. Friendly reminder: 17. A pattern I’ve noticed: 18. Observation: 19. Underrated life advice: 20. Reminder to self: 21. Note to self: 22. The older I get, the more I realize 23. One thing I’ve learned: 24. After [#
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Writing tip: the rule of three Here's how it works... The rule of three is a classic principle that says ideas in groups of three are more memorable and satisfying. Three creates rhythm and a sense of completeness: beginning, middle, and end. Use three lines to build tension and expectation. The fourth breaks the pattern and delivers the payoff. Instead of saying "you have to risk what you have to get what you want" You can say: "You have to risk looking broke to get rich. You have to risk looking weak to get strong. You have to risk looking desperate to get loved. Egos hold back more
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So fire 🔥 Arya Sattvikk
18 reactions · 3 comments · 1 reposts