


Career Reinvention: Build Work You Actually Want
A growth plan for anyone navigating a career transition, considering entrepreneurship, or designing a working life that's actually theirs. Moves from diagnosing your current situation to building new income and identity.
1. Module 1 · Audit Your Current Reality
Before reinventing, understand what's driving your dissatisfaction and what you actually want. Most career pivots fail because people skip this step.

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck
Mark Manson's bracing framework for values-clarification: not caring less, but caring about the right things. The necessary starting point for any meaningful career redesign.

The Almanack of Naval Ravikant
Naval's condensed philosophy on wealth, meaning, and leverage. A concise but profound map for thinking about what kind of work is worth building.

Outliers
Gladwell reframes success by examining what we systematically ignore: timing, context, and cumulative advantage.
2. Module 2 · Build New Skills & Test New Paths
How to explore alternatives without betting everything. Running lean experiments to validate new directions before committing.

The Lean Startup
Ries's build-measure-learn loop applied to career experiments: how to test new paths quickly, cheaply, and without destroying your current situation.

The $100 Startup
Guillebeau's proof that passion plus skill can generate meaningful income with minimal capital.

Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World
Permission to explore: your diverse background isn't a liability. Cross-domain thinkers often find unique career positions that specialists miss entirely.
3. Module 3 · Build, Launch & Sustain Your New Career
The operational and psychological tools for executing the transition — making it real, making it stick, and building momentum.

Zero to One
Thiel's framework for building something genuinely new rather than competing in crowded markets.

The Compound Effect
Hardy's mathematical argument for consistency: small daily improvements compound into dramatic long-term outcomes.

Can't Hurt Me
David Goggins's confrontational account of rebuilding identity from nothing. A psychological survival manual for hard reinventions.

Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance
Duckworth's research on the trait that predicts who finishes reinventions and who abandons them.