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Psychotactics Blog

How A Slight “Problem-Change” Can Dramatically Make A Massive Difference To Your Business Model?

Author: Sean D'Souza

Why People Fail

Why People Fail

What if the secret to growing your business isn’t changing your product, but changing the problem it solves?

This article takes you on a surprising journey from airport walkways to creative entrepreneurs, revealing how a simple shift in perspective can unlock untapped markets and breathe new life into what you offer.

With real-world success stories and a healthy dose of marketing wisdom, you’ll discover why the path to innovation might be as easy as seeing your product—and your audience—in a whole new light.

Right click to save this episode.


If you've ever seen a moving walkway at an airport, you might have had a thought like most of us.

Why don't we have walkways everywhere? At the airport, it seems to speed up things at least by a little bit. You can step onto a walkway and reach your gate much faster than before. The reality is that people have been trying to install walkways in cities since 1893.

Urban traffic was considered a pain even back then.

This is why urban planners assumed that walkways would soon take over most cities. There would be three core platforms:

  1. A stationary platform
  2. A slow-moving walkway.
  3. A faster walkway.

Despite a lot of tinkering and even live models, the walkway never took off.

“Take off” is a slightly ironic term to use, because it was the “take off” bit that made walkways popular again. After over 70 years, as airports got wider, people got annoyed at having to walk so much. Dallas Airport installed the first walkway. Similar walkways were then rolled out across other American airports and spread to Europe and Asia.

The walkway was designed solely for urban transport. Yet, the problem it solved was quite different. It got people to the gates quickly, whether they were boarding or tired after a long flight.

This shows that, while we as creators may assume our product solves one problem, we get no traction. The moment we change how the problem is perceived, the same product or service is eagerly adopted by the public.

Let's take an example, shall we?

At Psychotactics, we conduct a cartooning course. What problem does it solve? It promises to help you create a very unique character. A character that's like no other, and you can call your own.

That character can then be put on a website, blog, presentation or all of the millions of places where we seem to communicate. Hence, many, if not most, of the people who sign up for the course use it for business purposes.

Yet, if we change the problem, we have a completely different audience.

Let's say we announce that the very same course, with a few changes, is meant to create storybooks. Yes, we have AI, and we also have tens of thousands of illustrators. However, many people would like to write—and illustrate — their own books. It could be a story for kids in general, or even a one-off book that is for their grandchildren.

The moment you change the audience, you can quite easily change the problem.

However, even if you don't budge from the audience, you can still make tweaks to the problem. You could sell the very same “story” course as something that brings “stress-relief”. But wait! Doesn't the person who draws for their website also get great joy from learning to draw?

Sure, they do, but in that case, the stress relief is seen as a side benefit. For the third audience, “stress-relief” is the core reason they're joining. Hence, it's the same product or service, but depending on the audience you're selling to, you can expand your marketplace.

Not everyone wants to expand marketplaces, though.

It's not like it's easy for a small business to simply do different types of courses, or even start selling to a variety of audiences. However, knowing that every product or service serves many audiences helps you to test which audience works best for you.

All of which depends on your goal and your strategy. In the case of stress relief, the class could be much like a yoga class and could potentially go on for months, even years, at a time.

The storybooks or even the creation of a character may have a limited life, but it's possible that you want to do other things, and not sell the same offering forever. When you change the problem and get a response that aligns with your goal, you've got a good thing going.

The problem change can also work year-round.

I happen to know a person—Holly—who has a candle-making business. Well, candles are candles, aren't they? Not really. There are paraffin-based candles, soy wax, beeswax, coconut, palm, gel, blended, and other speciality waxes. Who knew! Anyway, when everyone is just waxing eloquently about wax, you can solve the problem in a slightly different manner.

When I went across to her workshop, Holly had dozens of candles, but what caught my eye were these Christmas trees. What problem would a Christmas tree candle solve? It could be a collectable. People may want a new design every year.

Now, while there are hundreds, or possibly thousands, of Christmas tree candles, this one candlemaker can solve the “collectable” problem, and therefore gift-giving becomes easier and still very much a fun activity every year.

It may also solve a different problem if you're a keen “tree-person” like me.

I want to put up the tree every year, and yet you may not. You may like the feel of having a Christmas tree without all the bother. Hence, it solves a problem in a tiny yet elegant manner.

In spring, Holly might create floral candles for home décor; in autumn, pumpkin-spice candles for seasonal gifts. Same product, different problem, different audience.

Doesn't this advice fly in the face of what's mentioned in the book, The Brain Audit?

If you've read The Brain Audit from cover to cover, or even a chapter or two, you're likely to be on board with the concept of “one problem”. That “big” problem, you're told, is the core of your marketing. If you're selling a book, that book should solve one problem. If you're selling a course, training or even a service, stick to one problem.

That advice doesn't change.

The issue has been that most people don't stick to one problem. If they're selling a cartooning course, they'll try to stuff “stress-relief, character development and creating storybooks” into the same headline and first paragraph.

The advice to stick to one problem remains the same. You still need to adhere to that principle, because people can't cope with many ideas at once. They not only have to remember what you've said, but then pass on that idea to others. Hence, the one problem doesn't change.

However, if you get a little restless, you can test the waters and try more than one problem.

Every product or service solves multiple problems at once. When you find your audience, you'll find the problem it solves for them, and that's when you're more than likely to meet your goal.


How To Explain Concepts Elegantly (And Keep The Attention Of Your Audience)

Author: Sean D'Souza

Keep The Attention Of Your Audience

Keep The Attention Of Your Audience

We all seem to believe that there’s nothing left to explain.

There are millions of articles, books and stories out there. Yet, there’s always a way to cut through the clutter. No matter how much information exists, some people are still able to communicate in a way that gets and keep your attention.

Here’s how you go about it.
Right click to save this episode.


How do you get better at explaining concepts better?

Saturation of information has already been achieved. However, the client is always looking for something new, different, easier, better etc.

And that's why no matter how much stuff is churned out, your voice can still be heard. It's also the reason why you should get better at:

1- Being able to write
2- Being better at explaining
3- Being less annoying


1) You think of a theory that seems to go against the grain. Then you remove the objection.

Renuka and I have had a long-running morning discussion.

My theory is that “practice” is pointless. Of course, it’s not meaningless, but you have to take a position to see if you can prove something or not. Now, like everyone else, I believed that practice was everything you needed to get skilled at something.

My niece, Marsha and I even composed a song.

“Practice, practice, practice, practice – we’ll turn that into a song.
Practice, practice, practice, practice – you’ll get better and better with daily practice.
Practice, practice, practice, practice – we’ll turn that into a song.”

So, I was espousing an idea, but I eventually grew tired of it and had to take a stance.

A theory that seems to appeal to you might be completely wrong, but let’s say you have a different take on things. Usually, the best approach is to assume that things aren’t as good as they seem. Hence, I believed that perspective in drawing was difficult. I also thought that using a camera in manual mode meant sacrifice to the camera gods.

And so on, the list goes on. You run into a belief system that is like the sword of Excalibur. It’s wedged in the rock. To be a better explainer, you have to have at least some doubt in the system that exists and try to provide a little insight into a different way of doing things.

Hence, the Renuka vs moi debate raged on.

It wasn’t even much of a debate. I lost every time because she said, ‘Practice does help.’ And I had to agree. But I knew that there was something wrong with that idea. Why? Because when there are twenty random people in the room, practice doesn’t guarantee a result.

Even in the now overly famous experiment of 10,000 hours, K. Anders, the author, couldn’t say who would make it. Some people reach a certain level in fewer hours (say 8,000 hours), while others get it in 15,000 hours. Well, whatever the reasoning behind the practice, it’s nice, but who has those many hours anyway?

Then, while on a call with a client, I muttered something I didn’t expect.

I said, “It’s not practice, it’s a pattern”. And I think I knew I’d just won the Renuka vs moi battle. I knew it because she confirmed my new concept. It was indeed the pattern that mattered—and matters. However, to explain something that seems entirely new, you have to be new.

You have to break a tiny piece of the Excalibur sword, not the whole sword. And somehow you have to win the Renuka vs you battle. However, sometimes just solving the problem isn’t the end. You have to have an elegant analogy to explain the concept.

Let’s wander down that trail, shall we?


2. You come up with an elegant analogy to explain it.

I was sitting in a cafe next to an ex-hockey player who wanted to help people with burnout issues.

“I used to play three-four high-pressure games, and then on the weekend, I couldn’t walk around the block. I pushed myself,” she said. Then she went on to explain all the symptoms of burnout, such as constant fatigue and disinterest.

“The problem with burnout,” she said to me, “is that you’re at peak performance level right before everything falls apart.”

What? That line makes no sense, does it?

But it does. Let me give you an extremely brief analogy that goes like this: A rocket is at top speed and on target, right before it runs out of fuel.

An analogy is not usually related in the same way as a personal story.

It’s more of a “like” statement. It’s like “stepping in dog poo”, like “making sure the avocado is at the correct ripeness”. It’s like this, or like that. You begin with a single statement and build a story around it. The personal story of the hockey player is a good one, but it only hits home when you hear about the rocket. That’s when you have to stop and think: Am I the rocket?

If you don’t have a way to explain it, you don’t get across just as clearly.

Hence, when I started out trying to sell The Brain Audit, I was already competing against tens of thousands of sales and marketing books. Just trying to explain myself would work. I could say “I’m a marketing coach”, and someone would take notice. However, what I decided to do was to isolate “one word”. That word happened to be “hesitation”.

I then had to find an analogy that fit that “hesitation” idea.

As you probably know, that’s how the “seven red bags concept” came about. The concept works for selling the book, but it would work just as easily if you were writing a report, an article, or selling a workshop. If you simply slip in a personal story, that’s not going to cut any ice.

People can relate to a story, but they often struggle to share it with others. They haven’t lived the life of the hockey player, but they sure can relate to a rocket hurtling through space, only to lose all momentum instantly.

Roller coasters, sandwiches, velcro, and even Santa can make for elegant analogies.

You often don’t need to do a lot to go from boring to elegant. You start with boring—that is incredibly important. If you want to start with “elegant”, well, that’s almost too much pressure. Once you’ve put your boring analogy on paper, that’s your starting point.

Sometimes you don’t have to tweak anything at all.

You just have to take something so out of the realm of the topic that it feels “creative”. Like “sandwiching” when learning about article writing. Or “roller coasters” when talking about how the brain continues to scan for problems.

Or how “getting the avocado to the right ripeness” is like playing the stock market. You don’t have to think about the analogy. You feel it immediately. It’s grounded in something tactile or emotional.

If the non-tweaked analogy doesn’t work, then go ahead and change 5% of it.

If an analogy of a sharpener seems too boring, talk about a blunt sharpener. If it’s about a mobile phone on low battery, talk about the last 1% that seems to linger forever. The tweak is always something small that no one is thinking about, and you’re just making a tiny change.

You have your theory that’s slightly against the grain.
You also have an analogy.

Those two are cool, but it may not be enough. We must consider the third factor: multiple angles to explain the same thing.


3- You come up with several angles to explain the same thing

If you look through the first chapter of The Brain Audit, you're likely to find a lot of repetition.

The Brain Audit seems to suggest that instead of leading with a benefit or solution, you should start with the problem. Then, there's a litany of examples. How many? Let's make a list.

  1. Driving on the highway, you notice a police car.
  2. An illustration of a block heading towards your head.
  3. Stepping in dog poo.
  4. Laptop slowing down.
  5. Case study by Dr. John Caciopo of dead cats vs plates vs Ferraris
  6. Going to meetings in a 1980 sedan, and everyone else has a flashy car.
  7. The 386 computer vs the 486.
  8. The cam belt breaking on the highway.

I'm betting you don't recall coming across so many examples while reading the book.

Well, I barely remember writing them, but the point is that no one seems to notice. Why is this the case? The answer is “pushback” or “objections”. If we were to examine the first point in this article, it suggests that we introduce an idea that goes against the grain.

Yeah, you figured it out, didn't you?

If you're going to be slightly out there, then you're more likely to get objections. The angles of explanation are directly proportional to the pushback. If the idea is easily understood, then people don't need a lot of detail. But the moment you start to say something like “orange juice for breakfast is a terrible idea”, they want to tie you to the stake.

How much pushback are you getting on your topic?

That's what's going to decide how many angles you use to explain the concept. You will also need to alternate some explanation with the angle.

It might look like this:

Story/analogy
Explanation
Explanation.
Story/analogy.
Some more explanation.
Story/analogy.

What's happening is that you're chipping away at a concept.

You've brought up a concept, but you can't dump everything on the reader just yet. Hence, let's assume the reader believes that “reviews or testimonials” are effective. Your article is about “reverse testimonials”, which suggests that the testimonial shouldn't be “nice” at the start.

Instead, the testimonial should demonstrate realism. The reader isn't ready to suddenly drop their point of view and hug yours. In the case of the reverse testimonial, you'd have to explain concepts such as:

  • Scepticism first (Before and after)
  • The transformation
  • Handling objections before they arise.

Those are three stage-by-stage concepts which sit under the umbrella of “reverse testimonials”.

As you tackle the stages, you must help your reader understand each idea with a story or analogy. That's how you chip away at the concept and develop a very sound explanation.

This chipping away isn't easily found online—or, for that matter, offline.

Which is why some explanations seem so much better than others, and how you can stand out, despite “everything” already being covered.

You need to take three core steps to get better explanations:

  1. You think of a theory that seems to go against the grain. Then you remove the objection.
  2. You come up with an elegant analogy to explain it.
  3. You come up with several angles to explain the same thing because you're breaking down the resistance step by step.

And that's how I win the discussion battle with Renuka, too. Though not all battles.


Why Habits Can Be Temporary And Environment Matters More, Instead?

Author: Sean D'Souza

Why Habits Can Be Temporary And Environment Matters More, Instead

Are you really in charge when it comes to changing your habits? While self-help books promise transformation, true change often stems from a shift in environment. Explore how small differences can influence your daily routines. Let’s jump on the environment bandwagon because it knows where you and I are headed. Right click to save this […]

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How To Use Grumpy People To Find Your Uniqueness

Author: Sean D'Souza

How To Use Grumpy People To Find Your Uniqueness

You and I avoid grumpy people, if we can. However, when those grumps happen to be your prospects or clients, you better pay close attention. Why? Because they’re they are key to finding out your uniqueness for your products and services. Uniqueness seems so hard to find, but grumpy people are everywhere. Here’s how you […]

[Continue reading...]

Why Learning Is So Tiresome (And How To Identify And Overcome The Barriers)

Author: Sean D'Souza

Why Learning Is So Tiresome

We believe that we’re talented in some areas and not talented in others. However, a lot of this understanding of talent is an illusion. It’s based on what we have been told and also our current behaviour. How can we overcome these barriers and become better learners? Let’s find out. Right click to save this […]

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The Dropout Factor: How To Reduce Dropout When Teaching Or Learning

Author: Sean D'Souza

The Dropout Factor: How To Reduce Dropout When Teaching Or Learning

One of the unseen enemies of learning is dropout. Clients get into a course very excited to learn. Then they go off a cliff. They don’t show up as often, if they show up at all. This dropout factor isn’t a new problem. It has existed for hundreds of years, but it’s only recently that […]

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How To Outsmart Procrastination With The 9/10 Principle

Author: Sean D'Souza

How To Outsmart Procrastination With The 9/10 Principle

We think procrastination means laziness. But often it’s just the first step that feels impossible. How do you make your clients move ahead quickly and recommend you more often than ever before? Let’s find out how this principle works. Right click to save this episode. Note: (This is an unedited transcript) One of the earliest […]

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The Reason You Can’t Focus (Why “Distraction” Has Nothing To Do With Focus)

Author: Sean D'Souza

If you ask someone why they can’t focus, they usually say they’re very distracted. But are we really distracted? Or is it congestion, instead? Let’s dig deeper into this slight nuance, and find out if distraction may be a good thing after all. Right click to save this episode. Note: (This is an unedited transcript) […]

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Bangkok Brain Audit Workshop Testimonials

Author: Sean D'Souza

Kasidis Thailand: Brain Audit Workshop Sean D'Souza Testimonials

“To be quite honest, I was not entirely sure what to expect. I really enjoyed the balance between the learning and participation level.” The workshop was fun and interactive. I really enjoyed the balance between the learning and participation level. I also appreciate that Sean points out mistakes. It’s a great way to help highlight […]

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How I Overcame My Three Fears

Author: Sean D'Souza

Business Fears: How I Overcame My Three Fears

At any stage in business, you have fears. And you look at others and think they are so successful. However, every business owner has fears; they just don’t share them with you. Here are a few stories on business fears and how to overcome them. When clients look at us, me in particular, they see […]

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