『Welcome to Cloudlandia』のカバーアート

Welcome to Cloudlandia

Welcome to Cloudlandia

著者: Dean Jackson and Dan Sullivan
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Join Dean Jackson and Dan Sullivan as they talk about growing your business and living you best life in Cloudlandia.© 2026 Welcome to Cloudlandia マーケティング マーケティング・セールス 経済学
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  • Ep173: Rules Over Insights: Time Sense and the Decider Role
    2026/04/22
    The most powerful systems aren’t built on motivation; they’re built on rules that make the right action the only option. In this episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, we follow Dean’s ongoing experiment with structured daily rhythms, phones locked from 10 PM to noon, meals pre-ordered the night before, and two daily golf sessions anchoring his mornings. He’s framing it not as discipline but as finally becoming a “law-abiding citizen” after 30 years of trying to be a maverick. The bigger discovery: for someone with ADHD, freedom lies within structure, not outside it. Dan shares a quiet but significant shift in his Strategic Coach tools, replacing the prompt “What are your three biggest insights?” with “What are your three biggest rules?” Insights are just thoughts. Rules are decisions with direction. He also returns to a theme from his 130-day “Creating Great Yesterdays” practice: that your past isn’t a fixed record of what happened, it’s your interpretation of it, and that interpretation is entirely yours to change. The episode closes with a wide-ranging discussion on AI, technological revolutions, and who actually profits when the world changes, spoiler: it’s rarely the builders. Dan’s historical read on railroads, radio, and automobiles applies just as cleanly to what’s happening now. This one rewards a second listen, especially the segment on time sense and what it means for how you take action. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Dean’s new rule: phone locked from 10 PM to noon daily, not as willpower, but as a structure that makes the right choice the only choice.Dan replaced “What are your three biggest insights?” with “What are your three biggest rules?” on his thinking tools, and the difference in entrepreneurial traction was immediate.Your past isn’t a fixed record, it’s your interpretation of what happened, and that interpretation is yours to change at any time.In every major technological revolution, railroads, radio, automobiles, only about 5% of builders profit. The real winners are the consumers who apply the technology to their most productive opportunities.ADD and future-thinking may be deeply linked: Dan’s observation that spending today’s attention on things that don’t yet exist is what creates the paralysis most entrepreneurs experience.Dean’s “Decider” role: the bottleneck in any creative system isn’t ideas or energy, it’s the decision about what actually makes it into the real world. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean Jackson: Welcome to CloudLandia. Mr. Sullivan. Dan Sullivan: Mr. Jackson. Dean Jackson: Well, here we are. Dan Sullivan: Here we are. Here we are. I was listening to the actual words of the song that you have introducing our podcast. And my feeling is that the guy who's singing is lying. Dean Jackson: Well, let's Dan Sullivan: Break it down. He's actually doing all those things and he's actually going to do all those things that he's saying. And I'm just wondering if all songs of that nature is that the singer is actually expressing something that's not true. Dean Jackson: Shadow. Some shadow. Dan Sullivan: Shadow. Shadow. This is the Dean Jackson: Challenge. The shadow side of it. I'm never going to give you up. I'm never going to let you go. Dan Sullivan: He's letting her go. Dean Jackson: Yeah. Oh my goodness. Dan Sullivan: Forget you. I'm Dean Jackson: Never going to Dan Sullivan: Forget. Well, I'm not sure of the gender that he's actually talking about. There we go. These days, you can't be sure. Dean Jackson: That is so funny, Dan. I love ... This is true. Yeah, you've been the first one to dial in. We should let people know the conference service that we use. We have it set up so that there's music playing when the first person arrives and the song is Rick Astley Never Going to Let You Go. Yeah, yeah. So you've been treated to some contemplative time with the lyrics of the song. Dan Sullivan: Yeah. Yeah. My whole feeling is that anything that people are singing about kind of tells you that they're not actually that kind of person. Dean Jackson: I saw there was a- Dan Sullivan: If you have to say it, if you have to sing it, you're not doing it. Dean Jackson: Yeah. I saw a t-shirt that had an image on the front. It said, "Things Rick Assley will never do. " And then it was check boxes. Let you go, give you up, forget you. Check, check, check. Dan Sullivan: Or it's the reverse. That person is doing all those things to Rick. Yeah. Yeah. It's kind of funny. The happiest people in the world are probably not talking about it. Dean Jackson: That's it. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction, right? Dan Sullivan: Yeah. Yeah. Well, what's up? What's up? Dean Jackson: Well, I'll tell you what, it's been another adventure in Club Landia, another week of being in one place ...
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    56 分
  • Ep172: Secrets, Surveys, and 30-Year Bets
    2026/04/15
    Protecting what you've built, revisiting where you started, and betting on the systems that have never let you down. In this episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, Dan and Dean open with a riff on the strange new logic of secrecy in the internet age, where the best way to protect an idea may be to share it widely. Dan's story about a platform speaker who borrowed his Free Days, Focus Days, and Buffer Days framework without credit turns into a sharp point: the internet has made intellectual property both more fragile and more defensible at the same time. Dean connects this to his Nine Word Email and the way naming an idea is often the most durable form of ownership. Dean then pulls out journal number one, dated April 1996, thirty years ago this week, and the conversation becomes a time capsule. He walks through his early real estate licensing business, Toronto and Beyond, and how the same playbook he used then to generate leads in Halton Hills is still running today in Winter Haven, Florida. Dan reflects on his own 25-year journaling project that began after a difficult 1978, and shares that his massage therapist of 34 years recently confirmed his physical condition hasn't changed since they started. The episode closes on a larger canvas: real estate as a measure of civilization, the Louisiana Purchase at 50 cents an acre, Canadian politics, AI-driven job creation, and the quiet argument that the best protection against an uncertain future is a system that has already worked across three decades. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Dan Sullivan's Free Days, Focus Days, and Buffer Days framework was stolen by a speaker mid-presentation and the audience corrected him before he finished the sentence.Seth Godin's counterintuitive take: before the internet, you kept secrets by hiding them; now you protect them by telling everyone first.Dean Jackson's Nine Word Email became famous globally and naming it was the single act that made it impossible for anyone else to claim it.The same lead-generation playbook Dean built in 1996 for Halton Hills real estate still works today, running virtually unchanged in Winter Haven, Florida.Dan's massage therapist of 34 years told him his physical condition is no different now in his 80s than when they first started working together.For every job eliminated by AI and robotics over the next 15 years, Dan estimates roughly two new jobs will be created,most of them in the legal and regulatory pushback against AI itself. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean Jackson: Welcome to Cloudlandia. Mr. Sullivan. Dan Sullivan: Yes. And AI will know about this call. Probably never. Dean Jackson: Probably Dan Sullivan: Never. It'll be scandalized. It'll be confused. Dean Jackson: Yes. This is the closest to analog. It's like, how did those spies meet in the trip down to our bathing suits neck deep in the ocean, having no wires, nobody listening. That's what Dan Sullivan: We're Dean Jackson: Having right now. Dan Sullivan: Yeah. There's a great story about Reagan, President Reagan. And when he got in, there was a particular situation where it was very clear that the Russians, the Soviets at that time, Dean Jackson: Were Dan Sullivan: Stealing American secrets. Dean Jackson: Very sneaky. Dan Sullivan: And Reagan had an interesting response to it. He said, "You know what we ought to do? Every so often, maybe every six months, we should collect every single secret in the United States and put them in 747s, cargo planes, 747 cargo planes, and fly them all to Moscow and dump them on the runway and fly off. And every six months we just dump all our secrets on the runway." He said, "The sheer confusion that that will cause will destroy the Soviet Union in a matter of a couple of years." Dean Jackson: That's funny, isn't it? Yeah. There's something interesting. Yeah. It's so funny, right? The things that we want to keep secret seem to be more desirable than the things we're willing to share. It's so- Dan Sullivan: Yeah. Just share everything. The way to destroy them. Actually, Seth Godin had a great line. He said, "Before the internet, the way to keep a secret secret was to keep it secret." Dean Jackson: Yes. Dan Sullivan: He says, "The way after the internet to protect your secrets is tell everybody your secret." Dean Jackson: Yeah. Oh, Dan, I can't tell you. So how many times the ... I created this thing called the nine word email. And the best thing I did was name it. And it's become known everywhere. And everybody who tries to present that idea as an original or as a, "Hey, here's this thing I've been working on. " Every single time in the comments is, "Oh, that's Dean Jackson's idea or that. " But predominantly, most people start out with the, "Here's an idea I learned from Dean Jackson." And then they talk about the nine word email. Dan Sullivan: Yeah. Well, I had a similar ...
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    1 時間 3 分
  • Ep171: The Inevitability System
    2026/04/08
    The most productive stretch of your life probably isn’t waiting for motivation, it’s waiting for the right constraint. In this episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, we follow Dean’s hundred-day phone fasting experiment locking his phone away from 10 AM to noon and what it revealed about the power of inevitability. Dean calls this his most consistently productive stretch ever, and Dan predicts that by the one-year mark, at least 20 other habits will have quietly shifted as a side effect. The big lesson: willpower is unnecessary when you design a system that removes the other options entirely. Dan shares that he’s now at day 116 of his ‘Creating Great Yesterdays’ practice and is finishing a new quarterly book, Yesterday Creates Tomorrow. He also makes a sharp case for proactive health investment twice-yearly full bloodwork, AI-assisted cancer detection, and taking personal ownership of your body rather than waiting for the system to catch something at stage four. The conversation moves into the language of regret, where Dan breaks down why ‘should,’ ‘would,’ and ‘could’ are manipulation words and how reframing your past experience as a source of lessons removes its power over you. The episode closes with a great business story from a Free Zone client: while every gas station in Washington State started charging for bathroom access, he went the other way, free bathrooms for everyone and created lineups of grateful customers who paid double out of sheer relief. It’s the kind of counterintuitive move that’s easy to describe and hard to execute, which is what makes it worth hearing about. This one’s got a few moments you’ll want to replay. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Dean’s 100-day phone fasting experiment, locking his device away from 10 AM to noon, produced what he calls the most productive stretch of his entire life.Dan’s prediction: by the one-year mark, at least 20 other habits will have changed as a quiet side effect of the phone fasting discipline.The willpower myth, debunked: Dean’s biggest transferable lesson is that the system does the work when you engineer inevitability and remove all other options.A Free Zone client turned Washington State’s ‘pay $20 before you can use the bathroom’ rule into a competitive advantage, by being the only gas station that didn’t charge.Dan on why ‘should,’ ‘would,’ and ‘could’ aren’t grammar, they’re manipulation tools used to distort your relationship with the past.AI is now detecting cancer predisposition three years before convergence happens. Dan’s case for twice-yearly blood panels: 20 extra healthy years for anyone willing to pay attention. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean Jackson: Welcome to Cloudlandia. Mr. Sullivan. Dan Sullivan: Good morning. Dean Jackson: Welcome to Cloudlandia. Dan Sullivan: Yes. I'm feeling it. I'm feeling the impact of Cloudlandia. Dean Jackson: I love that. There's always a home for us here in Cloudlanvia. Dan Sullivan: Yes. It's Dean Jackson: Our third Dan Sullivan: Space. Yeah. Well, yeah. And it's custom designed. Dean Jackson: That's exactly right. Dan Sullivan: It's custom design. Dean Jackson: You know when I say that, that's a really interesting thing, our third place, because that's how Starbucks, that was the intention of Starbucks when they got started as a third place between work and home, somewhere where you go to meet people and have great conversation. It's so funny because they've completely moved away from that. Now with the drive-throughs and the ... I described the interior spaces of the new coffee places as prison cafeteria style. It's like get your stuff and move along. Don't see them. Dan Sullivan: Yeah. Well, they went through a period, I think it's trying to think about a 10-year period where they were preaching to you, trying to make you a better person. And that didn't work. Don't have a goal in selling any product of transforming human nature. It's one of my- Observable. It's one of my firm foundational stones. Humans are going to do what humans are going to do and don't try to create a better human being. Just give them a little caffeine jolt and some sugar and they're okay. Dean Jackson: Observable life lessons. That's Dan Sullivan: Exactly right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Dean Jackson: It's so funny. Dan Sullivan: Yeah. I think that's really the big thing now because this was actually ... I read an interesting book and it's called The Progressive Era in American History. And it starts kind of, I would say probably right after the Civil War. And it was a middle class. It was like people who lived in nice neighborhoods and they had nice things. And they made it their goal that their responsibility in life was to look at anywhere in America that didn't look like their neighborhood, didn't have their mindsets. And they were...
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    1 時間 5 分
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