Knowing how to use technology is more powerful than knowing all the answers — because the world rewards the person who knows how to solve problems, not the person who insists on solving everything alone.
Think about a calculator.
Nobody hands out trophies for doing long division by hand.
But we do reward the person who gets the right answer faster, cleaner, and with fewer mistakes.
Why?
Because the point isn’t to prove you’re a genius — the point is to get to the solution.
Technology is leverage.
A calculator takes you from “I think I can figure this out” to “I know exactly what to do.”
It compresses time, removes friction, and frees your brain for bigger decisions.
Now take that same idea and apply it to people.
Using smarter minds is the human version of using a calculator.
You’re not outsourcing your intelligence — you’re multiplying it.
You’re borrowing decades of someone else’s experience in five minutes.
You’re skipping the trial-and-error phase and jumping straight to clarity.
This is exactly how I evaluate companies and investments.
I spend 20% of my time understanding the deal… and 80% of my time talking to experts I trust about the deal.
Why?
Because the paperwork tells you what it is.
But smart people tell you what it means.
The numbers tell you the mechanics.
But smarter minds tell you the risk, the opportunity, and the blind spots you can’t see.
Wealthy people instinctively operate this way.
They don’t sit around trying to decode every tax law, market cycle, or contract clause.
They find the person who already knows, and they plug into that expertise the same way you plug a calculator into a math problem.
Leverage beats knowledge.
Access beats ego.
And collaboration beats “I’ll figure it out myself” every single time.
If you want to grow faster, make better decisions, and build real wealth, don’t try to know everything.
Learn how to use the tools — and the people — who already do.
That’s the real advantage.
That’s the Smarter Minds philosophy.










































