Stop Networking. Build a Global Syndicate.
Networking is completely cooked, and that’s a good thing.
Networking is completely cooked. It’s dead. And that’s a good thing.
You no longer have to kiss ass and pretend to be someone you are not to win.
You no longer have to go to fake corporate events and play buddy buddy with Larry from Morgan Stanley in the hopes of getting a job interview.
You do not need to use LinkedIn’s cesspool to connect with someone you could not care less about getting to know. And you no longer have to bite your tongue, castrate your worldview, and hide who you actually are in the hopes of getting ahead.
For a long time these fake, inauthentic ways of navigating a business or career were essential. It was the only model we were taught and given.
But that has been replaced by something far more powerful.
Building a Global Syndicate. An ecosystem with enough gravitational pull to bring the right opportunities, the right contacts, and a way of life toward you without forcing a single moment of it.
Imagine hitting the tarmac in any major city in the world and already knowing exactly where to go. The local spots that never make it onto a list. The Muay Thai dungeon where the serious men train. Sitting across the table from men cut from the same cloth who feel like old friends before the first drink lands.
And while you are living that life, the ecosystem you’ve built is working on autopilot. Building connections while you sleep. Pulling the right men toward you through the skills you are developing, the pursuits you are chasing, and the side quests that make meeting men of your calibre feel inevitable rather than engineered.
This is how you build a Global Syndicate.
THE ECOSYSTEM
Every ecosystem has two primary functions: productivity and energy flow.
Productivity is yield per unit of output. I can write a tweet in thirty seconds and generate millions of impressions. That same thought, expressed in person, reaches the ten people in the room. The internet did not just change how we distribute ideas. It made the old relationship between effort and output completely obsolete.
Energy flow is simpler than it sounds. It is just people moving through your world. The right ones move toward you. The wrong ones fall away. You do not manage this consciously. The ecosystem does the sorting for you. What you put out determines who finds you. Who finds you determines what becomes possible.
For most of human history, men could only build one kind of ecosystem. In person. Local. Bound by geography and proximity. The internet changed that. It made the hybrid ecosystem possible.
A man who understands this can now slide between the digital world and the physical one, moving energy and people between them in both directions. He runs an in person event and distributes it digitally. He meets men online and converts those relationships into the tangible world. Each ecosystem feeds the other.
The output compounds.
When this is done correctly, you get asymmetric leverage. Asymmetric outputs. A life that produces far more than the effort put into it would suggest is possible.
Most online communities miss this entirely. They fill it with low quality participants, purely for profit. They have no understanding of how ecosystems actually work so they never truly build life changing relationships.
But you’re different, and below are 3 critical skills to develop to build your own ecosystem & if executed correctly, I can guarantee you that your social, financial and lifestyle will be exponentially better.
Using the internet properly
There are very few tools that allow you to reach millions of people, build a business from a laptop, get invited to a wedding in Lake Como, hold a direct conversation with a celebrity, and find yourself training alongside special forces operatives.
The internet is one of them.
I am not naive to the fact that it can be a toxic, negative waste of time. But used intelligently it gives you leverage and increases your surface area of luck like nothing else available to a man in 2026.
The truth about luck is that it has to be conferred onto you by other people. The more people who know who you are and what you stand for, the more surface area you generate. The internet is the most efficient luck surface area machine ever built. Most men are using it to consume. A small number are using it to be found.
I would have never thought shitposting on Twitter in 2020 would connect me with professional fighters who became clients, online businessmen, celebrities, and teach me how to build a business from scratch. I owe a lot to the power of the internet and the people I met along the way.
Compare that to when I worked as a physiotherapist. On a busy day I was seeing ten patients. Ten opportunities to communicate, educate, and impact someone’s life. That was the ceiling. Now I have, without exaggeration 20,000x the reach I had & educate millions of people every month. I can educate and communicate at a scale that was impossible from a clinical room, with a far greater influence on the world and a far greater surface area for the right people to find me.
But here is the part most men get wrong. In five years of building online I have pushed back constantly against friends who only cared about views and virality. Chasing mass traffic is the wrong game entirely. What you put out into the world acts as a filter. If I had spent five years making content for men with no attention span and a second grade vocabulary, how would that ever connect me to the kind of men I actually want in my life?
It would not. So the way I approach every platform comes down to one question: who does this platform actually attract? The man watching a ten minute YouTube video is not the same man scrolling thirty second TikToks. The man reading long form articles on Substack is operating at a level almost no other platform can replicate. The medium dictates the calibre of man. Build on the platforms that attract the men you want to find you.
The Art of Effortless Connection
Sprezzatura: effortless grace. It is the big secret to meeting people organically that nobody in the networking space ever talks about.





