‘The New Man’ is a technique for personal and professional transformation. It’s based on the idea that your current limitations are a result of your current “identity.” By consciously designing a “New Man” (or New Human)—a version of yourself with different values, skills, and reactions—you can solve problems that your “Current Self” finds impossible.
Engineering a New Identity
Your personality is not a fixed set of traits; it’s a collection of habits and beliefs. If your current “Identity” is someone who “hates public speaking,” then public speaking will always be a problem. If you design a “New Man” who “is an expert communicator,” the problem vanishes.
Audit Your Current Identity
What are the labels and beliefs you currently use to describe yourself?
Example: “I am a technical person, I’m not good at marketing, and I prefer to work alone.”
Design 'The New Man'
Create a detailed profile of a version of yourself that would excel at your current challenge. Give this persona a set of values and reactions.
- Name: The Visionary Architect.
- Value: “I believe that marketing is just another form of engineering human connection.”
- Reaction: “When I encounter a marketing problem, I get excited to design a system that solves it.”
- Skill: “I am an expert at distilling complex ideas into simple, viral stories.”
Identify the 'Transformative Gaps'
What specific belief is holding your “Current Self” back from becoming the “New Man”?
- Old Belief: “Marketing is manipulative and beneath me.”
- New Belief: “Marketing is a service that helps people find the solutions they need.”
Act 'As If'
Commit to one small action today that only the “New Man” would take.
“The Visionary Architect doesn’t wait for permission. I will write a 500-word blog post explaining our core mission and post it on LinkedIn today, without asking for anyone’s approval.”
Practice
Problem: “I can’t get my team to follow my lead.” Current Identity: “The Expert Contributor.” New Identity: “The Inspiring Captain.” What is one thing the Captain does differently in tomorrow’s meeting?