Jason Feifer’s books land because he doesn’t accumulate insights.
He patterns them for a specific reader.
Then he builds the book, and the launch, as one integrated tool inside a larger opportunity strategy.
Information is abundant.
Most authors don’t start with a lack of ideas.
They start with too many.
Notes are scattered across documents, voice memos, slide decks, and past work. There are outlines that were started, chapters that were attempted, and fragments that feel promising but incomplete.
In 2026, the question is no longer:
Can you get published?
The question is:
Can you own what you publish?
Because ownership is the difference between:
a book that sells a few hundred copies
and a book that becomes a business asset for the next decade


