Stop Looking for a Niche. Start Looking for a Problem You Can’t Ignore.
Your mission is the soul of your content creation. Here's how to find it.
There’s a lot of talk online about niches.
You’re told to choose a profitable one, something that you can defend or dominate. Or, you’re told to have no niche at all.
But the more I’ve been creating in this space, the more I start to think: niches are a content strategy, but beyond that, in the personal realm, it’s a bit lacking. And if you’re a mission-driven creator or founder trying to make something that matters and not just perform, then a niche will never be enough.
A niche makes you legible to the algorithm.
A mission makes you unforgettable to a human.
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The real problem
Most creators today are missing the point.
They post regularly, they follow all the best practices, they quote Naval and talk about dopamine detoxes. But if you look closely, they’re not really saying anything. Just recoloring other people’s ideas in their own color palette.
The crazy part is that it seems to work. At least on the surface.
They’re growing followers. Landing brand deals. Getting retweets from blue checks. But what they’re really building is a paper house. Something that a single gust of wind could blow over.
Because they’re not building from mission.
They’re building from imitation of general ideas that they don’t really care about.
And that makes you promptable
In the AI age, this is a dangerous game to play.
Why? Because if there’s no internal compass guiding your content, if everything you say can be summarized as “Top 5 Tips for X”, then someone will replace you. And it won’t even be personal. It’ll just be better SEO, faster output, more optimized systems -- all orchestrated by a faceless, profit-driven brand.
Even worse: this faceless, profit-driven brand could come after any of your own content.
With business contacts, money to spare, and business know how, what’ll happen once a company figures out that your “idea” or “niche” is lucrative?
This is the dark irony of the creator economy.
The more you focus on output over origin, the easier it becomes to duplicate what you do. You become predictable. A prompt waiting for someone to enter it.
Unpromptability isn’t about being loud. It’s about being rooted.
The antidote is mission
If you want to create work that lasts, you need more than a content calendar.
You need a cause.
Mission changes everything. It shifts your content from transactional to transformational. It brings weight to your words, because suddenly, you’re not just showing up to be picked up by algorithms. You’re showing up to change something real in the world.
And that changes how people experience you.
They start listening. They start to remember you—not because you posted 8 carousels a week, but because something about your message matters to them.
That’s the gravitational pull of a mission.
What is a mission, anyway?
Your mission is not your topic, not your tagline, or your latest lead magnet.
It’s the soul-level frustration or longing that drives you to keep going. The reason you feel physical pain when someone in your niche gives terrible advice. It’s why you keep on writing even when it feels like you’re ranting out into the void, because you know that someone, somewhere, needs to hear what you’re saying.
It’s the red thread that binds all your ideas together.
A mission isn’t just a positioning strategy, but a decision about who you are and what you’re here to do.
You can constantly reinvent your brand, or your content calendar. But once you find your mission, you’re going to stick to it forever.
Why mission makes you unpromptable
You can copy a post. You can mirror the writer’s cadence, or train your AI on their top 100 tweets and replicate the outer shell.
But you can't copy someone's cause. Not in any way that matters.
No one else on this planet has your particular mix of experience, heartbreak, obsession, and urgency. No one has lived your exact set of stories. No one is haunted by the same problem in the same way.
You might have the same niche as 10,000 other people. But if your mission is real, if it’s deep enough, you’ll never be doing the same thing. This makes you Unpromptable.
Even if someone has the best AI subscription money can buy, they still can’t write with the same stakes you do.
Because only you care the way you do.
All top creators are mission-led, all top creators are unpromptable
If you look closely, all the most impactful creators today have one thing in common: they’re not just publishing content—they’re following a mission.
Have a look at my favorite “big” creators like Ali Abdaal, Steven Bartlett, Daniel Priestley, Andrew Huberman, and Seth Godin. They’re all radically different in tone and format, but unified in one thing:
They each have a deeply personal problem they’ve chosen to solve in public.
Ali isn’t just teaching productivity, he’s wrestling with the lifelong quest for joyful, sustainable success.
Steven isn’t just interviewing founders, but rebuilding the mental and emotional scaffolding of modern entrepreneurship.
Priestley speaks from years of business scars and obsessions about scale.
Huberman explicitly states his mission at the start of every Huberman Lab podcast, that he wants bleeding-edge scientific knowledge to be accessible to the general public.
Godin spent decades redefining marketing, turning it into an act of generosity, of doing work that matters, for people who care
These guys have market dominated their market. Whether hard work or luck or both positioned them to do so, it’s undoubtedly their deep conviction to their mission that laid the foundation for them to be so interesting, and so helpful.
This is a big reason why their content is Unpromptable. Anyone can talk about productivity, or marketing. In fact, tons of people already do.
But copy cats don’t have a conviction as deep. They don’t have the mission, and they don’t have proof that they’ve lived their mission through years upon years.
You can’t just clone their tone. You’d need to replicate their urgency, their years of lived conviction, their willingness to go all-in on a specific change.
That’s what we mean when we say Unpromptable.
Not just “hard to copy,” but “impossible.”
You already know pain
You know what pain feels like. You’re already halfway through developing a mission.
Think back. Not just to last week, or the last job you had. Go all the way.
To the moments you nearly quit. To the chapters you wouldn’t post online. To the season of your life that tested you in a way no algorithm ever will. Think about everything you’ve endured. The heartbreak, the sorrow.
Now choose one.
Just one.
Pick one thread of pain. One real problem you’ve lived through. One thing that changed you, and that you know others still struggle with.
Develop that into your mission.
For me, this was when I lost all my freelance clients through AI.
Almost overnight, the projects, and money, dried up. The gut-punch wasn’t just financial but existential. I started asking dangerous questions. Am I obsolete? Did I build a skill set that has no future? But after a few weeks of flailing, light poked through.
I stopped trying to defend my old identity as a freelance writer, and started getting curious about what this moment could teach me.
I dove into AI. I studied how it wrote, tested its limits. I rebuilt my writing systems from the ground up, and saw AI’s potential. I questioned myself and my usage of it. I thought about what authenticity means in a writing process with AI.
Over time, the larger theme coalesced: to help other creators, founders, and companies through the AI transformation -- philosophically as well as practically.
To help them become Unpromptable.
You already know pain, so all that’s left is to shape it. Here are the steps I took:
Step 1: Trace the pain and spot the pattern
Ask yourself: what did you struggle with that still haunts you?
What makes you angry when you see others go through it? What advice would you give your past self, even if no one paid you for it?
Now zoom out. What bigger dysfunction caused that pain? For example:
Was it a broken industry?
A cultural myth?
A blind spot in how people are taught?
Write it down. Name it. Be specific.
Example: I lost my primary means of income when gen AI tools like ChatGPT became popular.
Larger pattern: Industries are still debating what generative AI is, what it’s role is in the content creation process, and how it fits in the overall marketing ecosystem. This is creating a lot of pain for creators and marketers caught in the middle.
Your wound and the system that caused it is your seed.
Step 2: Define the change
Now ask: What world would exist if that pattern was fixed? What transformation do you want your work to catalyze?
Write it like a vow.
That’s your mission. It’s not a slogan. It’s a direction. And you can now point your content toward it, every time.
This is how I defined the change I want Write10x to create:
I want to see an internet of fulfilled, enriched creators, all using AI to be more of their genuine selves. I want to see authentic, AI powered thought leaders creating unique, high-level content that spreads their ideas and helps their audiences to live better lives.
I want to see brands with lean, powerful content marketing departments who know how to use AI healthily in their marketing processes without sacrificing soul and authenticity.
Step 3: Define the rules of the game
If you’re serious about building around your mission, you need to ask yourself:
What kind of game am I playing?
Am I building something profitable? An entrepreneurial mission that deserves to be paid in proportion to the problem it solves?
Or am I giving from overflow? Knowing the work matters whether or not it scales, whether or not it sells, whether or not anyone applauds?
Both are valid. But not knowing the answer is how creators burn out. They give like it's charity, then resent the lack of revenue. Or they hustle for profit without realizing they’re not being entrepreneurial.
So choose. Be honest.
If you want to get paid, build systems that make that inevitable, just like how I’m building the mission of Write10x into an entrepreneurial venture.
If you don’t, structure your mission so that its payoff is intrinsic.
The rules of your mission are part of the mission.
What if you genuinely can’t name anything yet?
That probably means you haven’t experienced enough pain. At least not the kind that’s crystallized into conviction.
You haven’t hit a problem that dug deep enough into your psyche to keep you up at night. That’s not a moral failing. It just means you’re still in the phase of accumulating story.
So go live. Try things. Fail spectacularly. Chase things that don't work out. Be humbled. Break a few beliefs. Let something matter so much that its absence hurts.
Read widely. Take risks. Ask questions. Touch the edges of your curiosity. Learn more about the world than the internet’s hot takes can offer.
Eventually, something will grip you. Some injustice. Some broken system, wound.
When you finally feel the problem in your bones … you’ll know.
Your mission will reveal itself in the pain you can no longer ignore.
When you have a mission, you can’t be copied. You can only be empowered.
Stop looking for a niche.
Start looking for a problem you can’t ignore.
That’s how you build something that lasts. Not with clever tactics, but with conviction. Not with performance metrics, but with a clear sense of why you’re doing any of this in the first place.
Not only will this make you Unpropmtablee. You realize that to serve your mission, you have to use all the tools available at your disposal. AI, your community, the education of the wider internet -- your mission will give you a compass to navigate everything.
Now, you have everything you need to know. You know the cost of staying vague. And you know the reward of digging deep.
So:
Trace the pain and name the pattern
Define the change.
Set the rules of the game.
When you do that, your content stops being replaceable.
And, you find yourself a brand new purpose.
P.S. If you want to take this further, join the Unpromptability Sprint this August 10, a free, focused, high-leverage experience where you'll not only clarify your mission, but build a writing system that makes you uncopyable. Visit the Write10x chat for more details!
It’s where this philosophy becomes AI-powered practice, and where you finally stop sounding like everyone else.






This is great validation James for my own writing. I started writing last October because I could not ignore the drive to anymore, and felt the need to help guide others through similar challenges I was witnessing.
Building on this - the real challenge is user adoption.