Which is more important? Talent or hard work?.


  • @amaris
    where did you copy paste that from lmao


  • @kξk
    From my mind, you should try it some day


  • Both are important. Hard work awards a sense of accomplishment. Talent gives you things easily. For the sake of having to deal with more, Hard work just seems to have more respect. kinda.


  • @veitak
    they are both irrelevant, all you need is luck


  • @kξk luck is probability. you don't take terrible chances when you're trying to publish a book.


  • @veitak
    books dont get you famous or give you money, its all about luck and what the genre of the year or the decade is the most bought


  • @kξk not really. All genres of books are frequently bought, there's not too much of a mainstream thing in books. They get you famous and give you money if you make a great book, as many have done in the past.


  • @veitak

    1. Romance
    2. Crime mystery
    3. Religious
    4. Science Fiction
    5. Horror

  • @kξk All bought very frequently if they're good books.


  • @veitak
    No, number 1 doubles number 2 in revenue in 2012


  • @kξk
    5. 79.6 Million
    1 . 1440 Million (or) 1.44 Billion


  • @kξk doesn't matter, you still get fame and fortune for making a good book. if you make a bad book in any genre, you get nothing close to what you get if you had talent or put hard work into it.


  • @veitak
    So let’s do some quick math here: Let’s say you get a $5,000 advance for your book and you get 10% royalties net profit, and the book’s list price is $25.00. That means you are making $1.25 per book, and that you will need to sell 4,000 copies of your book just to break even. Thus the averages say that you will never make a penny from royalties off sales of your book (earn out). The average US non-fiction book sells about 250 copies a year and around 3,000 copies over its lifetime.


  • @kξk i'm referencing really good books that took a lot to make. Those books being the ones that you read for literature class. Those have given a lot of fame. anyways, books are irrelevant here I could have used a better example.


  • @veitak
    yeah that is a few percent
    that get lucky
    you prove my point
    bye


  • @kξk not luck, they made extremely good stories.


  • I think talent is the most important, because the catalisor of hard working is to have talent. Otherwise, if you keep hard working on something that you don't have talent, you'll get frustrated on some point, because you try and try. But the innate talent isn't really there.

    Let's see the things upside down:
    If you have talent on something, you'll probably grab that talent and use it for your own satisfaction. It makes you happy to know you have some talent, so you want to develop it with hard-working. Unless you loosen up because you think you can make it.


  • talent or hard work ?

    take it like that on the other basis.
    Except for the limit of human body everything can become the same.

    Genius permit the synthesis of data with little intell. (by data... well something you want to make or know)
    This data then become knowledge that the brain set to 1.
    Since the data is fixed genius don't need to be used on it anymore.

    Talent is the same. If you train in something hard it can become a talent.
    but i guess if you just use genius to do something you will lack some EXP points. And if you think because your talent is awesome you won't be surpassed, then you lost.

    at the end of the day, destroying obstacles won't help you to improve it will just make you dull.

    so if you got talent, don't forget to work hard too.
    and if you got none, just do it thousand times over to compensate.


  • Well, hard work can beat talent. Along with talent if you have discipline it's a deadly combination. I have seen talented folk ruined there carrier, just because they didn't have dedication and hard work in life. At the other hand, I never considered myself talented, but, I have tenency to do hard work.


  • well for me i'm talented in useless things... it's deadly useless.
    except for useless things , if i create something i remember it forever, and can do it again forever.

    If i want to create a manga, once i create the pieces of characters, i would be able to draw them in a short amount of time... don't need to draw a storyboard i can jump on the real thing dirrectly.

    And i'm good with photography..
    but thing you don't realy need to train like that tend to be boring, and i don't do boring things.