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Owned by Lauryn

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Laurintium

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The Institute Social

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41 contributions to The Institute Social
My 30 Day Focus
I’ve set myself two focuses because one I own and the other is outsourced to a team of students who are completing a project with me to reposition my brand. 1. Create my content pipeline and publish consistently on LI to grow my mailing list. 2. Support my student team, who are working on my brand repositioning. This is important right now because I have clarity around what I want to create in terms of content and repositioning my brand, and I want to stop collecting ideas and execute on them instead. I'm training to my 'operator' muscle. By the end of the month, progress would look like: - Posting one long-form article on LI a week, and have a month of articles written in advance - Repurposing content from the long-form articles into 5 short-forms to post something daily on LI - Increased subscribers to my mailing list.
0 likes • 20d
What’s one decision you’re going to make this week instead of overthinking? - I am choosing a “good enough” LinkedIn article structure and committing to it for the next 30 days without revisiting, refining, or re-architecting it. More specifically: - One article format - One headline style - One CTA style - One publishing day “What tool or system am I tempted to set up right now — that I’m choosing to ignore so I can execute?” - I am choosing to ignore building or upgrading any content system beyond a single, scrappy execution surface. If it doesn’t directly result in a post being published, it doesn’t get built. This month is about proving I can execute, not proving how well I can think.
0 likes • 11d
I’ve executed on the organizing but not on the publishing … and there’s no excuses, I just didn’t prioritise well this week.
Why I’m Treating This Community Like My Business Diary
I’ve been thinking about how I’m using this community lately. And honestly… I’m treating it like a business diary. Not a diary in the emotional, venting sense. A business diary. A place where I document: • What I’m testing • What’s working • What’s not • Wins • Losses • Pricing changes • Script adjustments • Capacity decisions • Hiring conversations • Follow-up tweaks • Financial pressure moments • AI leverage experiments • Operator mistakes Not because I have it all figured out. But because documenting the process forces clarity. Most operators only share polished wins. But the real leverage is in the in-between: The decision-making. The constraints. The uncomfortable conversations. The micro-adjustments. The “why” behind the pivot. When I write here, I’m not trying to look smart. I’m trying to: • Think clearly • Capture lessons in real time • Shorten your learning curve • Build a reference library of decisions Three years from now, I want to scroll back and see: “This was the season where systems tightened.” “This was the season where we learned follow-up is everything.” “This was the season where capacity decisions changed revenue.” “This was the season where discipline beat motivation.” If you’re building something real, I’d encourage you to do the same. Document your operator journey. Not just the highlight reel. Not just the motivational posts. But the mechanics. The scripts. The pricing. The pivots. The numbers. The mistakes. Because compounding isn’t just financial. It’s intellectual. And this space is where I’m compounding mine. If you’re here, you’re building. And I’m building right alongside you. What’s one lesson you’ve learned this week that future-you will be grateful you documented?
1 like • 11d
I think this is where this community has the opportunity to add immeasurable value - when we all treat it like a business diary and come in and share our learnings. This weeks lesson was about clarity and identity for me. Working with my team of students mirrored back to me that I wasn’t clear about my positioning and who I serve … but the truth is I was and I had documented it weeks ago I just hadn’t executed on it but future me is grateful we’ve got the thinking done to anchor back to with clarity and conviction.
🔥 NEW TRAINING: How to Use Notion + Import My Full Operating System
Alright team — this one’s BIG. I just uploaded a full training showing you exactly how to use Notion the way I run my entire operation, AND how to import the custom template I built for you. This is the same system I run multiple businesses AND this community with… so once you learn this, you’ll never operate your business the same way again. This is the operating system behind: - my content machine - my task/projects - my offers - my scripts - my weekly rhythm - my Command & Control dashboard If you want to scale without drowning… you need this. 🚀 What You’ll Learn in the Training Inside the video, I show you: - How to use Notion even if you’ve never touched it before - How to duplicate my template into your workspace - How to set up your Execution Hub - How to organize your content pipeline - How to build your weekly rhythm so you actually stay consistent - How to run your business like a real operator (not a chaotic freelancer) This will become the backbone of your business if you let it. 📥 Duplicate My Template Here Click this link to duplicate the template into your own Notion workspace: 👉 Notion Operating System Template Once you duplicate it, make sure to follow along with the video step-by-step so you don’t miss any setup pieces. *NOTE* When you click on the link it will take you to the page, on the top right there are 2 book looking icons and it should say "duplicate" when you hover over it. Click that and it will ask you what workspace to download it to. Just click your workspace and it will start downloading on the left side column of your workspace. It will take a min or two so just give it some time to download and you will see it pop up on the left side "Business Command Center". 🎥 Watch the Full Training Down below Go through it today or tomorrow — don’t wait on this one. This is the system everything else in your business will plug into.
🔥 NEW TRAINING: How to Use Notion + Import My Full Operating System
0 likes • 19d
The specialists in Notion AI that you've created 🤯🤯🤯
The stuff that feels “obvious” to you is usually the most valuable thing you have.
The stuff that feels “obvious” to you is usually the most valuable thing you have. One thing I keep getting reminded of lately: Whatever you think is basic… Whatever feels like “duh, everyone knows this”… Whatever you barely think about anymore… That’s usually the thing other people are missing. Example: Using Notion for project management. To me, that’s 101. Task breakdowns, systems, ideas, follow-ups, dashboards — it’s just how my brain works now. So I subconsciously assume: “Everyone has some system like this.” Wrong. I’ll be talking to entrepreneurs, business owners, people already in the game — and they’re managing everything in their head, notes app, or chaos. When I show them a simple system, it blows their mind. Not because it’s advanced. But because I’ve had more reps. That’s the trap we fall into: - We downplay our experience - We assume others know what we know - We stop seeing our skill set as valuable because it feels easy to us But ease is earned. Clarity comes from reps. And what’s obvious to you is often gold to someone else. If you’re ever stuck thinking: “What do I even have to offer?” Start here: 👉 What do people ask you about? 👉 What do you solve without thinking? 👉 What feels simple now that used to be hard? That’s not “basic.” That’s leverage. Don’t discount it.
0 likes • 20d
You are a notion Jedi Master, definitely don’t assume everyone has your genius brother. You’ve got a gift.
0 likes • 20d
I’m working through your videos and executing this weekend. I’m done delaying.
What Building 5 Courses in 14 Days Taught Me (Now That Time Has Passed)
A couple months ago, I built out 5 full courses in about two weeks. What mattered wasn’t the speed — it was what stuck after the dust settled. Here’s what’s proven true since then: 1. Speed creates clarity — after the fact I didn’t have perfect structure or language when I started. But once the courses were live, feedback, usage, and questions immediately showed me what actually mattered. Clarity didn’t come from planning. It came from shipping. 2. Consistency outperformed motivation There was nothing exciting about the middle of that build. No hype. No creative spark. Just steady progress every day — and that’s why the classroom exists at all. Looking back, motivation had nothing to do with the outcome. 3. Moving fast forced better thinking Speed eliminated fluff. I couldn’t over-teach, over-explain, or hide behind complexity. The constraint forced simplicity — and that’s what made the material usable. The operator lesson: Most things don’t need more strategy. They need a first version in the real world so reality can do the refining. If you’ve been sitting on something for weeks (or months), ask yourself: What would this look like if I shipped a rough version instead of waiting to be “ready”? Action: Drop the one thing you know you should’ve shipped already — and what’s been stopping you. That’s the real work.
1 like • 20d
Any one of the ideas I've had over the last six years .... 😂 jokes aside I'm being honest. The further I get into this community the more I realize how much I could have done if I just focused on being an operator.
0 likes • 20d
I read a great book called Building a Second Brain this week and alongside all your genius has really helped me to breakthrough in how I think about creating and executing … rather than hoarding ideas and knowledge. Add it to your TBR list, you’ll love it!
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Lauryn Girgenti
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37points to level up
@lauryn-girgenti-7600
Founder & Coach | Laurintium

Active 5d ago
Joined Nov 16, 2025
INTJ
Salt Lake City