The bait, then the rug-pull.
Nicolas Cole opens with a tease, not an answer — 'the single biggest missed opportunity on the entire platform' — then makes the audience guess before he delivers the line that powers the rest of the video: a comment is literally the same thing as a short-form post. From there it's seven minutes of one idea, repeated five ways, demonstrated twice live.
What the video promised.
stated at 00:07“I wanna point out the single biggest missed opportunity on the entire platform.”delivered at 00:41
Where the time goes.

01 · Cold open
Question + tease of 'biggest missed opportunity on the platform'

02 · The reframe
Audience guesses 'engage with other people' — Cole reframes: a comment IS a short-form post. No difference.

03 · The 30-minute routine
Block 30 min every morning, comment on 20 people's posts. Miami 2022 WeWork origin story with Dickie.

04 · Permission frame
'Your laptop will not explode if you do this incorrectly.' Sets up the live demo.

05 · Live demo: Roman
Cole writes a real comment on Roman's post about content-as-repository, posts it, then copies it as a Note.

06 · Anti-overthinking beat
'Should we have sat here and thought about this for 90 minutes?' Repetition of the no-overthinking permission.

07 · Your content is yours
The repurpose mantra — copy, remix, combine, expand, compress, cross-post. 'How do I chop it apart in 100 different ways? That is the game.'

08 · Live demo: Jake
Second live demo — replies to Jake's intro post, posts it, 'did my laptop explode?'

09 · The permission ladder
'Is it okay if I? Yes. Should I? Yes. Can I? Yes.' Call-and-response sequence.

10 · The execution-gap closer
15,000 writers through Ship 30. 'Number one reason people don't see traction is not lack of talent — it's that they don't do it.'

11 · CTA: startwritingonline.com
Cut to solo couch set. Pitch for the free master class, lead-magnet popup overlays 'How To Start Writing Online.'
Visual structure at a glance.
Named ideas worth stealing.
Comment = Note Equivalence
A comment on someone else's Substack post and a short-form Note on your own profile are the same artifact — same length, same audience surface, same value. Therefore every comment is one round-trip away from being a Note on your feed.
The 30-Minute Morning Routine
- Block 30 minutes every morning
- Scroll your feed
- Find 10 people you can comment on
- Write a quick reply on each one
- If a comment lands well, copy-paste it as a Note on your own profile
Cole's exact daily ritual from his Miami 2022 WeWork month with Dickie Bush — 30 minutes, 20-30 manual replies a day, every day.
The Permission Ladder
- Is it okay if I? — Yes. It is.
- Should I? — Yes. You should.
- Can I? — Yes. You can.
Three-rung call-and-response rhetorical pattern. Cole answers each of the three questions a creator-in-paralysis is silently asking, in order.
Chop It Apart 100 Ways
Your newsletter is the hard work; everything else is repurposing the same idea in 100 different containers. 'It's not about writing other things. It's about taking the thing you already wrote.'
Lines you could clip.
“I wanna point out the single biggest missed opportunity on the entire platform.”
“Writing a comment is literally the same thing as writing a short form piece of content. A comment and a piece of content are the same exact thing.”
“You block thirty minutes in the morning, and you go comment on 20 people's posts.”
“Your laptop will not explode if you do this incorrectly.”
“On the Internet, your content is yours. You can copy paste it. You can remix it. You can combine it. You can expand it. You can compress it.”
“How do I chop it apart in a 100 different ways? That is the game.”
“Is it okay if I? Yes. It is. Should I? Yes. You should. Can I? Yes. You can.”
“The number one reason why people do not see traction is not because they lack talent. It is not because they don't know what to do. It is simply because they don't do it.”
How they spent the runtime.
Things they pointed at.
How they asked for the click.
“If you wanna write online but aren't sure where to start, click the link in the description of this video and check out startwritingonline.com. This is a free master class I put together sharing all of our most helpful frameworks for beginners.”
Hard set-change signals the shift from teaching to selling. Cole goes from desk + Perrier to a totally different couch set in a ball cap — the set tells the viewer 'we're done teaching, here's the ask.' Lead-magnet popup overlays at 6:43 reinforces the verbal CTA visually. Social proof: '100,000 writers have gone through this free master class.'
Word for word.
Steal the format.
When you have ONE good idea, don't pad it into a listicle — repeat it five ways and demonstrate it live twice.
- Open with a tease, not the answer. Let the audience guess. ('What do you think is the single biggest missed opportunity?')
- Reduce your idea to a single sentence anyone can repeat ('a comment is literally the same thing as a short-form post').
- Prescribe a specific routine with a specific number — '30 minutes, 20 people' beats 'comment more.'
- Demo it live, then demo it AGAIN. Repetition is the proof.
- Stack the permission ladder ('Is it okay if I? Should I? Can I?') as a re-hook in the back half.
- Close with the execution-gap line — 'not lack of talent, they don't do it' — every creator-coaching audience needs it.
- Set-change for the CTA. Visually signal 'teaching is done, here's the ask.'
What this could mean for you.
The fastest way to grow on Substack is to stop trying to write the next War and Peace and start writing thirty comments a day.
- Block 30 minutes tomorrow morning. Same time, same chair. That's the only ritual that matters.
- Scroll your feed. Find 10 people whose posts you actually have a reaction to. Write a real reply on each.
- Don't overthink the reply. A sentence or two is plenty. If you spend 90 minutes on it, you missed the point.
- When a comment feels good — when you'd be happy to claim it on your own profile — copy it, paste it as a Note, hit post.
- Do this Monday. Then Tuesday. Then Wednesday. Cole's whole pitch is that the number-one reason writers don't grow is they don't actually do this.
- Your newsletter is the hard work. Everything else — comments, Notes, replies — is just chopping that work into smaller pieces.
- Stop asking permission. Cole is giving it to you. Open the laptop and start typing.





































