Eric Koester
Book Is the Hook
You have probably thought: I should write a book, or launch a podcast, or host on a conference... someday. Why not now? Professor Eric Koester has taught and coached hundreds of first-time creators, and he'll introduce you to some of the world's most unique and successful people -- authors, podcast hosts, video show producers, event organizers, product designers and more -- to show that the simple act of creating something, will improve our happiness, change our trajectory and unlock opportunities we never knew were possible. Whether you've started creating your podcast, video show or a book a...
Author
Eric Koester
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Apr 22, 2026
Where to listen?
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Episodes
Jean Hanff Korelitz: Why Most People Don’t Actually Have a Book Idea 22.04.2026 26:56
Do you need to know everything about your book before you start writing? Jean Hanff Korelitz says no, and in fact, knowing too much might be the problem. In this live, in-class conversation, bestselling novelist Jean Hanff Korelitz shares a clear and often contrarian perspective on writing, creativity, and the reality behind finishing a book. Jean explains why over-planning kills surprise, why mos...
Caroline Kepnes on Writing Complex Characters and Finding Your Voice 15.04.2026 27:04
How do you write a character that readers can’t stop thinking about, even when they shouldn’t like them? In this live, in-class conversation, novelist Caroline Kepnes shares how she developed the voice behind You, and why character begins with perspective, not plot. Caroline talks about her path from journalism to television writing to novels, how each medium shaped her craft, and why writing ofte...
Miri Rodriguez on Finding Your Author Voice Through Empathy and Story 08.04.2026 29:48
Great storytelling isn’t about charisma. It’s about empathy. In this live, in-class conversation, Miri Rodriguez, storytelling leader at Microsoft and author of Brand Storytelling, explains how writers find their voice, connect with audiences, and design stories that actually land. Miri shares what it was like launching her book during the pandemic, negotiating marketing support with her publisher...
Bob Burg on Why the Best Books Spread Through Giving 30.03.2026 26:13
Why do some books quietly spread for years, while others disappear after launch week? In this live, in-class conversation, Bob Burg, co-author of The Go-Giver, explains why stories and parables connect on a deeper level than traditional how-to books, and why the most successful messages travel heart-to-heart. Bob shares his approach to writing benefit-driven titles, building genuine relationships...
Jonah Berger on Why Ideas Spread (And Why Most Books Don’t) 24.03.2026 23:44
Why do some ideas catch on, while others disappear? In this live, in-class conversation, Jonah Berger, author of Contagious and The Catalyst, breaks down the real mechanics behind virality, influence, and change. We talk about Jonah’s STEPS framework, why “customer focus” matters more than originality, and why writers need to understand their audience before they fall in love with their topic. Jon...
Maysoon Zayid on Writing, Criticism, and Finding Another Dream 16.03.2026 22:36
Writing is solitary. Revision is relentless. And you have to be able to sit with your own work long enough to make it better. In this live, in-class conversation, comedian and author Maysoon Zayid shares an unfiltered look at what it actually takes to write with honesty, humor, and resilience. We talk about how to take criticism without breaking, why memoir can be harder than fiction, and why Mays...
Dr. Edith Eger on Healing, Choice, and Writing the Story You Lived 09.03.2026 26:07
What does it mean to be free, even after unimaginable suffering? In this live, in-class conversation, Dr. Edith Eger, Holocaust survivor, psychologist, and author of The Choice, shares profound wisdom on trauma, healing, and the power of response. She explains why “the opposite of depression is expression,” why you cannot heal what you don’t feel, and why perfectionism keeps people imprisoned long...
Dan Pink on Making Progress When Writing a Book Feels Endless 02.03.2026 33:22
Writing a book doesn’t come with a progress bar. In this live, in-class conversation, Dan Pink explains why long projects feel so disorienting, how writers lose their sense of momentum, and what actually keeps people motivated over months and years. He shares how his research into motivation shaped his own writing habits, why routines matter more than inspiration, and the simple end-of-day rit...
Gretchen Rubin on Why Nothing Works for Everyone 16.02.2026 29:15
Most advice sounds good on paper. But that doesn’t mean it works for you. In this live, in-class conversation, Gretchen Rubin explains why universal solutions fail, why habits need to be customized, and how self-knowledge is the real foundation of behavior change. She breaks down her Four Tendencies framework, shares how she uses her own experience as a testing ground, and explains why trying thin...
Apolo Ohno: Identity, Deep Work, and Life After the Olympics 09.02.2026 26:09
What happens after you achieve the dream you trained for your entire life? In this live, in-class conversation, Apolo Ohno, the most decorated Winter Olympian in U.S. history, shares what it was really like to compete at the highest level, and what came next when the Olympic chapter ended. Apolo talks about the mundane, repetitive road behind elite performance, the identity crisis that follows ret...
Julia Cameron on How to Silence Your Inner Critic 02.02.2026 38:34
Creative blocks aren’t a lack of talent. They’re usually a lack of permission. In this live, in-class conversation, Julia Cameron, author of The Artist’s Way, explains why simple, repetitive practices like Morning Pages are still the most effective way to unblock creativity. She breaks down how perfectionism shuts writers down, how the inner critic loses its power through daily practice, and why s...
Marc Randolph on Why Ideas Don’t Matter (Iteration Does) 26.01.2026 27:21
Most people think success starts with a great idea. Marc Randolph, co-founder of Netflix, says that’s wrong. In this live classroom conversation, Marc breaks down why ideas rarely survive first contact with reality, how iteration actually works in the real world, and why the best founders and authors learn by trying things that don’t work. He also shares how writing his memoir forced him to confro...
Seth Godin on Why Writing Is a Practice, Not a Performance 19.01.2026 17:56
Writing isn’t about talent, motivation, or finding the right system. In this live, in-class session, Seth Godin challenges the way most people think about writing. He explains why writer’s block is a myth, why bad writing is part of the process, and why committing to a practice matters more than waiting for clarity or confidence. Rather than focusing on publishing or outcomes, Seth pushes writers...
Simon Sinek on Why Writing a Book Should Feel Hard 14.01.2026 31:24
Writing a book is hard, and Simon Sinek thinks that’s the point. In this conversation, Simon joins Eric Koester for a candid, unscripted discussion about what separates meaningful books from forgettable ones. He breaks down why most ideas don’t deserve book-length treatment, why chasing bestseller lists misses the mark, and why depth, not speed, is the real value of authorship. They also explore h...
The moment your story stops being performative and starts being useful 08.05.2023 29:46
Most people wait for the “right time” to tell their story. That’s usually the reason it never lands. In this episode, Eric Koester sits down with Roy Choi, acclaimed chef, television personality and the author of L.A. Son, to talk about what actually makes a personal story work, and why forcing meaning onto your past almost always backfires. Roy shares how his darkest periods didn’t become useful...
Why you quit hard things, and how to build commitment that actually lasts 01.05.2023 47:53
Most people don’t fail because they aren’t talented. They fail because their ego can’t survive the early stages of being bad at something. In this episode, Eric Koester talks with Matt Thomas, world champion in chessboxing and founder of Brawl for a Cause, about what actually creates commitment when the work gets uncomfortable. Matt has taken hundreds of everyday people through a 90-day fight prog...
Focus Beats Passion: Cal Newport on Finishing Big Projects 24.04.2023 21:12
Most people don’t fail at big projects because they lack talent. They fail because they never protect their attention. In this conversation, Eric Koester sits down with Cal Newport, Georgetown professor and author of Deep Work and Digital Minimalism, to break down what it actually takes to finish meaningful, career-defining work in a distracted world. Cal explains why passion is overrated, why con...
Build in Public: The Distribution Cheat Codes Modern Authors Ignore 17.04.2023 26:40
Tyler Hayes built and sold startups, then went all-in on building a mission-driven company in public. In this conversation, we break down the real “cheat codes” behind productivity and creative output, not hustle fluff. We talk about why focus beats more hours, how constraints create speed, and why audience and distribution matter as much as the work itself. If you’re writing a book, launching a p...
Emotional Authority: Why Writing Has to Hurt a Little | Chuck Palahniuk 10.04.2023 36:57
Chuck Palahniuk doesn’t believe authority comes from research. He believes it comes from saying the thing everyone knows but nobody has dared to say out loud. In this conversation, the author of Fight Club explains why emotional truth has replaced factual expertise, how writing scenes like songs creates momentum, and why reading your work out loud to real people is the fastest way to improve it. W...
Stop Applying, Start Getting Introductions 03.04.2023 19:54
We’re taught the same job-search script: polish your resume, apply online, wait. It’s also the script that keeps smart people stuck. In this episode, career specialist and recruiter Kate Johnson breaks down what actually moves careers now: portfolio proof, real relationships, and the ability to market yourself without sounding desperate. You’ll learn: Why “applying online” rarely works, and what t...
Write the Ending First: How Riley Sager Designs Breakout Thrillers 26.03.2023 43:25
Riley Sager didn’t break out by writing more books. He broke out by writing differently. After three novels that barely sold, Riley changed his approach to story, structure, and momentum. Final Girls became the inflection point, and it started with one decision most writers avoid, designing the ending first. In this conversation, we go deep on the craft and the business of writing thrillers: outli...
Free Work Is Leverage: How Charlie Hoehn Got Noticed Without Permission 19.03.2023 39:09
Charlie Hoehn graduated into the worst job market in a generation and discovered something most writers never learn. Waiting doesn’t work. Instead of applying for jobs, Charlie started creating value for people he admired, without asking for permission or payment. That approach led to collaborations with Tim Ferriss, Seth Godin, Ramit Sethi, and the foundation for multiple bestselling books. This...
Make Your Book Unskippable: Vishen’s “Stickiness” Playbook 12.03.2023 35:50
Vishen Lakhiani didn’t “find his purpose” in a clean, inspirational way. He got wrecked first. After the dot-com crash, he was broke, depressed, and getting told to “fuck off” on cold calls all day. Then he took a meditation class that taught him to access an altered state, and it changed everything. It doubled his sales, rewired his decision-making, and became the seed of what turned into Mindval...
Stop Negotiating With Your Inner Critic | Terri Trespicio 05.03.2023 46:45
Most writers think they need more confidence. Terri Trespicio says that’s the wrong goal. In this episode, Terri explains why the inner critic isn’t the enemy, why criticism feels so destabilizing, and how attachment to being “good” or “liked” quietly sabotages creative progress. We talk about writing as identity, not output, why passion alone doesn’t carry you through hard drafts, and how to keep...
The Relationship Capital Behind Every Breakout Book | Jason Feifer 26.02.2023 35:31
Jason Feifer doesn’t believe in “launches.” He believes in relationship capital. As Editor-in-Chief of Entrepreneur, Jason has watched thousands of books fight for attention. The ones that win don’t market harder, they’ve already done the work years earlier. In this conversation, Jason breaks down how he quietly builds goodwill, tracks favors, and earns trust long before he ever asks for blurbs, c...
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