Q. From biomedical engineering student to educator with 8M+ followers, what moments shaped this shift?
The biggest shift for me was realising that people don’t connect with expertise first; they connect with the journey. I didn’t start creating content to monetise or position myself as an authority. I was a struggling student trying to fix my own life, and I started documenting that process honestly.I shared how I went from being a poor-performing student to a high-performing one, not because I felt qualified, but because I wanted to help people like myself. Watching a peer improve in real time made the content relatable. As my grades improved, I leaned more into my background in biomedical and neuroengineering, grounding everything in evidence-based learning.
That documentation led to my first product, a simple study guide PDF. I reinvested everything into building The Learning System, a physical book that hit #1 on Amazon’s new releases and helped scale the business to $1M within ten months. I repeated that same approach with content, documenting growth openly, even when I was still learning. That mindset eventually shaped Creator College. The lesson is simple: you don’t need to act like an expert. Documenting your pursuit creates trust and opens the door for others to follow.
Q. You prioritize systems over motivation. What habits kept you consistent, then and now?
I’ve learned that complexity kills consistency. Early on, I tried the 30-step morning routines and they always failed. What actually worked was building a few anchors that moved my life forward every day. For the last seven years, I’ve followed something I call Jun’s Four Wins: a mental win, a physical win, a spiritual win, and an accountability win. These anchors kept me grounded during school, helped me build businesses, and still guide how I operate today.The idea is simple. If you don’t fill your own cup, you can’t show up fully for your work or your people. Consistency isn’t about motivation, it’s about having a system that removes guesswork and makes progress inevitable.
Q. How do you decide what to teach next and simplify complex science so people remember it?
My goal isn’t to sound smart. It’s to translate scientific principles like active recall or spaced repetition into language people already understand. Real intelligence is making complex ideas feel simple, useful, and memorable.
My process is straightforward:
Identify the real problem someone is facing
Find the evidence-based principle that solves it
Teach it in a way that fits their context and language
When you understand the learner deeply, the content almost writes itself.
Q. How do you balance short-form and long-form content without burning out?
Short form content solves one problem at a time. Long form content lets you solve several problems in one place. A 15 second video has one clear theme. A 15 minute video might explore seven. But the philosophy stays the same across formats: stay focused, stay helpful, and stay relevant. If I post seven short videos in a week, each addresses a different challenge.My weekly YouTube video often ties those same ideas together into a more layered explanation. I see both formats as essential. Short form builds attention. Long form builds trust. My advice is to start with short form and intentionally funnel that audience into deeper content.
Q. What gap in creator education led to Creator College, and what do most new creators miss?
The biggest gap is that most advice online comes from theorists, not practitioners. A lot of people teach growth without ever having built anything outside of teaching growth itself. I followed that advice early on, and it didn’t work.I only teach systems I’ve personally used to build millions of followers and millions in revenue, and I test everything publicly. At the same time, I know I don’t have all the answers. That’s why I partnered with my co-founder, Shan Hanif, whose company, Genflow, has generated over $300M working with top creators.
Creator College became a practice-driven platform built by people who are actively building. My background in designing learning systems naturally evolved into creating a “college for creators.” Long term, the vision is to build an accredited space where creators can earn real college credit while building real businesses.
Bio
Over the past five years, Jun has built a global audience of 8M+ followers, posting daily using a system that has driven 1B+ views and generated over $5M in revenue through digital and physical products all while completing dual engineering degrees. He is the author of The Learning System, a #1 Amazon new release, and has worked with brands like Red Bull, Meta, and ManyChat.
In 2025, Jun co-founded Creator College, an education platform built alongside industry practitioners, helping over 10,000 creators build personal brands and sustainable businesses. Through the platform, students have collectively gained 100M+ views, 1M+ followers, and generated $500K+ in revenue within nine months. Jun believes learning is not about motivation, it’s about building systems that make growth inevitable.

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