About
David Webb is a contributing author in The Book On Series, where he has written five volumes that each tackle a different dimension of clarity, resilience, and strategic living. His titles include:
- The Book On Life Unscripted: What You Should Have Learned in High School — a practical field guide for young adults navigating the jump from the classroom to the real world.
- The Book On Strategic Obsession: How to Turn Long-Term Thinking Into a Competitive Weapon — a deep dive into how sustained focus and patient execution can outmatch short-term competition.
- The Book On High-Stakes Thinking: How to Make Decisions That Actually Matter — a playbook for handling pressure, complexity, and irreversible choices.
- The Book On Artificial Leverage: How to Use Tools, Technology, and Systems to Outwork Entire Teams Without Burnout — a roadmap for solopreneurs and creatives to scale output sustainably by leaning on smarter infrastructure.
- The Book On Clarity: How to Think Cleanly in a Messy World — an exploration of how to cut through noise, bias, and distraction to make sharper choices and live with more intention.
Across these works, David’s voice is direct, narrative-driven, and unafraid to challenge conventional wisdom. His goal is simple: to provide readers with frameworks they can immediately apply to the chaos of modern life.
His contributions to The Book On Series sit alongside the work of other authors, each bringing their own expertise to the shared mission of equipping people to live with more clarity, adaptability, and confidence.
Inside the Mind - David Webb - The Book On Life Unscripted

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What inspired you to write your latest book, and how did the idea first come to you?
The idea came out of frustration. I kept meeting young people who were bright, ambitious, and creative, but completely unprepared for the realities of life outside the classroom. They were struggling with basic skills, including money management, communication, resilience, and even understanding how to fail without collapsing. I realized this wasn’t their fault. The education system prioritizes test scores over survival skills. That gap stuck with me, and Life Unscripted was born as my way of filling part of it.
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Who do you see as the primary audience for this book, teenagers, parents, or adults looking back?
Honestly, all three. Teenagers will find it immediately useful because it serves as a kind of field manual for the next stage of their lives. Parents read it to understand what their kids are actually facing, instead of what they assume. And adults who feel they missed out on these lessons can use it as a reset. It’s a book that speaks to the transition moments, whether you’re 17 or 37.
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