Hi, I’m Jeremy, I’m glad you’re here.
No matter what you create, I’m guessing you spend a good amount of time feeling lost, hopeless, and unsure about how to get from where you are to where you want to be.
So do I. And so does everyone doing creative work.
This is the Creative Wilderness.
Every week, I publish a new article in my Creative Wayfinding newsletter about how we as creators and marketers can navigate it with more clarity and confidence.
If you’re building something that matters, but aren’t quite sure how to take the next step forward, I’d be honoured to have you join us.
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You Are Here: Why Knowing Your Destination Isn’t Enough to Make Progress
At some point, you’ve probably walked into an unfamiliar shopping mall and made a beeline to the directory.
For a moment or two, you scan the map blankly, trying to make sense of it until finally, your eyes find the red “You Are Here” arrow, and the map instantly snaps into focus.
Without this piece of information, the map lacks context.
And without context, no matter how finely detailed, how high the resolution, any map is effectively useless.
When navigating the physical world, we understand the necessity of knowing where we are innately.
It’s no mistake that when we open Google Maps we’re immediately presented with the unmistakable blinking blue dot indicating our current location. It’s the one constant of every conceivable route to every conceivable destination, after all.
Before embarking on a journey, a clear understanding of our starting point allows us to orient ourselves, identify obstacles along the way, and plot a course around them.
It also allows us to plan, equip, and train ourselves accordingly.
A 5k fun run requires a different level of training than a 42.2 km marathon, which again requires different training, preparation, and equipment from a mountaineering expedition of identical length.
Once the journey has begun, a clear understanding of where we have come from enables us to better project our future progress based on our past pace.
And yet, for all the value of understanding where we are, when it comes to our creative journeys, we tend to spend little time thinking about it.
Instead, we spend our time obsessing over both our destinations and the potential routes we might take to get there.
Where we start from, however, dictates the route we’ll take to a given destination.
A lack of awareness about where we currently are on the map, then, is one of the key cruxes that must be overcome if we want to make meaningful, efficient progress toward our goals.
The problem, of course, is that unlike shopping malls, when it comes to finding our place on our creative journey both the map and our position on it are a whole lot murkier.
Pinpointing Your Location
Pinpointing our location begins with a thorough accounting of both ourselves and our surroundings.
What assets, skills, and resources do we possess? What are our interests (or even better, obsessions)? What opportunities are available? What are our strengths, weaknesses, and liabilities? What milestones have we already attained, and which are we aiming for next?
The better we know ourselves and our surroundings, the better we’re able to identify others who have reached a similar destination to ours from a similar starting point, and contextualize our location based on their journey.
To this end, I’ve recently begun collecting every bit of data I can find on more established creators with similar business models to help me better understand where I am in relation to their trajectory.
Of specific interest to me is my friend Jay Clouse, who has a very similar business, audience, and style to me.
As someone earning $40k/mo as a creator, closing in on 20k newsletter subscribers, and 30k Twitter followers, he’s also someone who has had much of the success I’d like to emulate.
After analyzing the historical newsletter, audience, and financial growth data that Jay shares in his Creator Science Lab (affiliate link), and comparing it to my own, I have a pretty good sense that I’m about 18 months behind him.
Knowing precisely where we are in relation to our destination helps inform the decisions we make as we continue to make progress.
But understanding our timeline is just as (if not more) valuable.
Plotting Your Progress
A few years ago, a study of the London Tube system conducted a study in an effort to boost rider satisfaction.
What they found was shocking.
Going in, the assumption had been that the best way to improve rider satisfaction was to improve the speed of the system through faster trains and increased frequency. This would have been a multi-billion dollar project resulting in only incremental gains in efficiency.
The result of their research, however, was that they could increase rider satisfaction with one simple fix, at a fraction of the cost of the larger renovation.
The fix?
Installing screens in the stations that displayed the upcoming trains’ ETAs.
It turns out, people cared less about the actual length of the journey than they did the uncertainty of it.
The same is true for our creative expeditions.
Most of us are willing to do the hard work required to build sustainable careers around our creative work. The root of our frustration, however, lies often in the uncertainty around how long it’s going to take to reach our destination.
This anxiety leads us to jump from shiny object to shiny object, abandoning projects and strategies that would have worked if we’d just given them more time, and severely stunting our progress.
Understanding where we are on the larger journey eases that uncertainty.
When we see clearly that each of our chosen guides spent years working hard for little result before finally something clicked, we feel infinitely better about our own situation.
We can see that the low results:effort ratio is simply a phase of the journey we all have to navigate through.
And most importantly, we can set our expectations around how long it will take to reach the end of this phase and what we’ll encounter on the other side.
Chart Your Course Wisely
Of course, we need to take this type of mapping with a grain of salt.
No one person has started from the exact same place as any of us. Nor are they moving toward the exact same destination or working with the exact same assets & liabilities.
The more roughly similar routes we can identify, then, the better we’re able to triangulate our position based on the landmarks found in their stories.
Once we‘ve roughly identified our location, though, we’re able to plot the most efficient course to our destination.
We’re also able to confidently ignore advice and route suggestions that don’t apply to us, which can save us years of time and effort.
It’s not much use, after all, following the creative path of someone who has previously sold a company and is now able to work full-time on their creative projects with no need for them to generate income in the short term.
At least not if we don’t have similar circumstances.
Nor is it worth attempting to follow the path of someone who has a set of innate skills, obsessions, or connections that we don’t possess ourselves.
Sure, we can attempt to emulate these paths.
At best, we spend months or years getting ourselves to someone else’s starting point, from which we can following their progress to our destination.
At worst, we spend the time attempting to meet up with their route, only to find it utterly impassible… or at least, impassible to us.
Better to understand clearly where we’re coming from, and base our route, landmarks, and timelines on those coming from the same neighborhood as us.
Our guides might be fewer, and we may have to look harder to find them.
But once we do, the map snaps into focus, the way becomes clear, and all that’s left for us to do is walk.
Explore how to navigate a creative life that matters
This article originally appeared in my weekly Creative Wayfinding Newsletter. Each issue is the product of a week of work, and contains something not available for sale.
A fresh perspective, a shot of encouragement when you need it most, and maybe even some genuine wisdom from time to time.
Each week, we explore a different facet of the question “How do we navigate the wilds of creating work that matters?”
It’s something I’m proud to create and I’d be honoured to share it with you.
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Give Me a Break
No one gets far without one.
More likely a healthy dose.
No matter how hard you work, how much you know, how great your skill,
It’s all but impossible to make it on your own,
Regardless of how noble the ideal might seem.
Sooner or later you need a leg up.
A helping hand from a guide who’s been there before.
A fortuitous connection, just when you need it.
An unexpected nudge in the right direction when you’re feeling stuck.
Luck, coincidence, or a gift from the universe, it doesn’t much matter what you call it.
But it matters a great deal when you set out to achieve anything.
Waiting for your break is not so much about waiting, however.
But preparing.
Working to ensure you’ve done everything within your power to capitalize on your break when it does come.
And it always does.
Though it may be difficult to recognize.
Earnestness. Curiosity. Trust.
These are the tools required to make the most of the breaks that come your way.
Disguised as they may be.
Those, and doing something that is truly worth doing.
Worthy tasks have a way of attracting the help you need at the time you need it.
In uncanny ways from uncanny places.
So when you’re feeling stuck, stay earnest, stay curious, stay pure in your intentions
And trust that the next break is already in front of you, waiting for you to stumble on it.
Failing Your Way Forward
Except, it’s not really about the failure itself.
You can fail a hundred times and stay stuck where you are, after all.
Instead, it’s about how you respond to the failure that will determine your trajectory.
Your natural instinct is to get a little more gun shy with each new failure.
When the failure is big, public, or (and) you’ve invested a large part of yourself in the creation, it might only take the one failure to feel as though you can never bring new work to the world again.
And while the reaction is natural, staying in this mentality is a choice.
The alternative is to curl up and hide, for a while, and then choose to come back smarter with your next project.
Not more guarded, not less vulnerable.
The work suffers when you remove yourself from it.
But more skillful, wily, clever.
More committed to process, consistency, empathy and curiosity.
With a keener understanding of who and what the work is for.
The next project might fail too. And if not that one, then the one that comes after.
Maybe both.
Maybe a dozen, or a hundred more.
But the goal isn’t a home run on every swing.
The goal is simply to stay in the game, gleaning some insight and improving your approach with each new failure, building up your resilience and guile wihle waiting for the conditions to align.
And when they do, and you get the perfect pitch down the center of the plate, you’ll be ready.
75 Things That Made My Year (2020)
Inspired by Austin Kleon’s list (who’s name, not-coincidentally pops up a couple times in this list), here’s my list of 75 things that made my year in 2020.
- Kicking off the year with New Years fireworks and outdoor concert along the river in Riga, Latvia with my mom and Kelly.
- Starting a daily writing practice which has turned into one of the most transformative decisions of my life.
- Losing my wallet on the train from Riga to Tallinn and spending months trying to sort out my credit cards. I still don’t have a new driver’s license a year later, which has been a huge inconvenience, but also a hilarious story when combined with the fact that Kelly also lost her driver’s license a few months later…
- Walking the eerie Tallinn harbour at night with Kelly beside the crumbling old prison.
- Going to the gender-segregated nude sauna in Tallinn full of old guys speaking Russian, drinking beer, watching soccer, and beating themselves with vihad, branches used to stimulate blood flow.
- Being somewhere cold and dark for winter after the previous winter in South American.
- Morning writing sessions in Björn and Røst, two of my favourite coffee (and baking) spots in Tallinn.
- Insanely huge margaritas at Taqueria in Tallinn. Also, the time the server ignored(?) us for so long that it was comical.
- Stumbling upon the old soviet concert hall with Kelly in Tallinn while out for a night walk, each listening to our own podcasts. You can see this concert hall in the movie Tenet, although in the movie it’s in Ukraine.
- Listening to Seth Godin’s Akimbo podcast on the way to and from work every day in Tallinn.
- Uulits Burger in Tallinn. Probably the best burger place I’ve ever eaten at. We went here so many times in our month in Tallinn.
- Our weekend trip to Tartu, where we spent most of it sitting inside this weird but cool high-class food court type place (where we discovered another Uulits…) playing board games and drinking Irish Coffee.
- House and pet sitting on a farm in Somerset, England. We spent two weeks looking after a goat, two Shetland Ponies, two cats, two dogs, and a bunch of chickens. We were supposed to stay longer but the couple we were sitting for got turned away at the border to South Africa due to a technicality while on a trip to visit their children.
- Day trip to the Dorset coast. One of those days that you can’t believe how much good stuff you packed into it, including castles, seaside cliffs, and endless, beautiful, English countryside.
- Creating and releasing my first course, Podcast Audio Academy, a course taking the guesswork out of recording a pro-quality podcast.
- Getting up early to attend a Creative Mornings event in Bristol. The talk turned out to be pretty bad (the only bad talk I’ve seen at a Creative Mornings event) that basically amounted to, “Here’s how to use Google Calendar…” That said, we had a great day in Bristol, meeting and chatting with a few people at the event, coffee and work session at Full-Court Press, and then walking the riverbank in the sunshine.
- In January I got my first haircut in 4 years, and only second in the previous 13, as I’d had long dreadlocks for 9 years before the last cut. When I had initially cut off my dreads I had intended to keep my hair short-ish. I even walked into a barbershop in Granada, Spain a few months after cutting off the dreads, but when they didn’t have any availability for a week(!?) I walked out and never looked back. It was time for a change, however, and so I buzzed off my shoulder-length hair.
- The three weeks in Glasgow where it rained, snowed, hailed, and gusted crazy wind almost every single day we were there. I hadn’t been that impressed with Glasgow during my first visit a few years ago, but after spending 3 weeks there this year–even despite the weather–I have a much better view of it.
- Weekend breakfast at The Steamie. Amazing french toast, sandwiches, and coffee. The only problem is that it was constantly freezing, despite the 8 space heaters they had scattered around the cafe.
- Open mic nights at the pub beneath our apartment, listening to traditional Scottish music.
- Our last weekend in Glasgow we stayed with our friends Caitlin and Scott. We were supposed to go out to the Isle of Arran, but the weather was too poor to take the ferry over so we stayed in the city instead, playing board games, crazy golf, and relaxing.
- Weekend trip to one of my favourite places, the Isle of Skye with Kelly, the weekend before the world locked down for COVID. In particular, getting absolutely drenched exploring The Cuillin and Neist Point in insane wind and rain.
- More morning writing sessions at Fortitude, Cairngorm Coffee, and Brewlab before COVID shut things down.
- Getting stuck for five months in Edinburgh during COVID, already one of my favourite cities in the world beforehand and even more so now.
- So much walking. Daily walks to and from work over the Salisbury Crags, weekly trips up Arthur’s Seat, and exploring pretty much every street and avenue in the city on foot, almost always finding something new and interesting. I’m pretty sure my feet know Edinburgh better than any other city I’ve lived or visited in.
- Taking The Story Skills Workshop from Seth Godin and Bernadette Jiwa. I learned a lot about storytelling as well as being turned onto Hiut Denim, one of my new favourite companies via one of the links in the course.
- Laying in The Meadows with Kelly, reading Austin Kleon’s books, drinking coffee, watching birds and the clouds go by.
- Watching the seasons change in the same place. The prickly Gorse blooming in vibrant yellow and then fading to brown.
- Walking to Leith with Kelly in the rain, stopping in at the most charming little deli and coffee shop, and chatting with the owner for half an hour.
- Pre-selling my second course, Podcast Marketing Academy to the Founding Cohort of 18 people and taking them through the 3-month curriculum. This was one of the most valuable experiences of my life and I’ll never not presell a product again.
- Discovering 12 Triangles, the best bread shop and bakery I think I’ve ever visited and waiting in the line around the block every Saturday to pick up bread and chat with the really sweet guys running the place.
- Stumbling upon The Birchwood–the first coffee shop to reopen after the first COVID lockdown–on the way home from a long, Saturday morning walk. I stood across the street for 5 minutes debating whether to go get a coffee before deciding instead to race home, get Kelly, and come back together. Right decision. She was ecstatic to have good coffee again after weeks without. Going there became a Saturday morning tradition, and we got to know the owner a little bit during our weekly visits.
- Working my way through more stress than I’ve felt before, amidst COVID, running my agency, while also pre-selling and creating Podcast Marketing Academy. I discovered new ways to cope with stress and anxiety and feel much better equipped going forward.
- Slowing down and rediscovering lazy weekends filled with walks, naps, board games, writing, and binging TV series.
- Speaking of TV series, we watched some great ones, including Hannibal, Fargo, The Mandalorian, and Long Way Up, as well as re-watching How I Met Your Mother, and now starting on Modern Family.
- Discovering some incredible newsletters, in particular from Jay Clouse, Khe Hy, Josh Spector, and Ann Handley.
- Starting my own weekly newsletter which has become one of my most favourite things I do on a weekly basis.
- Spending one of our last weekends in Scotland with our friends Caitlin and Scott in Crieff, a charming town with great hiking, and which happens to be the hometown of Ewan McGregor. Also, our Airbnb was maybe the cutest I’ve stayed in yet.
- Finally starting a podcast, Build A Better Wellness Biz, after years of hemming and hawing. I also documented the development and launch process on a YouTube series, Podcast Launch Diaries.
- Making it into Portugal after our visa ended in the UK. We weren’t sure we would be allowed in since Kelly is American and it was a relief to pass through immigration in Lisbon.
- The first meal on a patio in Portugal with fish, tapas, and Super Bock, which brought back so many of my favourite memories of one of my favourite countries. This restaurant in particular was run by two septuagenarian men who were just the sweetest, and we went back many times over our three months in Lisbon.
- Making friends in Lisbon. We’ve spent the past 4 years spending typically no more than a month in each place we travel to, and as such have had a hard time building in-person community. We tapped into a great network through our coworking space in Lisbon and were able to meet a ton of great people.
- Stumbling on the many miradors overlooking the city in Lisbon. Particularly for sunrises and sunsets, maybe accompanied by a pastel de nata, beer, or both.
- Going to a socially distanced, outdoor, freezing cold opera performance of Tosca for Kelly’s birthday. A couple of our friends bailed halfway through due to the cold, and there were no subtitles to translate as there would normally be, but it was a memorable experience for my first opera.
- Taking Friday afternoons off to go surfing in Caparica. After surfing a handful of times previously in Morocco and Peru, it finally clicked for me during these surf sessions in Lisbon. Two of the most memorable days were one Saturday surfing giant waves that were way too big for my skill level that I somehow managed to catch a couple of before exhausting myself trying to paddle past the break. And then my final day out, the last Sunday in Portugal with two hours of perfect wave after perfect wave. Blissful.
- Walking the first leg of the Camino Portugues from Lisbon to Vila Franca de Xira on my birthday with Kelly. I walked the Camino from Porto to Santiago de Compostela with some friends in 2017 and have been itching to do more ever since. This particular one-day leg was supposed to be ~25km and ended up being around 40… It was a long, hard day, with some beautiful stretches, as well as a good share of suburban, industrial stretches. On the whole, a truly fantastic day of Type-2 fun.
- Poker nights with the boys in Lisbon. The knowledge of the rules was questionable at best but the food was always good, and it was good to play poker again for the first time in probably ten years.
- My relationship with one of my best friends, Hayley. We have similarly structured businesses that we started at the same time, and are working on a lot of the same things. We’re also both highly competitive, which creates this great dynamic that is both motivating and challenging, as well as supportive. This year was a big one for both of us, and there’s no way I’d be where I am without her.
- Weekend trip to Évora, Portugal with our friends Will and James. We had possibly one of the best meals we had in Portugal and spent a wonderful couple of days wandering the quaint town and relaxing.
- Long weekend trip to Porto with Kelly. Porto is one of my all-time favourite places, a city that has a lot of significance for me personally, and one which I’ve visited 3 times now. I had been wanting to take Kelly there as she had never been but was also worried that I’d built up the hype too much. Turns out, I hadn’t and this 5-day trip was another magical chapter in my relationship with the city.
- Day trip to Sintra with Kelly on our last weekend in Portugal. Another place that I was worried the hype would ruin for us. Almost everyone we met during our 3 months in Portugal raved about Sintra, but when we went for ourselves, we were blown away. The lack of tourists due to COVID surely helped, but this was probably one of the best day trips of my life.
- Signing up for Bonfire With Soul, a course from Duke Stump and The DO Lectures. Low on actionable, high on philosophical, this was one of the best business courses I’ve taken.
- Fostering our dog, Paola, for 3 weeks in Split before she went off to her forever home in Germany. A 7-month old puppy, she gave us the full puppy experience: Accidents in the house, chewing on absolutely everything, demanding constant attention, even (or should I say especially) while we were on work calls… For all the frustration, she was adorable and we miss having her around.
- Swimming in the ocean in Croatia. One of the most serene swimming experiences of my life with crystal clear, absolutely calm water, sunshine, and dramatic mountains stretching into the distance.
- Thanksgiving weekend in Šibenik with Kelly. Getting away from the city to unplug and relax, explore fortresses, and slow down.
- Taking The DO Lectures course, How To Build A Great Brand With Very Little Money. Another one of the best courses I’ve ever taken. I spent well over a month working through the course content and journaling on how it applies to my work. So much still to dig into and flesh out but this course has moved me significantly closer to creating the brand I want.
- Weekend trip to Plitvice Lakes National Park with our friends Rhys and Haya. Stayed in a great (and freezing) log cabin with wood-burning stove and spent a cold, densely foggy, and underwhelming Saturday exploring the park before returning for a much clearer, awe-inspiring experience Sunday. Also, the drive to and from the park was unreal, especially stopping and getting out of the car halfway up a serpentine mountainside road in the moonlight and hearing only the sound of the wind and the sheep’s bells clanging somewhere below us.
- The Reboot 2020 Wrap Up Workshop. This workshop, and tapping into the community behind it was the perfect cap on a tumultuous, rewarding, exciting, terrifying year, and has me primed to move into 2021 with more clarity and purpose.
- Brand exploration with Kelly. Kelly’s been building on her existing design expertise in 2020 by diving deep into brand strategy, and we’ve spent the final couple weeks of 2020 doing a brand strategy exploration for Counterweight Creative. It’s been a challenging, at times frustrating, and invaluable process, and I feel like it’s coming at exactly the right time. Super excited about the clarity this is providing me and where this will all lead.
- Discovering new music, in particular from Can’t Swim, Hayden Calnin, Driveways, Nightly, Henry Jamison, MAALA, Bjéar, Jeremy Zucker, and Fjord. Check out my 2020 Spotify playlist for the highlights of what I listened to here.
- New albums from old favourites including Donovan Woods, Novo Amor, Misery Signals, Movements, Hailaker, and Ed Patrick. Again, check out the 2020 playlist.
- Discovering (and subsequently binging) the On Being Podcast with Krista Tippett. One of my new favourite shows and biggest sources of information. I know this is going to be a trusted companion of mine for a long time.
- Discovering and feeling confident in my personal style for the first time in my life. I owe a lot in this regard to two of my new favourite brands that I discovered this year, Hiut Denim and Finisterre, both of whom I love not just for their products but for how they operate their businesses and use storytelling.
- Hitting the 50lb weight loss milestone. I started my weight loss journey in August 2019 at 213lbs, and in April 2020 was down to 163lbs. If you want to know my secret, it’s all that walking previously mentioned. And soup. Noom helped as well.
- Hiring an Online Business Manager, Lindsey to help out on the Operations side of things with my business. I was blown away by how big a difference Lindsey made and within 2-3 months of her being onboarded we had completed some major upgrades and projects.
- Partnering with my friend and collaborator Andréa to expand our service offering to include social media content creation and management services. This was a big, scary step, but I’m so grateful that I pushed through the discomfort to create and offer this package.
- Adding Arie, our video editor to the team. I’ve had clients asking about video editing for years, but never had a dedicated video editor. Really excited to be able to confidently offer video editing as a service now.
- The Dark Side Of The Lens. This short film has resonated with and moved me like almost nothing else has. It’s one of those pieces of art that feels as though it contains some part of you, expressing something deep and internal that you can’t express yourself. I’ve watched it dozens of times since discovering it, and will likely watch it dozens (if not hundreds more).
- Client successes, particularly the podcast launches for Just Being and Life Coaching For Women Physicians.
- My coach, Jaime who has pushed and supported me through both the challenges and opportunities this year has presented. I wouldn’t have accomplished most of what I did this year without her.
- Reading. The pandemic reintroduced me to reading physical books in addition to audiobooks. Some of my favourites from both categories include The Icarus Deception, This Is Marketing, The Dip, and The Practice by Seth Godin (yes, I’m a super fan), Ask by Ryan Levesque, White Fragility by Robin Diangelo, Walking by Erling Kagge, Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng, and the abovementioned Austin Kleon trilogy.
- Binging some really amazing Star Wars fan films to fill the Star Wars void… It’s pretty amazing to see what indie filmmakers on a budget can create nowadays.
- David Whyte’s incredible TED talk. Another video I’ve watched multiple times and will surely watch many more.
- A truly amazing year with Kelly. Relationships can certainly be challenging, but 2020 with Kelly was pretty much pure fun. Life is good when you’ve got someone who aligns with you on so many levels from work to humour to perspective to worldview to interests and more.
- Getting clearer on how my perspective, knowledge, skills, and experiences combine to offer something unique to the world through my work. It’s not fully formed yet, but there’s a thread to tug on.
Another Chance
A new year.
Another chance to choose.
What’s worth pursuing
And how to pursue it.
The guides you’ll follow
And those you’ll avoid.
The problems worthy of your unique skills, knowledge and perspective
And those best left to someone else.
While these choices can be made today, they must be remade every day anew.
Choose wisely, these are the choices that define who you’ll be
And become.
The impact you’ll make now,
And the legacy you’ll leave in the future.
These choices matter.
14 Lessons On Business, Creativity & Life From 2020
For so many of us, 2020 has been a year of unexpected challenges and opportunities, sorrows and delights, and a whole lot to process going forward.
I always enjoy the process of journaling and reflecting at the end of each year, but this year, it feels non-negotiable. As though the lessons and experiences of this year need to be written out of my system in order to be fully processed and embodied.
And so with that in mind, here are some of the lessons that most stood out to me from a year full of growth, experimentation, small steps backward and large leaps forward.
1. Ideas Are A Habit
I first heard James Altucher talk about the concept of treating idea generation as a muscle that can be strengthened years ago.
Back then, I tried to emulate his “10 ideas a day” practice but failed miserably. I don’t know that I ever once came up with a full 10 ideas in one day, and certainly, none of them were very good.
The problem, I now realize, is that I was setting my sights too high when it came to what qualified as an idea. I was looking for big, life-changing, business-building ideas, passing by anything that didn’t immediately fit that category.
I had a couple of realizations this year that helped this lesson really sink in for me.
- Big ideas often start with small observations or questions. You often only realize that they lead to something bigger when you start peeling back the layers and seeing how deep they go.
- Each of us has dozens of these little observations and questions every single day. The problem is that we haven’t built up the habit of giving ourselves time and space to actually think about and explore them.
When it comes to the latter point, my daily writing habit (more on that later) has become the vehicle to explore these questions and observations.
Sometimes, exploring an idea results in a 200-word blog post that goes nowhere.
Sometimes, as with the question of “Why do podcasters get stuck and plateau when it comes to growing their shows?” the question leads to many in-depth blog posts, and eventually an entire course, in this case, Podcast Marketing Academy.
If we can build up the habit of first noting just a few of the many small ideas that float through our heads on a daily basis and then spending even 20 minutes a day exploring one of them, we’ll be in good shape when it comes to creating work that matters.
I wrote more about this concept in one of the very first posts I published this year which you can find here.
2. Habits Are A Skill
In 2019, I set out on a quest to lose weight using Noom, a psychology-based weight-loss app.
What I didn’t realize at the time, however, is that the lessons I would learn in Noom were far more impactful than just the weight loss.
At its core, Noom is all about building habits. And the great thing about building habits is that it’s a skill.
It turns out that once you establish one habit, it becomes easier to establish another one.
What started with one habit around healthier eating and portion control, spun off into many new habits that look something like this:
Establishing healthier habits around eating
↘︎
Breaking my habit of biting my nails
↘︎
Flossing every day consistently
↘︎
Starting my daily writing practice
↘︎
Starting my weekly Listen Up Newsletter
↘︎
Starting my weekly podcast, Build A Better Wellness Biz
↘︎
Doing a weekly review every Friday of where I spent my time, how I felt at work, and identifying what I can do in the following week to improve both.
On and on the virtuous cycle goes, each habit becoming easier to build than the last.
I’m convinced after this year that habit-building may be the single most important skill any of us can develop.
Success in almost anything comes down to being able to consistently show up, even when you might not feel like it. So if you can build that habit around whatever it is you’re pursuing, chances are, you’re going to get there.
3. After Habit-Building, Writing Is Perhaps The Most Important Skill To Develop
I’ve mentioned my daily writing habit a couple of times now, and with good reason.
It’s been the single most transformative practice I might have ever undertaken.
I started after having been hearing for years from many of the creatoars and thinkers I follow about the benefits of writing and publishing daily.
Going in, I didn’t really know what to expect, or what my goals were.
I knew that there was the possibility of growing an audience, but that wasn’t at the top of my mind.
Instead, I was more focused, at least initially, on improving my writing and finding my voice.
I didn’t have a defined topic I wanted to write about, and ended up cycling through a selection of themes from business, marketing, leadership, podcasting, personal development and more.
Over time, I found myself getting fixated on one topic for a period, and write extensively about just that. There was one stretch where I published almost 30 articles in a row on podcasting.
I also found that as I did so, writing became not a way to express ideas, but to explore them.
More often than not, I started with a single phrase or idea that had occurred to me in the previous days, and would then sit down and explore it in more depth through writing.
This habit has had an incredible impact on my work and confidence, as having a written catalog of ideas I’ve explored and developed has helped clarify my thinking and feels like it’s given me a foundation to base all of my future work on.
In the process of building out this foundation, I’ve also built out a handful of new products and services for our clients, methods for operating my business and managing my team, and taken away host of other practical applications.
What I’ve found is that we all have dozens of ideas every day, but we don’t often give ourselves the time or space to actually explore and develop them.
Having a daily writing practice has given me that time and space to explore, develop and capitalize on a handful of those ideas.
I believe that the ability to generate, develop and share ideas is probably the most valuable skill we can develop as creators, and as writing is a vehicle for that, it’s an essential skill.
4. Everything Is A Draft
We all create with the intent that our creations will achieve their desired impact, preferably immediately upon releasing them.
More often than not however, they don’t.
At least not quickly.
Sometimes not at all.
When this happens, it’s easy to get discouraged. Maybe even give up on the project entirely.
Failed projects, especially when there’s been a significant amount of time, money, energy, and hope invested in them can be emotionally devastating.
One of the mindsets I’ve adopted this year that has been hugely beneficial has been to think of everything as simply the first (or the next) in a series of drafts.
Drafts aren’t supposed to be perfect.
They often don’t work at all.
Drafts can be clumsy and clunky.
And each draft is an essential step toward creating the next draft.
If your work doesn’t achieve the desired result, oh well, it was just a draft, make some revisions that make the next draft better.
If you’re interested, I wrote about this idea in more depth in Issue 27 of my Listen Up Newsletter.
5. Do Things That Have More Than One Potential Benefit/Version of Success
Every new pursuit in our businesses is something of a gamble.
We choose a niche betting that this is the group of people we’re best positioned to serve.
We create content betting that it will resonate with the right people and that the right people will eventually want to work with us.
We create (or at least attempt to presell) a product betting that this is the thing our audience wants most.
When it comes to long term pursuits like content creation, however, when there’s only one version of success, it can be hard to stick with the practice long enough for it to bear fruit.
With that in mind, one of the biggest learnings for me in 2020 was to focus on making bets that have multiple ways of paying off, preferably on different time scales as well.
For example, when it comes to my podcast, the primary goal is to establish a relationship with my guests betting that over 6–12 months, a few of them might become clients.
But there are other ways that the show can be successful even if that bet doesn’t pay off.
For one, while audience building isn’t my focus, there’s a good chance that I will in fact build an audience around the show over time, for whom I could choose to create other products or services other than podcast production and marketing support.
Another huge benefit is having a sandbox to be able to experiment with different production and marketing techniques, systems, automations, and more that can then be turned into new service offerings for our new and existing clients.
That benefit was already apparent before the show even launched.
The same concept holds true for my writing practice.
While I hope will grow an audience over time, the practice has paid massive dividends already by helping clarify my thinking, given me the space to explore new ideas, and by doing so, helped me develop a handful of new products and services.
This idea has been a revelation to me over the past year, and I can only imagine will be a major driving force behind everything I do going forward.
The more ways there are to succeed, the harder it is to fail.
6. Presell Everything
In late 2018/early 2019, I spent hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars over three months putting together the Podcast Power Pack, a bundle sale of resources to help podcasters launch, market, monetize and systematize their shows.
The Pack featured over $3000 worth courses, memberships books and software, available for 5 days only at more than a 90% discount.
I had a few friends who had run similar bundle sales in a couple different niches that had brought in anywhere from $30K to $300K.
Suffice it to say I was excited about what this bundle might be able to do in the podcast world, which I was certain would eat this offer up.
The collection of products was fantastic, the website was flashy, and the copy fantastic. Or so I thought…
The Pack ended up selling only a few dozen copies, and while it got great reviews from those who bought it, I ended up losing thousands of dollars–not to mention all that invested time–on the project.
There were a lot of lessons I’m continuing to learn about what went wrong, but the one overarching lesson was that it can be incredibly expensive to build a product without validating it first.
Fast Forward
Just over a year later, in the Spring of 2020, I had an outline for what would become my flagship program, Podcast Marketing Academy.
I had created the lesson plan after doing interviews with all my podcast production clients to find out both where they got stuck when it came to growing their shows, and where they had seen success.
Now that I had the outline, I desperately wanted to dive in and start filming the videos.
But my coach had other ideas.
She convinced me to face the possibility that the product might not be the right fit for my audience up front, before creating it, by preselling it.
With her guidance, the memory of the Power Pack’s failure, and my friend Hayley–who had just completed her own successful presale–smugly egging me on, I started sharing my idea and trying to find beta testers.
In the end, I wound up with 18 people who paid $500/each to be a part of the Founding Cohort of Podcast Marketing Academy.
While it was a stressful few weeks that followed, having to now film and deliver the content on a tight schedule. After selling and creating a product this way, however, I’m convinced that I will never build another product without preselling it first again.
The first cohort went extremely well, and as I’m writing this, we’re now a quarter of the way into the second cohort.
7. A-Players Make All The Difference
It’s easy to convince yourself that you can get by surrounding yourself with average people, as long as you’re exceptional in the work you do.
And you can.
Get by, that is.
It’s hard, however, to really excel in your work when you’re having to pick up the slack for average employees, contractors, influences, guides, and more.
As the leader of your company, you can only pick up the slack for so long before it catches up with you, either in the form of exhaustion and burnout, or a ceiling you simply can’t rise past on your own.
A-Players make your life easier.
One of the first things my coach, Jaime asked me to do when I started working with her at the beginning of 2020 was to go through my team and assign each team member a letter grade based on their contributions.
Being someone who believes the best in people–perhaps to a fault–I was generous in my assessments and gave pretty much everyone an “A” grade, with a few “B+’s” sprinkled in.
In hindsight, I could’ve benefited from a grading rubric to help me discern what an A-player actually looked like.
A few months into the year, I hired Lindsey, my Online Business Manager (OBM) and the distinction became clear.
Now Lindsey was in a much different role, with more responsibility and more ability to go above and beyond what was explicitly asked of her.
But she took advantage of that opportunity and spearheaded major projects and upgrades in the business, many with only vague direction from me.
As I recently reassessed my existing team, I realized that yes, there certainly are a few A-players on the team already. But there are also a handful more B’s than I initially thought.
Now don’t get me wrong, B’s are still above average, and they do excellent work. In many cases, they’re exactly what’s needed for the job at hand.
With some education, guidance, trust, and opportunity, many B’s can in fact become A-players as well. This is something I now realize I’ve done a poor job of doing and will definitely be focusing on in 2021.
But A’s go above and beyond. They move faster and make the business better than you’re capable of doing yourself.
Looking back, I think part of my generous grading was me wanting to believe that I only attracted the best of the best. Realizing that that’s not the case has been a somewhat humbling experience.
That said, the experience has helped me realize that I’ve taken the business about as far as I can shouldering the brunt of the load. To go any further, it’s clear that more A-players are needed, which for me, will likely be a mix of developing from within as well as bringing on new hires.
While it will take some time and effort to get there, the prospect of a team of A-players is an exciting proposition indeed.
I wrote more about what makes someone an A-Player here.
8. Almost Everything Is Built on Compounding Returns
Much like investing in the stock market, it turns out that investing in pretty much anything is built on the concept of compounding returns.
This is especially important to understand when it comes to content marketing, building a business, and growing your audience.
Understanding this idea helps us remember that we often have to put in a lot of work for a long time with minimal results, until at some point, perhaps for no obvious reason, the results start pouring in.
At least for me, realizing this has helped me maintain a healthy perspective when things are moving more slowly than I’d like.
I wrote about compounding returns in more depth here.
9. Find your guiding stars and double down on them
The amount of freely available information is one of the great blessings of our time.
But it’s also one of the great challenges.
We can quickly and easily find the information on how to do pretty much anything… along with numerous alternative or even conflicting methods.
For creative marketers, makers and entrepreneurs, this abundance of information causes flare ups of our shiny object syndrome on a weekly–if not daily–basis, and can make it hard to commit to one single strategy, tool, or even goal.
This lack of focus leads us to run in circles, never committing enough to any of the new strategies we pick up to see results.
As a result, we end up stuck.
I’m certainly no stranger to this cycle.
This year, however, I started asking myself questions about the type of business I wanted to be building, how I wanted to build it, and who I looked up to in regards to both business and life.
People and brands like Seth Godin, David Hieatt, Bernadette Jiwa, Duke Stump Patagonia and ConvertKit, along with a handful of others have emerged as my unofficial “board of directors” so to speak.
On an almost daily basis, I find myself asking how any or all of these brands would approach a decision I’m facing. The result is less distraction, more focus, and more confidence that I’m building something that I can be truly proud of.
I wrote more about finding your guiding stars here.
10. We Often Get Stuck, on Decisions, Not Actions
One of the biggest changes to my business and team this year was hiring my Online Business Manager, Lindsey back in February.
While I’ve had a solid team of sound engineers and content writers handling the bulk of our client podcast production work for the past couple years, Lindsey was the first person to come on to help me work on the business.
She took the lead on overhauling our project management, solidifying and further building out our internal systems and because of the work she’s done, our internal and external communication, client experience, quality of work and more are all much improved from where they were at the start of the year.
Many of the upgrades she’s worked on have been things that have been on my to do list for months, some even years. They always felt like tasks that were too big to tackle at the time with my limited bandwidth, and so they were either chipped away at slowly, or remained untouched altogether.
One of the biggest learnings for me in bringing Lindsey on, however, has been that most of the tasks on my list were not actually that large in scope when it came to the hours they actually took to complete.
Instead, what I was getting stuck on was the decision that needed to be made.
Often, it was a decision between two seemingly equally good options, or two compromises, or even two not so great options.
Having Lindsey not able to start on these projects until I’ve made a decision on which path to pursue has thrown relief on the real reason of so much of my procrastination and has helped me drastically speed up our team’s speed of implementation.
The next time you find yourself procrastinating, take a closer look at what the real reason is. Most likely, there’s an uncomfortable, unclear, or difficult decision that needs to be made, or conversation that needs to be had.
11. Insight and Context Is More Important Than Information
As a creator and content marketer, it’s easy to believe that the best way to grow our audiences and get more exposure is by sharing more information.
And so we rapidly scribble down a few dozen topics all with names like “How to _____” and “5 Ways to ______”. Maybe even a few “Ultimate Guides” if we’re feeling particularly ambitious.
The problem is that it’s really hard to stand out from the crowd pursuing this tack.
Chances are, we don’t have any proprietary information that isn’t already available freely online, most likely presented by a better writer, speaker or creator with more resources than we have.
As information itself becomes ever more ubiquitous and thus less valuable (at least as a content creator), however, the need for context and insight becomes much more valuable.
This is fantastic news for us as creators.
Whether they know it or not, our audiences are desperate for a way to make sense of the infinite information at their fingertips.
Processing that information, filtering the signal from the noise and translating it into language they understand while providing context is the greatest service you can provide to them.
Each of us has our own unique insight and perspective. If we build our brand around that perspective, rather than information, we’ve created a moat that’s impossible for anyone else to cross.
Realizing this over the past year has helped me shift my own content strategy to focus more on context and sharing my perspective than on providing more commoditized information.
This has turned out to not only be a lot more fun, but also a lot more distinctive in terms of my brand. I’ve had some amazing feedback from readers and podcast listeners and am convinced that this is the way forward for content marketing.
You can read about this more in Issue #2 of my Listen Up Newsletter, as well as in this blog post on Collecting & Connecting and this one, Your Audience Needs A Translator.
12. Speed of Implementation
For me, 2020 has been a year of executing on plans that have been brewing in the back of my mind for a long time.
This included creating and launching two courses, testing and rolling out new services, starting a new podcast, overhauling our project management system, adding new hires to the team and more.
When looking back at what changed this year to allow for these big leaps forward to happen, I trace it back to one thing: Speed of implementation.
I’m someone who likes to plan and strategize and wait until I’m 100% certain about an idea or direction I want to go in before acting.
This is useful in some ways, but when it comes to actually getting things done–even if that involves a few missteps along the way–it’s a major impediment.
There’s often no possible way to be 100% certain about a decision before making it, testing it out, and iterating from there.
To be honest, I’ve felt myself slipping and slowing down when it comes to my speed of implementation in the final quarter of the year, possibly because the first half of the year was fairly stressful due to rolling out so many changes simultaneously.
Now that the foundation is in place for the next stages of both our agency and educational content, I’m going to be looking to ratchet up the speed again in 2021.
13. Integrate More of Yourself Into Your Work
One of the standard pieces of advice in any content about discovering your passion or choosing your direction revolves around looking back at the things you enjoyed in your childhood.
How did you play, what did you gravitate toward, what activities did time just melt away while doing?
I’ve always written this advice off as unhelpful, at least for me. I didn’t see how my obsessions with LEGO and Star Wars had any bearing or application to my future career.
Late this year, however, I’ve started to realize that I was thinking much too literally about this idea, and that there actually are some interests from my childhood and adolescence that could be very relevant to my work now.
The most striking to me has been the fact that ever since childhood, I’ve been a philosophical thinker. No matter the subject matter, I’ve felt a pull to avoid the tactical and dig into the essence and meaning of it.
I recently realized that this is something that, while I’ve always gravitated towards, I’ve avoided integrating into my work.
I always felt that when it comes to content creation and business, people wanted tactical, actionable, strategic, and so that’s what I would create.
Recently, however, the philosophical has started creeping into my work, and I’ve been surprised to see that the reception has been really positive.
I’m now seeing that this perspective can be a major differentiator, while also making the work I do more personally interesting and fulfilling.
My big stumbling block with the question of examining your interests as a child was always that I perceived the desired outcome of the exercise as devising an entire career based on those interests.
Needless to say, that’s a tall order.
What I see now is that most of us do in fact have the ability to infuse our life long interests into our work in smaller ways. Not that those interests become our work, but that they inform our work and the way we do it.
They’re also fantastic differentiators and help us draw like-minded people to us.
14. Play the Long Game
When you play the short game, it’s easy to get sucked into making decisions and taking actions that don’t actually serve your long term vision.
Of course, when you’re feeling the pressure to get that next client, or make that next sale it feels like you don’t have the luxury of worrying about the long term vision. If you can’t keep your business going for the next 6 months, there won’t be a long term vision.
The thing is that most of us have more of a runway than we think. We have more latitude to plan for and build toward the businesses and the lives that we actually want, even if that means some short-term sacrifices.
When we’re building a business that’s actually aligned with our long term vision, everything becomes easier and more fun.
Content isn’t a chore when you’re creating what you want to create instead of what you’re supposed to be creating in order to attract followers.
Sales and marketing doesn’t feel uncomfortable when you’re building the products and services that you know are the perfect fit for the people you really want to work with.
Of course, sometimes we’re all forced to make short term decisions that compromise on our long-term vision, but it’s a helpful exercise to approach every decision from the starting point of, “How would I approach this if I didn’t need it to work for a year? Two years? Five years?”
When we play the long game, we’re less likely to chase shortcuts and get rich quick schemes and more likely to commit to the small, boring, consistent actions and habits that will lead to long term success.
The irony is that it’s often by committing to the long game that we achieve the results we’re hoping for the quickest.
Thinking about the long game has helped me keep my compass needle pointed North this year and ensure I’m working towards the business and life I want to be building, and taking actions that are aligned with my values.
I wrote more about playing the long game in my articles, The Long View, How Long Is Your Runway, and There Are No Shortcuts.
What Next?
I can’t think of another year in which I’ve leveled up my mindset and habits so profoundly, and can only hope that growth continues into 2021.
Even if it doesn’t continue at the same pace, however, I feel as though I’ve laid the foundation for a creative, productive, fulfilling year ahead.
I’d love to hear what some of the lessons you took away from this past year were. Lemme know in the comments.
A-Players Make All The Difference
It’s possible to get by without them, but it’s hard to thrive.
There are certainly many others who can perform the same core job function, but it’s not just about the job description on paper.
A-Players bring a whole other list of skills, mindsets, and perspectives that don’t just get the job done, but make everything else in your business run more smoothly as well.
Most solid professionals are B or B+, and you can certainly build a business with them.
But it’s hard to build a truly remarkable business without a roster of A-Players.
A’s are hard to find, more expensive to hire, and presented with more opportunities to leave. But if you can find and retain them, you’ll be able to move faster, create better work, and stress less.
Here’s a starting point for identifying or training A-Players on your existing team or bringing on new ones.
A-Players:
- Are absolute rockstars at their job role.
- Believe in and are committed to the company’s mission.
- Make the culture of the company better by engaging and being a part of it.
- Go above and beyond and do what hasn’t explicitly been asked if they know it will help the work or the company.
- Have empathy for the clients.
- Take charge of situations and pick up the slack without having been asked.
- Identify potential problems and delays before they happen and fix them themselves or propose solutions to avoid them.
- Ask for help when they don’t know.
- Do everything within their power to find the answer before asking for help.
- Regularly think about ways to make the company or the work better and bring new ideas to the table.
- Speak up and push back when confronted with something that is outside the company’s (or their own) values.
- Have an opinion on the work and the company and can back it up.
- Welcome critique and accept it humbly.
- Give critique generously and kindly.
- Don’t need to be monitored.
- Complete work before deadlines.
- Make everyone around them better.
- Seek to operate in a way that makes everyone else’s job easier.
- Communicate proactively rather than reactively.
- Never present an opportunity to question their trustworthiness or reliability.
- Work on themselves/better themselves without being asked or incentivized.
- Are constantly leveling up their skills.
- Don’t make excuses, take radical ownership when things go awry.
- Don’t require external motivation or incentivization.
- Have high standards that raise the bar for the team as a whole.
- Want to work on challenging projects.
- Have clear boundaries and enforce them
- Look after themselves physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.
Got an addition to the list? Let me know what A-Players mean to you in the comments.
Balancing Excitement with Discipline
The start of a new project is often defined by an abundance of excitement, energy, and ideas.
It’s easy to sit down and do the work, and in fact, may even be difficult to focus on anything other than the project.
But that level of energy and enthusiasm rarely lasts. Sooner or later, the easy early wins become smaller and momentum begins to slow.
You may still be excited about the long term prospects of the project, but it’s not quite as fun as it was just a few short weeks or months ago.
Sooner or later, you’re bound to face significant challenges that will force you to reckon with how badly you really want to continue slogging away at the project.
When things get hard, it’s only natural that you should look for ways to end the frustration.
The easiest way to do this is to quit.
This is particularly easy to do when the project started out as a side hustle, hobby, or experiment.
With little riding on the outcome, there’s little incentive to continue.
Every project will present challenges and require work that isn’t fun. In these moments you need to be prepared to fall back on your discipline to put your head down, do the work, and press onward.
For the projects worth continuing, however, you should be able to maintain a sense of excitement throughout the process.
You may not be excited about the work itself in every given moment, but you should at least retain some enthusiasm about the future prospects of what the work has the potential to achieve, for both yourself and others.
Projects with excitement but no discipline are doomed to fail. But the opposite is also true.
Take regular stock of your stores of both attributes and then recommit or move on to something new.
Start Before You Know Where You’re Going
Too often we don’t allow ourselves to start because we don’t know where we’re going.
Without a defined destination and strategy for how our efforts will help move us toward it, we worry that any effort we do exert might be wasted.
“Until I have clarity,” we think, “it’s better to sit and do nothing than move in a direction that might take me further from where I want to go.”
So we sit and wait, and agonize over our lack of clarity as much as our lack of action. The weeks, months, and even years pass by, marked by small flashes of insight and purpose that always seem to fade back into the ennui and uncertainty that has come to define our lives.
When you’re feeling stuck, when your feeling directionless, when you’re feeling like you have something to offer, but you don’t know what, it’s best to start, even when you haven’t the vaguest idea of where you’re going.
Sure, you might take yourself further away from what turns out to be your ultimate target. But isn’t a slight detour on the way to finding your path better than never finding it at all?
The fastest route to clarity is rarely the shortest or most direct. You often need to start down many paths before finding the one you’re supposed to be on.
By the time you find it, however, you’ll have built up the skills, habits, and perspective required to make meaningful progress towards your goal.
Start creating. Start experimenting. Start moving.
And watch your destination shift into focus.
Every Sunday I publish an exclusive article on my newsletter that hopefully provides a new perspective, encouragement, and maybe even some occasional wisdom.
It’s something I’m proud to create and I’d be honoured to deliver it to you. If you’d like me to share it with you please subscribe here.
Want to hear more about building an audience around work that matters? I think you might enjoy these reads.
https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/look-problem-face-3f11799dcb4bhttps://medium.com/@jeremyenns/look-problem-face-3f11799dcb4b
Look the Problem in the Face
When you’re faced with an uncomfortable problem to be solved or a decision to be made, it’s tempting to look around it.
You can avert your gaze, avoid taking in new information, and push it to the back of your mind until the last possible moment before action must be taken or a decision must be made.
It feels like you’re making an empowered decision to not worry about the problem before it needs to be worried about, or to avoid overloading yourself with information that will only make the decision more fraught with confusion.
But often the problem could be solved immediately, saving you a great deal of stress, energy, and anxiety. And often the very information you avoid taking in is in fact required to make an informed decision.
When faced with discomfort about a problem or decision, it’s better to look it in the face and tackle it head-on.
Find the information you need to solve the problem or inform your decision as quickly as possible. Even if you don’t take action immediately, with the necessary knowledge in place, your brain will subconsciously start putting the pieces together on its own and a clearer picture will take shape, outlining the best course of action.
Avoidance won’t make the problem go away.
Acting on it and solving it will.
Every Sunday I publish an exclusive article on my newsletter that hopefully provides a new perspective, encouragement, and maybe even some occasional wisdom.
It’s something I’m proud to create and I’d be honoured to deliver it to you. If you’d like me to share it with you please subscribe here.
Want to hear more about building an audience around work that matters? I think you might enjoy these reads.
https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/ownership-prerequisite-progress-4c007617cf47https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/ownership-prerequisite-progress-4c007617cf47
When You Have Nothing Worth Sharing
You might feel like you have nothing worth sharing.
No knowledge, no insight, definitely no wisdom.
Even the subjects in which you feel most competent already have all the information anyone could ever need readily available, and for free no less.
There’s certainly no room left for you to add anything new or contribute to the conversation in a meaningful way.
Here’s the thing.
We all walk around thinking everyone else knows at least as much as–if not more than–we do.
We think everyone sees the world the way we do, thinks the way we do, and makes decisions the way we do.
But they don’t.
Sometimes you don’t realize you have something to share until you start sharing.
Sometimes you don’t realize you have something to teach until you start teaching.
Sometimes you don’t realize your voice is unique until you start speaking.
So speak up, share what you have to share, teach what you have to teach, even if it’s been said and taught before.
No one will say it like you do, or teach it like you teach.
You have something to give.
So give.
Every Sunday I publish an exclusive article on my newsletter that hopefully provides a new perspective, encouragement, and maybe even some occasional wisdom.
It’s something I’m proud to create and I’d be honoured to deliver it to you. If you’d like me to share it with you please subscribe here.
Want to hear more about building an audience around work that matters? I think you might enjoy these reads.
https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/collect-connect-af39b5e823d7https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/collect-connect-af39b5e823d7
Creative Wayfinding For Ambitious Optimists.
Claw Back What’s Yours
Your time.
Your creativity.
Your inspiration.
God, sometimes even your hope,
Your faith in humanity
Your belief in yourself.
The world will twist and bend and monopolize every part of you if you let it.
So don’t.
Fight and kick and bite and tear and claw it back.
It’s your inheritance after all.
Your birthright.
Yours to use to bend the world to your will.
Take what’s yours and yours alone.
And don’t let the fight to reclaim it be in vain.
Give Me a Break
No one gets far without one.
More likely a healthy dose.
No matter how hard you work, how much you know, how great your skill,
It’s all but impossible to make it on your own,
Regardless of how noble the ideal might seem.
Sooner or later you need a leg up.
A helping hand from a guide who’s been there before.
A fortuitous connection, just when you need it.
An unexpected nudge in the right direction when you’re feeling stuck.
Luck, coincidence, or a gift from the universe, it doesn’t much matter what you call it.
But it matters a great deal when you set out to achieve anything.
Waiting for your break is not so much about waiting, however.
But preparing.
Working to ensure you’ve done everything within your power to capitalize on your break when it does come.
And it always does.
Though it may be difficult to recognize.
Earnestness. Curiosity. Trust.
These are the tools required to make the most of the breaks that come your way.
Disguised as they may be.
Those, and doing something that is truly worth doing.
Worthy tasks have a way of attracting the help you need at the time you need it.
In uncanny ways from uncanny places.
So when you’re feeling stuck, stay earnest, stay curious, stay pure in your intentions
And trust that the next break is already in front of you, waiting for you to stumble on it.
Failing Your Way Forward
Except, it’s not really about the failure itself.
You can fail a hundred times and stay stuck where you are, after all.
Instead, it’s about how you respond to the failure that will determine your trajectory.
Your natural instinct is to get a little more gun shy with each new failure.
When the failure is big, public, or (and) you’ve invested a large part of yourself in the creation, it might only take the one failure to feel as though you can never bring new work to the world again.
And while the reaction is natural, staying in this mentality is a choice.
The alternative is to curl up and hide, for a while, and then choose to come back smarter with your next project.
Not more guarded, not less vulnerable.
The work suffers when you remove yourself from it.
But more skillful, wily, clever.
More committed to process, consistency, empathy and curiosity.
With a keener understanding of who and what the work is for.
The next project might fail too. And if not that one, then the one that comes after.
Maybe both.
Maybe a dozen, or a hundred more.
But the goal isn’t a home run on every swing.
The goal is simply to stay in the game, gleaning some insight and improving your approach with each new failure, building up your resilience and guile wihle waiting for the conditions to align.
And when they do, and you get the perfect pitch down the center of the plate, you’ll be ready.
75 Things That Made My Year (2020)
Inspired by Austin Kleon’s list (who’s name, not-coincidentally pops up a couple times in this list), here’s my list of 75 things that made my year in 2020.
- Kicking off the year with New Years fireworks and outdoor concert along the river in Riga, Latvia with my mom and Kelly.
- Starting a daily writing practice which has turned into one of the most transformative decisions of my life.
- Losing my wallet on the train from Riga to Tallinn and spending months trying to sort out my credit cards. I still don’t have a new driver’s license a year later, which has been a huge inconvenience, but also a hilarious story when combined with the fact that Kelly also lost her driver’s license a few months later…
- Walking the eerie Tallinn harbour at night with Kelly beside the crumbling old prison.
- Going to the gender-segregated nude sauna in Tallinn full of old guys speaking Russian, drinking beer, watching soccer, and beating themselves with vihad, branches used to stimulate blood flow.
- Being somewhere cold and dark for winter after the previous winter in South American.
- Morning writing sessions in Björn and Røst, two of my favourite coffee (and baking) spots in Tallinn.
- Insanely huge margaritas at Taqueria in Tallinn. Also, the time the server ignored(?) us for so long that it was comical.
- Stumbling upon the old soviet concert hall with Kelly in Tallinn while out for a night walk, each listening to our own podcasts. You can see this concert hall in the movie Tenet, although in the movie it’s in Ukraine.
- Listening to Seth Godin’s Akimbo podcast on the way to and from work every day in Tallinn.
- Uulits Burger in Tallinn. Probably the best burger place I’ve ever eaten at. We went here so many times in our month in Tallinn.
- Our weekend trip to Tartu, where we spent most of it sitting inside this weird but cool high-class food court type place (where we discovered another Uulits…) playing board games and drinking Irish Coffee.
- House and pet sitting on a farm in Somerset, England. We spent two weeks looking after a goat, two Shetland Ponies, two cats, two dogs, and a bunch of chickens. We were supposed to stay longer but the couple we were sitting for got turned away at the border to South Africa due to a technicality while on a trip to visit their children.
- Day trip to the Dorset coast. One of those days that you can’t believe how much good stuff you packed into it, including castles, seaside cliffs, and endless, beautiful, English countryside.
- Creating and releasing my first course, Podcast Audio Academy, a course taking the guesswork out of recording a pro-quality podcast.
- Getting up early to attend a Creative Mornings event in Bristol. The talk turned out to be pretty bad (the only bad talk I’ve seen at a Creative Mornings event) that basically amounted to, “Here’s how to use Google Calendar…” That said, we had a great day in Bristol, meeting and chatting with a few people at the event, coffee and work session at Full-Court Press, and then walking the riverbank in the sunshine.
- In January I got my first haircut in 4 years, and only second in the previous 13, as I’d had long dreadlocks for 9 years before the last cut. When I had initially cut off my dreads I had intended to keep my hair short-ish. I even walked into a barbershop in Granada, Spain a few months after cutting off the dreads, but when they didn’t have any availability for a week(!?) I walked out and never looked back. It was time for a change, however, and so I buzzed off my shoulder-length hair.
- The three weeks in Glasgow where it rained, snowed, hailed, and gusted crazy wind almost every single day we were there. I hadn’t been that impressed with Glasgow during my first visit a few years ago, but after spending 3 weeks there this year–even despite the weather–I have a much better view of it.
- Weekend breakfast at The Steamie. Amazing french toast, sandwiches, and coffee. The only problem is that it was constantly freezing, despite the 8 space heaters they had scattered around the cafe.
- Open mic nights at the pub beneath our apartment, listening to traditional Scottish music.
- Our last weekend in Glasgow we stayed with our friends Caitlin and Scott. We were supposed to go out to the Isle of Arran, but the weather was too poor to take the ferry over so we stayed in the city instead, playing board games, crazy golf, and relaxing.
- Weekend trip to one of my favourite places, the Isle of Skye with Kelly, the weekend before the world locked down for COVID. In particular, getting absolutely drenched exploring The Cuillin and Neist Point in insane wind and rain.
- More morning writing sessions at Fortitude, Cairngorm Coffee, and Brewlab before COVID shut things down.
- Getting stuck for five months in Edinburgh during COVID, already one of my favourite cities in the world beforehand and even more so now.
- So much walking. Daily walks to and from work over the Salisbury Crags, weekly trips up Arthur’s Seat, and exploring pretty much every street and avenue in the city on foot, almost always finding something new and interesting. I’m pretty sure my feet know Edinburgh better than any other city I’ve lived or visited in.
- Taking The Story Skills Workshop from Seth Godin and Bernadette Jiwa. I learned a lot about storytelling as well as being turned onto Hiut Denim, one of my new favourite companies via one of the links in the course.
- Laying in The Meadows with Kelly, reading Austin Kleon’s books, drinking coffee, watching birds and the clouds go by.
- Watching the seasons change in the same place. The prickly Gorse blooming in vibrant yellow and then fading to brown.
- Walking to Leith with Kelly in the rain, stopping in at the most charming little deli and coffee shop, and chatting with the owner for half an hour.
- Pre-selling my second course, Podcast Marketing Academy to the Founding Cohort of 18 people and taking them through the 3-month curriculum. This was one of the most valuable experiences of my life and I’ll never not presell a product again.
- Discovering 12 Triangles, the best bread shop and bakery I think I’ve ever visited and waiting in the line around the block every Saturday to pick up bread and chat with the really sweet guys running the place.
- Stumbling upon The Birchwood–the first coffee shop to reopen after the first COVID lockdown–on the way home from a long, Saturday morning walk. I stood across the street for 5 minutes debating whether to go get a coffee before deciding instead to race home, get Kelly, and come back together. Right decision. She was ecstatic to have good coffee again after weeks without. Going there became a Saturday morning tradition, and we got to know the owner a little bit during our weekly visits.
- Working my way through more stress than I’ve felt before, amidst COVID, running my agency, while also pre-selling and creating Podcast Marketing Academy. I discovered new ways to cope with stress and anxiety and feel much better equipped going forward.
- Slowing down and rediscovering lazy weekends filled with walks, naps, board games, writing, and binging TV series.
- Speaking of TV series, we watched some great ones, including Hannibal, Fargo, The Mandalorian, and Long Way Up, as well as re-watching How I Met Your Mother, and now starting on Modern Family.
- Discovering some incredible newsletters, in particular from Jay Clouse, Khe Hy, Josh Spector, and Ann Handley.
- Starting my own weekly newsletter which has become one of my most favourite things I do on a weekly basis.
- Spending one of our last weekends in Scotland with our friends Caitlin and Scott in Crieff, a charming town with great hiking, and which happens to be the hometown of Ewan McGregor. Also, our Airbnb was maybe the cutest I’ve stayed in yet.
- Finally starting a podcast, Build A Better Wellness Biz, after years of hemming and hawing. I also documented the development and launch process on a YouTube series, Podcast Launch Diaries.
- Making it into Portugal after our visa ended in the UK. We weren’t sure we would be allowed in since Kelly is American and it was a relief to pass through immigration in Lisbon.
- The first meal on a patio in Portugal with fish, tapas, and Super Bock, which brought back so many of my favourite memories of one of my favourite countries. This restaurant in particular was run by two septuagenarian men who were just the sweetest, and we went back many times over our three months in Lisbon.
- Making friends in Lisbon. We’ve spent the past 4 years spending typically no more than a month in each place we travel to, and as such have had a hard time building in-person community. We tapped into a great network through our coworking space in Lisbon and were able to meet a ton of great people.
- Stumbling on the many miradors overlooking the city in Lisbon. Particularly for sunrises and sunsets, maybe accompanied by a pastel de nata, beer, or both.
- Going to a socially distanced, outdoor, freezing cold opera performance of Tosca for Kelly’s birthday. A couple of our friends bailed halfway through due to the cold, and there were no subtitles to translate as there would normally be, but it was a memorable experience for my first opera.
- Taking Friday afternoons off to go surfing in Caparica. After surfing a handful of times previously in Morocco and Peru, it finally clicked for me during these surf sessions in Lisbon. Two of the most memorable days were one Saturday surfing giant waves that were way too big for my skill level that I somehow managed to catch a couple of before exhausting myself trying to paddle past the break. And then my final day out, the last Sunday in Portugal with two hours of perfect wave after perfect wave. Blissful.
- Walking the first leg of the Camino Portugues from Lisbon to Vila Franca de Xira on my birthday with Kelly. I walked the Camino from Porto to Santiago de Compostela with some friends in 2017 and have been itching to do more ever since. This particular one-day leg was supposed to be ~25km and ended up being around 40… It was a long, hard day, with some beautiful stretches, as well as a good share of suburban, industrial stretches. On the whole, a truly fantastic day of Type-2 fun.
- Poker nights with the boys in Lisbon. The knowledge of the rules was questionable at best but the food was always good, and it was good to play poker again for the first time in probably ten years.
- My relationship with one of my best friends, Hayley. We have similarly structured businesses that we started at the same time, and are working on a lot of the same things. We’re also both highly competitive, which creates this great dynamic that is both motivating and challenging, as well as supportive. This year was a big one for both of us, and there’s no way I’d be where I am without her.
- Weekend trip to Évora, Portugal with our friends Will and James. We had possibly one of the best meals we had in Portugal and spent a wonderful couple of days wandering the quaint town and relaxing.
- Long weekend trip to Porto with Kelly. Porto is one of my all-time favourite places, a city that has a lot of significance for me personally, and one which I’ve visited 3 times now. I had been wanting to take Kelly there as she had never been but was also worried that I’d built up the hype too much. Turns out, I hadn’t and this 5-day trip was another magical chapter in my relationship with the city.
- Day trip to Sintra with Kelly on our last weekend in Portugal. Another place that I was worried the hype would ruin for us. Almost everyone we met during our 3 months in Portugal raved about Sintra, but when we went for ourselves, we were blown away. The lack of tourists due to COVID surely helped, but this was probably one of the best day trips of my life.
- Signing up for Bonfire With Soul, a course from Duke Stump and The DO Lectures. Low on actionable, high on philosophical, this was one of the best business courses I’ve taken.
- Fostering our dog, Paola, for 3 weeks in Split before she went off to her forever home in Germany. A 7-month old puppy, she gave us the full puppy experience: Accidents in the house, chewing on absolutely everything, demanding constant attention, even (or should I say especially) while we were on work calls… For all the frustration, she was adorable and we miss having her around.
- Swimming in the ocean in Croatia. One of the most serene swimming experiences of my life with crystal clear, absolutely calm water, sunshine, and dramatic mountains stretching into the distance.
- Thanksgiving weekend in Šibenik with Kelly. Getting away from the city to unplug and relax, explore fortresses, and slow down.
- Taking The DO Lectures course, How To Build A Great Brand With Very Little Money. Another one of the best courses I’ve ever taken. I spent well over a month working through the course content and journaling on how it applies to my work. So much still to dig into and flesh out but this course has moved me significantly closer to creating the brand I want.
- Weekend trip to Plitvice Lakes National Park with our friends Rhys and Haya. Stayed in a great (and freezing) log cabin with wood-burning stove and spent a cold, densely foggy, and underwhelming Saturday exploring the park before returning for a much clearer, awe-inspiring experience Sunday. Also, the drive to and from the park was unreal, especially stopping and getting out of the car halfway up a serpentine mountainside road in the moonlight and hearing only the sound of the wind and the sheep’s bells clanging somewhere below us.
- The Reboot 2020 Wrap Up Workshop. This workshop, and tapping into the community behind it was the perfect cap on a tumultuous, rewarding, exciting, terrifying year, and has me primed to move into 2021 with more clarity and purpose.
- Brand exploration with Kelly. Kelly’s been building on her existing design expertise in 2020 by diving deep into brand strategy, and we’ve spent the final couple weeks of 2020 doing a brand strategy exploration for Counterweight Creative. It’s been a challenging, at times frustrating, and invaluable process, and I feel like it’s coming at exactly the right time. Super excited about the clarity this is providing me and where this will all lead.
- Discovering new music, in particular from Can’t Swim, Hayden Calnin, Driveways, Nightly, Henry Jamison, MAALA, Bjéar, Jeremy Zucker, and Fjord. Check out my 2020 Spotify playlist for the highlights of what I listened to here.
- New albums from old favourites including Donovan Woods, Novo Amor, Misery Signals, Movements, Hailaker, and Ed Patrick. Again, check out the 2020 playlist.
- Discovering (and subsequently binging) the On Being Podcast with Krista Tippett. One of my new favourite shows and biggest sources of information. I know this is going to be a trusted companion of mine for a long time.
- Discovering and feeling confident in my personal style for the first time in my life. I owe a lot in this regard to two of my new favourite brands that I discovered this year, Hiut Denim and Finisterre, both of whom I love not just for their products but for how they operate their businesses and use storytelling.
- Hitting the 50lb weight loss milestone. I started my weight loss journey in August 2019 at 213lbs, and in April 2020 was down to 163lbs. If you want to know my secret, it’s all that walking previously mentioned. And soup. Noom helped as well.
- Hiring an Online Business Manager, Lindsey to help out on the Operations side of things with my business. I was blown away by how big a difference Lindsey made and within 2-3 months of her being onboarded we had completed some major upgrades and projects.
- Partnering with my friend and collaborator Andréa to expand our service offering to include social media content creation and management services. This was a big, scary step, but I’m so grateful that I pushed through the discomfort to create and offer this package.
- Adding Arie, our video editor to the team. I’ve had clients asking about video editing for years, but never had a dedicated video editor. Really excited to be able to confidently offer video editing as a service now.
- The Dark Side Of The Lens. This short film has resonated with and moved me like almost nothing else has. It’s one of those pieces of art that feels as though it contains some part of you, expressing something deep and internal that you can’t express yourself. I’ve watched it dozens of times since discovering it, and will likely watch it dozens (if not hundreds more).
- Client successes, particularly the podcast launches for Just Being and Life Coaching For Women Physicians.
- My coach, Jaime who has pushed and supported me through both the challenges and opportunities this year has presented. I wouldn’t have accomplished most of what I did this year without her.
- Reading. The pandemic reintroduced me to reading physical books in addition to audiobooks. Some of my favourites from both categories include The Icarus Deception, This Is Marketing, The Dip, and The Practice by Seth Godin (yes, I’m a super fan), Ask by Ryan Levesque, White Fragility by Robin Diangelo, Walking by Erling Kagge, Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng, and the abovementioned Austin Kleon trilogy.
- Binging some really amazing Star Wars fan films to fill the Star Wars void… It’s pretty amazing to see what indie filmmakers on a budget can create nowadays.
- David Whyte’s incredible TED talk. Another video I’ve watched multiple times and will surely watch many more.
- A truly amazing year with Kelly. Relationships can certainly be challenging, but 2020 with Kelly was pretty much pure fun. Life is good when you’ve got someone who aligns with you on so many levels from work to humour to perspective to worldview to interests and more.
- Getting clearer on how my perspective, knowledge, skills, and experiences combine to offer something unique to the world through my work. It’s not fully formed yet, but there’s a thread to tug on.
Another Chance
A new year.
Another chance to choose.
What’s worth pursuing
And how to pursue it.
The guides you’ll follow
And those you’ll avoid.
The problems worthy of your unique skills, knowledge and perspective
And those best left to someone else.
While these choices can be made today, they must be remade every day anew.
Choose wisely, these are the choices that define who you’ll be
And become.
The impact you’ll make now,
And the legacy you’ll leave in the future.
These choices matter.
14 Lessons On Business, Creativity & Life From 2020
For so many of us, 2020 has been a year of unexpected challenges and opportunities, sorrows and delights, and a whole lot to process going forward.
I always enjoy the process of journaling and reflecting at the end of each year, but this year, it feels non-negotiable. As though the lessons and experiences of this year need to be written out of my system in order to be fully processed and embodied.
And so with that in mind, here are some of the lessons that most stood out to me from a year full of growth, experimentation, small steps backward and large leaps forward.
1. Ideas Are A Habit
I first heard James Altucher talk about the concept of treating idea generation as a muscle that can be strengthened years ago.
Back then, I tried to emulate his “10 ideas a day” practice but failed miserably. I don’t know that I ever once came up with a full 10 ideas in one day, and certainly, none of them were very good.
The problem, I now realize, is that I was setting my sights too high when it came to what qualified as an idea. I was looking for big, life-changing, business-building ideas, passing by anything that didn’t immediately fit that category.
I had a couple of realizations this year that helped this lesson really sink in for me.
- Big ideas often start with small observations or questions. You often only realize that they lead to something bigger when you start peeling back the layers and seeing how deep they go.
- Each of us has dozens of these little observations and questions every single day. The problem is that we haven’t built up the habit of giving ourselves time and space to actually think about and explore them.
When it comes to the latter point, my daily writing habit (more on that later) has become the vehicle to explore these questions and observations.
Sometimes, exploring an idea results in a 200-word blog post that goes nowhere.
Sometimes, as with the question of “Why do podcasters get stuck and plateau when it comes to growing their shows?” the question leads to many in-depth blog posts, and eventually an entire course, in this case, Podcast Marketing Academy.
If we can build up the habit of first noting just a few of the many small ideas that float through our heads on a daily basis and then spending even 20 minutes a day exploring one of them, we’ll be in good shape when it comes to creating work that matters.
I wrote more about this concept in one of the very first posts I published this year which you can find here.
2. Habits Are A Skill
In 2019, I set out on a quest to lose weight using Noom, a psychology-based weight-loss app.
What I didn’t realize at the time, however, is that the lessons I would learn in Noom were far more impactful than just the weight loss.
At its core, Noom is all about building habits. And the great thing about building habits is that it’s a skill.
It turns out that once you establish one habit, it becomes easier to establish another one.
What started with one habit around healthier eating and portion control, spun off into many new habits that look something like this:
Establishing healthier habits around eating
↘︎
Breaking my habit of biting my nails
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Flossing every day consistently
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Starting my daily writing practice
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Starting my weekly Listen Up Newsletter
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Starting my weekly podcast, Build A Better Wellness Biz
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Doing a weekly review every Friday of where I spent my time, how I felt at work, and identifying what I can do in the following week to improve both.
On and on the virtuous cycle goes, each habit becoming easier to build than the last.
I’m convinced after this year that habit-building may be the single most important skill any of us can develop.
Success in almost anything comes down to being able to consistently show up, even when you might not feel like it. So if you can build that habit around whatever it is you’re pursuing, chances are, you’re going to get there.
3. After Habit-Building, Writing Is Perhaps The Most Important Skill To Develop
I’ve mentioned my daily writing habit a couple of times now, and with good reason.
It’s been the single most transformative practice I might have ever undertaken.
I started after having been hearing for years from many of the creatoars and thinkers I follow about the benefits of writing and publishing daily.
Going in, I didn’t really know what to expect, or what my goals were.
I knew that there was the possibility of growing an audience, but that wasn’t at the top of my mind.
Instead, I was more focused, at least initially, on improving my writing and finding my voice.
I didn’t have a defined topic I wanted to write about, and ended up cycling through a selection of themes from business, marketing, leadership, podcasting, personal development and more.
Over time, I found myself getting fixated on one topic for a period, and write extensively about just that. There was one stretch where I published almost 30 articles in a row on podcasting.
I also found that as I did so, writing became not a way to express ideas, but to explore them.
More often than not, I started with a single phrase or idea that had occurred to me in the previous days, and would then sit down and explore it in more depth through writing.
This habit has had an incredible impact on my work and confidence, as having a written catalog of ideas I’ve explored and developed has helped clarify my thinking and feels like it’s given me a foundation to base all of my future work on.
In the process of building out this foundation, I’ve also built out a handful of new products and services for our clients, methods for operating my business and managing my team, and taken away host of other practical applications.
What I’ve found is that we all have dozens of ideas every day, but we don’t often give ourselves the time or space to actually explore and develop them.
Having a daily writing practice has given me that time and space to explore, develop and capitalize on a handful of those ideas.
I believe that the ability to generate, develop and share ideas is probably the most valuable skill we can develop as creators, and as writing is a vehicle for that, it’s an essential skill.
4. Everything Is A Draft
We all create with the intent that our creations will achieve their desired impact, preferably immediately upon releasing them.
More often than not however, they don’t.
At least not quickly.
Sometimes not at all.
When this happens, it’s easy to get discouraged. Maybe even give up on the project entirely.
Failed projects, especially when there’s been a significant amount of time, money, energy, and hope invested in them can be emotionally devastating.
One of the mindsets I’ve adopted this year that has been hugely beneficial has been to think of everything as simply the first (or the next) in a series of drafts.
Drafts aren’t supposed to be perfect.
They often don’t work at all.
Drafts can be clumsy and clunky.
And each draft is an essential step toward creating the next draft.
If your work doesn’t achieve the desired result, oh well, it was just a draft, make some revisions that make the next draft better.
If you’re interested, I wrote about this idea in more depth in Issue 27 of my Listen Up Newsletter.
5. Do Things That Have More Than One Potential Benefit/Version of Success
Every new pursuit in our businesses is something of a gamble.
We choose a niche betting that this is the group of people we’re best positioned to serve.
We create content betting that it will resonate with the right people and that the right people will eventually want to work with us.
We create (or at least attempt to presell) a product betting that this is the thing our audience wants most.
When it comes to long term pursuits like content creation, however, when there’s only one version of success, it can be hard to stick with the practice long enough for it to bear fruit.
With that in mind, one of the biggest learnings for me in 2020 was to focus on making bets that have multiple ways of paying off, preferably on different time scales as well.
For example, when it comes to my podcast, the primary goal is to establish a relationship with my guests betting that over 6–12 months, a few of them might become clients.
But there are other ways that the show can be successful even if that bet doesn’t pay off.
For one, while audience building isn’t my focus, there’s a good chance that I will in fact build an audience around the show over time, for whom I could choose to create other products or services other than podcast production and marketing support.
Another huge benefit is having a sandbox to be able to experiment with different production and marketing techniques, systems, automations, and more that can then be turned into new service offerings for our new and existing clients.
That benefit was already apparent before the show even launched.
The same concept holds true for my writing practice.
While I hope will grow an audience over time, the practice has paid massive dividends already by helping clarify my thinking, given me the space to explore new ideas, and by doing so, helped me develop a handful of new products and services.
This idea has been a revelation to me over the past year, and I can only imagine will be a major driving force behind everything I do going forward.
The more ways there are to succeed, the harder it is to fail.
6. Presell Everything
In late 2018/early 2019, I spent hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars over three months putting together the Podcast Power Pack, a bundle sale of resources to help podcasters launch, market, monetize and systematize their shows.
The Pack featured over $3000 worth courses, memberships books and software, available for 5 days only at more than a 90% discount.
I had a few friends who had run similar bundle sales in a couple different niches that had brought in anywhere from $30K to $300K.
Suffice it to say I was excited about what this bundle might be able to do in the podcast world, which I was certain would eat this offer up.
The collection of products was fantastic, the website was flashy, and the copy fantastic. Or so I thought…
The Pack ended up selling only a few dozen copies, and while it got great reviews from those who bought it, I ended up losing thousands of dollars–not to mention all that invested time–on the project.
There were a lot of lessons I’m continuing to learn about what went wrong, but the one overarching lesson was that it can be incredibly expensive to build a product without validating it first.
Fast Forward
Just over a year later, in the Spring of 2020, I had an outline for what would become my flagship program, Podcast Marketing Academy.
I had created the lesson plan after doing interviews with all my podcast production clients to find out both where they got stuck when it came to growing their shows, and where they had seen success.
Now that I had the outline, I desperately wanted to dive in and start filming the videos.
But my coach had other ideas.
She convinced me to face the possibility that the product might not be the right fit for my audience up front, before creating it, by preselling it.
With her guidance, the memory of the Power Pack’s failure, and my friend Hayley–who had just completed her own successful presale–smugly egging me on, I started sharing my idea and trying to find beta testers.
In the end, I wound up with 18 people who paid $500/each to be a part of the Founding Cohort of Podcast Marketing Academy.
While it was a stressful few weeks that followed, having to now film and deliver the content on a tight schedule. After selling and creating a product this way, however, I’m convinced that I will never build another product without preselling it first again.
The first cohort went extremely well, and as I’m writing this, we’re now a quarter of the way into the second cohort.
7. A-Players Make All The Difference
It’s easy to convince yourself that you can get by surrounding yourself with average people, as long as you’re exceptional in the work you do.
And you can.
Get by, that is.
It’s hard, however, to really excel in your work when you’re having to pick up the slack for average employees, contractors, influences, guides, and more.
As the leader of your company, you can only pick up the slack for so long before it catches up with you, either in the form of exhaustion and burnout, or a ceiling you simply can’t rise past on your own.
A-Players make your life easier.
One of the first things my coach, Jaime asked me to do when I started working with her at the beginning of 2020 was to go through my team and assign each team member a letter grade based on their contributions.
Being someone who believes the best in people–perhaps to a fault–I was generous in my assessments and gave pretty much everyone an “A” grade, with a few “B+’s” sprinkled in.
In hindsight, I could’ve benefited from a grading rubric to help me discern what an A-player actually looked like.
A few months into the year, I hired Lindsey, my Online Business Manager (OBM) and the distinction became clear.
Now Lindsey was in a much different role, with more responsibility and more ability to go above and beyond what was explicitly asked of her.
But she took advantage of that opportunity and spearheaded major projects and upgrades in the business, many with only vague direction from me.
As I recently reassessed my existing team, I realized that yes, there certainly are a few A-players on the team already. But there are also a handful more B’s than I initially thought.
Now don’t get me wrong, B’s are still above average, and they do excellent work. In many cases, they’re exactly what’s needed for the job at hand.
With some education, guidance, trust, and opportunity, many B’s can in fact become A-players as well. This is something I now realize I’ve done a poor job of doing and will definitely be focusing on in 2021.
But A’s go above and beyond. They move faster and make the business better than you’re capable of doing yourself.
Looking back, I think part of my generous grading was me wanting to believe that I only attracted the best of the best. Realizing that that’s not the case has been a somewhat humbling experience.
That said, the experience has helped me realize that I’ve taken the business about as far as I can shouldering the brunt of the load. To go any further, it’s clear that more A-players are needed, which for me, will likely be a mix of developing from within as well as bringing on new hires.
While it will take some time and effort to get there, the prospect of a team of A-players is an exciting proposition indeed.
I wrote more about what makes someone an A-Player here.
8. Almost Everything Is Built on Compounding Returns
Much like investing in the stock market, it turns out that investing in pretty much anything is built on the concept of compounding returns.
This is especially important to understand when it comes to content marketing, building a business, and growing your audience.
Understanding this idea helps us remember that we often have to put in a lot of work for a long time with minimal results, until at some point, perhaps for no obvious reason, the results start pouring in.
At least for me, realizing this has helped me maintain a healthy perspective when things are moving more slowly than I’d like.
I wrote about compounding returns in more depth here.
9. Find your guiding stars and double down on them
The amount of freely available information is one of the great blessings of our time.
But it’s also one of the great challenges.
We can quickly and easily find the information on how to do pretty much anything… along with numerous alternative or even conflicting methods.
For creative marketers, makers and entrepreneurs, this abundance of information causes flare ups of our shiny object syndrome on a weekly–if not daily–basis, and can make it hard to commit to one single strategy, tool, or even goal.
This lack of focus leads us to run in circles, never committing enough to any of the new strategies we pick up to see results.
As a result, we end up stuck.
I’m certainly no stranger to this cycle.
This year, however, I started asking myself questions about the type of business I wanted to be building, how I wanted to build it, and who I looked up to in regards to both business and life.
People and brands like Seth Godin, David Hieatt, Bernadette Jiwa, Duke Stump Patagonia and ConvertKit, along with a handful of others have emerged as my unofficial “board of directors” so to speak.
On an almost daily basis, I find myself asking how any or all of these brands would approach a decision I’m facing. The result is less distraction, more focus, and more confidence that I’m building something that I can be truly proud of.
I wrote more about finding your guiding stars here.
10. We Often Get Stuck, on Decisions, Not Actions
One of the biggest changes to my business and team this year was hiring my Online Business Manager, Lindsey back in February.
While I’ve had a solid team of sound engineers and content writers handling the bulk of our client podcast production work for the past couple years, Lindsey was the first person to come on to help me work on the business.
She took the lead on overhauling our project management, solidifying and further building out our internal systems and because of the work she’s done, our internal and external communication, client experience, quality of work and more are all much improved from where they were at the start of the year.
Many of the upgrades she’s worked on have been things that have been on my to do list for months, some even years. They always felt like tasks that were too big to tackle at the time with my limited bandwidth, and so they were either chipped away at slowly, or remained untouched altogether.
One of the biggest learnings for me in bringing Lindsey on, however, has been that most of the tasks on my list were not actually that large in scope when it came to the hours they actually took to complete.
Instead, what I was getting stuck on was the decision that needed to be made.
Often, it was a decision between two seemingly equally good options, or two compromises, or even two not so great options.
Having Lindsey not able to start on these projects until I’ve made a decision on which path to pursue has thrown relief on the real reason of so much of my procrastination and has helped me drastically speed up our team’s speed of implementation.
The next time you find yourself procrastinating, take a closer look at what the real reason is. Most likely, there’s an uncomfortable, unclear, or difficult decision that needs to be made, or conversation that needs to be had.
11. Insight and Context Is More Important Than Information
As a creator and content marketer, it’s easy to believe that the best way to grow our audiences and get more exposure is by sharing more information.
And so we rapidly scribble down a few dozen topics all with names like “How to _____” and “5 Ways to ______”. Maybe even a few “Ultimate Guides” if we’re feeling particularly ambitious.
The problem is that it’s really hard to stand out from the crowd pursuing this tack.
Chances are, we don’t have any proprietary information that isn’t already available freely online, most likely presented by a better writer, speaker or creator with more resources than we have.
As information itself becomes ever more ubiquitous and thus less valuable (at least as a content creator), however, the need for context and insight becomes much more valuable.
This is fantastic news for us as creators.
Whether they know it or not, our audiences are desperate for a way to make sense of the infinite information at their fingertips.
Processing that information, filtering the signal from the noise and translating it into language they understand while providing context is the greatest service you can provide to them.
Each of us has our own unique insight and perspective. If we build our brand around that perspective, rather than information, we’ve created a moat that’s impossible for anyone else to cross.
Realizing this over the past year has helped me shift my own content strategy to focus more on context and sharing my perspective than on providing more commoditized information.
This has turned out to not only be a lot more fun, but also a lot more distinctive in terms of my brand. I’ve had some amazing feedback from readers and podcast listeners and am convinced that this is the way forward for content marketing.
You can read about this more in Issue #2 of my Listen Up Newsletter, as well as in this blog post on Collecting & Connecting and this one, Your Audience Needs A Translator.
12. Speed of Implementation
For me, 2020 has been a year of executing on plans that have been brewing in the back of my mind for a long time.
This included creating and launching two courses, testing and rolling out new services, starting a new podcast, overhauling our project management system, adding new hires to the team and more.
When looking back at what changed this year to allow for these big leaps forward to happen, I trace it back to one thing: Speed of implementation.
I’m someone who likes to plan and strategize and wait until I’m 100% certain about an idea or direction I want to go in before acting.
This is useful in some ways, but when it comes to actually getting things done–even if that involves a few missteps along the way–it’s a major impediment.
There’s often no possible way to be 100% certain about a decision before making it, testing it out, and iterating from there.
To be honest, I’ve felt myself slipping and slowing down when it comes to my speed of implementation in the final quarter of the year, possibly because the first half of the year was fairly stressful due to rolling out so many changes simultaneously.
Now that the foundation is in place for the next stages of both our agency and educational content, I’m going to be looking to ratchet up the speed again in 2021.
13. Integrate More of Yourself Into Your Work
One of the standard pieces of advice in any content about discovering your passion or choosing your direction revolves around looking back at the things you enjoyed in your childhood.
How did you play, what did you gravitate toward, what activities did time just melt away while doing?
I’ve always written this advice off as unhelpful, at least for me. I didn’t see how my obsessions with LEGO and Star Wars had any bearing or application to my future career.
Late this year, however, I’ve started to realize that I was thinking much too literally about this idea, and that there actually are some interests from my childhood and adolescence that could be very relevant to my work now.
The most striking to me has been the fact that ever since childhood, I’ve been a philosophical thinker. No matter the subject matter, I’ve felt a pull to avoid the tactical and dig into the essence and meaning of it.
I recently realized that this is something that, while I’ve always gravitated towards, I’ve avoided integrating into my work.
I always felt that when it comes to content creation and business, people wanted tactical, actionable, strategic, and so that’s what I would create.
Recently, however, the philosophical has started creeping into my work, and I’ve been surprised to see that the reception has been really positive.
I’m now seeing that this perspective can be a major differentiator, while also making the work I do more personally interesting and fulfilling.
My big stumbling block with the question of examining your interests as a child was always that I perceived the desired outcome of the exercise as devising an entire career based on those interests.
Needless to say, that’s a tall order.
What I see now is that most of us do in fact have the ability to infuse our life long interests into our work in smaller ways. Not that those interests become our work, but that they inform our work and the way we do it.
They’re also fantastic differentiators and help us draw like-minded people to us.
14. Play the Long Game
When you play the short game, it’s easy to get sucked into making decisions and taking actions that don’t actually serve your long term vision.
Of course, when you’re feeling the pressure to get that next client, or make that next sale it feels like you don’t have the luxury of worrying about the long term vision. If you can’t keep your business going for the next 6 months, there won’t be a long term vision.
The thing is that most of us have more of a runway than we think. We have more latitude to plan for and build toward the businesses and the lives that we actually want, even if that means some short-term sacrifices.
When we’re building a business that’s actually aligned with our long term vision, everything becomes easier and more fun.
Content isn’t a chore when you’re creating what you want to create instead of what you’re supposed to be creating in order to attract followers.
Sales and marketing doesn’t feel uncomfortable when you’re building the products and services that you know are the perfect fit for the people you really want to work with.
Of course, sometimes we’re all forced to make short term decisions that compromise on our long-term vision, but it’s a helpful exercise to approach every decision from the starting point of, “How would I approach this if I didn’t need it to work for a year? Two years? Five years?”
When we play the long game, we’re less likely to chase shortcuts and get rich quick schemes and more likely to commit to the small, boring, consistent actions and habits that will lead to long term success.
The irony is that it’s often by committing to the long game that we achieve the results we’re hoping for the quickest.
Thinking about the long game has helped me keep my compass needle pointed North this year and ensure I’m working towards the business and life I want to be building, and taking actions that are aligned with my values.
I wrote more about playing the long game in my articles, The Long View, How Long Is Your Runway, and There Are No Shortcuts.
What Next?
I can’t think of another year in which I’ve leveled up my mindset and habits so profoundly, and can only hope that growth continues into 2021.
Even if it doesn’t continue at the same pace, however, I feel as though I’ve laid the foundation for a creative, productive, fulfilling year ahead.
I’d love to hear what some of the lessons you took away from this past year were. Lemme know in the comments.
A-Players Make All The Difference
It’s possible to get by without them, but it’s hard to thrive.
There are certainly many others who can perform the same core job function, but it’s not just about the job description on paper.
A-Players bring a whole other list of skills, mindsets, and perspectives that don’t just get the job done, but make everything else in your business run more smoothly as well.
Most solid professionals are B or B+, and you can certainly build a business with them.
But it’s hard to build a truly remarkable business without a roster of A-Players.
A’s are hard to find, more expensive to hire, and presented with more opportunities to leave. But if you can find and retain them, you’ll be able to move faster, create better work, and stress less.
Here’s a starting point for identifying or training A-Players on your existing team or bringing on new ones.
A-Players:
- Are absolute rockstars at their job role.
- Believe in and are committed to the company’s mission.
- Make the culture of the company better by engaging and being a part of it.
- Go above and beyond and do what hasn’t explicitly been asked if they know it will help the work or the company.
- Have empathy for the clients.
- Take charge of situations and pick up the slack without having been asked.
- Identify potential problems and delays before they happen and fix them themselves or propose solutions to avoid them.
- Ask for help when they don’t know.
- Do everything within their power to find the answer before asking for help.
- Regularly think about ways to make the company or the work better and bring new ideas to the table.
- Speak up and push back when confronted with something that is outside the company’s (or their own) values.
- Have an opinion on the work and the company and can back it up.
- Welcome critique and accept it humbly.
- Give critique generously and kindly.
- Don’t need to be monitored.
- Complete work before deadlines.
- Make everyone around them better.
- Seek to operate in a way that makes everyone else’s job easier.
- Communicate proactively rather than reactively.
- Never present an opportunity to question their trustworthiness or reliability.
- Work on themselves/better themselves without being asked or incentivized.
- Are constantly leveling up their skills.
- Don’t make excuses, take radical ownership when things go awry.
- Don’t require external motivation or incentivization.
- Have high standards that raise the bar for the team as a whole.
- Want to work on challenging projects.
- Have clear boundaries and enforce them
- Look after themselves physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.
Got an addition to the list? Let me know what A-Players mean to you in the comments.
Balancing Excitement with Discipline
The start of a new project is often defined by an abundance of excitement, energy, and ideas.
It’s easy to sit down and do the work, and in fact, may even be difficult to focus on anything other than the project.
But that level of energy and enthusiasm rarely lasts. Sooner or later, the easy early wins become smaller and momentum begins to slow.
You may still be excited about the long term prospects of the project, but it’s not quite as fun as it was just a few short weeks or months ago.
Sooner or later, you’re bound to face significant challenges that will force you to reckon with how badly you really want to continue slogging away at the project.
When things get hard, it’s only natural that you should look for ways to end the frustration.
The easiest way to do this is to quit.
This is particularly easy to do when the project started out as a side hustle, hobby, or experiment.
With little riding on the outcome, there’s little incentive to continue.
Every project will present challenges and require work that isn’t fun. In these moments you need to be prepared to fall back on your discipline to put your head down, do the work, and press onward.
For the projects worth continuing, however, you should be able to maintain a sense of excitement throughout the process.
You may not be excited about the work itself in every given moment, but you should at least retain some enthusiasm about the future prospects of what the work has the potential to achieve, for both yourself and others.
Projects with excitement but no discipline are doomed to fail. But the opposite is also true.
Take regular stock of your stores of both attributes and then recommit or move on to something new.
Start Before You Know Where You’re Going
Too often we don’t allow ourselves to start because we don’t know where we’re going.
Without a defined destination and strategy for how our efforts will help move us toward it, we worry that any effort we do exert might be wasted.
“Until I have clarity,” we think, “it’s better to sit and do nothing than move in a direction that might take me further from where I want to go.”
So we sit and wait, and agonize over our lack of clarity as much as our lack of action. The weeks, months, and even years pass by, marked by small flashes of insight and purpose that always seem to fade back into the ennui and uncertainty that has come to define our lives.
When you’re feeling stuck, when your feeling directionless, when you’re feeling like you have something to offer, but you don’t know what, it’s best to start, even when you haven’t the vaguest idea of where you’re going.
Sure, you might take yourself further away from what turns out to be your ultimate target. But isn’t a slight detour on the way to finding your path better than never finding it at all?
The fastest route to clarity is rarely the shortest or most direct. You often need to start down many paths before finding the one you’re supposed to be on.
By the time you find it, however, you’ll have built up the skills, habits, and perspective required to make meaningful progress towards your goal.
Start creating. Start experimenting. Start moving.
And watch your destination shift into focus.
Every Sunday I publish an exclusive article on my newsletter that hopefully provides a new perspective, encouragement, and maybe even some occasional wisdom.
It’s something I’m proud to create and I’d be honoured to deliver it to you. If you’d like me to share it with you please subscribe here.
Want to hear more about building an audience around work that matters? I think you might enjoy these reads.
https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/look-problem-face-3f11799dcb4bhttps://medium.com/@jeremyenns/look-problem-face-3f11799dcb4b
Look the Problem in the Face
When you’re faced with an uncomfortable problem to be solved or a decision to be made, it’s tempting to look around it.
You can avert your gaze, avoid taking in new information, and push it to the back of your mind until the last possible moment before action must be taken or a decision must be made.
It feels like you’re making an empowered decision to not worry about the problem before it needs to be worried about, or to avoid overloading yourself with information that will only make the decision more fraught with confusion.
But often the problem could be solved immediately, saving you a great deal of stress, energy, and anxiety. And often the very information you avoid taking in is in fact required to make an informed decision.
When faced with discomfort about a problem or decision, it’s better to look it in the face and tackle it head-on.
Find the information you need to solve the problem or inform your decision as quickly as possible. Even if you don’t take action immediately, with the necessary knowledge in place, your brain will subconsciously start putting the pieces together on its own and a clearer picture will take shape, outlining the best course of action.
Avoidance won’t make the problem go away.
Acting on it and solving it will.
Every Sunday I publish an exclusive article on my newsletter that hopefully provides a new perspective, encouragement, and maybe even some occasional wisdom.
It’s something I’m proud to create and I’d be honoured to deliver it to you. If you’d like me to share it with you please subscribe here.
Want to hear more about building an audience around work that matters? I think you might enjoy these reads.
https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/ownership-prerequisite-progress-4c007617cf47https://medium.com/@jeremyenns/ownership-prerequisite-progress-4c007617cf47
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Hi, I'm Jeremy, I'm glad you're here.
No matter what you create, I'm guessing you spend a good amount of time feeling lost, hopeless, and unsure about how to get from where you are to where you want to be.
So do I. And so does everyone doing creative work.
This is the Creative Wilderness.
Every week, I publish a new article in my Creative Wayfinding newsletter about how we as creators and marketers can navigate it with more clarity and confidence.
If you're building something that matters, but aren't quite sure how to take the next step forward, I'd be honoured to have you join us.