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Newsletter

🔥 Sell or go big?

  • Post author By niccitalbot
  • Post date August 7, 2023
  • No Comments on 🔥 Sell or go big?

+ the books topping my TBR pile this summer | #123

Big news from Joe Pulizzi this week – Lulu has acquired The Tilt and its Creator Economy Expo (CEX) event. 

Lulu is a leading self-publishing platform that allows creators to publish and distribute books globally. They have been The Tilt’s biggest supporter over the last two years – sponsoring their newsletter, CEX, and third annual content entrepreneur research. 

They are on a mission to teach authors about the business model of content entrepreneurship (beyond books!). Loads of educational material on their site – toolkit, guides, Lulu University and more. You can even make a magazine!

Good synergies between the two, and this move positions them perfectly as a leader in the creator space.

I’m blown away by this news. Wow. It’s a much faster exit than I expected – just two years since The Tilt launched, still a toddler—a speedy trip from Part 1 to Part 8 of Content Inc. 

Congratulations to Joe and Pam, and the team. I’m excited to see how this will evolve and what opportunities it will bring with combined audience power. Lulu has come a long way since they published their first book in 2002.

Fascinating to see that a content business has acquired a content business! 

It gives The Tilt resources to expand on education, research and networking opportunities (yes, please!). They’ve built an audience of 25k+ newsletter subscribers, which is important for an exit plan. 

Just shows it’s never too soon to start thinking about exit strategies, even if you haven’t made much money yet. Because how you exit will affect how you build your business. 

This is Joe’s third official sale of a company, and he says his goal is to continue doing what he loves and is good at and leave the business side to someone else. I get that. No more payroll!! Having employees can get complicated and expensive. I didn’t enjoy putting myself on the payroll when I had a limited company. 

The Tilt & Lulu are launching a new imprint for content entrepreneurs – a hands-on service to publish your print book, ebook or audiobook. 

If you’re thinking about self-publishing, you can express your interest here. 


🔥 WATCH/READ/LISTEN

I’ve been to see three films this week – British Summer!! Barbie and Mission Impossible are both excellent. Barbie is a masterclass in marketing. MI – a warning about the dangers of rogue AI…

I loved Talk To Me, the new indie horror from Danny & Michael Philippou, the daredevil twins from Down Under. 

Something different. Gory, fast-paced fun. Wild punk energy and passion, with a great soundtrack.

I love how this movie came to be – read the backstory in The Ringer. They’ve racked up over a billion views on YouTube, and leveraged that to transition from social media to Hollywood. “We don’t want to be chasing the algorithm our whole lives.” [NYT]

Or have their work censored by a tech platform 👏

Another reason not to build your content home on rented land.

Talk to Me soundtrack

Nicky Blewitt is an author who runs a freelance collective of writers & publishers that supports new writers. They’ve launched a bursary scheme ​to support low-income authors. “We offer a free two-hour​​ self-publishing and book marketing consultation.” Details here. 

Sophie Rhone started her Digital PR business last year and has a podcast covering the creative industry – advertisers, marketers, and influencers. The first episode: The Art of Personal Branding, is now on Spotify. Send her some love and leave a review if you want to be a future guest.

Jennifer Phan, Co-founder & CEO at Passionfroot, is rocking Carousel posts on LinkedIn. I appreciate the time and research that goes into these and keep saving them to return to. Great resource. Here are 30 books EVERY creator should read to build strong content systems. 

Tons of inspo here for your TBR pile this summer. 

Recommendations for fiction welcome too – I need to lose myself in a good book.

Happy reading… 🍉 ⛱ 🌴

Nika 🙂

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  • Tags books, content business, content entrepreneurs, creator economy, creator economy expo, Joe Pulizzi, Lulu, newsletters, Self-publishing, The Tilt

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Newsletter

On nimble power and driving industry conversations.

  • Post author By niccitalbot
  • Post date July 23, 2023
  • No Comments on On nimble power and driving industry conversations.

“The only way to succeed in media is through niches.”

I just queued for 15 minutes and paid £11 for two scones. 

On autopilot and about to swipe my card when my brain registered the price. 

“Is that right? £11 for two scones to take away?” The waitress nodded her head. “I know. I’m sorry. It’s the cost of the ingredients. Everything’s gone up.” 

I’m in a multi-award-winning free-from tearoom in an old fishing lodge. Set in a hamlet with lakes, a caravan park, a working farm and walking trails – mostly locals and a few tourists. 

I looked around, and the place was packed – families, kids, dogs under tables, people on laptops.

Not one table left outside on the terrace. Going niche is big business. They’ve gone an inch wide and a mile deep – offering over 50 gluten-free cakes and bakes. Crazy combinations to surprise and delight the customer. 

I’m sure it wasn’t this expensive last time I came, but here we are. The cost-of-living crisis – one year on. 

Not seeing much evidence of that here, mind. The woman before me didn’t bat an eyelid at £23 for a small order. The folks behind me talked about the best places to eat and where to get good quality cake. 

People will pay for something niche and different. We associate higher prices with quality. 

We may have cut back on non-essential spending, but we’re not willing to compromise on other things – life’s simple pleasures. Our daily rituals and routines.

Time out, good food, company and conversation. A nice place to work.

I paid a premium to not be treated as an afterthought. I stopped eating gluten a few years ago for health reasons, and it’s a pain. Often not much choice on the menu – usually chocolate cake and boring biscuits.

Here I can have anything on the menu – and something different whenever I go. 

As they say, the riches are in the niches.

They are celebrating their 10th anniversary and clearly doing something right. Younger staff, shorter hours, a simpler menu, local deliveries, an online shop, and gift vouchers.

With a vision that people can get behind. Simple food created with love.

She handed them over. Big, fat, juicy scones, wrapped in paper bags with little pots of jam and rolled butter. 

They tasted great and didn’t crumble and fall apart, so she’s got the magic recipe right. All that trial and error has paid off. 

Got me thinking about niche media and what I can take away from this for my business.

Shorter hours, a simpler menu, pricing, a 5* experience, printed content, maybe.

Little things to surprise and delight. An inspiring view on the road. A thank you note to new clients. A cuppa and a chat.

There is no problem a cake and a cuppa can’t fix. 

Something so simple and universal is very powerful. 

Nika


Things to Read, Listen, and Watch 

Jacob Donnelly on the concept of nimble power, at FIPP World Media Congress 2023. “My belief is that going forward, the only way to succeed in media is through niches.” Morning Brew’s ethos: “Business doesn’t have to be boring.” Full report here – worth a read.

6 steps to kicking ass as a freelancer with Eman Ismail – brilliant advice on being intentional with your pricing, niching, life-work balance, and creating a 5* experience. Really enjoyed this one. 

Eve Arnold wrote a piece on how to never run out of things to write about. She’s just published her 900th article on Medium (updating its Partner Program incentives btw). Spotted this in Chenell Basilio’s fab NL.

PS, I’m watching ‘Deep Fake Love’ on Netflix. So bad it’s good!? Slightly alarmed that this is being classed as entertainment. But then it’s raising awareness, I guess.

When did life get so complicated? Bring back Cilla Black and her sympathetic shoulder pads. The wordplay, the innocence, the rituals, the flirting!


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  • Tags content entrepreneurs, FIPP World Media Congress, freelancing, newsletters, niche media, small business, writing

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Interviews Newsletter

Twitter and Threads 🧵

  • Post author By niccitalbot
  • Post date July 11, 2023
  • No Comments on Twitter and Threads 🧵

ALSO: An interview on marketing without social media | #121

Have you left Twitter for Threads yet? 😉 I played for a couple of hours on launch day.

Instagram has over 2bn monthly active users, which explains why Threads has exceeded 70m sign-ups in less than 48 hours.

Very smart move letting you port your existing audience over (stop, think. Do you actually want to!?). The worst thing about joining a new social network is starting from scratch with zero followers. 

Initial thoughts – it’s fast, clean, light, good UI. I like the simplicity – no fancy features yet, fun for now. Good vibes – it feels like Twitter c2008. It is the first-week flurry and novelty factor, but people seem to be enjoying it.  

I’m not loving the data grab. 

Threads collect the same data as Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp. From Znet: “Threads collects users’ physical addresses, health and fitness data, and sensitive info like biometric and ethnic data. Twitter does not collect these types of data.” 

It’s unavailable in the EU for now – privacy nightmare, but people are finding ways around it – a tip here from Jens Joseph Mannanal, co-founder of Passionfroot.

Future versions will integrate with ActivityPub, a decentralised social networking protocol, so you could potentially take your content elsewhere. The friendly fediverse as it’s called – interoperability is where the industry is heading. 

Early days, but I think it’s worth your time, especially if you used to enjoy Instagram.

All this talk about strategies to win on Threads already. Ugh. Chill, keep it light, and reconnect with long-lost friends! Mine will be tiny threads as I hate typing on my phone. There’s no desktop version yet. 

LinkedIn is still my main social platform, and I’m trying something new over there – themed weeks focusing on specific topics. So, this week it’s ‘newsletters’, and how to market yourself off-socials. Timely!

Meta has chosen a name that the Germans can’t pronounce very easily, which seems bizarre in their quest for world domination.

Expect to see even more puns on the platform. Stitch is a serious contender.

At least it’s not Threadz… 🙀

Listen to a special episode of the Hard Fork podcast with the head of Instagram, Adam Mosseri, on why the company now wants to take on Twitter.


Interview: Johanna Renoth, founder of Bye, Social Media!

“Say Bye to Elon and Mark!”

Johanna Renoth is the founder of Bye, Social Media!, an agency for marketing without social media. She helps small businesses, creators, and solopreneurs thrive away from the algorithms.

In this interview, she shares her insights into moving her marketing off all social media, how her PhD on social media inspired her to make the move, and what she’s learnt in the past year of pursuing this avenue. 

Food for thought here – enjoying your marketing is important.

I have mixed feelings about this. I agree with a lot of what Johanna says, but social media is a gift and we’re lucky to have it.

I don’t take it for granted – it is a great time to be a creator. We can share ideas and connect with others for free.

If I stop enjoying it, I’ll stop doing it.

READ JOHANNA’S STORY

Things to Read, Listen, Watch  

The Write to Roam | Ethan Brooks. An inside look at how 6 & 7-figure writers make money, and on their own terms (via the Copyblogger podcast). 

Chenell Basilio | Build In Public podcast on what newsletter creators are doing differently to grow to 50K subscribers. “Find the thing that feels like torture to others and a gift to you. And do that thing!”

Josh Spector studied the home pages of 10 smart creative entrepreneurs. They have a LOT in common. Here are six approaches you can borrow from them for your own site (via For The Interested).

– Just keep going 🙂

Nika


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  • Tags content marketing, digital marketing, entrepreneurship, newsletters, Social media, Threads, Twitter, writing

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Interviews Newsletter

Bold Types: Johanna Renoth, founder of Bye, Social Media! 

  • Post author By niccitalbot
  • Post date July 8, 2023
  • 1 Comment on Bold Types: Johanna Renoth, founder of Bye, Social Media! 
“Say Bye to Elon and Mark!”


Johanna Renoth is the founder of Bye, Social Media!, an agency for marketing without social media. She helps small businesses and solopreneurs thrive away from the algorithms.

In this interview, she shares her insights into moving her marketing off all social media, how her PhD on social media inspired her to make the move, and what she’s learnt in the past year of pursuing this avenue. 

Much food for thought here – enjoying what you do with your marketing and being self-sufficient is so important. 

I have mixed feelings about this. I agree with a lot of what Johanna says, but social media is a gift and we’re very lucky to have it. It is the best time in history to be a writer and creator.

So it’s about being intentional with it, using your time well and using platforms that you enjoy and get value from.

Tell us about yourself and why you started Bye, Social Media! 

I’ve always been an ideas person. I live in the realm of “Wouldn’t it be cool if…” Curiosity and enthusiasm led me to many career paths, including journalism, startups, VC, art, and photography.

Ultimately, I’m a creative at heart. The best occupation for me is at the intersection of business and creativity. 

The story of Bye, Social Media! starts with my frustration about social media. I hated promoting myself on socials and found no success in it. My curiosity led me down a path of trial and error in figuring out off-socials marketing for myself. 

When I realised others were also struggling with their disdain for socials, starting Bye, Social Media! was an organic next step. It’s been very fun so far. 

Who are you serving? Target audience and niche?

I currently serve solopreneurs, creatives, creators, and small businesses. I offer consulting on marketing and create off-socials marketing strategies. I also offer to write my clients’ newsletters and grow their audience. 

This niche is interesting because it’s not defined by an age bracket or industry. The common denominator is business owners’ frustration with social media marketing. They come to me because they want to get off the hamster wheel of creating content for socials and feel more free as entrepreneurs. 

For many, socials feel disingenuous, as if they had to fake a persona to make it on there. I recently received a message from an exasperated designer who said they only wanted to do their work, not pose as a content creator. I empathise with that very much. It’s challenging for social business owners or CEOs of small companies when much marketing hinges on them. 

Marketing always takes time and effort. It shouldn’t consume vast amounts of energy or emotion because you are on a platform that doesn’t work for you. 

You’ve done a PhD in Social Media – did this inspire you to move off socials? What have you learnt?

Yes, it 100% inspired me to move off socials. I never enjoyed using social media for work. I signed up because people at various stages of my career recommended I use socials. I got Twitter as a journalist, Instagram for photography, and LinkedIn as a founder. 

The PhD highlighted that not only did I not enjoy social media for work, but it was also at odds with my values. I didn’t want to build my business using the services of companies whose business models I found unacceptable. I don’t think you can find success that way. And if you did, it would always raise the question of the price tag of your values. 

Did you sell them for 1K followers? 10K? 500K in revenue? It’s a question I didn’t want to have to ask myself. 

Fundamentally, technology should serve humanity and not the other way around. This is especially relevant now, as we’re entering the age of AI.

With social media, that is not the case. Its purported benefits (connection, economic opportunity, self-expression) come at the expense of mental health, the robustness of democratic systems, widespread data collection & analysis, and manipulation through algorithmic feeds and nudges that undermine the autonomy of our minds. 

We’ve been using social media for almost two decades now. Its long-term effects are tangibly becoming visible. We’re atomised, disconnected, and distracted. How we’ve been using social media has incentivised people to turn themselves into or present as these singular, branded nodes. Yet, the fabric of humanity is interwoven and complex. 

How we perceive ourselves and our role in the world has changed since the advent of social media. This is especially noticeable in the conversation around personal branding. There’s a social expectation to build a personal brand on social media. The discourse surrounding it positions it as the best track to clout, fame, and success.

Yet, what happens when you distil the many faces of personhood into branding? 

Being human is complex and messy. Meeting other people requires nuance, understanding, and grace. Social media and branding culture flatten that. We’re incentivised to show bland versions of ourselves in a professional setting – and overshare even the most minute details of our lives in a personal context.

The algorithm magnifies both effects when it rewards certain sharing and posting behaviours with views and engagement – all in a battle for attention on the internet. 

I explore what happens when people as brands come together for communication in the public sphere, among other things. Doing so chips away at the open, messy, and sometimes challenging nature of public discourse that is so important for democracies. Personal brands don’t find compromise. They don’t need to. People do. Consider that representation is a central tenet of democratic systems. 

What happens when social media shifts the cultural paradigm to presentation, for example, an idealised version of the self on social media? 

Meta has almost 4bn monthly users. It’s important that we reflect on whether we feel comfortable with a company controlling communication and information streams for half of humanity with their algorithms and in their data centres. The companies who own these algorithms have tremendous amounts of power. The scale of their influence is mind-blowing. This is neither desirable nor healthy for democracies. 

Much marketing in the creator/online business world focuses on social media. There’s a gap in information and inspiration for alternative systems. 

What channels and strategies do you suggest for people who are fed up with socials? How can we do things differently?

I’m very frustrated by the groupthink in marketing and entrepreneurship. 

I understand there are people who enjoy making content for social media. The mono-focus on socials helps nobody, though. This is also a function of the algorithms. We see more of the same type of advice about social media marketing on social media. It pays off to produce more of the same kind of content. 

LinkedIn, for example, recently changed its algorithm. It now prioritises posts that share knowledge and advice – whatever that means. You can expect a deluge of repetitive content in your feed now. Yay. How boring is that? As unengaging as it is to consume that kind of content – it’s also not fun to make it.

What are you even doing if you’re not having fun with your business, at least occasionally? 

I’m even more frustrated by the standard advice around social media marketing: Get over it and just do it. It implies that if you don’t like to perform this type of marketing, you’re the problem and need to work on your attitude.

I wish business owners would spend less time figuring out how to game the algorithm and more time on how they can serve and delight their target audience with their marketing. 

From a strategic point of view, marketing without social media requires a mindset shift from ‘me’ to ‘we’. Business is a collaborative endeavour. We buy and sell from people; we’re connected to others through our products and services.

Marketing without social media reverts to the communal and social aspects of business. At its core, off-social marketing is an investment in people rather than algorithms and platforms. 

Here are four things to consider if you want to leave or cut back on your social media.

Find your strengths and build your marketing around them. That’s the prerequisite. Social media marketing has stuffed everyone into the same box. If the algorithm wants videos, videos you must make. 

Any sustainable marketing strategy for solopreneurs and small business owners leverages a person’s strengths and likes. If you like to write, write. If you enjoy speaking, explore podcasts. If you cringe at the thought of networking events, give yourself permission to stay at home. 

Please do yourself a favour and stop forcing something that’s not yours because that’s the trend or sounds smart. That’s a recipe for burnout and failure. Nobody connects to marketing that’s borne from misery. We’ve all seen a deluge of mediocre content that somebody made because they felt they had to. 

Joy, fun, authenticity, and candour are much more engaging and refreshing. Good marketing comes from the heart, not the head. 

Secondly, be creative with your marketing channels. If you hate writing, why not send a video newsletter? If you have no time to do an original podcast, why not record your newsletter to make the experience more personal and intimate?

Thirdly, explore collaborations. Offer cross-promos on your blog or newsletter, be a guest on other podcasts, and connect with people who are synergistic with you. Weave a net of people around you and support each other. 

And lastly, social media is fleeting with constant algorithm changes. If your business is going through an earthquake because the algorithm sneezes, you must make changes. Whether you want to be off socials entirely or partially, guide people towards a channel you own. This could be your website or a newsletter.

I like to imagine a marketing strategy like an octopus. Where does all activity point to? Whether you collaborate, have a podcast, network, or speak at a conference – it should direct people to what you define as your octopus’ head. 

What have you learned over the past year of your business? You ran a solo podcast for two seasons.

I went through a steep learning curve over the past year or so of my business. I learned two things in that period: that business is an inner game and to have a bias towards action. 

I was a freelancer for a long time before I started brands and businesses. As soon as I began to sell my own ideas, services & products, a lot of conflicting beliefs, protective inner parts, and resistance revealed themselves.

I felt like I was taking one step forward and two steps back for a long time. I needed to work through and release much of that before I began seeing traction in my work. 

The inner aspects of doing business deserve attention.

Bias towards action doesn’t mean hustling or forcing things. It means cultivating a willingness to start imperfectly. I still question my instincts and have perfectionist tendencies. Yet, I know now that I’ll be the most content with myself when I act on my ideas.

The solo podcast is a great example of that. I didn’t have perfect equipment and decided to record it, anyways. It feels imperfect, and I want to cringe at my insights from a year ago; I’ve learned so much. I’m still glad I recorded it with my phone. 

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve gotten on creativity and entrepreneurship?

Two things helped me find my own path in business: Human Design, a holistic tool, and the book The Slight Edge. The former helped me meet myself at my essence and free myself from thinking I had to do things in a certain way, THE WAY™. The latter is a very grounded approach to getting things done calmly and collectedly. 

If I may share two words of advice: Speed and growth have their own rhythms. The entrepreneurship and creator space places a great emphasis on speed and growth. Instead of chasing six figures in six months, ensure that what you’re doing is enjoyable in the first place. Your goals will unfold more easily from that sentiment than from forcing growth because that’s the cool thing to do. 

The other thing is to be clear on whether you’re more creative or an entrepreneur. It helps to know which side of the continuum you’re on. Some people are more entrepreneurial with a glaze of creativity; others are the other way around. When I understood that I’m more of a creative than the entrepreneur I thought I had to pose as things shifted immediately. It was such a relief! 

It’s very cool to be an entrepreneur right now. You’re still cool and successful if you don’t chase that title. You do you! 

Any recommended tools and resources?

The person worth knowing is you. I’m aware this sounds very cheesy. Outside advice and input can, of course, be a catalyst for growth and success. If you don’t know yourself, your work as a creative entrepreneur will stall. 

Business gurus on the internet can make it sound like they have the perfect formula to solve your problems. Those external inputs are only band-aids until you embark on the quest to know yourself and your values. 

You may read this interview and think it’s the best idea to leave social media for your marketing. Until you ask yourself why you want to go and how you would like things to be, there’s only so much my work and I can do for you. 

Other people’s newsletters, podcasts, and books can be excellent sources of inspiration and intrigue. If you hope they will deliver that one thing that will fix your life or business, examine that desire for input first. 

Also: input can feel like you’re doing something. But knowledge is only as great as it gets you to do what you want. The magic is in doing, even if it’s messy and imperfect.

There is no one magic book you need to read and no guru to follow. There are so many paths that can lead you towards your goals. In the bigger picture, it doesn’t matter which you choose. 

What does ‘success’ mean to you? And what will change when you get there?

The momentum I’ve built around Bye, Social Media! feels very exciting. It’s like I’ve hoisted a pirate flag in the land of marketing and business. Doing so feels deliciously mischievous. 

Lately, I’ve also been thinking about how fun it would be to grow this business into an agency – the only one of its kind in the world.

I’d love to see a big company or start-up lean into off-social marketing as a bold, visionary, and counter-cultural move. I’d be thrilled to help them through it – especially with a team that shares the light-hearted, disruptive spirit behind Bye, Social Media! 

Success to me is feeling spaciousness personally, emotionally and financially. I used to think I wanted to work only a few hours a week, Tim Ferris style. Then I realised that wanting your work hours to be gone fast is like wishing away time in your life.

Recently, I’ve become aware that I crave a sense of spaciousness in my days and a work schedule that accommodates my fluctuating energy levels. 

I like to feel that I’m playing, exploring, learning, and connecting daily and have ample time for rest and flow. I want to feel vibrant and inspired as much as possible in my days. I’m happy when what I do has an impact. 

Also, I’m determined to have a fantastic time with whatever I do.

All that to me is success, and I can have that at any moment, not only when I get there. 

What question do you wish I’d asked you?

What my favourite dish is, and why it will always be Schnitzel. Just kidding! Not.  

Visit byesocialmedia.com to learn more about Johanna’s work. You can sign up for her newsletter here. 

Get 20% off 1:1 marketing consultations with the code NIKA20.

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  • Tags content marketing, newsletters, Social media, social media marketing

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Newsletter

ChatGPT and the new wave of Content Shock 🌊

  • Post author By niccitalbot
  • Post date June 25, 2023
  • No Comments on ChatGPT and the new wave of Content Shock 🌊

How to beat ChatGPT

Great article this week by Mark Schaefer on ‘How to beat ChatGPT and the new wave of Content Shock’. Thanks to Mark @YATM for sending it on – it is a motivating rallying call for summer 2023. Read it here.

We’re all becoming 80% replaceable with AI.

“If you’re a creator just starting out today, the amount of content in the ChatGPT Era must seem like a major hurdle to success. It is. And there is only one solution: Focus on the 20% ChatGPT can’t touch.”

It’s an update on his original article (2014) on why covering the world with content isn’t a long-term sustainable strategy for businesses. “The global warming of content marketing is in view.”

Fast forward a few years, and we’ve had panic publishing with Covid-19 – businesses whacking up website content, over-communicating via email, and digital event overload to try and stay connected.

Gerry McGovern talks about the ‘Invisible Crisis’ of managing and storing all this data. It’s mindblowing that 99% of data has been produced in the last ten years. The Cloud is on the ground, and digital is still physical… yet no one is talking about this.

Now, with the introduction of ChatGPT and AI, the cost of creating content has been reduced to almost nothing. A tsunami of new content is rising. And the quality of the output will only get better and better.

Welcome to the new wave of Content Shock.

Is there hope? Or should we give up now and go off-grid? What can creators do to survive and thrive in the AI Era?

Focus on the 20% that matters, he says. The personal brand.  

The only thing that can save us in a world of commoditised content – writing, editing, and consulting.  

It all boils down to your premise, as Jay Acunzo describes it. Your why and mission. Justin Welsh’s is to build an army of one-person businesses, and he’s getting there. Inspiring folks every day on LinkedIn.

What problem are you solving for your clients and customers? Worth thinking about in a world of generalised expertise.

Mark is going to share his thoughts on what we can do in a Content Shock and ChatGPT Special in the YATM Club on Tuesday, 11 July, at 7pm BST. A chance to ask questions and go deeper on “the most important article of 2023.” Sign up here.


Shift Hot 5 🔥

Lots of free stuff on personal branding on Mark’s site and his bestselling book KNOWN – a path to personal business success in the digital age.

Dave Harland knows the power of humour. His Tweets always make me chuckle – a daily reminder to laugh more and not take life too seriously. Latest creation: #ConfuseTheScammers

The Brand Called You. Tom Peters on what it takes to be CEO of Me Inc (Fast Company, published in 1997!)

How to build an effective (and memorable) personal brand and FAQs (The Portfolio Collective) 

Johanna Renoth on bullshit in online content (Bye, Social Media!) 

Next issue: An interview with Johanna Renoth on finding the joy in marketing and growing a thriving business with ease – socials optional.

I like the idea of giving yourself a total blackout on content consumption for a week – emails, podcasts, socials. Not sure I have the discipline – love reading, love podcasts. Strap me to a massage table and maybe.

Summer Retreat! Now there’s an idea. See what I come up with when bored out of my brain.

Stay cool. Enjoy Glasto! 👯‍♀️

Nika


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  • Tags AI, ChatGPT, content marketing, Content Shock, Personal branding

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