“…We are ‘persuaded to spend money we don’t have on things we don’t need to make impressions that won’t last on people we don’t care about.’” This is Kate Raworth quoting Economist Tim Jackson in her book Doughnut Economics while discussing the power of aspiration in influencing human behaviour. Reading this, I realized that seeing (or at least feeling) this is what kept me from marketing for so long. (And what keeps me from engaging in much of its mainstream still.) I thought of it only as a way of doing the above. Until I encountered Joanna Wiebe’s non-sleazy copywriting and “Voice of Customer” thinking. And then immersed myself in Seth Godin’s “Permission Marketing” ethos. Together, these made me see there is also a light side to marketing (as there are two sides to everything). Then I understood that good, useful, vital ideas, products, and services will die on the vine if they aren’t properly conveyed and shared with the people who most need and care about them. There is a way of marketing that can show us how we can use our resources (time, money, effort, connections) on things we do need to have lasting effects on our lives, communities, families, and selves while supporting, inspiring, and broadening the circle of people we care about most. And that's work worth doing. Lightly, P.S. People (including me!) are enjoying and finding value in my recently launched Hero-Section Helper micro-service, where I rewrite your hero section—the part of your homepage people see before they scroll—and get it back to you in 2 business days for $500 USD. If you want to get in on the fun—with a light-side-only marketing mindset—click here to book yours. |
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One of the things missing from much of the “get AI to do everything for you” messaging is this fact: writing isn’t just a product, it’s a process. Yes, it’s nice to have “content.” But thinking that having it is the only outcome that matters is shallow and short-sighted. One of the things that has astounded me since I started writing daily(ish) emails back in November 2022 is how much it has changed me. It has vastly improved my ability to think—and to put those thoughts into clear, concise...
If you want to achieve more, do less. That is to say, build time into your day, your week, your year for quiet. In our house, following lunch, there is a period of mandated quiet time. It gives everyone a chance to do something they’d otherwise not do: nothing. It could be napping, reading, working on art, or even listening to something specific on headphones—as long as it’s quiet and done alone. For Kayte and I, it’s almost always napping, lol. During that time, we can recharge. We can...
You probably already know this. Perhaps your internal response to this will be, “Obviously.” But it sort of hit me like a tonne of bricks when I heard my internet friend and globe-trotting change-strategist Cassandra Mok say on the Unstoppable Mindset podcast today: “Innovation doesn’t have to mean high-tech.” (A mild paraphrase from the ~28-minute mark.) In that moment, I realized how thoroughly I’ve linked the two concepts (innovation and technology) in my mind. This came as a wake-up call....