Do You Struggle with Your Passion to Succeed?

One of the hardest things in the world is to get paid very well for something you absolutely love to do. Wouldn’t you agree?

The quest for success begins with passion. Somewhere along the way we realize there’s a system we need to follow to bring that passion to market.

Getting the passion and the system to run smoothly together is where many people fail. They either abandon their passion and embrace the system (and become a drone), or they cling to their passion so much that the system gets rejected (think starving artist or angry revolutionary). [Read more...]

Super REVIEW: Ignore Everybody And 39 Other Keys to Creativity

Ignore Everybody reviewIgnore Everybody Book Review

Well the title certainly got my attention, and it’s not bad advice—plus it was endorsed by Seth Godin—so I gave in and bought it.

Ignore Everybody And 39 Other Keys to Creativity is written by Hugh Macleod, a no-nonsense New Yorker whose snarky cartoons drawn on the backs of business cards have gotten quite a bit of attention these days. His “keys to creativity” are snippets of wisdom distilled from his experience as a diligent, pragmatic creative person.

I’ve lately kept a distance from books and blogs that gush how-to advice, but Ignore Everybody is an exception. [Read more...]

Do You Seek Influence or Income?

influence

Sonia Simone at Copyblogger describes two types of people on the web: thought leaders and marketers. Thought leaders (she calls them the “Cool Kids”) constantly push the boundaries of conversation, attention and influence, while the Internet Marketers chase the cash through quick, aggressive, black hat tactics.

Then she poses the question: which tribe is lame and which one is smart?

Aaron Wall similarly examines the dynamics between salesmanship and competent expertise. He claims people who desire to be experts have trouble being effective sales people:

The truth rarely ends up in marketing copy, so we discount much of what we read, assuming some of it to be false or over-stated. A person that is mostly driven by being an expert will likely have sales copy that sounds wishy-washy, especially when compared against a person who does nothing but write sales copy (or spin public relations) for a living.

I could not agree with him more. [Read more...]