We don’t plan to catch a flu-bug, but we can plan to get the flu shot.
There’s no immediate reward to getting the flu shot, of course, but hopefully months later we make it to spring in good health.
I’ve been sick since Friday, and of course I’m looking for the shortcuts to feeling better. Friends have all sorts of recommendations, like liquids and rest. I’ve discovered there are 20 variations of NyQuil at my local CVS.
The best shortcut would have been scheduling that flu shot a few months back, right? Doing the small bit of work that would have a possible impact on the future, right?
In our modern work, that could mean so many things:
Replying to comments
Answering emails
Reaching out to collaborate
Pitching ourselves on the podcasts and YouTube channels that make sense.
Having that conversation with someone in front of the venue after a show on a Tuesday night
A chance encounter at a dinner part
Meeting someone on a Zoom call unrelated to the work you’re doing
Be less concerned with metrics, and focus on conversations.
It’s less about followers, and more about community, as Kato McNickle explained it so well on last week’s Escape Pod Zoom call:
“What I'm hearing though is a conflation of audience, followers versus community, because followers aren't about engagement. Followers are not comments beyond “oh dazzling,” “oh love it or hate it,” right? That's that follower mentality. But think about whether which format you're in; are you trying to stoke community? Because I don't know that social media, when you're talking about engagement, you're talking about community, not really followers. Followers don't owe you anything.”
Modern marketing is walking into CVS and picking the fancy Honey flavored NyQuil, instead of doing the quiet work of just getting the flu shot months ago.
So, what’s the quiet work you could be doing right now?
Maybe it’s not even called “marketing,” but it’s a return to the truest form of your work and practice that makes it easier for the work to speak for itself, which in turn frees you to get closer to the heart of who you are, which is probably the best marketing work any of us can hope for.
//SETH
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Sorry to hear about the flu and hope you feel better soon! Appreciate you bringing some great advice despite feeling a little under the weather
Great read! Especially the closing note "which in turn frees you to get closer to the heart of who you are, which is probably the best marketing work any of us can hope for."