In my last post, I used the following quote that often causes some debate among colleagues and friends alike.
“I believe that ANY system can be successful, but it just is a matter of whether you want to be on a track to immediate results or a slow trek up a big mountain. I prefer speed – I talk fast, I think fast and I move fast.”
I’ve seen this type of thing play out hundreds of times in both professional and personal settings. For example, in working with some of my internet marketing clients, I’ve found that they had “accidentally” developed follower groups of 500 or more people that were regularly reading their content, responding to them on social sites or other sources, or otherwise paying attention to them without them even knowing that it was happening. In other cases, I’ve watched people spend hundreds of thousands of dollars looking for solutions to an issue and then discovering that a $100 coaching session or piece of software solves the problem in a very short period of time.
This is actually a two-fold thought process:
In essence, what ends up happening is that people feel they are unsuccessful if they are not receiving instant gratification. In addition, they may have actually reached benchmarks that make sense for their ongoing development, but they don’t realize that it’s happening. These two things are the number one factors I look for when I hear that “your marketing isn’t working” or “your website is performing poorly.” How do you DEFINE poor? What are your specific indicators for success?
In the end, every project you undertake should not be done with consideration for how fast you’re able to complete it and move on to the next one. Some of the most fulfilling things I’ve done in my life were downright lethargic in retrospect. That doesn’t mean that I learned any less from the slow ones, in fact I often learned more. As with all things, there must be a balance of the slow and methodical with the fast and furious.
Being one of the “faster” personality types, as quoted above, has yanked me down into this trap many times. If I feel that I’m not moving on a project quickly enough, I often start to consider abandoning the initiative. I begin looking for tweaks or efficiency measures that might give me back some time that I really needed to spend LEARNING and EXPERIENCING.
It’s funny how so many professionals will quote the value of experience while attempting to sap all of the experience they can out of the day in favor of a false sense of efficiency.
I figured there was no better time to kick all of this off than the present. However, this post is far more about where we will end up in the future.
For those of you who don’t know me, my name is Ken Course. I’m a wild combination of many things, ranging from strange humor to marketing savvy to mad scientist. All of those things have existed in the wild in some form or another, across a variety of different websites. It is with this blog that I finally bring it all together under one banner.
So, where have I been? Let’s take a quick stroll down memory lane:
The Silence Noise is my current music project. It has existed in various forms with various members since 2001, but has been quiet for the past year.
Fivecast is a netcast/podcast that celebrates randomness. The crew gets together every Saturday at 6 PM Eastern/3 PM Pacific to perform, entertain, or confuse. The order is up to you.
The Tahoe Network was an initiative to create an entertainment resource for the Tahoe/Carson area.
Thinking by Numbers was my previous blog featuring a variety of opinions, guest writers (such as the lovely Sara Marie Parks), and perspectives. The format is likely the “godfather” of what this will become.
On Course Multimedia is my content development and production company. It is the “parent” of all of these efforts.
So, now you’ve got a small taste of my little fragmentation problem. My goal is to bring it all together and perhaps even add some organization to the chaos. What a concept!
Welcome to my brain! Try not to step on anything in here, because it’s a tad delicate!