Do You Value Your Time?
At the Guardians/Mariners Spring Training Game

Do You Value Your Time?

But First...Be My Podcast Guest in Cleveland!

In the history of my podcast This Old Marketing (with Robert Rose), we’ve had four guests in 11 years. In May, we are adding our fifth.

At the welcome reception for Content Entrepreneur Expo (CEX) 2024 in Cleveland (May 5th to 7th), This Old Marketing will be live…with a special guest. If you’d like to be our special guest on this exclusive live show, just register and use discount code TOM100 (which also saves you $100). We’ll be selecting the winner from those people who use the TOM100 code. I hope you can make it and see you soon.


To Value Time (5 Questions)

My youngest Adam (now 20) and I visited my best friend from high school while in Arizona for spring training (see the image above from the Guardians/Mariners game). The conversation revolved around time.

This was Adam’s first flight using TSA pre-check and we were talking about the time we saved.

My friend is an accountant. He lives and breathes in 15-minute increments. He told story after story about how he values time over almost everything else. Time, to him, is the one thing we cannot make more of. I cherish the fact that we had this conversation in front of my kid.

Simply put, most people don’t value their time.

I’ve seen people close to me take three flights and save $200 to go somewhere but lose 10 hours in the process.

Most people I know don’t have a plan for each day, or for the upcoming week.

I know people who go into meetings without any idea of what they want out of it.

At the airport yesterday, I saw countless people scrolling through social media, giving their quality time to strangers and companies.

Sometimes this is understandable. When my wife and I just launched the business in 2007, I took the cheapest flight I could find to LaGuardia Airport in NYC, and then a SuperShuttle downtown (fyi, I will never take SuperShuttle again). Both these decisions cost me three, maybe four hours.

We were strapped for cash, and I didn’t believe we could spend any more money than we already were. So, I get it…sometimes you can’t make the best choice to save your valuable time. But looking back, I don’t think I valued my time enough. I would make different choices today.

I’d like to challenge you to think differently about time.

The first question I’d ask you is, how valuable is your time? How much is an hour worth to you? If it’s a relatively small amount, then none of this matters.

Last year I lost a loved one. Right before he passed, I had a chance to have some important conversations with him. Many of those conversations revolved around time. More time to be with his kids. More time devoted to his passions. Regret for how he spent his time during his life.

We always think we have all the time in the world…until we don’t.

Some things to think about as you move forward:

1. Have you set goals for things you’d like to accomplish? Are they measurable? Is there a timetable?

2. Do you have a plan for tomorrow? Or the next day?

3. When you go into meetings, do you jot down what you’d like to accomplish in that meeting?

4. Are you on time for your meetings with others? Do you respect the time of others?

5. How much time do you spend on social media per day (if you don’t know, your phone can tell you)? Can you reallocate that time toward your goals, dreams, and desires?

There’s so much more, but you get the gist.

And you can start small. Do one or two things that will save you 30 minutes a day. Great job! Now, what can you accomplish in that new-found 30 minutes that will help change the world?


David Bowie on Getting Uncomfortable

Two weeks ago I spoke at Social Media Marketing World for the 7th time. My presentation was on the seven steps to content marketing success, but I spent most of my time talking about the content tilt . As you already know, the content tilt is that area of differentiation, or hook, where you can break through all the content clutter out there and build an audience.

Most creators and marketers are mired in sameness. What most are creating is so similar to what’s already out there that it’s hard to break through.

So, then I watched this short video from David Bowie on creating art. Here’s what he said that I believe is very relevant to finding your tilt.

David says, “If you [the artist] feel safe in the area you are working in, you’re not working in the right area. Always go a little further into the water than you feel you’re capable of being in. Go a little bit out of your depth. And when you don’t feel that your feet are quite touching the bottom, you’re just about in the right place to do something exciting.”

Think about your own writing, videos, podcasts…whatever it might be. When I think back on when I started blogging on content marketing back in 2007, I remember sweating and feeling a little sick inside right before I pushed the publish button on some of those early posts. In those days, I was really pushing the establishment custom publishing industry. I was telling people they were wrong. I was setting new terminology. I was totally audacious, and it scared the crap out of me.

But I believed I was right, and people needed to hear these things. So, what I was creating was different than everything out there. And it was not safe. And it worked. That blog today has over 250,000 email subscribers to it and the business continues to flourish.

My best and worst job is talking to content entrepreneurs and having to tell them that if they continue creating content around their current area, the way they are doing it, no consistency or promotion is going to help them build a loyal audience.

I saw someone at the conference who was really struggling with their career. For the past five years…five years…they continued to talk about the same area of marketing. No flair. No differentiation. Kind of like blocking and tackling. Can’t get new speaking gigs. Consulting is struggling. I felt horrible for them. But you could see it coming.

So be honest with yourself. Challenge yourself. Get uncomfortable with your content. It’s the best thing you can do for your content business.

Speaking of content, if you would like me to talk about something specific for next issue or ask me a question, shoot me a DM on LinkedIn.


Quick Hits


Thanks again for all your support!

Mark Wiebusch, Business Growth Strategist, Disruptor

Optimizing marketing investments to drive brand awareness, preference, leadership position, market insight, new business opportunities and conversions. Proven B2B expertise to help identify, win and keep customers.

3 个月

Be present. Stay present. It's a choice. Makes time meaningful and magical.

回复
Phillip Lanos

Strategic Business Connector | Building Bridges Between Businesses for Sustainable Growth | Helping $1M+ Companies Unlock New Opportunities and Save Time

4 个月

I'm just now really getting into controlling my time and intentionally connecting with people instead of accepting what my social feeds give me. I can feel my brain chemistry changing. As for the squemish-ness before posting, Thankfully I've never felt that uneasiness but my challenge is consistently posting at all. :) Less that I don't know what to post and more just troubled by how much work it can take to be done effectively lol How do you approach that?

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Anthony Gaenzle

Helping Brands Find the Spark Between Creativity and Strategy | Author | Marketing and Content Strategy | Executive Coach | Looking to Grow Your Business or Boost Your Personal Brand? ?? Let's Talk!

8 个月

I love that. Get uncomfortable with your content creation. Take risks. Get outside your box. When you play it too safe, your content suffers (and the results along with it).

?? Jeff Large

Helping industry experts tell their stories. Owner & Founder of Come Alive. Podcasting since the iPod Classic.

8 个月

"We always think we have all the time in the world…until we don’t." That's a sobering reminder. A friend of mind got diagnosed with a rare form of cancer a couple of years ago. He's several years younger than me, was in seemingly great health, and has 5 kids under 12. Watching his journey has been my closest reminder to be grateful for the time we have and use it well. Thanks for the share Joe.

Chris Inman

Helping businesses create inbound leads through Podcasting and YouTube

8 个月

A client of mine did a video about opportunity costs and it completely changed my views on my time. Many say time is the only thing you can't buy more of but that isn't true. You can always buy other's time. AI is also helping with freeing up time.

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