If I started with “I have a confession to make…”, that would be cliché, so I have TWO confessions to make:
Confession #1:
This post has nothing to do with SEO. It’s about creative work. I guess it applies to content marketing. Ok, maybe it’s a little bit about SEO. If you’d rather eat a sandwich, I understand.
Confession #2:
I am a serial, high-functioning under-achiever. In other words, at the risk of sounding like an ass, my half-assed efforts usually return 7/8-assed results. I learned too early to game those ass-fractions – during final exams in college, for example, I’d calculate exactly what I needed to get an A in the class. If it was only going to take a 67% on the exam, I’d study for 30 minutes and then play Wing Commander for six hours.
1/2 Ass + 1/2 Ass = 1 Ass (Me)
Fast-forward to my 40s, and I still sometimes slip into habitual half-assery. As a marketer, I’m especially guilty of one bad habit – I save my best material for the future. When I have a really “great” idea, I add it to a list to write later, presumably because only content marketing will save us from the coming Zombie Apocalypse. Instead of wasting my best ideas, I pull something from the B list and try to get it to 88% assedness.
Why We Cheat Ourselves
So, why would I choose a method where I’m purposely ignoring my best ideas and ultimately doing sub-optimum work? I’ve asked myself this question a lot, and now that, on my good days, I’m finally breaking the habit, I think I’ve found a couple of answers:
(1) Perfectionism
When it comes to any creative block, you can bet the P-word is going to come into play. Obviously, my “best” ideas need to result in my best work, so enter the self-doubt. I could fight through it and put in twice the effort, or I could just procrastinate (the other P-word). Unfortunately, fear of imperfection doesn’t just rob you of your best ideas – it robs you of your passion in the here and now. If I’m always taking the idea I’m most excited about today and putting it on a list for later, I’ve already lost half the power of that idea. When I go to revisit it down the road, the spark is already gone.
I think that moment of passion is a lot of what makes any piece of content worth creating. I won’t claim that this post is the best thing I’ll ever write (please feel free not to wholeheartedly agree with me in the comments), but for whatever reason this particular fire was burning today. If I left it for next month, I’d be scratching out this sentence with the leftover coals.
I’m also not saying that you should never plan your writing or content ideas in advance, or that it’s bad to make a list. It’s always nice to have a back-up plan. Just don’t keep pushing today’s best ideas to the bottom of the list. Your “B” ideas can go on Plan B. Hit the A-list today.
(2) Future Glory
I suppose this is the outgoing half-sister of perfectionism – I’m waiting until my skills are good enough to be worthy of my best ideas. Only then, will the world recognize me in all my glory and unanimously declare me Supreme Commander of Taco Night (it’s a job – shut up).
Here’s the problem – only your most ambitious ideas push you hard enough to learn. If you keep churning out half-assed work, you’ll never close the gap between your capabilities and the idealized ideas in your head. If you’ve never seen radio producer/personality Ira Glass’s take on the “gap”, then do yourself a favor and watch it now…
This quote (in part 3) sums the series up, but doesn’t begin to do it justice:
All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste. But there is this gap. For the first couple years you make stuff, it’s just not that good. It’s trying to be good, it has potential, but it’s not. But your taste, the thing that got you into the game, is still killer. And your taste is why your work disappoints you. A lot of people never get past this phase, they quit. Most people I know who do interesting, creative work went through years of this. We know our work doesn’t have this special thing that we want it to have. We all go through this. And if you are just starting out or you are still in this phase, you gotta know its normal and the most important thing you can do is do a lot of work. Put yourself on a deadline so that every week you will finish one story. It is only by going through a volume of work that you will close that gap, and your work will be as good as your ambitions.
I’ll go one step further – it’s not enough just to do a lot of work. You have to take a shot at your best ideas; at doing your most important work even when you don’t feel ready. That’s how you grow and, eventually, become worthy of those ideas.
(3) Fear of Brain-drain
Finally, there’s the fear that I think all writers (fiction, non-fiction, ad copy, part-time, whatever) have – that we’ll just run out of ideas. If I use up my best ideas today, all I’ll be left with is junk, so I’d better save them up. The irony is that, the more I write, the more good ideas I generate. If I write more often, I find it easier to come up with things to write about. I can’t convince you of that until you’ve seen it for yourself – all I can tell you is this: trust yourself. Your creativity is a renewable resource, if you give it a chance.
How We Cheat Our Clients
I hate to say it, but this tendency to push our best ideas back to the future can also turn into a form of professional selfishness. My best ideas should benefit me, right? Why should my clients get them? I’ll make the same argument I did in (3) – you won’t run out of ideas, at least not in the long-term. If one of your favorites is a good fit for a client, let them have it. It’ll make you both look good, and you’ll grow as a professional. If you’re stuck on being selfish, then let me tell you from experience – showcasing your best work for a client will also make you a lot more money down the road. You cheat them, you just cheat yourself again.
How Do We Stop Cheating?
There was a great bit of history going around this week – a letter from F. Scott Fitzgerald to a family friend and aspiring writer. It was very honest criticism, but also a path to creative success. He cuts right to the chase with this advice:
I'm afraid the price for doing professional work is a good deal higher than you are prepared to pay at present. You've got to sell your heart, your strongest reactions, not the little minor things that only touch you lightly, the little experiences that you might tell at dinner. This is especially true when you begin to write, when you have not yet developed the tricks of interesting people on paper, when you have none of the technique which it takes time to learn. When, in short, you have only your emotions to sell.
So, pay the price, and put your whole ass into it. The only way to do your best work is to write what demands to be written, even if you aren’t ready. You can’t wait until you’ve got the skills, because no one will give you the chance to get there unless you make them care today – and to make them care, you have to care. So, stop shuffling your best work to the bottom of the to-do list – get out there and wreck it.
So this post itself: was it on the A-list, or are you keeping something back that you should have published?
;)
In all seriousness, "best" can get pretty subjective. In this case, it was more about urgency. For some reason, this thought got stuck into my head and started to write itself - if I put it aside for a month, it would lose something. So, I put down the technical post I was working on and gave the idea a chance.
It's a tricky balance, because you don't want to just live on impulse - some ideas sound great in theory but, once you dive in, turn out to be thin. I don't want people to think that they have to jump on every idea instantly. I just don't want them to put aside the ideas that scare them.
A lot of my best ideas have no urgency attached whatsoever. When I finally get to them, they are still great ideas but I find my enthusiasm has, as you say, lost its spark. Thanks for your insight. I think from now on I will jump in when the idea is fresh.
Procrastination is our worst sickness as marketers... even though somebody may think - wrongly - at it as "achieving maximum results with minimum effort.
Said that, when I was young I was spending 6 hours onto the Star Wars X-Wing videogame... then it was Tie-Fighter, the first Civilization and Sim City...
thumbs up for X-Wing and Tie Fighter :)
Yeah, lost many hours to that one myself.
Same here. I loved those tie fighters!
I can relate to so much of this. The college anecdote hits me in the core (except with newer video games :p). I am in the beginning of my content marketing journey and I think an inspiring post like this is just what people in my position need. Don't be afraid to not meet your standards, just understand that they are very high and keep working toward them.
The F Scott Fitzgerald and Ira Glass quotes were great inspiration. Thanks again for sharing your insights, they are appreciated
I can relate to this so much. All my great ideas are just sitting there, because I'm afraid of running out of them. So I tend to stagger them, alternating them with mediocre ones. I'm glad I'm not the only one, because I kind of thought I was!
My friend, this was absolutely brilliant, and not just because you referenced F. Scott Fitzgerald, which deserves two thumbs right there!
This post was spot on, especially with #1 perfectionism. Ironically, I think we so often blame it on procrastination, but that's merely the effect, not the cause, or the causes which you illustrated here.
And ironically, the secret that those who continue and don't give up will find out, is that we rarely reach the point of "satisfaction." With each accomplishment, we get closer to that bar, but we also raise it just a little bit higher. So embrace the growth and the journey, for the destination will always elude...and when it doesn't, it's actually probably time to walk away.
I've probably shared this before, but...
I'd comment more, but I fear it won't be good enough ;)
That's been a big lesson for me, over time, in this industry. The people who "have it all together" are usually perpetually dissatisfied and often incredibly self-critical. We all want to think that we'll reach some threshold where life is easy and everything comes naturally, but it just doesn't work that way. As I get older, that actually makes me feel better - it's nice to know that everyone struggles with this stuff and there's always something to improve.
First of all, thanks to this blog post, I now have the Vanessa Williams song "Save The Best for Last" in my head: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5EdmHSTwmWY
Secondly, I'm about to throw some more philosophy into here (what did you expect) but this is something I constantly talk with my team about. Bernard Lonergan claimed there were 4 bias humans have against understanding things: Individual (ego-centric; how can I benefit? meaning you may not do the work if it won't clearly benefit you), Group (your "isms" racism, sexism, etc), Dramatic (women do this --we image things one way and get really annoyed when how we envisioned it isn't how it's working out. Every bridezilla does this or a girl on a first date when the expectations clearly are WAY too high), the last one: General.
General bias is easy --we half-ass things we don't want to do. Procrastinate the thing we are the least passionate about. Remember your school days--your least favorite subject. You probably were a speed demon when it came to homework or not really caring if it got done. Our general bias limits us from growing. Because we aren't interested in a topic, we don't want to learn more. SEO has this problem. There are areas all of us aren't passionate about --but if we let our general bias get in the way and half-ass the projects associated with it, we are going to limit our SEO for our site and client.
~Professor St. Martin :o)
Haha - that song actually did get stuck in my head while writing this. I almost put up a giant picture of Vanessa Williams, but then that seemed creepy.
This is good stuff Dr. Pete. I have several articles that are probably great but are 90% done because I failed to finish and moved on to other things.
One of the biggest problems for me is that there are too many attention suckers online for me. I sit down to write and I end up on Twitter, reading forums or commenting on great SEOMoz posts....um...I have to go now....
Twice now, I've taken 30 days cold-turkey breaks from social media, and what I accomplished, writing-wise, during those 30 days was amazing. Yet, afterwards, I was back on social media, because it's just so integral to my job. Somehow, and it's a daily battle, you have to find that focus. Carving out even an hour to write can produce borderline miraculous results some days.
I don't know if it is true, but I recently heard that quitting Twitter can be as hard as quitting heroin. It is incredibly difficult!
Love this post, and I agree. There's actually a painful lesson in my own life about this -- years ago, I started a notebook of novel ideas. I had about a dozen of them. I didn't start any of them, because hey, I was waiting for the right moment. Then, during a relationship breakup and move, that notebook got lost, and all the ideas with it. So much for that. Sometimes, the "right moment" is right now or as soon as you can manage.
Ouch :( Oh, and finish editing your novel - I want to buy a copy already! ;)
I'm waiting for the right time. Which should be 2015.
(Actually, I'm really, REALLY in the home stretch now. Thanks!)
What a great, honest article. It totally resonates - especially the idea of procrastination based on perfectionism or some idea of future glory. Sometimes when I'm laying in bed half-asleep working out ideas in my head, I recognize that I'm in a state of future tripping. It feels great and can be really satisfying to spend time considering all the possibilities, ways that I'm GOING to create, design, write, market - at some point in the future. And then I fall asleep, happy and satisfied with my sense of how great things are going to be when I finally get off my ass and ACT on all those "brilliant" ideas. But instead of acting and finding out that they aren't as brilliant as I thought they would be, I keep them as dreams, where they remain absolutely perfect, unsullied by reality.
I've thought about all of this a lot and it's so satisfying (and helpful) to chat about it with my peers. So, thanks all. And, especially you, Dr. Pete. Kudos.
"Unsullied by reality" is a very good way to say it. Honestly, it's not always execution, either - I sometimes find that my half-formed "brilliant" ideas weren't really that brilliant after all. I think we fear that unpleasant realization, too.
I totally agree. Who wants to find out that their not as brilliant in execution as they are in their dreams? On the other hand, facing that "truth" and being ok with it, repeatedly over time, I suppose is what makes it easier to execute on ideas rather than sloughing off with multiple excuses. Being ok with ok. As annoying as it is in some ways, the Nike "Just Do It" slogan really hit on something. Thanks, Dr. Pete. :)
It takes 10,000 hours of practice to master something. Practice will lead to win. Creating your best content first is putting your best foot forward.
IMO when you get a good idea (even in the middle of another idea) crate it, why miss out on the fresh ideas that come to light when your thought first arrives (usually with excitement). Another factor is write it before someone else thinks of it, this has happened to me a hand full of times... I’ll think of something great and save it for "perfection" wile someone else creates it. There is no such thing as "perfection", practice does not make "perfection". Practice will give you (the creator) enough experience and confidence to feel and believe in what you've created.
You had me at Wing Commander! LMAO! Great game.
But seriously - you're right. Whilst I am a self-confessed procrastinator I find that I suffer from burn-out when I do too much in one go.
For example, I will go through a spell when I write 50+ pieces of content over the course of a week / 2 weeks (depending on how creative I'm feeling). However, after that crazy rate of writing I usually get a bad case of "writers block" for about a week or so after. Then eventually it starts again - albeit usually in drips and drabs until I'm up to my creative peak and I'll just let it flow.
The same applies to any design / development work I carry out.
So - it's not always about leaving your best until last. As a creative writer / designer everyone has good and bad spells - it just comes with the territory I think.
I don't want to over-simplify - I'm actually a big believer in learning your own cycle. I'm the same way - I have good days where I'm just "on" and I have days where forcing it isn't going to accomplish anything but frustration. Creativity is a complicated animal.
Totally agree.
I think it's something that a lot of us are guilty of and the quote from Ira Glass hits the nail on the head.
Good work.
While I was reading I was recognizing in each word. Amazing how we can sabotage ourselves without even realizing
I take it I'm not the only one with 4 drafts sitting behind the scenes on my blog then? The "Rainy Day Ideas" that will throw you into awesome epic-ness.
Guess being a procrastinator is a hidden requirement of internet marketing...
Oops!
I have closer to 10 drafts sitting in my blog!
"fear of imperfection doesn’t just rob you of your best ideas – it robs you of your passion in the here and now."
I have several clients that are so concerned with making every piece of content perfect that nothing ever actually gets published. They agonize over every word and send it back and forth a dozen times for revisions. This turns content marketing into a chore, a very painful chore at that. The next time they sit down to write a blog post/article they don't bother with their best ideas because they know it'll get edited to death anyway.
Procrastination is the enemy for a lot of people that work online, there are so many distractions just begging for your attention - email, Reddit, blogs, Facebook etc etc And to create awesome content takes a lot of mental energy, it takes real discipline to be efficient and successful.
Nicely said. I had another company develop my site. The company also offers SEO. They developed my site but used zero heading tags or list tags. They were waiting until I signed up for their SEO service.
I thought that was a really good post. To get your work as good as your ambitions is truly something to strive towards. Thanks.
Eating a sandwich while reading this post - a perfect choice! Great post and comments on this one!
Good stuff, I can attribute to this, because once I quit working for a boss the tendency to save unpolished gems for a rainy day became ever more present, while it did not make any sense at all.
Thinking aloud. I guess most people who are saving their best for the last somehow is feeling insecured. The fact that most people save their best is to protect themselves against any pitfall.
Don't you agree with me! It is good to read an article outside SEO for a change!
I think I'm the opposite. I've got so many ideas (all GREAT of course ;-)) and I have a strong urge to make it happen fast so I can show it off to everyone else. The problem is that sometimes I need to be doing the boring stuff to keep things ticking along. I think this is the flipside of the coin - the risk that you might rush into something without enough though.
Still, even with the mistakes, I prefer to rush in.
I didn't realize I was "saving the best for last". That's precisely what I've been doing! I have a folder full of half-finished blog posts that just never make the cut. I compare them to the incredible content posted on this blog and a few others and think, "C'mon- am I really going to post this piece with my name in the author box?" Do I want to see this thing in the SERPS five years from now?
This post certainly applies to content creation. Thanks for the excellent post and the quote from Ira Glass. It helps put things into perspective.
I think that is a great question to ask before publishing any content - do I really want to see this in five years under my name?
"Never half ass two things. Whole ass one thing."
-Ron Swanson
Yes, once again, another great post Doc! It couldn't have come at a better time and it makes all the sense in the world. Thanks for the kick-in-the-ass ;-)
Great post Dr. Pete. This rang through with me as over the years I've constantly been putting my 'big ideas' on the b-list and doing half assed a list work. Only recently since finding SEO have I felt that my 'big game' has been coming through. Thanks again for this.
Content marketing is a powerful way in promoting your products/services but you have to make sure that you have created high quality content.
Nice use of that ass in this post Pete but you didn't reveal it out completely
I really like the topic of this post. I find myself everyday putting off getting my best ideas into action not because I fear perfectionism, but I'm afraid my best won't be good enough.
I enjoyed the part about continuing to persevere through those days when your best work doesn't seem good enough. I am definitely in the phase where I need to keep working everyday at becoming a great writer and I need to work towards finding a way to articulate my ideas as well as they sound in my head.
Overall this was a great article and it definitely helped me to get out of my slump and push on towards higher glory.
When someone as smart as Dr. Pete wants to 1/2 ass something, he does math to figure out exactly how much of an effort to excert. Dr. Pete, even when you are lazy, you're still a genius. In all seriousness, I couldn't agree more. When I force myself to put 100% into something, I'm so much happier with the results.
For the sake of Inbound Marketing's reputation, we all need to step it up, and put 100% into everything that matters.
hahaha,, its actually human nature to keep best for the last,, as we always keep our pudding to eat in the end at dinner. Dr. Pete you hit the right spot,, dukhti nawj par hath rakh dia .. ;) :D
This is one post which induced me to confess something. I haven't read a post like this in the whole of my life. Great Work. I found myself engrossed so much that I will definitely read it again and again (this is something I never do with any other post).
Thumbs Up many times for an awesome post. Great work in real sense.
Awesome post for all us procrastinators out there.
I will now add to my "creative hopper" - 7 reasons why the Zombie Apocalypse is doomed to fail.
Now back to my blog post...
I often sub-contract on the program side of things from firms who will farm out the creative look to one person, the content to another, and the programming to me.
I am amused reading this thinking, the originating company is half-assing looking for the sub-contractors, who will not get any credit in the final work. So we sub-contractors certainly don't follow the path of doing our best work, just the path of the satisfactory work. The contractor is really focused on client satisfaction, timely completion, cost-factors.
If the client and the contractor are very time/money focused, have little eye for design, and rarely read the copy, I'm sure they don't care about how well commented my php code is. I see no reason the designer should put his 'very best' product there, or the content-writer should put his 'very best' product there.
I say all of this to imply, even though there is some 'half-assing' going on. I don't think a lot of guilt should be attached to all 'half-assing'.
NOTE TO SELF: Don't bother proofing this too closely, you have other things more important to do.
There are times when a job is a job - I won't argue with you there. I'm talking more about the work that matters to you - stuff you enjoy, that could really advance your career, or that could get you to where you want to be. In those cases, if you're always putting off the big projects, it has a way of being self-defeating.
My co-workers inspire me to post my ideas on SEO on my blog, but I keep delaying this. I think that people are just lazy, because implementing ideas require work to be done, and we don't have enough motivation/need to do that work and push forward.
The title of this post is the greatest "Call to Action" I've heard this year. Thank you.
I am guilty of this myself. I am trying to not be a procrastinator.
I'm reminded of the Seth Godin idea from "Linchpin": Perfect is the enemy of done. If you wait for it to be perfect, you give up on it ever being done.
This reminds me of the half ass quarter ass rule. You''re excitement going into anything new is 100%. After a week it will be half that. Another week it will be half that. Etc.
That sounds way too close to the truth, in my experience.
Dr. Pete your title in your MOZ profile is really just perfect The President. Really you blasted Moz today.
The best line in your article is Unfortunately, fear of imperfection doesn’t just rob you of your best ideas – it robs you of your passion in the here and now.
It is the greatest fact specially with content creation. I was not good with writing and might be still I am struggling a lot. But I had uncover my weakness with many ways. And here i like to share some tips below.
But this tips are not for genius guys like Dr.Pete and Cyrus Shepard. But for those who didn't get much time to be perfectionist but to stay in the game they need to perform.
Research or Survey - This both words are very different from each other. But still have some relation. As sometimes you might think that you cannot storm your mind any more I believe in storm Google in such situations. Research and survey helps you to discover some great content for any subject but the challenge is just not to collect the 100's of articles. Instead of it the real challenge is to churn whole those information and evolute some greatest points, humor and philosophy. I am not suggesting or promoting a copy write. But doing this process it will helps you a lot to collect ingredients and now you just have to use them as per your recipe.
Might be community moz cannot appreciate my above sharing. But it is the fact that either a person can be a artist or a performer. But sometimes competition force you to adopt both to stay in it.
The other thing which I really liked in your article Sir is that we should never cheat a client or behave selfish when it comes create greatest content for others. I had learn from my experience that if you can create a great thing once you can obviously create another greatest thing. Just you have a willing to do it.Their is no tip for it but all you have to be is just kind hearted and broad minded and stay motivated. If you love your work your work will obviously help you to discover new heights.
Thanks,
Raavan
I would give this post 2 thumbs up if SEOmoz allowed it. As a beginning writer/blogger, this post definitely motivates me. I am all too often guilty of saving ideas for the right time. All too often, the time never comes or just passes by completely.
This post is really nice and inspirational not only for an internet marketer but also for every other person. Though my problem is not that I use to save my best for the last but I do not exactly know what my best is and how can I explore it. Still I thank you for sharing such a nice post.
Great post Pete
I had read it somewhere that the idea or thought which is generating in your mind at the same time is also boiling up at least in TEN different minds too. So if you didn’t implement your mind first someone may do and you may lose your best.
Nice post Dr Pete it is so true that the difference between the ones that find the most success and the ones that don't are those that persevere and fully commit themselves to the cause, as highlighted so well by (2) Future Glory with Ira Glass. I think we have all been in a situation where we haven't got the results we have wanted as quickly as we would have liked and have been distracted/less committed because of this. I also think you are so right about holding back due to fear of running out of great ideas, dare to succeed! Never has it been truer that the more you do something the better you become at it. A very thought provoking post - nicely done as usual - thanks
I guess I'm half assed!
Great post! I definitely agree with the idea that we should work on our best ideas now before we lose the passion. I also agree that the more we work on our best ideas, the more we have great ideas.
Thanks for the motivation! Off I go!
Hi,
Nice review. It’s useful for IM Peoples & then did u know about What useful for this? I saw this most of ecommerce sites. Thats y am asking. This meta also important !! ?
Your post is a very good lesson for me. While i reading this article (two times) i have many new reflection. This short post is a greatest "CALL TO ACTION". Good job!
I was going to put my best comment here, you know, well thought out and something that will add to the conversation, but, seeing how low on the comment list it will be I didn't.
Great post by the way! The funny thing is, the blogs I put the most work into don't get much attention. Then I write something that just was a spur of the moment thought and it gets picked up by a bunch of sites and people. Could it be my half is better than my whole?
Sometimes, I'm afraid that's just the internet :) I like to joke that I posted one day on LiveJournal about some deep, personal thoughts and got 2 comments. Next day, I posted about how I thought Rod Stewart was smarmy and got 100+ comments.
Agreed that the internet just works that way sometimes. It's hard to predict what content will resonate with people the most.
This post is really nice and inspirational not only for an internet marketer thanks.
I have to agree when it comes to clients and thanks for discussing this in the post as this happens to me the most... for example if I write about technology and my client is from the same industry so it’s quite difficult for me to give my best piece of content to my client Although I know it will make me look good too (with him).
In my opinion... there is one point where you should not shoot your best piece and prefer the opinion B and that is when your idea for the best piece is against the trend... like for example these days Content marketing is the hottest buzz in the SEO sphere (even this post have a lot to do with content) so if you have a killer post regarding link building then you should hold it for a little while (at least until this content buzz slows down) or else you might not get as great response as you are expecting.
That's a great point - timing is important. I don't want to suggest that you should always rank order every idea and put the "Best" one first every time (if you could even really measure that). I just don't want people to shelf their best ideas out of fear. Sometimes, you have to tackle one of the really big ones and see what happens.
I hate comments that start 'Wow', which is why I've started this one like this before i say 'Wow Pete, that's a cracker'. The confidence to cross that gap between imagination and skill is surely what our education systems should imbue our children with, but sadly often do not.