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The point of this post isn’t to give you an exact strategy. Even though I did give an example in the video. It is to guide you into figuring out what is sustainable for you.
When you create content for the first time you don’t know what you don’t know. Over time when you put in the reps, it allows you to establish a brand. A consistency in your media content, and how you present yourself. How certain skills proliferate, and how your expression comes through.
Why do you need to do all three?
Each content type, let alone format, creates a different kind of connection with the viewer. If they like one type, then they’ll more than likely find you on other platforms as well. Reaching that person across many different places is key for building up your connection to them.
Once they hit a certain level they will be more inclined towards paying for your content as well. Hence the journey for success as a creator.
The studies shows that it takes over half a dozen, maybe closer to a dozen, of times for a person to see you. Before they ever consider buying anything from you, or subscribing, or whatever call to action you are asking for.
How you go about reaching 100 posts
I mention in the video the idea of taking 3 months of intense daily content production. However you could expand that out to a year.
I really don’t think you can do less than 3 months, as you would just burn out too quick, or worse overwhelm your audience and lose them.
There is a fine balance you need to thread, and that is key to pushing the limit of your production. If you can put in the reps, then you’ll be closer to a 100 posts a day, and once you get to that point you’ll be even closer to growth and monetization.
Highlighted Tool of the Week: Substack
Okay okay hear me out!
Substack has proven to me over the last two weeks to be a lot more than I initially thought it was. Mind you have been on here for the last five years, and I have known about a lot of the features already for a while.
Meaning you do too probably.
However I don’t think you fully grasp the extent of what they’re going for as a tool. Normally I wouldn’t write so much in this section of the blog post, BUT this tool actually goes hand in hand with my topic of today. By making use of the features here on Substack it will help you get closer to the 100x a day ideal.
You go live first (basically making a video), then cut out the audio, and then write a blog post underneath it (don’t just use AI, actually write one). From there Substack gives you clips. The reframing into vertical is pretty subpar, so I’d suggest using Opusclip, but let’s say for now you use it.
It automatically posts 2 shorts for you from your video, and you can download more (or make more). You should post a couple horizontal clips from the video too to substack notes.
The livestream would have also made a post already as well when you went live.
You can create an instagram post from their picture creator.
Already there you have TEN posts, all from ONE episode. That is honestly a conservative calculation too. As you could make a lot of clips, and if you made pictures on your own in Canva too that would help.
🥡 Takeaways
What should you leave with today? Really it is a matter of measuring how far you have come at this point, and how much farther you need to go.
Creating an established content ecosystem that feeds into itself, and reaching a far greater width of audience!
By Dustin Miller - PolyInnovatorThe point of this post isn’t to give you an exact strategy. Even though I did give an example in the video. It is to guide you into figuring out what is sustainable for you.
When you create content for the first time you don’t know what you don’t know. Over time when you put in the reps, it allows you to establish a brand. A consistency in your media content, and how you present yourself. How certain skills proliferate, and how your expression comes through.
Why do you need to do all three?
Each content type, let alone format, creates a different kind of connection with the viewer. If they like one type, then they’ll more than likely find you on other platforms as well. Reaching that person across many different places is key for building up your connection to them.
Once they hit a certain level they will be more inclined towards paying for your content as well. Hence the journey for success as a creator.
The studies shows that it takes over half a dozen, maybe closer to a dozen, of times for a person to see you. Before they ever consider buying anything from you, or subscribing, or whatever call to action you are asking for.
How you go about reaching 100 posts
I mention in the video the idea of taking 3 months of intense daily content production. However you could expand that out to a year.
I really don’t think you can do less than 3 months, as you would just burn out too quick, or worse overwhelm your audience and lose them.
There is a fine balance you need to thread, and that is key to pushing the limit of your production. If you can put in the reps, then you’ll be closer to a 100 posts a day, and once you get to that point you’ll be even closer to growth and monetization.
Highlighted Tool of the Week: Substack
Okay okay hear me out!
Substack has proven to me over the last two weeks to be a lot more than I initially thought it was. Mind you have been on here for the last five years, and I have known about a lot of the features already for a while.
Meaning you do too probably.
However I don’t think you fully grasp the extent of what they’re going for as a tool. Normally I wouldn’t write so much in this section of the blog post, BUT this tool actually goes hand in hand with my topic of today. By making use of the features here on Substack it will help you get closer to the 100x a day ideal.
You go live first (basically making a video), then cut out the audio, and then write a blog post underneath it (don’t just use AI, actually write one). From there Substack gives you clips. The reframing into vertical is pretty subpar, so I’d suggest using Opusclip, but let’s say for now you use it.
It automatically posts 2 shorts for you from your video, and you can download more (or make more). You should post a couple horizontal clips from the video too to substack notes.
The livestream would have also made a post already as well when you went live.
You can create an instagram post from their picture creator.
Already there you have TEN posts, all from ONE episode. That is honestly a conservative calculation too. As you could make a lot of clips, and if you made pictures on your own in Canva too that would help.
🥡 Takeaways
What should you leave with today? Really it is a matter of measuring how far you have come at this point, and how much farther you need to go.
Creating an established content ecosystem that feeds into itself, and reaching a far greater width of audience!