
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Thank you to everyone who tuned into my live video! Join me for my next live video in the app.
The 300 Reps Rule for Content Creators
As it has been said a lot, you should try to get to your first 100 reps as soon as possible. However I want to expand that philosophy a bit, as I think you really start to get good after 300 reps.
That’s when the posts really start to accumulate, your skills improve drastically, and you have had enough history for platforms to know.
While you can somewhat do it faster, it is more about you and your skills in particular.
After your first 100 reps, you’ll have enough bandwidth to start the next content type as well. Then you can do both alongside. 200 reps with your first, when you hit 100 reps with the second. Then you can start the 3rd, and so forth.
Don't Delete—Your Content History Matters
This is just something important I wanted to quickly share. I cannot wrap my head around people deleting their own content.
It does not matter if your previous niche encompassed your last 100 videos, and now you’re switching. Who cares? The SEO is not going to change that much if you delete and restart. Meaning you are only shooting yourself in the foot.
Every piece of content or micro-content is a doorway to your content ecosystem. If you delete your post, or even unlist it, then it closes that doorway forever.
Master Every Format: Keys to Content Growth
Before I start getting into more strategies and tools in these upcoming posts here on the Content Polymath. I have been really driving home the fact that you need to improve your skills as quickly as possible. Sustainably.
If you are interested in those upcoming posts, then I encourage you to subscribe!
By Dustin Miller - PolyInnovatorThank you to everyone who tuned into my live video! Join me for my next live video in the app.
The 300 Reps Rule for Content Creators
As it has been said a lot, you should try to get to your first 100 reps as soon as possible. However I want to expand that philosophy a bit, as I think you really start to get good after 300 reps.
That’s when the posts really start to accumulate, your skills improve drastically, and you have had enough history for platforms to know.
While you can somewhat do it faster, it is more about you and your skills in particular.
After your first 100 reps, you’ll have enough bandwidth to start the next content type as well. Then you can do both alongside. 200 reps with your first, when you hit 100 reps with the second. Then you can start the 3rd, and so forth.
Don't Delete—Your Content History Matters
This is just something important I wanted to quickly share. I cannot wrap my head around people deleting their own content.
It does not matter if your previous niche encompassed your last 100 videos, and now you’re switching. Who cares? The SEO is not going to change that much if you delete and restart. Meaning you are only shooting yourself in the foot.
Every piece of content or micro-content is a doorway to your content ecosystem. If you delete your post, or even unlist it, then it closes that doorway forever.
Master Every Format: Keys to Content Growth
Before I start getting into more strategies and tools in these upcoming posts here on the Content Polymath. I have been really driving home the fact that you need to improve your skills as quickly as possible. Sustainably.
If you are interested in those upcoming posts, then I encourage you to subscribe!