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In this episode of the Failure Is Knowledge Podcast, Terryl Humphrey talks about why podcasters, business owners, and creators should not follow every trend.
Terryl explains that trends can inspire you, but they should not control your direction. If you only follow what is popular, you can easily become overwhelmed, burnt out, and lost in what everyone else is doing.
This episode breaks down why it is important to look at what is working, understand why it is working, and then apply it in a way that is unique to your own business, podcast, or brand.
Terryl also shares how this lesson connects to podcasting, business, and helping multifamily investors build trust through content. Instead of simply copying what other people are doing, the goal is to find your own lane, document the process, educate your audience, and stay consistent.
The main lesson is simple: one video, one podcast, one conversation, or one post does not change everything. But when you stay consistent, keep learning, and keep improving, you can build leverage over time.
This episode is for podcasters, business owners, entrepreneurs, and creators who are trying to grow without losing themselves in trends.
Failure Is Knowledge helps multifamily investors build their brand through podcasting.
If you would like to learn more, contact:
By Terryl C. Humphrey5
55 ratings
In this episode of the Failure Is Knowledge Podcast, Terryl Humphrey talks about why podcasters, business owners, and creators should not follow every trend.
Terryl explains that trends can inspire you, but they should not control your direction. If you only follow what is popular, you can easily become overwhelmed, burnt out, and lost in what everyone else is doing.
This episode breaks down why it is important to look at what is working, understand why it is working, and then apply it in a way that is unique to your own business, podcast, or brand.
Terryl also shares how this lesson connects to podcasting, business, and helping multifamily investors build trust through content. Instead of simply copying what other people are doing, the goal is to find your own lane, document the process, educate your audience, and stay consistent.
The main lesson is simple: one video, one podcast, one conversation, or one post does not change everything. But when you stay consistent, keep learning, and keep improving, you can build leverage over time.
This episode is for podcasters, business owners, entrepreneurs, and creators who are trying to grow without losing themselves in trends.
Failure Is Knowledge helps multifamily investors build their brand through podcasting.
If you would like to learn more, contact: