avatarJames Julian

Summary

The author encourages early-stage online content creators to stop comparing themselves to those who have been in the game longer and celebrate their own achievements, no matter how small.

Abstract

In this article, the author shares his personal experience as an early-stage online content creator, emphasizing the importance of not comparing oneself to more established creators. He talks about how he started his YouTube channel a year ago and recently got monetized. The author cautions against falling into the trap of comparing oneself to others who have been in the game much longer, as it can lead to negative feelings and discouragement. Instead, he encourages creators to learn from those who are more experienced and use that knowledge to build their own unique thing. The author also shares his own achievement of receiving 72,000 views on his channel and encourages other creators to celebrate their own successes, no matter how small.

Bullet points

  • The author started a YouTube channel a year ago and recently got monetized.
  • He warns against the trap of comparing oneself to more established creators.
  • Content creation is a long game, and early-stage creators need to stop comparing themselves to those who have been in the game longer.
  • The author encourages creators to learn from more experienced creators and use that knowledge to build their own unique thing.
  • He shares his own achievement of receiving 72,000 views on his channel and encourages other creators to celebrate their own successes, no matter how small.

1 reason you should be so proud of yourself as an early-stage online creator

Yesterday, I was watching a YouTube video with my older son by his favorite online creator, Danny Gonzalez.

His channel is so simple but so creative and inventive and HILARIOUS.

My wife, who happened to be walking through the room and saw that Gonzalez’s video from 3 months ago had already garnered 6 million views, asked, “Oh my God, how much does this guy make?”

My son searched and the first result to pop up suggested Danny’s net worth was $5.2 million at Age 29.

“Uhg,” I thought.

You deserve a gold star no matter how many views you get. I’ll explain why. (Credit: James Julian/Photoshop)

At the start

I started a YouTube channel just over a year ago, and I got monetized about a month ago.

In this video I posted yesterday, I talked about how much money I made on my first day.

I’d suggest you watch it because it contains an important message, but I can tell you it AIN’T $5.2 million.

I had to catch myself yesterday when I started having those negative feelings.

I had stepped into one of the biggest traps for early-stage online content creators.

A big obstacle

One of the biggest obstacles to success as an early-stage creator is comparing yourself to people who’ve been in the game much longer than you.

I understand the inclination to do so.

Many people who seek out the kind of information I provide are usually at some kind of pain point in their lives.

Maybe they hate their job, maybe they’re sick of being broke and they want a big change NOW.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t work like that.

Content creation is a long game, so you need to stop comparing yourself to people who’ve been in it a lot longer than you.

If you’re new to this platform, for example, stop comparing yourself to me, or Zulie Rane, or Tim Denning, or whoever else you might see in your feed every day.

I’ve been at this for over a year.

For the other names I mentioned, it’s been more like 5.

Do what I did when I started out — LEARN from those people, study what they do and how they do it, and then take that knowledge to build your own unique thing.

A pat on the back

This morning, I checked my YouTube stats for my channel’s lifetime.

I’ve received 72,000 views overall.

No, it isn’t $5.2 million (yet), but it is something.

I gave myself a little mental pat on the back — 72,000 times, someone thought something I made looked interesting enough to see what it was.

Even if you get 10 or 100 or 1000 views per day on your work, you are in the arena.

You created something, and someone gave a bit of their time to check it out.

You’re already ahead of 99.9% of people out there.

Thanks to each and every one of you who has considered my work to be worth a bit of your time.

And I wish you the best of luck on your own journey!

Publish Every Day Goal Tracker

I’m doing an experiment to see if I can make enough cash to retire from commuter life within 1 year by publishing every day on multiple platforms and investing my earnings.

How much I need to retire comfortably: $250 CAD per day

What I earned on Day 10: $30.77 (writing), $1.43 (YouTube) — $32.20 total

Progress chart:

Publish Every Day progress on Day 10

2023 averages ($USD):

Average daily earnings in 2023 ($USD)

What I’ve published in the last 2 days:

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YouTube
YouTuber
Side Hustle
Passive Income
Business
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