avatarKieran MacRae

Summary

The author reflects on their experience of writing daily for 270 days and concludes that it was a waste of time due to a lack of focus and clear goals.

Abstract

The author was inspired by Seth Godin's daily writing habit and decided to write a blog post every day for a year. Despite committing to this practice for nine months, the author received little engagement and eventually quit. Looking back, the author realizes that the project was a waste of time because they were not consistent in their topics, quality, or improvement efforts. The author emphasizes the importance of knowing why you are showing up and having clear success criteria. They also highlight the need to decide who you are writing for, where they hang out, and how to surprise and delight them. The author concludes that their 270 days of writing were a waste of time because they did not use them to become better, delight a specific audience, or expand their thinking.

Bullet points

  • The author was inspired by Seth Godin's daily writing habit and committed to writing a blog post every day for a year.
  • After 270 posts, the author received little engagement and eventually quit.
  • The author reflects on their experience and concludes that the project was a waste of time due to a lack of focus and clear goals.
  • The author emphasizes the importance of knowing why you are showing up and having clear success criteria.
  • The author highlights the need to decide who you are writing for, where they hang out, and how to surprise and delight them.
  • The author concludes that their 270 days of writing were a waste of time because they did not use them to become better, delight a specific audience, or expand their thinking.

I Wrote Every Day for 270 Days. It Was a Waste of Time

I focussed on all the wrong things

Photo by Cookie the Pom on Unsplash

Like many writers, I adore Seth Godin’s writing. He has shown up daily for over 10 years, which is astounding.

I wanted a piece.

I committed to writing a blog post every single day for 1 year. I started writing short, punchy Seth Godin style posts. After 270 posts — I got crickets. Then I missed a day.

No big deal, I started my streak again. I got five more days in and missed two days. Then I quit.

This was about 5 years ago, and I can see now that the project was in fact, a complete waste of time.

Don’t consistently work on the wrong things

Be consistent. That’s the advice you see given again and again. Keep showing up. Commit.

It’s bad advice. I committed and showed up every day for nine months, but my attitude was all wrong.

I wasn’t consistent with the topics I covered. I wasn’t consistent with the quality of writing. And I wasn’t consistently trying to improve. Just showing up isn’t enough.

Yes, if you want to improve at something, you need to consistently show up to practice. But you also have to know how to improve. I wasn’t trying to be a better editor, I wasn’t trying to come up with better ideas, I wasn’t trying to make my writing punchier. I was just writing.

And writing every day just for the sake of it is a waste of time. If it’s just for fun, knock yourself out, but I expected to grow an audience by shouting random thoughts into the void.

Know why you’re showing up

I was a donkey following a carrot down a single road without stopping to think about where I was going. I never realized I was walking around in circles.

Because I was blogging every day to try and build an audience. But not really because I wasn’t trying very hard. I was also doing it for the practice. But only sort of because there was no conscious decision to improve. And frankly, I was doing it for the status of having blogged every day. I didn’t get that either because no one was reading.

I had no success criteria that would mean I felt like I’d done a good job. And so I never felt like I was achieving success with the project. Decide what it’s for and how to measure it, then commit to doing it.

Blindly showing up just because you think you should show up is a waste of time. Decide why you’re showing up and use that to guide you. And no matter why, always keep improvement in mind. How can I do better tomorrow. With that as your guiding star, you won’t go wrong.

If you build it, no one will come.

I thought if I just showed up and banged out 150 words on whatever thought came to mind, then people would find me. If you build it, they will come. Right?

Wrong.

Shouting into the void won’t get you anywhere, no matter how much you do it. If you’re going to publish regularly, you need to decide three things.

  1. Who are you writing for
  2. Where do they hang out
  3. How you can surprise and delight them

I’m not saying choose a specific niche and only write within that. I’m saying define the type of person you want to write for. Creators, entrepreneurs, people with mental health issues, women of color, cat owners. I didn’t do this. I was writing for whoever wanted to read it. That’s… That’s nothing.

If you’re writing and your audience spends its time on TikTok, you’re going to be in trouble. I made an even worse mistake. I wrote for people who wanted to read my work. These people didn’t exist because I had no following. Find your people and put yourself in front of them.

Then, you can show up every day while striving to surprise and delight. Your readers should feel seen, informed, educated, entertained, or at the very least like they’re better off than before they read your article.

Once you’ve lined up these, then it’s worth being consistent.

I wasted my time

My 270 days were a waste because I didn’t use them to become better. I didn’t use them to delight a group of people I wanted to help. I didn’t even really use it to expand my own thinking. I used it as busy work that made me feel good.

Be consistent. But only after you know why you’re doing it, and who you’re doing it for. Otherwise, it’s a waste of time.

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