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The First 180 Days Building an Audience - 5 Lessons Learned

At the end of 2019, I decided to begin getting serious about building a personal audience. My driving reason: to be able to travel anywhere in the world and be able to get a beer with a local who follows my work.

Here's a reflective look at how my experience online has changed over the last 6 months, moving from a lurker to a contributor.

Lesson 1: Act Like A Reporter In The Field, Not A Thought Leader

One thing I noticed very early on (maybe around month 2-3 of writing daily on LinkedIn), was that there are two types main types of people who publish online:

  • Those who post as practitioners. They are often willing to be vulnerable and aren't trying to be perfect. They tell it how it is and are practitioners of their own advice.

  • Those who post as experts. They often try to position themselves as the Prophet, speak in absolutes, and make it about how right they are.

Both are strategies for building an audience, but I have yet to see someone who does both at the same time very well.

If you're just starting out, I'd recommend putting out content about how you're learning. Act as a reporter in the field, recording interesting things you uncover and answers to questions you have.

Use your beginners mindset to your advantage, capturing your learning, inspirations, and testing your hypothesis in public, in real time.

Lesson 2: Focus on Increasing The Value of Your Ideas, Not How Many Likes You Get

Here's the truth: I'm 6 months in, have posted 200+ times, and released almost 20 podcast episodes. Guess what the average number of likes I get on a post on LinkedIn? It's about 10. How many podcast listeners I get per episode? About 40.

Growth will be slow.

The trick to keeping motivated is to make it about improving the quality of your ideas, rather than the number of likes you get.

Don't rely exclusively on growth hacks to grow your audience. Use them strategically, but get off them ASAP and spend more effort focusing on increasing the value of your ideas.

You'll be more proud of your work and will attract the right people, not a bunch of the wrong people.

Lesson 3: Permission Is Optional

One of the first things we learn in school is to ask for permission to use the washroom, to state your opinion, or to ask a question. This sticks with us as we become adults, constantly seeking permission from "gatekeepers" to do something.

One of the most under-rated parts about the Internet is that permission is optional.

You don't need to ask permission to write about something you're passionate about. You don't need permission to summarize your favourite book. You don't need permission to design an illustration inspired by song lyrics.

I'm not telling you to plagiarize. But instead of thinking that everything you do needs to be original, first start by putting a twist on something that inspires you.

The more you practice doing things without permission, the more you realize that often it's your own self-talk that keeps you from accomplishing your vision.

Lesson 4: Being A Doer Has Massive Benefits

What I've found is that once you've developed some credibility as a doer, people you thought were impossible to get at will become willing to engage.

Here's an example:

I've been asking marketers I admire to join me as a guest on my podcast show. They often have no idea who I am or that my show even exists.

But since I've put in the effort to even have a show, they see value in speaking with me. Now that I've got 20 episodes under my belt, they know I'm committed and that it will be worth their time to be a guest.

The result: the ability to get in touch, learn, and build relationships with people far more experienced than me.

Lesson 5: If You Don't Have A System, You Will Fail

Here's an amazing quote from James Clear that re-framed how I think about systems:

"You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems."

If you want to build an audience, you need to be consistent. And I've found that the best way to be consistent is to have a system in place that will allow you to ship everyday, whether you feel like it or not.

My system allows me to batch podcast recordings, which then turn into my written content, which then becomes my blog posts.

I'm still refining it, but without that system, I would have given up long ago.

Conclusion

Audience growth is slow - damn slow. Don't let anyone tell you differently.

That being said, I've found so many positive aspects beyond just having followers that makes all the work worth it. Here are a few benefits that most people don't talk about:

  • Network with smart / cool people
  • Build assets
  • Learn and fail quickly
  • Understand systems
  • Find your passion
  • Build an arsenal of tools you can bring to any new project, job, or problem.

Looking back, there's so much I wished I'd known before starting. But the thing is, I likely wouldn't have listened to that advice because it wasn't worth anything to me.

Getting started is the only way you can truly learn. If you're stuck in analysis paralysis, let this be the sign you've been looking for to get started.


I hope this was helpful to anyone who is building an audience or would like to in the future. I'm super up for answering any questions you might have, or to get into more details about any of the ideas mentioned above.

If you love learning about marketing, or want to follow along on my journey, I send a weekly email, or you can follow me on Twitter.

Cheers,
Stew

  1. 2

    Well written piece with excellent advice. Thanks

    1. 1

      Appreciate the kind words, Patryk

  2. 2

    I can only confirm the slowness part :). Good luck and thanks for sharing.

    1. 1

      Thanks Josef - There's a great Seth Godin quote that goes along the lines of "It takes longer than you hope, but gives you more than you could have ever imagined"

  3. 2

    Really enjoyed this post! Has me thinking about starting a podcast!

    1. 1

      Do it! Podcasting has been my biggest (not so) secret weapon in getting started

  4. 2

    Great work mate! I'm just working on a similar-ish article so kudos to you for sharing your experience!

    1. 1

      Thanks - good luck on getting that article shipped

  5. 2

    Not sure where you're publishing but at Pico (trypico.com) we've found that having a website is super key. The website allows you to get people off social onto your own property… and then critically use that property to capture email addresses to re-engage.

    1. 2

      Great point Jason - whoever figures out a frictionless way to get podcast listeners to be able to submit their emails is going to be very rich.
      For now, the best we have is telling them a URL and then hoping the page converts

  6. 2

    Thanks for sharing Stew!

    "You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems."

    This is just so true!

    1. 1

      Thanks Jamal - definitely a quote I go back to time and time again.

  7. 2

    Enjoyed reading this Stew. Good quote by James Clear in particular. Hadn’t read that one before. Good luck!

    1. 1

      Thanks a lot Marc. James' writing really hits a nerve with me too.

  8. 2

    Wow, very useful and well written. Thank you.

    1. 1

      Glad you found it useful Nicolas

  9. 2

    These are some great insights @stew_hillhouse. Thanks for sharing. I think that learning by doing is certainly the best strategy when building an audience starting out. I am consistently trying to refine and improve the content I create each week. It can be a slow process or sure, but I know the compounding effects in the long run pay off. Cheers!

    1. 2

      Thanks Gordon. The compounding effects are REAL and will hit when you least expect it. I'll go weeks where it feels like I need to push everything myself. Then all of a sudden one of my posts gets shared around, a podcast episode does really well, and it will lead to significant growth.
      Keep with it.

      1. 2

        Great to hear my man. It makes the grind all the more worth it when you can see those compounding effects beginning to happen. Glad it is all going well for you!

  10. 2

    When you speak about your marketing SYSTEM: "My system allows me to batch podcast recordings, which then turn into my written content, which then becomes my blog posts."

    What are you using to do this? ***

    Also, are you only turning them into blog posts or do you also use the written words for Twitter threads, Linkedin posts, Quora etc?

    Great post! :)

    EDIT

    I just read your other comments, I see you're using descript.

    Descript is truly great for editing your podcasts. Whilst also being a good starting point for creating content around your podcasts to help promote them. But as I said, this should only be a starting point for you...

    I'm the creator of Spread (https://www.spreadtech.online/) a content distribution and repurposing tool.

    That automatically transforms your podcasts into blogs, and your blogs into social media, IH posts, and Twitter threads. (Much more features to be added).

    I know the high price of Descript put you off, which excites me to tell you the BETA version of Spread is currently free - (once launched in a few weeks).

    You can sign up here to get access: https://www.spreadtech.online/

    let me know if you have any questions? :)

    1. 2

      Very intrigued to give your product a try - just signed up. Thanks for being persistent :)

      1. 2

        Hey, thank you so much!!!

        Quick question, do you have anything in mind that you wish descript did for you (promotional wise)?

        And is Spread something you'd want to replace descript, or use both at different points?

        1. 1

          I definitely love Descript for editing the podcast (taking out umms, removing silences, adding intro segment) and also for now transcribing the audio for text posts. I usually just copy and paste key takeaways into an Evernote for that episode so I have quick reference moving forward.

          When it comes to promotion, it now has audiograms but they aren't custom branded. I see that they now can send video snippets right to Headliner, so that's their workaround I guess.

          I'll have to give Spread a try to see what it's capabilities are, but I can see them working in tandem (unless of course you're creating an editing product also).

          Hope that helps - more than happy to chat through my workflow in more detail. DM me on Twitter

          1. 1

            I'm not looking to create it into an editing product at all, unfortunately :(

            But I can definitely see Spread being extremely effective for you in tandem with Descript/headliner.

            Spread will be the slightly cheaper alternative that will take over more than just what Headliner/Descript is capable of in terms of promotions.

            I'm more than happy to speak in detail about your workflow here but if you prefer Twitter then that suits me too?!?

  11. 2

    Thanks for the insights Stew. I'm trying to apply it using Twitter. 1 month in, lots to learn

    1. 2

      Twitter is definitely a tricky one. Lots of nuances compared to LinkedIn. I'm still trying to figure it out as well.

  12. 2

    Great and super authentic insights. You just grew your audience +1 😌

  13. 2

    Thanks for sharing your experience, Stew! Could you give us some insight, about what is included in your "arsenal of tools" you are using currently?

    1. 2

      Great question - What I mean by that is both tech and mindset tools.

      Tech tools: You learn how to use automations, shortcuts, and bootstrapped solutions to refine your workflow. Ex. I would never use Garageband to edit my podcasts now that I know how good Descript is. That being said, the $100/year price tag for Descript was really steep when I was just getting started. To justify that cost, I needed to figure out how to use the transcription, audiograms, and snippets so that it was worth it.

      Mindset tools: Say your next project requires 10 paying customers in 100 days. Now that you've built an audience before, you know how many contacts you need to create one paying customer. It makes it easier to work backwards and put action to the goals you're looking to achieve.

      Hope that answers your question - thanks for the prompt!

      1. 1

        Thanks for the answer, Stew. Very interesting to hear from you!

  14. 1

    This comment was deleted 4 years ago.

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