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  • I don't know if you can see how much it's raining on camera, but...

  • ...it's raining a lot.

  • In 1988, Jimmy Cauty and Bill Drummond wroteThe Manual”,

  • orHow To Have A Number One The Easy Way”.

  • They'd had a novelty pop song hit the top of the charts earlier that year, and the Manual --

  • I've had to plastic-wrap my copy, it's a bit rainy --

  • was a tongue-in-cheek guide to success in the music industry:

  • how to achieve a number one single with no money and no musical talent.

  • Almost all of it is out of date now, but there's one section, right at the start,

  • that is as relevant today as the day it was written,

  • and it's trying to talk the reader out of what they think they want. And it says:

  • The majority of Number Ones are achieved early on in the artist's public career

  • and before they have been able to establish reputations and build a solid fan base.

  • Most artists are never able to recover from having one

  • and it becomes the millstone around their necks to which all subsequent releases are compared.

  • Either the artist will be destroyed in their attempt

  • to prove to the world that there are other facets to their creativity

  • or they succumb willingly and spend the rest of their lives

  • as a travelling freak show.”

  • A number one song does not make a career.

  • In fact, it can kill a career:

  • if all you're known for is doing one thing,

  • all the world will want to see is that one thing.

  • A single popular video does not make you a YouTube star,

  • it makes you the person who stands up and repeats that catchphrase

  • over and over again until everyone's tired of it.

  • There are people out there who think,

  • just one big hit, that's all they need,

  • that's the path to stardom and being set for life.

  • They were wrong thirty years ago, and they're wrong now.

  • If you're a one-hit wonder,

  • then it's not you that's popular; it's that one hit.

  • What you need is a steady build, a back catalogue,

  • enough time to learn the skills that you need to survive under the spotlight,

  • to have long-term, sustainable success.

  • If you've been tasked by your boss to Make Something Popular,

  • or if you've had that one hit and now you need the second,

  • that is a terrible environment to be creative in.

  • If you sit round, with a committee, and you ask

  • What's funny? What's good? What's popular? What can we make?

  • What will people be interested in?”,

  • then you're already on the wrong track.

  • But you know that idea you had when you were in the shower, or in the pub with friends,

  • or just letting your mind wander on a rainy beach today?

  • That idea might be good.

  • Your brain isn't indexed so you can saythink of something popular”.

  • Your brain thrives on connections.

  • And it is way more difficult to make those connections when your job depends on it.

  • For me, it took me more than a decade of throwing stuff at the internet,

  • of steadily building up a small following and learning my trade before I found

  • the Things You Might Not Know format, an idea that really worked,

  • an idea that got me a large audience and

  • a chance to actually turn this into something that could support me.

  • By sheer luck, that happened at the point where I'd been working somewhere long enough

  • to build up some savings,

  • so I wouldn't be completely bankrupt if this new, shiny YouTube idea didn't work out long-term.

  • There's a reason that a lot of people who make stuff for online platforms are either

  • kids supported by their parents,

  • or students with a lot of time on their hands,

  • or folks who have the means to support themselves.

  • And even if you are one of the lucky ones,

  • if your project starts bringing in some money,

  • if you're lucky enough to have the budget to be able to book a last-minute sleeper train ticket

  • and travel to a remote, rain-swept Scottish island because it makes a better background for your video,

  • it could still end at any time.

  • You could get ill, or your audience could get bored.

  • Actually, your audience, they will get bored at some point.

  • There are some folks out there, mostly still teenagers,

  • with millions of people already following them and money rolling in,

  • and they think this is going to last forever.

  • But every band's second album is difficult,

  • and every TV show starts to lose ratings over time as newer things come along.

  • The internet works the same way.

  • The new stuff doesn't necessarily have to be better: it just has to be exciting.

  • People like to have both familiarity and novelty, but there's got to be both.

  • Too much familiarity is boring. Too much novelty is scary.

  • If you don't strike a balance, if you can't change with the times,

  • someone else will be ready and willing to take your audience.

  • For almost every creator making stuff for the internet,

  • the work they do is a passion project.

  • So if you're starting out, you should know:

  • it isn't going to support you for the first few years,

  • perhaps the first few decades, perhaps ever.

  • And if you are one of the lucky ones, if you've made it,

  • it very likely won't support you for life.

  • I mean, if this is a passion project, you probably won't care about that.

  • And as long as you know that, as long as you plan for it, that's fine.

  • But you'll have seen all the creators, in every genre on YouTube, talking about burnout.

  • Your dream job can still be a nightmare if you don't have a backup plan.

  • In 1994, six years after they wrote the Manual,

  • Jimmy Cauty and Bill Drummond pulled all their music from sale.

  • They went to their bank,

  • and they withdrew most of the money they had left over from sales and royalties,

  • both from the novelty number one single,

  • and from all the other hits they'd had since then.

  • They had one million pounds in cash.

  • They travelled to this island, Jura, in Scotland,

  • they went to an abandoned boathouse a couple of miles down the coast,

  • they burned all of that million pounds cash as art.

  • Now, I'm not about to do anything like that.

  • I wouldn't recommend doing anything like that.

  • I don't think they would these days, either.

  • But I am well aware that nothing lasts forever,

  • If all you're trying to do is repeat your one success,

  • or if all you're doing is trying the same thing over and over and over and over again

  • for years and you're getting nothing back,

  • then you might as well just be throwing your money in a fire.

  • So these days, I hope that my ideas work, and I try to accept when they don't.

  • And I try out new things.

  • And sure, my baseline is different to when I was starting out,

  • the same way it's different to that of a massive corporation

  • who might spend millions on one advert,

  • but the principles are the same.

  • I keep following all those rules I've learned:

  • I make as many things as possible, and I try to connect with people.

  • If you're starting out, success might take a week.

  • It might take a month. It might take a century.

  • But every idea you put out there is another roll of the dice,

  • and you can learn from however those dice fall.

  • That's how you get popular on the internet.

  • That's good enough. Augh! How is there--

  • How is there rain going down the back of my neck?

  • All right, I've got to go catch a ferry.

  • Pack away, catch a ferry.

I don't know if you can see how much it's raining on camera, but...

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