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Hey, it’s Marie Forleo and you are watching MarieTV, the place to be to create a business
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and life you love.
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And today you are in for such a treat because my guest is one of the most insightful and
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honest and prolific teachers of our time.
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Seth Godin is an entrepreneur, author of 18 books that have been bestsellers around the
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world, and a maker of ruckuses.
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He’s been on the internet since 1976, invented permission based email, founded two significant
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net companies, and defines his working life by the many projects he’s launched, the
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failures he has learned from, and the people he’s taught.
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His latest is the altMBA, an intense workshop that helps people level up in a way that truly
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lasts.
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Find out more about the course at altMBA.com.
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You can learn more about Seth and his blog by typing Seth into Google.
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Seth, thank you so much for taking the time to be here today.
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I want to say before we get into the interview, thank you for your body of work over the years.
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You have made such a tremendous impact on me personally, on my team, on so many people
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that I know, and I think you and I both share a tremendous love of books and I want you
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to know that any time I ever find myself feeling like a little stuck or in self doubt or just
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any stage of going, like, “Ugh.”
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I reach into my bookshelf and undoubtedly yours is one of the books that comes out to
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get me back on track.
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That’s so nice of you to say.
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It’s the truth.
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And I want you to…
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Thank you.
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That means the world to me.
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I want you to hear it.
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Now, you said something in your most recent book that I thought was brilliant.
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In Your Turn, you think that we’re wasting the chance of a lifetime.
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So what do you mean by that and what can we do to stop?
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To not do it?
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There’s the external thing and the internal thing.
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The external thing is this is our revolution.
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We live in this moment of time when anyone with a hundred bucks can connect to a billion
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and a half people around the world any time they want to.
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We live in this place where we each have more leverage and a bigger platform than any human
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on earth ever had before us.
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And internally, if not this moment, when?
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Right?
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That if we’re not gonna speak up now are things gonna be easier or better a year from
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now?
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We wait for things to calm down, we wait for it to be the right moment, but this is the
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right moment.
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That we… we look back a year in our life, 5 years ago, and we rarely say I’m disappointed
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that I spoke up.
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I’m disappointed that I did my art.
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I’m disappointed that I connected to somebody.
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We don't.
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What we regret is not doing that.
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So here we are in this moment of high leverage and all we can do is watch cat videos and
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whine about our boss and I just…
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I think we can do better than that.
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I agree.
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And one thing that I appreciate about you, you know, we got to spend some time together
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on Necker Island and I also wanted to say this.
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You know, having admired your work for so long and who you are, you’re one of those
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people who’s like a hundred times better in real life than you are even in your work,
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and your work is freaking extraordinary.
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And one of the things that I remember most about spending time with you there was how
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challenging you were in the best sense of that word.
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Like, “Marie, you should sit at the front of the table.
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Marie, you should do that.”
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And I was like, “What’s…?
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Oh my God, Seth Godin is telling me what to do,” and I loved every second of it because
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it was done in such a spirit of, “Hey, it’s your turn.
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Go ahead.
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Go do it, girl.”
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And I love that.
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And that’s why I love that book Your Turn.
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Well, one thing I want to just insert as an aside because I’m told 5 or 10 of your fans
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will be watching this?
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Is in real life, you’re exactly as you appear on TV.
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Like, it’s not an act that this generous, connected person is actually a generous, connected
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person.
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Thank you.
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So I thought people might want to know that because they didn't get the chance to meet
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you the way I did.
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Thank you.
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So a question that we get often here is from people who are struggling to figure out what
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should I do with my life?
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How do I find my passion or my purpose or my calling?
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And you’ve said I’m not sure that anyone has a calling.
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Can you speak to that?
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Thank you for teeing this up.
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This whole calling, passion thing is complete nonsense.
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It’s… as Steven Pressfield would call it, the resistance.
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Yes.
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That van Gogh, if he had been born 20 years later or 20 years earlier, he wouldn’t have
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done what he did.
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It’s not like he... some angel came down when he was born and said, “You’re going
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to become an impressionistic painter.”
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He wanted to do a thing but he didn't know what the thing was.
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And if Steve Jobs had been born 20 years earlier, he would have done a different thing.
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This isn’t about waiting for the right answer.
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Because there is no right answer.
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What there are are challenges we can sign up for and emotions we can experience.
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There are kinds of engagements we can seek out and ones that we don't want to.
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If you're the kind of person that only feels good when all the chips are in red 86, well
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then you need to go find that kind of activity.
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If you're the kind of person that would rather have a small circle of people who are committed
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to you for a long time, find any variation of those activities.
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But if you’re waiting for the perfect horse on that carousel to come around, you’ve
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missed 3, 4, 5, 7 cycles while you’re waiting.
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All the horses are just as good.
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It’s the same carousel.
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Just get on the damn horse.
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I love that.
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I… when I first started my career and I was starting to do life coaching and I was
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starting to get into dance and fitness, I remember feeling when I was in front of a
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fitness classroom and teaching, you know, people doing bicep curls or we were doing
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hip-hop dance.
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There’s a lot of that same feeling that I get even doing what I do now.
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Like, connecting with people.
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Even, honestly, bartending and making people drinks and talking to them about their meals
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and, like, asking them who they are and getting to know them and their dreams.
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There was so many threads that I have… now can see in hindsight where it was me being
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me.
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And who knows what’s gonna happen in another 20 or 30 years or…
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And this is where the grass is greener thing gets us into so much trouble.
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Because, you know, you have a sensational life, but so do some fitness instructors and
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so do some bartenders.
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Yes.
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Your life doesn't get more sensational when you have more followers on Twitter.
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That’s not what you ought to be keeping score of.
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It’s does this interaction leave behind a trail that I’m proud of?
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And does having the interaction make me glad that I did it and want to do it again?
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And, you know, so I know people who run nonprofits and some of them are big and some of them
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are small and they’re getting equal amounts of satisfaction because bigger isn’t the
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point.
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More isn’t the point.
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Yes.
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And when we, you know, are there bad ideas?
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There are tons of bad ideas.
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I’m not saying all ideas are equally good.
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What I’m saying is finding a thing that works is sufficient and that’s the challenge.
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So entrepreneurs, for example.
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Too many entrepreneurs think that there’s a prize for originality.
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There’s no prize for originality at all.
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You should steal a different person’s idea.
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You should bring something that worked in Detroit to Cleveland because you don't have
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to worry about apologizing and saying, “Well, yeah, I went to a muffin store in Detroit
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that works so I brought it to Cleveland.”
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So what?
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What matters is now there’s someone in Cleveland who’s engaging with you, buying something
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from you that gives both of you pleasure.
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And there are so many places where we need more of something.
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No one’s asking you to be that person who invents something that never existed before.
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What we’re asking you to do is choose to matter in a way that aligns with who you want
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to be.
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Yeah.
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And I think it’s also important to talk about this idea how you do things matters.
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You know, thinking about the bartending days.
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We were having lunch before, all the people on the crew, we’re just recalling folks,
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like there was a valet person who I met in Venice in California.
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This guy was amazing and he brought such light to what he did and lit up… and I’m still
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talking about him and this is years later.
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But the level of excellence and joy.
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And someone else was talking about these two pizza guys, like the banter they would do
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makes you want to go into the pizza store again and again.
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It wasn’t even the best pizza, but you just had this quality of interaction and I think
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so many people miss that looking for the holy grail of a perfect purpose.
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Right.
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And what they’re actually looking for is a way to hide by saying I’m looking for
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the perfect purpose.
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I went to business school with a guy who said he was waiting for the right moment to start
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his entrepreneurial venture.
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That was 27 years ago.
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Wow.
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Right?
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That I started so many bad ones along the way, but sooner or later you’re going to
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stumble into one that you're glad you did.
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Yeah.
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So you run one of the most popular blogs in the world.
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We all love it.
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You publish every day and you’ve said it’s one of the top 5 career decisions you’ve
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ever made.
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Why?
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Even if no one read it, I would blog every day.
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I think everyone should do so.
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And here’s the reason.
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If you know that tomorrow you have to say something about something you noticed, about
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something that might help someone else, about an opinion you have that might stand the test
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of time, you will form those opinions, you will notice those things, you will invent
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that idea.
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And if day after day week after week you leave this trail behind of thoughtful examination
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of your world, you can’t help but get better at whatever it is you seek to do.
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And if as a byproduct other people read it and trust you more, that’s a jackpot.
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Right?
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My goal is not to have more readers.
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My goal is not to sell more books.
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My goal is to be trusted in a way that I can make the change that I seek to have happen
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in the world.
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Return on trust.
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How do you gain permission to talk to people in a way that they want to be talked to?
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You don't do that with SEO and with gaming social media strategies.
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You do that by showing up in a way that you’d want someone to show up for you.
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And I still don't understand why people don't do this.
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I think… not that I’ll get the answer right, but I wanted to ask this on behalf
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of I know so many people who will be like, “Marie, please ask him this.”
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What I know from my interaction with our audience is sometimes people feel so afraid of being
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judged or they’re going to run out of ideas.
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Yeah, they should.
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Yeah.
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Those are all the things.
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Being judged sucks.
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Right?
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So write it under somebody else’s name.
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Right?
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That… call yourself anything you want.
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Talan Stone writing this blog.
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No one knows on the internet if you’re a dog.
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You just post every day and you can’t possibly get in trouble because it’s not you.
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And after you’ve done it for 6 weeks, you know what you’re gonna do?
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You’re gonna put your name on it because you’re so proud of what you’re creating.
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Are you gonna run out of ideas?
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Well, here’s my thought on this.
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I write like I talk.
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And nobody I know gets talkers block.
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Nobody.
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No one wakes up and goes… unable to speak.
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So if you write like you talk, don't worry.
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Because you haven’t run out of things to say yet, so you won't run out of things to
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blog.
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Do you ever in your own mind, because you’ve been doing this how many years now have you
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been blogging, roughly?
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Well, before it was called a blog I would say the first email newsletter went out in
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1990.
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I love that.
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So 26 years or so.
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That is so awesome.
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I remember when I first started doing email marketing it was like 1999, 2000 and it was
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woah and, like, PDFs, ebooks, that was like mind blowing.
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It was so cool.
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Isn’t that great?
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So few people saw what you saw.
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That, you know, they went ahead and they bought stock in bookstores and they went ahead and
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thought, “This just has to keep going in the direction it’s going.”
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In hindsight, once you put words and then video onto the internet, it has to change
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everything.
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Our culture was based on scarce TV channels, scarce spectrum, scarce bookshelf space, and
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we blew up all 3 of those.