This month marks my thirteenth year in the travel industry. I registered my domain all the way back in Feb 2008. I've learned a lot about writing and business since then, most of the hard way. Here are some of those hard lessons:
First, this ain’t easy. This is work. People think this is just buying a domain, putting content up, and presto, success! No. This is constant work. It's building a business. If you don’t plan on devoting all your free time to this, keep it as a hobby.
Failure will happen. A lot. The people who succeed are the ones who accept that, learn from their mistakes, and move on to the next project. The ones who get too emotionally caught up in failure and never move beyond it are the ones that get left behind.
Don’t quit your day job until your hobby can support you. Otherwise, the financial pressures will cause you to take whatever you can for money and you'll just end up on this hamster wheel chasing scraps, always in motion, but never moving forward.
The people who succeed are also the ones who change course and pivot when situations change. If you keep doubling down on a strategy that gives diminishing returns, you’re fucked.
Forget what people say. Luck has a ton to do with success. Being in the right place at the right time with the right idea plays a larger part of the story than most people want to admit.
If you’ve been doing whatever it is you do for five years and you're still struggling to pay the bills, go get an office job. There’s nothing wrong with calling it quits. In fact, successful people know when to throw in the towel.
And, remember, no one else has any idea as to what they are doing either. We’re all just learning as we go. Even the “gurus.” Don’t be too hard on yourself if things go wrong.
Learn to write. There’s so much crappy content out there. Just because you write doesn’t mean you can. Take a class. Get an editor. Even if you can write just ok, you’ll still be better than 90% of the people out there.
Pick a niche. There are too many creators out there to be a generalist. You need a “beat” these days. Something that distinguishes you from everyone else. If you’re trying to be "just another backpacker blog”, you’re gonna fail. That worked in 2008. It does not now.
Success is all marketing. There’s too much content out there to be found organically. This isn’t Field of Dreams. If you build it, people won’t come. You got to go out and promote, promote, promote. The hustle is real.
Network outside your niche. Be someone else’s expert. Trying to be big in your industry will limit you. There are more people outside your niche than in it. Network, network, network. I saw the most success when I took my message outside travel and to other industries.
If you’re trading your time for money, you’ve already lost. The people who don’t grow are the ones who trade time for money. Don’t do things that take away from building a business that makes money while you're sleeping. Own your revenue stream. Time is not scalable. Money is.
If you’re not getting your audience off social media, you're screwing yourself. Hot platforms and algorithms constantly change. If you’re not directing everyone to your own website / email list, you’re at the whims of companies who don’t care about you. Own your audience.
If you’re only working with brands, you're doing marketing. Don’t pretend it’s something different. Your product is your audience and your customer is the brand. You’re a mouthpiece for ads. Don’t dress it up differently.
Hire people. Seriously. You can’t do it all and, if you try, you’re not going to succeed. Hire people who do things better than you can so you can focus on your core strengths and being a leader.
Be you. People follow content creators because they want to follow real people not generic brands or content. Be real, be authentic, be human. Some people will like it, some people won’t. But who cares? You can’t be everything to anyone anyways. So don't try!
If you’re creating a product, actually think about the "why" of it. What problem does it solve? Don’t just create something you think sounds good without first seeing the needs of your customers. Your readers might not even want it.
If you’re not focusing on SEO, you’re missing out on constant, easily monetizable traffic. SEO pays bills. Not followers on social media.
You don’t need to always feed the beast on social media. Take breaks. Trust me. No one is gonna notice. Your readers want you to live a normal life not always be posting.
Finally, remember: No one cares about you. You are not the center of the universe and “look at me” content only goes so far. Do something that solves someone’s problem and they will stick with you forever.
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Today is my birthday. I am 39 years old. (Where does the time go? I mean almost 40? Wasn’t I just 25?) Well, anyway, since people love doing this kind of stuff, here are 39 lessons I’ve learned about life (some of them far too late) in my 39 years:
1. Sleep is very, very underrated. You will never regret getting a good night’s sleep. And you’ll live better because of it. Get sleep. Don’t skimp on it. 8 hrs. Trust me.
2. Read more. Books are great. They teach you a lot and expand your mind. If you don’t read, you’re not living your best life. And you won’t get as far ahead in it either. Be a reader.
Today, I wanted to share some of the BIPOC voices that I follow in the travel community so you can follow them, read their content, and get tips that will help you travel better. [THREAD]
Travel is an industry that’s very white (for example: me) and these voices don’t get heard enough.
The industry still has a very long way to go when it comes to diversity & lifting up the voices of people with varying perspectives.
As the world gears up to (slowly) travel again, I’ve seen a lot of articles about the future of travel and when it will go back to “normal.” I think they are all way too optimistic and I have a few contrarian thoughts. Let’s discuss:
Most of these articles seem to be navel-gazing exercises. They talk about what hotels and airlines will do, how destinations will change, and what this means for the environment. That's all well and good and there are points I agree on:
Yes, local/domestic travel will be big. Yes, many countries will require a test at the border or proof of a recent negative COVID test. Yes, companies will tout their cleanliness more. And, yes, recovery will be slow.
But travel will never again be as big or the same as before.
Today, I wanted to share nine ways to succeed online! A lot of you are creators and many have asked for advice so I’d thought I’d share some general lessons I’ve learned over the years that will help you succeed. Here’s a thread on some ways to stand out online:
1) READ A LOT! Read what experts have to say, learn what works, & apply their tips.
2) Focus on the community. There’s plenty of creators out there but the ones that succeed the most never lose touch with their readers. Community is everything. Make the time for your readers, answer their comments, and try to host events.
I woke up Saturday morning feeling like crap and, by mid-day, I had a fever. So, given my recent travels to France and Taiwan, I decided to get a COVID19 test. Here's what happened:
First, it was incredibly hard to find information about getting tested. The Austin Health Department website had zero information on testing. I found some news articles that said Austin has it but couldn't confirm. I called 311 & they said they'd call me back. I'm still waiting.
Second, I did manage to learn that as of Friday a private hospital, BSW Health, does provide testing. It's $40. I filled out the online form and they said I met the qualifications. So, yesterday morning, I drove to the drive thru testing.
Just how bad is it in travel? Step into my office (a thread):
I started my website back in 2008. It was just me. I didn't have any overhead. I just needed to make enough to travel. Fast forward to 2020. I now have 4 full-time staff and our annual biz expenses are over $500k.
Over the last 30 days, we're down 12% in traffic compared to the 30 days prior. But that masks the complete fall in the last two weeks, where traffic is 50% off its highs, touching a number we haven't seen since 2017.
What does that mean for revenue?
Our ad revenue daily average is 30% less than in Feb but, again, we have a huge drop this week and are 66% off its peak. The blue line is traffic, the green ad revenue. That's pretty bad.