One of the biggest things that used to slow me down was trying to make every post perfect.
I’d reread it. Tweak a word. Second-guess the tone. Then sometimes… not post it at all.
What I’m learning now is that a post doesn’t need to be perfect—it just needs to be clear.
Here’s how I decide a post is “good enough” to publish:
I ask myself three simple questions:
1. Does this say one clear thing?If I’m trying to explain too much, I know it’s not ready yet.
2. Would I say this out loud to a real person?If it sounds stiff or forced, I simplify it.
3. Does it reflect what I’m actually learning or experiencing? If it’s honest, it’s useful—even if it’s not polished.
If the answer is yes to those three, I post it.
No fixing.
No waiting for the “right time.”
No worrying about how it will perform.
And the more I focus on clarity instead of perfection, the easier showing up becomes.
Next, I’ll share what I don’t post—and why leaving certain things out actually makes marketing simpler.