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How I Know a Post Is “Good Enough”
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.
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Where I Post First (and Why I Don’t Try to Be Everywhere)
After I understand the message and turn it into a simple idea, the next question is always: Where should this actually be posted? What I used to do was try to be everywhere at once .Facebook. Groups. Pages. Comments. Messages. And honestly—it just created noise. What I’m doing differently now is choosing one primary place to start. For me, that’s usually: - My personal Facebook profile - Or one space where people already know me Not because it’s perfect—but because it’s familiar. Starting in one place helps me: - Focus on clarity instead of volume - Pay attention to what people respond to - Learn from the feedback (or silence) Once something feels clear and natural there, then I’ll think about repurposing it elsewhere. But I don’t start everywhere. I start somewhere simple. Right now, my goal isn’t reach. It's understanding. If I can clearly explain one idea in one place, I know I’m on the right track. Next, I’ll share how I decide when a post is “good enough” to publish—without overthinking or second-guessing it.
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👉 “If You Could Focus on Just One Thing…”
After working through the funnel training I mentioned earlier, one thing became very clear: Most people don’t need more tools. They need one clear starting point. So here’s a simple question for you — no overthinking: If you had to focus on just ONE thing right now, what would it be? Examples: - Getting more eyes on what you already have - Building an email list - Creating consistency - Understanding where your leads even come from You don’t have to have it figured out. Just name the one thing. Drop it in the comments — I’ll read every one.
A Quick Update on What I’m Working On Today
Yesterday and this morning, I spent some time working on my DFY funnel site and listening to a lead generation masterclass. What surprised me wasn’t anything complicated — it was how simple the process actually is when you stop trying to duct-tape tools together. The training walked through: - Setting up a free funnel in minutes - Running a 30-day email follow-up without writing emails yourself - Using organic engagement instead of paid ads I’m still processing it, but it helped me decide what to focus on first instead of trying to do everything at once. If you want, I can either: - Share the replay - Or break down what I took away in plain English (Reply or react — I’ll go with what helps most.)
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What I’m Working On – Part 3
Turning the Message Into Simple Posts Once I understand the message of a funnel, the next question is always: How do I turn this into content without overthinking it? What I don’t do: - I don’t try to explain the whole funnel - I don’t copy the funnel language word-for-word - I don’t start with links Instead, I start by pulling out one idea. Usually that looks like: - One frustration the funnel speaks to - One belief it’s trying to shift - Or one “aha” moment I had while going through it Then I turn that into a post that feels human—not promotional. For example, instead of talking about a system, I’ll talk about: - Feeling stuck at the “where do I start?” stage - The overwhelm of too many tools - Or the relief that comes from having something already built The funnel doesn’t become the focus. The experience does. From there, I write posts that: - Share what I’m learning - Speak to the feeling behind the problem - Invite curiosity instead of clicks Right now, my only goal with content is this:? Be clear. Be honest. Be consistent. No pressure to sell .No rush to scale. Just learning how to communicate one idea at a time. Next, I’ll share how I decide where to post first and why I don’t try to be everywhere at once.
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Marketing As I Learn It
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Learning affiliate marketing together—funnels, traffic, and content—shared honestly as I test and learn what works.
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