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Happy Tuesday
Ok guys, I'm finally ready to start posting some new content and classroom material. The tl;dr: We need to get moving, and prepare ourselves for what looks like a rocky year(s) ahead. I'm talking more aggressive, more outreach, more growth...all while still remaining true to the thing I preach about in every post, and on every call...we are here to help. Bit of a new tact with these as well. As I mentioned in one of the videos. If you guys want me to help implement any of the things I demonstrate in these new 2025 videos, just book a time in my calendar, and we'll do it together. No more me just assuming that everyone will figure out the technical things, even though I'm keeping things as easy as I can. Beyond that, I want to be clear that it's not doom and gloom, it's simply that the more we do to prepare ourselves for a rocky economy, the easier we'll ride it out, and the better we'll be positioned for the good times ahead. First two videos are up, with transcripts. In video one I set the stage some, and video two is where I start going through the things I'm doing to grow my new businesses. All of this of course in addition to the content and storytelling we're all already doing on a regular basis...right? :) I've also got some things to make that easier as well. Ok, get ready, I'm going to post a ton of shit this week and next.
Launched my first ever in-person writing event.
Very excited. Very nervous. It's a Nail Your Newsletter Masterclass for people who have always wanted to start or revamp their newsletter. I already have 3 people signed up (out of 12 possible spots). I'd love any feedback on the event text and tips to garner interest and sign-ups. The 3 people coming are in one of my networking groups, and I've emailed other people and clients I've worked with. The event is in person, which is a tiny barrier for some people, though I live in a small city with 2 train stations and a bus station. But just trying to think of ways to sell the workshop as a no-brainer. Other ways I am thinking of getting signups: - Flyers - old-fashioned, straightforward - Tiny Facebook ad campaign - I am thinking like £5 a day for 2 weeks just to target specific groups in my area Let me know what ya'll think!
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Quick Updates
I hate not being good at something. It’s the competitor in me. When I was younger I would lose at something, then spend days/weeks/months practicing the thing, until I was good enough to beat most people. But there’s a difference between not being good, and being early. And I have to remind myself of this every day. I want to be good at YouTube. I am not good at YouTube. But I’m also just starting. So, as of today I have four subscribers. 4. But instead of feeling like I suck. I looked at the analytics this morning and thought… Holy shit, I have four subscribers. Four people want to know what I have to say!! That’s how it starts. It’s all happening. And maybe it won’t. But I started. And I’m going to keep going. Four people. Wow. Guys, I promise there is a bunch of stuff coming. It's close. I just keep having to do some other things, and I'm pivoting a little with the content, based on all the thinking I've been doing on the fear post I made on a bunch of platforms last week. Stay tuned.
Quick Updates
Calling all guinea pigs, I mean beta testers
Totally kidding. This is not something super complex. But if you want to try one of the things I've been playing with, you're welcome to. Just don't go too nuts as it's using my ChatGPT API credits ( for now ). It's a chrome extension, for creating quick, short posts, based on the content of your browser screen. So say you're on Twitter, and someone is saying that Elon Musk is a Nazi ( could happen ). You'll click the extension, add your thoughts, choose the length and the platform you want to publish on ( then click elaborate ). Give it a second and voila, you've got some copy to post to your own networks. Not meant to replace the writer. It's simply to speed up the process for some posts. The real magic, if you go into the settings ( gear icon top right ), is that you can add in your details and tone of voice ( DO NOT CHANGE THE KEY ). To make it more....you. Hence that tone of voice post earlier. Just a fun little thing, part of many larger things i'm building, to play with. to install it, go into your Chrome ( or any chrome based browser like Arc ) and click on your extensions. In the top right you'll have to flip the Developer Mode toggle. When you do, some new buttons will appear, one of which will be Load Unpacked. Click that, find the folder ( from the zip archive attached to this message that you uncompressed ), and Bob's Your Uncle. No data collected. Nothing saved on my end, all happens in ChatGPT and in that extension window. Let me know how it works and if there are any issues.
Quick Update
Some very cool things ( automations and tech ) launching shortly, as soon as I kill a couple remaining bugs. In the meantime. If you use ChatGPT or Claude to create copy ( though we writers shouldn't be doing this for everything ), you know how important it is to capture your unique voice, your tone. Well, I came across and am using it for a few things, and thought you folks would be interested as well. It's essentially the mega prompt, that you feed your content to ( or your clients if you wanted to better capture their voice ) and it will give you maybe the most complete tone of voice prompt you could ever use. Put this into your favourite LLM, alongside some examples of your writing ( more is better ), and ask it to generate your tone of voice prompt. It's ok if you need to break it up some into prompt 1,2,3. Prompt 🤖 Prompt 1 - Micro-level elements: Analyze the given text focusing on the following micro-level elements: 1. Vocabulary and word choice - Analyze the writer's use of unique, specialized, or repetitive words and phrases - Identify the frequency and diversity of the writer's vocabulary - Examine the use of jargon, slang, or colloquialisms - Determine the writer's preference for simple or complex words - Look for any distinctive or unusual word choices - Assess the reading age level required to understand the vocabulary used 2. Grammatical patterns - Identify the writer's use of specific grammatical structures, such as passive voice, complex tenses, or particular parts of speech - Analyze the writer's use of verb tenses and consistency in tense usage - Examine the writer's use of singular and plural nouns, as well as pronouns - Look for any recurring grammatical errors or deliberate deviations from standard grammar 3. Punctuation - Analyze the writer's use of punctuation marks, such as commas, semicolons, dashes, and parentheses - Determine if the writer favors certain punctuation marks over others - Examine how the writer uses punctuation to create rhythm, emphasis, or clarity
Quick Update
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The New Skool
skool.com/the-new-skool-3248
No-nonsense community for creators, coaches & entrepreneurs to help you attract an audience, grow revenue, and create a profit-generating machine.
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