The Habit of Faking It

Most days, I’m faking it here on the blog. My mission statement is simple—show up every day and put the most interesting insight I have into the world—but at least half the time I show up searching for something to be interested in or something useful to say.

Some days, I’m less interested and more anxious or completely fucking batty or so burnt out it’s crazy. The blog is a mask I wear for a while, a better version of myself that exists for public consumption, discarded the moment I hit post.

Some days, the act of posting lets me step into that better version of myself and stay there for the next eight hours. A bad day turns good by the simple virtue of roleplaying a different version of myself. My own personal magic trick, pushing me to get out of my head and engage with the world, after which I’m ready to do more.

The value of faking it until you make it isn’t in the persona you project, but the habits you build up in order to become a convincing facsimile of success. Writing a blog post becomes a foundational habit upon which I can stack other habits. “Start writing after you finish a blog post” is far easier to do than “kick off the crappy mood and write something.”

Habits build upon habits, and doing the simple stuff first opens the spaces for more complex work. 

Strategy vs. Tactics in the Land of Newsletters

While the traditional side of the publishing industry is bracing itself for disruptions in the supply chain, the conversation over on the indie publishing side is all about how to prepare for the coming email marketing apocalypse.

For those who don’t pay attention to such things, the low-down goes something like this: Apple has been doubling down on email privacy with updates for a while now, and their most recent update to iO15 adds a feature dubbed “Mail Privacy Protection.” Once activated, this feature disrupts a bunch of tools that email marketing relies on: the ability to track open rates; details about what country the reader is in; triggers that would send you a follow-up email if you showed an interest in a particular thing.

There’s a pretty good round-up over here if you want to get into the technical stuff, but all you really need to know is this: a foundational marketing tool for many indie publishers is about to change in a big way, and a bunch of common tactics are going to get trickier to implement.

The email marketing industry has also encouraged to focus on different metrics of success from this point, because open rates are going to mean nothing. There’s lots of “focus on ‘read more’ links instead of including all your content in the email” type discussions, which means I’m dreading what the next few months of newsletters could end up becoming.

Some people are going to do that well, but I suspect lots of writers (who frequently pick up tactics and apply them divorced from context) are going to make some horrible newsletters as a result. 

A brief lesson from the days of RSS and blogging: Setting your feed to show a quick blurb and Read More can be the kiss of death, because your readers have already decided where they’d like to engage with you and communicated that preference. If I put your blog on my RSS reader, it’s because I want it to appear there when I review the new posts. If I sign up for your newsletter, I want the convenience of your content showing up in my inbox, where I can easily archive it (if useful) or discard it (if not).

Read more works best as a signpost for bonus information, not the core content, and I’ve unfollowed countless writers whose blogs were set-up with an eye towards getting readers onto their sites to boost site metrics instead of getting people to read their work.  

Getting people to read your stuff is always the core strategy for content marketing, and disrupting that strategic goal simply so you can cleave to a familiar tactic is very much a case of missing the forest for the trees.

Status: Saturday, 2 October, 2021

LOCATION: Windsor, Brisbane, Australia.

THE QUICK-AND-DIRTY NEWS

  • Printers have shipped out first print run of Joanne Anderton’s Inanimates, which should arrive around mid-week.
  • First COVID vaccination jab yesterday, which means I’m aching like hell today.
  • I’m searching for a new day job, which has thrown life into chaos.
  • Our cat had an emergency vet visit, which means…
  • I’m open for freelance cover design gigs, and have a few pre-made covers for sale at a discount.

CURRENT INBOX: 65 (Officially in drop everything and fix it phase, because anything over 30 usually means I’m ignoring important stuff that will come back to bite me later)

WORKING ON

  • Layouts and cover designs for a Corella Press project
  • Writing so many selection criteria
  • Edits and cover design for January and February releases from Brain Jar (currently behind because of cat drama)
  • A very secret project I’ll talk more about in November.
  • Writing a zombie-infested D&D fantasy novella which may or may not be terrible.
  • Contracts, as always, and edits, as always

THINKING ABOUT

  • I’m ratcheted way down to the bottom of Masłow’s hierarchy of needs right now, so there’s not a lot of deep thought going on beyond prioritizing urgent jobs.

READING

  • Luanne G Smith’s The Vine Witch, still, because it hasn’t been a good book for my stressed brain.
  • Stephen Graham Jones The Only Good Indians, a phenomenal book that blends a melange of influences into a gloriously cohesive whole.

LISTENING TO

  • I seem to be starting most mornings with The Hive’s Hate To Say I Told You So, or Pulp’s This Is Hardcore.

WATCHING

  • Reservation Dogs: incredible TV that breaks all sorts of storytelling rules in all sorts of interesting ways. Just…watch it.
  • Doom Patrol: Just when I thought they’d burned me out on DCs superhero television shows, along comes Doom Patrol which has the right amount of bat shit crazy, deeply weird superhero lore, meta-text, and career-resurgence-of-Brendan-Fraser to utterly capture my attention.
  • We’re also revisiting the first season of Jodie Whittaker’s run as the Doctor, with the aim of getting to the seasons we haven’t seen yet.

STATUS OF THE ADMIRAL

She’s got a chin full of kibble dust and an interest in the birds outside.