Thursday, November 21, 2019

2 things you should focus on instead of social media

2 things you should focus on instead of social media2 things you should focus on instead of social mediaEvery Monday and Wednesday, I pay a guy to push my hespecies rate into the stratosphere and turn my muscles into mush. His name is Tyler, and hes my personal trainer.For years, I worked out on my own. Haphazardly. Id run a bit here, lift some weights there. I seldom warmed up and frequently forgot to stretch. Afterwards, Id come home and reward myself with a beer.When I was younger, this exercise approach basically worked. I built some muscle and stamina. However, as I aged, injuries started to mount. My shoulders became stiff. I gave myself tennis elbow from too many curls.Last year, I finally bit the bullet and coughed up some dough for a twice-weekly trainer. Thats where Tyler comes in. He went over my entire health history, injuries and fitness goals. Then he measured my body fat, fashioned a training plan and we were off to the races.Now, every Monday and Wednesday, whether I want to or not, Im at the gym. We focus on core training, sort of like CrossFit. After the workouts, Im exhausted, but its a good kind of exhaustion.When I get home, I stretch, shower, and drink lots of water. No more beer. In fact, I eliminated alcohol and caffeine from my diet completely.When you pay for a personal trainer, its harder to flake on workouts. Paying makes it more of a priority. While everyone else in the gym is snapping Instagram photos or getting lost on Facebook, Tyler is putting me through the paces. Now, even when I work out alone, I always leave my iPhone in the car.What does any of this have to do with social media? Mostly, that there are no short cuts to any place worth going. Social media sucks a lot of time out of your day. It may be entertaining, and it can be helpful to market your business or art. But it distracts you from achieving greater, personal success.Authors Gary Keller and Jay Papasan wrote the book, The One Thing The Surprisingly Simple Truth Be hind Extraordinary Results. The book drives home the importance of priorities. Some of the points they touch on includeAchievers use a success list, not a to do list. They have a strong sense of priority.If you want extraordinary results, you need to narrow your focus.Do your fruchtwein important work, your one thing when your willpower is strongest. For many people, thats early in the day.Ask the question Whats the one thing I can do that will make everything else easier?Essentially, the authors suggest that in every aspect of your life, prioritize the one thing that is most important. For most of us, social media is probably not whats most important.Being an artist. Thats my one thing.A seemingly invaluable toolApart from mindless entertainment, social media has become a seemingly invaluable tool to promote your business, entrepreneurial ambitions, and creative pursuits.Everywhere you look these days, youll find online life coaches, aspiring writers and artists, as well as all man ner of businesses leveraging social media to promote themselves. Yet, for many of them, the stuff theyre peddling is not that unique or valuable. It doesnt stand out from all the other noise.Technology has removed the gatekeepers of the past. Anyone can create an online platform for their art, music or business. They dont have to convince agents, editors or investors anymore.Unfortunately, there is no quality control. As a result, many aspiring writers, artists and entrepreneurs have their hearts broken. They spend a lot of money on fancy websites, logos, photos and newsletter services.They launch their websites, post like crazy all over social media, and wonder why the response is crickets. Its sort of like building a fancy sports car, with a spectacular paint job and accessories. Except the car doesnt have an engine. Sexy on the outside, but dont look under the hood.Social media success is a side effect of quality, not the cause. You can pretty your Instagram account all you want, and upload all kinds of lovely pictures on your Facebook page. None of that stuff, by itself, will make your art or business take off.If you want to be successful with your art or business, stop spinning your wheels on social media. Instead, focus on these two thingsRare and valuableProduce things that are rare and valuable. Instead of wasting all day grooming superficial stuff on social media, pour your energy into mastering a difficult skill. If its not difficult, it wont be rare. You wont stand out, and success will elude you.A better writer and artistAuthor Cal Newports book So Good They Cant Ignore You Why Skills Trump Passion in the Quest for Work You Love argues that following your passion is bad career advice. Rather, you should pursue work that interests you to develop skills and career capital along the way.Its helpful if the work aligns well with your aptitudes, too.Not everyone agrees with Newport, but I think hes on to something. When I was a teenager, I dreamed of bec oming a rock star or cartoonist. My father urged me to get an education and pursue a reliable, stable career. Enjoy your cartooning and music, but have something solid to chose back on, Dad used to say.So, I went to college and studied criminal justice administration. On the side, I performed in a rock band and drew cartoons for the campus newspaper. Later, I went to grad school, attained a Masters degree, and enjoyed a 26 year career in law enforcement.My police career taught me volumes about people, responsibility, leadership, and more. The last ten years of my career I served as Chief of Police. I learned tons about politics, community issues, budgets, recruitment, retention, media relations and the fact that its impossible to make everyone happy.I dont know where Id be today had I tried to become a rock star or famous cartoonist. What I do know is that I developed invaluable skills in my law enforcement career. I honed a strong work ethic, personal discipline, good habits, solid writing and speaking skills, and the ability to delay gratification.The many experiences, skills and abilities I developed over my career helped me become a better writer and artist.Rare and valuable skills are what tischset you apart from everyone else. You have to create value to get value.Be like the Mona LisaAuthor and marketing expert Seth Godin wrote a short but excellent blog post titled, Social media is a symptom, not a tactic.Godin points out that if youre doing remarkable work and your organization has built a social ratchet that works, youll have a significant social media presence.Godin addsOn the other hand, if you spend all your time beginning at the end, grooming your social network, tweezing your Insta posts, hyping your tweetsnothing much is going to happen.To drive home his point, Godin points to the Mona LisaThe Mona Lisa has a huge social media presence. Her picture is everywhere. But she doesnt tweet. Shes big on social media because shes an icon, but shes not an icon because shes big on social media.Rome wasnt built in a dayRecently, I began studying figure drawing with Scott Waddell, a classically trained and talented painter. Also, Ive studied landscape painting at length with Scott L. Christensen, a master artist.The time, travel and expense of studying with these artists is considerable, but as noted above, There are no shortcuts to any place worth going.I could waste time wellenreiten social media, and paint only when inspiration strikes. But when I upload my artwork on Instagram and Facebook, I shouldnt wonder why no one pays attention.The solution, rather than trying to endlessly spruce up my website and social media posts, is to put in the hard work. Get up early, or stay up late honing my skills.Seek the best instruction you can afford. Relentlessly practice. Constantly compare your work to better artists, creators or entrepreneurs. Continue to focus on the ONE THING that you need to do to move forward.Are you producing things t hat are rare and invaluable? If not, stop grooming superficial work online and start developing the skills to produce rare and beautiful things.It may take time. Rome wasnt built in a day. Some of the skills youll learn might come from unlikely places. Keep focused on your ONE THING. Get the best instruction you can. Work hard.In time, youll start producing rare and valuable work. People will start to notice. And then, maybe your stuff will be the talk of social media.Before you goIm John P. Weiss. I paint, draw cartoons and write about life. Thanks for readingThis article first appeared on Medium.

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