If you want to make a living
at what you love doing, you need to get good at it. Some of you are already
good at what you love — you’ve been doing it for years, either on the job or as
a personal passion. Others are just starting out, but that’s not a barrier —
you just have to put in more time and effort.
I was already an experienced
writer when I started Zen Habits (I’d been a journalist for about 18 years),
but I didn’t know a thing about blogging or teaching people to simplify,
improve their lives, change their habits. I knew about how to do that myself
(though I was still learning) but I’d never taught anyone. So I learned: I read
other blogs, read personal development sites and books, read blogs about
blogging, studied the best, figured out what they did that made them
successful. It takes a lot of study, a lot of analysis, a lot of trying and doing
and seeing what works and what doesn’t.
I made a ton of mistakes.
That’s a good thing. You can’t get good at anything without making a huge
amount of mistakes. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes — they’re stepping stones
to greatness. Try everything, see what works, see what doesn’t. Stick with the
things that work.
Put in a lot of hours of
practice and doing. The more, the better. Reflect on what you’ve done and what
you’ve learned, write it down. Put it in your blog so you can help others
learn, but more importantly you’ll force yourself to learn from your own
experience.
Get good. Others will gladly
pay you if you’re good.
Build
an Audience
Any business, big or small,
benefits from an audience. That’s different than a customer base — an audience
is a group of people who you help and who love you. They might not pay you.
Some will want to pay you for more of what you offer, but many will just love
you, and that’s a great thing.
The best way to attract an
audience is to provide really valuable content. It’s that simple. Help people
solve their problems, give away lots of powerful information to do so.
Building an audience is
tough. It takes time, it takes a lot of giving, it takes a willingness to
wither criticism and to learn from that criticism (though ignore the idiots).