|
During my morning walk last week - I love walking, it makes me feel like I am claiming my time back in such an easy way - I was re-listening to this podcast episode with Seth Godin and Tim Ferris, I scribbled down on my phone (I guess I should write type, as scribbling on your phone is not advised kids) this question: 'Is your idea tattoo worthy?' He makes the example of Harley Davidson and Suzuki. If you want to buy a motorbike, there are plenty of cheaper options than a Harley, but Harley comes with a message. An experience. A lifestyle. People do get a Harley Davidson tattoo, but certainly not a Suzuki one. Or Vespa - EEKS. Of course, I am not suggesting you need to think whether your logo would be nicely wrapped around an arm of a 40-year-old trucker named Joe. However, I do believe that the people you genuinely want to help are the ones who can help you assess whether you are working towards a genius idea, or it's time to start over. In summary
From my Notion DashboardYou can create yours here!
Whenever I get interviewed, every single interviewer asks me how did I come up with the idea for the school. The stars did not align, I did not get hit by a lightning bolt with “AMS” on it (a bit like a twisted version of the Harry Potter origin story), and neither I did wake up one day and knew it was going to work. I had no bloody clue. It just felt right at the time. When I had to sacrifice my online coaching - all to protect my mental sanity, and fight my Virgo tendencies to overdo things - I did more or less what Seth talked about in the podcast episode. The way for me to assess whether this idea that I was experimenting with was worth the risk was to ask myself if this community was one people would be proud to be a part of. I recommend checking this exercise from Seth's blog about something called ‘the first ten’. We get so excited about a new idea/product/business and we get so attached we are almost wary of asking our ideal market for opinions, in case they shrug their shoulders and walk away Beyonce style. The curse of idea peopleOh hello, there my name is Fab and I am an idea person. Have we met? Joking aside, I know I'm an idea person and that is my curse. Yesterday I was talking to my business partner at EDGE, and we both agreed that neither of us is short of ideas. Ever. What I have learnt, over nine years of working for myself, is that the best thing that I can do is
I still remember Tim Ferriss, talking about how he gave himself 10 episodes of his podcast to see whether it would be worth it for him to pursue. That worked out pretty all right for him. I am doing something similar with our new series on the podcast on YouTube with the short weekly marketing news. I'm going to let it run for a couple of months and see if it actually has value to ourselves and our audience, and if not, I will just move away from it with love. Join our 4-day live experienceLast chance to snag super-early bird tickets for the next cohort of our 4-day Introduction to Positive Impact Marketing intensive. Appreciation cornerA fantastic marketer, cheerleader and bundle of wisdom, Sophie is honestly a fantastic human I met on the interwebs - and I am so glad I did! Her wit, her marketing insights, and relatable posts are always so spot on. So please, please do yourself a favour and go and follow this gal.
Fab-ulous weekly highlights
Are only “new” ideas worth your time?As I said before, and I shall say again, you do not have to reinvent the wheel. Use tools that already exist instead of struggling to come up with something completely groundbreaking. This is how Pinterest has become so successful. Pinterest simply repurposed the idea of the pin board and put it online so people could collect interesting images and share them. This simple concept has allowed the site to experience a huge success. Work and innovate when the time is right. When you need to devote yourself to your work, do it. Don't cut your work short, but also don't work when it's time for the other important things in your life, like family. Similarly, when you need to innovate, innovate. Don't innovate just for the sake of it –you'll only waste your creative energy. Save it for when it has the potential to lead to something great,
P.S. if you are looking for more support, these are 3 ways I can help…
Loved this week's issue? Consider fuelling my highly caffeinated lifestyle |
Thanks for reading 🫶 If you'd like to stop receive Fab's founder notes click here. To change your email or update the kind of emails you'd like to receive from us manage your profile. Not getting what you need? No hard feelings - but you will be missed. Unsubscribe here. 113 Cherry St #92768, Seattle, WA 98104-2205 |
Alt Marketing School is a newsletter and podcast teaching marketers how to market to hearts, not brains. Using psychology, impact and the latest frameworks to help you make a bigger impact online.
FAB GIOVANETTI DIARY OF A CEO This past month I came to a breaking point. My to-do list kept expanding, my work kept stretching and my time off was dwindling. Goodness knows if I needed help - and needed it fast. So off I went, in search of support with our day-to-day marketing. If you’re anything like me, when it comes to tackling big projects and expanding your team as an entrepreneur or solopreneur - delegation can feel intimidating and downright overwhelming. I mean, how do you even know...
FAB GIOVANETTI DIARY OF A CEO Do you remember the teen magazines that used to be in the newsstands twenty years ago? (Apologies in advance if you were not born twenty years ago, you just made me instantaneously feel ten centuries older) If, like me, you were lucky to be alike in such age of printing glory, you’d remember teen magazines filled with pops tart gossips, eyebrow raising advice about your intimate health and loads of quizzes and tests. Will you marry your BFF? If you were a Spice...
FAB GIOVANETTI DIARY OF A CEO And just like that, our latest cohort is almost over! In January, we set out to do the biggest update to our cohorts yet. New 30+ page playbook for both Notion and Google docs Revamp all of the sessions including teacher workshops Added 2 weeks and 4 sessions to the cohort I thought that'd be it - yet I have come out of these 8 weeks with 4 more pages of small changes. As such, I couldn't help but reflect on some of the things that I have learned in the journey,...