Last week, Vox published an article by internet culture reporter Rebecca Jennings about how everybody needs to be a self-promoter now—and we all hate it. Then, I read a response by writer and book coach Leigh Stein, who was quoted in the Vox piece, in which she admitted to actually enjoying creating her social media content. Stein said that she was considerably more optimistic about the state of things than Jennings article was.
I found the exchange fascinating. I find it hard to disagree with either of their perspectives! And Stein wasn't really disagreeing with Jennings either—which left me with one thought: I don't think we're talking about the same things here.
So I resurrected an old piece from July 2021 that made the case I wanted to make—that self-promotion sucks and is contentless, but that self-promotion is not the only mode for creating content that gets the job done on social media—and updated it for today's social media moment. This episode has my response to both Jennings's and Stein's articles, as well as a description of how enshittification doesn't only apply to platforms but to creators, too. And then, I share the 3 Rs of Digital Content.
Footnotes:
All new episodes are available in written essay form at whatworks.fyi
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★ Support this podcast ★00:00 - Introduction
01:53 - Enshittification
03:52 - Self-promotion doesn't work
08:48 - There's an alternative approach that works better
12:08 - Canva pre-designed templates offer ideas for another way
16:13 - The 3 R's of Digital Content
18:17 - 1. Respect the medium
21:18 - 2. Respect the audience
22:53 - 3. Redistribute the idea
24:24 - Next steps
26:30 - You're invited to Rethink Work