Each day I think about the people who read these posts, and I share what seems to be the most interesting and relevant idea that’s been on my mind.
I capture that idea as best I can and share it to The Infinite Creative where it can be discovered today and rediscovered tomorrow.
The idea gets delivered directly to the email inboxes of people who have subscribed, who can choose if and when they read that post.
I prefer email over Facebook, Twitter or Instagram because you have to make a small decision to read an email. You make a micro commitment to what’s going to be inside when you click open an email. It might be The Infinite Creative, but it’s comprised of many finite thoughts. When you get to the end of my post, you’re done. You forward it to someone you think needs to read this today, then close or delete the post and it you’re done. I’m consciously not contributing to an infinite scroll.
If you don’t read a post because you’ve got other things to do, neither of us are injured. I’ll be back with another idea for you tomorrow, and the next day.
If you tire of my emails, there’s an unsubscribe link available at the bottom of each post.
Blog maths says that half of the posts I write will be below average. I’ve got my fingers crossed for your sake that most of the ones you read are from the other half.
Blog maths also says that my top 10 posts are likely to get better. But the more posts you read, the more you’ll have read that were never destined to be in the top 10.
I care about your opinion, and my readers are of a quality and quantity that I invite and welcome feedback from each of you. That might be a comment shared below the post itself, or it might be liking a post that you think deserves to be bumped up towards my ‘top posts’. It might mean hitting reply and sharing your thoughts on what I’ve written via email, or it might mean unsubscribing and making more room in your inbox for content that is more relevant to you.
Merely a quote from Pat Pattison riffing on what's already been said here; "90% of Bob Dylan's songs are not his best 10%."