Ask The Person Who Hasn’t Done It

“Have you done this before?”

It sounds like a gate.

A velvet rope for experience. A tiny clipboard held by the bouncer of credibility. If yes, step inside. If no, please return to the sidewalk with the other amateurs and half baked philosophers.

But here’s the weird little pickle in the punch bowl.

Even people who haven’t done the thing often have something worth hearing.

Sometimes especially them.

The person who has never built the product may notice the part everyone else has learned to ignore. The person who has never run the event may ask the question so obvious it has become invisible. The person who has never written the campaign may wonder why the headline sounds like it was assembled in a basement by nervous accountants.

Experience is useful. Of course it is. Nobody wants a surgeon who says, “I’ve watched a lot of TikToks and I’m feeling spiritually available.”

But experience also creates grooves. Grooves become habits. Habits become laws. Laws become “that’s just how we do it here,” which is corporate Latin for “the raccoon on LSD is now driving the forklift.”

So ask the question differently.

Not just: Have you done this?

Ask: What do you see?

Ask: What feels confusing?

Ask: What would you try if you didn’t know the rules yet?

The person without the scar tissue may still have fresh eyes. And fresh eyes are underrated little lanterns. They don’t know where the bodies are buried, but they can often smell the dirt.

The best room is not full of experts.

The best room has experts, beginners, skeptics, operators, dreamers, and at least one person willing to say, “Wait, why?”

That question is a crowbar.

STay Positive & Use It

Constructing Curiosity

There is almost never a good reason to walk into something cold.

A meeting. A workout. A first draft. A shift behind the bar. A sales call. A Tuesday with suspicious lighting.

You’re going to do the thing anyway. So why arrive like a damp clone of yourself?

Take five minutes and get yourself excited.

Not fake excited. Not motivational poster excited. Not “crush the day” excited, which sounds like something a gym bag would say if it learned LinkedIn.

Real excited.

Find the angle. Find the weird little spark. Find the reason this thing might matter, even if the thing is ordinary, annoying, repetitive, or wearing khakis.

You can always find it. (I got excited about a construction ERP software the other day…but not at first…)

Maybe that meeting you’re entering? It’s when the idea finally lands. Maybe this is the run where your body stops arguing with gravity. Maybe this is the email where the sentence gets sharper. Maybe this is the shift where someone walks in for a beer and leaves feeling slightly more human.

Excitement is not always discovered. Sometimes it is assembled. Like a sandwich. Like a campfire. Like a child’s toy with instructions written by a committee of caffeinated adults holding onto their childhood memories. (The one I just built with my daughter had three versions of a piece of CAT equipment so you could deconstruct and reconstruct something different. Exciting in software. Exciting IRL, too.)

The point is this: energy changes the work.

Not magically. Not instantly. But noticeably.

When you choose to get excited, you enter with better posture. You listen differently. You notice openings. You become less of a passenger and more of a participant.

And that matters more than we’ll ever want to admit. Why? Becuase it’s easier to wait for something to prove it is worth of our enthusiasm than to develop it first.

Stay Positive & Easy Isn’t The Goal, Though, Better Is

Fold The Wrong Way

Fold your arms.

Go ahead. Be a human pretzel for three seconds.

Great.

Now fold them the other way.

Ah. There it is. That tiny mutiny in the elbows. That awkward little committee meeting between your shoulders and your brain. Nothing is broken. Nobody has called the authorities. Your arms are still folded.

But it feels wrong.

…That is learning, my friend.

Most discomfort is not danger. It is just the body discovering that the old path through the woods has a cousin. A weird cousin, sure. The kind who wears velvet pants to breakfast. But a cousin nonetheless.

The funny thing about folding your arms differently is that the result is exactly the same. Arms folded. Mission complete. The kingdom remains intact.

But work is not arms.

Life is not arms.

In work, doing it the slightly uncomfortable way can change the result entirely.

The new sales pitch. The sharper headline. The cleaner process. The honest conversation. The decision to ship before the thing has been polished into a haunted porcelain doll.

Progress often arrives wearing the costume of inconvenience and a little discomfort.

Stay Positive & Comfort Keeps Score By Repetition; Progress Keeps Score By Friction

Pick It Until It Picks You Back

The fastest way to become interesting is not to do more things.

It is to pick one thing, give it a finish line, and chase it until your excuses start sweating through their cheap little shirt.

A challenge does that.

Read one book on the topic. Interview one person. Make one thing. Share one thing. Sell one thing. Follow the thread until it becomes a rope, then tug.

When you do twelve things slowly, you mostly collect fog. You become fluent in almost. You can say, “I’ve been meaning to,” which is one of the most crowded cemeteries in the English language.

But when you take one thing to its end, something strange happens.

Your perspective sharpens.
Your work ethic gets fingerprints.
Your ideas stop wearing rental tuxedos.
You finally have something to say because you’ve been somewhere.

Not vaguely. Not theoretically. Not with the lukewarm confidence of a LinkedIn wizard standing in front of an AI chat thread.

You earned the sentence.

That’s the gift of a challenge.

It turns curiosity into evidence. It turns effort into a story. And it gives you the rarest marketing asset of all…. A point of view with dirt under its nails.

Stay Positive & You Know, The Kind Of Person YOU Would Trust

Ahead? Or Ready?

“Getting ahead of it” sounds heroic.

Like you are a cowboy lassoing tomorrow before it gallops into the ravine wearing sunglasses and bad intentions.

But most of the time, nobody is ahead of anything. They are just early to the panic. They built a tiny throne out of assumptions and called it strategy.

The better move is not to get ahead of it…. It is to get ready for it.

Getting ready keeps the ambition without the hallucination.

It says, “We do not know what is coming, but we can sharpen our tools, clean the windshield, feed the horse, and stop pretending the weather reads our calendar.”

Getting ahead creates false confidence.

Getting ready creates useful confidence.

Stay Positive & One Is A Trick, The Other Is A Practice

The Menu Item With Fireworks Around It

A menu that bolds every item is not a menu. It is a ransom note from a diner with laminate anxiety.

But a menu that places a little typographic tuxedo around one item?

The Burger That Made the Grill Believe in God

Now we’re talking.

Marketing has become very good at saying things. Less good at pointing. And pointing, when done well, is not a lesser art. It is the tiny carnival barker inside the customer’s brain saying, “Psst. This one. This is the door with the tiger behind it.”

Emphasis is one of the most underused tools in marketing because it feels too simple. Too primitive. Too much like putting a neon arrow over a sandwich. But that’s exactly why it works. The human brain is a distracted squirrel wearing a Bluetooth headset. It does not want twenty equal choices. It wants a clue.

The marketer’s job? It’s to choose what deserves the spotlight and let everything else become the velvet curtain.

So…how do you use emphasis without turning your website, email, or sales deck into a parade float driven by a caffeinated gofer?

First, pick one thing. Not three. Not seven. One. The feature that unlocks belief. The benefit that changes the buyer’s posture. The proof point that makes the skeptic put down their tiny courtroom gavel.

Second, emphasize the thing the customer already wants to care about. Don’t bold your internal roadmap poetry. Bold the sentence that helps them survive Tuesday.

Third, use emphasis as a promise, not decoration. If you spotlight something, it better matter. A highlighted claim with no substance is just glitter on a parking ticket.

Fourth, rotate the spotlight by context. A CFO wants margin. An operator wants fewer fires. A user wants the button to stop hiding like a woodland creature with commitment issues. Same product. Different bold.

The best marketers don’t just write better words. They create better attention.

Stay Positive & Become A Choreographer Of Attention

Many Hands, Light Work, And Other Lies

“Many hands make light work” is true.

So is “too many cooks turn the kitchen into a soup wearing clown shoes.”

That’s the annoying little fortune cookie of collaboration. Both ideas are right. The trick is knowing which truth you’re standing in.

A big team can move mountains, but only if everyone knows which mountain, why it matters, and who brought the shovel. Otherwise, you don’t have teamwork. You have twelve people politely forwarding the same confusion around like a cursed casserole.

A small team can move faster, too. Fewer opinions. Fewer meetings. Fewer chances for someone to ask, “Have we considered making the button more emotionally available?” The work can ship with the speed of a raccoon stealing a sandwich.

But speed is not always the goal.

Sometimes the work needs more hands because it needs more belief. A new message, a campaign, a product launch, a community event, a brand shift. These things do not travel because one brilliant person whispers into the void. They travel because people pick them up, carry them, repeat them, bend them slightly, and make them real in the rooms you are not in.

That is the marketing lesson.

The story is not launched when the asset goes live. The story is launched when enough people know how to tell it.

Many hands make light work when the hands are aligned. Fewer hands make faster work when the work needs focus. Neither is a principle. Both are tools.

The mistake is choosing the tool and then pretending it is a strategy.

Go in with the right mindset. Say what kind of work this is. Name the tradeoff. Do we need speed, or do we need lift? Do we need precision, or do we need participation? Do we need a tiny pirate ship or a village parade?

The work will become what the people believe it is.

Stay Positive & What Do You Believe?