How To Prevent Social Media BurnOut [Part 1]

Here Is The Most Important Thing You Need To Avoid:

Before deciding to give up on your job as a content creator earning $24,000 a month, read this.

Don't Quit Quite Yet.

Avoid doing anything that would make things worse or make you feel bad.

Things like cutting out tasks or quitting some of your to-dos will only lead to guilt. So, cut back rather than cutting out.

For example, if you are used to posting one YouTube video a week, you could post one video every 10 days, instead. And, if you usually post 10 tweets per day, you could post 5 tweets throughout the same timeframe.

And, yes, taking a clean, unplanned break counts as quitting. Your fans, listeners, audience, and people who rely on your input might find themselves having to find alternative advisors, mentors, gurus, coaches, influencers and entertainers, if you don't show up at all. Imagine what you would do if your favorite store closed for two weeks... We'll you'd need to find an alternative outlet--you couldn't simply go without food or toiletries while waiting for them to get their renovations done. That's why stores stay open even during renovations.

Just do something.

As a content creator who is doing this for money, you need to view your brand as a business and not as an individual with "life happens". Don't be a no-show. Show up, even if you're not perfect. You can always edit later or delete and redo. Just do something.

By The Way, I am Gigsome.

If you liked what I had to say, here are some of my links:

I hope to see you next time. I'll be doing a series on running social media. This has been inspired by my promotion of my spicy sites as well social media. If you're here early, congratulations.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Happy Saturn Day