The method before was to churn out constant material every week if possible. Just slam it out. If people didn’t like it, promise them better in the next round. They’d consume it anyway like hogs at a trough. People threw money at their boredom and didn’t care what they got.
-
-
Show this thread
-
Now, in an age when people are rationing what they have? Watching toilet paper and food dwindle and wondering when their supplies can be refilled, or if they’ll die tying to get food? Even if this virus ends next week, every person alive will vary deep memories of this time.
Show this thread -
Look at the generations who lives through the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. They hoarded broken nails for the rest of their lives. They gave rusted bolts as gifts and thought they were real treasures. How you think quarantine and fear of death and rationing will scar us?
Show this thread -
So I suspect folks are gonna want more quality in their work. Books they can read a couple times and actually enjoy. Hard to be bored when you’re scarred for life. Hard to throw money in the toilet when you’ve glimpsed the fragile glass spiderwebbing beneath your feet.
Show this thread -
If creators want to survive, I suspect quality over quantity will become the rule again. At least for a while. Act accordingly and learn to produce quality. Check out my writing course for tips on how to produce books people will read over and over.http://Gum.co/wlabd
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
This Tweet is unavailable.
-
@NickColeBooks had warned me about this even before the crisis. Now he looks like a freaking prophet.
End of conversation
-
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.