Nobody’s going to help you. Does that encourage you or discourage you?
By Derek Sivers
Nobody’s going to help you. It’s all up to you.
Does hearing that discourage you or motivate you?
For example: Are you hoping that a great world-class booking agent will find you and sign you? I believe no great agents will want to take you on unless you’re already earning $5000 a month gigging, so that their 10% cut (only $500) would be worth their time.
Or are you hoping to find a big investor for your music? Someone to invest $500k into your band for radio promotion, touring, recording, videos, publicity/pʌb'lɪsəti/, payola/pe'olə/, etc. I believe there are no investors that would invest in a musician now. Even solid profitable/'prɑfɪtəbl/businesses with customers and employees can’t find investors, so just assume you will not.
So: No agent. No investor. No one’s going to help you until you’re already successful. So how do you get successful with no help from anyone?
How can you make $5000/month from gigging, so that an agent will be interested enough to take it to the next level? Only you know.
How can you call so much attention to your music online, that a company will gamble/'ɡæmbl/on you, and finance the expensive offline campaign?
Those are the healthy questions to ask.
To some people, this approach is really discouraging.
To me, this approach is really encouraging.
I like being reminded that nobody’s going to help me - that it’s all up to me. It puts my focus back on the things I can control - not waiting for outside circumstances/'sɝkəmstæns/.
read loud
6:40 - 7am 20