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When early-stage founders mimic trending speech patterns, their identity vanishes. Readers are tired of fakes. Instead of borrowing someone else's language, compile the terms you typically use when explaining your field of expertise.
To fill 80% of your content with your own language, do these three things. First, select 10 technical terms you use daily. Second, put casual words like "legendary" or "pro-tip" on a forbidden list and filter them every time you write. Third, establish sentence principles, such as "Do A, but not B," to fix your tone. Doing this ensures readers immediately recognize your work the moment they see it.
Spending three hours a day on content creation is a systemic failure. Abandon perfectionism. Instead of grandiose posts, dig into a single point that solves a customer's pain.
The 15-minute workflow is as follows: First, write down one question customers ask most frequently. Next, present exactly one method that can solve that problem immediately. Finally, describe the small achievement gained by using that method. Investing just one hour a day is sufficient. Use your remaining energy to prove your expertise instead of relying on algorithms.
If you have fewer than 1,000 followers, empty views from tens of thousands of people are meaningless. Finding one real customer who will pay for your knowledge is far more important. Don't struggle to increase views; instead, ask questions to encourage comments.
To turn comments into conversations, follow this process: At the end of your content, ask, "What is the most difficult stage you are currently facing in this field?" When they comment, express your gratitude and immediately start a 1:1 conversation. Afterward, provide a link to a 20-minute diagnostic session or consultation. By screening customers this way, you gain potential customers who generate actual revenue, rather than just readers who consume your writing.
Creation should not interfere with your main business. Modern people do not read long articles. In a zero-click environment where information is obtained without clicking, high-density atomic-unit content is far more effective. To improve production efficiency, build a system that allocates four hours of focused time per week.
On Mondays, break down three past high-performing pieces of content into quote-sized units and save them in a library. On Tuesdays, fill in your pre-made templates and polish the connecting sentences to finish your drafts. On Thursdays, distribute them in batches and finalize your notification settings. Focus on your main work for the rest of the time. You should remain an architect who proves their ability, not a slave to the algorithm.