As an Educational Creator, I write brief books and provide other resources to aid fellow stiff-jointed and gray-haired friends in resetting facets of their lives that might need some TLC, such as personal enrichment, self-improvement, income generation, and overall well-being.
Share
Deciding what was valuable enough to teach...
Published about 1 month ago • 2 min read
This is the second in a series of posts about transitioning from a newsletter writer to an educational creator.
Yesterday, I wrote about feeling like an imposter
You can click the image to read the post if you missed it.
I’d become convinced that writing solely as a newsletter writer—especially under Substack’s limited monetization model—wouldn’t meet my revenue goals.
I wanted a more robust creation cycle and portfolio.
An educational creator writes and rounds out his services to meet readers, customers, and clients where they are.
“A newsletter can only meet the needs of a reader, while an educational creator meets the needs of a customer via products and DFY/DWY services and that of clients via coaching and mentoring.*”
Yet, I still remained uncertain about what specific knowledge I possessed that would be valuable enough to teach others.
What was an authority topic (AT) others would be willing to pay me to teach?
I inventoried my everyday skills
What everyday skills did I take for granted that others might be interested in?
I listed my unconscious competencies (stuff I did without thinking), such as:
Sitting zazen (silent Zen meditation)
Walking Kona, the WonderDoodle
Brushing my teeth (oh yeah, that’s a bestseller waiting the happen 🙄)
Reading about my ATs
Writing and selling mini-books
Writing and selling mini-courses
Aha! I’d happened on the ATs that I knew others were interested in and I was excited about.
These two topics made the shortlist.
I examined the intersection of my ATs
Authority topics often overlap and their boundaries become fuzzy, and that’s OK.
When combined, the two sub-topics a over (mini-books and mini-courses) opened a new category of possibility; they could both be included under the umbrella of an educational creator.
Finally, I investigated problems I’d already solved
Problems I’d personally solved seemed perfect candidates for courses others would value.
Bullet Journal (and later, my own system - Zen Journal)
A number of years ago, I was a user of the Bullet Journal system. I was active in Bullet Journal creator Ryder Carroll’s forum of users and rapidly became an authority. I created modifications (mods) that expanded the system’s function and effectiveness. After a while, I packaged what I knew into a series of Special Reports and sold over $5,000 worth to others using the system. [After Carroll threatened to sue me (I still can't understand why when all I did was increase his brand awareness and boosted his sales), I stopped selling the reports.]
I underwent meditation teacher training with Lodro Rinzler and Adreanna Limbach, a husband and wife team that writes The Laundry on Substack.
I'd written and publish a mini-book, The Practical Buddhist: Buddhism Without the Robes & Ritual, and numerous mini-courses.
These I knew were easy to leverage when structure correctly.
In hindsight, the answers were always within
I just needed to delve into my history and uncover them.
The topics that ultimately proved most beneficial to students, customers, clients, and clients were a combination of digital products (Ebooks, mini-books, reports), coaching (meditation and online business topics), and Done-For-You /Done-With-You services.
Following these three straightforward guidelines, I created a path that involved several newsletters, websites, and services.
...
Tomorrow, I'll talk about the difficulty I experienced structuring my expertise into teachable lessons and the system I devised to overcome it.
WRITER, TEACHER, COFFEE MAINLINER & LABRADOODLE DAD
As an Educational Creator, I write brief books and provide other resources to aid fellow stiff-jointed and gray-haired friends in resetting facets of their lives that might need some TLC, such as personal enrichment, self-improvement, income generation, and overall well-being.
“Unlike animals who thrive in a specific niche, like a lion in the Savannah, humans create jackets for the cold and fans for the heat. We’re tool builders and deep generalists.” ~Dan Koe *** Hi all, Baz here, and Happy Thursday! You know, for years, I taught students to niche down and become a big fish in a small pond. It’s not that I got it wrong, it's just that I was a bit off target. Here’s what I think hits the bullseye: 🎯 Blend Your Interests Into a Brand that Makes You a 'Niche of One'...
I was disillusioned with Substack I've been on Substack for a few years and have created and killed about seven—yes, I said seven newsletters there.😳 I've always had an issue with how Substack limits monetization, and I soon found that their email function—while a cool feature—wasn't robust enough. As Substack evolves, bigger names crowd out the attention base of the folks some of us serve. Don't get me wrong—I think Dan Koe's coming to Substack is great. Others of his caliber, such as Jim...
Hi, It's Baz. As I mentioned in my Substack post yesterday, here is the link to the free chapter of my new mini-book. 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼 Click here to download the sample chapter. Buy the entire book for $11. A few comments: I'm now a professional basket weaver! 🧺 OK, just kidding. 😉 Not with my arthritis! However, I've taken some time away from Substack to reflect on my journey over the past few years and to chart my future. I've spent the last year writing a lot of material, and now I'm ready to...