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>following a celebrity is always a mistake. you're getting attached to meta personas that push out mediocre content, just because that persona has been given a sexy and easily visualized form. you could instead be watching quality content produced competently in some niche that you actually have interest in, such as VR training for automotive enthusiasts. it's more accurate to engage with concepts than with people, and in many cases that's precisely the content you actually want.
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>getting attached to meta personas that push out mediocre content, just because that persona has been given a sexy and easily visualized form. you could instead be watching quality content produced competently in some niche that you actually have interest in, such as VR training for automotive enthusiasts. it's more accurate to engage with concepts than with people, and in many cases that's precisely the content you actually want. the quantity of content
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>the amount of content you're producing
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>productivity requires you to have something unique, and is only achievable by staying away from low-value content. but don't just put out content and expect it to get seen. constantly try to come up with ways to improve, or make your brand's content shareable in some way, even if it just goes out to your own blog, because constant iterations will increase engagement and encourage your audience to engage more frequently with you. even if your current audience is a small number of individuals, it'll still grow over time if you keep engaging and doing more creative things with it.
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>the amount of content you're producing how many channels you're doing it on
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>the amount of channels you're doing it on the tools you're using to reach the audience
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>the tools you're using to reach the audience the frequency with which you're using them
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>the frequency with which you're using them the level of creativity