I agree with “potential interested parties will usually need a lot of convincing just to think its worth investing their time in talking with you” but I’m unwilling to put significant effort into trying to convince them in this post. Here’s why: Nothing that I say even matters at all. They need to see it for themselves.
The way I see my post working is this: As people get to know me from my posts on LessWrong, some of them will see evidence of ability and start getting an idea of what kinds of things I’m good at. THEN they’ll think it’s worth investing the time to explain their problem to me and see what happens.
I’m not interested in working hard to convince people that don’t want to believe me, who may be too risk averse to think big—all for the prospect of not getting paid! My personality is like oil to that water. It’s the people who are thinking big and can guess at what I have to offer based on our interactions that I’d like to work with.
I’m just not known in this community yet.
And, just in case it wasn’t clear, most of my marketing ideas are untested. I’ve had some amusing successes, but I’m not a professional marketer. I’m a person who has enough of the right kinds of ideas that potential is there, but has not yet had the opportunity to make use of it. If you want to pay people like they’re interns, you tend to hire entry level people, no? If you want to do new kinds of work, you tend to accept that it might not pay well at first, right? For marketing ideas, I’ve essentially got an intern-like attitude, though I am offering only a small time investment.
I agree with “potential interested parties will usually need a lot of convincing just to think its worth investing their time in talking with you” but I’m unwilling to put significant effort into trying to convince them in this post. Here’s why: Nothing that I say even matters at all. They need to see it for themselves.
The way I see my post working is this: As people get to know me from my posts on LessWrong, some of them will see evidence of ability and start getting an idea of what kinds of things I’m good at. THEN they’ll think it’s worth investing the time to explain their problem to me and see what happens.
I’m not interested in working hard to convince people that don’t want to believe me, who may be too risk averse to think big—all for the prospect of not getting paid! My personality is like oil to that water. It’s the people who are thinking big and can guess at what I have to offer based on our interactions that I’d like to work with.
I’m just not known in this community yet.
And, just in case it wasn’t clear, most of my marketing ideas are untested. I’ve had some amusing successes, but I’m not a professional marketer. I’m a person who has enough of the right kinds of ideas that potential is there, but has not yet had the opportunity to make use of it. If you want to pay people like they’re interns, you tend to hire entry level people, no? If you want to do new kinds of work, you tend to accept that it might not pay well at first, right? For marketing ideas, I’ve essentially got an intern-like attitude, though I am offering only a small time investment.