Websites need blogs to drive traffic and to truly matter, the blogs need to deliver great value to its readers.
The Salesa website was launched on the 28th of October (2020) to deliver A.I solutions to businesses and even individuals.
We have felt the need to create blogs that supplement our technology and provide credible and valuable ideas and information to people who are interesting in shaping the future.
We had several great ideas about how we want to go ahead and even drafted a wide range of articles.
But we did not publish any of them.
The first blog seemed momentous and I suppose a certain sentimental value creeped in and we wanted it to be extraordinary.
That’s not the way to go.
Everything starts out ugly and unfinished. It is through continuously working on it and improve it that it gets better.
This philosophy is ingrained in how we develop our technology.
The first iterations of any technology are nowhere near close to what they will soon be.
In Ed Catmull’s words, new things are ugly babies. You need to allow them room to grow up into something beautiful.
The same principle applies to the blog as well, does it not?
So, let’s not start off with something awesome. Let’s just start.
Let’s deflate the significance of the moment by doing the opposite of what we want to do. Let’s not start off with a bang. Let’s just start.
Let us build up from here and deliver insane amounts of value instead of becoming paralyzed by our sentiment to start exceedingly well.
This article delivers no value and doesn’t warrant any interest from any person.
But this article will remove the paralysis that’s stopping us.
Our articles are going to be bad. Perhaps even horrible. Then, they will get better and perhaps one day, we can even be proud of them.
But it all starts with putting out articles on the regular, even if they are bad.
So, let’s go.
What are we waiting for?
Wanting to improve is almost instinctual to most of us.
Websites need blogs to drive traffic and to truly matter, the blogs need to deliver great value to its readers.