(Ready, fire, aim wildebeest via Imagen 3/Google Gemini)
If I had to choose between acting too quickly and acting too slowly, I would choose the former. You already know I don’t like it when things never get done. But the ready, fire, aim method introduces problems of its own. Let’s look at how ready, fire, aim can adversely affect both external and internal content.
External content
If you haven’t figured it out already, I create a lot of external prospect/customer facing content. Not only for Bredemarket’s clients, but also for Bredemarket itself so I can get more clients. This blog post is an example.
Sometimes I meticulously plan a full campaign via a myriad of Asana tasks covering multiple blog and social media posts. Sometimes the entire project appears in a day or two, sometimes it takes a week, and one recent project took 3 weeks including teaser content, the main content, and follow-up content.
Yes, sometimes I meticulously plan. And other times I just do stuff.
Last Saturday I was struck with an idea for a 2 minute and 20 second landscape video about biometrics and Bredemarket. I knew it was long and many who encountered it wouldn’t watch the whole thing, but I wanted to make my statement and reserve it for bottom of funnel activities.
Only AFTER I posted the video did I realize that this was the logical second part to a 30 second video that I had previously created for biometric clients.
If I had thought this through, I could have started with the 30 second video, THEN introduced the longer video as the logical next step. Like a funnel, if you believe in funnels.
The proper first video
Well, better late than never.

Watch this 30 second video that I made for Bredemarket’s biometric prospects and clients.
The proper second video
Hey, did you like that video? Would you like to learn more?

Watch this 140 second video that I made for Bredemarket’s extra special biometric prospects and clients.
Hey, did you like that video? Learn more on my “CPA” page.

Well, that’s what I should have done in the first place so I wouldn’t have to make this clumsy fix later.
But there’s still time to fix a future internal campaign before it happens.
Internal content
Because this content is internal I can’t really talk about it, but I anticipate that Bredemarket will be invited to a future event…and I am already planning NOT to attend.
There are a number of stakeholders associated with this event, and in a TLOI kind of way they will have different reactions to my non-attendance. Some of them probably don’t give a you-know-what whether I attend or not. But perhaps there are those who do care, ranging from mild curiosity about why I’m not going, to the other extreme of demanding to know how I could bypass this important event.
So I drafted three messages in case I was asked about my non-attendance: (1) a brief two-paragraph message, (2) a longer message, and (3) a detailed message which delved into my concerns.
But what if I don’t know which message to send? What if I unloaded my deepest darkest fears via the long message, when the stakeholder merely wanted to know if I had other commitments at the time of the event?
So I rewrote the messages so that they build on one another.
- Let’s say Bob asks why I’m not attending. I would simply send Bob the first, brief message. If this satisfies Bob’s curiosity, we’re done.
- If Bob asks more, then I will send those portions of the second message that weren’t part of the first one—namely, the 3rd and 4th paragraphs of the second message. (The first 2 paragraphs of the second message are identical to the entire first message.
- If Bob still questions, I will unload parts of the third message on him—namely the stuff absent from the second (and first) message.
There’s my funnel. And if needed I can skip directly to the third message with certain stakeholders.
And if no one asks why I’m skipping the event, I don’t send ANY communication—and know that my decision to skip the event was the right one.
Future content
So in the future, whether creating external or internal content, I need to pause and think about how it fits into the tons of content I’ve already created.
So that I can tell the best stories.
And so I will achieve ready, aim, fire rather than ready, fire, aim.

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