• Published On: April 22, 2026Categories: Marketing, Newsletters

    One person on your email list can make a big difference.

    I found out that Pearl Jam posted about the local nonprofit community art center Alice and I started, Art House Grandview, on their Instagram.

    Three point eight million followers. A photo of a kid at Art House learning guitar, small hands on the neck of an instrument almost too big for them. Their foundation, the Vitalogy Foundation, picked Art House as the April recipient of their Future Days Fund grant. The money goes directly into the programs where we teach kids music for free.

    Joshua Heath Scott wrote a newsletter, ‘HOW GUITAR CHANGED MY LIFE,’ and someone on the email list forwarded it to Pearl Jam’s foundation, which led to them highlighting Art House Grandview.

    Joshua wrote that piece as only he could, talking about how Pearl Jam’s ‘Ten’ album was a huge influence, and “I’ve spent a lot of time on this Substack trying to articulate why art and creativity matter — why guitar matters — why it’s more than an instrument, why it carries the weight of where music has been, why holding one connects you to something larger than yourself.”

    This is the core of talking about what we do.

    We don’t just play music, we change lives.

    We don’t just write essays, we shape culture.

    We don’t just take photos, we document the world around us.

    When we reduce ourselves to commodity offerings (check out my song, buy my print, read my article), we can’t be surprised when it’s treated as “content.”

    So talk about your work in the same creative manner in which you make it. Dare to say you’re a writer even if you’re not “published.” Call yourself a photographer, a musician, a poet.

    If the ding-dongs running the United States right now can claim they know what they’re doing, you have my permission to be anything you wanna be.

    Let’s not define ourselves by our primary source of income, as we were put on earth for reasons beyond comprehension, beyond punching someone else’s time clock to pay the rent.


    Join me and the Social Media Escape Club TOMORROW, April 23 at 2pm EST, as we talk about this (and more), and you’ll leave with some new ways to talk about your work – sign up here.

  • Published On: April 22, 2026Categories: Social Media

    From Lauren Bliss over at Thought Enthusiast:

    I recently took a month off from social media, and while I initially thought it would be detrimental to my work, like I needed to stay tapped into trends and what other brands are doing, it actually had the opposite effect. I felt like I had more creative ideas because my brain wasn’t bogged down by endless content (and constant bad news).

    This is why some people say to take walks without listening to a podcast, or eat without watching YouTube videos – we need to give our brains time to process and sort things out! By doing so we might actually think of our next great idea!

  • Published On: April 21, 2026Categories: Websites

    Got this from musician Dom Aversano on a recent live stream (edited for clarity):

    “I was thinking about recreating the recommendation aspect (on my website), which is what social media tends to excel at. I remember when websites used to have links to other sites… My issue with websites is they can feel lonely sometimes — not in terms of traffic, but more in the sense that they tend to be about individuals rather than groups. My sense is that social media is popular partly because it feels like a party.”

    Most of our websites are mullet marketingbusiness up front, party in the back.

    We invest all this time and energy in the social media space – interesting videos, fresh updates, lively banter, etc. That’s the “party in the back” part of the mullet. Fun, fresh, exciting (for the 10% of your audience that even get to see it).

    Then, when anyone does end up on our website, they see your head shots from two summers ago, seven month old blog posts, and twenty links spread across the header and footer for someone to make sense of.

    I’m not even saying you have to stop posting on social media. I’m just saying put some of that same material on your own damn website. Stop the mullet marketing.

    And to Dom’s point – yes, talk about other people! Link to other projects! I linked to Dom’s website at the top of this post – go check out his work! We’re in this together, learning as we go, and there’s no reason we should be doing this alone.

  • Published On: April 20, 2026Categories: Work

    I wrote this back around the time my dad, a life long musician, passed away a few years ago.

    The biggest lie is we have to make our entire living on the sale of our art, or else we’re just no-talent wannabes.

    So many artists fall for this, feeling like 100 views isn’t enough, and they stop because “no one cares.”

    I wake up thinking about the artists, poets, writers, and musicians we’ve lost because they couldn’t keep up with the “hitting it big” rat race of social media.

    Somehow, 10,000 views aren’t enough because you really need 100,000. Having 12 people at a show on a Tuesday night is a waste of time. No one buys your art because you’re not making enough Reels.

    It’s lies, it’s all bullshit.

    Recently, a friend walked me around her apartment, showing me art left to her by a dear friend who had passed away. Just time together, picking up pieces, pointing out tiny details, and sharing the stories of each item.

    I didn’t ask how many followers they had, or if they were a full-time artist. In the end, literally – when we pass away – no one will give a damn.

  • Published On: April 19, 2026Categories: Community, Events

    I’m no sales expert, but I’ve watched enough YouTube videos to know about “scripts.” Literally planned out lines of dialogue to making the sale in person or on the phone. Teams will even review calls from during the week, just to make adjustments and get better.

    With most things, there are extremes.

    (more…)
  • Published On: April 18, 2026Categories: Events

    Had a health scare in the family this week, and drove 3+ hours to visit my aunt in the hospital. Thankfully she’s okay, and I’m surrounded by family and lovely friends who sent me lots of cat photos, but whew… what a time to reflect. Makes me realize more and more it’s all about the connections and stories we get to make with people in our lives!

    ◾ CO-WORK ESCAPE POD
    Change your Welcome email, file that tax extension, edit a voiceover, retouch some photos, practice the piano – let’s do this work together!
    Tuesday, April 21 from 12-2:00 PM EST
    REGISTER HERE: https://luma.com/w767uysy

    ◾ ESCAPE POD #115 – THE PARTY TEST
     ​Picture yourself at a dinner party, and someone asks what you do. What if you talked about the thing that gets you out of bed every morning, instead of your day job?
    CAN WE DO THAT? I think we can. ​And what happens when we start doing that more??!
    Thursday, April 23 from 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM EST:
    REGISTER HERE: https://luma.com/f5p4u3u0?coupon=PARTY

    ◾ BREAK UP 💔 WITH SOCIAL MEDIA #02
    Like the break up party we had on Valentines Day, but making this a regular Saturday feature to focus on BREAKING UP WITH SOCIAL MEDIA.
    Saturday, April 25 at 12PM EST
    REGISTER HERE: https://luma.com/4eqvlsck?coupon=23RET6

  • Published On: April 16, 2026Categories: Social Media

    From a Cal Newport blog post, “In Defense of Thinking,”

    “I’m done ceding my brain — the core of all that makes me who I am — to the financial interests of a small number of technology billionaires or the shortsighted conveniences of hyperactive communication styles.”

    The platforms display view counts of short form “content,” but that doesn’t mean you’re required to play along. Are those numbers even accurate?

    Lots of people drive past billboards everyday on highways, but so what?

    It’s 2026 and $20 magazines exist. People are buying vinyl records. Young people are buying digital cameras and camcorders and CD players.

    There is a possibility that people you’re trying to reach aren’t even on social media anymore.

  • Published On: April 15, 2026Categories: Social Media, Video, Work

    Someone asked me about finding engagement outside of social media on today’s Substack Live.

    I get asked this a lot, and it came up in a great conversation with Deanna Seymour on her podcast that I recorded earlier today.

    My answer isn’t super complicated, but it does require patience. I make it work by showing up on other people’s channels (think podcasts, YouTube interviews, live sessions) and having genuine conversations.

    I don’t do this as a growth hack. I’m not expecting a thousand people to rush to my site. Maybe ten people really hear me, and two of them subscribe to your newsletter, and if I keep doing that, those twos and threes add up.

    The real trick is consistency, though. One podcast every four months ain’t gonna move the needle. But showing up regularly, having good conversations with good people, and letting their audience find me over time – that’s how all this works without social media.

Published On: May 6, 2025Last Updated: May 6, 2025By
Seth on the phone

I help creative people quit social media, promote their work in sustainable ways, and rethink how a website and newsletter can work together. Find out more here. 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️

Join us — start a 30 day membership and hop on our next Zoom call meeting!

Email me: seth@socialmediaescape.club

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