7-40 Challenge | Planning Week
Zig Ziglar said it decades ago: “You can have everything in life you want, if you just help enough other people get what they want.”
I’ve read that quote a dozen times over the years. Tonight it finally landed, because it answers the exact thing I’ve been stuck on for six months.
I’ve spent this whole year tangled up about promotion. Telling people about my book felt like begging. Asking for a sale felt like having my hand out. Every time I sat down to market something I’d built, a voice said you’re being self-serving, you’re asking people for something. And I’d close the laptop.
But Ziglar’s quote exposes the lie in that. I had the transaction backwards. I thought promotion was me taking — asking for attention, asking for money, asking people to care about me. It’s not. Promotion is me offering. It’s telling someone who’s bored on a plane that there’s a story that’ll make the flight disappear. It’s telling someone who grew up in the 90s that there’s a book that sounds like the inside of their teenage head.
I’m not asking them for something. I’m trying to give them something.
That’s the whole shift. When I post about Phase Defiant, I’m not begging a stranger to validate me. I’m raising my hand and saying if you want to feel the way I felt writing this, here’s how. Some people will want it. Some won’t. But withholding it — keeping it quiet because telling people felt uncomfortable — wasn’t humility. It was just selfishness dressed up as modesty.
If the book is good — and the people who’ve read it tell me it is — then keeping it hidden doesn’t protect anybody. It just keeps the people who’d love it from ever finding it.
