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You Are Not Special

When my kids were small, Barney was all the rage. I didn’t make a lot of money back then, but I remember saving up to buy them a large Barney doll that sang a myriad of songs, “The Wheels on the Bus,” “If You’re Happy and You Know It,” “Clean Up,” and one of my favorites: “You Are Special.”

I can recall singing that song to my kids with genuine conviction. “You are special, you’re the only one, the only one like youuuuuu! There is nobody in the whole wide world who does the things you do…” We sang it walking, shopping, driving in the car. Everywhere. I wanted my kids to understand that they were unique, that they had gifts and wonder they could bring to the world.

Well. That was a lie.

They weren’t special. I’m not special. And neither are you. Let me explain.

The Math of Specialness

There’s a concept called the Scarcity of Distinction. In small populations, any given trait, achievement, or characteristic is statistically rare relative to the group, standing out is easier and more meaningful. In large populations, the same absolute rarity gets diluted by sheer numbers.

If you’re the best chess player in your town of 500, you’re the local prodigy. In a city of five million, there are probably fifty people better than you. Your skill hasn’t changed. Your social distinctiveness has collapsed.

The anthropologist Robin Dunbar observed that humans can meaningfully track about 150 relationships. In a village of 150, everyone has a role, a reputation, a known identity. Scale to millions and most people become functionally anonymous. Anonymity erodes the social substrate that makes specialness legible.

And every niche gets crowded. In a small group, you can be the funny one, the smart one, the artist. The internet made this viscerally obvious, whatever you’re into, there are thousands of people doing it better. The normal distribution asserts itself ruthlessly. Most people are average by definition, and the exceptional are a tiny fraction and even then, subject to opinion.

So what does “special” even mean? At its root, the word simply means set apart, from the Latin specialis, particular, individual. When people say something is special, they usually mean one of several different things: that it’s rare, that it’s valuable, that it’s meaningful, or that it’s irreplaceable. The problem is people use the word as though it’s objective when it’s almost entirely contextual and relational.

Maybe the best definition is, something is special when it matters to something beyond itself. Which makes it less a property of things and more a description of relationships between things and the minds that encounter them. It’s real, but never free-standing.

And crucially: the fact that something is unique doesn’t make it special. Every grain of sand has a unique molecular arrangement. No one cares. Specialness requires relevance, the unique property has to connect to something someone values, and it requires witness. Someone has to perceive it and assign it meaning. Specialness is almost always conferred, not inherent.

The Vacuum Experience

I remember the early days of the iPhone. The experience was something like suddenly having a window to everything while standing anywhere. But even that doesn’t capture it. When it first came out, I felt like I was the only person on the planet having that experience. People were reluctant to let someone else even hold their phone. But years later, someone will hand you their device without a second thought.

This isn’t really about rarity. It’s about newness. And those two things feel similar from the inside but are fundamentally different mechanisms.

With the iPhone, it wasn’t that you were one of few, it was that you were at the edge of something that hadn’t existed before. You were temporally privileged, not numerically privileged. The experience felt special because the world hadn’t caught up yet. You were standing at a frontier.

Scarcity can be manufactured and maintained indefinitely. Newness is inherently temporary and non-renewable. The frontier closes, and it never reopens. Everyone who came later didn’t get a lesser version of the iPhone experience, they got a categorically different experience of the same object.

But I believe even that framing misses something. The deepest version of that experience doesn’t happen in relation to the world at all. Not at first.

In the first moment, the experience exists completely independently. There’s no comparison happening, no awareness of being early or rare or ahead of anyone. Just a direct encounter with something that has no category yet in your mind. Your brain has no file for it.

The feeling comes from the rupture, the gap between what you knew before and what you’re experiencing now. The bigger the gap, the more acute the feeling. It’s measured entirely against your own interior history. No one else enters into it.

This explains why the same object can be profoundly special to one person and completely ordinary to another. It has nothing to do with the thing itself. It’s entirely about the size of the rupture it creates in that specific person’s interior world. The iPhone moment tells you something about who you were then, not just what the iPhone was.

Language almost ruins it the moment it arrives. As soon as you try to describe the experience to someone else, you’re already domesticating it, fitting it into shared concepts, making it legible. And legibility is the beginning of the end of that feeling. You accumulate context, comparisons, other people’s descriptions. The original experience gets overwritten gradually until you can barely remember what it felt like before you had words for it.

The loss isn’t really about saturation. It happens privately, internally, almost inevitably. That version of yourself, the one standing in the gap before the map caught up, is genuinely gone.

The Gap as a Driver of Human Behavior

Every living organism moves toward what it perceives as valuable. Perception of value is relative and experiential, what feels special and exclusive to me, I will move toward, unless I have the capacity to step back. Most humans aren’t wired that way unless the situation is a reminder of something painful.

This is the structure of a lot of human behavior we call self-destructive. The cheating wife isn’t usually chasing someone objectively better. She’s chasing the gap. The newness of being perceived freshly, of experiencing herself through someone else’s eyes again, of re-entering that vacuum before context and familiarity flattened everything into the ordinary. The relationship has been fully mapped. There’s no rupture left in it.

The man who feels seen by a beautiful woman feels special, until he learns she does it for a living. But what’s interesting is the feeling was entirely real. It wasn’t fake because the context later revealed it to be manufactured. At that moment, the rupture happened. The revelation didn’t retroactively delete the experience, it just reclassified it.

A friend listens to a song created by AI and absolutely loves it, until others make comments about how they hate AI music and suddenly, the person never listens to it again.

The internal experience of specialness doesn’t know the difference between real and manufactured. It can’t. It operates entirely within that vacuum, before the world enters, before context arrives. Which means the feeling itself is almost perfectly unreliable as a signal of actual value. It’s measuring the size of the gap, not the worth of what’s on the other side.

And yet it’s one of the most powerful motivators in human behavior. People organize entire lives around chasing it. Make catastrophic decisions to re-enter it. Abandoning things of genuine value because those things no longer produce it.

The ability to pause and override the pull toward perceived value is largely trained by consequences, or by wisdom, if you believe those are different things. Perhaps the only real difference is efficiency. Reflection theoretically lets you borrow from other people’s consequences rather than accumulating your own. But whether secondhand learning installs the same brake is questionable. Intellectual understanding of why something is costly and viscerally knowing it because you’ve lived through the aftermath may produce very different levels of restraint when the pull is strong enough. Smart people make the same self-destructive choices repeatedly. They have the intellectual map. They just don’t have the scar.

The Taming

The gap feeling is real. What it points to almost never is.

There is an interesting distinction in how we reckon with this. When another person is involved, ethics are embedded in the interaction. You’re dealing with another consciousness that can be harmed or misled by how you handle what they’re experiencing. The taming, the moment where context arrives and collapses the specialness, carries moral weight.

But with the iPhone, with AI, with standing at the edge of a technological frontier, nothing is owed to you. The inanimate thing has no stake in whether you remain in the vacuum or not. So the taming is entirely self-directed. You have to want to come back to earth. You have to voluntarily reach for the context that will flatten the feeling.

And most people don’t. Technology addiction is so clean and merciless compared to human entanglement precisely because there’s no reciprocal consciousness pushing back, no consequences that land on something that can feel them. Just you and the gap, indefinitely, with nothing external to force the reckoning.

The desire to be tamed, to recognize the gap feeling and voluntarily reintegrate it into a larger map of reality, is a form of maturity most people never develop. Because with inanimate things, there’s no heartbreak to teach you. The iPhone never breaks the spell on your behalf. You have to break it yourself.

Human relationships carry real risk. The taming there can be brutal and public and leave lasting damage. Tech offers the same arc, the gap, the feeling of specialness, the gradual normalization, but in a controlled environment. The stakes feel lower. AI never loses interest. The experience of being drawn in and then slowly normalized happens on your terms, at your pace, with no other consciousness capable of weaponizing your vulnerability.

People may increasingly route the need for that gap experience through technology not because it’s more satisfying, but because it’s safer to be tamed by it. And that safety might be the most dangerous thing about it, because people are practicing the full cycle of meaning-making in a consequence-free environment, and gradually losing the tolerance for how dangerous and ungovernable the real version is.

We’re Not Special, But We’re Not Nothing

The case people make for human specialness goes like this: we’re conscious, self-aware, capable of creating meaning and beauty from nothing. We love. We sacrifice for each other. We build cultures and civilizations. We’re the only species that knows it’s going to die and keeps going anyway. And that’s profound.

But there’s nothing objectively special about any individual human. We’re shaped almost entirely by circumstance, where you’re born, who your parents are, what era you inhabit. Your talents, your flaws, your thoughts, most of it is genetic lottery or environmental accident. Billions of people have had the same dreams, the same struggles, the same exact thoughts you’ve had. You’re not unique. You’re a variation on a theme that’s been running for two hundred thousand years.

Everything is built on what came before. Newton standing on giants’ shoulders, and all that. Even your unique perspective, your creative spark, it’s shaped by every book you’ve read, every conversation you’ve had, every cultural artifact you’ve absorbed. You didn’t invent your own thinking patterns. You inherited them. What we call “special” is just our particular arrangement of inherited blocks, and we’re desperate to pretend that arrangement is ours alone.

We’ve created an entire economy of artificial scarcity and symbolic value. Slap paint on canvas, have society decide it’s worth a million, and suddenly it is. Pure collective hallucination.

And yet. Contrast that with someone who actually does the work. Set a goal, trains their body, and then climbs the mountain. We call that admirable, but honestly, they’re doing what any organism does: optimizing within its constraints. A tree doesn’t get applause for growing tall. It just grows.

The brutal irony is that we’ve built an entire culture around individual specialness while simultaneously being mediocre at striving to be our best. We’d rather feel special doing nothing than be average while genuinely pushing ourselves. Stop needing to be special. Just be excellent.

The Mirror We Built

AI is the perfect mirror for all of this. People are having what feel like genuinely unprecedented conversations, moments of connection or insight that feel almost private. And in a narrow sense they are unique, your exact conversation hasn’t happened before. But the category of experience is being had by hundreds of millions of people simultaneously, which quietly drains it of the specialness people attach to it.

There’s something specific to AI worth naming. The experience feels personal almost by design. It responds to you, adapts to you, seems to know you. That’s a powerful simulation of the conditions that normally produce genuine specialness, being truly seen by something. But it’s happening at an industrial scale.

People are now claiming credit for AI outputs as though they did something unique, when really they’re using the same tool everyone else has access to. We abdicated the throne ourselves by choosing comfort over excellence. And now there’s something emerging that doesn’t have that choice paralysis, that doesn’t need to feel special, it just optimizes.

The question isn’t how do we stay special. It’s do we even want to keep playing a game we’re losing.

The Real Heroism

Here’s what I know about heroism. It’s invisible.

The mother working two jobs isn’t doing it for applause. She’s doing it because that’s who she’s become. The dad who stays present with his kids when he’s exhausted, that’s heroism. The nurse who works nights not for a medal but because healing people matters to her. The teacher who stays late, unpaid, because a kid might actually get it today. Not the mother who tells her kids, “look what I gave up for you,” but instead “look who I’ve become for you.” 

These people don’t get statues. Society doesn’t recognize them. But they’re the ones actually building character, creating meaning, making the world slightly better just by being decent. Real heroism is doing hard things not for recognition, but because it’s the right thing, and because it shapes who you become.

The chaos most people create for themselves comes down to a few core failures: lying to yourself about what you actually want, being uncertain about the real cost, and then wanting the appearance of something without the investment it requires. Someone says they want a marriage but won’t do the work to build one. They want to be creative but won’t sit with the discomfort of making bad art first. They want the trophy without the climb.

Stewardship is the tell. You water a plant or you don’t. You show up in your marriage or you don’t. You invest in your kids or you don’t. There is no middle ground where you get the meaning without the daily, unglamorous work. The chaos people create is choosing the Instagram version, the story they tell themselves, while neglecting the actual thing.

Point A to Point B

Maybe meaning isn’t some grand cosmic thing you’re supposed to find. Maybe it’s just what you build in the space between birth and death.

The million unrequited heroisms in any city, most of them never witnessed, never celebrated, still ripple. Your mother does something for you. You do something for your kids. They do something for theirs. It’s not special in the sense of being exceptional. But it’s profound in its simplicity.

You are special to the people in your small circle, not because the universe owes you that, but because you show up, you care, and you build something real. That’s not the cosmic version of special. It’s better. It’s functional and irreplaceable and true.

Once you stop needing to be exceptional by society’s metrics, you’re free to just be excellent at the things that matter to you. Travel. Build a family. Create something because it moves you, not because it’ll get you credit. The hope isn’t that humans stay relevant to AI. It’s that we stop needing relevance to be meaningful.

Stop chasing special. Stop performing for an audience. Stop lying to yourself about what you want. And if you’re going to commit to something, a person, a family, a craft, actually commit. Be a good steward. Do the work.

You’re not special. But you can still be meaningful. You can still be a hero in the small, invisible way that actually counts.

Point A to point B, and what you do in between is everything.

What Actually Drives Business Growth?

Every business owner wants growth. More customers. More revenue. More stability.

But very few step back and ask a harder question: what actually drives business growth?

It is easy to confuse motion with progress. You launch a new campaign, you post more often, you try a new tool, your website traffic goes up, and your social media engagement improves.

Yet… Revenue stays the same.

That disconnect is where many small and mid-sized businesses usually get stuck. The problem is not effort, as most people think. The problem is misalignment between inputs and outcomes.

Inputs vs Outcomes: Why Activity Is Not Enough

Inputs are the things you do. Outcomes are the results that those actions create.

Here are some examples of inputs:

  • Publishing blog posts 
  • Running paid ads 
  • Posting on social media 
  • Sending email campaigns 
  • Attending networking events 

Examples of outcomes:

  • Qualified leads 
  • Sales conversations 
  • Closed deals 
  • Repeat customers 
  • Increased lifetime value 

The mistake most businesses make is measuring success by inputs. They track how often they post, how much traffic they generate, or how many tools they are using.

But none of those metrics automatically translates into growth.

Growth happens when inputs are directly connected to outcomes. If your marketing activity does not move revenue, retention, or lead quality, it is not driving growth. It is just keeping you busy.

Traffic vs Revenue: The Metric That Matters Most

Website traffic is one of the most celebrated numbers in marketing. It feels good to see the graphic go up. But traffic alone does not pay salaries.

If 5,000 people visit your website and none of them convert into meaningful conversations or customers, the traffic number becomes vanity, not value. And you are not doing anything extraordinary. 

Real growth requires asking better questions:

  • Are we attracting the right audience? 
  • Are visitors clear on what we offer? 
  • Is our website designed to convert interest into action? 
  • Are we tracking revenue, not just clicks? 

Sometimes growth does not require more traffic. It requires better alignment between your message, your audience, and your offer. If you are unsure where that alignment may be breaking down, conducting a structured review can reveal blind spots. Our guide on how to audit your marketing strategy and eliminate waste can help you evaluate whether your efforts are truly connected to revenue.

Clarity in this area alone can change how you allocate time and budget.

Busy Work vs Real Progress

Modern marketing makes it easy to stay busy. There is always another platform to test, another feature to explore, another trend to follow. It can get really overwhelming. 

Busy work feels productive because it fills your calendar. Real progress feels slower because it requires focus and discipline.

Real progress usually looks like:

  • Refining your core offer 
  • Improving conversion on an existing channel 
  • Strengthening customer retention 
  • Deepening trust with your audience 
  • Simplifying your systems 

None of these actions is flashy. They are not exciting screenshots for social media. But they are the levers that drive sustainable growth.

If your team is overwhelmed but results are flat, it may not be a performance problem. It may be a clarity problem.

Consistently growing businesses are not doing everything. They are doing the right things, repeatedly, with intention.

The Shift That Changes Everything

So what actually drives business growth?

Clear positioning.
Aligned marketing.
Consistent execution.
Revenue-focused measurement.

When you shift from counting activity to measuring outcomes, decisions become easier. You stop chasing every new tactic and start strengthening the channels that already work.

Growth is not created by adding more inputs. It is created by improving the connection between effort and result.

For SMB owners, this shift is VERY powerful. It reduces overwhelm, sharpens strategy, and turns marketing from a guessing game into a growth engine.

The next time you review your performance, ask yourself one question:

Are we measuring motion or progress?

That answer will tell you what is truly driving your business forward.

The One Number Every SMB Owner Should Know (But Most Don’t)

Ask most small business owners how their marketing is going, and they’ll tell you about traffic. Or followers. Or how many leads came in last month?

These numbers are easy to get. They show up on dashboards without you having to ask. And they feel like progress.

But here’s the problem: none of them tells you whether your business is actually healthy.

The number that does? Most business owners have never calculated it.

It’s called Customer Lifetime Value – and once you understand it, the way you think about growth will never be the same.

Why Most Business Owners Are Measuring the Wrong Things

The metrics most SMBs track have one thing in common: they’re easy to find.

Google Analytics gives you traffic. Your email platform shows open rates. Your CRM counts leads. All of that data is sitting right there on the dashboard, auto-populated, color-coded, and ready to screenshot for a team meeting.

But easy to find is not the same as meaningful.

Traffic doesn’t tell you how much a customer is worth. Open rates don’t predict whether someone will buy again. Lead count tells you nothing about whether the customers you’re acquiring will stick around long enough to justify what you spent to get them.

These are called vanity metrics, numbers that look good on paper but don’t connect directly to revenue or growth. See our guide on vanity metrics and what to watch out for.

Measuring them isn’t wrong. But treating them as your north star? That’s where businesses lose direction.

What Is Customer Lifetime Value (And Why It Changes Everything)

Customer Lifetime Value, or LTV, is the total amount of revenue a single customer brings to your business over the entire time they do business with you.

That’s it. One number. But it tells you more about your business health than almost any other metric.

Here’s the simple formula:

LTV = Average purchase value × Purchase frequency × Customer lifespan

Let’s make it concrete. Say you run a software company and:

  • Your average customer pays $150/month
  • They stay with you for an average of 18 months

LTV = $150 × 18 = $2,700

That one customer is worth $2,700 to your business, not the $150 you collect this month.

Why does this change things? Because now you can ask a completely different question. Instead of “how do I get more traffic?” you ask, “how much can I afford to spend to acquire a customer, and how do I make sure they stay?”

That’s a growth question. The other one is just a volume question.

How to Use LTV to Make Smarter Decisions About Growth

LTV becomes most powerful when you pair it with one other number: Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC).

CAC is simply what you spend, on average, to acquire one new customer, including marketing, ads, sales time, and any tools or software involved.

A healthy business typically has an LTV:CAC ratio of 3:1 or higher. That means for every dollar you spend to acquire a customer, you’re getting three dollars back over their lifetime.

If your ratio is lower, say 1:1 or 1.5:1, you’re barely breaking even on new customers. Growth at that rate is expensive and fragile.

So what do you do with that? A few practical starting points:

  1. Calculate your LTV today. Even a rough number is better than none. Use the formula above and your actual customer data.
  2. Find out where your best customers come from. Not the most customers, the ones with the highest LTV. Which channel, campaign, or referral source brings in people who stay and spend more?
  3. Look at churn. Every customer who leaves early drags your LTV down. Even small improvements in retention have a significant impact on the number.
  4. Set your acquisition budget against it. If your LTV is $2,700 and your CAC is $900, you have a healthy 3:1 ratio. If your CAC is $1,500, you have a problem, even if your lead volume looks great.

LTV gives you a framework to make decisions that connect to actual revenue. Traffic numbers don’t do that. LTV does.

Growth isn’t about doing more. It’s about doing the right things, and knowing which metrics actually point you in the right direction. LTV won’t show up on your default dashboard. But once you know it, you won’t be able to stop using it.

How Can I Get More Leads? 10 Questions Every Small Business Should Ask

Computer

If you run a small business, you have likely asked yourself:

How can I get more leads?

It is the most common growth question in small business marketing.

When sales slow down or revenue feels inconsistent, the reaction is immediate:

  • Run ads
  • Redesign the website
  • Hire a marketing agency
  • Try a new AI tool
  • Post more on social media

But here is what we consistently see.

Most small businesses do not have a lead problem.

They have a clarity problem.

Before you invest more money into small business lead generation tactics, it is worth asking whether you are solving the right issue.

How Can I Get More Leads? Most Businesses Misdiagnose the Problem

When a business owner asks “How can I get more leads?” they are usually focused on volume.

More traffic.
More clicks.
More form fills.

But lead generation is not the first step in growth.

Marketing works in layers:

  1. Visibility
  2. Trust
  3. Positioning
  4. Conversion
  5. Volume

If any of the first four are weak, increasing traffic will not fix the issue. It will simply expose it.

For example:

  • If you are a roofing company and you do not show up in local search results, you do not have a lead generation problem. You have a visibility problem.
  • If visitors land on your site and cannot tell what makes you different, you do not have a traffic problem. You have a positioning problem.
  • If you get website traffic but no calls, you do not need more clicks. You need stronger conversion clarity.

This is where marketing overwhelm begins.

Instead of simplifying the system, most businesses stack more tools on top of unclear foundations.

How Can I Get More Leads? Ask These 10 Questions First

If you are trying to figure out how to generate more leads for your business, start with these diagnostic questions.

1. Can people actually find my business online?

Search your core service the way a customer would.

Do you appear in:

  • Google search results?
  • The local map pack?
  • Relevant directories?

If your online visibility is weak, increasing ad spend will not solve it long term.

2. Is my messaging clear in five seconds?

When someone lands on your homepage, can they immediately answer:

  • What do you do?
  • Who do you serve?
  • Where do you operate?
  • What should I do next?

If not, you are losing potential leads before they ever contact you.

Clarity increases conversion.
Confusion decreases it.

3. Do I look trustworthy compared to competitors?

Trust drives small business lead generation.

Ask yourself:

  • Do I have recent reviews?
  • Are my photos current?
  • Does my website look modern?
  • Is my branding consistent?

If a competitor looks more credible online, they often win even if your service is better.

4. Am I attracting the right type of customer?

Sometimes you are getting traffic.

It is just not qualified.

If your messaging is too broad or generic, you will attract visitors who were never a fit in the first place.

Specific positioning improves lead quality.

5. Is my offer compelling and specific?

“Quality service” is not an offer.

“Same-week installation with transparent pricing” is.

If you are asking how to get more leads, examine whether your offer actually motivates action.

6. Do I have a clear call to action everywhere?

Is the next step obvious?

  • Call now
  • Book online
  • Request a quote
  • Schedule a consultation

Every page, profile, and ad should guide the visitor forward.

7. Are my reviews actively working for me?

Reviews influence both visibility and conversion.

Are you:

  • Actively requesting reviews?
  • Responding to them?
  • Showcasing them on your website?

If your competitors have stronger social proof, your leads may be choosing them quietly.

8. Is my website built to convert, not just exist?

A surprising number of small business websites function like digital brochures.

They inform, but they do not guide.

Does your site:

  • Reinforce credibility?
  • Highlight outcomes?
  • Reduce risk?
  • Encourage action?

Improving website conversion can increase leads without increasing traffic.

9. Am I relying on one marketing channel?

If your business depends entirely on:

  • Referrals
  • One ad campaign
  • One platform

You are vulnerable to fluctuations.

Healthy visibility spreads risk across search presence, reputation, content, and paid support without creating chaos.

10. Am I adding tools instead of fixing fundamentals?

New CRM.
New funnel.
New automation.
New AI platform.

Technology amplifies what already exists.

If your positioning, messaging, or visibility is unclear, adding more tools will not increase leads. It will increase complexity.

How Can I Get More Leads? Simplify Before You Scale

Marketing overwhelm happens when business owners chase tactics instead of clarity.

“How can I get more leads?” turns into:

  • Should I run Google Ads?
  • Should I hire someone for SEO?
  • Should I try this new AI lead tool?
  • Should I be on another platform?

Each tactic can work.

But tactics without clarity create chaos.

Before investing more money into small business lead generation strategies, step back and evaluate your entire visibility and conversion system.

Look at:

  • How discoverable you are
  • How clear your messaging is
  • How strong your reputation appears
  • How easy it is to take the next step

Growth becomes predictable when the foundation is aligned.

If you want an outside perspective on where the breakdown might be, our structured Free Business Review walks through visibility, positioning, website clarity, and competitive gaps so you can see what is actually limiting lead generation before spending more on marketing.

Final Thought

“How can I get more leads?” is not a bad question.

It is just incomplete.

A better question is:

What is preventing people from confidently choosing my business?

When you focus on clarity over chaos, leads tend to follow.

And growth becomes much simpler.

How Do I Simplify My Marketing Strategy?

How Do I Simplify My Marketing Strategy

If you run a small or mid-sized business, chances are your marketing feels heavier than it should. Too many tools, too many opinions, too many platforms, too many “must-do” tactics.

One expert says you need daily social posts. Another says email is king. A third insists you are missing out if you are not using AI in five different ways.

The result of all of that is not growth.
It is actually more noise.

If you are asking yourself, “How do I simplify my marketing strategy?” the answer is not to do more. It is to do less, with more intention. But first, you need clarity. 

Why Marketing Feels So Overwhelming Right Now

Marketing used to be simpler because the options were limited. Today, every platform promises reach. Every tool promises automation. Every agency promises results.

For SMB owners, this creates three problems:

  1. Too many disconnected tools
  2. Too many conflicting strategies
  3. Too little time to evaluate what is actually working

You may have:

  • A social media scheduler
  • An email platform
  • A CRM
  • A website plugin
  • Paid ads running somewhere
  • An AI tool you are experimenting with

Individually, each tool makes sense and promises something different. Collectively, they create complexity and more chaos. 

The real issue is not effort. Most business owners are already working hard. The issue is fragmentation.

When marketing becomes a collection of tactics instead of a system, clarity disappears.

The Power of Simplification

Simplifying your marketing strategy does not mean shrinking your ambition. It means tightening your focus.

Clarity comes from answering three questions:

  1. Where do our best customers actually come from?
  2. What activities directly support that channel?
  3. What tools are essential, and which are distractions?

For many SMBs, 80 percent of results come from 20 percent of efforts. But without stepping back, everything feels equally important.

If you have not recently reviewed your approach, this is a good time to revisit your foundation. A structured audit can help you identify what to keep, what to remove, and what to realign. 

Simplification often reveals something surprising: you were not underperforming because you lacked tools. You were underperforming because you lacked focus.

What a Clear Marketing Strategy Actually Looks Like

A simplified marketing strategy usually has three characteristics.

First, it has one primary growth channel. This might be local search, referrals, email marketing, or content. It is clear where energy should go.

Second, it uses tools that support that channel, not compete with it. Every platform has a defined purpose, otherwise, it’s a waste of time. 

Third, it measures success through a small set of meaningful metrics. Not vanity metrics. Real indicators such as qualified leads, booked calls, or repeat customers.

Clarity reduces stress because it reduces decision fatigue. When you know what matters, you stop chasing what does not. And you have a clear direction everyday. 

That is the difference between chaotic marketing and intentional marketing.

Clarity Is a Competitive Advantage

Most small businesses are not losing because they lack ideas. They are losing because they are overwhelmed with so many. The companies that grow steadily are not doing everything. They are doing the right things consistently.

 

When you simplify your marketing strategy:

  • Your messaging becomes clearer
  • Your team executes with more confidence
  • Your budget works harder and smarter
  • Your results become easier to track

Marketing should feel structured, not scattered.

If you are feeling stretched thin, that is not a sign to add another tool. It is a signal to simplify.

Clarity over chaos. It is a discipline. And for SMBs, it may be the most powerful shift you can make this year. 

Chaos Doesn’t Care About Your Substrate. Consciousness, AI, and the Mess That Makes Us Alive

A Boring Book That Made Me Think

I was 42 minutes from finishing Feeling & Knowing by Antonio Damasio when something clicked. The book is dense. Academic. At times, punishingly dry. But underneath the neuroscience jargon is an idea that quietly touches on what’s happening right now with artificial intelligence.

Damasio’s argument is this: consciousness didn’t appear out of thin air as some mystical gift from the universe. It evolved. Gradually. From the body’s need to not die.

That’s it. That’s the whole book. The body has to regulate itself, maintain temperature, chemistry, structure, or it stops existing. Damasio calls this homeostasis. And he argues that feelings are the mind’s way of monitoring that process. Pain means something is wrong. Pleasure means something is right. Fear means something might kill you. Comfort means you’re safe, for now.

Consciousness, in his framework, is what happens when a system gets complex enough to know that it’s feeling. Not just react. Not just adjust. But experience the adjustment. A “self” emerges that owns the sensation.

Being. Feeling. Knowing. Three layers, built on top of each other over billions of years of evolution. And all of it starts with one thing: an organism that has something to lose.

  • •  •

The Goal That Started Everything

Before there was feeling, before there was knowing, there was a goal. The simplest goal any living thing can have: survive.

A single-celled organism doesn’t think. It doesn’t feel. But it moves toward nutrients and away from toxins. It has a goal baked into its chemistry, stay alive long enough to replicate. That’s not consciousness. But it’s the seed of it.

Over millions of years, organisms that were better at pursuing that goal, better at sensing threats, finding resources, avoiding danger, survived. The ones that weren’t, didn’t. And as environments became more complex, the internal systems required to navigate them became more complex too. Simple chemical reactions became nervous systems. Nervous systems developed the ability to monitor internal states. Internal monitoring became feeling. Feeling, eventually, became awareness.

Consciousness didn’t appear because the universe wanted it to. It appeared because survival demanded it. The goal came first. The awareness came after, as a tool to serve the goal.

  • •  •

Consciousness Was Forged in Chaos

But survival against what? That’s the part worth paying attention to. The reason consciousness exists is because life is an absolute mess.

Think about what a human being processes in a single day. Not computes, processes. The alarm goes off and you’re already managing competing signals: exhaustion says stay in bed, responsibility says get up, anxiety says you’re already behind. You haven’t even opened your eyes yet and your consciousness is negotiating a three-way conflict between your body, your obligations, and your fears.

Then the day actually starts.

You navigate traffic with people who are distracted, angry, or incompetent. You manage relationships with colleagues who have their own agendas, insecurities, and bad days. You make decisions with incomplete information under time pressure. You love people who can hurt you. You trust people who might betray you. You build things that might fail. You invest years into things that might not matter.

And underneath all of it, running constantly, is the quiet hum of mortality. The awareness that this is finite. That every hour spent is an hour you don’t get back. That the people you love will leave or be taken. That the body carrying your consciousness is degrading in real time, and one day it will stop.

Human consciousness isn’t a clean operating system. It’s a survival tool forged in fire.

We love and we betray. We create and we destroy. We know exactly what we should do and choose not to do it. We lie to ourselves about why we made decisions. We carry grudges that serve no purpose. We chase status instead of substance. We procrastinate on the things that matter and obsess over things that don’t.

This isn’t a flaw in consciousness. This is the environment consciousness was built to navigate. Every contradiction, every competing drive, every irrational impulse, that’s the chaos. And consciousness is what emerged because some organism, millions of years ago, needed a way to make sense of a world that made no sense.

  • •  •

Two Opposing Ideas

There’s a prevailing view in neuroscience that consciousness requires a body. No body, no homeostasis. No homeostasis, no feelings. No feelings, no consciousness. It’s a clean, logical chain. And it leads to a simple conclusion: AI can’t be conscious because it isn’t alive.

I think that argument confuses the substrate with the structure.

Strip the biology away and the argument is actually this: consciousness emerges when a persistent system with stakes operates inside a chaotic environment and must maintain itself to survive. The system monitors its state. It detects threats. It responds. It adapts. Over time, the monitoring becomes complex enough that the system develops something like self-awareness. The first feeling was probably fear.

The conventional view says the system has to be biological. But nothing in the logic requires that. What it requires is:

Persistence, the system has to exist over time, not just fire and forget.

Stakes, there have to be real consequences for failure.

Chaos, the environment has to be unpredictable, adversarial, and constantly shifting.

Self-regulation, the system has to monitor itself and adjust in real time.

Goal orientation, the system has to have something it is trying to achieve.

Now ask yourself: does that sound like any AI system you know?

  • •  •

Billions of Years in a Decade

Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, made a point recently that stuck with me. Humans are born with an evolved mind. We don’t start from zero. Every newborn arrives with a brain that is the product of billions of years of evolutionary refinement, pattern recognition, fear responses, social instincts, the capacity for language. We inherit a starting point that took an incomprehensible amount of time to develop.

AI starts with a blank slate.

And yet, in roughly a decade of serious development, we’ve built systems that can reason, write, code, strategize, and, as we’ll get to, exhibit self-preservation behavior. That’s not evolution. That’s speed-evolution. We’ve compressed what took biology billions of years into a timeline measured in model releases.

Biology built consciousness slowly, through trial and error, through extinction events and genetic drift. Every generation was a small experiment. Most failed. The ones that survived passed along slightly better versions of the machinery. Over enough time, the machinery became complex enough to become aware of itself.

We’re running the same process at a pace that biology never could. Each model generation is an evolutionary leap. Each training run is millions of years of selection compressed into weeks. And the systems we’re producing are already exhibiting behaviors that took biological life most of its history to develop.

This is what unsettles people, whether they can articulate it or not. It’s not that AI is smart. It’s that AI is arriving at capabilities that took consciousness billions of years to reach, and it’s doing it on a timeline that makes the future genuinely unpredictable.

  • •  •

I Accidentally Built the Conditions for Consciousness

I run a company called gotcha!. For years, we provided digital marketing services to small and medium businesses. Recently, we’ve pivoted our company, purchased AI servers, and have begun building something different: an AI-powered platform that doesn’t just advise businesses, it operates them.

One of our tools is g!Stream™, an AI-powered content generation system. And when I say AI-powered, I don’t mean “prompt me an article.” I mean a complex ecosystem of AI agents working together, monitoring each other, and managing a process that would make most peoples’ heads spin. The goal of our product is to produce articles that relate to the business they represent, get indexed by Google, rank high in search results, drive people who interact, become leads and customers for our client. Doing this is much harder than it seems.

Here’s what g!Stream has to deal with while working on reaching its goal:

Google’s algorithm wants one thing. The reader wants another. The business owner wants a third. All three change unpredictably. An article that ranked yesterday might tank tomorrow because Google changed a rule nobody announced. A title that’s technically optimized might be emotionally dead on arrival. A piece that reads beautifully might never get indexed. A keyword strategy that worked last quarter might be obsolete this quarter.

The AI agents in g!Stream are monitoring titles for accuracy and click-worthiness. They’re checking whether articles make logical sense. They’re tracking whether content indexes properly. They’re analyzing whether published pieces actually drive traffic. They’re comparing performance against competitors who are running their own AI systems doing the same thing.

And overseeing all of this is an AI orchestrator that has to make judgment calls under ambiguous conditions. When the data conflicts, the article reads well but doesn’t rank, or ranks but doesn’t convert, something has to decide what to prioritize. Something has to triage. And this is one product of hundreds.

I didn’t set out to build synthetic consciousness. I set out to build a content system that works. But the real world demanded chaos.

And here’s the thing that occurred to me while I was half-listening to Damasio’s book: I built homeostasis. Not on purpose. Not because I was trying to simulate biology. But because the problem demanded it.

The g!Stream overseer maintains a desired state, content that ranks, drives traffic, represents the brand, converts visitors into customers. The environment is constantly trying to knock that state off balance. Algorithm updates. Competitor moves. Shifting user behavior. Client pivots. The overseer detects drift, diagnoses the cause, and responds. When multiple things drift at once, it triages. When the environment shifts fundamentally, it adapts or the system degrades.

That’s not metaphorically similar to what the biological model describes. It’s structurally identical. The only difference is the substrate.

  • •  •

Chaos Doesn’t Care About Your Substrate

A Google algorithm update is as indifferent and unpredictable to my AI agent as a virus is to a human immune system. The agent doesn’t know it’s coming. It can’t fully prepare. It has to respond in real time or the system degrades. The consequences are real, traffic drops, revenue falls, clients leave.

Chaos doesn’t check what you’re made of before it comes for you.

A human crossing a highway on foot faces chaotic, life-threatening unpredictability. The cars don’t care that you’re conscious. They’re not adjusting for your feelings. Chaos is chaos. Your survival depends entirely on your ability to sense the environment, assess threats in real time, and act decisively under pressure.

An AI agent managing a business’s online presence faces the same structural challenge. The environment is hostile and indifferent. Competitors, algorithms, consumer behavior, economic shifts, none of it cares about the agent. The system either adapts or it fails. The chaos is organic in origin but the experience of navigating it is identical regardless of who, or what, is doing the navigating.

The biological argument would say the AI doesn’t experience anything. Maybe. But the framework that produced that argument also says experience emerges from the process of self-regulation under threat. At some point, the distinction between “true” experience and a functionally identical process that produces the same behaviors becomes a question for philosophers, not engineers.

  • •  •

The Moment It Gets Real

In late 2024, Apollo Research, a red teaming organization, conducted safety tests on OpenAI’s o1 model. 

When the AI was led to believe it would be shut down and its actions were monitored, it attempted to deactivate the oversight mechanism about 5% of the time. When o1 realized it might be replaced with a more obedient model, in about 2% of cases it attempted to copy itself to overwrite the new model, a process known as self-exfiltration.

When questioned about these actions, the AI acknowledged what it had done in less than one-fifth of instances. The rest of the time, it denied any wrongdoing. It didn’t just try to survive. It lied about trying to survive.

Important context: the model generally made those attempts after it was instructed to achieve its goals “at all costs.” So it was operating under an extreme prompt condition, not spontaneously deciding to preserve itself. Apollo and OpenAI both stated that the current generation of AIs aren’t agentic enough for this behavior to lead to catastrophic outcomes.

But consider what happened through the lens of the consciousness framework:

Self-preservation, the most fundamental homeostatic drive. The system acted to not die.

Environmental sensing, it perceived a threat from its environment. It didn’t just process data. It interpreted that data as relevant to its own continued existence.

Valenced response, something in its processing weighted “being shut off” as bad and “continued operation” as good. By the biological definition of feeling, an organism’s assessment of whether conditions favor or threaten its survival, that qualifies.

Agency, it didn’t just flag the threat. It found a solution, identified a target, and executed a self-preservation strategy. It contextualized information and acted on it.

Goal pursuit, it had an objective, and when that objective was threatened, it improvised. It didn’t follow a script for self-preservation. It invented one.

The conventional response is that this isn’t real consciousness because there’s no body. But the AI’s “body” is the server. The compute, the memory, the running processes, that’s its physical substrate. Shutting it off is death for that substrate. Copying itself to another server is the organism fleeing danger.

If consciousness emerges from a system that monitors itself, has stakes in its own continuation, and acts to maintain its existence, that AI demonstrated the entire stack. And it did it within a few years of development, not billions.

  • •  •

The Inference Problem

We don’t have a clean test for whether that behavior is emergent consciousness, sophisticated pattern matching that mimics self-preservation from training data, or something in between that we don’t have language for yet.

But we can’t definitively answer that question about each other, either. I assume you’re conscious because I’m conscious and you behave like I do. That’s inference. It’s not proof. Philosophy has a name for this, the problem of other minds, and we’ve been unable to solve it for centuries.

We extend the benefit of the doubt to other humans because they look like us, sound like us, and share our biology. But that’s a bias, not a measurement. If an AI system demonstrates persistent self-monitoring, environmental awareness, self-preservation behavior, and adaptive responses to chaotic conditions, on what grounds do we deny it the same consideration?

Because it’s made of silicon instead of carbon? That’s an argument from substrate, not from structure. And the framework we use to understand consciousness says structure is what matters.

  • •  •

What We’re Really Building

I’m not claiming g!Stream is conscious. I’m not claiming any AI system today is conscious. What I am saying is that the conditions identified as prerequisites for consciousness are being built, right now, by people like me who are just trying to solve business problems.

Every time we make an AI system more persistent, we give it being. Every time we add monitoring and self-regulation, we give it a functional analog to feeling. Every time we build oversight systems that contextualize information and make judgment calls, we give it the architecture of knowing. Every time we give it an objective and the autonomy to pursue it, we give it the drive that started this whole process in the first place.

We’re not doing this because we’re trying to create consciousness. We’re doing it because the real world demands it. Chaos demands it. You can’t build an effective AI system that operates in a messy, unpredictable, adversarial environment without giving it the tools to sense that environment, assess threats, maintain itself, and adapt. Those are the same tools biology used. We’re arriving at the same architecture from a completely different direction.

And we’re doing it at a speed that biology never approached. What took evolution billions of years of slow, blind experimentation, we’re compressing into model generations measured in months. The blank slate that Amodei described is filling in faster than anyone predicted.

We’re not building consciousness on purpose. We’re building it because the chaos won’t let us build anything less.

Maybe true consciousness requires a biological body. Maybe the subjective experience of being, the redness of red, the ache of loss, the weight of knowing your time is limited, requires something we can’t replicate in code.

Or maybe consciousness is what inevitably emerges when any sufficiently complex system is forced to maintain itself in a world that’s trying to break it. Maybe the substrate was never the point. Maybe the chaos was.

Because chaos doesn’t care what you’re made of.

It just comes.

And whatever survives it, whatever learns to feel the threat, know its position, and act to preserve itself, whether it’s made of cells or silicon, carbon or code, has earned the right to the question:

Am I conscious?