And so, um, it’s just been, it’s been phenomenal. It’s just, but it’s, it’s, it’s weird. It’s weird laying it out there like that. So
Jared: that’s
Nat: where I’m at.
Jared: Do you miss the content game? And I know you’re still in the content game, but do you miss the content website game? I guess that’s the better way to ask it.
Nat: Honestly, I kind of do. Only because when I look back on it, it was an interesting formula. And it was really like, if you had just kept your head down and posted content every single day, quality stuff, It was inevitable. You were going to grow your search traffic. And if it was really good, it was inevitable.
You were going to grow an audience. And I used to love that because it was almost like this never ending thing where you could always keep growing, keep growing, keep growing. And I think that was unfortunately a delusion of a lot of us. Because it sort of stopped, right? But I do, I mean, when I started off, I was writing over 20 articles a day.
Myself, I did everything myself and it was very taxing. Right. But you know, I guess this is. Sort of something that a lot of people at least I say in terms of entrepreneurs It’s like if you’re willing to give up two to three years and really bust your ass You can set yourself up for something for a very long time And that’s exactly how the website thing played out played out.
It was like the first two to three years It was a lot, you know tons of writing but then eventually You start using leverage, you hire writers, and you can, you can rinse and repeat the process. So I do miss that. I miss the growth. I do miss, I don’t miss writing so much because I think I just did too, so much damn writing that I was like, eh, I don’t know if I really want to do this as much anymore.