Do You Want to Be Fed or Learn to Fish?

I have a bunch of blog posts in my head right now. Some are a lot more fun, but this one is the one that is pulling me the most right now. There’s always time for more fun stuff.

I have noticed over the past few years, as more people read this blog, and have joined my Squidoo for Beginners course, that there are definitely two different types of “new marketers” and I’m sure it probably translates to the rest of the world as well.

Those Who Want to Be Fed.

I get emails regularly from people who have questions. Many times the questions come from an email I sent out, or a lesson in one of my courses. Often times the answer is directly in the message the person has been reading.  If it’s not,  it is a question that is general knowledge and the person could easily find the answer themselves, but, instead of looking for an answer, they instead email me.

Now don’t get me wrong. I love talking to people and helping them move forward. Questions about the intricacies of a marketing plan I welcome and enjoy. However, these “feed me” questions not so much.

When I first started, and even still, when I had a question I went to Google and asked the question. 9 times out of 10 Google will give me the exact answer I’m looking for on the first page.

For example, today I received an email asking if  Google sees RSS feeds on a Squidoo lens.

By itself it’s a pretty good question, however, the answer was in the email the person replied to. I decided to go to Google and see what it told me.

I Googled “Does Google See RSS feeds on Squidoo lens” (without the quotes. Here’s what I found 6 listings down:

I clicked through to see the whole article, and there is a grand explanation of Google seeing RSS feeds there.  So how long did it take me to find that information? All of about 30 seconds.

How long did it take someone to email me the question, wait for me to get the email, wait for me to reply?

Way more than 30 seconds.

It just surprises me a little how little this group of marketers will do for themselves. I have yet to figure why this is.  Because there is this other set of new marketers, the ones who are learning to fish.

Those who are Learning to Fish:

This group of people tend to go to Google for answers, if they can’t find it at Google they look somewhere else. They search for the how’s, why’s and when’s on their own. If once they have found some information and have tried to put it together but are having difficulty, they THEN ask a question about the information they have found.

Those questions help them hurdle a marketing bump and they continue to move forward.

Here’s what I’ve noticed about being fed vs. learning to fish.

Those who want to be fed do not succeed.  Sorry if this pisses some people off, but it’s the truth, in Internet marketing at least. Here’s what I see. Those who want to be fed, have an easy out when someone doesn’t feed them what they want/need.

These people are already looking for an excuse to quit. They are looking for someone to blame beside themselves when they don’t “make money online” and the fact that so and so wouldn’t help me is a perfect way to do it.

The people who are learning to fish are the ones who read, learn, and act. They are the ones who will build an internet marketing business no matter what! They are the people who do not let anything stand in their way. They will hunt down information, find a way around a problem, and continue to move forward.

These are the people who will not let anyone stand in their way, and no matter how long it takes will find success.

Who are you?

Are you looking to be fed or are you learning to fish?

Now don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying people can’t change. Maybe recognizing there is another way to do things may give you the push you need to start learning to fish, or maybe you’ll take this as the perfect excuse to quit before you even get started. However, when you give up on this whole “make money online” thing take a look at your reasons and who you are “blaming” for your lack of success.

What have you done, what did you learn, and how did you implement all of it?

You can’t say “squidoo doesn’t work” if you have actually put up 100 lenses.

You can’t say “keyword research doesn’t work” until you’ve built a list of 1000 keywords and built sites around a LOT of them, and a lot is not 5.

You can’t say “so and so is such and such” because they couldn’t/wouldn’t answer your question that you could easily have found the answer to if you had just taken the initiative to look.

Really, there’s really no right or wrong in this, it’s just a matter of awareness, and taking responsibility for yourself and where you are in your life.  It’s at least something to think about, who you are, and what you expect from yourself and others in your online marketing journey.

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Comments

  1. Brad Parler says:

    :)

    I use a very elaborate system — well not really, just Google Alerts & Blogs Search – which tells me when my brand or twitter name show up on blogs or in the news, I found your post after asking one guy who is also on the same post as my content and realized that nothing (or very little) on that site is original content.

    I know that it’s easy for this to happen and it’s a part of life – but theft of IP is still theft. One of the the long tail search terms that I’m proud to have ranking on is Twitter Name Change with more than 131 Million pages fighting for action I have #5 on the first page (above twitters own page on the topic). He may not be getting much traffic on his site – and I’m not asking for him to take it down – just to create the proper back link and provide a proper by-line for the post (the same that you’d have to for any article from a directory.)

  2. Jackie says:

    Hey Brad,

    Thanks for the heads up~ but it’s really just part of the business. With RSS feeds people can pretty easily scrape your content. I’d be interested to know how you found that post. I doubt any of those scraped sites are getting much traffic, and he did link (kinda) back to my site. lol. It’s not cool, but it’s not worth spending a lot of time either.

  3. Brad Parler says:

    Hey Jackie –
    I recently found a site that had stolen (re posted) one of my blog posts, and given little / no credit to me — I’m finding that they are doing the same to a lot of other bloggers (you as well)!

    [site edited by Jackie ~ not giving them any traffic]

    Just thought that I’d bring this to your attention.

  4. MySpace Proxy says:

    Very well thought out and informative. I’m sure many others enjoy reading this too, but are just a little scared to post – anyway – thanks again!

  5. Can you provide me with some more information on this? Thanks – Chuck

  6. Coco says:

    Yes. Very nice article. first you must know who you are, what do you want from your life. And then you must put you in movement. You must concentrate on what do you want.

  7. Jackie says:

    Hey Fisher,
    I beg to differ, they are the ones who don’t buy, expect it for free, and then bad mouth you in every forum because you didn’t give it away.

    Jackie

  8. Fisher says:

    We should however be grateful for the open mouths begging to be fed because it is they who avidly buy our information products.

  9. Sunshine says:

    Well said my friend.

    I think some folks at the beginning maybe a little of both at the beginning. I’m sure this post will encourage those who’re totally dependent on others for technical/business answers will feel encouraged to do a tad more research before sending out an SOS.

    Believe it or not, many folks are not aware that Google or most any other search engine would yield such rich information to their most obscure question(s).

    Today, You’ve definitely done many blog and ezine owners everywhere a great big service today with this insightful post.

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  1. [...] wrote a fabulous article, Do You Want to Fish or be Fed? that is far kinder to this sort of entitlement mindset than I tend to be (one day I’ll tell my [...]

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