Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Following up

Follow Up

If you’ve been staring at your inbox wondering if your email fell into a black hole, here’s a little tough-love communication lesson.

Don’t say: “I’m just following up.”

Don’t say: “I’m just checking in.”

Those phrases smell like insecurity. Like you’re peeking into the room you were invited into.

Do say: “I didn’t have the chance to reconnect with you ... what are the best next steps?”

That’s confident. That’s professional. That’s someone who believes their time has value.

Stop “just checking in.” Start sounding like you belong in the conversation.



Monday, March 23, 2026

Social Media

 Life online is a meat grinder for the soul. 

Scott's Social Media Rant

Scroll long enough and you’ll start to believe everyone else is better looking, better dressed, making more money, doing more yoga, scaling mountains, founding companies, gaining followers, losing weight, gaining muscle, and generally smashing life like it’s a video game they’ve already mastered.

Meanwhile, you’re just sitting there with a half-eaten bagel and cold cup of coffee, wondering where you went wrong.

Social media is a comparison trap wrapped in neon lights. It doesn’t matter how good your life is, two swipes in and you’ll be convinced you’re failing at everything. 

Spend too much time there and it will hollow out your sense of self until you’re little more than a reflection in somebody else’s sunglasses.



Friday, March 20, 2026

You’re Not Paying for the Hour. You’re Paying for the Decade.

 



There’s a moment that happens in every career: You’re staring at an invoice from a senior pro ... and your stomach drops.

Three times what you usually pay.

Three times the hourly rate.

Three times the tiny voice in your head screaming “Are you out of your mind?”

And yet… three days later, you’re looking at the results thinking:“Oh. That’s what I’ve been paying for.”

Experience is sneaky. It doesn’t show up wearing a badge that says “Worth Every Penny.” It shows up in the quiet stuff: the work that doesn’t need fixing ... the problems that don’t happen ... the weeks you don’t lose because someone forgot to ask one critical question.

A seasoned pro isn’t just faster. They’re cleaner. They’ve seen this movie before (the one where everything goes sideways halfway through) and they know exactly which scene to cut.

That’s what you’re really buying when you hire experience: the ability to skip the blooper reel.

The first time I worked with a  senior contractor, I worried I was overpaying. Until I realized what I’d actually been doing all along: underpaying for chaos.

Because the truth is, juniors are great. They’re hungry. They’re learning. But learning costs time. Mistakes cost time. And time? Time is the most expensive thing in the room.

The senior already paid for that education. They paid with failed projects, with late nights, with that sinking feeling of “oh no” at 2 a.m. when something breaks in production. Now, you get to rent all that experience for the low, low price of not having to live through it yourself.

So when you see a senior’s rate and think, “That’s steep,” remember this: You’re not paying for how long it takes them to do the work, you’re paying for how long it took them to get this good.

Experience isn’t an expense, it’s insurance.

And if you’ve ever been burned by the cheap option, you know that good insurance is always worth it.



Thursday, March 19, 2026

Healthy Twinkies?


Here are three videos that expose some of the "tricks of the trade" used to brand and sell products:


Pepsi


 Snickers


Twinkies




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Thank you, Matt Rosenman who's focus is simplifying the world of health and fitness and cutting through misinformation in that world.





Following up

If you’ve been staring at your inbox wondering if your email fell into a black hole, here’s a little tough-love communication lesson. Don’t ...