You have arrived at the web home of Noah Brier. This is mostly an archive of over a decade of blogging and other writing. You can read more about me or get in touch. If you want more recent writing of mine, most of that is at my BrXnd marketing x AI newsletter and Why Is This Interesting?, a daily email for the intellectually omnivorous.
Whenever I tell the story of building Brand Tags, I explain that I finally decided to launch the stupid thing because I was feeling guilty about not having blogged in a while. (In the post where I introduced the idea I opened by explaining that, "In lieu of actually writing something interesting (which I haven't done in a while), I've decided to release a 70% done project.")
Just today I was feeling it again as I looked at the last time I wrote a "full entry" (which is what I call those things on the left side of the blog). It was December 31st, which is over a month ago and that post is hardly an insightful or interesting piece of writing, it's just a list of a whole bunch of blogs I steal ideas from.
None of this is to say much, except that I think it's funny that in the 21st century we have the luxury to worry about things like whether our blog audience is feeling as though we're paying an adequate amount of attention to them. In some ways it's incredibly egotistic, as if there's a whole bunch of you sitting around waiting for me to write something (which you are obviously not). In another way, though, it's the flip side of the whole "attention thing" people love talking about (I refuse to call it an economy).
As a content creator, albeit a small-time one, I feel constantly on the hook for finding interesting things to share with all of you. I scour the internet daily, looking for tidbits and ideas that are worth of your time and attention. It shapes what I read and, maybe more importantly, how I read it, as I am constantly reading with a critical eye towards insights.
I guess the point is that too little attention is paid to the effects of so many of us being content creators, since the consumption part is the topic-du-jour. Just think about how it changes the way you look at everything, even if you're only a creator amongst a tiny group of friends or family. Look at how differently you judge photos that are going to the web or how you've learned to describe experiences on Twitter.
Pretty soon we'll have a world with a billion-plus publisher/editor/creators and only focusing on the mass of content they create is probably missing the larger cultural impact of them all being this other thing that puts content out into the world.