The Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here This episode is short and direct — and it’s built around a question I think most of us care about more than we admit: what actually makes a great friend? Friendship is often treated as something casual. Easy. Automatic. But as life gets fuller — work, family, responsibility, distraction — the quality of our friendships can quietly slip into something surface-level. Not because we don’t care, but because we stop being intentional about how we show up. What I’ve learned is that great friendships aren’t defined by history or proximity. They’re defined by...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here This episode is short and direct — and it’s built around a simple idea I’ve come to believe deeply: the most important creative tools are free. Most creators assume they’re stuck because they don’t have the right gear, the right resources, or the right opportunity. But after decades of making work, interviewing hundreds of top creators, and studying the lives of artists across disciplines, I’ve noticed a different pattern. What actually holds people back isn’t a lack of tools — it’s a lack of the right conditions. Creativity doesn’t break down...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here This episode is short and direct: most creators don’t struggle because they lack talent — they struggle because they quit at 95%. They get the work to “pretty good,” ship it, and move on. And for a lot of things in life, that’s fine. The 80–20 rule works. But when it comes to your core creative craft — the thing you want to be known for — good enough is the trap. The last 5% is where the details live. It’s uncomfortable, slow, and often invisible. Which is exactly why most people stop before they get there. Here’s the core idea: 80–20 works for...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here This episode is short and honest: if you don’t love the work you’re making, don’t ship it — or better yet, figure out how to love the work before you ship it. I know that sounds blunt, but the market — and more importantly, your audience — can smell half-hearted work a mile away. You can’t fake the stuff that matters. Loving the work isn’t about perfection. It’s about clarity, curiosity, and being willing to do the uncomfortable thing: choose a direction, commit to it, and then grind the craft until you actually love the result. That’s the difference...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here This time of year, I get a lot of messages from folks ready for change — they’ve declared an intention, they want the next chapter, but something’s holding them back. Some have the ideas and energy but no system to ship. Others have the systems but aren’t listening to the quiet that tells them what to build next. Different gaps, same problem: without space to reflect and a mindful plan to act, momentum stalls. Here’s the truth most people ignore: Intentions are the spark — but they won’t transform your life without quiet, synthesis, and daily practices...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here This week I had back-to-back coaching calls with two different clients. One had the skillset but not the mindset. The other had the mindset but not the skillset. Different people, same roadblock — they were both stuck at the edge of their next level because they were avoiding the hard stuff. Here’s the truth most people don’t want to hear: You don’t level up because you “get discovered.” You level up because you build both your skillset and your mindset — and that requires doing the uncomfortable work you’ve been dodging. Skillset without mindset? You...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here You put the work in. You make something you’re proud of. You hit publish… and then? Crickets. Tumbleweeds. A handful of likes from your mom and your college roommate. If you’ve ever wondered why some creators seem to explode overnight while your (arguably better!) work struggles to get traction, today’s episode is for you. Because here’s the truth: Making great work is only 50% of the job. The other 50% — the part no one told you about — is community. Community is the force multiplier behind every breakout launch, every viral post, every “overnight...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here. If you’re a creator, here’s a hard truth: most of us don’t charge enough. We look around, see what others are doing, and call that “the going rate.” But that’s not how value works. There’s no upper limit on creativity — you can charge whatever someone is willing to pay. The key is learning to positionyourself and negotiate with confidence. Your job isn’t to fit perfectly into “industry standards.” It’s to understand the value you bring and price accordingly. It takes the same effort to sell something for $100 as it does for $10,000 — the...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here. Here’s an important reminder: you’ll never feel ready to start. But you’ve got to do it anyway. And the operative word there is “do.” Just start. This episode is the kick in the ass you need. Too often we get bogged down in the dreaming, the research, and the preparing - without the DOING. Feel me on this? It’s a common excuse that most of use…that we just need a little more planning… Wrong. This is not to say that planning isn't necessary, just that it shouldn’t be the crutch that prevents you from executing....
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
In this week’s episode, we’re revisiting a powerful conversation that — one that feels even more relevant today. Brené Brown joined me to talk about courage, connection, and what it really means to find true belonging in a divided world. Her insights on creativity, loneliness, and the power of standing alone have only become more urgent as we navigate today’s culture of comparison and noise. Since our original conversation, Brené has continued to expand this body of work through her bestselling books — including Atlas of the Heart and Dare to Lead — and her podcasts and . She...
info_outlineHey friends, Chase here.
If you’ve ever found yourself hesitating to start a project because it didn’t feel “portfolio-worthy,” this one’s for you. I’ve fallen into that trap more times than I’d like to admit — obsessing over whether something I’m making is polished enough to represent me. The irony? That mindset kills the very creativity that fills a portfolio in the first place.
The Portfolio Trap
Somewhere along the way, we started treating our portfolios like prisons instead of playgrounds. We only want to show our “best work,” so we start *only* making work we think will fit that box. Every idea gets judged before it’s even born. That’s not curation — that’s fear dressed up as professionalism.
Here’s the shift:
Separate creation from curation.
Create Wildly. Curate Ruthlessly.
When you’re creating, you’re exploring. You’re playing. You’re trying things that might fail — and that’s where originality lives. When you’re curating, you’re editing. You’re selecting what best represents your voice *after* you’ve made a lot of things. These are two different modes, and mixing them up is where people get stuck.
Let yourself make a mess. Create hundreds of sketches, photos, prototypes, or drafts that no one will ever see. Then, later, curate like a maniac. The discipline is in the separation — not in perfection.
Why the Messy Stuff Matters
Some of the best gigs of my career came from “throwaway” experiments — the projects I almost didn’t share because they weren’t polished enough. Those experiments showed curiosity and risk-taking. Clients and collaborators see that energy and think, *I want that.*
You don’t need every piece of work to land in your portfolio. You just need to make enough to find the pieces that truly speak for you.
Here’s what we get into in the episode:
- The portfolio trap: how obsessing over “shareable” work limits your creativity
- Separate creation and curation: freedom in process, discipline in presentation
- Messy work = momentum: why experimentation builds better portfolios
- Play over perfection: creativity thrives when the stakes are low
The big idea?
Your portfolio should reflect your growth — not restrict it. Make more. Edit later. The only “wrong” project is the one you were too afraid to start.