Content Inc with Joe Pulizzi
How do you know when it’s time to move on, even when nothing looks broken? In this final episode of Content Inc. (for now), Joe reflects on how chapters in our lives and careers often end quietly, without a clear signal. He explores why so many capable people stay in roles that no longer fit, how loyalty can turn into a trap, and why understanding the system and chapter you’re in is critical to knowing what comes next. Joe also shares why he’s choosing to pause the Content Inc. podcast and what he’s thinking about as he enters what he’s calling his “third chapter.” This episode...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this special year-end episode, Joe revisits one of the earliest Content Inc. podcasts, originally recorded in December 2014. It’s a deeply personal reflection on growing up around his grandfather’s funeral home in Sandusky, Ohio, and the unexpected business and storytelling lessons that came from those years. At the heart of the episode is a simple truth. Great storytelling is not about performance or persuasion. It’s about service, empathy, and meaning. Through one powerful story from the Great Depression and a set of foundational content marketing principles, Joe reminds us why...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this episode, Joe digs into a hard truth most creators avoid: we keep doing things we no longer enjoy, not because we have to, but because stopping feels harder than continuing. After a personal conversation with his wife about the commitments and routines they no longer want in their lives, Joe realized something uncomfortable. Most of what fills our calendars is self-chosen… even the stuff we complain about. And the longer we avoid questioning it, the more permanent it becomes. This episode will help you get honest about what no longer fits, and give you a simple framework for letting a...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this episode, Joe shares a personal story about his father, two very different types of people he observed over Thanksgiving, and why gratitude may be one of the most overlooked advantages creators can build right now. Joe explains how a well-known research study divided people into three groups: one that listed things they were grateful for, one that listed their hassles, and one that listed neutral events. The gratitude group ended up healthier, more optimistic, more energetic, and made more progress toward their goals. The complainers did worse across the board. Gratitude, Joe argues, is...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this episode, Joe breaks down the idea he shared during his MarketingProfs keynote — why creators don’t need another tactic or another tool, but a focused ninety-day challenge that forces clarity, momentum, and real progress. It’s called the Misogi Quarter. Joe explains where the idea came from, why creators desperately need it right now, and the simple system for choosing and completing a Misogi that actually changes your identity as a builder. What Joe Covers in This Episode 1. The MarketingProfs Moment Joe reflects on his recent keynote in Boston — a talk unlike anything he’s...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this episode, Joe revisits an old article he wrote six years ago about Apple’s Think Different campaign and discovers a deeper lesson hidden inside it. This is not a story about marketing, or even about Apple. It is a story about belief, service, and the system every creator needs to survive long enough to succeed. Joe shares how belief powered Apple’s turnaround in 1997 and how the same kind of belief shows up in the creators and entrepreneurs who persist through uncertainty. But he also explains why belief, on its own, can drift into ego and self-focus if it is not directed toward...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this episode, Joe digs into what he believes will become the final competitive advantage for creators in the years ahead. As AI accelerates and platforms gain the ability to clone creator voices, styles, and content patterns, many of the moats creators once relied on are disappearing. Technology can now replicate content quality. Algorithms can generate reach. Even personal style and voice can be synthesized. The last remaining moat is being known personally by real people. Joe explains why the strongest creators of the next decade will not be the ones with the biggest follower counts, but...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this unscripted, straight-from-the-heart episode, Joe talks directly to creators and entrepreneurs about what really matters heading into 2026. It’s not about doing more... it’s about doing less but with intention. Joe calls this episode “The Creator Reset.” It’s about identifying what you don’t want to do anymore — the habits, platforms, clients, or patterns that drain your energy or pull you off mission. Once you stop doing those things, you can finally see what truly lights you up and what you actually want to build. Then comes the challenge: choose one Misogi goal — a...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
In this episode, Joe explores what happens after the “three-year window” closes — when AI begins to produce nearly everything on demand. What does that mean for creators and entrepreneurs? Joe shares three essential moves to stay relevant and build lasting value in the coming Age of Abundance. Key Points: 1. Build a Small Tribe with Purpose Forget chasing scale. The next era belongs to creators who build small, mission-driven communities rooted in shared values and purpose. Machines can copy your voice, but not your meaning. 2. Turn Your Process into the Product When content becomes...
info_outlineContent Inc with Joe Pulizzi
Joe Pulizzi goes deeper into his “three-year window” theory and shares three unconventional strategies creators can use to build real connection before AI changes how audiences find and consume content. These moves — collaboration, physical experiences, and shared memory — create the kind of trust algorithms can’t replicate. Key Takeaways: Turn your audience into collaborators. Your audience doesn’t just want to consume — they want to contribute. From small communities to co-created projects, inviting people into the process builds belonging and loyalty that AI can’t imitate....
info_outlineIf I lost everything – the audience, the money, the reputation – and had to start over, here’s what I’d do.
Step 0: Take Inventory
What do I still have? My skills. My story. My scars. Just because the list is gone doesn’t mean the asset is. This helps frame that even starting from “nothing” isn’t truly nothing.
Step 1: Cry
I’d spend at least a week screaming into the void. “Why me Oh Lord, why me?” Then I would get down to business. I’d remind myself:
“There’s never been a better time to start over. The tools are free. The gatekeepers are gone. The only thing missing is your plan.”
Step 2: Pick a weirdly specific niche
I’d need to spend time to really find my purpose…my Tilt.
As Warren Buffett and Simon Sinek discuss, every successful person is really good at one thing. What am I really good at or know something about to truly differentiate?
And it’s not about being louder or flashier. It’s about being more specific, more real, and more essential to a group of people who need exactly what I have.
I’d need to work on it, but things like:
· Helping laid-off corporate marketers build a business around one weekly email.
· Guiding former agency owners to repurpose their network into a publishing-driven business.
· Helping Midwest Gen Xers who want to escape the job ladder and own something by 50.
· Coaching marketers over 40 to build businesses that don’t require social media.
· Teaching people with 1,000 email subscribers how to make a full-time income.
· Helping podcast hosts averaging over 10,000 downloads per month turn their show into a live event, a book, and a revenue flywheel.
I’d obsess over a tiny group of people with a burning problem.
I’d need to remind myself that you can’t be too niche. The more specific the better. I’m already thinking that a number of the ones I listed are not specific enough.
Step 3: Define Success
What will success look like? I’d spend some time visualizing what that could be. Family life? Money needs? Living situation? Career goals?
Basically, what do I really want here? What’s the dream?
Then, I would write that statement down in my journal and review it every day. Something like:
We are the leading event education resource for podcast hosts and sell the company for two million dollars in 2028.
Something like that.
Step 4: Start an email newsletter. Twice Per Week. Non-negotiable.
I’d write one useful, entertaining email two times per week. No fluff. No templates. Just my honest take.
This would be the home base for everything. The email list is the new land. Social is just rented space.
Even though I really like using Kit (how you received this email), I probably would opt for Substack, where you get the benefit of the direct connection (email) with a little more help from a network (social media).
Step 5: Spread the Word
I would create a list of 15-20 places where I believe my audience is hanging out, mostly other newsletters and podcasts. I would reach out and form relationships with these people to do guest articles and serve as podcast guests.
I would also prepare a few sample speeches and start submitting to relevant in-person events.
Step 6: Write the Book
As I create my newsletter I would start thinking about how I can take these newsletters and put it into a print, ebook and audiobook for sale. This will, ultimately, become my greatest marketing vehicle…the business card everyone wishes they had. Of course, I would use Tilt Publishing.
Step 7: Launch a product before I feel ready
By month 2, I’d offer something—a digital guide, a paid workshop, a 1-hour consult. Not to make money at first. But to get skin in the game and test what people will pay for.
Revenue doesn’t come from a viral moment. It comes from consistent service to a small, loyal group.
Step 8: Build in public
I’d document every win, fail, and lesson. Why? Because people don’t follow perfection. They follow momentum.
I’d most likely include my own creation strategies in every newsletter.
Step 9: Stack assets
By month 6, I’d package my best content into a course I could sell forever. Not for viral growth. For long-term leverage.
Step 10: Diversify into second channel
By six to nine months, I should have a small but growing email newsletter following, a newly published book, a speaking event here or there, some podcast appearances, a couple small consulting clients and a newly launched course.
If the small wins are there, I’d diversify into a second channel, most likely a podcast, which could also be a YouTube show. More than anything, this would be marketing for the main channel, the email newsletter.
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