Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
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Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
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  • About
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Stop Trying To Get Everyone To Like Your Work

When I talk to creators and survey the industry landscape, I see a zillion creators trying to have all their work liked by all the people. This comes from our social animal DNA, but it’s the completely wrong approach to success – whether that be measured by your work being licensed, sold, etc, or by getting hired, shown, talked about, displayed, whatever.

Simply said, by trying to please everyone, you end up pleasing no one, especially not yourself.

But fear not (or fear less, perhaps). The answer is simple.

1. Shoot what you love.
2. Relentlessly share that work.
3. Repeat.

People can smell whether you love what you’re shooting or not, love what you’re promoting or not, love what you’re doing or not. So you might as well effing love it for real. It’s all you’ve got.

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So quit with your shifty eyes, looking at what everybody else is doing. And do your own shiznit. Yes this means you. If your work is priced…… appropriately, be it fine art, commercial, editorial, wedding, whatever, all you need is 10-50 people each year to dig what you make. That’ll come from doing what you love, and that will make for a great year. Of all the damn people you have access to with the innernets, there are 50 people with money who like what you do. Of the 1000 or 10,000,000 who look at your site, your book, your whatever, those “likers” can be a pretty low percentage. Bet on it.

Check out these creative classes I've curated + built that relate to this post:

Worth It: Negotiation For Creatives
with
Creating Your Ideal Photography Business
with Kathy Holcombe
Fulfill Your Creative Purpose
with Ann Rea

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154 replies on:
Stop Trying To Get Everyone To Like Your Work

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  1. JT says:
    June 7, 2011 at 11:50 am

    Surely pimping your work is the same thing as getting people to Like it???!

    Massive contradiction surely?

  2. Dan says:
    June 7, 2011 at 11:35 am

    This definitely hit a spot with me and came at just the right time for me…thanks Chase 🙂

  3. Edward (m) says:
    June 7, 2011 at 11:32 am

    Totally agree with the above statement.One added note to many of those “newer” photographers who post their work and ask for opinions on the work,but can’t handle the constructive criticism or the holes being poked in their ego.Quit being a” facebook attention whore”.Like the author of this post brings up, your work should stand on its own, not just influenced by the 1000’s of “friends” who would not know good composition even if it slapped them in the face.

  4. SimonGman says:
    June 7, 2011 at 11:31 am

    Excellent post Chase, so true!!!

  5. Scott Wyden Kivowitz says:
    June 7, 2011 at 11:30 am

    Well said!

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