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The Way Things Are vs the Way They Should Be

Jeremy Enns
2 min readMar 24, 2020

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Why don’t people just recognize what’s best for them and then do it?

While people like you and I can clearly see, from our lofty vantage points the best course of action for the people we’re seeking to engage with and serve, they seem more than happy to persist in their irrationality.

They walk in circles, bang their heads against any of the many walls they encounter, and then have the temerity to whine about how hard life is.

Can’t they see that we have the solution available to their problems? We’ve offered it to them dozens of times, clearly explained its benefits and features, and demonstrated how it will help them get to where they’re looking to go.

Shouldn’t that be enough?

It probably should. But it’s often not.

No matter how obvious the road maps and solutions are to us, our audiences will seldomly make cool level-headed decisions based on data and facts alone.

It’s easy to assess our marketing, our website, our podcast and say “This should be working!” But the world, and the people that make it up, seldom behave as they should.

As marketers and creators, as much as we might wish that the equation {customer problem + our product = customer solution + our profit} was enough to make a…

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Jeremy Enns
Jeremy Enns

Written by Jeremy Enns

Founder of podcast production and content amplification agency Counterweight Creative. Believer in the power of kindness and generosity.

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