The Pivot: From Marketing Agency to Digital Garden
For over a decade, this corner of the internet has been my "office." It was a place for all things Marketing, SEO tips and professional advice designed to help businesses rank, grow and thrive. It served its purpose, but lately, the walls have started to feel a bit thin.
The truth is, the internet has changed, and so have I. We’ve moved into the era of the "infinite scroll", a noisy stream of algorithmic drivel from people I don't particularly like and opinions I didn't ask for.
Take LinkedIn, for example. It used to be a place to actually learn and grow professionally. Now? it’s a performative circus. It’s become a race to the bottom of "thought leadership" and engagement bait. I realised I’m done contributing to that noise. I missed the old web, the one where personal blogs felt like actual conversations instead of polished sales pitches or desperate grabs for a "like."
Why I’m Clearing the Deck
I’m moving away from the "Marketing Agency" template, both literally and figuratively. This site is now a Digital Garden. It’s a personal social site without the social pressure or the ego-driven metrics.
It’s a place for things that don't necessarily "scale" or "convert," but actually matter to me:
- The "Now": A simple log of what I’m actually doing, reading, and thinking today.
- Consumer Rights: Ranting with a purpose when the system fails.
- Beer Reviews: Because life is too short for bad pints and even shorter for bad reviews.
- Rants: I like a rant, I've proud that I've finally become a "grumpy old man".
- Politics: I used to argue about politics with grandad, not that we had different opinions, we just enjoyed it - I can do it here now.
- Contract Shenanigans: The real-world headaches from me where I've taken on all sorts of businesses - and won!
The Benefits
By stripping away the professional "armour," I get to write more honestly. You get a feed that isn't trying to sell you a consulting package or a "proven framework."
I saw Bear Blog, and it's a good looking platform, but I had so nuch stuff in Blogger I really didn't want to lose any of it, but I liked the styling of it, I liked the minimalistic look and feel of it, then I started reading about Digital Gardens, and I thought that was me. So, I’ve moved to a much leaner, minimalist Blogger setup. No tracking cookies, no "suggested posts", no comments, or Like buttons; just text (and the occasional pic), it's me, the real me.
The old marketing archives are still here if you need them, but the new growth is going to look a little different. It’ll be shorter, more frequent, and significantly more human.
Thanks for sticking around for the rebrand. I’m looking forward to screaming into the void again, only this time, without the LinkedIn "influencers" screaming back.
— Andy