• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Jared Dees

Author. Speaker. Teacher.

  • About
    • Now
    • Projects
    • Jared’s Newsletter
    • Contact
  • Books
    • New! Goals to Gold
    • New! The Gospel According to Video Games
    • New! Just Plant Seeds
    • Beatitales
    • Take and Eat
    • Prepare the Way
    • Take Up Your Cross
    • 15-Minute Stations of the Cross for Kids
    • View All Books
  • Events
  • Articles
  • Stories for Kids
  • Nav Social Menu

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter

What would you create even if no one was watching?

By Jared Dees

Basecamp, the company formerly known as 37 Signals, is a big name in the startup space and very popular among developers.

Their rise to prominence in that space came largely due to one thing: a blog.

They had a blog that turned into a book that turned into a movement.

Early on, though, they didn’t set out to create a content marketing strategy with a blog that would attract new users. They started blogging before Joe Pulizzi even coined the phrase content marketing. They had a blog even before we had a word for blog.

In the first episode of the new Basecamp podcast, Rework, Jason Fried shares the story about the early days of their blog and why it became a success.

Here is the most important lesson from what he said:

Share what you would share even if no one was reading (or listening or watching, etc.).

In those early days they weren’t checking the stats and analytics about visitors. There were no analytics back then. If they had, Fried points out, they probably would have been discouraged and stopped.

Instead, they decided that since they were having conversations about a new kind of business model and writing emails to summarize these thoughts, they might as well post the ideas online so other people could engage with them, too.

Not only that, they used this same line of thinking to create products.

They created things for internal use and then turned them into products for others to use as well. The most popular among these is web application framework Ruby on Rails.

They call this strategy: “Sell Your By-Products”

It reminds me of a lot of other stories of content marketing success that started as something someone was already doing and decided to share online.

Pat Flynn found Internet business success by posting the notes he was taking for the LEED exam for architects. Like Basecamp, he didn’t even have Google Analytics installed and he didn’t realize how many people were using the notes until he set it up one day.

John and Hank Green started posting videos to one another on a YouTube channel they called vlogbrothers because they wanted to have a creative way to keep in touch. The blog now has 3 million subscribers.

The point is to create what you would create even if no one was watching.

Create things you find useful.

Create things that you will come back to and use later.

There’s a likely chance that other people will find them useful, too.

Seth Godin recommends keeping a daily blog whether people read it or not. He posts daily and says he would do it whether anyone read it or not.

This is the 14th day in a row that I’ve posted to this blog. I feel guilty about the amount of time I’m spending on it, but I find it helpful to think through lessons I’m learning each day.

November 14, 2017 Filed Under: On Entrepreneurship

About Jared Dees

Jared Dees is passionate about sharing practical resources to teach faith. He is best known for his website The Religion Teacher and is the author of many books including 31 Days to Becoming a Better Religious Educator, Christ in the Classroom, and Beatitales: 80 Fables about the Beatitudes for Children.

Previous Post: « My Favorite Part about Writing Books
Next Post: TK »

Primary Sidebar

Jared Dees

Author, Speaker, Teacher

Join the 10,000+ subscribers to Jared's weekly email newsletter with stories for kids:

Jared’s New & Popular Books

  • 🌳 Beatitales
  • 🍞🍷 Take and Eat
  • 👨‍🏫 Christ in the Classroom
  • 🌱 Just Plant Seeds 
  • 🎮 The Gospel According to Video Games
  • 📚 View All >

Jared’s Popular Website for Religious Educators

Search the Site:

Footer

Connect with Jared Dees

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Jared Dees is passionate about sharing practical resources to teach faith. He is best known for his website The Religion Teacher and is the author of many books including 31 Days to Becoming a Better Religious Educator, Christ in the Classroom, and Beatitales: 80 Fables about the Beatitudes for Children. See all of Jared's Books →

Stories for Children

Copyright © 2025 · Jared Dees