One challenge that many of the PodCamps have been faced with is session concurrence and the inability of the community to organize sessions into logical tracks (note many, not all, PodCamps!). This means that if you attend a PodCamp, chances are good that being part of one session means missing another — or several others — that you want to attend at the same time. Thankfully, all of the PodCamp Toronto sessions were videotaped and are available in the media archive of that event.
I have been slowly working through the archive and this past weekend found a nugget of gold. During his session with Connie Crosbie on What To Podcast, Jim Milles said “If something is worth doing, it’s worth doing badly” — which is very different from what my father told me when I was growing up. What a perfect way to frame that the only true barrier to becoming a podcaster is one’s own conscious mind.
There are many reasons why people start their own podcast(s) and just as many reasons why people delay or refuse to do their own podcast(s). Don’t let fear of “doing badly” be one of them. Every podcaster I know (myself included) cringes at the thought of listening to their first five episodes — possibly more.
In everything, we have to do something “badly” to do something else well.
Photo: rhyndman

Thanks, Mark, for finding and sharing that nugget — I’m an awful perfectionist, and it’s been driving me crazy lately that I can’t get things perfect with my podcasting. I needed the reminder to just keep plugging and making improvements one step at a time, and looking on the “bad” as a place to learn and grow.
Comment by katherine — May 31, 2007 @ 8:47 am
[...] Did Jim Milles contradict your parents? [...]
Pingback by Canadian Podcast Buffet » Blog Archive » 67: Boats, Rockstars and More J-men — June 3, 2007 @ 5:22 pm
Thanks, Mark, for finding and sharing that nugget — I'm an awful perfectionist, and it's been driving me crazy lately that I can't get things perfect with my podcasting. I needed the reminder to just keep plugging and making improvements one step at a time, and looking on the “bad” as a place to learn and grow.
Comment by katherine — December 31, 2009 @ 3:01 am