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Craft Is the Entry Fee

Craft Is the Entry Fee

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Hey friends, Chase here If you're a creator who's ever wondered why someone with "less talent" seems to get more opportunities… this episode is for you. Because here's the truth: being great at your craft is only the price of admission. It gets you in the door. But what happens after that? That's where your career is made. In today's micro-show — Craft Is the Entry Fee — I'm talking about the things that matter most in the work you do… and the things that matter just as much in the way you do it. The stuff you can't always point to on a resume. The stuff you can't show in a portfolio. The stuff you can't always "prove" — but everyone can feel. Because what you can't see matters. The Big Idea Let's start with a reframe that will save you years of frustration: Great work is the "get in the door" fee. Yes — you have to be good. You have to practice. You have to care about the craft. You have to put in the reps. But if you're trying to get hired, land clients, build long-term relationships, or get re-hired again and again… then your craft is only one part of the equation. Because hiring isn't just about output. It's about the total package someone brings to the table: experience, energy, passion, intensity, positivity, wisdom, technical knowledge… and the unspoken, unmeasurable stuff that shapes every interaction. What You Can't See (But People Hire For) Here's a vivid example from the episode: Imagine you're an art director or a client. You're going to spend ten days on set with a photographer or director. Now ask yourself: Do you want to spend ten days with a jerk? No. You don't. And neither do they. You might be incredibly talented. Your work might be objectively excellent. But if you're difficult, unpredictable, late, disorganized, or hard to trust — the next job goes to someone else. And it's not personal. It's practical. People hire to solve problems — and they also hire to reduce risk. The Basics Are the Differentiator This is the part creators often skip. We obsess over craft (and we should). But we forget the simple things that determine whether someone wants to work with us again: Are you hard working?Are you enjoyable to be around?Are you on time?Can you deliver on budget?Do you exude integrity and thoughtfulness?Do people feel confident and safe around you? Those are not "nice-to-haves." Those are career builders. I call them "the basics." You might call them the X-factor. Whatever you call them, they're real — and they matter. Soft Skills Are Still Skills This is one of the most important reminders in the episode: Soft skills are still skills. They can be learned. They can be practiced. They can be honed. And the best part is: you don't need to be born with them. You can build them the same way you built your creative ability — with intention, repetition, feedback, and self-awareness. What You'll Hear in This Episode This is a quick micro-show, but it's packed with reminders that hit hard — especially if you've ever felt overlooked or undervalued. Why craft alone isn't enough to get hired (or rehired)What hiring decisions really include beyond talentWhy being "good to work with" is a competitive advantageHow reliability and integrity compound over timeWhy people always notice the invisible stuff — even if they don't name it Timecodes (So You Can Jump to What You Need) 00:00 – Weekly email sponsor message01:50 – Intro: "what you can't see matters"02:14 – Craft is the "get in the door fee"03:19 – Hiring is about the total package03:51 – The "ten days on set" thought experiment04:11 – "Do they want to hang with the jerk?"05:02 – The basics: hard-working, enjoyable, on-time06:00 – Hiring is risk management (and values)06:35 – Soft skills can be learned and practiced08:11 – Closing: share the show / community Read This If You're Trying to Break Through If you've been grinding on your craft and wondering why the opportunities aren't matching the effort — don't assume you're not talented enough. Instead, zoom out. Ask: What is the experience of working with me? Because whether you like it or not, your "work" isn't just the deliverable. Your work is also: how you communicatehow you handle stresshow you collaboratehow you show up when things go wronghow you make people feel while you're doing what you do And the wild thing is… even if you think these things are invisible, people see them. They notice. Questions to Ask Yourself If you want to turn this episode into action, sit with these questions for five minutes: When someone hires me, what "total package" are they getting?Am I making it easy for others to trust me?What do I do when I'm under pressure — and who does it affect?What's one "basic" I could level up this week (timeliness, communication, follow-through)?If I were the client, would I rehire me? A Simple Practice for Building the Invisible Edge Here's a small practice you can run this week — no big life overhaul required. Pick one ...
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