Not Quite the Mona Lisa

When I began recording audio podcast episodes in April, the recordings were awful. I figured the more practice I got, the better the episodes would be, so I set a goal to record 100 episodes by the end of summer and then reevaluate. I’m at 92 episodes and will be at 100 soon.

The series I’m most proud of is the John H. Johnson series. I felt I’d made a breakthrough. I figured out my content format, and things started to click. I’m proud of the quality of that series, which isn’t the case for prior series. I recorded another series after Johnson’s and then took a break from recording to focus more on improving my process to create a digest of each biography I read.

I’m back recording this week. I listened to the John H. Johnson series for the first time in a few weeks. I wasn’t as impressed as I had been. The quality was better than that of prior series, but I picked up on many areas where I need to improve. I must improve my delivery, connect the dots for listeners, and do various other things. I’m still proud of this series, but it’s not the Mona Lisa I thought it was a few weeks ago.

What happened? Recording those first 92 episodes, I published one almost daily. This aggressive schedule put me deep into the weeds of creating recordings. I got lots of reps, which was needed and helpful. But it made it harder to see where I needed to improve and to gauge the quality of my recordings. Now that I’m not publishing every day, I can see things more clearly. The areas where I need to improve are more obvious.

This reminded me that when I’m aggressively doing something new, I must avoid getting caught up in hitting metrics or the minutia of execution. I need to take time to zoom out and consider the big picture.

For this project, stepping back and focusing on another part of it was helpful. I returned with a fresh perspective and could see the forest, not just the trees.

This week I’m doing more test runs before I record an episode, so the recording process is a bit slower. I hope the quality of the recordings will be higher. I’m also testing some other ideas to help me be more relaxed when I record.