{"id":280,"date":"2018-12-24T20:46:24","date_gmt":"2018-12-24T20:46:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/leonhitchens.com\/2018-in-review\/"},"modified":"2024-02-21T08:13:45","modified_gmt":"2024-02-21T13:13:45","slug":"2018-in-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/leonhitchens.com\/2018-in-review\/","title":{"rendered":"2018 in Review"},"content":{"rendered":"
2018 is coming to a close and 2019 is just starting. This year has been a wild ride with a new job, a side-project launched, a lot of growth, and some bad habits formed.<\/p>\n
In the past, I was resistant to making new years resolutions or making significant changes in my life during this time of year. This year, however, I felt different. Instead of starting the new year and changing everything cold turkey, I started making changes in December. I relaunched my website, became more active on Twitter, launched Markerters.chat, and continue to focus on IronMic.<\/p>\n
Before I go into my new years resolutions and talk about the roadmap for 2019, I wanted to recap the year.<\/p>\n
In January, I started a new job with a marketing and development agency in San Antonio. This job move was a big change for me. It was not only a career change but also one where the I’ve had the opportunity to grow, network, and learn more in a year then decades of schooling could do. When I started, I joined to write content, create graphics, and focus on social media. Now I am leading up the marketing team and crafting strategies for dozens of small businesses and startups.<\/p>\n
It’s been an exciting year working through the different strategies for each business. Since we don’t work with one category of business, I get to approach marketing for companies in hundreds of different ways. Some companies focus on paid advertising with Google while others concentrate on SEO and content marketing.<\/p>\n
Since I was in middle school, I have been doing side projects. The longest-running side project was Digital Bounds, and this year I finally sunset the project. Because of the project, I was able to attend CES, SXSW, and dozens of other technology-related events and conferences. The decision to sunset Digital Bounds wasn’t easy; I had worked on the technology blog for 6 or 7 years. It wasn’t a wild success, but it brought a lot of joy working on it every week. I plan on writing further on why I sunset Digital Bounds in the new year. The jest of the story revolves around the new job and having a shift in focus from being a technology blogger to wanting to build my brand.<\/p>\n
After I left Digital Bounds behind, I had a bit of downtime. I started to brainstorm business ideas with my two friends and business partners, Kyle McDonald and Sunny Singh. From the brainstorming, we knew we wanted to have something that would generate money out of the gate and help us build out our brands at the same time. We came to the idea of an automated and straightforward podcast website generator. At the time we were all launching podcasts, and we found a problem – if you hosted with Anchor or SoundCloud, you didn’t have a website. You had to use Squarespace or WordPress to create a site. From this, IronMic was formed, and we launched an MVP in late summer. The service isn’t a wild success but it’s grown at a steady pace, and we have paying customers covering most of the monthly costs.<\/p>\n
Then recently, I launched Marketers.Chat as a private Slack workspace<\/a>. It’s meant for anyone who does marketing, whether you work for a startup or you’re a developer and have to market your new product you just launched on Product Hunt. I created the workspace because most of the “marketers” I meet are all the used car salesman types. They follow thousands of people on Twitter and use growth hacking in unethical ways. It’s grown slowly but with the right people. I hope to grow it more of the year and keep the same level of marketers on the Slack.<\/p>\n I have grown leaps and bounds through the year, learning more about SEO, PPC, and marketing than I would anywhere else. I have connected with some talented players within the San Antonio market. These connections have helped with IronMic and get more traction within the podcasting community.<\/p>\n The biggest opportunity of the year was going to San Fransisco and learning from Google directly about Google AdWords. The trip helped me understand Google AdWords more, and discover all the new features that Google rolled out with the Google Ads update.<\/p>\n Hands down, 2018 has been the year of growth.<\/p>\n 2019 is a lot about growing what I am doing. I don’t want to launch any new projects or get started on anything big. I want to focus time on growing what I have. In the past, I would launch sometime and get bored and move on. In the case of Digital Bounds, I got hyper-focused on the blog and didn’t grow other projects with more potential.<\/p>\n This year, I did some new years resolutions in a Twitter thread.<\/p>\n 2019 New Year’s Resolutions \ud83c\udf89<\/p>\n I have never set new years resolutions before but this year I felt different.<\/p>\n Thread \u2193<\/p>\n \u2014 Leon Hitchens \ud83d\udc7e (@Leonhitchens) December 18, 2018<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\nGrowth \ud83d\udcc8<\/h3>\n
2019 Roadmap \ud83d\udee3<\/h2>\n
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