Shed your money taboos

Shed(SHed) your money(ˈmənē) taboos(ta-,təˈbo͞o)

By Derek Sivers

Everyone has weird(wi(ə)rd) mental(ˈmentl) associations(-SHē-,əˌsōsēˈāSHən) with money.

They think the only way to make money is to take it away from others. They think that charging for your art means it was insincere(ˌinsinˈsi(ə)r), and only for profit(ˈpräfit).

But after knowing thousands of musicians for over twenty years, I’ve learned this:

The unhappiest musicians are the ones who avoided the subject of money, and are now broke or need a draining(drān) day job. It may sound cool to say money doesn’t matter — to say “don’t worry about it!” — but it leads to a really hard life. Then ultimately(ˈəltəmitlē) your music suffers, because you can’t give it the time it needs, and you haven’t found an audience that values it.

The happiest musicians are the ones who develop their value, and confidently(-fəˌdent,ˈkänfədənt) charge a high price. There’s a deep satisfaction when you know how valuable you are, and the world agrees. Then it reinforces(ˌrē-inˈfôrs) itself, because you can focus on being the best artist you can be, since you’ve found an audience that rewards you for it.

So never underestimate the importance of making money. Let go of any taboos you have about it.

Money is nothing more than a neutral(ˈn(y)o͞otrəl) exchange of value. If people give you money, it’s proof that you’re giving them something valuable in return.

By focusing on making money with your music, you’re making sure it’s valuable to others, not only to you.

https://sivers.org/mn1