If you’ve been told that no one reads anymore, that people only want quick videos, catchy soundbites, or viral trends, I’m here to tell you—the experts are wrong.
I know because I’ve been told the same thing. More than once. Have I listened? Nope.
A little while ago, I was working with a Pinterest manager—someone who literally worked at Pinterest—who reviewed my content and told me flat-out: People don’t care to read all that. She pointed to one of my pins filled with text from a recent blog post and urged me to take a look at what other people were doing. Quick, catchy videos. Minimal text. Just enough to grab attention, not enough to make someone stop and actually read.
Her words stung. I’ve always done things a little differently when it comes to content. I love writing from the heart, and—if I’m being honest—my posts almost always end up longer than ideal. I’ve hit Instagram’s character limit more times than I’d like to admit. But hearing someone so experienced say, No one is reading this made me question everything in that moment. Maybe I was doing it wrong. Maybe no one actually cared.
Except—I knew that wasn’t true.
I Have the Proof (And It’s in the Data)
Here’s the thing: I actually have the analytics to back up the fact that people do read. They read my long captions on Instagram. They read my blog posts. They even read my text-heavy Pinterest pins—the very ones I was told would never work. The longest emails I send out, get the most replies.
In a world where everyone is chasing viral clips and five-second attention spans, long-form content stands out. When you take the time to show up, share your story, and write from the heart, people stop. They listen. They engage. They connect.
The experts say people don’t have time. I say people make time for what matters to them.
And your words? They matter.
Stop Trying to Fit Yourself Into a Tiny Box
I see it all the time—entrepreneurs trying to shrink themselves to fit the “rules” of online content. Keep your captions short. Say less. Stick to trends. Follow the algorithm. But here’s what I’ve learned: The people who are meant to connect with you will connect with you, no matter what the experts say.
If writing is how you express yourself, don’t stop just because someone told you it won’t work. If storytelling is part of your brand, tell the story. If you have something to say, say it.
Your audience isn’t looking for you to be a copy-paste version of what’s trending. They’re looking for you.
Stop Trying to Fit Yourself Into a Tiny Box
I see it all the time—entrepreneurs trying to shrink themselves to fit the “rules” of online content. Keep your captions short. Say less. Stick to trends. Follow the algorithm. But here’s what I’ve learned: The people who are meant to connect with you will connect with you, no matter what the experts say.
If writing is how you express yourself, don’t stop just because someone told you it won’t work. If storytelling is part of your brand, tell the story. If you have something to say, say it.
Your audience isn’t looking for you to be a copy-paste version of what’s trending. They’re looking for you.
The truth is, authenticity always wins. People crave realness, not another perfectly curated, bite-sized version of what everyone else is doing. If you’re writing long captions or in-depth blog posts and they’re resonating with your audience, keep going. Trends come and go, but meaningful content creates real connections that last.
Yes, People Do Want to Hear From You
One of the biggest lies we’ve been told is that people aren’t interested in what we have to say unless it’s packaged in a way that’s short, trendy, and “consumable.” But what I’ve seen time and time again is that when you show up authentically—when you write like yourself, when you share your heart, when you stop worrying about whether or not it’s too much—that’s when your people show up.
And here’s another truth: The internet is full of people who are craving depth. People who are tired of mindless scrolling. People who are exhausted from being bombarded with quick clips and catchy captions that lack any real substance.
Think about the last time you truly connected with something you read. Maybe it was a story that reminded you of your own journey, a post that put words to something you’ve been feeling, or an article that shifted your perspective. That kind of impact doesn’t come from quick soundbites—it comes from depth.
That’s why long-form content will always have a place. That’s why what you have to say matters.
So if you’ve been told to stop writing so much, let me be the one to remind you: There’s room for you and your words here.
Keep Showing Up, Keep Writing, Keep Sharing
Your words are powerful. Your story is important. And the people who need to hear from you? They’re out there, waiting for you to show up.
Forget what the experts say. Trust your gut. Write the post, share the blog, hit publish on that heartfelt caption. The right people will find you.
Because the experts? They don’t always get it right.
But you? You know your audience better than anyone else.