Begin anywhere. I&amp;#8217;m not a fan of the big blowout splashy launch for streams, nor page-driven websites. The Internet is innately designed for morphing, for reinvention, for changing on a dime, and/or for evolution.
I started my first blog on Dave Winer&amp;#8217;s Radio. I fretted and worried over what I&amp;#8217;d say so I never really cracked the spine of that journal and got to scribbling. I started my second blog on Blogspot. I worried slightly less, but abandoned it after a few months. My third blog begun in February 2004 still exists, mainly because I embraced the paradox of the Internet. I strategized I would write about technology and culture. I&amp;#8217;d travel. I&amp;#8217;d juxtapose different innovation ecosystems around the world and the tension between their technological and traditional, spiritual traditions from Silicon Valley to Finland (mobile was still hot there then) to India to Israel. That&amp;#8217;s not what ended up happening at all. But at least I wrote the first post. Then another. Then another. Within six months, I had a popular business and marketing blog. (Yeah, I know&amp;#8212;not exactly how it started out. And it&amp;#8217;s not what the blog is about today.) Don&amp;#8217;t overthink it.&nbsp;
So I totally agree with Bruce Mau and John Cage:

John Cage tells us that not knowing where to begin is a common form of paralysis. His advice: begin anywhere.

The rest of Bruce Mau&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;Incomplete Manifesto for Growth&amp;#8221; is awesome and applies well to the art of the Web.