No, you should publish your content and apply the feedback to your next piece. Thinking of feedback as a reason to rework an existing video is one of the most common traps in content creation, and it almost always leads to a creative block.
The purpose of feedback isn’t to question your expertise or your ideas. The real goal is to see if your message landed with your audience – did they understand what you were trying to convey?. If someone gives you feedback that a transition was abrupt or a point was unclear, it doesn’t mean the idea is bad; it means the delivery can be improved next time.
Think of your content like arrows in a quiver. To become a master archer, you don’t aim the same arrow a thousand times without ever letting it go. You shoot a thousand different arrows, learning from each one. It’s the same with content. You will get better by creating and publishing 50 videos and learning from each one, not by trying to perfect a single video. Constantly reworking the same piece will only leave you feeling saturated and stuck. The truth is, 90% of creators get stuck at this exact stage and never publish at all.
Action Step: Look at the feedback you received. Write down the single most important lesson from it. Now, publish the content you already created and schedule time to create your next piece, focusing on implementing that one lesson.
You’re not aiming for one perfect video; you’re building a library of work that shows your evolution. Hitting “publish” is the most important step in that journey