Thursday, December 31, 2015

Last Chance to Save $150 Instantly: Get Pro Plus Before It Becomes Recurring

lock in the pro plus all-theme pack today (and save big)

This is it …

Time is running out to get our Pro Plus All-Theme Pack for WordPress before the new recurring element is added at the end of January 2016. (Here’s what that means.)

It’s also your last chance to get $150 off.

And it’s your last chance to book the expense on your 2015 taxes.

If you’ve waited until the last minute, wait no more.

Click here to claim your $150 Pro Plus discount, lock in your account before recurring payments are added, and book it on this year’s taxes

This offer expires today, December 31, 2015, at 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time.

And if you’re feeling at all rushed because it’s New Year’s Eve and your head is already in the clouds getting ready for tonight … don’t. :-)

We offer a no-questions-asked, 30-day, money-back guarantee. We do this to make your decision as easy as possible.

Get started with Pro Plus today and take all of January to decide if you want to keep it. If you decide you don’t, just email our Support team and we’ll issue you a full refund.

You don’t even need to give a reason.

We just want you to have the StudioPress design you need for your WordPress website when you need it … for as long as you choose to maintain an account. Pro Plus gives you that, and so much more (and you don’t pay another dime after today).

Click here to find out about everything Pro Plus has to offer and get started risk-free today

Remember: This offer expires today (12/31/15) at 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time.

Then after you get started with Pro Plus, go be safe and have fun tonight. :-)

Tomorrow it’s time to start working on our goals for 2016.

About the author

Brian Gardner


Starbucks addict. Sarah McLachlan fan. Maker of Rain.
Founder of StudioPress. CPO and Partner at Rainmaker Digital.

No Sidebar / Twitter / Instagram

The post Last Chance to Save $150 Instantly: Get Pro Plus Before It Becomes Recurring appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Announcing: Copyblogger.FM

Introducing Copyblogger.FM

AKA the Episode Where Sonia Seizes All the Power …

If you’re reading this on New Year’s Eve, you’re probably a diehard. (Which we love, by the way.)

You might have been reading and listening to Copyblogger content for a long time now. And you may well know our original podcast, The Lede.

It started life as Internet Marketing for Smart People (audio edition) with Robert Bruce and Brian Clark, then over time morphed into The Lede, most recently hosted by Jerod Morris and Demian Farnworth.

In 2016, the show is transforming once again, and The Lede becomes Copyblogger.FM.

And I (ahem) kicked all those jokers off the platform and am taking over.

Last time I saw Farnworth, he was demolishing his console with his lightsaber, but I’m sure he’ll get past it. We’re here for you, bro.

Announcing: Copyblogger.FM

What’s the new show about?

Copyblogger.FM is about content marketing, first and foremost. We’ll be covering:

  • Emerging trends
  • Interesting disasters
  • Enduring best practices
  • Worthwhile news
  • Practical strategies and tactics

We’ll also let you peek behind the scenes at the content strategies for the Copyblogger blog and Rainmaker Digital as a company, so you can learn from our experiments and observations.

And I may go on a rant once in a while.

If you’re already subscribed to The Lede, Copyblogger.FM will use the same feed, so you can just keep listening to the new incarnation without doing anything special.

If you’d like to try it out, you can find us here: Copyblogger.FM.

Serious thanks to our great team

Kidding aside, I want to thank Jerod and Demian (and Robert and Brian) for all of the hard work and insights they’ve delivered over the years. They’ve created something valuable, and I promise I will work hard to keep building on what they’ve created.

They will, of course, be showing up on the new version of the show with their wisdom and occasional shenanigans. We’ll also see lots of Pamela Wilson, our EVP of Educational Content, who will be sharing behind-the-scenes news about Copyblogger.

The team and I are greatly looking forward to seeing you there!


The Cornerstone Content Challenge

Have you signed up yet for our January Content Challenge?

We’re going to be walking folks just like you through a powerhouse strategy to make your site more authoritative, more attractive to your audience, and just plain more awesome. We’ve got tutorials, a free webinar, and even a pop-up forum to help you get it done. And it’s all free.

Join us for the Copyblogger Content Challenge.

Footnote: By the way, yes, I’ll still be producing my own show, Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer, which is focused more on who we are as individuals and how that plays out in our work and business lives.

That one is around 80 percent rant and 20 percent strategy; on Copyblogger.FM, we plan to reverse that ratio.

About the author

Sonia Simone


Sonia Simone is co-founder and Chief Content Officer of Rainmaker Digital. Get lots more from Sonia on her podcast, Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer, or come hang out with her on Twitter.

The post Announcing: Copyblogger.FM appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Why Content Marketers Need Editors

how an editor helps your content shine

I’m good at math.

If you looked at my standardized test results from when I was back in school, you’d see I scored very high in math and very low in verbal.

And yet, today I’m a professional writer and editor.

It’s a mad, mad, mad, mad world.

Sort of. Your content needs to quickly communicate what your audience wants and needs, so my natural abilities are actually the perfect fit for content marketing.

You probably possess some of these editing skills too, so let’s examine how you can use them to become a discerning content marketer.

Turning a “weakness” into a strength

Most of my English tests in high school weren’t adorned with those coveted “A” grades because timed exams to test reading comprehension didn’t fit my reading style.

I read text passages slowly, studied each word carefully, and analyzed how the writer could have presented his or her message more clearly.

It’s no surprise I’d run out of time before I finished every question. (It’s okay, 16-year-old Stefanie. The future looks bright for you.)

My poor test scores could have convinced me that the English language and reading comprehension were my weaknesses, but instead, I turned my way of reading into a career.

We’re in The Editor Age

The title of this interview on Contently’s The Content Strategist says it all: ‘You Need Editors, Not Brand Managers’: Marketing Legend Seth Godin on the Future of Branded Content.

When asked how he’d build a brand media property, Godin replied that brands often opt for playing it safe rather than thinking, “How can we be more interesting?”

Then, Godin concluded:

That’s not what happens when you want to make a hit TV show or a website that people care about. You need editors, not brand managers, who will push the envelope to make the thing go forward.

Editors produce enjoyable content

“Enjoyable content” sounds a bit weak, doesn’t it? It’s less serious than “effective content” or “content that produces business results.”

But enjoyable content is a prerequisite if you want your content to be effective.

Editors produce the right content experiences with refined messages that help meet your business goals. This meaningful content gives your ideal prospect an enjoyable experience that produces results.

For example, I enjoy painting, but I don’t always have time to paint on canvas, so I frequently paint my nails. It’s relatively quick, and I get to display my work every day for as long as the manicure lasts.

Essie is my favorite nail polish brand and the company’s YouTube channel has a collection of nail art tutorials. To communicate a persuasive message, each concise video required a focused vision and intentional refining.

Here’s a tutorial that has more than one-million views:

Every aspect of the video also forms a seamless call to action — the instructive lesson makes you want to buy the products used in the tutorial so you can try the look yourself.

That is enjoyable content for a nail polish lover. I watched a number of Essie tutorials while researching this article and now have a long list of new colors I’m going to buy. 😉

8 steps to become a content marketing editor

“Egregious grammar errors make your content confusing and typos are distracting,” said Captain Obvious.

There’s more to becoming an editor than aiming to produce error-free content.

Here are eight steps that will help bring your inner editor to the surface during your content creation and production process:

  1. Research. Your content marketing strategy begins with research. In addition to optimizing your chances of connecting with your target audience, research is also the foundation of captivating content. It helps you stand out with unique ideas your audience won’t find elsewhere.
  2. Prepare. I prefer preparing over planning because it allows for more flexibility when unforeseen circumstances arise. If you’re prepared, you can easily adapt. Editors prepare their content schedules in advance and adjust them as needed.
  3. Write. Synthesize your research into a cohesive presentation, whether it’s an article, podcast, or video. “Don’t try to do too much” is my favorite writing advice. While first drafts are certainly the place to let your ideas run wild, stay focused on the message you need to communicate.
  4. Delete. Remove repetitive and excessive content. In the Essie nail art tutorial above, only essential information made the final cut. For example, our guide, Rita Remark, didn’t distract viewers with statistics about how many people give themselves manicures each year. That information doesn’t directly match the video topic or serve viewers.
  5. Push. In the video above, Rita explains that the argyle print she’s creating is composed of diamond shapes. Take a closer look at the bookcase in the background. Notice anything? Yep, it has diamond-shaped compartments. The producers of this video pushed themselves creatively beyond a standard plain background to construct a complete experience for viewers.
  6. Refine. Once your content is complete, how can you make it sharper? Is there a more succinct phrase you could use, or do you need to explain a point with more details? To address a possible concern, about halfway through the nail art tutorial, Rita reassures the viewer, “This may look difficult, but don’t be scared. It just takes a little practice.”
  7. Polish. I’m not talking about nail polish this time! Grammar and spelling lovers rejoice; this is the step where you check for mistakes — large and small. Dedicate time to fact-checking (even if you think you already did) and hold every aspect of your content up to professional standards.
  8. Publish. You don’t have the chance to make a positive impression on your ideal prospects until you release the content you create. Confident editors have overcome the false security of perfectionism and publish their best efforts. They simply stay vigilant about possible ways to improve in the future.

Present a refined message to your audience

Think like an editor to become a more persuasive content marketer.

And, as you adopt the perspective of an editor who critically evaluates every aspect of his content, recognize your opportunity to take any supposed “weakness” you have and turn it into your winning difference.

What do you do differently that you can harness as a strength?

Additional reading

About the author

Stefanie Flaxman


Stefanie Flaxman is Rainmaker Digital's Editor-in-Chief.

The post Why Content Marketers Need Editors appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Get the All-Theme Pack Now Before It Becomes Recurring (Plus: $150 Off Instantly)

lock in the pro plus all-theme pack today (and save big)

A change is coming to our biggest and best-selling product.

The StudioPress Pro Plus Pack — which gives you immediate, on-demand access to every active theme in the StudioPress library — is about to add a recurring component.

Note that I said about to add. Nothing is changing immediately.

But the change is coming soon (likely at the end of January 2016), which is why we’re letting you know about a special offer happening this week only.

We want you to have every opportunity to lock in the current Pro Plus offer.

Here’s the offer …

For a single investment in Pro Plus today, you get unlimited access to:

  • All current StudioPress themes (there are more than 40 as of today)

  • All future StudioPress themes (several are already in development)

  • All design, security, and functionality updates

  • All current and future third-party themes we add to Pro Plus (there are five currently)


  • Support for all themes
 (we support StudioPress themes, while the third-party developers support their themes)


You get all of this for the lifetime of your account. You never make another payment.

Until this special offer ends on Thursday, December 31, 2015 at 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time — you get $150 off as well.

It’s the largest discount we’ve ever given for Pro Plus.

That’s more than 30 percent off of a deal that already saved you more than $1,000 compared to purchasing everything separately.

Click here to learn more about Pro Plus
(and get $150 off)

And Pro Plus keeps getting more valuable as more themes get added.

What will the recurring element look like?

It will be pretty simple.

Right now, you make one payment and receive everything as long as you maintain your StudioPress account (so, basically, as long as you want it).

Once the recurring component is added, new Pro Plus customers will make one payment to activate their accounts and then make smaller annual payments to maintain access.

Obviously, recurring customers will get to keep any themes they have downloaded and are using, but they will need to make the recurring payment each year to maintain their access to:

  • All existing themes
  • All future themes

  • All updates

  • Support


Again: this change is not happening now. It’s happening at the end of January 2016.

But we wanted to give you a heads up way in advance in case you want to lock in a Pro Plus account before the recurring component comes.

Plus get $150 off when you do. 😉

Click here to learn more about Pro Plus
(and get $150 off)

Grab your Pro Plus account today. The value will never be better. Offer ends at 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time on New Year’s Eve (12/31/15).

About the author

Brian Gardner


Starbucks addict. Sarah McLachlan fan. Maker of Rain.
Founder of StudioPress. CPO and Partner at Rainmaker Digital.

No Sidebar / Twitter / Instagram

The post Get the All-Theme Pack Now Before It Becomes Recurring (Plus: $150 Off Instantly) appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Are You Creating Meaningful Content?

how to deliver beneficial results

Everyone’s creating all this online content, but does it matter?

More importantly, are you accomplishing your goals with the content you deliver, or are you simply spinning your wheels?

Well, if you’re doing it right, your content is highly effective and tightly tied to your ultimate business objectives. Otherwise, you’re just filling up space on an ignored web page.

Content marketing is the most effective and lucrative form of online marketing, because it not only works, it also builds a media asset at the same time. So it makes sense to understand exactly what makes content effective, right?

The key is meaning.

Effective content is meaningful

The simple definition of content marketing is giving away valuable information in order to sell something related.

Value is a function of perception. You want the people you’re trying to reach to perceive your content as valuable, even if people you’re not trying to reach perceive it as worthless.

This is an important point, even though it seems simplistic.

The snarling enemy of meaningful content is the urge to water it down for the lowest common denominator, in hope to either:

  • (A) Reach an unreasonably mass audience, or
  • (B) Not offend anyone

The result of that approach is content that means very little to anyone.

Meaningful content is an experience

As Sonia Simone has discussed over the years:

Content (what you say) without copywriting (how you say it) can be a complete waste of otherwise valuable information. But no matter how you say it, what you say has to have meaning to the right people.

Meaning is a function of what people believe before you find them. What people believe is how they view the world, and your content has to frame that view appropriately to be effective.

As a function of belief, meaning is derived from the context in which your desired audience views your content. From there, your content has to provoke a desirable reaction.

For example:

  1. Content: 10 Tips for More Productive Writing
  2. Context: Your ideal prospect believes productive writing is important
  3. Reaction: Your ideal prospect believes he can now write more efficiently

While everything we perceive is technically an experience, experiences begin to become meaningful at the reaction stage. It’s at that point that your content is good.

But is it great (meaning highly effective)?

No.

Meaningful experiences involve action

A higher grade of experience involves active participation from that ideal prospect. So, beyond the belief that your advice is beneficial, your ideal prospect actually acts on your advice.

  1. Content: 10 Tips for More Productive Writing
  2. Context: Your ideal prospect believes productive writing is important
  3. Reaction: Your ideal prospect believes he can now write more efficiently
  4. Action: Your ideal prospect implements your productivity tips

The action taken can vary. It can be acting directly on your advice, sharing your content, buying your software that helps implement the advice, buying your book for more details, or hiring you as a personal productivity coach.

At this point, your content is truly meaningful and truly aligned with your objectives. There’s only one level that’s better.

The content holy grail: results

What’s better than action? It’s action that leads to beneficial results.

Now, this won’t happen with every piece of content. In fact, it’s safer to say that reader (or viewer or listener) results happen thanks to the totality of the story you tell over time.

But let’s look at it in its simplest form:

  1. Content: 10 Tips for More Productive Writing
  2. Context: Your ideal prospect believes productive writing is important
  3. Reaction: Your ideal prospect believes he can now write more efficiently
  4. Action: Your ideal prospect implements your productivity tips
  5. Result: Your ideal prospect is a more productive writer

It doesn’t matter whether or not you know about these results — you’ve now earned a true fan. Odds are, a true fan is going to tell someone.

That’s the fantastic last part of a cycle that repeats itself over and over in social media, all thanks to content marketing.

And all the while, you’re building a media asset on your own domain that has independent value beyond the cash flow you pull in every month.

You are building that asset, right?

Editor’s note: The original version of this post was published on January 12, 2011.

About the author

Brian Clark


Brian Clark is CEO of Rainmaker Digital, founder of Copyblogger, host of Unemployable, and evangelist for the Rainmaker Platform.

The post Are You Creating Meaningful Content? appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Monday, December 28, 2015

Social Media Discussions: How to Keep Sanity When Someone Disagrees with You

It may be my age or the craziness going on around the world (or both), but I’ve seen so much hatred on social media lately that it’s almost scary.

People jump into argument with so much passion that it’s almost impossible to keep sanity.

Yet, we have to: It’s essential to maintain dignity. In many cases, it mostly comes down to stopping the discussion before it’s too late.

Here are a few tips for those who agree with me on this:

Unfollow vs Unfriending on Facebook

Unfollow vs Unfriending on Facebook

Some of your friends tend to share something you don’t agree with? It doesn’t make him/her a bad person… nor justifies a spoiled relationship.

If you unfriend that person, he’ll notice sooner or later.

If you stop following what he/she posts, that will always remain your secret prerogative. There’s no way to tell if your Facebook friend is also following your updates.

You can also unfollow a separate thread to stop notifications on new replies and ignore the follow-ups. This is better done earlier than sorry:

stop notifications

Block vs Mute on Twitter

The simplest way to explain the difference:

Muting a user on Twitter means their Tweets and Retweets will no longer be visible in your home timeline, and you will no longer receive push or SMS notifications from that user (though they can still send you DMs).

Blocking a user on Twitter means everything what muting does + The blocked user cannot see your tweets when going to your Twitter profile.

That basically means that the user can easily tell when you are blocking them but there’s no way for them to tell if you are muting them.

Twitter muting

Muting is like silent blocking which you can use to stop seeing annoying tweets without ruining that relationship completely.

Shutting Down “Ethically”

Social media discussing is a weird beast: You basically talk to total strangers you know little about. You have no idea about their background; you can’t even tell what they feel.

This is why keeping sanity and trying your best not to offend anyone is so essential. It’s ok if you cannot accept an opposite point of view… or the way your opponents express it in words: You don’t have to change yourself.

What you can do is to avoid hurting anyone’s feelings or saying something you won’t be proud of by shutting down that conversation before it’s too late and without offending your opponent.

Read further: Social Media Etiquette: If There’s an Option, It Doesn’t Mean It’s a Good Idea

The post Social Media Discussions: How to Keep Sanity When Someone Disagrees with You appeared first on Internet Marketing Ninjas Blog.



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Join the Copyblogger Team for Our First Content Challenge

Challenge begins January 4, 2016 - build your website's content marketing cornerstone

Starting a week from today, the Copyblogger team is doing something we’ve never done before … and we want you to join us.

We’re hosting our first three-week Copyblogger Content Challenge. These brand-new challenges are designed to give you in-depth education around key content marketing topics.

The goal of our challenges is simple:

We help you master each topic — and you put that information directly to use to grow your business.

Challenge #1: Create your cornerstone content

For the January 2016 challenge, we’re teaching you how to create powerful, audience-building cornerstone content for your website.

The three recent articles below will help you understand what cornerstone content is and why it’s important to have it in place on your site.

How much does this in-depth cornerstone content education cost? Nothing. :-)

Join us for the Copyblogger Content Challenge

Why is cornerstone content important?

Website owners use cornerstone content to answer the most important questions their newest prospects have.

Cornerstone content pages are informative, instructive, and they help your prospects understand the crucial information they need to interact with your business.

Once you have your cornerstone content in place on your website, you’ll begin benefitting from better search engine rankings for the terms you target. And cornerstone content builds your authority, too.

Here’s what you get when you join us for the Copyblogger Content Challenge:

  • In-depth instruction on planning, writing, and creating cornerstone content pages
  • Support and encouragement from the Copyblogger team: Sonia Simone, Pamela Wilson, Stefanie Flaxman, and Demian Farnworth
  • Community support from your fellow challenge members in our temporary “pop-up” forum
  • A live educational webinar about cornerstone content — exclusive to our challenge participants

As we mentioned above, there’s absolutely no cost to join us for this challenge. We only ask that you commit to devoting a little time each day to working through the materials.

Our promise is to keep things fun and easy, so you make fast progress and enjoy the process.

We’d love to help you set up your cornerstone content and sail into 2016 with a powerful, content-driven website!

Join us for the Copyblogger Content Challenge

Remember, there’s no charge. Register to get started! We’re looking forward to having you in January’s Copyblogger Content Challenge.

About the author

Pamela Wilson


Pamela Wilson is Executive Vice President of Educational Content at Rainmaker Digital. Follow her on Twitter, and find more from her at BigBrandSystem.com.

The post Join the Copyblogger Team for Our First Content Challenge appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Thursday, December 24, 2015

Patience, Persistence, and Waiting for the Payoff

cultivating patience and persistence

I grew up as the middle child in a family of five children.

We celebrated Christmas, which involves — as you know — tightly wrapped presents tucked under a tree.

In those days, you started dreaming about your presents in August when the Sears, Roebuck catalog landed in your mailbox.

You’d flip through the pages that were brimming with products and think about what it would be like to possess the Deluxe Hand Loom (make beautiful potholders!), the Alaskan Wooden Toboggan, or the Young Artist Studio Toolkit.

Christmas Eve was a test of my patience. That was the night we had our big Christmas dinner, followed by The Opening of the Gifts.

Off in the corner, the Christmas tree glowed, and the shiny paper and bows beckoned.

But you had to eat your dinner at the table first. And that’s where I began to learn the art of patience.

It’s a skill I still use today.

Christmas Eve dinner wasn’t like any other dinner. It was a smorgasbord of dishes that were reserved exclusively for that night. And each one had to be served up to seven (or more) people, admired, and eaten. Plates were then collected so you could prepare for the next round.

Looking back, I feel fortunate we always had food on the table and a warm home where we could celebrate.

But at that age? All I wanted was to get to those gifts under the tree.

Earlier in the day, when no one was watching, I had checked out the boxes that were labeled with my name. I’d given them a shake to try to figure out what they contained.

I couldn’t wait to unwrap the surprises inside.

Cruel and unusual punishment

My parents — each in their own ways — knew how to create humor in our lives.

And every year around the Christmas Eve table, as all five kids eyed the gifts under the tree, they’d pull the same joke.

Dessert would be served. In our case, everyone had a slice of Julekake — a Norwegian Christmas cake — in front of them.

Then the coffee would be served. The only people who drank coffee were the adults at the table.

This is when the fun would start.

Not for the kids though! This is when the adults at the table would have their fun.

Now that I’m an adult, and I know how much work goes into putting together a family holiday celebration, it must have been delicious to watch all the kids squirm.

Here’s what the joke sounded like:

“Oh my, this coffee is scalding hot! We’re going to have to drink it verrry slowly.”

“Yes, it’s really great coffee. I just wish it wasn’t so hot!”

“Well, that’s OK. We can take our time. Let’s savor every drop of this coffee. It’s so good.”

All of us kids would look at the adults with withering glances. Not funny. Not funny at all!

Delayed gratification

This past year, I’ve had the privilege to work and interact with many of our customers through our Authority advanced content marketing training program.

In our new Authority Business Coaching sessions, Sonia Simone and I have taken a close look at one member’s business in a monthly webinar we broadcast to all Authority members.

The people who’ve sat in our “friendly hot seat” and received help from us have come from entirely unrelated fields. We’ve helped:

  • A web developer
  • The owner of a home cleaning business
  • A life coach for women
  • A fly fishing lodge owner

What could any of these businesses possibly have in common?

Delayed gratification.

Every one of these business owners has a vision for where they want to take their businesses. And none of them are there yet.

Their business goals sit like unopened gifts under a tree. And they are still at the table, watching while the hot coffee cools down.

They have to wait. And hope.

And work hard.

Learning patience in the business world

The business world is a great teacher of patience. And delayed gratification is just how things work.

I like to think that this process continues to build character well into adulthood.

Patience while waiting for the future to unfold is a skill that’s helpful in all areas of our lives.

There’s no “easy” button, and nothing is automatic. Sure bets don’t exist.

Patience, hard work, and delayed gratification — as unglamorous as they sound — are the three ingredients you need to succeed.

Back on Monday

It’s Christmas Eve once again, and here at Copyblogger, we’re taking a break tomorrow.

We’ll be back next week with new content for you.

We’ll continue to serve up the truth about what it really takes to succeed in business.

And we’ll bring you the best information about using content marketing — a technique that requires great patience — to build your business.

Thanks for your time, your attention, your patience, and your persistence.

About the author

Pamela Wilson


Pamela Wilson is Executive Vice President of Educational Content at Rainmaker Digital. Follow her on Twitter, and find more from her at BigBrandSystem.com.

The post Patience, Persistence, and Waiting for the Payoff appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Wednesday, December 23, 2015

10 Ways to Build Authority as an Online Writer

surprising ways to build authority with your content

Picture the set of a late-night talk show, circa 1983.

Allen Ginsberg is fat, bearded, and sitting in the interview chair. Long hair grows in unruly patches from the side of his otherwise bald head. His eyebrows sprout from his forehead like wild hawthorn in bloom.

He’s wearing a tie-dye t-shirt with a hole in it. His fingers are stained from nicotine resin.

Ginsberg, a former marketing researcher, wanted to talk about the generation gap, and what he said about the challenges youth had to face actually made a lot of sense.

But although he certainly looked the part of “legendary poet,” this audience didn’t take him seriously. He simply didn’t appear to be a credible expert who they could know, like, and trust.

What was missing?

Another type of expert

Fast-forward to 2003. There he is: completely bald, with a black, long-sleeved shirt tucked into blue jeans. This time, it’s Seth Godin presenting at TED — one of the most prestigious speaking gigs.

In a fluid and flawless presentation, Seth explains how to get your ideas to spread. He obviously knows what he’s talking about or he wouldn’t have been invited to speak. This audience wanted a credible expert — and they got one.

Godin wrote the manifesto for modern advertising: Permission Marketing. He can break 7 of the 12 so-called rules of blogging — and get away with it.

Why? Because he’s earned a tremendous amount of authority by showing up day after day for years, delivering something remarkable — concise, well-written expressions of his ideas.

If we want to find our way out of the wilderness of obscurity, we have to fight for our own audiences. We have to earn authority, just as Godin did.

You won’t build authority by copying another writer — even a very good one — but you can improve your influence by following these 10 proven practices.

1. Act against your own self-interest

When you have an obvious agenda, people take what you say with a grain of salt. It’s like a mother saying her boy is the smartest child on the block.

You can dissolve some of this skepticism by, at times, acting against your own self-interest.

This was the objective of the 1960s ad agency Doyle Dane Bernbach when selling the world’s ugliest car: they flaunted its dysfunctions.

When you mention weaknesses before strengths, you lower resistance to arguments and generate more belief.

2. Try the “convert effect”

Consider these two different people:

  • An all-star high school and college athlete who grew up thin and confident, raised by Olympic-caliber parents
  • A timid soul who struggled with obesity his whole life and grew up in a family more interested in barbecue than barbells

If both people tout the same fitness program based on eating french fries and sprinting up a 40-foot ladder for 7 minutes every day, who are you more likely to believe?

No question you’re going to choose the second person. He is more persuasive because he didn’t start out as a fit athlete — he converted to that status after starting life as a coach potato.

Someone who’s taken the path from A to Z is always more believable. We share a sense of familiarity with people who have had the same struggles as us. We identify with the convert because it convinces us we could make the same transformation.

3. Play hard to get

Most customers expect you to say things to please them. They may even sense a little desperation. A little bootlicking. And they blow you off.

This is one of the reasons I don’t suggest you say “I’m flexible” when in negotiations.

Say that, and your opponent will suspect you’ll do anything for money. She’ll suspect you don’t care about quality or integrity. In other words, you can be bought … cheaply.

You do your prospects and customers a greater service when you maintain your independence and integrity, defending your hard work and turning down requests.

People will see that you actually have their best interest in mind because you’re not falling over yourself to kiss their bottoms.

4. Avoid influencing anyone

Did you know you can influence people simply by not influencing them?

For example, you’re probably more likely to take the advice to buy a certain stock if you overhear the tip during a whispered conversation between two well-dressed men at the table next to yours than you are if a broker called you up with the same information.

Give away high-quality content without asking for anything in return and you’ll find a much warmer reception when it does come time to promote a product.

5. Establish a reputation for one outstanding quality

Your reputation should be simple, based upon a single, sterling quality — strategic thinking, say, or persuasiveness. This becomes your calling card. It announces who you are and gets people to shut up and listen.

Seth Godin has a reputation for passionately spreading important ideas. That’s how he got the opportunity to stand in front of a TED audience and mesmerize those people. How he can publish multiple New York Times bestsellers.

Allen Ginsberg commanded attention because of his extreme individualism. Disenfranchised youth flocked to hear him speak. (Their parents, not so much.)

Discover that one quality that defines you — and work it to the bone.

6. Court attention

Pablo Picasso dreaded the idea of getting lost in the crowd. So when his name began to get attached to a particular style, he would deliberately destroy that perception with a new painting style.

In other words, he valued recreating himself more than popularity.

Don’t be afraid to reinvent yourself. Don’t be afraid to draw attention to that single, sterling quality that elevates you above mediocrity.

Sure, you may be attacked. You may be slandered. No worries. That fate is much better than being ignored. All professionals (even introverts) must possess a bit of showmanship.

Audiences want to hear from larger-than-life people.

7. Be confident

Remember that timid soul back in tip number two? The once-overweight hyper-athlete who lost weight through a diet of potatoes and a daily seven-minute assault on a ladder?

That gig would never work if he were an insecure communicator.

The more self-assured and confident a communicator you are, the more likely people will accept what you say. Say what you think. And say it with backbone.

Audiences want people with conviction. You will please those who matter to you. And probably piss off those who don’t.

8. Ship

Hard work. There’s no way around it.

You have to write that ebook. You have to build that online course, membership site, or downloadable software.

If you don’t ship, then what you say carries zero weight.

Few people respect talking heads. We respect those who get up early in the morning and work late into the evening. Who seldom complain. And who deliver products we love.

9. Charge premium prices

We’ve always been taught that “you get what you pay for.” In fact, it’s common for a prospective customer to distrust a product because it’s too cheap.

Yet, when it comes to setting our own prices, we often shoot much too low. This is a mistake.

In You Don’t Charge Enough — Here’s How to Fix That, Marla Tabaka noted there are five questions you have to ask yourself when it comes to pricing:

  1. What are my success stories?
  2. Is it true that people can’t afford my services?
  3. Do I believe that anyone can do this?
  4. How can I save the world if I don’t have any money?
  5. What’s my true vision?

Let’s explore that third one.

All through high school, and into my early years as an adult, I thought that everyone could write — that writing was no different from walking or doing cartwheels. I didn’t value what I did as unique.

It was my wife who pointed out this simply was not true (reason number 428 why I married her). What I did was truly valuable. And only grew in value through training and experience.

One past client solidified this outlook for me when he said, ‘We could do this ourselves by spending the next 15 years learning how to write — or we could hire you.’

I no longer believe anyone can do what I do. And neither should you.

Charge accordingly.

10. Demonstrate scarcity

Here’s the deal: that which is rare is appealing. Long lines during gas shortages. A run on bread and milk before a blizzard. Black Friday sales.

People are motivated by the thought of losing something — even if they don’t need it. And this appeal is stronger than one based on gaining something of equal value.

Show genuine scarcity in the most tangible way you can. Here are three ways to do that:

  • Limited number: Produce only 100 copies of your artwork. Hand-build a car. Give away only 1,000 invitations to use your software.
  • Limited time: A sale that ends in 24 hours. A jam-packed workweek that only allows for two openings for clients.
  • Large population: You can create scarcity by indicating the number of people who will receive your offer: “And I do suggest you reserve that property immediately. Why? We’re making this offer to 20,000 people and only accepting two reservations.”

Don’t let others decide how you are perceived

If we put Godin and Ginsberg in the same room to discuss marketing, would we take Godin more seriously than Ginsberg?

Absolutely.

But, if they spoke about artistic liberty or the mechanics of a great poem, we would probably take Ginsberg more seriously.

See how that works?

We live in a message-dense, decision-rich environment. It is an information onslaught. To make sense of all of this content, we want narrowly defined authorities. We want credible experts.

That’s why your reputation is critical. Don’t let others decide how you are perceived. Become the master of your own reputation.

Become an authority.

Editor’s note: The original version of this post was published on January 14, 2013.

About the author

Demian Farnworth


Demian Farnworth is Chief Content Writer for Rainmaker Digital

The post 10 Ways to Build Authority as an Online Writer appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Tuesday, December 22, 2015

5 Simple Steps to Breathe New Life into Old Content with SlideShare

reuse old content in a brand-new SlideShare deck

Ready to reach a wider audience without having to create content from scratch?

Repurposing an old blog post into a SlideShare deck gives it new life and adds more value to your original content.

SlideShare decks can drive more traffic to your website and help you build your email list, too.

Here are five simple steps you can use to repurpose old content into a SlideShare deck.

Step 1: Select popular content

Once you know a blog post is popular on your own site, you can repurpose it to reach an even wider audience.

Posts that have strong visual elements also translate into compelling decks, and educational list posts easily convert into a slide format.

You can turn your latest “Top 10 Tips” post into a deck, with one tip on each slide.

Step 2: Plan your visuals

Check out the featured decks on SlideShare’s homepage for inspiration and to help you understand the types of visuals that work well on SlideShare.

As of December 2015, popular slide trends include photo backgrounds on title slides and screenshots of related social media posts.

For a detailed guide about choosing images for your slide deck, check out How to Fully Engage Your Readers’ Brains with Images.

Step 3: Repurpose your content

Outline your deck
First, break your content into an outline that will translate into slides. You can use mind-mapping software, or even index cards or sticky notes.

Listen to How to Create Videos and SlideShare Presentations that LinkedIn Loves for more on planning your SlideShare content.

Hook your viewers
Take the most important points from your blog post and put them into your slides. The deck should simplify the content to communicate your message quickly.

Motivate viewers to keep clicking through your deck by offering a mix of entertaining and informative content on each slide.

Here’s your chance to present highlights and omit any language that isn’t necessary.

Write short copy
Each slide should state one single point and make every word count. Think of your deck as a visual snack for your audience. Each slide should be a nibble.

I like the “three-second rule” from Duarte:

People should be able to comprehend your slide in three seconds.

Add calls to action
Calls to action in your deck direct readers to the next step you want them to take — read your full blog post, study your cornerstone content, sign up for your email list, etc.

You can hyperlink any object or text in a deck, but readers need to clearly see that an object is clickable:

To make your SlideShare calls to action absolutely foolproof for viewers, type out the URL for at least one of your links, so readers can see where the hyperlink will take them.

Step 4: Publish and share your SlideShare deck

After you’ve uploaded your deck to SlideShare, post it on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Pinterest, and any other sites where you have a social media presence.

Be sure to share an image of your deck. As Copyblogger’s SlideShare deck, The 3-Step Journey of a Remarkable Piece of Content, says:

Remarkable content starts with the eyes.

Since LinkedIn makes it easy to upload SlideShare decks to your profile page, decks can also become an engaging part of your LinkedIn presence.

Step 5: Embed the deck on your site

Embed the deck in your original blog post to enhance the existing content. Adding a SlideShare deck to a blog post helps illustrate the information for readers.

You may want to share the original blog post more frequently on social media or republish the content on your site.

If you created a SlideShare deck from a blog post that answers your customers’ frequently asked questions, you can also embed the deck in your website’s FAQ page to present prospects with a persuasive piece of content.

Spin your old content into SlideShare gold

SlideShare is a powerful platform that helps you expose your popular content to new prospects.

Now you’re equipped to turn one of your blog posts into a SlideShare deck and share it with your audience!

About the Author: Jessica Mehring is a copywriter, content marketing expert, and author who specializes in working with B2B companies. A Colorado-based bibliophile, in her spare time Jessica attends comic-book conventions with her husband. Download her special report on creating white papers that actually convert.

The post 5 Simple Steps to Breathe New Life into Old Content with SlideShare appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Monday, December 21, 2015

Google Employees Who Actually Reply to Help Website Owners

Google has had a long history working with webmasters and while we don’t always agree with what they say (for various reasons), our community certainly appreciates this cooperation.

Here are most active Google employees who work a lot to talk back to us:

Google Employees Who Help

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John Mueller

John Mueller

Where to find:

John Mueller is a Webmaster Trends Analyst at Google Zürich, where he helps to make sure that webmasters and Google engineers understand each other and can work together.

John Mueller is one of the most vocal Google representatives actively answering website owners’ questions both on Twitter, Google Webmaster Central Help forum and via regular Google hangout on Air.

You can vote for your favorite question to be discussed on the regular Google HOA on John’s Google Plus page. Here’s an example.

regular Google HOA on John's Google Plus page

John is also an old member and a former moderator of Cre8asite Forums, one of IMN properties and he participated in the community staff reunion anniverssary chat a few months ago.

Garry Illyes

Garry Illyes

Where to find:

Garry Illyes works as Webmaster Trends Analyst for Google Switzerland GmbH. Garry is contributing to the Webmaster Central Blog and helps users debug their websites in the Google Webmaster Forums. Prior to joining Google in 2011, Gary was teaching online journalism in Romania and abroad

Garry is very active on Twitter and he also speaks at a few prominent Internet Marketing conferences including Pubcon and SMX.

Zineb Ait

Zineb Ait

Where to find:

Born and raised in Morocco, Zineb now lives in Zurich, and works as a Webmaster Trends Analyst at Google.

Zineb Ait has an SEO background and says she has a “crush on Search Engine marketing”.

Fun fact: Zineb doesn’t seem to mind meeting people in person. So if you are around Google Headquaters in Zurich, why not? :)

Zineb Ait

Brian White

Brian White

Where to find:

Brian White is program Manager in Google’s Webspam team.

Brian has been at Google since 2003 working in the Search Quality group with a focus on webspam. He has spoken at several search industry events including Google I/O, Pubcon, Search Engine Room and SES.

Nathan Johns

Nathan Johns

Where to find:

Nathan Johns is search Quality Analyst at Google. He has spent the past 10 years keeping spam out of the search results. In addition, he is active in webmaster outreach and communications.

Before search, Nathan worked on both Gmail and Google product support.

Nathan has appeared at Pubcon.

Maile Ohye

Maile Ohye

Where to find:

Having joined Google in 2005, Maile Ohye has been working closely with Google’s Search and Webmaster Tools teams as a Developer Programs Tech Lead.

Her goal is to support and advocate on behalf of all site owners.

A few of Maile’s projects include rel=”canonical”, and rel=”next” and rel=”prev” for paginated content.

Maile often speaks publicly about SEO, including keynotes at SES Chicago and SMX Munich

Mariya Moeva

Mariya Moeva

Where to find:

Mariya Moeva is Webmaster Outreach Specialist at Google’s Search Quality Team.

She is working on improving Google’s search results in several European languages, with a focus on communications – internal (trainings) and external (communicating with webmasters to help them make more accessible and Google-friendly sites).

Mariya is quite responsive on Google Plus.

Johannes Mehlem

Johannes Mehlem

Where to find:

Johannes works for Google’s Search Quality team based in Germany. He protects the integrity of Google Search by fighting webspam

Andrey Lipattsev (Russian)

Andrey Lipattsev

Andrey Lipattsev is Search Quality Senior Strategist at Google. Since May 2015, Andrey has been “working on making the Russian Internet Mobile Friendly and safe”. You can read more about Andrey in his G+ spotlight.

Watch Andrey’s Google Plus page for event announcement to join official Google Russian Hangouts on Air.

John Brown (AdSense)

John Brown

John is head of Publisher Policy Communications at Google which means his role is provide greater communication between Google and ad publishers.

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