Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Why (and How) Selling Ourselves Makes a Difference, with Matthew Kimberley

yp-matthew-kimberley

Speaker, coach, and author Matthew Kimberley of How to Get a Grip talks with Youpreneur.FM host Chris Ducker about selling, marketing, and the critical importance of speaking your audience’s language.

Why do so many small business owners struggle with sales? Chris invited his good friend and fellow Brit Matthew Kimberley to share his thoughts on the subject in today’s podcast.

Matthew is a masterful salesman, a renowned author of the self-help book How to Get a Grip, and the head of the Book Yourself Solid coaches training program.

On this show, Matthew shares his candid and often hilarious anecdotes on how to be more confident when making a sales pitch (and why it matters), two ways to build your sales muscle, and whether sales people are born or made.

There’s a lot of deep and beneficial insights from Matthew and Chris in this episode of The Youpreneur.FM Podcast, so sit back, grab your favorite beverage, and listen in!

Essential Learning Points From This Episode:

  • Why we must understand our audience
  • When do people need to be told what to do?
  • Where do 90 percent of business problems stem from?
  • Why repetition is so important to being great at sales
  • What is Kimberley’s kid’s kidney concept, and how does it help sales?
  • Much, much more!
Click Here to Listen to
Youpreneur.FM with Chris Ducker on iTunes
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About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

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Revisiting Authenticity: What It Is, What It’s Not, and Why It Matters

ld-revisiting-authenticity

Creating a remarkable experience for an audience starts with authenticity, which should never be confused with transparency.

In this week’s episode of The Lede, Jerod Morris and Demian Farnworth (Hey! They’re back together again!) tackle the topic of authenticity to give you a better understanding of how to create an authentic connection with your audience, no matter what type of content you’re creating.

Jerod has discussed authenticity a lot in relation to podcasts. He wanted to hear Demian’s thoughts on how developing an authentic connection may differ depending on the medium.

Among the topics discussed:

  • Why authenticity is one of the essential elements of a remarkable audience experience
  • How authenticity differs (or does it?) between audio and written content
  • What Erika Napoletano taught Demian about being authentic
  • Why Erika’s version of authenticity and your version are surely different 😉
Click Here to Listen to
The Lede on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post Revisiting Authenticity: What It Is, What It’s Not, and Why It Matters appeared first on Copyblogger.



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The Extraordinary Value of Sharing and Being a Connector

he-nicole-feliciano

Today’s guest on Hack the Entrepreneur is the Founder, Publisher, and CEO of Momtrends.com. She left her role as an executive at Ralph Lauren to launch the Momtrends blog in 2007.

Momtrends has grown massively since then and is now a boutique media brand, which provides moms with the latest news on all things trendy and cool. It has an ever-growing mom community with more than 150,000 visitors to the site and its social media channels each month.

On top of this (and with the help of her team), she has created a successful events business that connects top-tier brands with influential bloggers, and she has hosted nearly 100 events so far.

Now, let’s hack …

Nicole Feliciano.

In this 35-minute episode of Hack the Entrepreneur, host Jon Nastor and Nicole Feliciano discuss:

  • The pros of being a connector of people
  • Packaging things in a way that’s unique to your brand
  • Knowing what you’re not good at and letting better people handle it
  • Failing quickly, picking yourself up, and working harder the next time
Click Here to Listen to
Hack the Entrepreneur on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post The Extraordinary Value of Sharing and Being a Connector appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Why a Hot Seat Is Shockingly Good for Business

How a professional group helps grow your business

Back in 2004, the heat was on for me and my little marketing and design studio.

In those days, I was a single mom with a 10-year-old and a 12-year-old, and I desperately needed my business to produce.

And by that, I mean produce profit. I needed money, honey — to support my family, run my household, and build my business.

I knew it was time to ramp up my efforts. My business was successful, but it was time to take it to another level.

Around that time, I started hearing about mastermind groups.

And now, when I look back, I recognize that joining a mastermind group profoundly changed my business for the better, especially because of one specific exercise these groups do.

That’s what I’m going to share today. Because earlier this month, we began doing something similar inside one of our communities at Rainmaker Digital.

Mastermind groups around every corner

You know that thing that happens when you’re interested in something and all of the sudden you start seeing mentions of it everywhere?

It’s called frequency illusion, and that’s what happened to me with mastermind groups. Everywhere I looked, I saw mentions of them.

But every mastermind group I found met in person, either early in the morning or later in the evening. And those were both times of the day when I had to be on Mom Duty. Attending a meeting outside the home wasn’t an option.

And yet, I was convinced that a mastermind group was what I needed. I knew I would benefit from the experience and viewpoints of other business owners, and it would help me position my business where it needed to be.

So, I continued to search and finally found a “virtual” mastermind group that met by phone. I applied, was accepted, and prepared myself for our first meeting.

Group therapy for my business?

I was a little nervous going into the first meeting. Was it going to be like a confessional? More like group therapy? Would I feel comfortable talking to these strangers about my business?

Every scenario I imagined had some level of discomfort baked in.

At the start of the meeting, the group leader explained that we would take turns sitting in the “hot seat” talking about our businesses.

We’d start by reporting successes — what had gone well in the past month. Then we’d move to sharing our biggest challenges — what we needed help with. The group would listen and contribute ideas to help the person in the hot seat.

Here’s where I was wrong

This is embarrassing to admit, but here’s what I thought:

“When it’s someone else’s turn, I’ll listen politely, provide the best feedback I can, and count the minutes until it’s my turn. And when it’s my turn, I’ll get a lot out of sharing my successes and challenges, and hearing the feedback from the group. The real value will come from taking my turn in the hot seat.”

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

I learned a lesson that day and relearned it every single time we met as a group.

All the different businesses that exist in the world share many common problems.

When I look back on my mastermind meetings, I got as much or more from listening to other business owners talk about their triumphs and tragedies as I did when I shared my own.

Here’s what happened:

  • The mindset tips shared with the chiropractor? I was able to use them to improve my own mindset.
  • The negotiation techniques offered to the professional organizer? I used those the next time I needed to negotiate something.
  • The website advice that went out to the voice coach? It made me look at my own site in a new light.

The funny thing about calling your time in the spotlight a “hot seat” is that the name is only partly accurate.

Instead of feeling like you’re under interrogation, you feel like you’re being warmly embraced by a community of professionals who support and encourage your efforts.

Maybe they should be called “warm seats.” :-)

New: Authority Business Coaching calls

Last month, we began offering Authority Business Coaching calls inside our private site for advanced content marketing training.

We’ve brought a taste of this “warm seat” style of education to Authority, and the results so far have been pretty amazing.

The main challenge our first guest brought to the session was a need to improve cash flow in his business.

Here’s what we heard from our webinar attendees:

Money is so hard! And talking about it is even harder. This conversation is great.

And this:

I absolutely relate to this conversation. This is a great session.

And from the person sitting in the hot seat? Here’s what he said after it was over:

The session reinforced my ideas about what needs to happen, but it also gave me a sense of direction and more clarity. I feel a bit overwhelmed at times, and the coaching call left me with a sense of ‘I can do this.’

As a member, I think it is a highly appealing format for a show. It helps build a sense of community, while at the same time having a chance to be informative and valuable. All of us are in different stages of growth and success, but the problems we face are very similar.

Exactly. The problems we face are very similar.

And you’ll find that you can learn a tremendous amount by listening and sharing with people who own businesses that are quite different from yours.


Authority is closing (temporarily) to new members tonight

Our Authority Business Coaching calls happen once a month inside Authority, our private community for advanced content marketing training.

And beginning tonight at 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time, our community is closing temporarily to new members.

We're making improvements to our content, our formats, and the site interface. We'd love to have you join us while we upgrade our community for advanced content marketing training.

Join Authority today.

About the author

Pamela Wilson


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

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Tuesday, September 29, 2015

How Joe Berkowitz (Journalist and Fast Company Editor) Writes: Part One

wf-joe-berkowitz-file-1

Author and Fast Company Editor Joe Berkowitz stopped by The Writer Files this week. His latest, a humor book titled You Blew It!: An Awkward Look at the Many Ways in Which You’ve Already Ruined Your Life, lands this October. He took a break from his busy schedule to rap with host Kelton Reid about how he survives the harried life of a big city journalist.

In addition to his work for Fast Company, Joe’s writing has been featured in The Awl, Salon, The Village Voice, Vulture, RollingStone.com, GQ.com, McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, and many others.

For a writer who works on breakneck deadlines, and almost never gets a break from the writing life, he has some pretty solid advice for keeping the cursor moving.

Join Kelton and Joe for this two-part interview.

In Part One of the file, host Kelton Reid and Joe Berkowitz discuss:

  • How a bad breakup can boost your productivity
  • When to throw out the rule “All Killer, No Filler”
  • How to build your writing endurance
  • Don Draper’s advice for beating writer’s block
  • How making lists can help your head
  • The magical power of 4:00 a.m. dementia
Click Here to Listen to
The Writer Files on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post How Joe Berkowitz (Journalist and Fast Company Editor) Writes: Part One appeared first on Copyblogger.



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3 Practical Content Conversion Tactics That Actually Work Today (and Where You Can Find Even More)

hp-conversion-tactics

Ever wondered if those content tips you read a few years back are still relevant today? Hit Publish host Amy Harrison has just returned from a conference of conversion experts who spilled the beans on what tactics are working right this minute. And she wants to share them with you …

Last week, Amy was part of a copywriting panel at the Call to Action Conference in Vancouver. The two-day event was packed with practical, actionable tactics from conversion experts all around the world.

These are the people who know what to do to your landing page, in terms of design and content, to make people want to take action.

Amy has picked her top three takeaways that she thinks you, as a Hit Publish listener, will love, but she’s also linking to more resources on Rainmaker.FM to help you boost those conversion rates.

Tune in to Hit Publish to find out:

  • The call-to-action mistakes that can cause you to lose sales and sign-ups (one of them defies classic copywriting convention)
  • Why you should practice flipping your headline if you want people to know in seconds what it is you do or offer
  • Why putting obstacles in front of your reader can be the best conversion tactic (even if it makes you uncomfortable)
Click Here to Listen to
Hit Publish on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post 3 Practical Content Conversion Tactics That Actually Work Today (and Where You Can Find Even More) appeared first on Copyblogger.



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The Easiest Way to Know if Your Project Has Failed

he-danny-iny

Today’s guest on Hack the Entrepreneur is a speaker, advisor, entrepreneur, and the bestselling author of multiple books, such as Engagement from Scratch! and The Audience Revolution.

He is the founder of Firepole Marketing and Productive Inbox, and the host of the Business Reimagined podcast. He is also the creator of training programs, such as Audience Business Master Class and Course Builders Laboratory, which have collectively trained more than 3,000 online entrepreneurs.

In just a few years, Firepole Marketing hit seven figures in revenue and a worldwide team of 20 people, who support a community of more than 40,000 entrepreneurs.

Now, let’s hack …

Danny Iny.

In this 32-minute episode of Hack the Entrepreneur, host Jon Nastor and Danny Iny discuss:

  • The importance of having a “what’s next” mindset when something does not work
  • How to expand your bandwidth as an entrepreneur
  • What buying furniture can teach you about hiring employees
Click Here to Listen to
Hack the Entrepreneur on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post The Easiest Way to Know if Your Project Has Failed appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Finding the Balance Between Pragmatism and Your Ideals

cp-your-ideals

If you feel like you need to choose between idealism and getting your bills paid, look again.

If you’re getting along financially but compromising your own beliefs, you’re going to make yourself sick and miserable. But if you’re leading some kind of “pure” life but suffering a lot of financial stress, that’s not the key to a great life either.

Somewhere, there’s going to be a path that brings those two together, and that will get you where you want to go.

In this 13-minute episode of Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer, host Sonia Simone talks about:

  • The village of tiny blue idealists
  • Sonia’s fascinating excursion to the land of scary hardcore marketers
  • The (fun) craziness that was the Third Tribe
  • Some of the lessons learned from a community of idealistic pragmatists

The community Sonia mentioned in this podcast, Authority, will be closing to new members on September 30, 2015, and won’t be available again until early 2016.

If you want to learn what we’re about, and perhaps join us, you can find us here: The Authority Community of Content Marketers.

Click Here to Listen to
Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post Finding the Balance Between Pragmatism and Your Ideals appeared first on Copyblogger.



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Building a Trustworthy Brand in the Digital Business Environment

ss-chris-brogan-2

In today’s episode of the Search & Social Podcast (formerly Search & Deploy), host Loren Baker discusses social media and content with none other than Chris Brogan.

Chris and Loren dive into the importance of trust and relationship building in digital business as well as traditional relationships.

They also discuss the importance of content ownership, personal branding, the shelf life of social media, and how businesses can implement storytelling to break through the noise online.

Last but not least, they go over the specific things they’ve learned over the years from speaking, lifestyle choices, and also launching different digital businesses.

Listen to Search & Social …

Click Here to Listen to
Search and Social on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post Building a Trustworthy Brand in the Digital Business Environment appeared first on Copyblogger.



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How to Use Twitter Videos

twitter-videoTwitter Video has been around for a while now. But it is still shockingly underutilized, probably because nobody is quite sure of how to best take advantage of it. Can such a casual feature really be applied to a strong social business strategy?

Branding has changed a lot in the past decade. The Internet – and social media in particular – have made adapting to a new kind of audience necessary. Your potential customers just expect something different now, something more personal and effortless. Or, at least it is supposed to seem effortless… we know the truth.

Twitter Video is a helpful tool for this purpose because you will be creating very simple clips and uploading them right to your account, no heavy editing, no gimmicks. The world of vlogging has shown that this can be immensely successful in connecting on a deeper level with viewers.

Twitter videos are getting even more important to marketers now that they are included in Twitter advertising options.

What Is Twitter Video, Exactly?

It is right in the name: it is a video feature that you upload directly through Twitter. Or, more specifically, through the Twitter mobile app.

You have two options: 1) you can record the video directly through Twitter and post it on your profile; 2) you can upload a video and post it that you have already taken through your smartphone.

All videos have to be 30-seconds or less. So we are talking very quick clips here. While that might not seem like a lot of time, consider the success of Vine videos. If you can built so much viewer loyalty within a couple of seconds, imagine what could be done in half a minute!

Limited editing is allowed, as well as drag and drop for organizing the clips to best reflect your brand needs. But if you want greater editing control you will have to download a video editing app, prepare your video clip there, then upload it from your gallery folder. Thus you can add watermark logos, for example.

But for off the cuff videos, which Twitter Video really encourages, the simple editing features should be plenty.

Now that you know what Twitter Video is, and how it works, how can you use it to enforce your brand? Here are some ideas.

Use Visual Comedy

You can actually be visual here! So why not do something that will amuse your audience? For example, show your face reacting to something trending or ridiculous. Actually physically enact hashtags, which usually they would just have to imagine.

Respond To a Trending Topic

Utilizing a trending hashtags always makes sense and for videos too! You can say a lot more in 30 seconds than you can in 120 characters. Which makes making your view on the issue known much easier, and what you post more valuable.

Have you ever had to send out several tweets to comment on a trending topic? Then had tiny pieces of it ignored, while others got a bunch of retweets? Or worst, had something taken out of context because it was broken down that way?

Videos will keep that from happening, and put all your thoughts in a cohesive narrative that is much more effective.

Create Small Educational Clips

Educational clips are always very popular. You have 30 seconds in a video to show someone how to do something. That is way easier than you might think, and very helpful to your viewers. For example, you can capture yourself doing something that you would otherwise not be able to show them.

A great example of this came from a certain artist I follow on Twitter. They wanted to show how they start a drawing, and how different it is from the beginning point to the finished product. So they created three 30-second videos, one at each stage of the process.

You could see the real difference between the initial form sketches, to the messy middle sketches where everything was being slowly refined, to the final result and how those messy elements had been cleaned and polished.

By putting those three educational clips on their Twitter, they were able to quickly convey to new artists who might be frustrated that it is all about time and effort. No pieces of art were perfect from the beginning.

Live-Tweet From Major Events

Are you going to a conference or special event of some kind? Tweeting little moments and teasers can be a great way to generate hype. It may also be a way to connect to people who are also at the conference, and so improve your networking.

One strategy could be to do longer videos of conferences that will be edited and released later. Then take mini clips of the conference and expo hall, or even of people you will be interviewing for your videos, on Twitter Video.

These will whet people’s appetites for the real deal that will be released later, keeping them interested. This is a great method of live-tweeting that is being done more and more.

Say Thank You To Followers

Your followers deserve a little love, don’t they? This strategy has been used on other platforms, like YouTube, for awhile. For example, popular video vlogger Markiplier used to release a thank you video for every 5,000 subscriber he got on his YouTube channel.

Why not apply that same principle to Twitter Video? Every so often send out a tweeted clip thanking people for following your account. Maybe mention more active engagers by name. Make them feel special, and they will return the favor.

Directly Engage Specific Influencers

Twitter is the ultimate platform for direct influencer engagement. Being so open, making it easy to @tag people, and having a constant stream of trending hashtags often used by those influencers, networking is super simple. But you still have to break through all the noise.

Posting a video is a great way to talk to an influencer face to face. It direct attention, almost guarantees that they will watch it, and really connects with them. They are more likely to share it, because you can show your earnestness. It just feels more personal.

Try creating a video response instead of direct tweeting next time, then use tags and hashtags to enhance the content. The results will speak for themselves.

Conclusion

Twitter Videos is a feature that provides endless possibilities. It gives you an option to diversify your Twitter feed. And it’s so easy!

Have an idea? Share it in the comments below!

The post How to Use Twitter Videos appeared first on Internet Marketing Ninjas Blog.



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10 Ways Specificity Helps You Build a Profitable Audience

why you should sweat the details

If you’re building a business through content marketing, you’ve probably noticed that the attention span of your audience is shrinking by the second.

We’re all on the verge of an attention meltdown.

This can be a huge hurdle if you’re trying to effectively engage your audience and get your products or services in front of them.

That means you have to use every writing tool you can to gain and keep audience attention.

Believe it or not, a return to solid writing fundamentals — and more specifically, specificity — can get you out ahead of the competition without having to strap dynamite to yourself to get noticed.

One small note before we get started …

If you only read one section of this article, read this one

Specificity is especially helpful for writing your headlines.

Remember the 80/20 rule: 8 out of 10 readers will read your headline copy but only 2 out of 10 will read your entire post.

Since headlines persuade your audience to read your content, you should dedicate 50 percent of your efforts to writing magnetic headlines before you write the rest of your copy.

The experts have been touting the importance of getting specific all along, and here are some of their more compelling tips to help you win the battle for your audience’s attention.

1. Get to the point

Old-school copywriter George Lois wrote a very useful guide titled Damn Good Advice (for people with talent!). In it, he gets to the heart of the importance of specificity.

Lois writes: “All creativity should communicate in a nanosecond.”

That’s about all the time you have to make an impression, but “creativity” can be misunderstood.

He reminds us that brevity is the key to good copy and that every single word counts.

“It’s not how short you make it; it’s how you make it short.”

Creativity is getting people to read your copy, without confusing hyperbole or jargon phrases.

2. Without attention, you have nothing

Without an attention-grabbing headline, you can chuck your great content in the trash.

AIDA is the classic marketing acronym heralded by many great copywriters, including Brian Clark, Sonia Simone, and John Carlton.

Attention. Interest. Desire. Action.

Gaining attention is gold because it’s the first step on the path to getting your prospects to take action and buy.

3. Grab attention by being ultra-specific

The Four U’s of headline writing, as outlined by American Writers and Artists Inc. (AWAI), are a helpful guide when evaluating any piece of sales copy or content:

  1. Useful
  2. Ultra-specific
  3. Unique
  4. Urgent

Useful is absolutely required. If your headline can only be one more thing, make it ultra-specific. This is key because specificity presents the most benefit to your reader.

You make a promise of the reward you’re offering up front so your prospects will have a reason to give you their precious time and read your first paragraph.

4. Specificity builds credibility

Brian Clark’s How to Get 53% More Readers for Every Blog Post You Write reminds us that “Specificity increases credibility because specific details are simply more believable than broad assertions.”

He has some great examples of ultra-specific headlines:

  • In This Free 10-Chapter, 123-Page Ebook, You’ll Learn …
  • Lose 36 Pounds in Only 7 Weeks
  • How to Shave 5 Strokes Off Your Golf Score in 3 Days

If your headline isn’t presenting specific, rewarding information, you’re bound to get bogged down with the rest of the unreadables.

Just remember that the #1 rule for building credibility is making good on your headline’s promise.

5. Specificity is persuasion

Chris Garrett wrote about the advantages of precise details over vague guesstimates in his post The Persuasive Power of Specificity.

Statistics, exact details, and case studies:

  • Catch the eye
  • Build curiosity
  • Reinforce authenticity
  • Show your readers your attention to detail

Being vague doesn’t work in real life, and it doesn’t work in copywriting. Getting specific means revealing the cold, hard facts of what you have to offer.

However, he also warns us not to use specifics if they are overly technical, confusing, or can get you into legal trouble.

6. Specificity boosts your conversion rates

Marketing Experiments have proven that optimizing your headline can boost your conversion rates by 73 percent.

Not only will you boost your readership, but optimizing your headline by just a single word or figure can actually get more people to take the action you want them to take.

That’s reason enough to do some split testing of your own.

7. Warning: Big words make you sound dumb

In Dean Rieck’s post 11 Smart Tips for Brilliant Writing, he references an important psychology study that showed using overly complex language doesn’t make us look smarter to readers.

We’ve all seen inexperienced authors use big words to make themselves feel smarter.

You’re not fooling anyone, so do your research and know your audience.

Remember Nathaniel Hawthorne’s maxim:

Easy reading is damned hard writing.

8. There is no substitute for great copy

Robert W. Bly wrote in The Online Copywriter’s Handbook that the most important thing that will set you apart as an effective online marketer is “powerful, attention-getting, compelling copy.”

Your words must grab your prospect and never let them go.

9. To approach greatness, you have to start at the start

Ernest Hemingway started out as a reporter for The Kansas City Star.

He won a Nobel Prize in his later years and credited his formative years writing “copy” as a journalist.

Cub reporters were each given a style book when they started, with these rules:

  • Use short sentences
  • Use short first paragraphs
  • Use vigorous English
  • Be positive, not negative

It doesn’t get much simpler than that.

10. One word can make all the difference

Mark Twain wrote:

The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter — ’tis the difference between the lightning-bug and the lightning.

Specificity is the lighting rod that will lead your prospects through your sales cycle to take action.

Let’s get specific

We can all use help getting more specific in our copy.

There is no “the dog ate my homework” in content marketing — do your research or somebody else will do it better and with more detail.

Know your audience, their problems, fears, desires, and dreams, and you’ll be well on your way to getting them to reading your copy and taking action on your offers.

Do you have more suggestions for getting specific?

Let us know over on LinkedIn …

Editor’s note: The original version of this post was published on May 10, 2012.

About the author

Kelton Reid


Kelton Reid is Director of Multimedia Production for Rainmaker Digital, writer, podcaster, and mediaphile. Find out how great writers keep the cursor moving on his podcast The Writer Files, and find Kelton on Twitter.

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Monday, September 28, 2015

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The Entrepreneur’s Path to Building a Real Business

he-mark-reinmiller

Today’s guest on Hack the Entrepreneur is a marketing expert, entrepreneur, and bass player.

He is the Creative Director of Kinectiv, a marketing firm that focuses on developing business identities and providing customers with a great experience via websites, graphic design, and social media.

He’s been described as the “brains” behind this operation, as he develops strategies and marketing campaigns to ensure the success of Kinectiv’s clients.

He is also the owner of Commonwealth on Queen, a farm to fork cafeŽ.

Now, let’s hack …

Mark Reinmiller.

In this 34-minute episode of Hack the Entrepreneur, host Jon Nastor and Mark Reinmiller discuss:

  • Why ignorance is bliss when building a business
  • The importance of connecting with people
  • Why you’re always building a community with people, no matter what you’re doing
  • Deciding to do something and not giving up
Click Here to Listen to
Hack the Entrepreneur on iTunes
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About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post The Entrepreneur’s Path to Building a Real Business appeared first on Copyblogger.



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This Tiny Editorial Habit Can Make a Big Difference in Your Content

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Here’s a quick tip that helps you build trust with your audience.

Discover how to produce clean, professional writing in a way that also maximizes your chances of creating unique content.

In this 14-minute episode of Editor-in-Chief, host Stefanie Flaxman discusses:

  • A simple, but often ignored, editorial standard
  • When Stefanie broke this editorial standard during an episode of Editor-in-Chief
  • The importance of researching your ideas before you present them as original content
Click Here to Listen to
Editor-in-Chief on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post This Tiny Editorial Habit Can Make a Big Difference in Your Content appeared first on Copyblogger.



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How to Design a Book Cover That Sells

ap-derek-murphy

If your book cover stinks, your book is not going to sell … period.

We live in a world where first impressions mean everything when it comes to quick browsing/shopping. You’ve got something like a millisecond to get someone interested in your book through your cover.

Are you 100 percent sure your cover is right for your genre? Are you 100 percent sure your cover is using the right imagery and fonts?

If not, you’ll want to listen to this episode of Authorpreneur with master book cover designer Derek Murphy.

In this episode of Authorpreneur, host Jim Kukral and Derek Murphy discuss:

  • How to design a book cover that sells
  • The biggest mistakes authors make when designing book covers
  • How much should you pay for a book cover design?
  • Are pre-made covers worth it and should you use them?
  • Illustrations vs. stock photography? Which one is best?
  • Nonfiction vs. fiction book cover design secrets
Click Here to Listen to
Authorpreneur on iTunes
Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM
About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand digital business and marketing advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post How to Design a Book Cover That Sells appeared first on Copyblogger.



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