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Blogging in 20 minutes or less Part #5

Aug07
2010
Leave a Comment Written by Mike Webb
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Step 5: Don’t forget the value 

One of the worst things you can do is come up with a great attention grabbing headline and then not give your reader any real content that they can take action with. Even with the greatest headlines in the world readers will soon figure you out and stop following you, your blog and your content if you don’t deliver something of value to them. 

You will want to make sure that you are solving problems for your readers or giving them ideas and content that are useful without a lot of fluff. So be sure you have enough cherries in your cherry pie. 

So by putting your blog in order ahead of time and putting a little effort in at the beginning and then following what I have suggested here you will be off to a great start providing consistent and relevant posts to your blog. And that is why people will follow you and become comfortable with you and then turn into clients and people that will talk about you and recommend you to others.

More great tips about building your Authority Status coming soon. Sign up for my RSS feed so you wont miss anything.

Posted in Authority Status, Blogging, Brand Strategy, Competitive Positioning, Publishing

Blogging in 20 minutes or less Part # 2

Aug01
2010
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Step 2: Build a list of headlines 

Headlines should grab attention. If yours don’t then your posts won’t get read no matter what you do to get people to your blog. So build a list of at least 50 attention grabbers that are relevant to your business, service or niche and you will save a ton of valuable time. You can pick four to six key topics that you deal with and then come up with as many sub topics as you can in each of those. A catchy headline can make all the difference in whether or not your visitors stick around so be sure it’s doing the job it’s supposed to. 

Here are some ideas of areas that you can build your headline list around: 

Statistics 

For example you can grab attention with the following: 

  • 400,000 books in a single year
  • 1 billion tweets every day 

Thought Provoking Questions 

Ask your readers a question that they will find curious or want to know that answer to themselves. 

For example: 

  • Does your marketing stink?
  • How do you demand attention?
  • When is the last time you had a heart to heart with yourself? 

All of these create a curiosity in your reader’s mind that makes them want to read more. Do this and your blog posts will keep eyes on your page. 

Tell a story 

If you can tell a good story then you can capture the attention of your readers. Not a long story but just long enough to get whatever point across that you want to make. It could be the story of one of your clients and how you helped them. Or it could be just a make believe story that tells the ending that you want and that illustrates how you can help someone or provide a service that they have been in need of. But remember you will still need a compelling title for your story. 

Relevant Quotes 

Have probably seen quotes used along side chapter heading in books that are relevant to the chapter itself. This is a good method to use and a quote can be used as the headline itself. For example: 

In the book “Tactical Entrepreneur” by Brian Hazlegren (one of my authors at Sortis Publishing by the way) the second chapter is titled “Do You Have What It Takes?” he quotes himself by saying the following:

 “If a man cannot dream he will soon be asleep to all the important things that life has to offer. If a man cannot pray he will soon only listen to himself. And if he has no charity for others he will soon be the only important thing in his pathetic existence.” – Brian Hazelgren 

He then proceeds to write a great chapter all about the courage needed to start a small business. The quote really gets you thinking about what it is that Brian is about to discuss in the chapter. That is powerful and it’s a fantastic way to capture attention and help drive the point home.

Part #3 is coming soon. Sign up for my RSS feed to be notified.

Posted in Authority Status, Blogging, Book Marketing, Brand Strategy, Competitive Positioning, Publishing, Writing, social media - Tagged Blog, blogging, Brian Hazelgren, Tactical Entrepreneur, writing blog posts

Have you developed your elevator pitch?

Dec09
2009
Leave a Comment Written by Mike Webb
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The elevator pitch is a 30-second answer to “What does your company do?” The concept is that any employee should be able to describe what your company does and the value it provides during a short trip in an elevator.

The elevator pitch is extremely important for early-stage companies that have a new or intangible product or service. These companies often require multiple stages of financing and key strategic partnerships, and ineffective or non-existent elevator pitches can make this task more difficult.

Your elevator pitch should be easy to remember and easy to say. Keep it simple and free of jargon. You want to engage the listener, so make it as interesting as possible.

As you write your elevator pitch, say it out loud; time it and test it on people to see what flows. Ask your sales team to test it and give feedback – they’re the ones who will be using it regularly.

Your elevator pitch should include:

1. What you do
2. Who your customers are
3. The #1 reason customers should choose you over your competitors

Tagged elevator pitch, marketing

Mike Webb

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