Archive for On Writing Better – Page 21

The Content Marketing Two-Step Trap

Fifties-dance Every where you go on the Web these days you hear blog and Twitter talk about "Content Marketing."

Seems it's the new buzz word among Internet marketers. But if you're like me, an independent professional who does her own marketing, and who doesn't use paid advertising, you're no stranger to Content Marketing. You've already been doing it.

Anytime you write content on the Web (or elsewhere) you present yourself, your personality, and your knowledge so that readers get to know you. They like you (you hope!), they begin to trust you, and they eventually become clients or customers, or at least regular readers.

Or not. It's not always easy to write quality content that works to actually bring in business.

Although it seems self-evident, it's not. Why not?

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Can You Be Nice AND Sell the Sh*t Out of Your Stuff?

Aggressive-blonde-business-woman-2 A smart biz mentor once told me that success is in the 1% nuances. He said the difference between someone selling and making money online and someone doing all the work and NOT making money is in the details, those little tweaks to your email and web copy content marketing.

If you're like me, you don't want to come across like an internet marketing sleeze-bag and hype yourself up so bad you're embarrassed to read your own stuff. Especially if you're selling your own writing or services. There's something funny about selling yourself.

I just had a sale on my article and e-newsletters subscriptions and boy, did it start out slow. Happily, it ended with a bang of new orders. So I had a chance to analyze my own marketing efforts. Here's what I found.

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Marketing for Nice People Makes You Laugh Out Loud…

Devil_angel I'm taking a course called Marketing for Nice People with two of my favorite peeps on the Web, Sonia Simone and Naomi Dunford. These two have teamed up to deliver some really important lessons on content marketing for your business. They take a devil/angel approach, and you can guess which one wears the horns…

Click here to view more details about Marketing for Nice People…

If you're familiar with Naomi Dunford's blog, Ittybiz, you know she's got one of the most famous potty-mouths around, but she's also got a heart of gold, writing smarts, and is one keen biz whiz. She knows how to make money online, and knows how to teach you to do the same.

Sonia is the gifted writer/marketer behind the blog Remarkable Communications. She's such a talented writer that Brian Clark snapped her up as one of his permanent guest writers on Copyblogger.

If you want to know more about these two, I suggest you read this brilliant interview, Content Marketing Gets Real. Then go sign up for Marketing for Nice People, it's a gas (as we used to say)…Click here to view more details

Here's a sample lesson from something called 101 Tweaks to Fix Your Marketing and Your Business:

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Top 20 Things You Should Know About SEO Copywriting

Heather-lloyd-martin-200x180 According to SEO expert Heather Lloyd-Martin, here are the top 20 things you need to learn about small business SEO copywriting. (And if you're not sure what SEO copywriting is, then you really need to learn this and sign up for Heather's online course!

   1. How to give your customers the exact information they need, exactly when they need it!
   2. How the search engines work (and what it means to you)
   3. Tried and true marketing “power words” that get results
   4. Powerful low-budget small business keyphrase research strategies
   5. How you can make more money during seasonal sales

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Content Marketing Contest Winners:
Targeting Boomer Women

HerMentorCenter-banner Congratulations to Phyllis Goldberg, Ph.D. and Rosemary Lichtman, Ph.D. of HerMentorCenter and NourishingRelationships blog: this pair of dynamic professionals won the drawing for a free Content Marketing Review for May.

If you signed up and didn't win, don't worry, you still can win in the next  drawing. If you haven't signed up yet, be sure to get on the list: click here to enter the contest.

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Be Happy – or Get Mad and Get Writing!

Emotional-choices Here's a question for you to think about …Does it help you to write when you're happy…or angry? I think about this a lot.

For example, I'm reading a couple of books on happiness right now. Did you know that the US isn't even in the top ten countries based on a measure of people's happiness?

This is from an article in Forbes, World's Happiest Places by Lauren Sherman:

Where in the world do people feel most content with their lives?

According to a new report released by the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), a Paris-based group of 30 countries with democratic governments that provides economic and social statistics and data, happiness levels are highest in northern European countries.

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What Makes Your Office Space Creative?

PatsiAjijicJuly06 What kind of office space do you work in? Did you know that your environment has a real effect on your creativity and how well your brain works?

Well, you probably intuitively know that, but now the behavioral scientists have done some empirical studies to prove that high ceilings boost creativity. Maybe that's why I love our home and my office here in Ajijic: the ceilings and windows go up 18 feet in some rooms.

Here's an interesting recap of the scientific research from Scientific American Mind magazine and the Neuromarketing blog (which I highly recommend you subscribe to if you're interested in how your brain works).

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Best Darn Content Marketing Tool on the Planet:
7 Steps to Sustainable Blog Success

Blogger-with-community You may have heard me say this before…As The Blog Squad, I’ll come right out and tell you that blogs are the best darn content marketing tool on the planet!

But maybe you don’t see it that way. You may have a blog and find it a pain to keep up. Maybe you tried blogging for a while, but you didn’t see big benefits for your business.

I hear these complaints from people all the time…

“Help! Patsi, I’ll confess, I’m a reluctant blogger. I’ve been writing on my blog for the last couple of months. But I’m only getting a few visitors a week and no comments. I haven’t sold any products and no new clients have come to me from the blog. It’s getting harder to write on it, since no one seems to read it and I’m not seeing any results."

And quite frankly, after all the effort, what’s the big deal? If it’s not bringing in clients, sales and money, why waste time posting on a blog?

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Brain-Based Content Marketing: Write with Respect

Brawn-and-brain As a former psychologist with a passion for how our minds and brains work, I'm writing this series of blog posts about how neuroscience contributes to content marketing.

When you write to readers on the web, you have an opportunity to connect and engage with people  globally. What an opportunity, and what a daunting challenge.

What can we learn about the human brain that makes it easier for us to write good content that works?

So far, I've stressed how important it is to compel people to read your stuff, including:

  • Brain Based Blogging: Lessons from Neuroscience for Content Marketing
  • Compelling Content: What Are Readers' Hot Buttons?
  • Business Blogs Deliver Content Marketing: 4 Keys to Great Results
  • How to Turn Your Blog into a Content Marketing Ferrari

The lessons so far are that you must:

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Brain Based Blogging:
Lessons from Neuroscience for Content Marketing

Subconscious  In the brain, emotions are closely linked to action. In our mammalian past, they were the single most important function of our brains. Our survival depended on quick action.

Feelings do not require reflection or thought. We feel, we act. We think later and justify our actions based on input from our more highly advanced reasoning brain.

Strong feelings are hot-wired into the brain's action centers, provoking any one of the "F" actions:

  • Feeding
  • Fleeing
  • Fighting
  • Fornicating

Emotions are simple and clear so that action is easy and fast. This is built into our brains for very clear reasons of survival as a race. We wouldn't be here talking about content marketing if our ancestors hadn't become good at all four "F" actions.

Maybe our current culture of consumerism means our brains are now hot-wired to react differently to our emotions? Maybe instead of feeding, we grab a snack, we argue or write snarky responses, and we make purchases over the internet. These things won't necessarily contribute to our survival, but they do satisfy the need for action and instant gratification.

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