Archives for November 2011

A Little Blogging Secret

A belief that many small businesses share is that delivering exceptional work will naturally attract everything necessary to support their business.

This is also one of the secrets of blogging – stay in the game, strive to create valuable, innovative and inspiring content, and everything else will fall into place.

Hardly a day goes by when I cannot point to one particular article that drives more than 50% of the traffic to this site. It’s really quite astonishing – and a function of social sharing.

Logic tells us that when you post an article your audience consumes it – and hopefully responds.

Based upon my experience, that is rarely true.

When you consistently create useful content – information that is valuable for your target audience, it seemingly rises to the surface when its time is right – effectively introducing you, your site, and your business to a new audience.

The little secret is that blogging is not a linear game.

One home run is not going to win the game. You have to keep pounding out base hits, grind out more yardage, and sink as many putts as possible.

The Secret

Over the last few weeks, this article on protecting your Facebook account from hackers has generated an enormous amount of traffic for me – one that I wrote 4 months ago.

Why? I have no idea. It could be the result of posting it on my son’s Facebook wall after he and a bunch of his college buddies were hacked.

In other words, the secret of blogging is about consistency – creating content whose value will eventually find its day.

More recently, this article on asking your customers the tough questions has generated hundreds of clicks for several days running. It was an article I was particular proud of when I wrote it, but it produced very little traffic at the time.

My Analysis

For you and me, blogging is not just about delivering the news – that’s what the big media outlets do.

For small businesses, blogging is more about planting seeds.

What is cool is those seeds have multiple lives – germinating again and again as they are shared on the social web.

Perennial Flowers

What is awesome and cool is usually transitory – it quickly fades.  As a former landscape architect and contractor, we created some amazing floral displays with annuals flowers.

They were indeed awesome – but only for a few weeks.

As a blogger, you are more interested in planting perennials – a floral show that comes back again and again.  

Annual flowers are like a one hit wonder – they have their day and quickly fade.

Perennial flowers deliver value for years to come – and your evergreen blog content does the same.

Gardeners know they cannot predict the weather, any more than you can predict the tastes, needs, and desires of your community. That’s why the foundation of your blog has to be perennial – delivering content that conceivably has value today and long into the future.

There is nothing wrong with seizing the day – capturing a relevant moment for your audience.

Though the secret to blogging is building a sustainable digital asset that delivers value again and again – often when you least expect it.

Leave a comment below or share this with your community with any of the share buttons below – or with those on the little red bar at the bottom of this page.  

Until tomorrow,  Jeff

Photo Credit: antonychammond

Say Goodbye to Little White Marketing Lies

At an early age, many of us were taught the distinction between a lie and a white lie, with the latter being a socially acceptable lie – one that serves a benevolent purpose.

In fact, for years bending the truth a bit has been an acceptable marketing practice .

Remember the film Forrest Gump? Even Forrest, a prolific do-gooder, endorsed the Flex-O-Lite ping-pong paddle he never used because his mother said there was nothing wrong with a little white lie to get a nice check in return.

Times have changed. We are now surrounded by media that is doing what it does well – illuminating every aspect of our lives, past, present, and future.

The Time For 100% transparency Has Arrived

About fifteen years ago I had just completed extensive training to become a meditation instructor. It was a side business.

My primary business was operating the landscape contracting company I founded, but I was nevertheless passionate about helping others learn a practice that had greatly helped me to manage the stresses of running that seasonal business.

One of my first marketing efforts involved a presentation at a local bookstore. To my surprise, about 25 people showed up. I was pretty nervous in front of an audience back then, but things were going well – up until one gentleman in the back of the room asked me a question.

“How many folks have you taught?”

I though for a moment, took a breath and told him the truth – none.

I was crestfallen. Right or wrong, I went from feeling like a trained expert to a fraud.

About six months later I was greeting the guests for my usual weekend sessions and guess who showed up with 4 of his friends?  Yep, the same guy.

At the close of the two-day workshop I asked him why he signed up for my class when he knew I didn’t have much experience as a teacher. His answer was simple and direct.

” You confirmed my intuition. You proved you were trustworthy. That’s why I’m here.”

I’ve been known to tell my share of white lies, but for some reason I just couldn’t do it that day. And it proved to be a powerful lesson.

The truth is what media demands from all of us today – especially social media, because everyone can now easily determine the difference between the truth and a little white lie. You don’t even need intuition because you have Google and many other search engines to do the work for you.

Times have indeed changed.

Learn From the Mistakes You See Every Day

If you follow the media at all you are getting a PR lesson just about every day – usually from the blunders of notables that should know better – athletes, politicians, and administrators.

Of course, we see it on a much smaller scale all around us. The most common example is making false claims – stretching the truth, or covering it up.

If you are going to call yourself an expert you had better be one. For example, can you claim expertise as a blogger if you haven’t published in months – or years?

Why claim to be something you are not when being 100% transparent can actually be more beneficial, as it was for me?

Media amplifies – and that means little white lies can become big fat ones.  It’s a risk that you don’t need to take.

If you have only one customer that is enough for the one who wants to be next.  And if you have 23 years of experience, that’s what you have – don’t round up to 25 because it makes for better marketing.

Learn from the hard lessons that we see in the media everyday – with many of them ending careers.

New media and search have made the little white lie a thing of the past.

Be who you are and you will earn a lot more business, not to mention the power you gain from knowing your brand is untarnished.

How about you? Are you feeling that it’s time to say goodbye to marketing as we used to know it?

Leave a comment below or share this with your community with any of the share buttons below – or with those on the little red bar at the bottom of this page.  

Until tomorrow,  Jeff

5 Best Practices for Local Small Business

Today is Small Business Saturday – a day dedicated to supporting small businesses in local communities. Much of the publicity surrounding this marketing effort to create awareness for small businesses is on the word small. Yet, isn’t being local more relevant? Location is often what differentiates small businesses that are part of the fabric of […]

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The Purity of Work and Art

To create outstanding work it is essential to start from the beginning – focusing on its most basic and essential qualities. As film animation studio Pixar achieved success with blockbuster films such as Toy Story, business partner Disney, and CEO Steve Jobs decided it was time build a new home that would encourage more creative […]

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Picture the Intangible to Build It

It is impossible to create anything that you have not clearly imagined. How does your imagination work?  Do you have a process that enhances your effectiveness for achieving pragmatic results? I was interested to learn that the creative genius of Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak was his gift for visualizing technology, something he learned from his father. […]

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Blog or Website – The Real Difference

Blogs are indeed websites, but there are distinct and relevant differences and advantages to both. Most people think of a website as a digital storefront – a place for offering products and services, activities that you can also accomplish with a blog. Then what exactly is the difference between a blog and a website? A […]

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eBay is A Content Marketing Laboratory

eBay is an ideal arena for honing your content marketing skills. When you are selling an item on eBay you can create a traditional advertisement – or you can use content marketing to substantially increase your profits. When a potential buyer searches eBay they are not only looking for information on a specific item, but […]

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The Biggest Risk is Not Taking Any Risks

The headline of this article is a direct quote from an interview with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, when he addressed a group of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs. In it, he noted that some companies move too slow, and a few too fast. The challenge is to find your place in the middle. This is good advice even […]

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Call Me – Going Beyond Social Media

Today Google announced that they are providing 24/7 live phone support for Google apps customers. This is great news for those of us that have not taken advantage of the full suite of Google apps services because we were not comfortable betting the future of our business on a faceless company. Are you unknowingly doing […]

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