“Celebrate Your Marketing?!” plus 1 more |
Posted: 16 Dec 2012 12:06 PM PST This guest post is by Karl Staib of Domino Connection. Have you ever planned out your day and put marketing as the last thing on your list because you just can't stomach another rejection? I know I did. I have a popular blog named Work Happy Now that gets 15,000 visits a month. That's due to backlinks, Google search, and social love. This happened because of my desire to build relationships with people. I didn't force myself onto anyone. I connected with them via interview, guest post or Twitter. It was this kind of outreach that I enjoyed. The marketing that I avoided was cold calling, cold emailing, and buying ads on websites. I just didn't want to build connections with people who weren't interesting to me. You marketing should be a celebration instead of some stodgy task that you have to do to get a few sales. If you hate the kind of marketing you’re doing, your business won't grow. Think about it this way: everything you do is marketing, from a blog post to a conversation with another blogger. You are creating something. You can create something beautiful and memorable, or you can create something forgettable. It's up to you. In this post, I’ve put together a few concepts that you can use to delight and encourage people to talk about your blog. Give away surprise giftsStudies have proven when people receive an unexpected gift their dopamine levels skyrocket. Knowing this you can give someone an extra boost to your visitors. You may even want to include a little blurb about it on your blog. I would suggest keeping track of everyone that leaves a comment on your blog for one month. The person with the most comments for that month wins a free ebook, ecourse, or something along those lines. The idea is to keep it a surprise. I guarantee that person will keep coming back to your blog and leaving comments for a long time. Throw an online partyThrowing an online event is a great way to get people talking about you. The technology is so good today that you can do almost any kind virtual event. You can create a webinar, tele-seminar, Twitter party, Facebook giveaway, or a contest that engages people. The idea is to build authority and friendships with your tribe. Throw a physical partyAn online event is cool because it's not as stressful as a real-life event, but a live event has a few benefits. I still remember my first tweetup with Robert Scoble. I'm not really a tech guy, but I wanted to see what a tweetup was all about. Robert was visiting Austin and put together a group of people to meet at the restaurant. He was a cool enough guy, but the best part of the party was the people I met. I still keep in contact with someone I met that night over five years ago. By creating an event for people that allows them to bond, you are creating something worth sharing. Since Robert threw that Twitter party over five years ago, he gets a link from Problogger.net. That's priceless. Help out a charityMy friend Colleen Wainwright created the 50 for 50 event. She promised to shave her head if she was able to raise $50,000 by her 50th birthday. You should check out her link. She has an image of her shaved head on the page. She was able to raise over $50,000 for WriteGirl, a charity that helps young girls improve their writing skills. Colleen gets the benefit of raising money for a super-cool charity, but also building her network. I know that's not why she created the event, but it's a nice bonus to have a new network of people to help you with your business. Your storyIt's all about creating a story. If you can get people on board with your story, you are able to create an event that tugs at their hearts. Chris Guillebeau created The Empire Building Kit to help people who wanted to create a lifestyle business that fits their needs. He wasn't sure how to get people excited about it, so he went on a trip. His return trip stopped in Chicago and he wasn't able to get a flight to Portland. His wife suggested that he take the train. At first he balked, but then he found out the train was called Empire Builder. He then got a bag from Tom Ben called the Empire Builder. Chris realized that he needed to launch the Empire Building Kit while riding on the train back to Portland. He invited his friend J.D. of Get Rich Slowly and it kept building from there. He blogged about the whole trip, turning the story into his launch. A very successful launch. Can you see how this story sucks you in? This is great marketing that can be a lot of fun. When you are planning on releasing something to the world, you need to have a plan that grabs people's attention and makes them take notice of who you are and what you created. It's a little more work than a standard launch, but very much worth your time and energy. These are just a few ideas, but each of us has a different approach. What have you done to celebrate your marketing and turn it into a fun event? Check out Karl Staib of Domino Connection and his free e-course "How to Create an Amazing Product Launch," You can also check out Domino Connection on Facebook because he shares all kinds of great content and tips. Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger |
Get Creative About Your Content … Consistently Posted: 16 Dec 2012 06:03 AM PST This guest post is by Pratik Dholakiya of E2M Solutions. You’ve heard it a thousand times. "You need great, original content." And it’s becoming increasingly obvious that "original" isn’t the same thing as "not plagiarized." There’s just one problem. Doing something truly original is hard. How can you make original ideas happen? The answer comes from an unexpected source: psychological research. Writer’s block is only half the battleThe solution to writer’s block is simple: keep writing. It doesn’t matter what. Just publish. Just ship. This is where most bloggers give up. They get stuck on the belief that everything they publish needs to be gold. It won’t be. You need to make writing a habit. That’s all it takes to conquer writer’s block. But it’s only half the battle. If your content isn’t new and exciting to your visitors, most of them will leave. And since it’s very difficult for an individual blogger to come across a breaking news story before anybody else, most bloggers end up publishing well written and completely redundant material. Creativity is the spice you need to keep your blog fresh. Here’s where you can get it. Are you afraid of creativity?Consciously, no. But studies suggest that when we do have a fear of creative ideas, it’s subconscious, and we’re completely blind to the results. One of these studies, led by researchers from Cornell, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of North Carolina, suggests that when we’re uncertain about the future, we reject creative ideas, even though we want them. They discovered that if they paid participants by a random lottery, instead of a set fee, they would subconsciously associate creative words with negative words like, "hell," and "vomit." In a second experiment, they found out that if the participants wrote an essay about how "there is only one way to solve a problem," this also created a sense of uncertainty. Worse still, this caused them to rate ideas as less creative, rather than recognize their fear. The implications are clear:
Are you being too closed … or too open?A study led by Ella Miron-Spektor of Israel, along with researchers from Harvard and Carnegie, suggests that paradoxical thinking plays a part in creativity. In one of their experiments, they asked participants to read an article about an experimental new toy, and then they read comments made by "judges" of the product. The judges said one of four things:
Out of the four groups in the experiment, only one group stood out on a creativity test: the last one. In other words, it wasn’t enough to be open to the idea that something could be creative and cheap at the same time. It also wasn’t enough to realize that creativity and low price were opposites. Creativity was only boosted by recognizing that two things could be somehow different and complimentary at the same time. What does this mean for you?
Again, you have to be able to see how things can be different and complimentary at the same time, not just one or the other, in order to get a boost in creative thinking. The "idea mashups" that result from this are some of the best blog posts on the web. I like to think of it like this:
Are you in the right mindset?There is a belief among many intellectuals that in order to be creative, you need to be a tortured soul. But a meta-analysis of studies on the subject revealed that out of 29 experiments, only nine suggested there was any truth to this, and those studies had a flawed design. In one example demonstrating just the opposite, Alice Isen and others tested the impact of mood on people’s ability to solve a creative problem, called the candle problem. They asked one group of students to watch a funny video before solving the problem, and the other group to watch a math video. Only one in five of the people who watched the math video solved it, but an amazing three out of four solved it if they watched the funny video. Was this because of laughter, or just a positive mood in general? In another experiment, they gave the participants a decorated bag of candy. The results were similar, but not as dramatic. It turns out maybe you don’t have to be depressed and self-loathing in order to be creative after all. Vincent Van Gogh may have cut his ear off, and history does seem to favor the tragic stories about creative people, but the psychology is clear. At least when it comes to everyday creativity, positivity is the answer. Are you too focused?This is a weird one, so bear with me. I want to be absolutely clear here. It takes focus and dedication to complete anything you start. If you don’t stay focused on your goals, you’re likely to wander aimlessly for a long time before you get anywhere near where you want to be. But when it comes to creating the ideas in the first place? In that case, focus may actually be working against you. In one experiment, participants were asked questions like this:
The experiment was led by Mareike Wieth and Rose Zacks, and it was based on people’s sleep schedules. Your sleep schedule determines which time of day you are most and least focused (which is not necessarily the same thing as being alert and sleepy). People who were brought in during their least focused time of day actually did best on these types of creative solving problems. (If you couldn’t think of it, the answer is that they’re triplets.) And this isn’t the only experiment to suggest this. Another experiment demonstrated that people who have frontal lobe damage do better on these kinds of problems, and still another suggested that alcohol had the same effect. Now, I’m not advocating drinking on the job or taking a hammer to your forehead, but we can’t ignore the implications. So here are a few ideas to take advantage of this knowledge:
As a simple example:
Putting it all togetherHere is a sample creativity "plan" that you can borrow from and adjust as you see fit, based on what we’ve learned.
So there you have it: a plan for creating original material, based on solid science. You’ll find that when you have an unlimited number of ideas to work with, the whole writing process gets easier, and your quality levels will start to improve. Have you tried using methods like these? What else has helped you come up with original content ideas? Tell us in the comments. Pratik Dholakiya is a Lead SEO Strategist at E2M Solutions, a full service internet marketing company specializing in Organic SEO, PPC, Local Search, Social Media, Reputation Management, Content Marketing and more. He recently started an Interview platform TalkWithLeaders.com where he'll be interviewing various industry leaders. You can contact him on twitter @DholakiyaPratik or by email. Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger |
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