ProBlogger: Finding Readers: Strategies for Building Your Audience in 2015 |
Finding Readers: Strategies for Building Your Audience in 2015 Posted: 06 Jan 2015 06:22 AM PST In 2014, Dustin Stout outlined how he grew his audience, and how you can find readers too. It’s worth revisiting so you start this year off on the right foot. What would you add? When I launched dustn.tv in March 2011, I had no idea what I was doing. All I knew was that I had some insight and skills that people needed and I genuinely enjoyed helping people. Between then and now, I've had successes and complete WTF-just-happened failures. Through all of that I believe I've landed on a handful of crucial elements that have allowed me to get to where I am today. 1. Give the Reader A Beautiful ExperienceIt doesn't matter if you have the most amazing, jaw-dropping, slap-yo-mamma content in the world, if people don't read it. When someone lands on your webpage you have five seconds or less to prove that your site and its content is worth their precious time. So if your web design is cluttered, hard-to-read and visually unattractive, you're content may not have the chance it deserves. One of the primary reasons people continue to visit and read my blog (rather than just through an RSS reader or email) is because the reading experience is enjoyable. With all the templates, themes, and examples of good design permeating the digital space, there's no excuse for poor design. You don't have to be a designer in any sense of the word to create a beautifully-designed, content-focused blog. Just find what's working, what you would enjoy looking at, and imitate it. You can read my tips for creating a stunning reading experience for your readers here. 2. Write For Real PeopleOnce your canvas is ready (your design) you can now fill it with glorious content that knocks people’s socks off! But the most important thing to remember is just that— you want to knock people's socks off. Not robots: real people. Having a voice that people can relate to is crucial to growing your readership. If people can't relate to what you're saying or how you're saying it, why would they return? One thing that has helped me to communicate effectively to my readership is focusing in on exactly who I'm speaking to. No, I'm not talking about my demographic or target audience— that's not specific enough. To effectively write from an authentic, relatable voice you need to write as if you're talking to one person. Try this as an exercise– the next time you draft up a blog post, think of one person in your life that could benefit from the information you're about to write, and write it in such a way as if you're talking directly to them. This will help you communicate your message more clearly and your voice will be more authentic. And people will love you for it. 3. Engaging Content (Actionable)Another thing I've found when crafting content is that the actionable always wins out on engagement. Give people clear, easy-to-do actions and watch your engagement soar. People don't always know right off the bat how to take the action you may be moving them towards, so make it easy for them. Tell them exactly what to do. 4. Compelling Content (Sharable)Making your content sharable is a crucial peice to the continued organic growth. When people share with other people there is power that no degree of marketing could ever capture. In order to compell people to share your content, you have to first understand why people share things. The motivations are many but here's just a few powerful reasons someone would share your content:
Do you see a pattern there? People tend to share content based on how it will make them look to others. So if your content gives someone the chance to look better in front of their peers, they will be compelled to share it. 5. The Right Distribution ChannelsOkay great, so you've got your awesome content written and wrapped inside a beautiful package (your web design) ready for people to consume, engage, and share. So now how do you get people to that content? Distribution channels, otherwise known as social networks. The right distribution channels make all the difference. For everyone's audience it may be different. If your target audience is mommies looking for great recipes, then Pinterest may be your best channel. If you're ideal audience is teenagers who don't want their parents knowing what they're up to, then Snapchat may be your ideal channel. My biggest piece of advice though when it comes to distribution channels is to resist the lie that you have to be on all of them. I've built the majority of my audience by doing one network really well. You can either do a mediocre, semi-invested job at many networks or you can knock one single network out of the park. The latter will grow your audience faster than the former. For me, I've found that the most powerful distribution channel in both driving traffic and acquiring new readers is Google+. No platform has yielded the return on investment that Google+ has, despite what lazy journalists might have you believe. For me it's about being able to not only distribute content, but also to be able to create and repurpose content in different formats such as images and video. With Google+, the number of tools at your disposal is beyond that of any other platform making it the most diverse, feature-rich and multi-demensionally engaging platform of them all. Ultimately though, your perfect distribution channel will be one that has all of the following characteristics:
One Last ThingAbove all else, be true to yourself. Don't be someone or something you're not. Be uniquely you because that is your secret sauce. Nobody else has the perspective, experiences, and thought process as you in the same combination of skills, knowledge and insight. The more true you can be to yourself, the better you can relate to your ideal audience. Top 3 Takeaways
Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger |
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