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Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney

Affiliate Marketing 101 For Affiliates and Product Owners

Posted: 10 Sep 2014 08:41 AM PDT

I have been meaning to write a general guide to Affiliate Marketing but with some real life examples from my experiences for about hmm 4 years now.  This is by no means a holy grail but I wanted to put something out.

When I started in making money on the internet it was through Google AdSense.  But it didn’t last long because I learned very quickly that all the advertisers through AdSense were Affiliate Marketers.  So I followed the money and signed up to these affiliates and that started my world of selling other people’s products as an affiliate.

The Affiliate Marketing world is composed of 2 core components and I have been on both sides of the coin:

  • The Publisher  – Commonly referred to in the industry as the Affiliate or affiliate marketer.   You have a lot of creative control to sell other people’s products.  And if you find the right way to present them and their perceived value than there are riches to be had.  I don’t have access to full statistics back when I was an affiliate but I remember my record day was about $15,000 in profit.  But Keep in mind that you take on all the risk here.  You could spend countless hours/days and a lot of money and yield nothing.  On several occasions in testing something new I have lost thousands of dollars in only a few hours.  Most of the time you can expect to lose money until you profit.  In the end you are just a commission only based sales person on the internet.
  • The Advertiser – Commonly referred to in the industry as  the offer or the product owner.  This is the company that sets up the affiliate program in house or with a network.  As the product owner you are in essence the business owner.  Financially you have little downside.  You know what your margins are and what you can pay a commission based sales person (an affiliate).  If you are not doing it in house then a network will work directly with affiliates to get them to promote it.  This is a double edge sword.  The hardest thing is just that because affiliates have all the risk to sell your products its very hard to recruit them.  You went to an affiliate network because they have affiliates in the industry your product exists.  However most your competition is already making money for all involved so the barrier to entry as the product owner is VERY VERY VERY hard.  You have a very low chance that anyone will even try your offer.

If you have ever attended shows like the Affiliate Summit or LeadsCon you will see 90% of it is people looking for affiliates.  They all make claims of highest converting offers and best payouts.

Its a very high stakes and high swinging industry.  The ups and downs are crazy.

On the publisher side when we took the ShoeMoney System to an affiliate network it took over 6 months to do anything.   We went from making next to zero sales per day to over a thousand. It was insane.  When your product/offer is hot then every affiliate will want it and every affiliate network will want to run it.  When its not than its frustrating as hell.  Either way most don’t last long.  We only lasted about 3 months until we lost our credit card processing.  We went from processing $0 per day to over $250,000 per day…. and only had a 3 million dollar cap on our merchant account.  We had to pause the campaign and get more merchanting and once we did we couldn’t get anyone to try it again and the few that would try it said they were making more with some other make money online product.  O well was awesome while it lasted.

But you need to start somewhere no matter what side your on.

Keys to success:

On the Affiliate side creativity is everything.  You have to present the product, and more importantly the products perception BETTER than the company is/can do.  Sure you can just send traffic to their landing page but if you make your own page that is where the magic happens.

On the Product Owners side – you have to do whatever it takes to get started.  It might mean you have to pre-pay 1-10k (depending on quality) to get them to do a “test”.   You might have to do a loss leader to get some traction.  By loss leader I mean you pay out more than you make.  For instance with our product that sold for $97/$79 we paid out as much as $130.  We lost about $50 overtime we made a sale.  But on the back end we put other monetization strategies in place to ensure we came out profitable to the tune of an average of $65 per buyer after the dust settled.

I will leave you with this.  In my 10 years of experience in internet marketing the biggest keys to success are knowing your analytics and having creativity.

No matter what side you are on you HAVE to log every little component of data you can.

On the affiliate side you need to be constantly testing and measuring user behavior.  What web browsers convert the best.  Desktop or mobile.  Geographic. Landing page optimization and testing.  Tons of stuff here to make a huge difference.

On the publisher side analytics is the key to raking in money vs losing your ass.  First you have to determine the LTV (life time value) of  a customer.  If your product is a subscription than this will take a little bit.  Then back track it all to the source.  Not only the affiliate network but what affiliate is making or losing you money.  As a product owner I had this really drilled down that I knew not only the profit of every individual affiliate but also the refund/chargeback rate and lifetime value.

Affiliate marketing is an amazing industry that is rapidly being regulated and evolving.   The most prosperous days were in the 2004-2008 era.  However there is still a HUGE opportunity for both affiliates and product owners.  But it will not last.  The gold rush has always been regarded as the standard in a time when people could make an enormous amount of money.  This is bigger.

Good luck.

 

 

 

 

“How to Craft a Blog that Attracts Customers and Converts Like Crazy” plus 2 more

“How to Craft a Blog that Attracts Customers and Converts Like Crazy” plus 2 more

Link to @ProBlogger

How to Craft a Blog that Attracts Customers and Converts Like Crazy

Posted: 09 Sep 2014 09:54 AM PDT

This is a guest contribution from entrepreneur Natalie Sisson.

So, you want to turn your blog into an online business?

Congratulations, so does every other person with wifi.

Now, I don't mean to to bust your buns right off the get go, but if I'm being honest (and I always am!) then you need to know one thing:

A blog that doesn't make money is a hobby, and a hobby is not a business.

The truth is, many of us don't know what we're doing when we're first starting out online. Learning how to create a website, identify your ideal customer and convert them into sales will be a process, one that I am here to help you with though.

First things first; when you think of your website does it make you proud? If you are uncomfortable sharing your url with friends and family because it looks horrendous, then chances are your audience will be thinking the same thing.

Have you ever heard the theory that when shopping, if you hold an item for 10 seconds or longer you are more likely to buy? Well, the same principle goes for websites, but you have far less time to convert them – you have four seconds, to be exact.

A lot can happen in four seconds, which is why you need to make the most of it. If your viewer can't find what they're looking for, then they will surely go elsewhere. So how do you grab their attention and keep them on your site? It all starts by building a connection.

Every great relationship revolves around feeling a fundamental connection between two people. In this case, you need to build the foundation between your website and your audience. One of the best ways you can do this is to ask yourself what the primary goal of your website is.

Since your website is a platform to introduce yourself and your products to the world, knowing exactly what you mean to sell or achieve from having the site will help you target the ideal target audience.

The easiest way to convey this message is by creating a crisp, clear homepage. Your homepage is basically a landing page for any and all visitors. It will be the first thing they see, so capture them in those four quick seconds.

A few key tricks for ensuring a stellar home page is to:

  • Choose a clear web design – the more hectic your layout, the more likely your visitor will bounce
  • When asking your audience to opt-in to a free mailing list or free download, create one simple, to-the-point call to action
  • No one likes getting lost, so make navigating your site simple. Have a clear menu at the top so visitors can easily find their way around
  • Selling a product or service? Make it evident on the homepage. The harder they have to look for it, the more likely they will go to your competition
  • Outline what it is you're all about. I'm not talking a novel, but one clear paragraph about who you are, what you stand for and what you're offering

Now, to really start converting your audience you're going to want to check off these next five steps from your to-do list.

1. Determine what it is you are selling

What do you feel jazzed about making money from? Whether it's a product or a service you are are going to want to make this particular item forefront on your homepage.

Many people make the mistake of offering several different service on their homepage and it only confuses their visitor. For example, if you really wanted to sell business coaching, but offered website design coaching and business coaching on your homepage, how would they know which to choose?

Besides the fact that these two products sound beyond similar, why would you offer something you aren't keen on doing yourself? Take away the option by simply promoting one service on you homepage.

2. Keep it clean

Some people just don't know when to call it quits when it comes to web design. If you've ever happened across a site that seems to be hoarding widgets, images, links and more, then you know how unappealing and distracting that is to the eye.

Too much distraction will confuse and deter your visitor from becoming a sale. So here's what you should do:
Remove any external links from your homepage that take them off your site
Choose social widgets that allow them to like your content without leaving your site
Avoid flashy text or image that takes their attention away from the product you want them to purchase

Are you starting to see a pattern here?

3. Implement a sales funnel

Your sales funnel should start on your homepage. That little chunk of screen you see when you land (referred to as 'above the fold') there should contain everything you need to compel your visitor to buy what you are selling.

Using your best copy, image, video or what-have-you to convey the many benefits of your product should all be visible here. To further resonate with your audience, feel free to direct them to your About page so they can get to know you and strengthen your bond together.

4. Make buying simple

You may have convinced them to buy, but if you make it difficult to pay that is a surefire way to lose a sale.

The easiest way to rectify this situation is to have a “buy now” option on your landing page; and be sure to make them feel safe when buying from you. To do that make sure you use and advertise a secure shopping cart option, like Paypal. A money back guarantee always helps solidify the sale as well.

5. Make sure your new landing page is working

I have no doubt that if you managed to follow the first four steps you will have created one heck of a landing page. Now that it's there, it's time to find out if it's converting, which is where analytics comes in.

  • Set yourself up with a free Google Analytics account and add in the tracking code to your website. Every few weeks head back to that analytics dashboard and see:
  • How many unique (read, first time) monthly users are visiting your site
  • Where they are coming from, aka. traffic source
  • Your average bounce rate – how long they stay on your site before leaving
  • Which page exactly your visitors tend to exit your website from the most – visitor exit

You don't need to be a geek to be able to read this data. For example, if you're traffic is mainly mobile then make sure that you are using a mobile-optimized web theme. On the other hand, if your visitors continually exit on your product sales page, it's time to think about doing a redesign.

With these five strategies, there is no doubt in my mind that you will be able to turn your current website into a cash converting sales machine.

Now tell me; what is the biggest change you need to make to your website after learning these steps? Share your thoughts and progress in the comment section.

Natalie Sisson is a Kiwi entrepreneur and adventurer who shares creative ways to run a business from anywhere. To start your very own lifestyle online business be sure to check out her new program, The Freedom Plan. And don’t be shy, – drop her a line on Twitter or Facebook.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

How to Craft a Blog that Attracts Customers and Converts Like Crazy

Hypnotic Writing | 5 Effective Strategies To Put Your Reader In A Trance.

Posted: 08 Sep 2014 09:30 AM PDT

This is a guest contribution from Thai Nguyen of Wantrepreneur Journey.

5323104963_50c0b02711

You are getting sleepy…very sleepy…

That’s typically what comes to mind when you think of hypnosis—a stage show with some unfortunate soul doing the chicken-dance. However, those who practice hypnosis are quick to give a proper explanation.

Here's the textbook definition: The induction of a state of consciousness in which a person becomes highly responsive to suggestion or direction.

We enter into hypnotic states on a daily basis; completely absorbed in an activity and losing track of time. It happens when you drive, when you watch movies, and—when you read.

Hypnosis feeds off the psychosomatic power of words. An intriguing study in Malcolm Gladwell's Blink highlights the mind-body relationship inherent in words. Subjects were lead into a room, asked to describe how they felt. Then, they were told to read a list of words: "worried," "Florida," "old," "lonely," "grey," "sentimental," "bingo," "withdraw," "forgetful," "retired," "wrinkle."

Afterward, subjects not only described feeling slow and sluggish, but physically walked out of the room slower than when they entered. In psychology, it's referred to as Priming, in hypnosis it's synonymous with "embedding a command."

This fascinating link between words and physiology is often exploited by the advertising and marketing industries. Words are carefully crafted to evoke powerful emotions and a state of higher suggestibility.

Exploitation occurs because something is so effective. That effectiveness can certainly be applied to the article you’re about to write.

As you write, here are five hypnotic strategies to put into place:

1. Poetic Meter

Ever wondered why Shakespeare's work is so mesmerising? He uses iambic pentameter heavily throughout his plays and sonnets. Pentameters indicate the rhythm of spoken words; iambic being the most common in English poetry. The rhythm of poetry captures us, and can be applied to writing.

Think of the da-DUM rhythm of the heartbeat and the tic-TOCK of a clock. The unstressed syllable followed by the stressed syllable is the iambic pentameter. It's not only our feet, but also our minds that cannot help tapping to the beat. Here's the first line of Shakespeare's 12th Sonnet:

When I / do COUNT / the CLOCK / that TELLS / the TIME

Let's be clear, this isn't a challenge to try and turn all your articles in poetic pieces, but if you are able to bring more of a rhythmic and poetic flow to your writing, you'll certainly be more engaging.

2. Active Voice VS. Passive Voice

Research and academic writing is general done with the passive voice—hence they're so tedious to read. The focus is always placed on object—the evidence, findings, and results, rather than the subject—the person doing the research.  Hypnotic writing is all about the subject; always use the present active voice when structuring your subject and verbs.  The "now" engages people much more than the past or future.

Notice the difference between:

The brakes were slammed on by Stacey at the red lights.

and,

Stacey slammed on the brakes at the red lights.

3. Personal Stories

Everybody loves movies. Great stories are universal across all cultures because they allow for human empathy. When you share a personal story or experience in your articles, people respond with, "Oh yeah, I remember when that happened to me!" Or they can at least imagine what that’d be like.

A story brings you into a different setting. You're suddenly detached from sitting on a chair and looking at your laptop to immersed in the scenario presented. Studies show that when we engage our imagination, the lines between what's mentally constructed and what is real gets very blurry. A person who imagines practicing piano experiences similar neurological effect as one who physically does.

Use stories in your writing to activate your reader's imagination and immerse them into hypnotic experience. Simply starting off a sentence with "Imagine…" will get the ball rolling.

4. "You." Yes, You.

"You" makes readers feel as though your article is directly speaking to them. Although you’re writing articles in hope of having it read by millions, you certainly don't want to sound that broard and generalised. That create a canyon of disconnect. You want to sound as though you're having a personal one-on-one conversation with your reader.

There's a psychological principle called the Fundamental Attribution Error—you'll be furious and disgusted when you see someone texting and driving, but oh-so forgiving as you drive and text away. Our critical factors are on high alert when we analyse others, but take a break when we analyse ourselves.

If you write as though addressing a broad audience, you'll have to fight through the critical factor, the more you are able to be personal, the more engaged your uncritical reader will be.

5. Explanations.

"Why is that so?"

"Because" is your key word here. Humans have curiosity hardwired into us, we're always searching for answers and justification. Addressing problems and creating curiosity in your writing is crucial, but even more so is providing a resolution and explanation.

The classic "Xerox copy" study by Harvard psychologist Ellen Langer demonstrated the power of simply giving an explanation. The set-up was a student attempting to cut in line for the copier:

In the first scenario, she asked “Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine?” 60% allowed her to cut-in line.

The second scenario was more specific and asked, “Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine because I’m in a rush?” The numbers shot up to 94%.

The third scenario is the most surprising: “Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine because I have to make some copies?” The numbers stayed about the same at 93% even with a redundant and ridiculous explanation.

A well written and hypnotic lead-in will create enough momentum for the reader to come to a climactic "Why?" But as the study shows, we're profoundly responsive to explanations, and not presenting an explanation is like switching off a movie before the big ending.

The power of words to evoke positive change motivates Thai to write. Previously a professional chef and international athlete, he's now somewhere in the world with a backpack, MacBook, and a story to share. You can follow his work at The Utopian LifeFacebook or Twitter.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

Hypnotic Writing | 5 Effective Strategies To Put Your Reader In A Trance.

The 5 Step Voyage of Creating Awesome Content

Posted: 07 Sep 2014 09:36 AM PDT

Image via Flickr user na.harii.

Image via Flickr user na.harii.

This is a guest contribution from James Scherer.

Do you struggle for content inspiration? Do you feel like every article you write is exactly like another you've already written or read?

You're falling victim to content stagnation, and it's something we all deal with.

Perhaps you need a refresher, a reminder, or just someone to give you a few new ideas - a nudge along the way.

This article will give a full look at how to encourage and capture readership, optimize for action and engagement, and get the most out of your content – the full gamut of content marketing best practice.

I'll refocus you on the five steps that you need to take to create interesting content that get shares, comments, engagement and loyal readers as well as content that generates leads.

Let's make sure you're doing this content creation thing right.

 

Step #1 to Creating Awesome Content: Grab their Attention

I wish I could tell you that the title of your content doesn't matter anymore, that your content's readers, visitors, viewers and listeners have grown more discerning in the past couple years and now it's all about the quality of your content: the expertise, experience and analysis you throw painstakingly into each and every article, podcast, video and presentation.

Unfortunately, I can't do that for you.

Your content's title is hugely important to its success – not just because of search optimization but for clickability, shareability and engage-ability.

Without a title that snaps, grabs the eye, intrigues, frustrates, scares or humors, your content will fall flat on its face, no matter that it's the second coming of Gangnam Style.

Content Title Formulas that Work:

  • New! Never-before-seen Insights into [your Job/Sector/Relevant Subject]
  • Exclusive Strategies from [Sector Expert/Authority/Boss]
  • 23 Things you Need to Know in Order to [Succeed in Some Way]
  • 10 Tricks to [Achieve a Goal]
  • How [Your Field/Relevant Subject] is Like…
  • How I [Did Something Unbelievable/Surprising/Awesome/Terrible]
  • 16 [Amazing/Awesome/Sexy] Things you Need to Hear About
  • Are you Making this Huge Error that's [Leading to a Bad Result]?
  • How do you do [Activity]?
  • 52 Ways to [Improve in Your Job/Your Sector/Relevant Subject]

Step #2 to Creating Awesome Content: Optimize for More than SEO

It's taken me a bit too long to accept this fact, but fact it is nonetheless: SEO is antiquated and incomplete, a universal term of use we should steer away from.

Let me back that up, because I hear some of our SEO readers sharpening their pitchforks and lighting their torches.

Optimizing your content for search is still hugely important, but we should stop using it as an umbrella phrase when what we actually mean is optimizing for readership, engagement and conversion.

Optimizing your Content for Readership:

This is the general SEO stuff: the strategies we implement to get our content to the top of the front page of Google.

  • Use H1s (title) and H2s (sub-headers) and where applicable. Ensure these include keywords.
  • Put alt text on your content's images and videos relevant to the content's subject.
  • Avoid keyword stuffing (keep it to about 1 in 25, depending on sector).
  • Place meta tags within your content.
  • Consider long-tail search keywords and niche topics (rather than competing with the corporations).
  • Link intelligently by including keywords in your links. Never use "Click <here> for more information". Instead use, "Learn more about SEO in my article <How to Easily Optimize your Blog for Search>" (see how I did that?).

Optimizing your Content for Engagement:

Content engagement, also known as social shares and comments, is not only important because of the Hummingbird Algorithm (Google's update to SEO a year ago that placed more importance on social endorsements) but because the more your content is shared, the more readers you have. Duh!

  • Have a title optimized for SEO and another title optimized for social platforms (shorter, more Buzzfeed-like). Include one in your URL and a different one in your social toolbars.
  • Ensure your content's header is social-friendly so it shows up whole on Facebook, Google+ and LinkedIn.
  • Include "Tweetable" statistics or takeaways (with a link) throughout your content to encourage a specific social share.
  • Ask for questions, comments or examples from your readers at the end of articles.
  • Be an active commenter on other people's sites (as well as your own).

Optimizing your Content for Conversion:

We're blogging for business here, not musing about the trials and tribulations of maternity (unless you are… In which case you still need to be optimizing your content for conversion!)

Think about it, is there any real point in your article being at the top of Google's search results or having a million readers a week if nobody's acting on your CTA buttons, downloading your ebooks, registering for a free trial or subscribing to your email list?

No. No there's not.

Here are a few ways you can optimize your content for a real-world conversion (something that helps your business in a concrete, measurable way):

  • Include links to your email-gated content on the sidebar and bottom of your blog articles, podcasts, webinars and Slideshares.
  • Implement click pop-ups and email subscription toolbars so readers or viewers don't have to be sent to a separate landing page and tab to convert.
  • Don't link to competitors.
  • Link to related articles and resources on your site (increasing the value of engagement) and external content where you're business is mentioned (increasing the level of trust and authority).
  • Test CTA button copy to determine what "Ask" resonates most with your readers.
  • Implement exit pop-ups promoting email-gated content relevant to your content's subject matter. For instance, implement an exit pop-up with "want to learn everything there is to know about landing pages?" and show it to unique visitors (once!) as they go to leave the page.

Screen Shot 2014-09-05 at 10.40.43 am

Step #3 to Creating Awesome Content: Format Your Article Intelligently

The longer you can keep a reader looking at your page, the less likely they are to leave it, the more likely they are to share it, and the more likely they are to convert on one of your "Asks" spread across your optimized blog.

Your title, hook and introduction get them to stay for the first 10 seconds (the most crucial section of your article as, if they stay for more than 10 seconds, the chance of them leaving drops like a rock):

Screen Shot 2014-09-05 at 10.41.26 am

Beyond those first ten seconds, your articles (or podcasts or webinars) needs to be structured to encourage readers to stick with it and stay engaged.

Here are a few best practices that will help you do that:

  • Segment your articles with bold, clearly visible subheaders that grab the eye of your reader.
  • Include an image once every segment (if possible) to keep the reader visually stimulated.
  • Use bullet-points or numbered lists in your sections to communicate your message or advice clearly and quickly. This also increases the chance that someone skim reading will pause for a moment.
  • In both podcasts and webinars, give a short breakdown of the points you're going to cover at the beginning
  • Where possible, include exclusive tips and tricks (in all types of content) that you tease your audience with at the beginning and only include at the end. In webinars and podcasts, test hiding your big secret without telling people when exactly it’s going to be.

 

Step #4 to Creating Awesome Content: Incorporate Awesome Images

Articles with images are shared twice as much as those without.

But I'd like to emphasize that it's not just any image that encourages a share or keeps a reader scrolling. You have to be using awesome images.

Put time into original image content (even if you're just drawing over and citing someone else's pie chart). Put time into getting to know PhotoShop, GIMP, even Google Drawings or Presentations.

For instance, I made this with the Google Presentation tool in about 6 minutes:

Screen Shot 2014-09-05 at 10.43.35 am

I know. It's awesome.

Images not only encourage social sharing, communicate data and statistics quickly and grab the eye of the reader, they also humanize your business and make your articles more visually appealing and scrollable.

When used badly, however, they can cause your readers to go elsewhere, your articles to flop socially, and your authority to decrease significantly.

Stock images, for instance, are increasingly recognizable for what they are. As a result, they're increasingly becoming one of the chief causes of a page bounce:

I mean, c'mon:

Screen Shot 2014-09-05 at 10.44.26 am
Put that little bit more time into your content. Find the Google Images "Labeled for Reuse" or subscribe to one of the million photo sites and use the least "stocky" images you can find.

And don't force an image. They should always serve a purpose (as "teamwork" rarely, if ever, would above). Instead, communicate the stuff that adds to the value of your article (statistics, case studies, industry report findings, etc) in a visually appealing way.

 

Step #5 to Creating Awesome Content: Be Unique

Content audiences (the people that listen, read and watch your content) are fickle creatures. They're skim-readers, hyped up on coffee with not enough time on their hands and an urgent desire to, essentially, channel-surf content.

Channel surfing is actually a pretty solid analogy now that I think about it.

Your content audience is like a TV watcher before we had Netflix: sitting slouched on their couch hitting the "up" button on their remote control, searching for something they haven't seen before. More often than not they're disappointed (as your "10 Marketing Best Practices You Haven't Seen Before" article is a blatant lie).

But sometimes they land on your article, give it the standard three seconds, and decide they'll put the remote control down on the couch, cross their arms, and watch.

But how do you ensure your content engages your reader more than the other 100,000 shows on TV right now?

Tell a Story:

People like content relevant to them. Even more than that they like content relevant to them written by an author recognizable to them with a story they can relate to. The more like your reader you can be, the better your content will be.

That's not to say you don't have to tie your story into genuine, professional analysis of changes or best practices in your sector – but make it interesting and make it recognizable.

Be Honest:

Transparency in marketing is becoming best practice (just look at Buffer if you want to know what I'm talking about). It's about being an open, honest, modern company – a company that plays foil to the murky, underground goings-on of multinational corporate giants or the federal government.

Consider articles entitled something like:

  • "5 Lead Generations That are Working for Us Right Now"
  • "The 10 A/B Testing Mistakes I Tried that Failed Miserably, and Why"
  • "10 TImes I was the Mayor of Fashion Faux Pas City"
  • "5 Divorce Mistakes I Wish I'd Known About"
  • "A Step-By-Step Guide to Our Sales Funnel"

Be Yourself:

What is it about you as a content creator that sets you above your competitors. Is it your ability to pump out content, your silky-smooth podcast voice, or your never-ending anecdotes that entertain and educate?

Increasingly your content audience is looking for something to differentiate you (and your content) from that of your competitors. It's like when applying for university or a job: readers are receiving thousands of applications every day and they're struggling to separate the wheat from the chaff.

Here's what I recommend: make your application bright pink, printed on poster paper, covered in golden glitter, or make it a pop-up book. Do something that sets you apart.

A few recommendations to set your content apart:

  • Become a visuals guru, incorporating awesome graphics into every one of your articles, videos, webinars and ebooks. It might take you longer, but it's worth testing the ROI.
  • Create a content persona, mascot or alter ego – something to make your content entertaining.
  • Find the niche in your niche, and own it. Be the go-to expert on a specific part of your sector.

Or, honestly, just get creative every once in a while (I'm not talking about every single article) but test adding personality to your content periodically to see what kind of return you get.

Conclusion

Hopefully that's given you a refresher course (or even an educational one) on how to optimize your content for readership, engagement and loyalty.

Content marketing is officially (there's no arguing anymore) the best way to increase your business' online profile, generate leads and ensure brand authority. It can be a challenge though, don't get me wrong.

My main recommendation for creating content that snaps, crackles and pops is to put time into how you start your article. Focus on finding the right topic, the right title, the right structure and the right way to make it different. Then start writing.

 

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

The 5 Step Voyage of Creating Awesome Content