logo      welcometoentrepreneurcountrylogo
Log in using Facebook Forgot login?Register
News & Features Business Know-How How to spread your business message

How to spread your business message Featured

Written by Mindy Gibbons-Klein on Tuesday, 29 May 2012 20:47
Rate this item
(3 votes)

Without making this a lesson in marketing, I think we would all agree that getting the message out is essential to any business. Isn’t it great that if we put time and effort into it, and it pays off in terms of new clients and extra revenue, that we are the ones who benefit from that? You may feel that your income potential is limited, but I can assure you it is not. Even if you currently work with all clients personally and have reached the maximum number of clients you can manage on a daily or weekly basis, you can still create other products and services to bring in more income. The opportunities truly are unlimited.

Sharing your personal story and your business wisdom gives you even more opportunities to promote yourself and your business to your target market. It’s much more fun to talk about different products and services than just one and there’s more of a chance people will buy something if they have a choice of products, rather than just a yes/no choice. Some people at the top of their professions cleverly market all of their products to loyal clients, who insist on having the whole set!

Overcoming Your Fear

A business colleague said something astounding the other day. He said he would rather speak to an audience of ten people than write for an audience of a thousand. I thought that sounded a bit strange, so I challenged him on it. It turned out that he had written an article for a magazine with a good circulation, but he hadn’t had any feedback at all from it. He felt he had spent his time crafting a wonderful, informative piece that no one appreciated. He also felt that if that message had been delivered in person, he could have seen the response from people immediately, in their eyes and their body language.

It’s true what my colleague said, so how can we justify putting time into writing when we don’t get feedback? That, my friend, is the nature of writing. Sometimes you get to find out what your readers think of your material, and many times you don’t. It’s my view that we have to be OK with the fact that writing is one-way until we get a response, and we must continue to put good material into the market.

There are some excellent guidelines for one-way communication that I have seen business experts use to their advantage and apply when thinking about writing a book, a blog or an article. Here are my favourites:

1.    Keep Your Outcome in Mind at all Times

Hone your message according to what you have to say as well as what your reader needs to hear, and decide what kind of information you are imparting. For example, if you need to teach people with your writing, you may choose a different style from writing which aims to influence or persuade. Make whatever you write clear.

2. Deliver Your Message as Passionately and Authentically as if You Were Speaking

I prefer to see writing as an extension of speaking, and in fact, for people who will not get the opportunity to hear you in person or even on the phone, your writing must do the same job. It has become very trendy to write conversationally, spurred on by the advent of blogging and newsletters. That style can be used effectively in books and articles as well. It’s no secret that one of my favourite authors is marketing guru Seth Godin. I love the in-your- face, direct style he uses. It feels like he’s in my living room talking to me one on one. It seems from his book sales that others also respond to that style. And it happens to be the way I prefer to write, in case you hadn’t noticed!

3. Get Feedback

That may sound like it contradicts what I said earlier. Actually, there are some clever mechanisms to get people interacting with you, even though you are not there. You can get them to go to a web page and complete a survey – with or without an incentive. You can put an email address at the bottom of the piece, asking for comments – again, with or without an incentive. This can work equally well for books. I get a lot of clients excitedly planning to include CDs with their books, until I show them how they can still give away free CDs and capture people, contact details and feedback at the same time. NEVER include bonuses with your book when you could engage with readers and get some indication of how many people read it and liked it at the same time.

Well, that’s plenty for you to be getting on with. If you know your subject and deliver your message well, if you write powerfully and authentically, they will listen. And they may even respond. Good luck!

Mindy_Gibbons-KleinAbout the Author


Mindy Gibbins-Klein is a multi-award-winning International Speaker & Executive Coach specializing in turning experts into thought leaders and published authors.  Mindy is a serial author and her latest book, 24 Carat BOLD, has been called ‘practical and inspiring’ by leading business thinkers.

Last modified on Wednesday, 30 May 2012 09:42

comments  

 
0 # Eric Sutherland 2012-05-30 14:53
Hi Mindy,

Good and useful info

Regards

Eric
Reply | Reply with quote | Quote
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Latest Comments

Welcome to Entrepreneur Country

Community Coffee Lounge

Welcome to the Entrepreneur Country Coffee Lounge.

coffee_lounge

With a host of viral videos, games, cartoons and puzzles, its your time to relax.

Entrepreneur Country

June Issue Get your free June Issue of Entrepreneur Country Magazine in the format best for you!

Desktop

Smartphone

Tablet

Related Media

Facebook/Twitter

Poll

Should governments be able to access corporate and personal data?