OK, so you’re blogging away, producing content regularly and starting to enjoy the writing process.
Visitor numbers are rising, albeit slowly, and you’re starting to deliver useful content. But something isn’t quite right, something doesn’t add up. There’s still a stilted edge about your blogging, something mechanical and clunky. Want to know what it is?
It’s probably due to my Number One of these quick six tips to better business blogging. If it resonates, you know you’ve got some changing to do. Nothing worse than that niggling internal voice telling you to change what you’re doing. Here goes:
1. Be authentic
Lose the corporate, parental, unemotional writing style. It’s dull, boring and your readers won’t engage. Try dropping your barriers and opening up. Write with passion, authenticity. Listen to yourself.
2. Be confident
There’s nothing worse than a safe, anodyne, sterile blog. Open up, be confident in your knowledge and expertise. Now share it!
3. Be challenging
Do you accept everything you see, read or hear? No? Thought not. So challenge what you see, hear and read out there, too. And highlight your challenging nature in your blog. Ask questions to make your readers stop and think. You can challenge anything.
4. Be humble
Not sure what this means? For me, it means there will always be better, smarter, faster, richer people blogging out there. And I am grateful that they share their mistakes, so I don’t have to make the same ones. Be humble for the wise old coots who exist.
5. Be funny
Nothing worse than a corporate blog which is totally devoid of humour. Boardroom bores. The antidote? Try humour, flex your funny bone, and engage with some witty banter online. Lightness, fun, and frivolity can get powerful messages across very well.
6. Be passionate
Are you passionate about your areas of expertise? Yes? Well, why hide it? Too many business blogs are devoid of passion. With so much competition out there, one of the best ways to stand out is to demonstrate your passion. Get emotional. Fight your corner.
Extra tip: just to keep you on your toes. Final nugget – ignore the critics, cynics and emotional drains in business. They are too many to count.
Wish them well, ask the gods that be for their success and happiness, and send them on their way. Ignore it and focus on the positive elements to your blogging instead.
There will always be a critic in the background. Usually an unhappy one.
Here are three steps to making sure your content is seen by an interested audience.
Automation is good
It performs a small but significant task for your carefully crafted text. Sign up to the dlvr.it service and add the RSS feed of your blog to the system. dlvr.it will detect when you have published a new blog post and then seed it into your status updates across a range of social networks. This leaves you more time to get on with all the other jobs you need to do and draws in your interested audience wherever they choose to have a presence.
Repetition is good
Not only is it perfectly acceptable to repeat your status updates, it is encouraged. Your audience will not be on the web all the time. You may have an international audience where time zones come into play. If you publish a blog in the morning it is good practice to update your Twitter status and any others later in the day with a link to your blog post.
Laziness is good
Do not panic if you get ‘Blogger’s Block’. If you do not have any inspiration for writing content do not force yourself to write. Your audience will thank you for the quality control. Regular updates keep a blog alive but writing content for the sake of it will do you no favours.
I've been meaning for some time to blog about what it is that makes a promotional video really work in a business context. And now I've been asked to judge an exciting video competition, I've been given extra motivation to get the post written.
The following are my top seven tips for creating a powerful promotional video for business. Conveniently, they'll also be what I will be looking at when I judge the upcoming competition. In writing this post, I've focussed mainly on business to business, although my tips work equally well for business to consumer.
So what elements do you need to ensure that your promotional video is very high impact?
Get the basics right. Imagine you are looking to employ someone, and you receive their CV only to find that it's full of spelling mistakes and formatting errors. Are you likely to employ them? Probably not. The same basic rule applies when you create a business video. The thought that goes into quality control will affect what the viewer thinks of your business. Make sure that the sound quality is acceptable. Think about lighting (much as you would when taking a photo of someone). Take some time to "frame" each shot in an interesting way. If you need to, re-shoot anything you are unsure about. Make sure that your title graphics don't contain spelling mistakes. These things only take 5% more time when you are creating your video, but add 95% to the overall impact.
Tell a story. Great videos - even business videos - tell a story. So rather than "shouting" at your viewer (brochure style), pull them in. If you run a car repair shop, you might shoot the video from the perspective of someone who has damaged a car in an accident. If you run a hotel, you might tell the story of a couple's incredible wedding at your venue. If you are a business organisation, you might get a handful of members to share their stories about the impact you've had on them. If you are a consultant, you might share some of your greatest "triumphs" or top tips. In telling a story you are building empathy with someone who would like to be part of that story. There is always a great story to tell - find the most powerful one, and tell it.
Be different. Chances are you are in a competitive market with lots of other [insert your profession] trying to appeal to lots of [insert your typical prospect]. It's not going to be easy to stand out if you are pretty much the same as your competitors. So, look at what they are all saying, and say something different. This alone will increase your chances of being heard above the din. It works for Richard Branson doesn't it?
Demand action. If I had five pounds for each time I saw a promotional tool (advert, video, website) which got my attention but then failed to demand action from me, I think I'd be a millionaire. Make sure you have a very punchy, clear "call to action" in your video. Make it the last thing your viewer sees. When I watch your video, I should have no doubt what it is that you want me, the viewer, to do next. So, what is it that you want me to do?
Be creative. There seems to be an unwritten rule that if it's for business, it has to be deadly serious. Wrong. Be creative, have fun, throw some colour into what you are doing. You don't just want people to know about your business. You want them to react "hey, that was fun" or "what a hoot", or "wow - that's clever." People will react more positively to your message. We're all human, and we don't like things to be mundane. It also helps you to differentiate.
It's not show and tell. Avoid telling your story twice. Video is a great medium - it gives you both visual and audio to work with. So use them wisely, and in tandem. let one work with the other. Don't fall into the trap of saying and showing the same thing - for example "we've got lovely meeting rooms" and then showing the lovely meeting room. Rather, let the visuals work to enhance the audio - for example "we make meetings a breeze" and show lovely meeting room and a fresh cup of coffee.
It's not about you. Sadly, your prospects care very little about how brilliant your products and services are. They're not as interested in this as you are. They almost certainly don't care about the clever things you'd done in the past. And they don't want to hear that you were estabilshed in 2002 and now have 56 employees. But they are interested in how you can help them. So instead of giving them a history lesson, give them a peek into the exciting future (their future), and let them see how you can make a real difference (to them).
I'm sure if you scratch around the internet, you'll find experts who have other factors they focus on. But for what it's worth, these are my top tips for putting together a great promotional video, and I'll be looking closely at these factors when judging the competition in a few months' time.