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Going Bankrupt in the Relationship Economy

October 15, 2009 by Guest Author

A Guest Post by Linda M. Lopeke

relationships button

Running a successful business comes down to how well you manage your numbers. Social media enthusiasts often rave about the new medium as an expressway for growing higher revenue. But building successful networks and communities is not about numbers, it’s about creating and sustaining high-trust relationships. Building relationships takes time and energy in both real life, business, and social media. Your statistics, as in “number of friends”, “number of social engagements attended”, and “number of followers” are not an indicator of your success in the relationship economy.

Businesses and marketers will spend over $350 billion on slick campaigns designed to attract you into entering into a relationship with them in the coming year. They want you to spend your conversational currency interacting with and responding to their ever growing number of advertising messages.

Some will produce meaningful and worthy content to seduce you into engagement. A few will respect and perhaps even admire you for the unique person/prospect/customer you are. Many will only add to the noise and clutter that bloat Twitter and every other social networking site in the universe; to them you’ll just be one of a number. Even fewer will get it right (after all Liz Strauss, Chris Brogan and others like them can only help so many people understand how to use social media properly at a time).

If you talk to everyone, how long will it be before your time and energy are exhausted, leaving you emotionally bankrupt, with nothing left to share with those with whom you once had a meaningful relationship?

____

The SMARTSTART Coach, Linda M. Lopeke, writes at SmartStartCoach.com Her twitter name is @smartstartcoach

____

Thank you, Linda!
–ME “Liz” Strauss

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Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, social business

Ever Been on a Blog That Was Laid Out Like Las Vegas

October 14, 2009 by Liz

A Navigational Crap Shoot

blogworld1

I’m leaving today for BlogWorldExpo in Las Vegas. The convention is a treat of Blog and New Media conversations, exhibits, and information. I look forward to catching up with old friends, getting some work done, and making some new things happen.

What dread is what it takes to navigate that city.

In Las Vegas, the shortest distance between two points is never a straight line. They’ve purposefully made it that way. I’m frustrated, beat up, and lose time whenever I try to find anyone or anything that isn’t the nearest casino. A round trip from the front desk to a hotel room easily can steal about 20 minutes.

Las Vegas is like a blog filled with shiny things that distract and divert people. Ever been on a blog or website like that?

Las Vegas doesn’t want me to be in my hotel room.
Some blogs don’t want me to read them.

  • When I arrive and have to close an ad before I can see anything, that blog doesn’t really want me to read it.
  • When I click to a new page and I’m asked to subscribe or buy, that blog doesn’t really want me to read it.
  • When the header or sidebar is filled with flash to pull my eyes away from the text, that blog doesn’t want me to read it.
  • When the colors vibrate with a hot red on a bright blue background, that blog doesn’t want me to read it.
  • When the fonts scream at me like a carnival barker, that blog doesn’t want me to read it.
  • When I can’t find the search box to get where I want to go, I really know then that …
545561_las_vegas

When we have all of the time in the world to get where we’re going diversions can be interesting and wonderful. But it’s not often that the luxury of time is with us. Make it easy for folks to find what they came for and they’re like to come back again to find the next thing.

Unless you want them to be lost in your casino.

Ever been on a blog like Las Vegas?

Hope to see you at BlogWorldExpo!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

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Filed Under: Blog Basics, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog navigation, LinkedIn

How Do You Transition or Repurpose Content for the Web?

October 13, 2009 by Liz

Don’t Endow Me

Power Writing Series Logo

Anyone who has had to give a demonstration, deliver a report, or teach a class knows the importance of tuning the information to the audience. Anyone who been to a class that involves learning software knows that students is likely to include folks new to the subject and the most savvy experts who want to refine their skills.

Sharing information with people is easier, more efficient, and more meaningful …

  • when we’re speaking one-to-one and can tailor the information to that individual.
  • when the people receiving the information offer feedback about the information they’re receiving.
  • when we know the experience of the people who are receiving the information.
  • when all of the people who are receiving the information are from the same culture, speak the same first language, are at the same functional level, have the same skills, and relate to the topic the same way we do.

It’s hard to do these when we’re working with a group that is all in the same room. This problem becomes even more difficult on the web. Here, we’re tasked to share information meaningfully when we’re in a new genre and blind to the audience. We’re writing for an unknown number of people who could be from anywhere and know absolutely nothing on our subject or have significantly more experience than we do.

How Do We Write Meaningful Content for People We Can’t See?

Writing for the web gets easier when we realize the words carry a different load than words in print. Words online are lit and hit the eye differently. People access them with a different intent. It’s a different experience to read a device than to read a book. It’s different experience to read and respond to a blog than to read a newspaper and write an email back.

I’ve been repurposing content and publishing online and offline since the 20th century. Here are some tips about transitioning and writing content for the web.

  • Titles Are Invitations. The title of this post tells you exactly what you get by reading it. Had I more metaphorically called this Snapshots of Web Writing, you might have thought this would feature pictures and writing samples. Use a title to attract people who want exactly the content that will be under it.
  • Brevity is Beautiful. Fifty-one word sentences and half-page paragraphs don’t work with the backlighted, fast-paced format of the web. Attention in harder to keep in this visual venue. Long sentences lose their meaning before we get to the end of them. Long paragraphs have the same effect. Easy to read can still be intelligent … To be or not to be. is possibly the most easily read graduate level sentence ever written. Short words are powerful tool.
  • Subheads Are Relevancy Signposts that Show Respect. When we break up content with subheads, we give people a chance to know what’s coming next. Readers have so little time. When we offer a simple subject that telegraphs the idea in the next section, we allow them an option to choose whether to skip ahead. Who wouldn’t appreciate that to having to crawl through unwanted information searching for what we really need?
  • Everyone likes to learn. No one likes to be taught. Often we take our responsibility to share information so seriously that we undercut our own effectiveness. We stand at the podium hoping it will give us expertise so that our words will be heard. If we step away from being the “sage on the stage,” and instead take on the role of the “guide at the side,” we can share what we’ve learned rather than tell what we know.
  • Write for one person who wants to know what you know. It’s easy to get overwhelmed by writing to a diverse group. Think individuals and include yourself. It’s WE — the audience and me — not me and them. We write more effectively when we consider what we’d want to learn. Write for someone intelligent and savvy as yourself, who wants to know or be reminded of what you know.

Great titles, short paragraphs, small words, subheads for navigation, a learner’s voice, and content leveled and chosen by you as a partner with the audience <-- that's a formula for transitioning content to the web. Have you repurposed content for the web? What have you found works best? --ME "Liz" Strauss Liz can help with a problem you're having with your writing, check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

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Filed Under: Blog Comments, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, repurposing-content, Writing

How Do You Capture Your Irresistible Ideas?

October 12, 2009 by Liz

Be Irresistible Instead

Every great movie star did a movie or two for the cash until he or she could do the movies he or she really wanted to do. That’s one thing. It’s fine to do if we know that’s what we’re doing. It’s a skill-building, bill-paying short-term strategy that works to keep us solvent.

But, if we’re not careful, we can get so busy doing, that we lose sight of the end game — the strategic goal out there on the horizon. While we’re busy making money to pay the rent, we can have outstanding ideas and let them get away while we work at things that don’t inspire us.

Work without inspiration steals energy. It keeps us in the same place or moving in the wrong direction.

What powers and fuels a career or a business is irresistible, value-added, real WOW ideas — what folks need, wish, and dream for — can’t live without ideas. Even if you’re working on something that’s boring, are looking for your own irresistible ideas that will head you to your own horizon? Here’s how to know one …

  1. An irresistible idea addresses the practical and the emotional simultaneously. Think of a great car that makes you feel something when you drive it. Irresistible ideas appeal to the child and the adult in us.
  2. I bought my Toyota MR-2 Spyder for many reasons. It had great performance specs — practical. It has its flaws — 1.9 cubic feet of storage space. The WOW is the faux titanium door handles — emotional. No other car has them, not any Porsche, Ferrari, BMW two-seater. I know. I look inside them all. They all look boring to me. Those door handles make my car look like it cost 3 times what it cost. It will also allow me to resell it much higher. And the dealer was willing to sell and service it at a great price — it fit into my life.

    An irresistible idea fits easily into our lives. We don’t have to work to buy that product, to learn a lot use it, or to explain it when we share it with our friends. Irresitible save us time, saves us money, or gives us a sense of ease and comfort.

  3. Irresistible ideas are in the details, not in giant bells and whistles.
  4. Every car has an engine and four wheels. Trying to improve on those gets you into trying to be original. Original is risky and expensive. Why not piggyback on what has been tested and perfected. Irresistible ideas come in the back and the side doors. They approach things from the inside out. They make things work better, feel softer, stop being a pain. Irresistible takes one part and makes it elegantly simpler.

    Irresistible ideas are joyfully unexpected. I still love the person who invented the wireless mouse.

  5. Irresistible ideas are authentic. Spectacular ideas can’t be knocked off with the same effect, because they came from customer-centered thinking. Gotta be Apple to make the iPod. Gotta be Iain Dodsworth to make TweetDeck. I can’t build your event or product your way, because you are the special sauce that makes it just right.

The most irresistible ideas come from where your passion and your intelligence cross with the places you spend the most time. We have more ideas than we might actually realize and when we’re busy working on something tiring it’s easy to forget them.

How do you capture your irresistible ideas?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
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Filed Under: Idea Bank, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, ideas, LinkedIn, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, social-media

Hate Self-Promotion? … Could Trust Be the Issue?

October 8, 2009 by Liz

Deliverables Depend on Trust

Ask a venture capitalist what moves him or her to invest, what you’ll hear is a definition of the word trust. How could it be otherwise? A VC is betting on an investment to pay off. It’s a trust situation. A sure thing doesn’t exist in business.

Trust is part of most every purchase decision we make. We trust that we get what we paid for in working order. We trust that the people who offered it will stand behind their offer.

Trust is also part of the offering. Marketing and promoting what we do also requires trust — trust in ourselves, trust in our products and services, and a bond of trust with the person we’re telling about them.

  • If we trust ourselves, we’re confident that we’ll deliver on the promises we make.
  • If we trust our products and services, we know they’ll meet and surpass the expectations of the person who invests in them.
  • If we have a bond of trust with people about what we do, we’re not worried about our credibility. We talk to them as we talk to our friends, fully expressed and enthusiastic to share something we believe will help. They hear us as we want to be heard.

Do you hate self-promotion and marketing? Could it be that you’re trying to sell before you know the potential buyer trusts you?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
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Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, sales, self-promotion, trust

World Business Forum: A View from the 3rd Mezzanine

October 7, 2009 by Liz

Up here the front row of the third mezzanine of Radio City Music Hall, world leaders speaking on the stage look like miniatures. On the video screen behind them, they appear larger than life.

I can’t help but notice the lovely irony that to us invited to blog about this event, the video version is easier to see and identify with.

rWe stepped out of the online culture to listen in here and report back. We’re tweeting, writing, and making opinions … listening to statements from a world of experience.

Most profoundly I see some connections that only we online might see. From Bill George challenged us Who’s going to step up today and make a difference?
Bill Conaty spoke of CEOs who need to support truth and candor. Patrick Lencioni said, We spend a lot of time making an organization smart, but not a lot of time making them health.

and Kevin Roberts brought it home with these statements …

reason leads to conclusions
emotion leads to action
inform … inspire …
do one thing

The chance to listen to outstanding people speaking about what they know has been huge and hugely thrilling. I’m sure many will detail the report of what was said.

What I notice is how, when we meet at the core of the matter we’re not so different online or off.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your web presence.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, social business

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