Blogging Starts and Grows Because of Trust

 

“In business, we need our customers and potential customers to trust us….otherwise they simply won’t want to invest time and resources into us and our business,” Safarz Ali writes in the Business Influencer. How do you prove that you are trustworthy? Ali suggests the biggest three ways:

1. Show, don’t tell. Live up to your promises and use client case studies to prove it.
At Say it for You, we emphasize that case studies chronicle a customer or client who had a problem or need, taking readers through the various stages of using the product or service to solve that problem.

2. Practice honest communication, brushing no issues under the rug.
Problems with customer service are going to arise, but those very situations offer you an opportunity to shine by making things right. Empower Then use writing for business as one excellent vehicle to tell about your own mistakes and the way you offer outstanding customer service by making things right.

3. Prove you know your customers.
Your blog can’t be all things to all people, any more than your business can be all things to everybody.  The blog must be targeted towards the specific type of customers you want and who will want to do business with you.  Everything about your blog should be tailor-made for that customer  – the words you use, how technical you get and how sophisticated your approach..

The top five best communication traits of a successful leader, Rebecca Weintraub and Stan Lowes think, are these:

1. walking the talk
The typical online searcher is leery of hype and unrealistic claims, and honesty in content writing has power.

2. authenticity (understand yourself first)
To demonstrate that you’re unique, you need to explain what you care about and what it’s like to work with you.

3. embracing a communication culture
Use your blog to demonstrate your full engagement and concern for your customer’s welfare, and allow real-time feedback from your target audience.

4. storytelling
You have to have a point, conveying the reason you’re sharing the story.

5. listening
When I’m ghost-blogging for a business, I need to keep up on what others are saying on the topic, on what’s in the news, and about what problems and questions have been surfacing that relate to what my client sells and what it does for its clients.

Blogging starts and grows because of trust!

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Blogging to Offer a New Look

 

The 2023 Harris’ Farmer’s Almanac offers “A New Look at Warren G Harding”, who, for decades, had been labeled by many historians as our worst president. During his 882 days in office, Harding had indeed made some bad choices. Several of his cabinet appointees took bribes; his extra-marital affairs were well-known. Reporters called him lazy and doubted his intelligence. However, now that presidential records from the early 1900s have been digitalized and available, author Veda Boyd Jones explains, “a more balanced view of President Warren G. Harding has emerged.”

Some of Harding’s notable accomplishments as president include:

  • creating the Veterans Bureau
  • creating the Bureau of the Budget
  • reducing the national deficit
  • appointing four Supreme Court justices, including William Howard Taft
  • putting in an 84-hour work week, including working lunches
  • being the first to visit Alaska , correctly predicting it would become a state

“No matter what size of business you have, you may be presented with a situation where you have to answer some undesired questions or clear up some misconceptions,” the Digital Echidna blog explains. ” While the Web can be your greatest enemy, it can also be your greatest ally. It affords you the opportunity to get your message out, immediately, without the need for a third-party distribution….  explain, apologize, and then lay out exactly what is being done to rectify the situation and ensure it doesn’t happen again.”

Blogs are an ideal vehicle for damage control, we teach at Say It For You. By putting your own “spin” on reports about your company or practice, we teach at Say It For You, you can exercise control over the way the public perceives any negative developments concerning your business or practice. Of course, if you don’t blog frequently, you won’t attract negative comments, but neither will you attract the attention of search engines who deliver readers to your blog site.

Just as the authors of the 2023 Harris’ Farmer’s Almanac used updated information to counteract negative perceptions of former president warren G. Harding, your blog can offer a new look at a situation within your company or practice. Blog to offer readers a new look!

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The E Test for Blogs

 

Since the 1980s, Daniel Pink lets us know in his book To Sell is Human: the Surprising Truth About Moving Others, psychologists have used the E test to measure “perspective-taking”. Asked to, with the index finger of their dominant hand, draw the letter E on their own forehead, some will draw the letter “backwards” (so that they themselves can read it), while others will draw the E correctly, with the spokes to the right, (so that others can read it). When confronted with an unusual or complex situation, will that person examine it from only his/her own point of view, or step outside and view the situation from another’s perspective? What’s being tested is the ability to “attune”, bringing one’s own outlook into harmony with other people. When it comes to sales, there’s an important additional element in attunement, the author goes on to explain. Individuals don’t exist as single units; their reactions are connected to groups, situations, and contexts.

When it comes to blog marketing, achieving “attunement’ is all about finding the right timing, along with the right context. Back in 2009, with Say It For You in only its second year, I shared an insight gained from the late advertising marketing guru Eugene Schwartz: As the same promise is made over and over by different providers, the market progresses to a new level of sophistication, and it becomes necessary to market through unique value propositions. And, as prospects achieve the highest levels of sophistication,  Schwarts went on to say, marketers must use prospect-centered tactic (AKA attunement).

Blog marketing itself, of course, is inherently prospect-centered – the only people who are going to notice your blog posts are those who are searching for the kinds of information, products, or services that relate to what you do. Having said that, it’s still crucial to keep your blog posts “attuned” to the frequency and sophistication level of your target audience, not to mention to those of the others in their “context”.

As content writers, we need to ask ourselves – would our blog posts pass the E test?

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A Grid for Planning Blog Content

 

This week’s Say It For You blog posts are based on guidance offered by Jeanette Maw McMurtry in her book Marketing for Dummies…..

As tools for planning how to best market any product or service, marketing maven Jeanne Maw McMurtry recommends using an ESP grid. Since most brands market to more than one segment, she explains, you’ll want to create and deliver content that’s specific and relevant to each type of customer. Segments might include:

  • different generations
  • different emotional needs
  • different professions or industries
  • different geographic areas
  • different levels of authority within a company

For each segment of your market, the author recommends, consider the following factors:

  1. Respect accorded to authorities – (does this audience form its own opinions, or tend to emulate authority figures?)
  2. Values – (what cultural values are most important and how driven is this audience by those values?)
  3. Messaging – (what promises must be made to this audience?)
  4. Creative – (what colors and fonts will work best for this audience? How important is mobile access to the content?)
  5. Trust – (what level of trust does this audience tend to have in content presented to them?)

In working with so many different business owners and professional practitioners over the years, we’ve come to realize that customers want to help “fill in the ESP grid for their providers.” In fact, we tell Say It For You clients, customers want and need to “feel heard”; and it’s often unnecessary to initiate formal market research procedures in order to gather valuable insights into what’s working and what is not.

Of course, the very fact that searchers found their way to your page indicates their interest in the subject of your blog, but now the content writing challenge is to create those “targeted and personalized experiences.” In fact, the process of creating ESPs is ongoing, with the blog content creation constantly adapting to new customer and reader feedback.

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Creating Hormonal Blog Content

 

Hormones affect choice, Jeanette Maw McMurtry explains in Marketing for Dummies. Neurotransmitters affect the actions we take related to finding joy and avoiding fear and pain.

  • Dopamine makes us feel infallible and euphoric.
  • Oxytocin gives us a feeling of connection and validation.
  • Cortisol makes us feel threatened and fearful.
  • Serotonin makes us feel calm and upbeat.

Marketers of products and services, McMurtry stresses, must learn to develop ESPs (emotional selling propositions), rather than the much-touted USPs. How will what you’re offering help buyers feel glamorous, confident, secure, superior, or righteous?

Research by psychologist Daniel Kannemann found that when people are faced with risking something in order to gain a reward, they will most often choose to avoid the risk. As a blog marketer ,then, consider how your product or service helps users avoid loss/ embarrassment/ risk.  Identify the fear that drives your customer, McMurty says, then diminish it, presenting a visible solution to the problem.

Know your target audience, the author urges. Think about which aspect of their personality best predicts their behavior and which form of “hormone” or psychological fulfillment your brand helps support. Should you be focusing on:

  • “scarcity” (only a limited supply of a product is available, the introductory price for a service is about to end; supplies are dwindling)
  • “purpose and mission” (socially responsible, environmentally responsible, charitable purpose)
  • “prestige” (feelings of superiority associated with the ownership of luxury goods)
  • “health and fitness” (appealing to fear of illness and a desire for longevity)

“Ask yourself key questions about the psychological fulfillment your brand helps support,” McMurtry recommends.

Creating “hormonal blog content” means perceiving – and then presenting/seeing your product’s value in the light in which your customers’ subconscious minds will!

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