10 Ways to Create An Ad Agency Blog That is Reader-Centric

October 6, 2010

A key to your agency’s blog success for new business is to put the user’s experience ahead of your own.

People don’t have time to work hard for their information. You must be prepared to do some work on their behalf if you want to grow your blog’s traffic and generate inbound leads.

Success on the Internet depends on multiplying the number of people who will visit a home page times the proportion who actually enlist your services –the percentage who become clients.

Writing for Web: it is the survival of the easiest. Giving attention to usability can greatly increase the amount of your blog’s visitors who turn into new clients.

Here are 10 ways to create an agency blog that is reader-centric and puts the user’s experience first and foremost:

  1. Write to be easily found. Create an SEO strategy so that your blog’s content is found by your intended target audience. Consistency using certain key words in your post titles that aid in the search-ability of your posts. This same tactic also helps with Twitter and identifies content specific to  your audience’s needs.
  2. Make your blog site easy to navigate. Blogs are not often read chronologically. That makes navigation from a Category section located in your blog’s sidebar a very important feature. Creating blog categories will also provide a guide for your writing keeping you focused.
  3. Provide the reader’s digest version for the information that you share. I would suggest limiting your posts to 350 to 450 words on average. Usually half the word count than you would use for print. It actually takes a bit more work to make post copy concise but your readers will love you for it.
  4. Create numbered and bullet-pointed lists when possible. Readers love it when you created this type of executive summary of information.
  5. If you want more readers focus on short, scannable content. 79 percent of Web users scan rather than read word-for-word. Highlight key words, indent quotes, etc.
  6. Write for fast comprehension. Eliminate unnecessary copy. It takes more work to be brief. Try to stay within 350 to 450 words per post. Web content must be brief and get to the point quickly, because users are likely to be on a specific mission.
  7. Write content that is evergreen to provide information that has a long and valued shelf-life.
  8. Use your analytics to sharpen your blog’s appeal. Your readership will be your guide to relevant content.
  9. Don’t think that just because you’re written it that everyone has read it. Repurpose content. Someone that found a post through SEO, might find another through your email newsletter, or through Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn.
  10. Take the time and select images for your post that convey useful, memorable information, not just decoration.

Why is it so important to create a blog that is “reader-centric”?  To provide a great user experience with your online content, you must overcome these obstacles:

  • You are competing with hundreds of millions of other online sources.  Advertisers are  trying to break through the clutter by yelling more loudly and being more aggressive by deceptive means that hurts everyone’s credibility and raises users suspicions. Readers come to your site with their defenses engaged.
  • Online readers have a very short attention span. The average page visit lasts about 30 seconds. 10 minutes would be a long visit to a website. People want sites to get to the point, they have very little patience.
  • Your competition is a click away. There is a low tolerance for poor site navigation, material that is hard to locate and sites that are slow to load.
  • Users want to construct their own experience by piecing together content from multiple sources. Many users want simply to reach a site quickly, complete a task and leave.
  • Web users are getting more selfish when they go online. People arrive at a website with a goal in mind, and they are ruthless in pursuing their own interest and in rejecting whatever the site is trying to push.
  • Online behavior is very search-dominated which makes your content search dependent.

What are some of  the benefits for creating a “reader-centric” blog?:

  • It will improve the success rate for communicating key messages.
  • Increase your credibility.
  • Convert readers into loyal followers and advocates.
  • Generate more traffic which leads to higher conversion rates of readers to new clients.

Some additional articles that may be of interest:

Learn more with a full day, Social Media | Ad Agency New Business Workshop


5 Steps to Improve Your Ad Agency’s Blog for New Business

September 7, 2010

Tim Volk, President of Kelliher Samets Vok

An agency blog that is a repository of helpful content can effectively attract a large number of prospective clients.

Here are 5 simple steps and suggestions to improve your agency’s blog as a major tool for fueling new business leads:

1. Creating

Each new blog post is a new opportunity for you to be found online by your best prospects. Some quick suggestions:

  • Write to a specific target audience and provide answers to their advertising/marketing challenges.
  • Write consistently: is important to creating regular readership. Write at least 3 to 5 posts per week.
  • Post should average 350 to 450 words and be pleasantly scannable to the eye. Break up long paragraphs, use bullet/numbered list when possible. Highlight key words and thoughts.
  • Write in the inverted pyramid style, lead with your conclusion. People read differently online than they do for print. They tend to scan much more.
  • Identify and consistently use key words in your post title. You want to be able to dominate these words in Google search.
  • Let your reading fuel your writing.
  • Write 1 original post to every 4 to 5 resource posts. You’ll never be considered a thought leader without original content but you wont generate much traffic if all of your content is just your original thought. A balance of both needs to be provided through your blog.
  • Write with an “evergreen” style that will have a long shelf-life and provide a great return on your time investment.
  • Provide the “Readers Digest” version for your writers. Do the work on behalf of your readers and pull out the nuggets in simple language that is concise and easy to read.

2. Optimizing

  • Carefully think through your blog’s heading. A “heading” is a stand-alone phrase that describes your blogs content that appear below it. I usually advise clients to create a blog descriptor statement for the header that lets a reader and search engines know the purpose and intent of the content. Mine is “Fueling ad agency new business through social media.”
  • Be sure you own your domain. A person that still has “wordpress or blogspot” in their domain wont be able to change blogging platforms without losing traffic.
  • Be sure your site is indexed with Google. If your pages are not indexed, then Google is not crawling them.
  • Build quality inbound links.There are lots of online business directories where you can just submit your URL, agency’s name and a description of your services. There are also many social media sites where you can simply build links to your site. Writing guest articles and posts and optimized our press releases can build links. The best way however, is to produce valued content and create a blog that is a repository of helpful information for your target audience.

3.  Promoting

  • Make sure your content can be easily shared on Facebook, Twitter, Linked, as well as social bookmarking sites such as Digg, dell.icio.us and StumbleUpon with Share buttons.
  • Jumpstart traffic by repurposing your blog’s content through an email newsletter that is sent every-other-week. This is an easy way thing to do. Since you already have the content and can create an email template that is reused, it will take literally minutes to prepare the newsletter and send.
  • Build a sizable Twitter following that is targeted using TweetAdder and repurpose your blog content to your Twitter account using a program such as Social Oomph.
  • Write guest post, invite others to guest post for your blog.
  • Comment on other blog post and online articles, sites such as Ad Age, ADWEEK, etc. Select that sites that are frequented by your target audience.
  • Write content for search-ability.
  • Publish new blog content to your other social media accounts such as Facebook and LinkedIn.
  • Conduct your own primary research using your blog generate links and traffic through press releases using PRWeb or PRNewswire.
  • Be proactive in facilitating speaking opportunities by creating a Speakers Page for your blog, list the topics and titles that you can speak to. You can also provide links to your past speaking engagements through YouTube, post photos through your Flickr Photostream.
  • Pull blog content together, expand SEO opportunities, creating Slideshare Presentations, Whitepapers, etc.

4. Converting

All of this activity isn’t worth the time investment if it doesn’t turn visitors into leads.

  • Place your RSS Subscription Feed button above the fold, near the top of you blog’s homepage. Visitors who subscribe will automatically receive updates every time you publish a new post either through an RSS Reader or through their email Inbox. I would suggest setting up an RSS feed through Feedburner.
  • Also place a subscription for your email newsletter within your blog’s sidebar to create Opt-Ins from site visitors.

5. Measuring

If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it. Fortunately you can measure a lot online and continually hone your program.

  • Review your blog site’s analytics daily to see what posts are generating the most traffic, what search terms are being used, where traffic is coming from, who is linking to you, links readers clicked on, page views, etc.
  • Utilize your email newsletter analytics to improve open and click-through rates. Test the day of the week your email newsletter is sent, time-of-day and subject line copy.
  • Create a first-step call-to-action for your readers to know how to initially engage you. This could be something similar to my New Business | Social Media Workshop. Make it something simple and of value that doesn’t take a lot of consideration but does separate to qualified prospects from those that just want to glean what they can from you for free.
  • Use tools this suite of tools to analyze your marketing efforts:

Some additional agency blogging resources:

Share


7 Tips for Using Twitter for Ad Agency New Business

September 1, 2010

Used in the right way, Twitter can be one of the best social media tools to be used to generate traffic and leads for your agency’s new business.

For the past 3 years Twitter has been the leading traffic generator to my Fuel Lines blog. It definitely needs to be part of your agency’s overall social media marketing strategy.

The following are seven of my personal tips to help make Twitter more effective for your agency’s new business:

  1. Don’t be afraid to use Twitter differently from the way it was originally intended to be used. Twitter is more of a broadcast tool that most would admit and current research validates. Treat it as a broadcast tool through reach and frequency of your content marketing efforts and generating the best return on your time investment by repurposing your content through tools such as Social Oomph.
  2. Build a targeted Twitter following. Research Twitter lists such as Mashable’s Twitter List Directory, third-party programs such as TweetAdder.
  3. In addition your own blog’s content, be sure to supplement your Twitter posts with resources from others that are of help to your target audience.
  4. Pay-it-forward. As others are so kind to publicize your content, also help to promote theirs.
  5. In addition to Twitter being a broadcasting tool, it must be utilized as a networking tool for you to have success. Content helps build awareness but it is up to you to turn awareness into relationships. The efficiency of these kinds of online networks should be all that is need to motivate you to participate. People want to work with other people that they know, like and trust.
  6. Use third-party Twitter tools like  CoTweet and HootSuite to minimize your time and maximize the effectiveness of your Twittering.
  7. What you learn to do for your agency can be used for your clients. There are a multiplicity of benefits from your involvement.

To provide you with further help in using Twitter for new business here are 20 of the most popular post:

 

Follow this list of agencies and see first hand how they are using Twitter: Twitter List: 500+ Advertising Agencies on Twitter

Share


6 Simple Steps for Using Content Marketing to Attract Ad Agency New Business

August 4, 2010

Relevant and valuable content will attract a clearly defined and understood target audience.

Content marketing is an overarching term that involves the creation and sharing of content for the purpose of engaging your prospective clients. Educating your potential clients results in building your agency’s brand awareness and recognition as a thought leader and industry expert. The primary objective is lead generation for new business opportunities.

Here are 6 steps for using content marketing to attract prospective clients:

  • First, define your target audience
  • Second, determine what are their marketing and advertising challenges, “what keeps them up at night”
  • Third, create a blog as your central communication platform that becomes a repository of information, “a one stop shop” that provides consistent solutions, rich helpful content
  • Fourth, continually measure how well you’re doing and adjust as you go
  • Fifth, “Jump start” your blog’s traffic, accelerate its growth by repurposing content through other social media channels such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn using third party tools to that help to make the process easy to manage and time efficient.
  • Sixth, now, what you’ve done for yourself, do for your clients

    Additional articles that may be of interest:

    Share


    Reading Can Fuel Your Writing for Ad Agency New Business

    August 2, 2010

    “Okay, I believe that content marketing can create significant traffic to my agency’s blog and generate inbound new business leads. But my main concern is that I wont have enough to write about that would be of interest to my audience. What should I do?”

    I’ve been writing about ad agency new business for four years. My wife will occassoinaly ask how can I possibly have anything more to write about regarding “ad agency new business”. But I still have plenty of ideas. At last count, I had over 200 post drafts that await my completion.

    What fuels my writing? A solid reading program that keeps me ahead of the curve and provides the resources for writing.

    My reading had to be strategic and more efficient. It also had to be focused, geared to the interest of my target audience which is small to midsize advertising agencies and specifically, ad agency new business. I learned early on to constantly manually searching online was a huge time waster.

    The primary tool that simplified, strategized and focused my online reading more efficiently has been the use of an RSS Reader, specifically  Google Reader. This Reader is set as my Homepage,  on my Firefox browser to help me ritualistically start each day using it. I found that if I opened even on email, most of the day my reading was put on the back-burner.

    Also, I’m ADD enough, that when I just Google information, I’m easily distracted and chase lots of rabbits. An hour or two goes by and I can’t even recall what I initially was searching for. Google Reader resolves this issue for me.

    Using Google Reader can be awkward and first, but you will soon see its value and time-management benefits. I have hundreds of focused, daily RSS feeds coming to me instead of me searching for them. They are all one central location, organized in specific topical folders.

    A couple of tools will enhance your Google Reader experience and make your reading seamless:

    • Bit.ly is a little tool is becoming a big deal. It is now the default shortener for Twitter and has rapidly become the most popular URL shortener available.Google Reader included it in their new “send-to” feature, which lets you share any post on Twitter, automatically shortening long URLs with bit.ly. Just sign up for bit.ly  and drag and drop into your browser bar.
    • Press This. This tool is for WordPress.com users. You can collect and share bits of the web easier and faster than ever with Press This, the new WordPress bookmarklet. Grab an article title, URL and info quickly and add it as a draft post. When you are in your writing mode, all you need do is go to your blog post drafts and you’ll have plenty of writing resources to kick start a new post.

    In addition to an RSS Reader, eNewsletters also provide a great resource. Some of these are daily briefs and others are received either weekly or monthly. Here are a few of my choice newsletters:

    A couple of other online sources that are directed to my Inbox allows me to stay organized and focused.

    • Google Alerts (Some handy uses of Google Alerts include monitoring news stories, keeping current on a competitor or industry)
    • TweetBeeps (Keep track of conversations that mention you, your URL, your clients, anything, with hourly updates)

    Additional articles that may be of interest:

    Share


    Recycling Older Posts and Articles for Ad Agency New Business

    July 27, 2010

    Keeping older content alive can provide additional fuel your agency’s inbound lead generation program through social media. It also greatly enhances the return on your writing time investment.

    Some of the most helpful tips on blog writing I have found online from resources as old as 1996. In a day when blog content that was published only a few months, it is often discounted as being old. If it is content that has been generated over six months it is considered ancient. But some of the most helpful resources that I have found for writing for Web is as old as 1996.

    I often cite older sources without disclosing the date, if I’m confident the resource is of worth to my readers.  Readers would often discount these resources if I included the date when I cite the source.

    Just one example is information that I gleaned from Jacob Nielsen when writing this post, “How do users read on the web? They don’t … they scan”His online writings have completely changed my view of “older content”.  The New York Times calls Nielsen,”the guru of Web page usability”.

    The date of the material shouldn’t matter. What should matter is relevancy. Is the content still of value to your audience?

    Here’s an example of some of Nielsen’s rich nuggets of information for writing for the Web:

    In research on how people read websites we found that 79 percent of our test users always scanned any new page they came across; only 16 percent read word-by-word. (Update: a newer study found that users read email newsletters even more abruptly than they read websites.

    As a result, Web pages have to employ scannable text, using

    • highlighted keywords (hypertext links serve as one form of highlighting; typeface variations and color are others)
    • meaningful sub-headings (not “clever” ones)
    • bulleted lists
    • one idea per paragraph (users will skip over any additional ideas if they are not caught by the first few words in the paragraph)
    • the inverted pyramid style, starting with the conclusion
    • half the word count (or less) than conventional writing

    Web users generally prefer writing that is concise, easy to scan, and objective (rather than promotional) in style.

    Jacob Nielsen’s insights were ahead of the times. It would be a shame to discount them just because some of his great content were published online over fourteen years ago.

    I continue to recycle and repurpose blog posts to over 40,000 + Twitter followers and too subscribers to the Fuel Lines eNewsletter. I have also pulled older content together for eBooklets, white-papers, SlideShare presentations. You can even recycle your blogs content into a book. Recycled posts continue to generate lots of blog traffic and fresh comments from readers who have just discovered them for the first time. By reviewing my analytics I can tell what posts to keep in this recycling rotation and what I need to pull out. Ultimately my readers decide what is appealing and what isn’t.

    If you’ve written it, don’t assume that the majority of your readers have read it. Don’t be afraid to repurpose/recycle content.

    Also, as you write your posts, learn to write “ever-green” to give the content a long shelf life. By doing this, a post that took me an hour to write, will provide a 100% return on my time investment.

    I recently wrote a post, 50 of the Best Insights from Ad Age’s First Ever Small Agency Conference, the first ever small agency conference sponsored by Ad Age. Even though this was a one-day conference, I purposefully wrote the post in a way that would allow the content to be used for a much longer period of time.

    I would also suggest revisiting older posts that may not have generated very much traffic. With the proper edits and revisions you can breath new life into them as well.

    Here are some additional resources for creating content for an agency blog for new business:

     


    10 Tips for Creating an Ad Agency Blog for New Business

    June 28, 2010

    The following 10 tips are my suggestions for creating an ad agency new blog with the objective of generating inbound new business leads while simultaneously building social media capabilities and credibility:

    1.  I recommend that you do not incorporate your blog into your agency’s website

    Online inbound lead generation is like fishing. You should fish for a particular fish (your target audience) with a particular bait (an appealing positioning that differentiates your agency from the rest) and do your fishing away from the boat (the agency’s website) so that you don’t scare away the fish.

    Some additional reasons to allow you agency’s blog to reside apart from the website:

    • Most agency blogs look too corporate and less personal.
    • If  tied into your agency’s website and branding, is constricted and has little room to breathe and grow.
    • A blog can and should have a much narrower focus that speaks to a specific target audience. You can think more narrowly without the risk.

    Your agency’s website is more like an online brochure, the place where capabilities, credentials and client work resides. It’s okay for your agency’s Website to show its diversity of clients but a blog has to have a specific target audience.

    2. The agency’s blog should be reflective of its owners

    You have to remember that social media is about people. Be the face of the agency and don’t hide behind a veil. For instance, if your agency’s Twitter account is the agency and the avatar is the agency’s logo, how does a person know who they are speaking to? It makes it awkward if you are not leading your social media with people.

    Your agency needs a face and for most small to mid-sized agencies, that face needs to be the agency principal(s).

    The agency’s  principals are the least likely to leave the agency.  If you lose a staff member who you’ve allowed to be the face of the agency through social media, you lose a lot of equity, your audience and you must start the process all over again.

    3. Keep the design simple

    I know an agency that took 5 months just to design their blog’s header. The more people you involve in this process the more chance you will have a bottle neck that slows down the process.

    Keep the design simple and highlight the content. The content is the fuel for using social media as a lead generation program.

    I would even suggest utilizing WordPress, TypePad, Blogger blog platforms to keep the process as simple as possible. My favorite is WordPress. You can create a blog in minutes rather than days, weeks or months. It will be a constantly evolving process and its important that you keep the process moving.

    You have to stay razor focused delivering valuable content to your audience.

    A great example is Edward Boches’s blog, creativity_unbound. Edward is the chief creative office for the Mullen agency. With an arsenal of resources available to him, he has kept his blog’s design simplistic, easy to navigate and consistently provides excellent content that has positioned him as a thought leader.

    4. Make your target audience crystal clear

    I write specifically to small to mid-size agency principals. She-conomy’s audience is male advertisers who should be marketing to women, Blue Collar Branding has a focus on marketers of manufacturers who want to reach blue-collar workers.

    For your blog to be successful, keep you target audience in mind. Make your blog a repository of helpful resources they would consider of value. You don’t want traffic for numbers sake, you want targeted traffic.

    Being focused-in on a targeted audience will enhance your blog’s SEO, also drawing targeted traffic from other social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.

    5. Before you begin to write learn to listen

    Some to-dos:

    • Spend time building your online community and network. This will require a significant time investment in the beginning but once created it is much easier to maintain.
    • If you want to receive learn to give. Be a help to others and they will in turn be helpful to you.
    • You will have ambassadors, be kind and express your appreciation.
    • Look for opportunities to engage your prospects. This is networking on steroids. Social media provides you with the capability of being in dozens of places, networking with a much greater number of people than you could ever do offline. There are no geographical limitations and you can network literally from anywhere you have internet access. But you must be a participant.

    Listen to your readers. Your blog’s analytics will help you to fine tune your writing to make it more appealing. Your readers are the judge and jury of the content you post. Always look to your readers to provide you with direction for your writing, what they care about and respond to.

    6. Write Concisely

    People read online differently than they do print. They usually don’t read word-for-word, they tend to scan.

    Nielsen Norman Group ’s research found that 79 percent of their test users always scanned any new page they came across; only 16 percent read word-by-word.

    Make your posts scannable by:

    • Always lead with the conclusion. Use the inverted pyramid style of writing. The very first sentence in your post should be the “takeaway or benefits statement.” Answer the question, what will be my takeaway if I commit to read this post?
    • Being brief, give your readers the Readers Digest version, the executive summary. Do the work on their behalf
    • Divide up long copy into shorter paragraphs
    • Use bullet points or numbered lists
    • Use compelling subheads, quotations, bold, italics, etc,  so readers can scan for the information they need

    7. Jump start traffic to your blog to accelerate lead generation

    “Build it and they will come,” is not the answer to generate traffic to your agency’s blog. You must employ proactive tactics to create awareness and interest among prospective clients. The more traffic that you can generate, from among your target audience, the more inbound new business leads that will follow.

    You can create a great return on your time investment by repurposing your content. Two good ways to build initial traffic quickly is to repurpose your blog’s content through Twitter and an email newsletter.

    Don’t make assume that just because you’ve written it, everyone has read it. You are better off assuming they haven’t.

    My newsletter is emailed every other week to a data base of over 10,000 email addresses. The copy for  the newsletter comes from my blog posts. It takes literally 10 to 15 minutes to create and send. That allows it to be maintainable even when I’m at my busiest.

    A program called SocialOomph allows me to automate repurposing blog content to my Twitter accounts. I actually have a media schedule for Twitter. Another helpful program is TweetAdder, which will quickly build a targeted Twitter following.

    Here are some other tips to help generate traffic to your blog:

    • Publish posts frequently. I would encourage you to post at least 3 times and preferably 5 times per week.
    • Write evergreen for your posts to have a long shelf life and a good return for your time investment.
    • Syndicate your new posts to Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
    • Add your blog link to your email signature.
    • Add  a Share Button at the bottom of your posts to allow them to be easily promoted by others to through their personal networks.
    • Provide subscription options for your blog such as through email or an RSS Feed such a Feedburner.
    • Identify key words you want to dominate in Google search and consistently use them in your posts titles.
    • One thing to not do that will impact traffic. Don’t sell! The moment you start to sell on your blog is when you will most likely LOSE your audience.
    • Don’t forget SEO. Identify the key words you want to dominate and consistently use them in your posts titles to accelerate your rankings in search engines such as Google.

    8. Fueling blog post ideas

    Please remember this, your reading will fuel your writing. The key is to find the online sources that inspire great content. A huge time saver for your reading is to use an RSS Reader. My suggestion would be to sign up for Google Reader.  Instead of you constantly having to search for resources, Google Reader will flow it all to you and allow you to scan and organize hundreds of sources daily with little time and effort.  It is very efficient.

    Because I know who my target audience is, I have identified the categories that I’m going to write to, coming up with blog posts ideas is not difficult. From my experience, the narrower your focus the easier it is to find things to write about.

    9. Be focused and consistent

    It is as simple as planning the work and following the plan.

    1. I follow a daily ritual to keep me on track and consistent. I start every day with my strategic reading. My homepage in FireFox is my Google Reader. I open it before I check email. Because if I open the first email, my day is usually done.
    2. I start out each day knowing who is my target audience.
    3. I write consistently to the stated purpose of my blog which is, “fueling ad agency new business through social media.”
    4. I find lots of resources that isn’t specific to my target audience but I make it irrelevant. I do the work on their behalf.
    5. I do my best to follow a regular posting schedule of 4 to 5 posts per week.
    6. I usually write 1 original blog post for every 4 to 5 resource posts which is taken from other online resources. My blog becomes a repository for everything related to agency new business.

    10. To keep up you must have the right mindset

    One of the main reasons agency principals haven’t been as inclined to participate in social media is that they are already over extended with little time for anything additional in their professional or personal lives.

    When they make time to participate and understand social, is when they’ve finally relented,  it isn’t going to go away. What will make the social media pill easier to swallow is the understanding the multiplicity of benefits it provides:

    • I’ve helped to create over 60 agency blogs and have found it to be a great agency branding tool. A lot of agencies are in a perpetual state of branding their agency. A blog helps them to answer the tough questions and provides a way to be more narrowly focused without throwing the baby out with the bath water.
    • A blog is worth doing if only for this one big benefit, professional enrichment. It provides a system for you to stay ahead of the learning curve in communications technologies and in front of where your clients and prospective clients. A position of leadership. Thought leadership.
    • The interaction with your prospects provides you with rich, priceless info. If you really want to know what your prospective clients obstacles are and become a thought leader, then write a blog.
    • The old saying is true, “you don’t know what you know until you write it down.” Writing a blog will help you become a much better communicator.
    • Learn to create a strong appeal for your agency. A blog will help you to stop using agency speak and speak in a language that resonance with your target audience. It will teach you how to generate an appealing message.

    Share


    Let Hemingway improve your writing for ad agency new business

    June 9, 2010

    A great resource for content marketing, social media marketing and agency new business is Ernest Hemingway, one of my favorite authors.

    Hemingway, is among the most famous American novelists, short-story writers and essayists, who won both the Nobel and Pulitzer prizes.  No doubt he would have easily adapted to write for Web and word limiting platforms such as Twitter.

    Hemingway  pioneered a new style of writing, simple clear, direct and unadorned. His style is very helpful for content marketing and writing for social media.

    Content marketing is a means of achieving a position of  thought leader and lead generation. Creating relevant and valuable content to attract, acquire, and engage a clearly defined target audience – with the objective of generating agency new business.

    Social media didn’t create content marketing, but it’s an incredible tool for getting it easily circulated to a large audience.

    The two combined can greatly increase inbound lead generation and networking opportunities. But I’ve found that a lot of agency principal’s struggle with generating content and writing for the Web.

    People read online differently than they do in print. Most people tend to have short attention spans and are constantly scanning rather than reading word-for-word. They are more comfortable and accustom writing for print. Hemingway can help.

    Ernest Miller Hemingway was 18 years old when he walked into the newsroom of The Kansas City Star and began his writing career. He was given a copy of “The Star Copy Style’” sheet, a single, galley-sized page, which contained the 110 rules governing Star prose.

    Hemingway would always remember the style sheet and its core admonition: “Use short sentences. Use short first paragraphs. Use vigorous English. Be positive, not negative.”

    At the core of the style sheet that greatly influenced Hemingway’s writings are these four simple rules for writing well:

    1. Use short sentences. Don’t waste time and words, get straight to the point. Perhaps his finest demonstration of short sentence skill was when he was challenged to tell an entire story in only 6 words: For sale: baby shoes, never used. Just write the truest sentence that you know.
    2. Use short opening first paragraphs.
    3. Use vigorous English. “Vigorous English is muscular, forceful, it comes from passion, focus and intention” – David Garfinkel
    4. Be positive, not negative. Say what something is rather than what it isn’t. For example, instead of saying “inexpensive,” say “economical.”

    “Those were the best rules I ever learned for the business of writing,” Hemingway said in 1940. “I’ve never forgotten them. No man with any talent, who feels and writes truly about the thing he is trying to say, can fail to write well if he abides with them.”

    I’ve printed out, read and re-read often the Kansas City Star Style Sheet.  I hope that it will be a helpful resource too you.

    Here are some memorable Hemingway quotes on writing:

    • All my life I’ve looked at words as though I were seeing them for the first time.
    • I like to listen. I have learned a great deal from listening carefully. Most people never listen.
    • I never had to choose a subject – my subject rather chose me.
    • If a writer knows enough about what he is writing about, he may omit things that he knows. The dignity of movement of an iceberg is due to only one ninth of it being above water.
    • My aim is to put down on paper what I see and what I feel in the best and simplest way.
    • The shortest answer is doing the thing.
    • There is no rule on how to write. Sometimes it comes easily and perfectly; sometimes it’s like drilling rock and then blasting it out with charges.
    • There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.
    • Develop a built-in bullshit detector.

    A quote from Hemingway that every agency should adhere to for new business, “Never mistake motion for action”.

    Photos from my recent trip to Hemingway’s home in Key West.


    Copyblogger: Content Marketing for Ad Agency New Business

    May 11, 2010

    Blogging has become a smart strategy to be found by your agency’s best prospects. Everyone has a desire to work with others that they know, like and trust. A blog provides a great way to network and generate new business leads, by plain written words designed to focus on the needs of your readers.

    One of my favorite resources that has helped hone my online writing skills is Copyblogger.  This blog writing resource was founded in January of 2006 by Brian Clark.

    Copyblogger is all about helping you with content strategies and copywriting skills that get traffic, attract links, gain subscribers and sell your agency’s services.

    “Copywriting is one of the most essential elements of effective online marketing. The art and science of copywriting involves strategically writing words that promote a person, product, business, opinion, or idea, with the ultimate intention of having the reader take some form of action.” Brian Clark

    I hope you find this resource as helpful as I have. These are my favorite 10 Copyblogger articles:

    1. Content Marketing 101: How to Build Your Business With Content
    2. The 8 Habits of Highly Effective Bloggers
    3. Five Areas to Focus On for Effective SEO Copywriting
    4. 10 Secrets to More Magnetic Copy
    5. The Eminem Guide to Becoming a Writing and Marketing Machine
    6. The 7 Deadly Sins of Blogging
    7. How to Write an Article in 20 Minutes
    8. Ernest Hemingway’s Top 5 Tips For Writing Well
    9. Ten Timeless Persuasive Writing Techniques
    10. 10 Steps to Becoming a Better Writer

    p style=”text-align:left;” class=”getsocial”>Like This!

    Share


    6 Tips to Blog Successfully for Ad Agency New Business

    April 29, 2010

    If you agency has a blog but very little traffic and no new business leads, here’s some help.

    A blog should be central to your agency’s social media strategy for new business. What fuels the engine to this strategy is good content.

    You must consistently feed your inbound marketing machine with rich content or you will see a slow-down in traffic, search engine results and prospective client leads.

    Here’s my 6 tips to be more effective with your blogging:

    1. To be successful you need to write a lot. The more posts you add to your blog, the more traffic you’ll get. The more content can also fuel repurposing content through other social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. No content = no fuel =no traffic=no new business leads.
    2. Be consistent. To keep writing I visualize someone walking to the end of their driveway to pick up the morning paper, only to discover there’s nothing there. That helps me to stay motivated to write 4 to 5 posts per week. My readers know what to expect. I want to give them  a reason to consistently come back.
    3. Write concisely. People are busy. They need your content to be easy to digest. Provide them with the readers digest version. Make your content easy to scan, provide bullet points and numbered lists. People will be much more interested in what you have to say if you don’t try and fluff it up.
    4. Use your analytics. Know what your readers care about and what they respond to. It will help you to connect with you audience. They’re the judge and jury of whether your content is relevant or not. I know daily where my readers are coming from, what post titles and content generates the most traffic, what search terms they are using,
    5. Use your writing to learn. When I first started blogging I was reminded of the old saying, “you don’t know what you know until you write it down.” It’s true. Writing strategizes and invigorates my learning. It can get me ahead of the learning curve and provide me with a system to stay there.
    6. Keep focused. If your blog is broad you will not generate any significant traffic. Narrow your focus. Think narrow and deep rather than wide and shallow. Know who you are writing to, what you are writing about, know the categories you will be writing to, the key words that you want to dominate for search.

    Here is a collection of agency blogging resources: