The Value of Mom in Blog Content Writing

“Never thought of it that way” is exactly the type of reader reaction you’re after as a business blog content writer. To convey the value a product or service can have for a prospective buyer, try this tactic: translate a benefit that isn’t typically thought of in dollar terms into just that – dollars and cents.

The other day I found a wonderful example of this very tactic in the “Stat Bank” section of The Journal of Financial Planning. According to common household tasks and wage data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, I learned, the value of Mom in 2013 is $59,862 a year. (That statistic certainly evoked a “never-thought-of-it-that-way” response from me as a mom, anyway.)

 “Business is the activity of creating value. That is what you get paid to do. Customers do not want your products and services – they want what those products and services will do for them. Business people must learn to become value creators,” points out Dr. Ian Brooks. “Compete on value, not price,” adds Brooks.

As a corporate blogging trainer, though, I can see where freelance blog content writers can turn that advice on its head by using the ‘Stat Bank’ tactic – assign a dollar value to something readers are not used to thinking of in dollar terms at all.

Now, if through providing blogwriting services to you, I can use that dollar-denominated value “surprise” to capture a blog visitor’s interest by showing useful – and unexpected – ways your company's expertise or product line can be of value in money saved and satisfaction gained, you've got a good chance of converting a "Never thought of it that way" reader into an  "I want to know more!" online buyer!
 

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Marinated Bloggers Produce More Content

When I heard Certified Speaking Professional Brian Walter say “I like to marinate among other speakers”, I knew exactly what he meant, and understood his reasons for advocating the practice.  

"Reading around" and "learning around", in fact, are my prescriptions for keeping blog post content fresh and engaging. When you learn snippets of O.P.W. (Other People's Wisdom), you enrich your own knowledge. But then, you curate that wisdom for others.

Think of a curator in an art museum. “The curator,” explains Wikipedia, “will make decisions regarding which objects to take, oversee their documentation, conduct research based on the collection and history that provides proper packaging and display of the art, sharing that research with the public.”  In the process, the curator enhances both her own learning and that of museum visitors.

Quoting others in your SEO marketing blog adds value in and of itself – you’re aggregating resources for the benefit of your readers. Still, that’s hardly enough; as business blogging service providers, we need to add our own “spin” to the material based on our own business wisdom and expertise. By “marinating” your own ideas in others’ material, you never run out of fresh content to satisfy both search engines and searchers. Meanwhile, the readers get a double benefit.

Should business bloggers feel guilty for “regifting” content?  Not in the least, provided we’ve properly attributed that content to its source, then adding our own thoughtful commentary. In fact, by marinating, then curating, we professional business bloggers demonstrate our own confidence.

“Content curation,” asserts fellow blogger Beth Kanter, “is not about collecting links or being an information pack rat, it is more about putting them into a context with organization, annotation, and presentation. Content curators provide a customized, vetted selection of the best and most relevant resources on a very specific topic or theme.”

Marinated bloggers produce more and better content!
 

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The Wow, How, and Now of Business Blogging

Consultant Brian Walter suggests business owners use a formula to answer the question “What do you do?”  The idea, he says is to play verbal ping pong, making statements that “make people want you to keep talking”.

Interesting. I’m a blog content writing trainer; Brian Walter sounds as if he could be, as well. The advice he gives executives and professional speakers is a good fit for business bloggers and web content writers.

In an elevator speech situation, Walter points out, it’s the other person that starts by “serving you the ball” with The Question “What do you do?”

In the case of online readers, they’ve made the first move as well, by searching for information on your topic, then clicking on your blog.

Your next move, says Walter, is to “powerfully position what you do and what your company does through a progressively-revealed, conversational answer”. That progressive reveal has to start with a WOW that creates surprise and interest the second you open your mouth. (Think defibrillator sales, an example Walter offers: “I’m in the cardiac arrest arrest business.”)

In any SEO marketing blog, it’s the keyword phrases in the title that start the job of getting the blog found. But, once the online visitor has actually landed, it takes a great opener to fan the flicker of interest into a flame. In fact, a big part of blog content writing, I’ve found, involves getting what I call the “pow opening line” right. One tactic is to use an anomaly, a statement (like the defibrillator sales line) that, at first glance, doesn’t appear to fit.

Now it’s the other person’s turn, Walter reminds us. Your listener has to give you permission to continue with the HOW. In the in-person elevator situation, that permission could come in the form of a nonverbal signal indicating puzzlement or interest or in the form of a question.

This second step might well be as far as you get, explains Walter, but make that step count by using a story format (“When xyz happens, we come in and….), presenting a startling statistic, or debunking a commonly-held misperception. “We’re making sure people who suffer sudden-cardiac-arrest get help inside of the ten minutes between life and death.” Remember, the idea is to make people want you to tell them more!

In your blog HOW, a story or statistic points to the difference your product or service or technique makes to real people.

NOW – If, and only if, the other person indicates a desire to know more, the two of you decide whether to get together for coffee, exchange business cards, or take some other next step.

What corporate blogging does best, I’ve often remarked, is deliver the kind of customers to a business website who are already interested in the product or services that website is touting. But then what? In any SEO marketing blog strategy, something needs to happen next. That something is the Call To Action.

Does each blog post you create have a WOW, a HOW, and a NOW?
 

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Expand Your Blog Content Writing With Adjacency

Part of learning how to write a blog, I’ve often explained to business owners and professional practitioners, is learning how to keep it up. No doubt about it, sustaining blog content writing over long periods of time without losing reader (or writer!) excitement is the real blogging challenge.

When I heard Certified Speaking Professional Brian Walter talk about using adjacency to enrich content writing for speeches, I knew right away that using adjacency would be great advice for blog writers as well.

“What’s the next closest thing to your specific topic?” Walter asks speakers, explaining that talking about an “adjacent” thing will allow them to expand the content of their speech and make the material more compelling for more people.

A State Farm e-newsletter that I highlighted in a Say It For You post two years ago is a perfect example of adjacency.  With articles on troubleshooting a roof, watching for animal crossings, and winterizing your home, the newsletter offered valuable and usable information on topics related to (“adjacent to”) insurance but not about insurance products themselves.

It’s interesting that the term “adjacency” relates to the topic of English language comprehension. (My B.S. degree is in secondary English education.) One of three types of cues that let readers know what the intended subject of a verb is adjacency, meaning that “the next immediately preceding noun phrase is the subject of that verb.”

In other words, adjacency helps readers understand what the author meant.

When blog content writers expand their own reach using adjacent topics, they expand readers’ understanding and engagement!
 

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Can Blog Content Writing Get You Equal Business Stature?

“Equal business stature, Tim, that’s all I want, to be treated as an equal. I believe I have earned that right and yet to a gatekeeper or prospect, I am the lowest form of humanity,” is the lament one sales professional voiced to a favorite Indianapolis sales trainer, Tim Roberts.

Most of the time, the barrier salespeople face is the “gatekeeper” (the secretary or admin assistant who guards access to the VIP).  A gatekeeper can hear the difference between someone of equal business stature and someone who doesn’t have it from a mile away, explains Roberts, so the secret is to “act as though you’re the president and get referred in”.

With a 27-year long career in sales under my belt, I knew exactly why that salesperson was so frustrated. I understood what Tim Roberts was saying, too. I also realized that for all of us Indiana blog content writers (whether it’s the owner of a business, a professional practitioner, or a Say It For You freelance content writer who’s involved), the salesperson/gatekeeper conflict is very much in play. Except, when it comes to SEO marketing blogs, there’s no admin assistant blocking access to the target buyer. In fact, the “gatekeeper” is the short attention span of online readers today!

As a professional ghost blogger, I study statistics about today’s buyer.  If  you used Search Engine Optimization strategy, providing relevant, new, frequently posted information through business blogging, online readers are going to do one of two things – "bounce" away from your blog and keep looking for what they want, or (and this is the result you're aiming for) proceed to visit your website.. You just won't get readers to sit still very long reading your content.

Blog readers are scanners, by and large, not readers, and they came online to search for information. You’ll have a mere couple of seconds during which searchers will decide whether you deserve “equal business stature”.

 

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