Are You Putting Red Lipstick on Your Blog?

 

This week’s Say It For You blog posts feature more helpful advice based on Brant Pinvidic’s powerful little book The 3-Minute Rule….

“Brant, are you putting on red lipstick?” TV producer and sales coach Brant Pinvidic remembers his mom (herself president of a global organization). asking him whenever she sensed he had been emphasizing presentation over substance in his work.

“Your pitch is a path of information to follow,” Pinvidic cautions, and it’s vital to let that information take the lead. Too much emphasis on style and personality muddies the message. You don’t want to pull your audience out of the story and remind them they’re being sold to, he adds.

It’s true that readers’ first impressions are design-related, as some British researchers found when analyzing online health sites. Those researchers found that readers judged a website by its design, print size, look and feel, and use of color. Simple and familiar page design was the best received. Great design gets people to trust the source and to stick around, writes Peep Laja of the CXL optimization Agency. As Neil Patel points out in hubspot.com, articles with images get 94% ore total views than those without images.

So how does that relate to Brant Pinvidic’s mother’s advice about the lipstick? “When my mom sees me trying to spice up elements of a presentation to overshadow the lack of clarity, “he explains, that’s when she cautions me to get the information and the story at its highest level first, and only then add a little flair.

Keep in mind, Neil Patel writes in Hubspot.com, your blog is a reflection of your company. If there are any issues with the blog, it impacts how people view your product. It’s important that any statistic you state can be verified. Many blog posts will link right to the statistic and the source. Accuracy builds trust with readers.

Leave readers with questions, Patel adds. This doesn’t mean to have an incomplete post, but rather to include questions that make readers reflect on how they can implement the knowledge you provided. When possible, add a story to your blog post. It will make it more engaging and may also help the reader

What Mrs. Pinvidic is reminding her son – and what we teach blog content writers at Say It For You –  is that the meat comes first, then the sauce. The core content of the program – the article, the blog post – comes first, the “showmanship” second.
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