Exciting News, At Least to This Here Writer
I just wrote the last word to the last chapter of my first draft of my next novel.
Your Content Isn’t Broken. The Way You’re Using It Is.
For a while now, something has felt off.
You’re publishing consistently. You’re showing up on LinkedIn. The blog still gets written. The newsletter still goes out. On paper, everything looks fine.
And yet the returns feel thinner. Engagement feels flatter. Meaningful conversations feel harder to come by.
Most teams respond to this moment the same way: more content, more frequency, more volume. That instinct made sense once. It doesn’t anymore.
Because the problem isn’t that brands stopped publishing. It’s that publishing itself has lost meaning.
In this episode of Bullhorns and Bullseyes, Tom Nixon and Curtis Hays geek out (in the way that only true geeks dare!) on three powerful marketing models that shape how they plan campaigns, create content, and measure success.
If you’ve ever wondered why some campaigns flop while others convert like magic, this episode is your masterclass in doing it the Bullhorns and Bullseyes way—from the top of the funnel to the flip at the end.
That is the art of effective communication.
What I learned in sixth grade holds true today. If you’re using your marketing content and messaging to TELL people why they should engage with you, nobody will relate.
But if you SHOW them—through storytelling, testimonial, metaphorical allusions, emotional connection—your story will resonate. And be remembered.
Allow me to show you how…
If I told you my life story, would you care?
What if I asked you tell me your life story?
Eugene M. Schwartz’s The Brilliance Breakthrough: How to Talk and Write So That People Will Never Forget You should be (and often is) considered to be the “bible” of effective copywriting and storytelling. One of the many tenets Schwartz embraces is the notion of making the reader (or the customer) the hero of the story you’re trying to tell.
Too often, we put the capes on our own backs. And that’s where the writing falls short.
Adrian Lurssen tells the story of when he went to see Nelson Mandela deliver an address in his home country of South Africa. He still draws upon the experience today, but in the most unusual context.
As Adrian has recounted this tale to Jay Harrington and me on an episode of The Thought Leadership Project podcast, he likens this notion of a praise singer to how we considers thought leadership content to work on behalf of the expert that shares it.
See how…
If you are in the business of selling expertise, a professional service, or consulting engagements, one of the best ways to earn the confidence of a prospective client is to consistently and convincingly demonstrate domain authority and subject matter expertise.
But the goal is almost never to move a prospect into market. Typically speaking, no amount of marketing can, as the purchases are significant, well-thought-out, thoroughly discussed, and of significant scope and dollar value.
So, if we can’t convince someone to buy from us with marketing, why should we bother? Because of the natural lifecycle of a purchase of professional services.
Anyone who knows me knows my love and admiration for #podcasting. I find it fun, effective, immersive and rewarding for so many reasons.
Imagine my joy when Jay Harrington wrote me to tell me we were going to be hosting Jonah Perlin on our Thought Leadership Project podcast to talk about podcasting!
In the most recent episode of The Thought Leadership Project podcast, Tom and Jay provide their take on AI and its impact on service professional careers and content marketing. They define and share tips on building a powerful personal brand. And they address the importance of being interested in and excited by the subject matter of the content you create in order to make content creation a sustainable effort.
In the latest episode of the Thought Leadership Project podcast, Tom Nixon and Jay Harrington describe the new paradigm of thought leadership content marketing for business-to-business professional services, known as the 95:5 Rule of marketing. It’s all about building trust with an audience when they don’t have an immediate need for your services, so that when they do they naturally think of you.
Is it better to focus on SEO-friendly long-form content, or short, more digestible content that audiences seem to have a preference for these days? If you only play the short game, and all of your content lives only in social media posts, it will be invisible to anyone searching for your expertise online or visiting your website to vet you as a service provider. If you only post short-form content, will search engines find you invisible?
The truth is you have to do both if you want to be truly effective—the short game AND the long game. The nice thing is, one overlays against the other.
I don’t think it’s wise to approach LinkedIn as prospecting “CRM” software, wherein you go trawling for leads, playing the spray-and-pray numbers game.
Instead, I think there’s a more genuine, human approach you can take to the world’s largest business-to-business social network in a way that will almost assuredly result in business-development wins, but will not have you pounding the proverbial pavement, cold calling and knocking on doors.
If you are in the business of selling expertise, a professional service, or consulting engagements, one of the best ways to earn the confidence of a prospective client is to consistently and convincingly demonstrate domain authority and subject matter expertise.
Here is my formula for structuring written content that will earn the interest of your clients, referral sources and prospects, and ultimately, establish you as the preferred candidate for anyone looking to hire a service provide in your particular domain of expertise.
Most people are familiar with the term "content marketing" as it relates to thought leadership. But what is "content business development?" Recently referenced by prior guest Adrian Lurssen of JD Supra, this is (as the name suggests) content that lives and operates further down the sales funnel.
To be specific:
Refresher course: What is a sales funnel?
How content and thought leadership now operate across the entirety of the sales funnel.
How can professionals use various formats of content for business development purposes, in addition to its marketing uses?
A handful of specific examples of content being used as business development tools for listeners to consider.
An invitation, not a solicitation. The offer, not the cold call.
How should professionals be thinking differently about their content marketing strategy in 2021?
Reading & Resources
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The post that inspired the topic: Guest Adrian Lurssen coins the term "content business development."
The sales and marketing conundrum for busy professionals who bill their time.