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5 Elements Of A Killer Blog Post

January 18, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

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wordpress blog

The web is filled with countless blog posts. While many exist, only a select few stand out from the crowd. These are the killer blog posts, the ones we simply cannot ignore. We have to read them from start to finish and then read some more.

Creating these types of blog posts will increase the amount of time people spend on your blog, and that helps with getting more leads and sales. As you write your next blog post, make sure you incorporate these 5 elements that result in killer blog posts.

 

#1: You Did Your Research

People love research. They love when you can provide a statistic demonstrating your concept in action. Buffer goes into incredible detail about their researching process, but it all comes down to reading as much as you can.

The next time you read a blog post you enjoyed, save the link and categorize it in a document. The more of these types of links you categorize, the easier it is for you to find relevant articles that support your next blog post idea.

Keeping a document with all of those links will boost your productivity and make it easier for you to write a killer blog post. You should keep a document containing your blog posts and other people’s blog posts. That way, you have a solid mix of inbound and outbound links.

Inbound links keep people on your site longer and results in a lower bounce rate. Outbound links result in a better SEO ranking since Google sees you’re promoting high profile websites.

Get into the habit of saving every article you read on the web. You can link them in a blog post later.

 

#2: You Provide Anecdotes And/Or Examples

storytelling

People love stories. Our entire culture is built around them. Anecdotes and stories make your concepts seem more real. Talking about your journey or showing someone else’s journey gives your audience someone to relate to.

Personal stories are especially powerful as they allow your audience to know more about you. The more personal stories you tell, the more likable you become. Don’t confuse this type of person story with the fellows who can only talk about themselves and their glory days.

The personal stories and anecdotes are rarely the focus of the blog post (unless you state that from the beginning, i.e. titling the blog post “My Blogging Journey” or something similar). They are usually meant to support concepts instead of becoming the center pieces.

 

#3: You Go Deep Into What You Talk About

This blog post can be half the length. Some people can squeeze all of their knowledge into a concise format. However, as you lengthen your blog posts, you can expand on more concepts and provide more value with each blog post you write.

If I only wrote one paragraph for each tactic I discussed, this blog post wouldn’t provide nearly as much value as it’s currently providing.

In addition, writing blog posts like these isn’t just about identifying tactics and concepts. The other essential is to prove the concepts. When I mention that you should do more research for your blog posts, I demonstrated the power of research by including a variety of links in that portion of the blog post.

Many of the top bloggers go deep into each blog post. In fact, these bloggers spend several hours to finish a single blog post.

Kevin Lee from Buffer even broke down where he efforts go towards writing a blog post. Notice how about 33% of his time goes towards writing the blog post.

blog post breakdown

If you only write content for your blog post but do nothing else, you’re missing out on all of the extra things that make a blog post so great.

 

#4: Craft An Epic Headline

Blog headlines are critical for your success as a blogger. Many readers use the headline alone to determine whether they should read your content or not. If you wrote a complete masterpiece, but you used a bad headline, few people will read that post.

HubSpot recommends some tactics for coming up with attention-grabbing headlines, but it comes down to practice. The most important tactic is to write multiple headlines for a single blog post. I write 5-10 headlines before I choose the headline that works best for me.

The headline doesn’t determine the value of your content, but it is the primary indicator of perceived value. Once you get people’s attention with a headline, all you have to do is ensure your blog post lives up to the hype.

 

#5: Make Your Content Skimmable

We are afraid of the 5-line paragraph, and we appreciate the 1-liners. The shorter you make your paragraphs, the easier it is for people to skim through your content.

You can also change the font (bold, italicize, or underline) to make certain tactics, words, and sentences stand out. Most people who read a blog post have their hand on the scroller.

Chances are you scrolled right down to this part in a hurry. If you didn’t do it this time, you’ll do it very soon (probably next time).

One way to prevent your audience from skimming through your content from start to finish is to include pictures throughout your content. The pictures give your visitors a break from a series of small walls of text.

To get into the flow of writing skimmable content, start by reading all of the blog posts you write, word for word. If you find it difficult to read a certain part of your blog post, that means you either need a picture or a shorter paragraph.

 

In Conclusion

Killer blog posts provide an intense amount of value to your audience and give your visitors multiple reference points. These reference points keep people on your blog for a longer period of time while bringing attention to other people’s content on the web.

You’ll get better as you keep practicing. I recommend writing a blog post every day to turn content creation into a consistent habit.

What are your thoughts on writing a killer blog post? Do you have any tips for us? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: blog tips, content creation

My System For Accomplishing Goals

January 17, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

goal achievement system

Everyone wants to know the best system for accomplishing goals. I’ve experimented with many existing systems to create a system that works for me. This system focuses on leveraging every minute and laser focusing on a few goals instead of many. In this blog post, I’ll go deep into my current system for accomplishing goals.

 

Identify 3-4 Goals For Each Month

I give myself a one month deadline to get my important goals accomplished. I also set quarterly goals and few annual goals, but I focus on monthly goals.

Giving myself less time for goal achievement forces me to take more action and get out of my comfort zone. If I think I can accomplish a goal in four weeks, I’ll give myself three weeks to accomplish the same goal. I’m always pushing the envelop.

 

Track These Goals

While I write my daily goals on sticky notes, I actively track my monthly goals on a Numbers file. Although this Numbers file doesn’t contain many of my goals (I started in November 2017), this file will increase in size and fill up with more goals.

At the end of each month, I write down how I performed. While it’s easy for me to remember how I performed in the moment, it will be more difficult to remember five months from now.

Journaling my performance and keeping all of the goals in one file allows me to analyze past months to see my strengths and weaknesses. I may have more difficulty accomplishing my goals under a certain context. I may have an easier time accomplishing quantitative goals as opposed to qualitative goals.

This system for accomplishing goals also allows me to acknowledge what I have accomplished. This is something few people give themselves the privilege of doing. We live in a go, go, go atmosphere that prevents us from realizing we’ve accomplished a lot already.

Realizing what you have accomplished will make it easier for you to accomplish the new goals you give yourself.

 

Set Weekly Milestones For These Goals

New Year’s resolutions don’t work because people think they have so much time to get their goals accomplished. At the time I write this blog post, it was the beginning of December, and I hustled big-time during that month. Not for my New Year’s resolutions, but because the end was near.

If you’re not careful for any deadline you set, you’ll put in no effort until the last week of the month, or worse, the last month of the year. That’s why it is important to set weekly milestones for your goals.

But not only is it important for you to set weekly milestones, but it’s also important for you to set the right milestones.

For December 2017, one of my goals was to land 7 new clients for my coaching services. If everyone else had that goal, here’s how most people would have planned week-by-week.

Week #1: Get 2 clients

Week #2: Get 2 clients

Week #3: Get 2 clients

Week #4: Get 1 clients

2+2+2+1=7, and there are your new clients.

While this looks like it works, it doesn’t. Effective milestones don’t focus on the target. They focus on the actions you take so you can reach that target. Here’s how I approached this goal.

I hypothesized I would get a 50% conversion rate once I got potential clients on the phone. Here’s how the milestones change.

Week #1: Call 4 people

Week #2: Call 4 people

Week #3: Call 4 people

Week #4: Call 2 people

At this point, you’d think we’re done. Just get this many calls per week, and as long as the hypothesis is true, I’ll get 7 clients.

We’re not quite there yet. You still need to get people on the phone. Let’s say that you expect 20% of the people you contact via email to take you up on the call. Here’s what the new structure looks like:

Week #1: Email 20 people about coaching services

Week #2: Email 20 people about coaching services

Week #3: Email 20 people about coaching services

Week #4: Email 10 people about coaching services

Do you see how we went from get 1-2 clients every week to emailing 10-20 people every week. The action oriented goal helps you achieve what you’re after, but if you limit your thinking to just getting 1-2 clients every week, you don’t know what effort you need to apply.

Action with no planning is of little use, and the deeper you look into what kind of effort is necessary for you to accomplish your goal, the more likely you are to accomplish that goal.

 

My Next Experimentation

After an additional month of monthly goals, I will set bi-weekly goals in a similar fashion. The idea behind bi-weekly goals is to get a month’s worth of goals accomplished in just two weeks. That would result in 24 months’ worth of work getting accomplished in one year.

I’ve already honed in on The 12 Week Year’s approach for goal achievement, but I will experiment with bi-weekly goals. I eventually strive to get more done in two weeks than most people get done in one quarter which is a faster rate than The 12 Week Year. We’ll see if that happens, but my goal is also a fancy title that I’ll solely determine based on how I feel about my effort.

I’ll update everyone after some experimenting. I recommend getting the rest of my system for accomplishing goals first.

 

In Conclusion

Once you have the system in place, all you need to do is determine when you’ll get the work done. Each person’s schedule is different, so it’s entirely up to you as long as you get into a routine.

When you pick out certain actions from your system and turn them into habits, you’ll know you’ve on the express lane of goal achievement.

What are your thoughts about my system for accomplishing goals? Do you have any tips for accomplishing our goals? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Goals Tagged With: goal setting

E74: Creating Massive Engagement For Our Content With Tim Fargo

January 17, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Tim Fargo is an American author, KeyNote speaker, angel investor, and entrepreneur. In 2015, Tim launched his startup, Tweet Jukebox which is now Social Jukebox, an app and service acclaimed by the likes of Forbes and Social Media Examiner. Social Jukebox assists business owners with scheduling social media posts in a time effective manner.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“The most important thing is to get to know your audience.”

“Very often, the easiest thing to do is ask.”

“The ultimate content drives engagement with your audience and creates trust.”

“It’s better to keep an open mind as to who might be the next person for you.”

“Most people give up too soon.”

“Don’t let a challenge freak you out.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • How to determine content that resonates with your audience for maximum engagement
  • How to craft enticing content for people to share with their audiences
  • How to make sure you are targeting the right people to your content
  • Learn to get people to stick around and consume more content
  • Learn what holds people back from reaching their full potential
  • Learn the one question that you need to ask yourself more often

 

Key Links From The Show:

Tim’s Site

Tim’s e-Mail

Tim’s Twitter

Sumo

Medium

CaseyNesitat YouTube Channel

Recommended Books:

Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini

Jungle Rules: How to be a Tiger in Business by Dennis Hamilton and John P. Imlay

Any book by Edwards Demming

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

E73: How To Plan, Launch, and Develop A Successful Business With Terry Ogburn

January 16, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Terry Ogburn is the renowned owner and Lead Business Coach of Ogburn’s Business Solutions. His proprietary coaching system and personal devotion to the development of others has contributed to the success of hundreds of small to large business ventures.

Quotes To Remember:

“Only about 20% of businesses that are built from the ground up survive.”

“In today’s fast moving world, we can focus for 90 days.”

“An airplane is only on course for about 8% of the time.”

“The customer is the boss.”

“How do we solve the customers’ wants, and needs first?”

“That’s how we grow, by learning through our mistakes.”

“Ego is fear based.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • Learn great tips for planning business, and how to go about it
  • Learn how to work “backwards” and why it’s a good idea
  • How to usefully implement your business plan to avoid bankruptcy
  • Learn why having and using a pro-forma is a solid plan
  • How to turn a failing company around to profit again.
  • Why hiring the right person for each job is so crucial

 

Key Links From The Show:

Terry’s Site
Ogburn Business Solutions

 

Recommended Books:

The E-Myth Revisited by Michael Gerber
Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill
Seven Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

10 Tactics To Boost Your Email Marketing ROI

January 16, 2018 by Marc Guberti 1 Comment

email marketing

Email marketing is the most lucrative platform for an online brand. It’s so important that every other platform (i.e. your blog and social media accounts) should direct people back to your email list.

However, getting people on your email list is only half of the battle. The way you communicate with your subscribers determines their engagement and the revenue that you make. In this article, you will learn 10 tactics you can utilize to boost your email marketing ROI so your return is more worthwhile.

 

#1: Analyze & Learn From The Masters

In every niche, there is an email marketer who seems to have the entire process dialed in. Some of these people have written books and blog posts about the process. Others prefer to tell their audience through videos and podcast.

Consume as much of this content as you possibly can.

Content consumption is a great start for becoming better at email marketing. You’re reading this post after all. With that said, the best way to learn is to subscribe to these individuals’ email lists to see how they communicate with their subscribers.

Pay attention to the copy, how links are introduced, the frequency of emails, the subject lines, and anything else that interests you when you read their emails. Don’t just settle for a few tactics. See the top email marketers in your niche implement these tactics when they communicate.

You can also subscribe to top individuals’ email lists who are outside of your niche. Even though these individuals are outside of your niche, there’s still plenty to learn about writing emails that generate more engagement.

 

#2: Insert A Countdown For Time-Sensitive Offers

call-to-action

Nothing moves people like a deadline. For some of your emails, especially emails featuring special discounts, it will be appropriate to insert a countdown. Countdowns raise the sense of urgency.

It’s no wonder that during a product launch, most of the sales come on the last day. The timer is ticking with less than a day left, and then most people take action.

This isn’t something you can implement within every email you write, but when you want to make a point about an approaching deadline, use a countdown timer.

I prefer to use the MotionMailApp to make this possible. You may have your choice for a different timer, but this is the one I use and I commonly see used in other emails with countdown timers. You can get 20,000 free impressions every month.

 

#3: Email Your Unopens

Emailing your unopens is the single easiest and quickest way to boost your open and click rates. No matter how loyal people are to your brand, they will miss some of your emails. This is the nature of our busy world where email marketing is no secret.

Some people receive hundreds of emails every day, so it’s normal for emails like ours to fall through the cracks.

To remedy this effect, you can create a second email and exclusively send it to the people who didn’t open the first email. This second email is an identical. The only difference is the swipe copy.

Since these people didn’t read your email the first time, this swipe copy will be completely new to them. For many of my emails, resending the emails to my unopens doubles my open and click rates.

 

#4: Learn From Your Past Emails

Every month, I look back at the emails I wrote for that month. I look at their stats and determine which emails over performed and which emails underperformed.

Ideally, I want all of my emails to over perform, but some of my emails underperform based on my standards. I look at both of these emails and see what I did. Here are some questions to consider and answer as you learn from your past emails:

  • What were the emails that came before this one?
  • Did I clearly describe the CTA?
  • Did I provide multiple opportunities for subscribers to click the link?
  • Did I keep the email nice and short and just provide 1 opportunity to click?
  • Did I use a P.S.?
  • What is the flow of my copy?

Continuously looking back at your past emails will help you write better emails in the future.

 

#5: Include Bonuses

gift

Including bonuses increases the likelihood of people taking action. While this is most commonly seen in product pitches where people say, “If you buy through my link, I’ll throw in some bonuses.”

However, you can incorporate bonuses beyond the product pitch.

You can offer a small bonus (i.e. 4 video series) to people who read your blog post and leave a comment. When Chandler Bolt started his podcast, he offered a free copy of his book (he even paid for shipping) to everyone who left a review for his podcast. With this promotion, Chandler was able to get hundreds of subscribers.

While it would be very complicated to offer a bonus in every email you write, you can offer bonuses for the important actions you want your audience to take. And those important actions go beyond buying a product through your link.

 

#6: Write Great Copy

Copy is the make or break point of all emails. Effective copy will result in more sales and poor copy will result in no sales. As you write emails, you’ll get a little better at writing great copy. However, the best way to write great copy is to learn from the copywriting masters.

For my copywriting education, I only pay attention to Ray Edwards. There are plenty of great copywriters on the planet, but Ray is the best for me. I’ve read his books and joined him in his product launches not just because I know his product is awesome, but also because I get to see his copy in action.

Analyzing email copy will help, but learning from a true master of the process will help even more. I recommend taking a deep dive into Ray’s books and reading his copy.

 

#7: Benefits > Features

I don’t care that your product has a bunch of modules, a constantly updating library of content, and swipe copy you can use for your funnel.

I care about a product that can triple my traffic, double my subscriber list, and give me a funnel sequence that will increase my revenue by 20%.

One product description focuses on the features. The other product description focuses on the benefits. People don’t care about what you give them. They care about the benefits they will get from purchasing your product.

When you share a new piece of content to your email list, describe the benefits they’ll get after they consume their content. What will they be able to do or have that they can’t do or have now? Answer that question in all of the emails you write, and your ROI will increase.

 

#8: Send More Emails To Your List

email marketing

No matter how great your email copy is, if you only send an email to your list every month, people on your list won’t remember who you are. While some people recommend weekly emails, I recommend getting as close to daily emails as possible…until you’re sending an email every day.

In 2017, I was inconsistent with publishing new content. This inconsistency in content creation led to an inconsistent emails unless I was promoting a product as an affiliate. Towards the end of 2017, I realized that this had to stop for me to have a successful 2018.

At the beginning of November, I decided to write one email every day that would go out to my list. This email would promote the blog post I had most recently wrote. Now I have emails written several months in advance.

The best way to get more consistent with your emails is to write them before you need them. When I was inconsistent, I waited until the new content was published before I started writing the email copy. That’s like hoping you’ll always publish a new piece of content at the same time and day every week…even if you couldn’t schedule anything in advance.

Sending more emails to your list simply means having the swipe copy ready well in advance. I write anywhere from 1-3 emails each day so I always have email swipe copy for a few months in advance.

 

#9: Offer Multiple Pricing Structures

If you promote a product to your email list, one of the best ways to drive more sales is to offer multiple pricing structures. These pricing structures allow you to account for people at different stages of the journey and with different incomes.

For the Content Marketing Plaza, I didn’t get many sales in the beginning because I only offered a $997 option. After some more consideration, I added a basic level and an advanced level. The basic level costs $497 while the advanced level costs $1997.

During my Cyber Monday promotion, I got many sales for the basic level and some sales for the advanced level. Neither of these levels were options when I first promoted the Plaza.

Getting a strong return for your email marketing efforts isn’t just about optimizing your emails. It’s also about optimizing the pages where you are leading your subscribers.

 

#10: Craft An Effective Funnel

Funnels are very effective for generating a strong ROI. You welcome your new subscribers with a series of automated emails designed to strengthen the relationship and promote one of your products or services towards the end.

The starting point of all effective funnels is an understanding of how you’ll take your new subscribers from the welcome email to the last email in the autoresponder. You should always start off your autoresponder with an email that strengthens the relationship. A popular way to do this is including a picture of yourself in the email and describing the context of that image.

As you continue through the funnel with the product in mind, offer free content based on that product’s topic. This will warm your new subscribers to your pitch which you’ll make later in your funnel.

When you do make the pitch, include several emails that promote the product. No one email will get the job done. As you subscribe to more people’s funnels, pay attention to how they lead you through the process. You can use that as inspiration for when you create your own funnel.

 

In Conclusion

Your email list is the most valuable asset for your brand. The growth rate matters, but the way you communicate with your email list matters more. Some people with small lists make 6-figures while people with much bigger lists struggle to make $10K every year. The way you communicate with your list determines the results you’ll get.

What are your thoughts on email marketing? Do you have any tips for us to boost our ROI? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Emailing Tagged With: email marketing

E72: The 5-Figure Close Method That Lands $10K-$25K Clients With Michael Marcial

January 15, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

After several bumps in the road and a life changing event, Michael Marcial decided that enough was enough. He quickly turned things around and made $5,000 in one week. He now teaches others how to create their own training courses and monetize them. He encourages his students to view monetization as part of the journey as opposed to an end-goal

 

Quotes To Remember:

“When we create anything, it usually serves a purpose for our former self.”

“The learners are earners.”

“I get consumed by content.”

“If you want to lead people, you’ve got to impact first.”

“Stand up, share your message, and the world changes.”

“Inauthenticity is the quickest way to not have a business.”

“We are always growing, always creating.”

“What is your message, what is the value you are bringing?”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • How to find high end/big ticket customers for your business
  • How to develop trust with your potential customers.
  • Learn how to use Facebook to grow a client base
  • Why building a business around your genuine self is so successful
  • Learn what “adding value” actually means, and how to implement it

 

Key Links From The Show:

Michael’s Site

Michael’s Facebook

5 Figure Work Week Facebook Group

 

Recommended Books:

Michael had no book recommendations for this episode. He has a different approach to consuming content while staying action oriented.

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

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Primary Sidebar

I am a business freelance writer who writes for individuals, small businesses, and corporations. My content will help drive engagement and sales to your business. I have produced content for several companies, including…

  • Upwork
  • MoneyLion
  • Freight Waves
  • Westchester Business Journal
  • Property Onion

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