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How To Delegate More Tasks To Freelancers

January 6, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

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Welcome back! I am so happy to see that you have come back for more.

delegate-tasks

One of the secret ingredients to success is to effectively delegate tasks within your brand. The moment you realize you can’t do everything alone (and do something about it) is when you’ll move forward at a faster pace that ever before.

However, delegation isn’t easy. It’s a skill you can master, but hiring people for the sake of hiring people won’t work. You also have to repeatedly revisit your budget, revenue, and expenses because a few bad mistakes can force you to fire really good freelancers.

That’s the last thing you want to do on the delegation journey.

To avoid that pitfall and continue to expand via delegation, utilize these insights.

 

Ask Yourself If These Are The Right Tasks

Identifying tasks you’d like to delegate is the easy part. Write a list of what you have to do but don’t want to do. That’s your list of tasks to delegate.

However, when you’re just starting out, you need to strategically choose what you delegate so you don’t go into debt and find yourself making hard decisions.

When you start out, delegate the tasks that take up the majority of your time. That way, you have more time to think strategically and plan out the direction of your business.

That’s an important point many people overlook.

While you’ll have to be in your business on a certain period of time, you must focus more of your time on your business. That means taking an aerial view and looking at the entire layout of your land (all current and potential endeavors).

You’ll learn a lot about the actions you need to take to move your brand forward. Knowing where to exert your time and then exerting your time in that area will allow you to achieve better results.

Ask Yourself If These Are The Right Freelancers

If you outsource the right task but delegate it to the wrong person, you’ll lose more time than what you would actually gain. Every hire must get micromanaged for the first week to ensure you and your new hire are on the same page, but you’ll never get on the same page as a low value freelancer. You might get on the same page of a different book with lower standards, but you’ll find yourself spending too much time making sure the freelancer is doing the assigned work and constantly correcting mistakes.

You need to make sure you hire the right freelancer or else your delegation efforts will be meaningless.

The more freelancers you hire, the better you’ll get at hiring the right freelancers. However, I’ll provide some pointers beforehand:

  1. Ask each applicant to describe his/her personality. Look for the kind curious learners.

  2. Ask each applicant to explain why they want to work for you. Look for the people who took the 5-10 minutes to do some research and meaningfully explain why your brand’s mission attracts them.

  3. Look at the skill set. Make sure you hire a freelancer with the right skills for the part. This seems simple but it’s also a common mistake people make. Finding freelancers with additional skills based on the other tasks you want to delegate is a plus. If you like that freelancer, you can easily give him/her more money.

4, BONUS: When you hire great people, ask those great people for suggestions when you want to hire more people. Great freelancers tend to know other great freelancers who would be a great fit for your brand.

 

Pay Attention To Your Budget

Paying attention to your budget is big. If you hire many freelancers, your expenses will significantly climb upward. You must now make additional revenue to pay for your growing team.

To avoid problems, you must set limitations based on your current revenue streams and expenses. If you make $5,000/mo, don’t spend $5,000/mo on freelancers. Start closer to $500/mo and set a ceiling towards $3,000/mo.

Of course, everyone’s financial situation is different, but you must set a costs ceiling that expands and shrinks in relation to the changes in your revenue.

Once you set your budget, commit yourself to maintaining that budget. Until you expand your budget by expanding your revenue, you may have to say no to quality freelancers.

Understand this going in and use this fact as motivation to generate more revenue.

 

Time Or Revenue?

When you hire a freelancer, you either do so to save time or generate more revenue than you would have without that freelancer.

I recommend you start by saving more time so you can have more time to think. Having more time to think will speed you on the path to success.

Once you have enough time to think, you’ll better understand how you can hire freelancers that directly result in additional revenue.

 

Utilize Your Extra Time Wisely

This is the most important thing to know when hiring freelancers. Your freelancers are depending on you for their income. That makes firing people so hard (it’s also a good reason to hire the right people to decrease the amount of those decisions you have to make).

If you have no plan to generate additional revenue and then can’t pay your freelancers, you are letting down that freelancer and his/her entire family. Some freelancers need that money to pay for their rent. Others are saving up for expensive college tuition.

Delegation doesn’t mean more time for you to kick back. On the contrary, delegation means you must kick things up a few gears because you’ve got people depending on your for their livelihoods and goals.

If you won’t put in the work to generate more revenue, don’t bother hiring freelancers. That’s sabotage.

 

In Conclusion

Delegating tasks to trustworthy freelancers will allow your rapidly expand your business.

However, you can positively impact the lives of your freelancers by giving them work and the financial security they need to feel happier.

You’ll also positively impact the lives of your audience as you can create a more legendary experience through your content.

What are your thoughts on delegating your tasks? Have any tips for hiring the right freelancers and expanding your brand? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: productivity

E66: Building One Of The World’s TOP Product Management Conferences From Scratch With Mike Belsito

January 5, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Mike Belsito is the Co-Founder of Product Collective which is a community for product people. In addition to co-founding and developing this community, he also co-founded and organized INDUSTRY: The Product Conference, where product managers with world-class products gather together to share their insights and learn so they can build, launch, and scale their creations.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“How can you position yourself differently?”

“If you have a good attendee experience, then the other things tend to follow.”

“How are people going to find out about you?”

“You do the things that don’t scale, and figure out what works so you can scale them up later on.”

“Don’t be discouraged if your first event isn’t profitable.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why it’s important to follow people in your field, and learn from them
  • Learn to market your event to find the right attendees
  • How to find your ideal audience, and how to reach out to them
  • Why “cold calling” individual potential customers is still valuable
  • How to keep review and improve on your events, by noting things that you’d like to change

 

Key Links From The Show:

productcollective.com

Mike’s Email

industryconference.com

Mike’s Twitter

 

Recommended Books:

Rework by Jason Fried

Content Inc by Joe Pulizzi

The Monk and The Riddle by Randy Komisar

Filed Under: Uncategorized

E66: Building One Of The World’s TOP Product Management Conferences From Scratch With Mike Belsito

January 5, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Mike Belsito is the Co-Founder of Product Collective which is a community for product people. In addition to co-founding and developing this community, he also co-founded and organized INDUSTRY: The Product Conference, where product managers with world-class products gather together to share their insights and learn so they can build, launch, and scale their creations.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“How can you position yourself differently?”

“If you have a good attendee experience, then the other things tend to follow.”

“How are people going to find out about you?”

“You do the things that don’t scale, and figure out what works so you can scale them up later on.”

“Don’t be discouraged if your first event isn’t profitable.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why it’s important to follow people in your field, and learn from them
  • Learn to market your event to find the right attendees
  • How to find your ideal audience, and how to reach out to them
  • Why “cold calling” individual potential customers is still valuable
  • How to keep review and improve on your events, by noting things that you’d like to change

 

Key Links From The Show:

productcollective.com

Mike’s Email

industryconference.com

Mike’s Twitter

 

Recommended Books:

Rework by Jason Fried

Content Inc by Joe Pulizzi

The Monk and The Riddle by Randy Komisar

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

Can’t Get Eyeballs On Your Content? Here’s The Fix

January 5, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

how to get more people to visit your blog

Wondering how you can get more people to visit your blog, watch your video, or subscribe to your podcast? If so, you’re not alone. Even the most successful content creators want to get more eyeballs on their content.

Marketing nowadays is a race for everyone’s attention. Many brands capture people’s attention for several hours in a given day. Chances are you want to create a similar effect with your content in which some people will spend hours each day consuming your content.

If you’re struggling to get eyeballs on your content, then use this game plan to drive meaningful attention to your content.

Focus On One Traffic Source First

The biggest reason people struggle to generate more blog traffic is because they diversify their traffic sources. While this is a great long-term strategy, the short-term results in you spreading yourself too thin.

It’s difficult to master traffic generation when you’re trying to master 10 different methods for generating traffic. You’ll have a much easier time trying to master one traffic source and then expanding from there.

To speed up the process, you can hire a coach or an expert who is great at driving traffic via a specific traffic source. This will significantly help with your learning curve for one traffic source.

You can then master another traffic source as one traffic source is either completely delegated or a coach guides you step by step on mastering the other traffic source.

Direct Everyone To Your Email List

email marketing

No matter how much traffic you get, that traffic won’t do you any good if you can’t direct people to your email list. You may get short-term attention, but that attention won’t materialize into long-term revenue if you don’t get people on your email list.

There are plenty of methods to grow your email list, but you must pick a few that work best for you. My personal favorites are the following:

  • Promoting my landing page on social media many times each day
  • Getting partners to grow my email list (this usually means providing your partners with affiliate links)
  • Optimizing my blog with welcome mats, pop-ups, and other tools that boost my blog’s overall conversion rate

All of your efforts need to direct people to your email list. No exceptions.

Get Into Partnerships

As mentioned before, getting partners to grow an email list is one of my favorite methods. This is free and you build a lot of great relationships.

When I hosted the Content Marketing Success Summit, I had dozens of partners help me promote the summit. This resulted in thousands of new subscribers that I wouldn’t have gotten on my own. As an added bonuses, these were highly targeted subscribers since they went through the some of the summit’s 50+ interviews all about my niche.

To get involved with partnerships, you need a good reputation and have a funnel with high conversion rates. The higher the conversion rates and overall commissions received, the more likely you’ll get someone as your partner. As you get more success stories, you’ll recruit more partners and some partners will even come to you.

For the affiliate program, I recommend using SamCart. They offer a variety of integrations to email lists, Optimize Press, and more. In addition, SamCart will help you create sleek order pages with 1-click order bumps that can significantly add to your bottom line.

You’ll get a 14 day free trial to SamCart if you join with this link.

 

Activate Your Network

expanding network

Most of the advice you’ll hear about networks is how important it is to build your network. Get to know some influencers because they’ll help later on, and then the advice stops.

Building your network is easy. Just reach out to a bunch of influencers asking questions, praising them, or presenting them with an opportunity (i.e. appear as a guest on my podcast).

Activating your network is the harder part. In activating your network, you get people to promote your content, leave testimonials for your products, and advise you when you ask for advice. The best way to activate your network is to stay in constant touch.

If you haven’t contacted people in your network for more than three months, you need to contact those people this month. Whether it’s a “Hello” or “I found your latest content interesting,” you need to keep yourself in these people’s frames of mind. That way, they remember you when an opportunity comes up, or if you ask them to do something for you, they are more likely to do it.

 

Get Great At Creating Content

You spend all of this time attracting the eyeballs to your content, but you need to get people to stick around as well. Part of that is creating content that spreads, but also extending the experience visitors have on your blog.

In my blog posts, I intentionally link to some of my past content to enhance the experience people have on my blog. The more often you write content, the better you’ll get at crafting impactful content.

I recommend writing one blog post every day. This will force you to keep the chain going and provide your visitors with an intense amount of value.

In Conclusion

Every content creator wants to drive as much meaningful attention to their content as possible. Even the most successful content creators, or perhaps, especially the most successful content creators want more eyeballs on your content. You should (and probably do) too.

However, with time at a premium and a ton of content getting created each day, the growing gap between time and available content makes this goal more challenging to accomplish.

But with every challenge lies an opportunity. Getting eyeballs on your content is a game of patience, smart work, and persistence, but once you get thousands and eventually millions of people to flock to your content, you’ll know that the effort was worth it.

What are your thoughts on these tactics? How do you get more eyeballs on your content? Do you have any questions for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

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

E65: Building A Strong Personal Brand With Lee Caraher

January 4, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Lee Caraher is the founder and CEO of Double Forte, a 15 year old public relations and digital media agency. The Millennial Whisperer has become a highly sought after KeyNote speaker on hiring and retaining a high-performing multi-generational team. She is also the author of two books, Millennials & Management and The Boomerang Principle.

Quotes To Remember:

“Just saying it doesn’t necessarily make it come true.”

“The most diverse teams, when they work together, are the strongest teams.”

“Just saying please and thank you during the day can go a long long way.”

“You have to change the wheels while you’re driving the bus towards that direction.”

“Always leave a party when you’re still having fun.”

“It is your job to make sure that the people who could be influential for you know who you are.”

“Relevance is fleeting.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • How and what makes a strong personal brand
  • How to choose and efficiently manage social media pages
  • How to put together a strong millennial team, and working together.
  • Learn to talk about and promote your personal brand
  • How to find business and talk to people at a networking event
  • Why it’s so important to pay attention, to stay ahead of the curve

 

Key Links From The Show:

Lee’s Site

Follow Lee On Twitter @LeeCaraher

 

Recommended Books:

The Power of Onlyness by Nilofer Merchant

Pivot by Jenny Blake

Work Pause Thrive by Lisen Stromberg

Millenials & Management by Lee Caraher

The Boomerang Principle by Lee Caraher

Filed Under: Uncategorized

E65: Building A Strong Personal Brand With Lee Caraher

January 4, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Lee Caraher is the founder and CEO of Double Forte, a 15 year old public relations and digital media agency. The Millennial Whisperer has become a highly sought after KeyNote speaker on hiring and retaining a high-performing multi-generational team. She is also the author of two books, Millennials & Management and The Boomerang Principle.

Quotes To Remember:

“Just saying it doesn’t necessarily make it come true.”

“The most diverse teams, when they work together, are the strongest teams.”

“Just saying please and thank you during the day can go a long long way.”

“You have to change the wheels while you’re driving the bus towards that direction.”

“Always leave a party when you’re still having fun.”

“It is your job to make sure that the people who could be influential for you know who you are.”

“Relevance is fleeting.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • How and what makes a strong personal brand
  • How to choose and efficiently manage social media pages
  • How to put together a strong millennial team, and working together.
  • Learn to talk about and promote your personal brand
  • How to find business and talk to people at a networking event
  • Why it’s so important to pay attention, to stay ahead of the curve

 

Key Links From The Show:

Lee’s Site

Follow Lee On Twitter @LeeCaraher

 

Recommended Books:

The Power of Onlyness by Nilofer Merchant

Pivot by Jenny Blake

Work Pause Thrive by Lisen Stromberg

Millenials & Management by Lee Caraher

The Boomerang Principle by Lee Caraher

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

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Primary Sidebar

I am a content marketer and personal finance writer who produces content for individuals, small businesses, and corporations. My content will help drive engagement and sales to your business. I have produced content for several publications, including…

  • US News & World Report
  • Business Insider
  • Benzinga
  • Newsweek
  • Bankrate

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