Blogger 2 Business Woman Phase 1 Notes

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Blogger  to  Business  Woman-­‐Phase  1-­‐Building  Your  Brand    

Copyright  ©  2015  by  Courtney  Sanders   All  rights  reserved.  No  part  of  this  publication  may  be  reproduced,  distributed,  or  transmitted  in   any  form  or  by  any  means,  including  photocopying,  recording,  or  other  electronic  or  mechanical   methods,  without  the  prior  written  permission  of  the  publisher,  except  in  the  case  of  brief   quotations  embodied  in  critical  reviews  and  certain  other  noncommercial  uses  permitted  by   copyright  law.  

 

  Introduction:     Courtney  started  blogging  6  years  ago  as  a  college  student.    At  the  time,  she  was  trying  to  balance  being   a   college   student   with   wanting   to   be   an   entrepreneur.       She   ultimately   did   start   her   own   company   at   19   years  old,  Material  Gurl  (a  natural  hair  product  line),  which  is  no  longer  in  business,  but  along  the  way   she  learned  so  much.      Over  the  preceding  years,  she  studied  how  to  really  be  effective  and  one  of  the   books  that  really  inspired  her  was  Think  and  Grow  Rich  by  Napoleon  Hill.         The   turning   point   for   Courtney   was   realizing   that   she   needed   to   stop   being   a   blogger   and   become   a   business  woman.    When  she  had  that  mindshift  and  thought  more  globally  that’s  when  things  started  to   take   off   for   her.       This   mindshift   is   what   led   her   to   her   current   success   and   she   shows   you   the   steps   through  her  new  program  today,  Blogger  to  Business  Woman  Secrets.    

You  CAN  turn  your  blog  around  and  grow  it.      What  do  YOU  need  to  do  to  make  that  pivot?     Let’s  discuss  the  common  mistakes  new  bloggers  and  online  brand-­‐builders  make:     1. The   belief   and   expectations   that   you   need   a   large   following   and   thousands   of   readers   to   be   successful  from  a  profitability  standpoint.     2. Preoccupation   with   their   blog   design   and   logo   and   a   focus   exclusively   on   “looks”   and   not   content  .     a. Design  and  logo  are  important  but  should  not  be  your  first  concern.    It  is  not  necessary   to  spend  that  money  up  front.    Your  first  concern  should  be  content.     i. At  the  same  time,  your  content  needs  to  be  QUALITY,  not  QUANTITY.    More  of   that  discussed  later  in  the  class.     3. The  “we”  thing.       a. People  who  start  saying  “WE”  as  if  there’s  a  large  group  handling  the  blog  although  it’s   only  1  person.   i.  People   WANT   to   connect   with   another   person   even   more   than   they   want   to   connect  with  a  person  or  content.       ii. “WE”  is  inadvertently  creating  a  distance  between  you  and  your  reader.     4. Not  having  a  clear  idea  of  who  you  are  going  to  be  to  your  reader-­‐your  USP   a. USP-­‐Unique  Selling  Proposition   i. At  the  most  basic  level,  you  are  selling  your  content  for  attention.     ii. Your   USP   is   going   to   determine   your   “branding”   and   who   you   are   and   what   makes  you  special  to  your  readers.     iii. Your  USP  means  you  need  to  decide  who  you  want  to  be  to  your  reader.    What   kind  of  role  model  are  you  going  to  be  ?  Why  should  people  follow  you?  It  sets  a   tone   for   how   you   brand   yourself   going   forward   and   will   play   out   eventually   in   everything  that  you  do,  including  your  blog  design,  like  colors,  fonts  and  images.       5. You’re  going  to  make  a  lot  of  money  running  sidebar  ads  and  getting  sponsorship.    

 

  a. Not  sustainable.    It’s  actually  the  worst  way.    There’s  easier  ways  to  make  money.       b. We’re  actually  going  to  discuss  this  much  further  in  phase  3  of  B2B  Secrets    

 “Content  is  King”    -­‐    How  to  provide  meaningful  and  compelling  content   1. Your   content   drives   all   of   your   branding.     You   get   to   meet   the   needs   of   your   readers   in   your   own  unique  way.       2. The  questions  you  need  to  ask  yourself  are  WHAT  are  you  writing  about  and  WHY.    What  is   your  ENDGAME?    What  is  the  point  of  writing  about  it  in  the  first  place?       3. You  want  to  be  UNIQUE.    That  means  that  although  there  may  be  3500  fashion  blogs  and   you   want   to   write   a   fashion   blog,   you   have   to   come   at   it   from   a   unique   standpoint.     An   example  would  be  that  you  are  writing  about  being  fashionable  on  a  budget  and  then  you   narrow   down   your   unique   viewpoint   that   you   are   fashionable   on   a   budget   because   you   were  a  college  student  who  put  themselves  through  school  financially.     a. If  you  can’t  answer  why  someone  would  want  to  come  to  the  blog  you  have  to  think   about  that.  You  want  people  to  connect  and  resonate  with  you.   4. Ask  yourself  who  your  readers  are-­‐-­‐Who  are  you  trying  to  reach   a. What  kind  of  woman  is  she?     b. What  are  her  beliefs?     c. What  is  her  outlook?     d. What  is  her  sense  of  humor?     e. Is  she  a  reader?     f. Does  she  like  connecting  with  other  women,  making  friends?       5. “Pains  and  Promises”  -­‐-­‐The  most  important  questions  you  can  ask  are:     a. What  is  she  struggling  with?    What  does  she  want  more  than  anything?    Then  you   ask   what   is   preventing   her   from   getting   it   (This   is   the   Aspirational   Line   which   we   discuss  next)   b. You  need  to  meet  the  needs  of  your  target  audience/ideal  reader  to  keep  growing   your  brand.    THAT’S  why  your  blog  exists!     i. Change   your   mindset   from   they   need   to   pay   attention   to   me   to   I   need   to   pay  attention  to  THEM  and  then  structure  the  blog  to  be  attractive  to  them   to  invest  their  attention.     Keep  reading  on  next  page……..we  have  so  much  left  to  cover!      

   

 

 

 “The  Aspirational  Line”   Let’s  pretend  your  reader  is  Dorothy  from  Oz.      Her  line  is  the  Yellow  Brick  Road.    She  is  between   where  she  came  from  and  where  she  wants  to  be.       Where  is  she  right  now?  What  pains  are  preventing  her  from  getting  to  the  “Wizard”?   Example:  lack  of  time  management,  self-­‐belief  issues  about  past  mistakes,  lack  of  self-­‐ discipline,  financial  roadblocks.    

What  are  those  promises  that  are  pushing  her  towards  the  “Wizard”  despite  the  obstacles?       Example:     the   promise   of   creating   a   dream   business   for   financial   and   time   freedom,   availability   to   friends   and   family,     the   overall   promise   of   figuring   out   her   purpose   so   she   can  wake  up  every  day  and  feel  motivated.        

A  Simple  Way  to  Write  Your  Blog  Posts    

At  the  top:    start  every  post  with  what  your  intention  is.     Once  you  set  this  up,  go  into  your  email  and  act  like  you  are  talking  to  ONE  person  and   just   free   flow.     This   is   how   you   invest   feeling   in   your   subject.     If   you   have   to,   direct   your   subject  to  a  person  you  know  who  is  going  through  that  same  issue  (just  don’t  address   the   “to”   line   in   case   you   accidentally   hit   send.   Whoops!!!)   .     After   you’re   done   free-­‐ flowing,  then  you  can  go  back  and  edit.    

 

At  the  bottom:    a  made  up  quote  that  I  want  my  ideal  reader  to  say  when  she’s  done  reading.   Create  content  that  is  going  to  illicit  that  response.    For  example,  “Girl,  I  better  go  look   at  my  bank  accounts  now.    You  are  so  right  and  I’ve  been  a  mess.  It’s  time  to  get  this   under  control!”  

Let’s  Talk  about  Design!     1.  You  want  to  have  cohesive  graphics  throughout  your  blog.     a. Decide  on  your  brand  colors.  For  example,  black  and  white  are  sophisticated.  Grass   green  is  mellow.    Purple  is  feminine  but  not  “girly”.       b. Big   Useful   Tip:     Create   a   secret   board   on   Pinterest   .     When   you   like   a   design   you   see   online,  pin  it  to  your  board.    When  you  step  back  different  elements  will  jump  out  at   you.    Colors,  shapes,  fonts,  etc.     2. Incorporate  these  into  your  pictures  and  your  theme  as  well  as  your  sidebar  elements  and   any  e-­‐book  covers  if  they  are  advertised  on  your  blog   3. Consistent  themes,  colors  and  fonts  allow  for  a  clean  and  seamless  look.     4. If  you’re  not  a  great  designer,  don’t  worry.    There  are  a  lot  of  tools  you  can  use:     a. Pixelmator   (www.pixelmator.com)     -­‐similar   to   Photoshop   but   easier   and   less   expensive.    

  b. Web-­‐based  tools  that  are  not  design  software  downloads:   i. Canva    (www.canva.com)   ii. PicMonkey  (www.picmonkey.com)   iii. Pixlr  (www.pixlr.com)  –stripped  down,  web  based  version  of  Photoshop  

A  few  notes  on  about  Blogging  Platforms   1. WordPress—this  is  Courtney’s  favorite.    We  will  come  back  to  this  again  and  again  through   the  B2B  program.       a. You  want  wordpress.org  (not  wordpress.com).       b. WordPress.org   sites   allow   the   site   to   become   “yours”.     It   is   YOUR   platform   with   YOUR  chosen  URL,  i.e.  “website  name”.   c. It   gives   you   the   most   creative   options   and   the   most   flexibility   and   is   always   being   updated  with  improvements   d. It  has  the  most  plug-­‐in’s  (plug-­‐in’s  are  like  blogging  “apps”-­‐things  you  can  make  your   blog  “do”)   2. SquareSpace   a. A  lot  of  people  like  this  one  as  well.  It  is  probably  the  2nd  most  popular.     b. However,  it  IS  newer  and  does  not  have  the  full  functionality  of  WordPress,  so  for   business  needs  such  as  membership  pages,  etc.,  you  are  going  to  be  limited.   3. Wix   a. It’s   kind   of   “buggy”   and   not   as   much   technical   support   as   SquareSpace   or   WordPress.      

A  few  last  little  notes  to  think  about:      

Blogging  1.0-­‐live  journal  era.    Online  diaries  with  no  rhyme  or  reason  

 

Blogging  2.0-­‐got  very  specific  and  niche.    

 

**Blogging  3.0  –  this  is  the  phase  we’re  in  now  **   Your  blog  is  now  everything  you  do  online.    It’s  all  of  the  experiences  that  you  create  for  your   target   market.     You   want   to   keep   creating   non-­‐blog   post   experiences   that   will   drive   people   back   to  your  blog.  You  are  doing  them  on  a  different  platform  and  driving  readers  back  to  your  blog.     For  example,  doing  google  hangouts/google  interviews.    People  then  share  them  and  then  new   people  experience  it  and  go  back  to  your  blog.    Same  for  podcasts.    Same  for  webinars.    Really,   the  sky  is  the  limit!    

  Keep  reading  for  some  Q  &  A  ………………..  

 

 

A  Little  Q  &  A  Session….   Charlene:      How  do  you  getting  people  to  subscribe  and  join  your  email  list?    Can  you  give  some  tips  on   how  to  gain  subscribers?    She  has  3  different  “reminders”  to  prompt  readers  but  is  still  not  getting  the   numbers  she  was  hoping  for.     Courtney:     Suggests   that   she   have   an   opt-­‐in   gift.     The   caller   does   not     be/c   she   doesn’t   know   what  to  give  them.      It’s  a  promise  of  the  quality  they  will  get  if  they  keep  coming  to  your  blog.     It  can  speak  to  a  promise  they  are  trying  to  get  to    or  a  pain  they  are  trying  to  get  away  from.   Courtney  is  going  to  discuss  the  Opt-­‐In  Gift  much  more  in  detail  in  Phase  3  of  the  B2B  program.     Pepper:          Wants  to  revamp  her  blog  that  is  currently  based  around  her  show  Brown  Betty.    How  did   Courtney  keep  her  audience  when  she  changed  paths  on  her  blog  over  the  last  few  years?     Courtney:    She  started  digging  into  things  that  the  former  audience  were  into  that  would  be  in   common   with   the   newer   direction.     Where   is   the   point   that   overlaps   between   Pepper’s   show   fans  and  the  new  direction  and  keep  zooming  the  lens  to  find  the  commonality.       Next   Caller   (no   name   provided):     If   you’re   starting   from   scratch,   what   is   the   best   way   to   start   getting   readers?     Courtney:    In  her  future  sections  in  B2B,  there  are  actually  5  different  ways    that  she  goes  into   on   a   deeper   scale,   but   the   fastest   and   best   way   is   “OPA”-­‐other   people’s   audiences.   Go   to   where   your  target  audience  is  that  is  similar  and  get  in  front  of  them.    A  portion  of  those  people  will   then  follow  you  back  as  well.     Dija—Owner  of  The  Inspire’d  Café    (www.theinspiredcafe.com)  and  a  coach-­‐ee  of  Courtney’s.    She  feels   that  if  she  wants  to  inspire  creatives  and  work  creatively  professionally  she  has  a  deep  seated  conviction   that  she  needs  to  share  her  struggles  more.    She  is  looking  for  tips  on  how  to  be  more  open  with  her   struggle.       Courtney:      Think  of  the  end  goal  in  terms  of  how  it’s  going  to  help  others  and  release  yourself.     It   is   embarrassing   in   the   beginning.       She   herself   had   to   from   the   dependency   on   external   factors.    It’s  hard  to  share  when  you  feel  you  have  lost/not  experienced  those  factors  that  mean   success   in   our   culture   (i.e.   a   certain   car,   failing   at   school,   etc.)     But,   you   have   to   realize   that   nothing   that   happens   externally   takes   away   your   value.       You   get   rock   solid   in   your   personal   value  and  you  will  be  able  to  face  those  fears  about  making  your  struggle  public.