Saturday, October 31, 2020

Have you had your "FTE"? (Or Was it an FTM?!)

So this is an open call for everyone to share their "FTE" story, otherwise known as their "f*ck This Event."

A "f*ck this event" is an incident in your life that pushes you over the ledge of a SCRIPTED existence. It is a pejorative "I've had it!" or a "I can't live like this!" moment that screams it's time for you to change.

Interest moves to commitment. Thinking moves to action. Desire moves to obsession.

I described mine in both books -- getting stranded in a limousine on the side of...

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from Have you had your "FTE"? (Or Was it an FTM?!)

I Wish I Knew These 5 Things Before Hiring a Marketing Agency

I-Wish-I-Knew-These-5-Things-Before-Hiring-a-Marketing-Agency.jpeg
Hiring a marketing agency could be the best decision for your brand’s image and growth potential. From established companies to small and medium businesses, getting the help of an external marketing agency can get you more leads, inform current and future marketing decisions, and optimize your overall brand presence and visibility.

And thanks to the development of the marketing field over the last couple of years, marketing agencies are increasingly more...

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from I Wish I Knew These 5 Things Before Hiring a Marketing Agency

An Educational Business In The Gaming And Esports Industry

Hello everyone,

I often find myself being inspired early morning by reading execution threads on TFF after my alarm goes off. I already had the idea of starting my own thread for a while and today is the day. I'll do my best to provide you with lessons I'm learning, some golden nuggets, insights in mistakes and things that went well, and more.

If you want to know more about the industry that I'm in, please jump over to my thread...

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from An Educational Business In The Gaming And Esports Industry

100 Unsexy Business Ideas: Name as many as you can!

Something that cannot be stressed enough on the Fastlane forum is that people would be better off pursuing businesses in UNSEXY industries. Industries that FEW people are talking about because they are boring, unpopular, or possibly even unlikely to be discussed among the general public, and etc..

This is a good thing.

Many entrepeneurs don't want to run an UNSEXY business!!!!!!!

Nobody wants to run a fish cannery in the middle of the alaskan wilderness. Most aspiring...

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from 100 Unsexy Business Ideas: Name as many as you can!

What is the difference between a Joint Venture and Providing a Service?

I would like to know your answer to this one. I had been looking through the Joint Venture forum, and had seen a number of posts asking for.

from What is the difference between a Joint Venture and Providing a Service?

What dissertation topics are worth studying about

Hi all,
I know a lot of people think University is just a waste of time and a scam etc, which I semi agree with, however I am finishing my final year of university online and have to write a dissertation. Of all the topics my classmates are choosing, a lot of them seem to be a waste of time.

One person said they are going to study about buyer behaviour and the panic buying of toilet paper

I basically have to find a topic that I want to spend the entire two terms studying, so In your...

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from What dissertation topics are worth studying about

Rockstar on LinkedIn..Struggling in Real Life

My parents to the toddler me: "You can be anything you wish to be in life. What would you wish to be?"

Le toddler me in reply: "Me wantz to be fancy-pants scientist!! Pew-Pew.."

My parents to the current me: "Son, there are certain things that need to be done by a certain age, and you aren't ticking the list. We are concerned. "

Le now me in reply: "I feel you. But alas! I have decided to dedicate myself to live a free and fullfilled life, where I serve lives...

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from Rockstar on LinkedIn..Struggling in Real Life

We could do this for growth and fun?!

Hey everyone!

A few of us friends on the forum have been planning how to make this a crazy good end to the year.
We have written plans and accountability to each other. We are making it happen!

This is part of our plan. We’d love you to join!

It’s also incredibly easy to start.

Choose something to reach towards any goal you want. Do it for 30 days. That’s it : )

30 day challenge where you do one good thing, the same good thing, every day.
We’ll go Oct 20 - Nov 18.

This literally...

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from We could do this for growth and fun?!

Self-Promotion Thread: Post Your Offer, YouTube Channel, Your Service (Sept/Oct)


Have something to sell? Want to do a little shameless self-promotion?


:checkbox: Like to post a video from your YouTube channel?

:checkbox: Want to promote your design service?

:checkbox: Like to link to a company that you'd like to recommend?

:checkbox: Have a book to promote?

:checkbox: Blog or a landing page you'd like to mention?

:checkbox: Amazon product you'd like to link and sell?

SELL-ME SATURDAY is your opportunity to self-promote whatever you'd like on one central...

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from Self-Promotion Thread: Post Your Offer, YouTube Channel, Your Service (Sept/Oct)

The 2021 Fastlane Summit - Announcement

Fastlaners,

It is with great sadness that I am announcing that the 2021 Summit will not be held this year, at least at the regularly scheduled time (which is about the 2nd week in February).

Unfortunately with Covid-19 and the election looming, the risk for me at holding this event has essentially gone nuclear. There are still many big COVID-19 uncertainties ongoing which make planning this event (and hoping for the best) a bad bet. Usually, tickets are sold at the end of October...

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from The 2021 Fastlane Summit - Announcement

Slowlane sales director / future fastlaner from Europe

Hi fellows,

greetings from Europe! Glad to be here and I have read MJ's both books which really made an impact.

A small intro: I have job as international sales director making around 170-200keur per year including bonuses (note that the taxman takes 50% here) in IT sector.

Some side hustles:
*A small manufacturing business with my friend with annual revenue up to 30-50keur (no profit yet, all is put to R&D + filling the stocks). Here we are selling to consumers but lost earlier 5meur...

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from Slowlane sales director / future fastlaner from Europe

Fox Web School "Legend" Group Coaching Program 2020

This year has been quite crazy so far, and a lot of people have reached out to ask me if web design is still a good option. While this is a marketplace post about my coaching program, it will also be a good general guide of the web design opportunities that exist right now.

Is web design still a profitable business in 2020?

You may be thinking, “Sure, web design was great when...

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from Fox Web School "Legend" Group Coaching Program 2020

Let's Talk About Entrepreneurial Depression

It's a tough topic, but one that should not be taboo to talk about.

If you choose the life of an entrepreneur, there's one thing you need to accept that's not in almost any business book: Your probability of being depressed, stressed, and anxious skyrockets.

"Depression was the highest-reported reported condition, being present in 30% of all entrepreneurs. ADHD (29%) and anxiety problems (27%) followed close by. That’s a dramatically higher percentage than the US population at...

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from Let's Talk About Entrepreneurial Depression

From the miserable comforts of the mediocre slowlane

I've known it was all bullshit for so very long.
Walk the treadmill, reproduce, make sure your offspring is indoctrinated to enter the treadmill, perish.

But as long as I walk the treadmill I can afford all the comforts.
The hyper-realities. A different author would refer to it as the soothing lullaby of Mother Culture.
Dulling the pains of the chafing shackles. Drawing away attention from those cold iron bars.

Got a nice house, got a nice car, got a nice TV, got a nice computer, got a...

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from From the miserable comforts of the mediocre slowlane

Hello from Turkey!

Hello everyone,

The quality of this forum really impressed me. It was a thing that I was looking for for a long time, so congratulations to MJ and also to all contributers.

I am a 24 years old entrepreneur in Istanbul / Turkey, graduated from university 2 years ago, currently working at both our family business (footwear industry -wholesale,export) and also my own company.

Now I am at the head of family business, everything going stable there so I mostly involve at strategic moves, big...

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from Hello from Turkey!

Any Fastlaners in Stockholm?

Hey there,

I just moved to Stockholm from London after 4 years (originally swedish though). Now with COVID, I quit my £130K+ sales job, and decided to start a consumer wellness brand (first up will be a functional beverage) as I'm really passionate about health, fitness, biohacking etc. and have seen a problem in the market.

However, I'm new in Stockholm, so would be awesome to meet some likeminded people here.
So hit me up, and maybe we can do a group meet up somewhere or just grab a...

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from Any Fastlaners in Stockholm?

100 Brown Cents To $8000

This is a thread I've decided to create to keep me accountable. I'm sick to my bones tired of "failing fast", heck I even made an article about it.

I don't know what need I'll solve yet, my idea was to build a niche community on social media starting with Instagram and then help producers connect with the community members. I'm unsure as to what sort of niche it would be and...

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from 100 Brown Cents To $8000

Hello folks

Hi friends,
I am newbie. I'm very excited to be here.
Hope I'm in the right place.
Thanks!


from Hello folks

FTE's Are The Catalyst, Not the Change.

Today you realize life is shit. You have no money. Your boss is an a**hole. You hate your job. Your family thinks you're a loser. You're drowning under a pile of debt. Your girlfriend left you for a real man with a real job and a real body or whatever.

But unlike other days, today is different because you REALIZE all of this and ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!!

Right then you commit to change. You say, today I stop being such a pussy. Today my life turns around because I see clearly now. I'm tired of...

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from FTE's Are The Catalyst, Not the Change.

What would be your 5 book loadout?

I've been reading business/finance/self-improvement books for a few years and I think I'm getting to the point where I won't get any more but rather keep 5 books handy at all times. This would be for re-reading, revectoring, recapturing any inspiration or motivation I pulled in the first read through. So similar to a video-game, I'm aiming to stick with about 5 books I will always have and go back to. This is not to imply I'd never read again or anything but I'd probably do more rereading of...

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from What would be your 5 book loadout?

The Path of Least Resistance

One of the things I've realized in my journey of self-improvement is how damaging the path of least resistance is on our lives. It literally always makes us the worse version of our potential selves every time we take the path. Eat junk and don't meal prep, because a healthy lifestyle is harder. Watch Netflix because reading a book takes too much focus. Lie because facing consequences is too painful. Cheat in relationships because loyalty is too challenging.

We erode our potential every...

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from The Path of Least Resistance

Friday, October 30, 2020

day 3 (failure)

Before i begin, let me clarify something:
i don't like failing.
every time i do, i feel like i don't just fail myself, but also all the others who are grinding it out and working hard. it sucks. when you see "failure" at the top of an entry, i write with frustration and disappointment with myself. alright moving on...


Today started like it did on day one, minutes before i had to go to work.

i had overslept again.

why?

because i was lazy and simply...

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from day 3 (failure)

The AI Entrepreneurship thread. Code AI? Interested in AI? Data Science? Machine Learning?

Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning are likely going to be the biggest boons of the 21st century.

Possibly one of the biggest technological boon the world has ever seen.

The Entrepreneurship opportunities are going to be endless.

I wanted to make a space for those pursuing AI or interested in AI to share resources and any type of AI related

So are you pursuing AI? What's your story? What interests you about AI? Have any resources to share?

Or feel free to just talk about...

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from The AI Entrepreneurship thread. Code AI? Interested in AI? Data Science? Machine Learning?

getting the distributors from the competition?

We originally thought to become the distributors of our innovative product in the US and gradually expand overseas. Now we are thinking on focusing in getting distributors around the world, including for the US, instead of focusing in the US only. We know that our product is going to be copied as soon as it is released so we were thinking on a global launch.
The question is: We have one main competitor, Is it ok to go after his distributors in different countries? In one hand they already...

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from getting the distributors from the competition?

The Only 3 Beliefs Holding You Back Right Now

Twice per day, I scroll through the forum. Occasionally I recognize patterns of thinking or behavior and I go through a little internal struggle: "do I respond to this question with a heartfelt response" or "should I just keep scrolling" -- I'll admit, I've been scrolling a lot more than responding lately so I figured I'd take a minute to give some unsolicited advice.

Your current results are a direct reflection of your belief systems.

That means the amount of...

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from The Only 3 Beliefs Holding You Back Right Now

Rank and Rent SEO - thoughts and resources?

I've been really curious about "Rank and Rent" Lead-Gen lately. I've found a course on it but from what I could find online it's 6,000 F*cking dollars!

For the uninitiated:
Create a website for a local business niche eg "Louisville Locksmiths"
Rank the Site on Google
Fwd calls from the landing page to the business owner and charge them on a per lead or monthly basis. There is software that will do this and track things.
Profit -- do it again.

I'm sure I probably sound uninformed because...

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from Rank and Rent SEO - thoughts and resources?

Health Insurance Options when leaving employer

Hello all,

In Q1-Q2 in 2021 I will be quitting my W2 job. I am planning for worst-case scenarios for health insurance costs. If I keep my employer's insurance, it will be around $450.
  • Is there any cheaper options or am I better off keeping it? I have savings for high deductibles, I just want insurance for catastrophe (accident, cancer, etc.).
  • Should I expect the costs to be around $400 dollars a month or in your experience any cheaper options?
  • Any recommendations on how to...

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from Health Insurance Options when leaving employer

Hello From the Midwest!

Hello Everyone! Name's Grayson. I'm currently a (broke-ish) student at a state college studying Electrical Engineering. I took quite a circuitous route to this forum. I've always been interested in solving problems (hence engineering and entrepreneurial interests) and came across James Jani's video on "the equation to wealth" (or some and such title). I saw both of MJ's books in the background of James' video and decided to go buy Unscripted (not realizing he wrote TMF first.) After...

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from Hello From the Midwest!

From Flat-Broke to Financial Freedom: How to Get Started When You Have No Money

I see this question a lot here, and posted in a lot of introductions.

How do I get started when I have no money and no skills?

I made a video to answer...


Also there's an update on my next book near the end of the vid!

Enjoy, and if you're broke with no skills, I hope it helps you!


from From Flat-Broke to Financial Freedom: How to Get Started When You Have No Money

1 Year Anniversary at TFLF

I just popped in for a sec and got a notification that yesterday was my 1 year anniversary with the Fastlane Forum. I felt the need to take some time and journal my experience.

Last October I was halfway through my last semester in college studying Economics full-time and working full-time at a clothing store in the mall. Being self-supporting, I took my sales performance seriously and was able to fund my education without taking any student loans.

After reading TMF, I joined the forum...

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from 1 Year Anniversary at TFLF

1001 Days of Execution

Hi guys,
I am starting 1001 days of Execution today.
first things first, completing my backlog in the first 45 days and figuring out the process(using 12 week year) to be used.
will upload voice notes on youtube daily but will only publish result of each week.
will post my goals to achieve next week for 1001 days.
see you next week:)


from 1001 Days of Execution

Mighty Networks vs. Circle

If you’re thinking of starting a membership community, which community platform is right for you?

The post Mighty Networks vs. Circle appeared first on Smart Passive Income.



from Mighty Networks vs. Circle

KAK's Kill Bigger Radio Show

As I am sure you probably have already heard on @Vigilante s Mind Your Business.

I too am launching a radio show! I have been a bit of a troll with the new avatar for a week. :rofl:

EDIT! Here is episode ZERO for people that want to learn what the show is all about. Basically Ayn Rand meets actionable business content.

Kill Bigger Radio Trailer - Ep 0 by Kill Bigger Radio with...

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from KAK's Kill Bigger Radio Show

#2004 David Rubenstein of The Carlyle Group

Today I have David Rubenstein, the billionaire businessman and philanthropist. But one of the things that I’m most excited to talk to him about is his book, How to Lead: Wisdom from the World’s Greatest CEO’s, Founders and Game Changers, where he sat down with people like Oprah, Tim Cook, and past presidents.  

David Rubenstein is a billionaire businessman and philanthropist. He is also a co-founder The Carlyle Group, a global private equity investment company based in Washington, D.C.

Sponsored by

Toptal – Toptal is a global network of top talent in business, design, and technology that enables companies to scale their teams, on demand. Toptal serves thousands of clients, including Fortune 500 companies and innovative startups, delivering expertise and world-class solutions at an unparalleled success rate. With elite freelancers in over 100 countries, Toptal connects the world’s top talent with leading companies in days, not weeks. Plus, every new engagement begins with a no-risk trial period, so clients only pay if satisfied with the work. Get started hiring with Toptal today.

More interviews -> https://mixergy.com/moreint
Rate this interview -> https://mixergy.com/rateint



from #2004 David Rubenstein of The Carlyle Group

TFF CONSISTENCY & ACCOUNTABILITY COLLECTIVE TRACKER

Oh yeah.. It's about to get real..

I am making this thread because I personally believe every person (myself included) struggles with consistency and accountability.

Therefore, this thread will be for members of the forum to stay accountable and consistent through tracking whatever metrics they want about themselves and/or their business ON A CONSISTENT BASIS.

Why is this important? Because consistency is...

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from TFF CONSISTENCY & ACCOUNTABILITY COLLECTIVE TRACKER

Making Solo Indie Game Developer A Viable And Lucrative Business

Hello everyone,

since I have put a lot of thought into this, it's probably going to become a long post. Actually, I'm writing this to sort my thoughts.

First thing you'll probably think when reading this is "Ooooh great, another gamer who has THE idea and now wants to become a video game rockstar". Hear me out. Here is the first thing you have to hear: I'm not a gamer. I do play games, indeed. But I actually thought about selling my XBOX One because it's collecting dust. Didn't play for...

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from Making Solo Indie Game Developer A Viable And Lucrative Business

How do you get the most out of tutorials/Udemy courses?

I bought different courses on Udemy in the past on JavaScript and it always ended up bad.
Bad in the sense that every course seems to be filling your head with lots of theory which is very hard to apply in a real life context and application.

I'm currently following a Node.JS course and I'm experiencing the same thing, once again.
I realized copying what the teacher does isn't the solution. That's a waste of time.

Now, instead of watching the lessons without using my head and actually...

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from How do you get the most out of tutorials/Udemy courses?

Lex DeVille's - Journey To Doctor

If you'd asked three years ago about grad school I would've laughed in your face. I hadn't even finished the undergrad degree I started in 2007, one of the longest, most agonizing experiences of my life. I'd hopped from one major to another and from school to school searching for the right program. All of those switches caused years of setbacks and added costs. Luckily, I served in the military and Post 9-11 GI Bill covered it all (almost). Unfortunately, I ran out of GI Bill with a few...

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from Lex DeVille's - Journey To Doctor

I lost my job and starting all over again learning web development @ 40 years old.

I lost my high paying remote CAD job a year ago.
I thought that job would go on forever since the company seemed big, backed up by a billion-dollar investment firm, and has been in the industry for over 30 years.
I was wrong.
Without warning, we were told that it's shutting down.
I was shocked.
My wife also worked under me so both of us were jobless.
So we went from earning big to zero in a flash.
This is what happened when we put all the eggs in one basket.
I learned it the hard way.

A...

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from I lost my job and starting all over again learning web development @ 40 years old.

WordPress Site Speed, Perfected—Ask Me Anything

Let's Make Your Site Perform At It's Peak

Ok, so many of you probably bring in business through your website. So obviously, you want to make your site as effective and efficient as possible.

After all, a better website means a better business.

One of the easiest and most effective ways to make sure your website performs at its best is to make it fast.

How fast? Or should we ask, how fast is fast enough? 5 seconds? 3 seconds? 1 second? Well, the...

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from WordPress Site Speed, Perfected—Ask Me Anything

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Hey friends

Hi friends,
I'm new to this forum. Hope I'm in the right place discuss and clear doubts on all aspects of business.


from Hey friends

Sending Freight

After some help. Looking at it importing products from California, USA to Sydney, Australia.

I have negotiated with two potential suppliers who are both in CA. Wanting to send a pallet with a mix of both companies goods. Can anyone recommend someone (or what services I should be seeking) in CA that might be able to receive my goods from both companies and combine onto a single pallet before shipping?

Thanks.


from Sending Freight

Struggling introverted art photographer looking to start making money.

Hi Fastlane Forum,

I'm an art photographer: I create photographs to sell through galleries as artwork and I also photograph artwork in high-resolution so that artists can make high-quality prints of their paintings. I've allowed myself to struggle for the past four years, misplacing my time into bad coping mechanisms and expensive vices, experiencing painful social anxiety while trusting the wrong people, all while spending more than I make (which isn't much right now! Less than $20k a year...

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from Struggling introverted art photographer looking to start making money.

Need some help finding high level Chinese sourcing agents. If anyone can help it would be wonderful!

Where are the best places to look, this is to people with experience only. Thank you.


from Need some help finding high level Chinese sourcing agents. If anyone can help it would be wonderful!

Airline Pilots

So with so many highly specialized skilled airline pilots hitting the streets I wanted to get peoples ideas on evolving those skills that seem a very narrow niche into something else to produce income, or ideally a 'Specialized Unit'?
Apart from the usual teach people to fly route.


from Airline Pilots

day 2 (FAILURE...)

Alright, let me explain...
Remember when I said I would start going to bed early? well...

When I got home from work last night I ate dinner and went straight to bed. That's when my girlfriend came inside the room and started putting the moves on me.
I think you can piece together what happened.

So long story short I didn't end up going to bed until 2 am. But that didn't stop me from actually listening to the alarm clock the next...


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from day 2 (FAILURE...)

Mr. Trash's journey to shakeup Private Equity (Trash Panda Capital)

Hi all,

I have been debating posting this thread for a few days, but here it goes.

I've been an Ideapreneur/Wantpreneur for a while. I'm 27 and have worked in the Salesforce ecosystem for about 5 years on and off (More about that here). After spending time at Non-Profits & PE owned companies running a single Salesforce organization, I took a leap into Consultancy late last...

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from Mr. Trash's journey to shakeup Private Equity (Trash Panda Capital)

On the path to becoming a business owner

I have been interested in making money and becoming rich since an early age. I had some success over the years with little hustles. Now my goal is $500 a day income . I work in the digital marketing space. My name is brian and I am starting 4 side hustles / 4 micro businesses in the next 30 days.


from On the path to becoming a business owner

If you are in Poland...

Hey guys,

Hit me up if you are in Poland.

I am living around the Gdansk/Sopot area and would be cool to possibly meet up.

Just post on here or shoot me a PM.


from If you are in Poland...

Financial Minimalism is Anti-Fastlane/Unscription

I think this video is great at explaining why save save save is a not the best idea for an entrepreneur looking to achieve great results.

Wanted to share this and see some responses from the forum.

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsXi3b9wC2w


from Financial Minimalism is Anti-Fastlane/Unscription

Is there a way to answer to multiple quotes in the same message?

Hi everyone.

I just respond to a few replies people have given me on my thread but I replied one at the time. I would like to know if there is a way to respond to multiple people in the same post?

Thanks for your help!


from Is there a way to answer to multiple quotes in the same message?

Idea: Remote controlled automatic plant watering

Hi,

okay, this isn't really something new, but during this summer vacation I felt a need for the following item that I would actually buy:

It would be really nice having a cheap automatic plant watering, where there is also the opportunity to control it from remote. I have a lot of sunflowers on my balcony which are quite thirsty in the summer months, needing watering every day.

The idea would be something like I lie somewhere at the beach, open an app on my phone, take a...

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from Idea: Remote controlled automatic plant watering

10 Great Copywriting Examples (+ Takeaways for Copywriters)

How useful would it be to have a handy list of great copywriting examples bookmarked for inspiration?

A swipe copy of high-quality examples that inspire you to write engaging website copy, perky popups, and emails that zing with persuasion.

Best of all, how wonderful would it be to understand why those copywriting examples are so effective and what techniques you can steal to improve your own writing?

That’s what you’ll find here. Hot tips, tangible advice, and resources to take your adverts, taglines and other sales copy from meh to mind-blowing.

Let’s dive in.

Great Copywriting Examples (+ Takeaways for Copywriters)

What Makes These Copywriting Examples Good Enough for Our Swipe File?

You know those ads on Google and Facebook? What about all that stuff in your mailbox you forgot you subscribed to? Those are examples of copywriting.

But are they great copywriting examples? Probably not.

Great copywriting is when the words compel you to sit up, take notice, and do something.

You see, killer copywriting triggers an emotional reaction so deeply rooted in our psychology, we’re unable to control it. Emotions like greed, compassion, envy, the need to belong, or the fear of missing out.

Good copywriting says, ‘trust me, I have the solution. You can stop looking.’ And that’s what our examples do.

It can be as simple as writing copy that tempts us with something free. Or convincing us to spend up big because it increases our self-esteem and social worth.

Like this 1958 classic from the “Father of Advertising”, David Ogilvy:

Copywriting examples David Ogilvy

Ogilvy knew what made his target audience tick. His headline put them in the driver’s seat. They could smell the plush leather and hear the purring of the engine under the assured ticking of the clock.

Best of all, they could feel the envious stares of other drivers, clattering past in their clunkers and rattletraps, wishing they too could join the exclusive Rolls-Royce owners club.

It was the longest running and most successful Rolls-Royce ad, resulting in a 50% increase in sales in its first year, and it formed the go-to template used by many copywriters. No list of great copywriting examples would be complete without it.

Now let’s look at 10 more copywriting examples that target a range of psychological triggers and compel us to say, ‘Yes please! Where’s the Buy Now button?’

Copywriting Example #1: The Empathetic Homepage

One second. Maybe two. That’s all the time you’ve got to persuade people to keep reading your web copy.

So, you have to draw them in immediately. Like this homepage from Marie Forleo:

Copywriting examples Marie Forleo Website

Marie provides online training and resources, and her purpose is to inspire you to build your dreams.

Why It’s Effective

You need to visit the site to get the full effect, but here’s why it’s a great piece of copywriting:

Firstly, the focus is on you. Her opening statement is warm, encouraging, and empathetic. Like a big hug from your Mom.

Scroll down and the empathy continues with phrases like, “You don’t have to get it perfect, you just have to get it going.”

There’s no hard sell, no credit card required. She draws you in with free resources and big, bold call-to-action (CTA) buttons.

Then she convinces you with testimonials from happy customers and impressive endorsements from Oprah Winfrey and Richard Branson.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Empathy: Picture your audience. What are their pain points? Use ‘you’ rather than ‘me’ or ‘I’. Tell them a story that creates a bond to make them feel understood and valued.
  • Social proof and authority: This is a trust building technique. Use customer testimonials, and showcase relevant experience, skills, or qualifications.
  • Call to Action: Move visitors through the site with helpful CTA buttons like Maria’s: ‘Download’, ‘Watch Now’, and ‘Get Inspired’.

Copywriting Example #2: The Shock-Effect Billboard

Billboards are usually targeted at motorists. They need to grab attention and leave a lasting impression, as the cars whizz by.

This is a perfect example:

Copywriting examples billboard copy

Why It’s Effective

This billboard sells a serious message with great impact. Literally.

The message is instant. It slams into our brain using 4 words and 1 image. And it’s even more powerful because they crumpled the actual billboard at the point of impact.

Great copy isn’t just about words. The context, layout, and relationship of the words and images are just as important.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Triggering shock: Negative emotions like shock and fear work as well as positive ones. What emotions can you associate with the product you’re writing about? What power words might trigger those emotions?
  • Tone: Always use an appropriate tone of voice for the audience and message. This billboard is perfect — serious, but simple.
  • Brevity. If you can say it in 4 words, don’t use more. One of the best ways to achieve brevity is to cut out unnecessary adjectives and superlatives like ‘very’.

Copywriting Example #3: The Funny Popup

Popups. We all hate them, but everyone uses them.

But sometimes a perky little popup begs forgiveness. Like this one from Really Good Emails:

Copywriting examples popup

Why It’s Effective

It’s apologetic. It knows it’s annoying, so it uses cheeky charm to win you over.

This whimsy continues in the ‘name’ field where it uses a silly name to show where you need to enter your details.

Just think: if Really Good Emails can make its popup worth reading, the rest of the site must be great.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Good headline: Make it funny, cheeky, controversial — anything but boring.
  • Humor: If you can raise a smile, you’re halfway to a conversion. Here’s how you do it well.
  • Honesty: Popups are like flies. You just want to swat them out of your way, so be honest about it and you may win a few hearts (and addresses for your email list).

Copywriting Example #4: The Engaging Email

How many emails do you delete without opening? And what makes you open the others?

Usually it’s because:

  1. You trust the sender and want to hear what they have to say, or
  2. You can’t resist the subject line.

No one knows this better than Laura Belgray from Talking Shrimp, the queen of email marketing whose conversion rates are through the roof.

Here’s a typical email from Laura, the second in her welcome sequence to new subscribers:

Copywriting examples email

Why It’s Effective

Laura has one of the strongest voices in the world of copywriting. She writes like your best friend would. She’s funny, irreverent, ballsy, and honest.

Her language is full intimacy and humor, but above all, she’s a skilled salesperson. She’s like a heat-seeking missile, on a mission to get you to click through (while charming the socks off you).

Email Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Subject line: If it sucks, it doesn’t get opened. Make it intriguing, arouse their curiosity, and avoid anything too salesy (unless it’s irresistible, like ‘free’ or ‘only 2 hours remaining’).
  • Know your audience: Write as though you know them — that the email is intended for their eyes only. Visualize the reader, know their needs, and make it conversational.
  • Tight Copy: Keep your writing tight and deliberate. Use active verbs, cut the flab, and make every word count.
  • Call to Action: Always include a call to action (CTA) and at least one PS — did you know people often skim down to the PS first?

Copywriting Example #5: The Irresistible Landing Page

When you click a CTA link, it often takes you to a landing page, which has a very specific task — to convert potential customers into buyers or subscribers.

Here’s a landing page from MasterClass, a website that streams video lessons from the world’s leading experts in their niche, like Gordon Ramsey.

Copywriting examples landing page

Why It’s Effective

MasterClass is like an online university where the professors are celebrities. Imagine Samuel L. Jackson teaching you about acting, or Anna Wintour tutoring you on leadership!

Apart from being beautifully designed, with high-quality images and videos, this landing page pulls out every sales and conversion trick in the book, such as:

  • A call to action button above the fold.
  • Minimal navigation distractions. It wants you to focus on Gordon Ramsay’s class.
  • In the video, Gordon promises, “Everything I’ve learned is laid bare in this MasterClass”. It’s a compelling value proposition.
  • Teasers, trailers, and samples so you can try-before-you-buy.
  • A sign-up form to join their email list.
  • A pricing breakdown of what you get for your money to reinforce the value proposition.
  • FAQs designed to erase the last trace of doubt.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Social proof: You may not have Gordon Ramsey as social proof, but use what you can, like customer testimonials, or your client’s awards and achievements.
  • Call to action: There are 3 subscription buttons on this page, plus one for a gift subscription, which is genius. Would this work for the online business you’re writing about?
  • Creating desire: The body copy reads, “You’re not just learning recipes, you’re learning how to take your cooking to the next level.” Irresistible benefits for a home-cook enthusiast. What would your audience find irresistible? Show them how the product can change their life for the better. Win their hearts and minds with a story. And don’t think this only applies to consumer products. Buyers of high-tech SaaS products also respond to emotional triggers in a landing page, case study, or any sales copy.

Copywriting Example #6: The Trustworthy FAQ Page

If you thought FAQs were created to answer questions, think again. Here are some of the reasons organizations include an FAQ page on their site:

  • It showcases your expertise, trustworthiness, and authority.
  • Draws people to your site by responding to their search criteria, which gives you lots of SEO opportunities.
  • It helps to overcome objections and move people towards a purchasing decision.
  • It’s a great way to tell people what you want them to know about your products without making it sound like a sales pitch.

And that takes some copywriting know-how. Just ask McDonalds:

Copywriting examples FAQs

Why It’s Effective

McDonalds is a content marketing juggernaut, as this FAQ page demonstrates.

Firstly, the questions are highly optimized to respond to keywords and phrases used in Google such as ‘Do any of the McDonald’s stores sell curly fries?’ As it happens, they don’t, but why miss the opportunity to capture the attention of people who ask.

McDonalds is cheap and convenient, but its food isn’t famous for its health benefits. Rather than avoid the elephant in the room, the FAQ page asks, and then side-steps the stickier questions, like this:

Copywriting examples McDonalds FAQs

Most of the links in the answers direct people to other pages and content in the site, which helps retain visitors and boost their SEO. And with a highly visible search function at the top of the page, it’s like a directory for the whole site.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Building trust: With every answer McDonalds is saying: You can trust us to listen to you, and deliver what you want. It uses phrases like “it’s something we know our customers want” and “It’s time for All Day Breakfast. Why? Because of you!” Think about the ways you can respond to customers’ concerns and feedback to build trust in the FAQs you’re writing.
  • Conversational tone: Use a friendly, conversational tone, but make sure it suits the audience you’re writing for. McDonalds uses phrases like “Great question,” and “Makes you wish you had one right now, doesn’t it?

Copywriting Example #7: The Persuasive Social Media Ads

We all know that classic line from Ernest Hemingway:

For sale: Baby shoes. Never worn.

It’s possibly the greatest ad copy of all time because it conjures up an entire story in just 6 words, each one dripping with emotion.

There’s no Tweet, LinkedIn, or Facebook post that quite matches Hemmingway’s flair, but the principles of writing social media ads are the same. You need to be brief and relevant, while packing a persuasive punch.

L’Oréal Paris comes close with this ad:

Copywriting examples social media ad

The ad — a 6-second video featuring actress, Eva Longoria — is targeted at women who want to get rid of their grey roots instantly.

Why It’s Effective

The text above the video gets right to the point: “Instant coverage for gray roots?” It conjures up the problem and the target market in 5 words.

In the video, Eva Longoria demonstrates the product, squeals in delight, and says “I don’t know what it’s made of but it’s magic.”

Who cares what it’s made of! If it works for Eva Longoria, it’s going to work for every other woman who wants to look like Eva Longoria.

And that’s why the ad is so effective.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Relevancy: The advantage of social media is that you can select your target audience by gender, age, interests, or down to a pin-prick on a map. Make sure your message is just as targeted and relevant to their needs, delivering a message they will understand, instantly.
  • Benefits over features: Forget the features, focus on the benefits. How is your product going to solve their problem or improve their life?
  • Product demonstration: If you can demonstrate how your product or service works, do it. It’s one of the most effective sales techniques.

Copywriting Example #8: The ‘Buy Me Now’ Product Descriptions

How many times have you clicked through to product details on an ecommerce site, only to find a lackluster description that leaves you cold?

But if you’ve ever visited Method’s website and read the dreamy descriptions of their cleaning products, you’ll know how hard it is to resist hitting the ‘buy now’ button.

Copywriting examples product descriptions

Why It’s Effective

Let’s face it, dish soap and gel hand wash are not the sexiest products. But Method uses dynamic language and metaphors to conjure up images of fashionistas (“on-trend colors”)… international travel (“a sun-drenched hillside in Tuscany”)… and enviable lifestyles (“a relaxing hour in a spa”).

Why would you want to buy any other brand of soap?

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Benefits over features: Method tells you their dish soap will whisk you away to Tuscany. What are the benefits of the product for your audience?
  • Sensory Language: Every one of Method’s descriptions is a mini experience, sparking the reader’s imagination, like “the crisp scent of freshly cut basil wafting in the breeze”. What story can you weave about your products that will capture a mood or an emotion? What luscious language can you use to make them feel, taste, smell, or experience the benefits of the product?
  • Humor: Method’s products descriptions are whimsical and funny. They brighten up a drab day and make you happy to be buying mundane soap. Can you add the same sense of fantasy and fun to your ecommerce product descriptions?

Copywriting Example #9: The Awe-Inspiring Topical Ad

A topical ad is when the advertiser takes something that’s in the news and spins it to their advantage. Like this advert by international money transfer service, TransferWise:

Copywriting examples topical ad

The ad appeared in the Australian Financial Review newspaper following a government enquiry into the banking sector. The Deputy Chair of the enquiry criticized the four major Australian retail banks for their hidden currency exchange fees and said:

“It’s very, very simple. TransferWise does it… They just tell you how much you pay to transfer money. This isn’t complicated… You just need to come clean with people.”

Why It’s Effective

TransferWise was handed a silver bullet on a golden platter, and they didn’t let it go to waste:

  • They acted immediately, while the topic was newsworthy, and the public was interested.
  • They capitalized on the issue while staying true to their own messaging: Be radically transparent. Charge as little as possible. As a brand awareness ad, it couldn’t have been stronger.
  • They ran the full-page ad in Australia’s most elite newspaper aimed at a business audience. But they used the language of their customers — individuals who live and work around the world — to emphasize the snootiness and arrogance of the banks.
  • They brazenly took on their major competitors (‘Dear Banks’), pitching themselves as the little guy in a David and Goliath saga, and won.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Humor: With their tongue firmly in their cheek, TransferWise used satirical humor to put the knife into their competitors and give it a good twist. Warning: Be very cautious when using this form of humor as it can backfire.
  • Controversy: If you’re going to do something controversial like naming and shaming your competitors, you need to take a stand and believe in your own convictions. This is a perfect, awe-inspiring example.
  • Tone of Voice: The ad remained true to TransferWise’s down-to-earth tone of voice, even throwing in a bit of Aussie slang (‘fair dinkum’) in an otherwise high-brow setting. Think about the audience you’re writing for and the tone of voice that would best resonate with them.

Copywriting Example #10: The Timeless Tagline

The job of a tagline is to sum up a key value proposition in a few succinct words. A great tagline is memorable (Nike: Just do it) and sets a brand apart from its competitors (Apple: Think different).

It can be heart-warming (Disneyland: The Happiest Place on Earth), or self-effacing (Volkswagen: Think Small).

A tagline is usually the last thing people see or hear at the end of any marketing copy, and its job is to keep the brand top of mind for future buying decisions.

Here’s arguably the all-time best copywriting example of a tagline:

Copywriting examples tagline

Why It’s Effective

Ad copywriter, Frances Gerety, came up with the famous tagline for De Beers in the 1940s, when only the rich and famous bought diamonds.

It’s effective because it directly connected diamonds with eternal love (instead of wealth) and — virtually overnight — diamond engagement rings became the symbol of that sentiment. By 1951, 80% of brides in the United States wore a diamond ring, a tradition which continues to this day.

So great was the tagline, it has been used in every De Beers ads for engagement rings since 1948. In 1956, it inspired the title of a James Bond novel, and in 1971 the Shirley Bassey song of the same name.

In 1999, it was named ‘The Slogan of the Century’ by Advertising Age.

Copywriting Techniques You Can Steal

  • Value proposition: De Beers value proposition is: if you buy this ring, your love will never end. What is the core value proposition of the brand you are writing about? Will it make people smarter, faster, happier, richer?
  • Brevity: The best taglines are short sentences that only a few words long, yet still pack a punch. Write the core value proposition as succinctly and clearly as possible, then start trimming back the words and adding pizzazz.

Which of These Great Copywriting Examples is Your Favorite?

Becoming a great copywriter isn’t about being a creative genius.

It’s about borrowing the very best ideas from the creative geniuses who came before you, studying their techniques, and applying them to your own writing — whether that be for SEO, a case study, or blogging.

That’s why you need to bookmark these copywriting examples and continue to build your own swipe file as you build your skills.

But in the meantime, we’d love to hear from you.

Which of these copywriting examples is your favorite? Is there a great example we missed?

Let us know in a comment below.

The post 10 Great Copywriting Examples (+ Takeaways for Copywriters) appeared first on Smart Blogger.



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13 Tips for Building Authority and Influence

The post 13 Tips for Building Authority and Influence appeared first on ProBlogger.

13 tips for building authority and influence

This blog post is based on episode 235 of the ProBlogger podcast.

Starting a new blog can be a bit of an uphill battle. You need to create lots of content, and then use that content to bring traffic to your site.

But what’s even tougher is building authority and influence in your niche. After all, why would people believe you’re an authority in your niche when you’ve barely talked about it?

Sure, you may know a lot about your chosen niche. But talking about how much you know and what you’ve achieved doesn’t seem to cut it anymore. These days anyone can call themselves an expert, and so people expect more than just self-promotion and a list of achievements .

Which is why I’d like to share 13 tips for building and influence through your blogging.

1. Share everything you know

There’s no doubting that to be an authority in your niche you need to know something about it. And obviously the more you know, the more influential you can become. But rather than keeping it all to yourself, you should share what you know with your audience.

Not only will it prove that you really do know what you’re talking about, it will also help you come across as someone who is honest, likeable, and that your readers can trust.

Of course, that means you should never pretend to have knowledge that you don’t actually have. But you should never need to pretend you know more than you do, because my second tip is to…

2. Don’t be afraid to talk about what you don’t know

How do you react when you see someone calling themselves an expert or a guru on a particular topic? Chances are you roll your eyes and think, Yeah. Right.

The reality is that no-one knows everything about their topic. And it’s quite okay to let your readers know there are areas that you’re still learning about.

If you’ve been reading ProBlogger for a while then you’ll know I’m not the most technical blogger in the world. I’ll often tell people that I can’t answer their question because I don’t know the answer, and then try to find out from someone who does.

You might think it’s the last thing you should do when trying to be seen as an authority. But admitting you don’t know everything makes you more ‘human’, and it can help you build a deeper connection with your audience.

3. Learn in public

If you want to become an authority in your niche then should always be trying to learn as much as you can about it. But rather than keeping your learning journey a secret, why not share the journey with your readers so they can learn with you? Chances are they came to your blog to learn the same thing, so why wait until the very end to reveal what you learned?

Learning together will help you form stronger relationships with your audience. They may even even be able to fill in some of your knowledge gaps and help you learn faster.

And don’t be afraid to do it in case you take a wrong turn or make a mistake. Mistakes are a part of learning, and your readers will be able to relate to your situation, which again strengthens the relationship.

4. Use case studies of yourself and others

There’s a big difference between telling people what you know and showing people what you know. And a great way to show them is through case studies.

When I started ProBlogger, I’d occasionally do case studies on how I’d improve someone else’s blog. It was just me telling people what I’d do to improve their blog, but always in a positive way. It wasn’t a critique, but rather a list of suggestions and constructive things.

People started asking me to coach them. But instead of coaching them one-on-one in private, I wrote up little critiques and posted them (with the blog owner’s permission, of course). The posts became very popular, but also showed that I knew what I was talking about. And being able to demonstrate what you know indirectly can be a very powerful thing.

5. Show vulnerability

Just as none of know everything about a topic, none of us are perfect either. Which is perhaps why we get so cynical about people who call themselves experts. Even if they do know a great deal about their chosen topic, they can come across as being so ‘perfect’ that no-one can relate to them.

People want to connect with people, not robots.

So don’t be afraid to get a bit personal in your blog posts. You don’t have to reveal every minute detail about your life, or share every thought that pops into your head. But revealing a little bit about yourself and showing some vulnerability can be a great way to connect with you audience .

6. Share your transformations and conversions

Let’s say you want to hire a personal trainer. Who would you rather hire: someone who has been fit their entire lives and never struggled with their health, or someone who has struggled with nutrition and exercise over the years but has now reached a point where they’re healthy?

My guess is you’d rather hire the person who has struggled. Why? Because they’re more likely to understand the struggles you’re going through help you get past them.

So don’t be afraid to tell stories about how things used to be and how much better they are now. We like to hear these stories, because it makes us believe we can make similar changes in our blogging and our live as a whole.

7. Have a positive, optimistic and constructive outlook

Some influencers seem to take great delight in busting myths and tearing people down. But I’d much rather hear from someone who spends most (if not all) of their time presenting solutions, solving problems, and pointing the way forward.

That’s not to say you can’t get negative on your blog. Sometimes being negative, critiquing something and busting myths can help you build you authority. But the last thing you want is to become known as a negative person. It may bring you traffic, but it won’t help you become an authority.

8. Give to others before asking them to give to you

Yes, there’s a time to ask people to help you out, whether it’s by buying your product/service or some other way. But you need to give them something in return.

Except it needs to be the other way around: you need to give them a lot of value so they will buy from you in return.

Of course, you don’t want to be giving away all your knowledge away for free. But you should be generous, and give your readers great content they can use to improve their lives. In doing so they will come to like and trust you, and so when you do ask them to help you they won’t think twice.

9. Be reliable

When people see you as an authority, they may come to depend on you for your knowledge and advice.

Don’t disappoint them.

If you say you’ll be posting every week, then make sure you do.

If you tell them they’ll be receiving a newsletter every week, make sure you create one every week.

 

If you’re going to send an email newsletter every week, send that email newsletter every week. Do everything you can to show up. Not to say that you can’t take a break but forecast that break. Tell people the reason why you’re taking that break.

It’s reliability. It’s being there for your reader and them feeling like you’re consistent and you’re going to continue to show up and you’re going to have their back. This builds credibility. When people know that you deliver a podcast every week or that you deliver articles every week and you deliver that newsletter, they begin to show up expecting that you’d be there as well. Be reliable in that way.

10. Keep your messages clear and simple

Did you notice how clearly and simply I said that? Keep your messaging clear and simple. Authority isn’t built upon making yourself look smart and lording your intelligence over those who follow you. Authority comes when you make your audience feel smart, when you facilitate them making discoveries, when their knowledge grows because of you. Again, let me think about this. It’s not about you looking smart, it’s about you making your readers feel smart.

I love the quote from a guy called Adam Grant. He said, “Good communicators make themselves look smart. Great communicators make their audience feel smart.” Really important distinction there. The old school way of building authority is about look at me, look at all the things that I know, look at all the things that I can say, look at all the big words that I can use. That might make you look good but influence, trust is built upon people feeling that they are benefiting from the relationship and that they are getting smarter as a result of you.

This needs to shine through in your content, the way you write your content. I’ve read a number of articles recently that talk about how to best communicate is actually write at a low level. They write at an 8th grade level rather than a university level. Actually writing in a way that your readers can understand the words, they don’t need to go away and look up words in dictionaries, they don’t need to guess the jargon you used – actually writing in a very clear way that makes your readers feel like they can understand what you’re saying is actually so powerful in building authority and credibility as well. It needs to shine through in the content that you use but also in the way you promote yourself as well. Don’t just make yourself look smart, make your readers look smart. Bring them into that in many ways that you can.

11. Use your influence for the benefit of those you influence

There are too many word influences in there but think about this. A lot of influencers use their influence to benefit them. “I want to be influential.” “Why do you want to be influential?” “I want to be influential because it’s going to get me a car, it’s going to get me a holiday, it’s going to get me money. It’s going to get me all this stuff. I’m going to get a lot out of being influential.” The reality is that that’s only going to get you so far.

Great influencers use their influence for the benefit of other people. Use your influence for the benefit of other people. I see a lot of people trying to build authority and influence because of how their influence and authority will improve their lives. But I’m struck by the fact that many of the great influencers that I’ve met live very simply. They use their influence to benefit others.

What can you do that’s going to improve the situation of your readers and make the world a better place in some way? I actually ask that question from time to time. You will discover ways to use your influence, as small as it may be, to benefit other people. Obviously, you can write content that’s going to solve your readers’ problems but what more could you do? What more could you do for your readers?

For example, as I think about this for ProBlogger, what can I do to benefit you as an audience? One of the things that we’ve been realizing over the last year or so is that yeah, we can teach you how to blog but one of the needs that we see a lot of bloggers having is they want more traffic, particularly new bloggers. As you start your blog, you’ve got no traffic. One of the things we realized as we were doing this Start a Blog course that we launched recently is that we can actually help our students to get their first traffic.

This is why we started International Start a Blog Day, which happened yesterday as I record this. We actually promoted the 103 blogs that started as a result of our course because we realized we could not only help these bloggers to start their blogs but we can actually give them a little bit of traffic. We’ve been promoting these blogs. I had an email this morning from someone who said, “Wow, I had 100 readers yesterday. I never thought I’d get 100 readers on the first day of my blog.” What could you do that could help your readers to have their dreams come true? What could you do to help your readers’ dreams come true? Don’t just use your influence to make your dreams come true. Find creative ways to make your readers’ dreams come true as well.

12. Show your audience that you know, like and trust them

The quote by Bob Burg, “People do business with those that they know, like, and trust.” This is a very well-known quote. I believe it. People will want to do business with you when they know, like, and trust you. One of the ways that you speed up people knowing, liking, and trusting you is to actually do those things to them as well. I think this quote is a two-way thing. Don’t just try and be known, don’t just try and be liked, don’t just try and be trusted but actually display that you know your audience, that you like your audience, and that you trust your audience. Let’s just break that down a little bit.

Do you know your audience? The more you know your audience, the better position you’re in to build authority with them. Do your research on who is reading your blog. Who are they? Their demographics. What are their needs? What are their dreams? When you know these things, you’re in a much better position to serve them and as a result they’re going to begin to realize that you actually know who they are. One of the best things that I get is emails from time to time from people saying, “I feel like that podcast was for me.” That is because I’ve spent a lot of time trying to understand who is my audience. I create content based upon knowing who they are having met many of them at our conferences and our events but also talking to them on Facebook lives and those types of things as well. The more you get to know your audience and show them that you know who they are, the more they’re going to want to know, like, and trust you as well. Know your audience. Know, like, and trust.

Like your audience. Show warmth to your audience. Show your audience that you actually like them. Make your audience feel they are charismatic. A lot of bloggers they want to be charismatic themselves. Actually make your audience feel like you know them but you also like them. Spend time with them. Get on Facebook live and answer their questions. Hang out with them. Some of the most popular Facebook lives that I’ve done have been the ones where I’ve sat with a beer on a Friday afternoon and I’ve just said, “Let’s hang out.” We just chatted back and forth. We’ve asked questions of each other. We’ve hung out, we’ve had fun. Those are the types of things that, actually as I look back over the year, I’ve built relationships with my audience the most. Hang out with them. Show them that you like them.

Lastly, show them that you trust them. This comes down to this vulnerability that I was talking about before. When you share something of yourself, you’re showing your audience that you trust them. By me sharing that I’ve got three boys and me sharing that I’ve just been on holidays and me sharing some of the mistakes that I’ve made and some of the insecurities that I have, that shows that I trust you as my audience. I wouldn’t share that type of stuff if I didn’t have some trust of you, if I didn’t like you. Don’t just try and be known, be liked, and be trusted. The way that you actually do that is to know who you’re speaking to, to like them and to show that you like them, and to trust them – very important.

13. Understand that it takes time

The last thing I’ll say about building influence and trust and authority is that it takes time. Most of the people that I see as influencers and authoritative type people and people that I see having credibility in the topics that they talk about, as I think about it and as reflecting on this week, they’ve all been around for a while. I’ve been following them for a while. It didn’t happen overnight.

I look at someone like Chris Guillebeau. He’s been blogging for years, probably for a decade or so now. He’s someone that gradually over time I’ve come to know, like, and trust. He’s someone that overtime I’ve began to see has authority on certain areas. It’s because he’s done all of the things that I’ve just talked about. He’s been vulnerable, he’s put himself out there, he’s kept his messaging clear, he’s shown up, he’s delivered on his promises. All of these things I’ve just talked about, he’s done them but he’s done them time and time and time again over the years. It’s the accumulation of that that makes me think, “Yeah, he’s credible. I can trust him. He’s an authority.” That is key.

I know that’s a little bit disheartening for those who just finished our Start a Blog course and you just started. But it’s the accumulation of the little things that you do over time that are going to lead to people knowing, liking, and trusting you, and people seeing you as an authority. It doesn’t happen overnight. It’s the accumulation of these things. It’s the longevity of you doing these things overtime that’s really going to count the most. Yes you can build little bits of influence early on but it’s going to exponentially grow the longer you show up and the more consistent you are with these things over time as well.

I really hope that has been helpful to you. I hope it’s been clear and simple enough. As I thought through, I’m very aware that different people grow their authority and influence in different ways.

Photo by Chris Barbalis on Unsplash

The post 13 Tips for Building Authority and Influence appeared first on ProBlogger.

      


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