Archive for May, 2012
The profound power of five blog readers
May 6th
At the recent Social Slam conference, there was a ton of inspiring content from some of the greatest marketing minds around. And yet to me, the sentence from the day-long conference that has lingered in my mind came from the least-known speaker of the day. She is not a marketer. She is not a social media expert. In fact, Social Slam was the first social media conference she had ever attended.
I invited Dr. Alice Ackerman, a pediatrician and college educator from Virginia Tech University, to relate her inspiring story of how she was connecting to her community through social media. She told the audience of her introduction to the social web through The Tao of Twitter and of her struggles to get approval to blog from the university medical community. She persevered and eventually got the go-ahead, but finding an audience for her blog posts was another matter.
Much of her first blogging efforts were aimed at educating the community on the importance of childhood vaccinations. But she had some doubt as to whether she was making an impact. She displayed a chart displaying the lowly results of her blogging efforts. For more than a year, her posts limped along. In fact, she averaged 4.5 readers a day.
And then something magical happened when she received this tweet:
Dr. Ackerman is the person who changed my mind once I read her blog and her links. I had no idea that info existed.
And it was at this point that Dr. Ackerman delivered the line at the conference that received a thunderous applause from all the hard-working bloggers in attendance:
“Yes, I only had 4.5 readers a day on my blog … but I had an impact on one of them.”
I thought this was a profound lesson on many levels.
- “Citizen Influencers” are using the power of online publishing tools to make a difference in unexpected ways
- You never know when your words are making an impact
- Tenacity, commitment, and patience make the difference in social media success
I think this is an inspiring message for any blogger out there. What do you think? Are you making a difference in big and small ways?
Stake out, check in. A {growtoon}.
May 4th
Join the growtoonists each Friday for a humorous take on marketing, social media, and current business events.
Joey Strawn is a social media strategist that loves enjoying a good book and then drawing in it. Check him out on Twitter: @joey_strawn
Re-boot your company, re-boot yourself.
May 3rd
Click here if you can’t see this video interview with Mitch Joel.
Mitch Joel rocks. He really does. You may know him as a blogger, podcaster and author of the seminal book Six Pixels of Separation but he is also a business leader, husband, father and generous friend.
You are going to LOVE this short video interview because Mitch reveals plans for his new book. It really sounds amazing. “Re-boot your company, re-boot yourself.” Yeah, I can dig that.
He also has some very interesting observations on the writing process itself.
Enjoy!
Is there a formula for viral content?
May 2nd
By Srinivas Rao, Contributing {grow} Columnist
Every now and then I will write a post that meets the following formula:
- It has a clickable headline (i.e 7 ways to increase traffic, 5 ways to get more followers, etc)
- It’s something I think will get shared plenty
- It’s a safe topic that has probably been repeated 1,000 times before
Mark (being the smart guy that he is) never accepts the post and tells me it won’t cut it. That’s why the content at {grow} brings a unique perspective that you won’t find on many other blogs. The writers are held to a different standard, especially if there’s a formula involved!
You Can’t Manufacture Authenticity
And yet, we’re all looking for that magic viral “formula” right? In the past when I’ve had a blog post go viral, I’ve tried to make an effort to write something that will catch fire again and can rarely reproduce that effect.
A conversation with Danielle Laporte made me realize why. When you approach producing content this way, it’s not authentic. It’s manufactured. It loses the personal touch that makes people read your blog. To quote Scott Stratten, “what people spread is emotion.” When you write a post in the hopes of getting tweets, traffic, and likes, you filter your voice through that lens. It’s a bit like adding artificial sweetener to your dessert and wondering why it doesn’t taste as good as real sugar.
Stop Trying to Fit In
People who fit in rarely make history. They get lost in the echo chamber. What makes you human is that there is no other person on this planet like you. Infuse that into every blog post you write. As Mark once said, social media amplifies your competitive advantage, so make sure you leverage it.
Take a Stand
If you’re afraid to offend people or fear people disagreeing with you, get over it. If you want to write something that makes an impact, it’s unlikely it will appeal to everybody. If you lose some people because of what you write, they may not be the right members for your tribe. As you’ve probably heard before, if you try to appeal to everybody you’ll appeal to nobody.
Create Art, not Marketing Material
One of the things that holds most business blogs back is that most of their blog posts read like PR puff pieces that promote their products. But we’ve entered an age in which everybody is in the publishing business. Everybody is a creative business owner. So you have to create art, not marketing material. Entertain and inspire.
Ditch the Scripts and Formulas
Scripts, formulas and best practices will only get you so far. You might even be the most popular person in the echo chamber. But if you ever want to get out of the echo chamber you have to ditch the script. I’d recommend taking a week off from reading any other blogs so you can reconnect with your own voice.
Writing anything formulaic with the intention of inflating vanity metrics is a recipe for mediocrity. Forget the traffic, tweets, likes and comments for a while. For some reason when you stop keeping score it goes up on its own. Write as if you’ve got nothing to prove and you’ll resonate with your audience in a way you never have before.
Srinivas Rao writes about the things you should have learned in school, but never did and his the host-co founder of BlogcastFM. You can follow him on twitter @skooloflife










You’re in marketing for one reason: Grow.
Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
-Mark Schaefer

