The simple way to get everything you want from your digital marketing
Sonia Simone
Recognized leader in content marketing. I create courses, ghost-written books, and conversion-focused content campaigns for experts with sky-high standards and limited time.
I want to tell you a story about two women.
One is my hairdresser and the other is my massage therapist.
Of the two, I have a stronger connection with my massage therapist. I see her more often, she’s closer to my age, and — well, there’s just a certain bond that develops when you get naked that often with a person.
A few years back, my hairdresser asked me to recommend her for a “best of” list our local TV station was running.
She didn’t cajole, bribe, beg, threaten, or promise me a free haircut. She just said,
“Hey, if you think about it, would you mind logging into this site and giving me a review?"
I like her, so I went home and did it. Took me about three minutes.
A few weeks later, I noticed that my massage therapist had a banner over her business saying that she was mentioned in the same program.
And I felt really bad.
I would have been very happy to give her a review as well. I’d love to support her business. And I’d love to do something nice for her.
But like a dummy, it never even occurred to me to check the other categories. The contest was finished and the votes were all counted.
And she didn’t ask.
You don’t get if you don’t ask
We don’t ask for referrals. We don’t ask for the order. We don’t ask for a guest post. We don’t ask for advice.
We don’t ask our readers to buy the products and services that would help them get what they want.
We don't offer any urgency for our buyers to get this problem addressed now, instead of procrastinating until the heat death of the universe.
"It sounds so salesy! I feel like an infomercial!"
We think that by asking we’re being pushy.
(And some people do push it a little too far. It’s probably contact with the pushy ones that makes us so nervous.)
The two most common mistakes in digital marketing
Marketers online seem to fall into two camps.
A few aggressive types still pitch too much.
Everything they send is a pitch. They burn out their lists, flood our DMs with irrelevant offers, and just generally make pests of themselves.
Sometimes it works, especially if the ad budget is infinite.
But their cost per sale would be a lot better if they provided a little more value and a little less promotion. If they cultivated some relationships instead of just harvesting eyeballs.
But I've found the more common camp is the one we don’t see.
They’ve got something valuable to offer. But they’ve over-internalized the advice to “give before you get.”
They give and give and give and give and give. But when it comes time for the “get” part, they freak out.
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“I only want customers who already want me”
Sometimes I work with clients who feel weird about including persuasive elements in their content.
Or who get the icks when they see a clear, straightforward call to action attached to their name.
"If I really have to play all of those manipulative copywriting tricks, do I even want these people as my customers?"
To me, that sounds a lot like “I want customers to buy from me, but they have to read my mind to find out why.”
Your customer is supposed to:
That’s a lot to ask of your poor customer, just because you feel weird about asking them to do something.
You may be awesome, but I promise you, you aren’t that awesome.
Running a business can get uncomfortable
I don’t care who you are, there will be something about running a business that makes you uncomfortable.
For me, it was selling. I would rather have extensive dental surgery than stand up on stage and sell something.
That’s not colorful overstatement — I really would prefer the dental surgery.
But I’ve done it. In front of a cold crowd who didn’t know me, who mostly hated who I vote for, and who didn’t have a multi-month warmup from the blog.
And (this still amazes me) I was successful at it. I sold a ton of stuff. It was horrendously uncomfortable, but now I know I can do it.
And I never have to feel limited by the “I’m not a salesperson” belief again.
Ethical business is a nonzero-sum game. You win when your customers win.
But that doesn’t mean you never spend time outside your comfort zone.
If you want the sale, ask for it. If you want your business to grow, learn some ethical copywriting techniques to help you ask more clearly.
And if it feels awkward ... you might just be growing into the kind of person who knows how to ask for what you want.
Need a hand with that?
If you could use a hand with content and copy that asks for business — without sliding into Creepy McSaleshole territory — drop me a DM right here on LinkedIn.
I can help you with website copy, content strategy, and email sequences that will built audience relationships and help you sell your magnificent offer.
I have room for two projects in July.
This post was originally published on Copyblogger. Photo by Camylla Battani on Unsplash.
B2B Freelance Marketing Writer | Conversion Copy, Content & Strategy | Build trust & authority in SaaS, Tech, Supply Chain, Logistics
5 个月This one's a keeper! I might make it into a poster lol.
NKBA President Chicago Midwest Chapter and resourceful partner for design build professionals in the building materials industry.
5 个月I've always felt like when I make a purchase with you Sonia, it's a privilege. I'm getting depth of experience and integrity behind the product/service - all the way back to my original copyblogger enrollment. Everything has served me well and I'm proud of what I've learned from you.
CMO | Brand Builder | Business Coach + Consultant | MCode: Achiever/Orchestrator/Driver
5 个月It's amazing how much content I engage with that never once asks for the sale or any type of action — that's one of the first things that was drilled into my head when I started investing in learning how to write for marketing. Now, as I update old content that doesn't have a bold ask, I make sure to add it!