Showing posts with label good communication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label good communication. Show all posts

Thursday, 14 March 2013

Don't Let Your Sales & Marketing Look Like This Oatmeal


Inspiration for what to blog about can come from the most unlikely places.  One such example came last week from a Hampton Inn in northern Wisconsin:  One morning, as I wandered down to the hotel breakfast area in search of some nourishment, the burger that I had for dinner the previous evening sat like a rock in my stomach.  I wanted something healthier and hoped that the breakfast offering included oatmeal.

Happily, the breakfast bar did include oatmeal.  Unhappily, this is what it looked like:



In an instant, my taste for oatmeal vanished and I decided to see what else was available.

OK, I get it, it’s a hotel, not a restaurant.  I don’t expect a gourmet menu.  But is it possible to make oatmeal look any less desirable?  Upon sharing this picture with my wife, she compared it to the compost bin we keep in the kitchen for fruit and vegetable peelings and leftover scraps.  Not exactly the comparison the folks at Hampton Inn were shooting for, I’m sure.

Let’s see if we can’t draw some food for thought (pardon the pun) from this most unfortunate food presentation.


The Importance of the First Few Seconds

In his book “Blink”, renowned author Malcolm Gladwell describes that our rapid recognition subconsciously make a series of conclusions about something within the first few seconds of seeing it.  It’s why we dress nicely for a job interview, why we shave and comb our hair on a first date, and why we make eye contact and smile when we meet a prospect for the first time.  All because we want the person we’re engaging to like us and give us what we want, whether it’s a job, a relationship or their business.


Sales & Marketing Materials

Here’s the reason the look of your sales & marketing materials (brochures, case studies, whitepapers, etc.) is so important:  It’s often the first impression prospects and customers will have of your company and you want them to subconsciously conclude that you’re a professional and reputable company and make them comfortable with the prospect of doing business with you.


Website & Blog

Thanks to Google and other search engines, your website is very likely the first impression prospects will have of you and accordingly it should have a clean format so visitors are able to quickly determine what you do.  Graphics should be clear and relevant, headers should logically break up your pages so the viewer can quickly scan and decide if you can provide what they’re looking for.

Your blog should have the same characteristics: an appealing look that makes the reader want to explore and read deeper.  Relevant graphics and images make your blog posts more readable, and headers break up the body of the post, make it more reader-friendly and allow the reader to identify the highlights and decide if they want to read more.


Sales Proposals & Quotations

Sales proposals and quotations are notoriously poorly formatted.  Many companies simply list quantities and prices for what they will provide, expecting that to be enough to convince the reader that they can solve the problem at hand.  Images and headers are important here, too, and if your document exceeds ten pages you might want to think about adding a table of contents so readers can quickly locate what they’re looking for.

A professional title page clearly showing the title of the proposal, who the document was written for and by, and the date would all help create a positive first impression.


Conclusion

A bag of oatmeal doesn’t provide the most appealing first impression for someone with an appetite for a healthy breakfast.  Your sales & marketing materials shouldn’t make this same mistake: your website, blog, sales proposals and quotations and other materials should have a clean, concise and professional look, lest your prospects and customers take a pass on dealing with you or your company and consider some other options.


Got something to say? Leave a comment below, we’d love to hear from you! Got a question that we can address in our blog? Contact us through our website or email me directly and we’ll put our crack team to work and let you know when we post a reply.


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Steve Hartley, Managing Partner
Fering Communications Inc.

Thursday, 28 February 2013

How To Write an Effective Professional Bio


I’ve found myself writing a fair number of professional bio’s recently, so I decided to take a few minutes to put fingers to keyboard to whip up a quick how-to on writing an effective biography.  Bio’s can be used in a number of places including your company website, sales literature, or a program at a conference you’re speaking or presenting at and provide a summary overview of one in all of their glory.



What Is a Bio?

While it’s a pretty straightforward question, it’s worth pausing for a moment to consider.  Of course, bio is short for biography which is a written account of a series of events that make up a person’s life.  However, bio’s come in different shapes and sizes.  Twitter provides the shortest bio opportunity, limiting you to 140 characters.  The “Summary” section of your LinkedIn profile is a bio and is usually a few paragraphs long.  If you have a blog, your bio is probably a few paragraphs there, too.  Many companies include bio’s for their ownership and management team members on their ‘About’ or ‘Company Profile’ pages on their website.  Famous people often have biographies that are published books and can span several hundred pages.


What Does a Bio Include?

A bio is a summary of you as a person and what it includes depends on where it will appear.  Professional bio’s are the most common type—the sort that appears on sales literature, websites, and on other business related channels.  Typically, a professional bio highlights your related professional experience, your academic background, and career achievements.  Awards, published articles and high profile customers or projects are all fair game for a professional bio.

Non-professional bio’s might relate to charitable work or community involvement and typically include more personal information such as how long you’ve been married, how many children you have and what your hobbies include.

It’s also not a bad idea to, where space allows, include some personal information in a professional bio: it will help put a human touch to your professional profile.


How To Write a Bio

Bio’s aren’t that difficult to write because of the law of supply and demand: most people generally have a lot to say about themselves but the amount of space or words they have to work with is typically limited.  The challenge in writing a bio is cherry picking the important details and piecing them together in one continuous piece.  If you’re writing a professional bio a good place to start is with a resume: reduce it to its essence by continually removing the least relevant information until you’re within whatever space constraints you’re working with.  Then turn what’s left into a well written piece.

When you’re writing a bio, even if it’s your own, always write in the third person.  Don’t write “I am the Managing Partner of Fering Communications Inc.  I am married and have three children.”, instead write “Steve Hartley is the Managing Partner of Fering Communications Inc. He is married and has three children”.

Consider your tone carefully: let how the bio will be used dictate the formality of the tone.  A professional bio should be written in a formal tone even if you’re a joke-a-minute kinda person—you never know how a reader might interpret some tongue-in-cheek humour.

Adding a picture is always a good idea as it literally puts a face with a name and that builds a stronger relationship with the reader.  Again, let the purpose dictate the picture: a smiling but serious picture would be suitable for a professional bio, a picture of you with your family for more personally oriented purposes, and a picture of you with your beer league hockey buddies for something more fun.


Conclusion

Biographies are everywhere you look, and writing one can be a bit tricky.  If you keep the purpose of the bio in mind and make sure what is included is relevant to the purpose, you’re on the right track.  Letting the purpose of the bio dictate the tone and writing in the third person will also help make sure that the bio is appropriate.  Adding a picture adds a personal touch that will connect with the reader.


Got something to say? Leave a comment below, we’d love to hear from you! Got a question that we can address in our blog? Contact us through our website or email me directly and we’ll put our crack team to work and let you know when we post a reply.


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Steve Hartley, Managing Partner
Fering Communications Inc.

Sunday, 6 January 2013

10 Great Reasons Why Your Company SHOULD be Blogging (Part 2)

As promised, we’re back with reasons 6 – 10 of why your company should have a corporate blog.  For those who didn’t see the first part of this post, please take a few minutes to check out the first part of this post to get up to speed.

Without further ado let’s get on with the rest of the reasons why your company should have a blog:
  1. Share Timely Information – Your blog can serve as an announcement board for your company’s current events. If you’re going to be exhibiting at a tradeshow or attending a conference you can create a series of blog posts leading up to the event that discuss relevant topics and highlight your participation. If you’re going to release a new product or a major update on an existing product then your blog can play an important role in getting that message out there. If you’ve signed up a key account or established a strategic partnership, you can get that message out to your audience instantly by posting the information on your blog.
  2. Damage Control – Your blog can be an archive of all things good about your company but can also play a key role in swiftly and deftly dealing with bad things that inevitably happen, helping to protect the reputation of your company, products and services. Say you just released a new version of your software without full testing Windows XP compatibility. Within hours of the release your help lines are overwhelmed by people who are finding out that your new software doesn’t play nice on XP. Within minutes of confirming the issue you could have a new blog entry posted recognizing the issue, accepting accountability for it and committing to a fix as quickly as possible. This might not correct the compatibility problem but will go a long way in assuring your user base that you’re dealing with the problem head on. And, if you use your blog as the foundation for social media channels, you might be able to get the message out to users before they install the new version and mess up their systems.
  3. Humanize your company – As much as it may pain you, your website is probably a fine blend of corporate hyperbole, hand-wavy benefit statements and industry jargon. Your company blog is different: it gives you an opportunity to have a human voice—a chance to wish people the best of the season, to comment on current events, to drop the rhetoric and engage your readers in a human and personal way.
  4. Understand Your Audience – By blogging about different products and services offered by your company and analyzing the number of pageviews, click throughs, shares and comments that each post gets you can understand what resonates with your audience. You could use this to boost products and services that might be underperforming or to eliminate products or services that your audience is showing that it’s not interested in.
  5. Search Engine Optimization – Having a carefully planned, well written and informative blog that is updated regularly gives you a chance to lace your site with words and phrases that are key to your business and will help you rank better with the search engines. The search engine spiders adore fresh content that is rich with relevant material and will keep a close eye on your blog, helping your rankings and thereby increasing the traffic it directs to your website. While this is usually the number one reason on every other list of “top reasons why you should be blogging”, we have found it largely depends on your industry so we’ve put it at the bottom. Check back for a blog post in the near future where we’ll expand on this.
 
 

Conclusion

A company blog is a great way to engage prospects, establish your credibility, and keep your company in the forefront as prospects make their way towards a buying decision.  You can use your company blog to share your experiences, keep your audience up-to-date and improve your search engine rankings, thereby increasing traffic to your website.  But keep in mind that if you do decide to start a company blog it isn’t a trivial task—you should have a clear set of goals, define a strategy and identify your expectations before even posting your first blog.  If the thought of all of this is overwhelming don’t let it stop you, just drop us a line because we’d love to help you navigate the waters of corporate blogging!
 
Got something to say? Leave a comment below, we’d love to hear from you! Got a question that we can address in our blog? Contact us through our website or email me directly and we’ll put our crack team to work and let you know when we post a reply.
 
 

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Steve Hartley, Managing Partner
Fering Communications Inc.

Monday, 17 December 2012

You Can't Not Communicate

Let me preface this post by saying that the title of this post is the same as a book written by David Grossman, but the content of this post is not based on that same book.  I do own the book but (note to Mr. Grossman: you shouldn’t read the read of this sentence) haven’t read beyond the first twenty or so pages because they really weren’t that inspiring.  So regardless of how closely this blog post may or may not be to the book of the same title it was neither taken from nor inspired by the book of the same title.


You are always communicating—it is impossible not to.  You have the choice of actively controlling the message that you want to communicate or passively communicating a message that may or may not be what you want.  Either way you are always communicating.

Say, for example, you’re out of the office for a few days attending an industry conference.  By turning on your email out-of-office assistant you are actively communicating to anyone who emails you that you have limited availability and it might be a day or two before you respond.  If you didn’t they might think that you’re ignoring them or don’t value them enough to reply.  Hopefully this is not the case, but by not actively communicating you are losing control of the message because you can’t not communicate.

The same is true if you’re working on a project for a client.  If you provide regular status updates—even if those updates describe that there is no activity on the project or that you have encountered issues but you are working to resolve them—you are communicating a message that you are on top of things.  If you don’t provide regular updates your client might perceive that your silence means that you are on track and everything is a-OK, but alternately they might think that you’re having problems and don’t want them to know.  Your communication doesn’t have to be much: a quick phone call or short email might suffice or if you want to really impress them you could provide regular and formal project status reports.  Either way, you can control the message by actively communicating or you can passively communicate and leave your message to chance.  (Shameless plug:  contact us and we'll help you create a professional project status report or other technical documentation.)

Have you ever been to the website of a company that provides a product or service that you need, checked out their company blog and seen that the last posting was made months earlier?  What message does that project?  Maybe you think that they’re so wonderfully busy that they just don’t have time to maintain their blog.  Or maybe you think that they can’t afford the resources to keep their blog current or that they’re not good at following through on things that they start.  Do either of those thoughts fill you with enough confidence to engage them?  Probably not.


Conclusion

In today’s world we are always communicating whether we like it or not.  You can take charge of the message by actively communicating or you can do nothing and passively communicate a message that may or may not be accurate.  Your communication doesn’t have to be fancy—an automated reply email, a quick phone call or a full blown project status report are all ways that you can actively communicate the message that you want.


Got something to say? Leave a comment below, we’d love to hear from you! Got a question that we can address in our blog? Contact us through our website or email me directly and we’ll put our crack team to work and let you know when we post a reply.


Other Blog Posts

If you liked this blog post, here are some other blog posts that you might also like:


Steve Hartley, Managing Partner
Fering Communications Inc.
Website: www.feringcommunications.com
Email: steve.hartley@feringcommunications.com