Marketing
Tip
Cutting Through the
Noise So You Can Be "Well
Heard"
by
Diane Eble
Nobody
has to tell you that you can hardly do anything or go
anywhere without being bombarded with messages—mostly
someone trying to sell you something.
I did some research
on just how many such messages we encounter on average. The
stats are all over the map (click
here to read the sources), but the figure that keeps
floating to the top is around 3000.
Most of us have
become quite adept at tuning out most of those
messages.
The trouble is, if
you're an author or business person, you have a message of
your own you want people to hear.
You know YOUR
message is important. Your message deserves to be
heard.
But look at the
competition!
So, how can you
ensure that YOUR message will be "well
heard"?
The Secret to Being
"Well Heard"
One word provides
the answer: Context.
People will listen
to you if you provide the right context for them to really
hear your message.
Test this for
yourself.
Which messages in
your email inbox do you actually read?
Aren't they the ones
from a friend? The name provides the context for your
wanting to receive the message.
Or perhaps it's the
subject line that grabs you. That is the context—you know
that the topic will interest you.
Well, you have to do
the same thing for others if you want them to listen to you.
You need to continually find ways to create a context, or
the frame, that orients them to the rest of what you want
them to hear.
But you don't want
people to just listen to you once, do you? You want them to
come back to your blog, to keep reading your emails, to
listen to your teleseminars. To buy your book, course,
product or service.
Creating
Community
To do that, you need
to create a community.
Virtual Communities
are more possible now than ever before. You can have people
from all over the world in your community.
The trick is not
only how to get their attention in the first place, but how
to design an interesting place for them to go visit and want
to stay for a while.
Better yet, not only
stay, come back again, but invite their friends to come
visit, too.
As an author, you
want to be thinking about building a community. A group of
followers. You as an author are leading a tribe of people
who resonate with your ideas. (For more on this, see my
article, "The Real
Job of an Author.")
Or, you could look
at it as creating a Virtual Village.
In the state of
Washington, there's a town called Levenworth
that is designed to be a Bavarian village. The food,
festivals, shops, mostly have a Bavarian theme, as if you
were in an Alpine village. That's the context of the town,
and it attracts people who want a taste of that kind of
experience.
When your
Virtual Village has a clear "theme," and people know
what to do when they get there, they're more likely not only
to visit once, but come back—and tell their
friends.
So as you think
through how YOU want to be "well heard" above the crowd,
think about the different ways you can not only create a
context for people to really hear you, but also what kind of
community you
want to build.
Next
Step:
For
more specifics on how to create both context and community,
I invite you to listen to the May 28
"Design Your Village" Pre-class call with Russell Cox
(Bonnie Dubrow and I also added our thoughts). You can
listen to that, plus find out more about how to "design
your village," at www.designyourvillage.com.
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