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The Clean and Green Club, September 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: September 2021

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Are You Confusing Your Market and Audience? BIG Mistake

In a recent newsletter, Chris Brogan wrote, “The other day, I tweeted out something like, ‘Hey, who here can help shiny up a sales page for me?’” and then went on to list the responses and his process of choosing who to work with. I realized even as I was writing back to him that I wanted to share my thoughts with you, too. Here’s the relevant part what I sent him. You can see the archived sales page we’re discussing (since he has indeed replaced the copy) at https://web.archive.org/web/20210507210632/https://ownermedia.leadpages.co/insider/

I L O V E “shiny it up”–nice addition to the language. I missed the post where you made that request, or I probably would have responded.

I say “probably” because your existing sales page is quite strong–at least for a word nerd like me. I love replacing the “new normal” with “New Better”–especially since I’ve been thinking hard about the opportunities to make a better world as we emerge from the pandemic. I’m sure you’ve heard that it’s too long, but that’s an audience thing. If I and people like me are your target audience, it’s not too long because it got me to read all the way through. And it felt much less lengthy when I switched from reading it on my phone to re-reading it on a computer, BTW.

I will be very curious to see what magic Sandy works. Three changes I would make would be:

  1. A MUCH stronger headline than “Small Business Owner Tools and Support”–something focused on the benefit (goal made easier and/or problem solved or at least helped) and an action step
  2. Change the five “I” bullets to “You”
  3. Spread the testimonials out instead of grouping them together (and possibly add more)
  4. Since you used Cyndi’s testimonial as a teaser early on, I’d use her entire blurb there and not repeat it later

It got me thinking more about the difference between audience and market, though–because I AM your audience, but I’m NOT your market.

I’m your audience because I love good copy, I run a microbusiness (a solopreneurship, in fact), and I encounter some of these issues in my business. But I’m not your market, because 1) I historically haven’t reacted well to online courses and tend to abandon them; 2) I can’t keep up with the firehose of information already coming my way; 3) I tend to multitask while listening to webinars and teleseminars, and if I’m paying for the content, that means I have to not multitask to get my money’s worth, and therefore there are fewer computer hours in the day to get everything else done; and most importantly, 4) I’ve already developed a bunch of support systems and networks of people I can bounce stuff off–ranging from online communities to 1:1 peer masterminds where we mentor and help each other.

Until now, writing to you, I really hadn’t thought very much about the truth that [audience and market] don’t always align even when it looks like a fit. Since I’m thinking about it now, this note is likely to evolve into my monthly newsletter main article.

Other places where a market and an audience might not match–these, I *have* thought about before–would include:

  • K-12 and college-following-right-after-high school educational settings, where the market is parents or teachers but the audience is kids
  • Services for elders, purchased by younger caregivers
  • Services provided by nonprofits working in poverty situations; their market is donors in wealthy countries, but their clients (the audience) are individuals with zero disposable income and little infrastructure
  • Corporate B2B sales where the decision-makers are not the users

What’s new and different about *this* conversation is the situation where the audience is almost the market, but non-obvious factors get in the way. So thanks for the insight ;-).

And here’s the relevant part of his reply to me:

There’s quite a lot of food for thought in here so thank you for that. We both agree that a new better might be much better than a new normal.

If you’re curious about what his copywriter did, visit https://ownermedia.leadpages.co/insider/ . The version I’m looking at begins,

Owner Insider

“WAIT, WHAT? THERE’S A MEMBER COMMUNITY AT OWNER MEDIA?”

If you’re seeing something different, you can see if Archive.org has that one (paste the above URL into the search field on that site). As of the day I’m writing this in August, the most recent Archive copy is the May 7 version that begins “Small Business Owner Tools and Support.”

Next month, I’ll give you my response to Chris’s “Shiny up” new sales page.

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Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

Are you ever stuck on the hamster wheel, just barely getting by? What if I told you there are always ways to create more impact, more income, and more freedom?

>Maybe you’ve seen others thrive and asked yourself, “Why can’t I create those kinds of results? How do I figure out what the cutting-edge experts are doing?”

Well, if you’re like my friend Christine Schlonski, you get a bunch of these super successful, heart-centered experts and authorities together and ask! She won’t even charge you to hear our answers, if you listen live to her Profitable Coach Summit. But it’s not just for coaches. Any entrepreneur will benefit.

You might recognize some of the speakers’ names–Milana Leshinski, Jeannie Spiro, Dan Janal, and many others–and, of course, Christine herself. She is not only brilliant, she’s also a lot of fun to be around. Plus, all of these strategies are heart-centered; they’ll feel right from the get-go.

Get your complimentary ticket to The Profitable Coach Summit here: https://ci340.isrefer.com/go/PCS/shelhoro/

The best part is, these sessions will give you guidance and insights on how you can become a profitable coach with the impact and freedom you desire.

Here’s just a taste :

  • How to Create a Business That Feeds Your Soul and Your Wallet
  • The World’s #1 Media Coach Will Show You How To Generate Top-Tier Media Coverage (without paying anything for it)
  • Turning Webinars on Their Heads: How to increase interaction and conversion with shorter, story-based presentations.
  • Converting LinkedIn Content and Connections to Conversations
  • The Four Sales Languages
  • Small Events, Big Back End: How To Build a 7–Figure Business With Retreats & Mastermind Groups
  • How To Triple Revenue In One Year With 3 Simple Steps
  • MY TALK: Finding the Profit in Purpose and the Purpose in Profit: The Sweet Spot Where Profitability, Social Change, and Healing the Planet All Intersect
  • And many more…

==> https://ci340.isrefer.com/go/PCS/shelhoro/ for your no-charge ticket, then tune in September 21-26.

PS–if you can’t make all the sessions, there is an upgrade package to get all the recordings.

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

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Sell with Authority: Own and Monetize Your Agency’s Authority Position

Sell with Authority: Own and Monetize Your Agency’s Authority Position by Drew McLellan and Stephen Woessner (BookPress, 2020)

Don’t be put off by the subtitle if you don’t happen to run an advertising or marketing agency. While the book markets itself to ad agency owners, the authority strategy is far broader. I actually tried to think of an industry vertical where an authority strategy couldn’t work, and I failed. When I think of toilet paper, I think first of Marcal and its authority strategy around forest preservation…when I think of transportation, I think about the way Toyota and Tesla made electric cars a status symbol in vastly different markets—by positioning their customers as authorities in combining functionality (Prius) or performance/luxury (Tesla) with environmental responsibility: customers who were smart enough to be pioneers in our brave new path to a clean future. In agriculture, I think of the hundreds of organic foods businesses that use their packaging to educate consumers and position themselves as authorities on healthy eating and healthy land use.

So…what’s an authority position? According to McLellan and Woessner, you pick a niche, which could be driven by your industry slice, your audience, or the problem you solve (p. 31). In a Venn diagram, your niche is the intersection of several circles, as on the cover and on page 36, where the intersection is agencies—we’ll substitute “businesses”—with your expertise, those who “give a rip,” and those with your unique point of view. That intersection is tiny slice of a huge pie, and if you define it properly, it may only have one dot in the intersection: YOU! People who need your exact expertise, benefit from your point of view, and see that you actually care will discover that hiring your company is the only choice.

But I’d a add a caution: make another Venn diagram to establish market viability: One circle for who needs your expertise (and your solutions), another for who is aware of you or can become aware after minimal exploration, and a third for who is willing and able to pay for that expertise. THAT intersection is your actual potential market, and it should be a lot bigger than a single pinpoint.

I made the mistake of not doing this research 25 years ago when I released my book on how to have fun cheaply. It turned out the frugalists who wanted information on how to legally and ethically see entertainment for no-cost, travel for a fraction of the usual place, and find dating options that cost little or nothing didn’t want to pay for that information—and despite consistent national publicity (including ABC News, the MSN home page, and Redbook, among many others), it took me 8 years to sell through a 2000-copy print run of a $17 book.

You develop a detailed and unique point of view on the issues in that niche (pp. 37-43), perhaps asking how your clients are missing the mark (p. 41). Next, you develop a single content “cornerstone”: a central marketing strategy including the six building blocks on page 51. Something like a book, a regular podcast or blog—that consistently gets you in front of prospects who welcome those messages, that plays the long game—that both helps your audience (of actual prospects) get better at their task and deepens your connection with them. Once one cornerstone is firmly established, you can add a second.

From the cornerstone, develop “cobblestones”: little drips of enticing content that engages, informs, and brings people into your orbit.

In other words, everything should be strategic. As you develop your cornerstone content, you get to play journalist. Call your prospects, invite them to be interviewed, and then turn snippets of the conversation into cobblestones that promote them—and you.

Strategically maximize your efforts with everything from adding captions to all your videos (p. 70) and loading them natively into not just YouTube but other platforms including LinkedIn and Facebook (p. 137) to turning clients and prospects into marketing partners (p. 112), to detailed rinse-and-repeat recipes for getting the most exposure from every effort (pp. 156-165), and even a list of software tools they use.

Each chapter has one author, by the way: a very easy way to collaborate on a book.

Connect with Shel

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Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

————–

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The Clean and Green Club, September 2020

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: September 2020

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Are You a Franklin or a Mozart?

One of Chris Brogan’s newsletters offered this nugget:

We have to throw out multitasking. It’s basically an excuse we use to be bad at multiple things. Be better at one. Or a few.

If we “stay busy,” we think that’s progress. But progress is progress. Seeing one needle (one number) move is the real target.

Sell one thing really well. (Man, I really need to embrace this.)

I think of Chris as someone who does many things well, and who doesn’t fit easily into a box. So I wrote him this reply:

What you are suggesting works great for some people. But I am one of the ones who has enough ADD that it wouldn’t work well for me. I always say I became a writer because I’m interested in almost everything. And writing is at the core of what I do as a marketer.

But that ADD has driven me to keep expanding the scope of what I do, while narrowing the focus toward businesses that want to make the world better in some way.

In the earliest days of my business, most of my work was typing term papers. You may be too young to remember when that was a thing. By the time I got my first computer, in 1984, I had been in business almost 3 years.

Over time, my focus shifted first into editing and resume writing, then PR materials for small businesses and authors, then book publishing consulting, and now a mix of all of the above (except typing, which I let go of in 1990) – plus strategic marketing consulting, all with a much narrower focus on who I would like to serve. And the other strand has always been activism. The evolution of my business over the past 20 years has a LOT to do with a conscious decision to braid those two together, following a successful campaign I started to stop a hideous housing development on the side of a local mountain. That campaign brought a lot of my marketing and negotiating skills into my activist work, and I started thinking about how I could bring the values of my activism into the business world.

[I didn’t go into detail about the work I’m doing helping business find the sweet spot where profitable products and services make an actual difference on things like hunger, poverty, war, catastrophic climate change, and pandemics, because Chris and I have corresponded many times, and I think he already knows this about me. He even endorsed my latest book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World. If we’d had less contact, I would have inserted that right here.]

From the 30-thousand-foot level, this shifting path actually makes sense and feels somewhat linear. But looking at piece by piece, it would come across as chaos.

There is a wonderful book called The Renaissance Soul by my late friend Margaret Lobenstine that posits two paradigms for a successful career path. The first is Mozart, who knew what he wanted to do at age 4 and kept doing it, getting better and better at it, until he died.

But the second is Benjamin Franklin, a person with half a dozen career paths and a gazillion interests. Was he a postmaster? An inventor? A diplomat? A revolutionary? He was all this and more.

Many of our greatest successes as a society have come out of the work of people like Franklin, Hedy Lamar (famous as an actress, she was also an inventor whose work made cell phones possible), DaVinci, Eleanor Roosevelt, Buckminster Fuller, Helen Keller, Franklin’s contemporary Thomas Jefferson… People who see the world and their own contributions through a holistic lens.

So that’s multitasking on the macro level. On the micro level, I find I’m not as good at doing several things at once in the same moment as I used to be, and have tried to focus more deeply. But I can only keep that intensity for so long, so I take a lot of breaks. If I’m doing client work, I am not multitasking, but I might only work for 20 or 30 minutes before clearing my brain for at least a few minutes. If I’m on a learning call, I typically am [multitasking]. I listen to a lot of learning calls, and in many cases prefer the replay recordings, because if I hear something that sounds important, I can rewind a minute or two and give it my undivided attention for a moment. And if I’m hiking, I often find that part of my brain is chewing on a problem, and sometimes I have the solution at the end of my walk.

PS: I think of you as someone whose natural strengths lead much more toward the Franklin than the Mozart.

PPS: Along with multitasking is multipurposing. This letter will become the main article in one of my newsletters.

Warmly,
Shel

He wrote back a one-sentence reply wondering how successful the approach would be—and acknowledging that he’s much more in the Franklin camp.

I answered,

I really think it depends on how we are wired. Some of us work very well in the do one-thing-at-a-time mode. Margaret’s whole point is that it is a mistake to assume that because it works for some people, it should work for everyone. Not that people can’t change their style but I think on the whole it is much easier to adapt your work can the style that works for you, rather than trying to adapt your style to someone else’s idea of how you should work.

This one didn’t get a reply. Perhaps you have a thought on this? If so, write back (and please tell me if I have permission to quote you).

—————————————————————————————————————————-

Would you like to be quoted or featured in media like the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Christian Science Monitor, ABC TV News, Redbook, and Reader’s Digest? I do at least 30 interviews in a typical year, 50 or more if I’ve got a new book out.

My favorite way to get coverage is to respond to reporters who have posted that they’re actively looking for sources for a story they’re working on. It’s so much easier to get press by giving a journalist the exact information they need to write a story than to “spray and pray” by sending press releases or cold-calling. I see many people doing this all wrong–so

Several services match journalists with story sources—and most of them don’t charge anything. There’s one called HARO, also known as Help A Reporter, that I’m particularly fond of. I put time aside three times every weekday to look over the queries and respond to the ones that could benefit me. But here’s the thing: I’ve forwarded reporters’ source queries to friends many times. And when I see their responses, I often cringe. I got tired of cringing, so I wrote a 40-page quick-read ebook on how to answer those queries the right way. It includes six actual queries (by me and four other people) that resulted in coverage in Reader’s Digest, the Toronto Globe and Mail, and elsewhere—with analysis of why they worked and how some of them could have been even better.

It also includes three bonus reports: How to Write Press Releases that Actually Get Media Coverage—and Your Prospects’ Attention (includes 10 full or partial actual “story-behind-the-story” press release examples); Ten Other Services That Get You in Front of Journalists and Show Producers; and How to Get Superstars to Endorse Your Book—discussing some of the ways I’ve gotten endorsements or guest essays from Chicken Soup for the Soul co-creator Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, Cynthia Kersey (author of Unstoppable and Unstoppable Women), Frances Moore Lappe, author of Diet for a Small Planet, and the founder of the Guerrilla Marketing concept, Jay Conrad Levinson (who later co-authored two books with me).

This very useful addition to YOUR marketing toolkit is just $7.95, delivered instantly as a PDF. Get your copy at https://shelhorowitz.com/product/generate-thousands-of-dollars-in-publicity-without-spending-a-cent/

 

 

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Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

Wide-ranging written interview on Fem Founder (I was very pleased that they would interview a man) about being a tiny startup, morphing my business multiple times, marketing challenges, the current work on strategic integration of profitability and social change–and even some insight into my lifestyle and my volunteer social justice/immigration justice/environmental activism outside of work. https://www.femfounder.co/femfounderstories/shel-horowitz-interview . If you prefer to read it on Medium, it’s also at https://medium.com/fem-founder/do-the-homework-to-make-sure-you-can-find-a-market-if-you-follow-your-heart-with-shel-horowitz-f27efb35ac82 . Note that at this time, I am not pursuing the activist clearing house idea that the interview refers to. I have something more exciting that I’ll reveal to you down the road.

The 22-minute Climate Change with Scott Amyx interview I taped several weeks ago is now live: https://scottamyx.com/2020/08/31/interview-with-shel-horowitz-green-transformative-expert/ We discussed some very different ideas about marketing, the importance of environmental and social commitment to profitability, and more.

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Send News Releases at No Charge — 10-Day Pass
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Not a friend, but I came across this interview with a naming expert and had to share it with you. As a Canadian living in Australia, she has a very different perspective. https://www.sourcebottle.com/blog/WHATS-IN-A-NAME

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What Does Injustice Have to Do With Me?

What Does Injustice Have to Do With Me? Engaging Privileged White Students with Social Justice, by David Nurenberg (Roman & Littlefield, 2020)

Like so many other fields, from customer service to architecture, education has a marketing component. Educators are in the business of marketing the importance of knowing certain information, or embracing certain values or thinking processes. As Nurenberg points out throughout the book and most clearly in his final chapter, educators also have to market their own worth as change agents in a system that values conservative conformity (pp. 163-173)—and do this to multiple audiences with different agendas: students, parents, administrators, and colleagues. And he recognizes that every classroom has a different dynamic, that each teacher knows that dynamic intimately and will need to adapt any exercise to the specific conditions.

While many of the books I review here are much more overt in their marketing focus, books about social change (another subset of marketing, often) are also within my purview. This is a book by an educator, for educators. It uses the language of educators, which is not always familiar to me.It looks at how a teacher can incorporate anti-racist lessons and materials even into science and math classes (pp. 66-75). And it dips heavily into both marketing and social change.

Again and again, Nurenberg demonstrates the advantages privileged kids gain by having their privilege challenged (especially pp. 108-118): they become more critical thinkers, they face adversity and build skills of resilience, they’re more college-ready (and more desirable to good colleges), and of course, they become much more aware of different perspectives in the wider world, and perhaps more willing to take action to redress inequity. Nurenberg offers a number of specific in-class and research activities that can break down resistance to confronting racial justice—and particularly to confronting one’s own (conscious or unconscious) complicity in a system that’s ultimately based in institutionalized racism. He also offers strategies to promote genuine allyship and avoid coming in as the know-it-all, patronizing, smug benefactor. He has fewer ways to actually have students of different races work together productively, though he does offer some.

All of this is somewhat fraught. Nurenberg is highly sensitive to the effects of this kind of curriculum not only on suburban white kids of privilege but also on urban kids, kids of color, or kids of lower economic status, who are often already marginalized in majority-white schools serving the affluent. It’s very easy for white teachers and students to commit microaggressions such as tokenizing or insisting that the voice of the student of color or a particular religion or ethnicity or disability or gender category represents all people of that cohort, or demanding that those students share experiences they might rather keep to themselves. But Nurenberg offers lots of strategies to do this in a meaningful and inclusive way that feels safe for students of any background.

There’s no index, but there is extensive footnoting and a terrific bibliography.

Full disclosure: the author and I are acquainted. We both participated in a Jewish social justice delegation to a prison holding 3000 teens in Homestead, Florida last year. That prison was closed a couple of months later due to public pressure.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

 

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

 

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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Another Recommended Book: Trust Agents, by Chris Brogan and Julien Smith

Another Recommended Book: Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust, by Chris Brogan and Julien Smith

Of the dozen or so books I’ve read on Internet-based communities (and their application for marketing), Trust Agents stands head-and-shoulders above the rest. Normally when I review a book, I take a page of notes, maybe two. In the smallest handwriting I can still read, I had more than half a page by the time I got to the end of Chapter 1! By the time I was done, I had four full pages.

A generation younger than me and a generation older than those who grew up with computers from the womb on, Brogan and Smith bring insights from Read the rest of this entry »