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All the best info on storytelling to lead and grow your biz
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Five Ways to Be a (Social Media) Clutter-Buster & Better Biz Storyteller

Five Ways to Be a (Social Media) Clutter-Buster & Better Biz Storyteller | Just Story It | Scoop.it

From Karen: What a great article that is related to business storytelling! Biz storytelling is all about finding and sharing stories that create engagement. The steps below give tips for how to do this: listening, conversations, etc. I particularly like the last point: go offline -- because that is when storytelling REALLY starts happening, and where relationships are cemented.

Thanks to fellow curator Brian Yanish for finding and posting this article! His review is below:

So if you’re not engaging on social media because you think “everyone else is doing it, so why bother,” or you just don’t think people are going to notice your content, that’s a cop out. If you have something interesting to say, then SAY IT. You never know when your tweet, post, blog or video will be exactly what someone was hoping to find on any particular day.


Wait. Let’s back this train up.

Before I go further, let me say first that you really have to buy in to the importance of even showing up. I mean, why talk about breaking through clutter if you don’t believe there’s value in adding your 2 cents to social conversations. You have to know who you want to talk to and where they play. What’s your objective and what’s your message? No need to figure out how to get people’s attention if you don’t know WHY you want their attention.

Once you have that all squared away, then by all means, start breaking through and turning heads. Here’s how.

1) Develop a noticeable social presence. This is the bare minimum, but you’d be surprised how many brands and businesses don’t have completed profiles. So here’s the starting point—make your profiles interesting. Social media is fun, so have fun with your profiles! Post funny pictures. Have a sense of humor. And engage. Don’t talk at—talk with. Social media is a two-way street, not a commercial.

2) Listen to the conversations. You know how when you’re at a party and you walk up to a group of people, you wait a moment before you jump in? You don’t want to be rude, so you listen first to see what they’re talking about. You can learn a lot by listening. Figure out who your customers are talking to in their social circles, and listen. This will help you craft your message to be more targeted. More interesting, if you will. And your message will rise to the top.

3) Be an equal-opportunity player. I almost deleted that because it sounds bad—but it’s interesting, so I’m going with it. What I mean is, it’s impossible to engage with your entire audience and drive your message through if you aren’t playing on several social networks. This may mean your social promotion campaign lives in various forms on several networks in order to be relevant. Not everyone tweets. Not everyone posts. Not everyone pins. But you, my friend, are a marketer, which means you speak the language of the people, wherever they are. You know. When in Rome.

4) Create a conversation, not just a campaign.  A campaign is a good place to start—but don’t end there. If you take away nothing else but this today, fine. Just get this: Marketing on social media is NOT about advertising and promotion. If you’re on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest to just sell your stuff and promote the heck out of it, you don’t stand a chance of breaking through the clutter. People will turn a blind eye. Consumers are advertised to all day long, in so many ways. But a brand who actually engages with them? Listens to them? Asks questions and responds back to theirs? Now that is something they’ll notice. Trust me.


5) Go offline.
Crazy, right? So crazy this just might work. Start the conversation online, but then try taking it out of the social media sphere. Last I checked most of our cell phones could still make calls. What if you reached out with something more personal than a tweet? Or mailed something to follow up after an online interaction? Social is just a means to building an introduction. But the magic happens when you carry the connection beyond the online world and into the real world.



Key Takeaway: You want to turn heads in social media? Be interesting. Engage with your networks. Create conversation. Respond to your audience. Care about them as much (if not more) than your campaign. These things will get you noticed and help you bust through the clutter.


Great article from by Bryan Kramer


Via Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com
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Your Story in Network Marketing | 30 second speech | Jackie Ulmer, Direct Sales Coach and Social Networking Trainer

Developing your story in Network Marketing plays a critical role in your success in prospecting and presenting!

 

I'd love it if this article was titled "Your Story; 30 Second Speech" because it applies to any business person (not just those in MLMs) who struggles to tell his/her story at any networking event.  

 

I included the article here becuase it asks some great questions that will help us craft and tell our mini-networking story.  These questions are the first step.  If you can answer these with confidence, you are well on your way to crafting your mini-story that will lead to richer conversations and connections at networking events.

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Rapid Storytelling: 20 Slides in 6 min. What the Pecha Kucha?

Rapid Storytelling: 20 Slides in 6 min. What the Pecha Kucha? | Just Story It | Scoop.it
Pecha Kucha is a presentation method, developed in Japan, that is reputed to improve audience attention. It is a method of presenting that ensures both content and length are kept ...

 

Here's a great exercise & method to create powerful yet brief stories to share with only 20 slides with 20 seconds for each slide.  This is a discipline all business could develop and use for those times when you have to share your story both quickly and well.

 

Originally shared via Twitter @marketingwizdom.

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StorySelling “How to Write Mini User Stories”

Why: Use mini user stories, with the right sales message, so that your salespeople are able to sell value and differentiate your offering instead of pitching product and reducing price. Mini User Stories: Make the stories short.

 

One of the best articles I've read on using stories in sales.  The author give how-to tips and concrete examples on crafting your sales stories so the customer is the hero, and you are the winner (higher sales).  Well done (and it works)!  

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GlobalGiving Storytelling - Turning Anecdotes into Useful Data

GlobalGiving Storytelling - Turning Anecdotes into Useful Data | Just Story It | Scoop.it
We're collecting stories from people who benefit from programs run by charities to find out what's working, what isn't, and what the community really needs.

 

Want to create a customer feedback loop using stories?  Then here's your how-to guide.  This non-profit is doing what every business needs to do.  

 

This is a must-read article, and even includes a downloadable PDF for how to set this up in your business.  

 

Don't wait another minute to read this piece and learn how to do this yourself -- no matter what size your business is.  If this non-profit can do it, so can you.

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