Archive for October, 2009

the ONE thing you do? a marketing error explored

October 27th, 2009

I was talking to Kevin C. Pyle today, the author of “Blindspot” and the newly released “Katman” graphic novels.  We were very briefly talking about his upcoming book signing at Watchung Bookseller’s in Montclair, NJ, which is tonight October 27th at 7:00pm incidentally.  I was really curious about the marketing that goes into his book because 1.  I am working with another author, the Science journalist Nicholas Wade  and 2. I just watched Gary Vaynerchuck more or less CRUSH IT! with his newest book, and I’ve noticed that publishing companies actually rely heavily on their authors to do promotions.

Kevin was sharing with me a few things about his marketing when he said something that I’ve been noticing in the business world.  To paraphrase, he said “Well, I actually write books for different markets, adults and teens, and my publisher said my personal branding should be for the teen market”.  So, an individual who is dynamic enough to be able to publish for both Teens and Adults should brand himself, as a teen author only?  That is the message many seem to speak:  You brand ONE thing, you give ONE thing to the world, you have to have ONE idea.

I see this as a major marketing error, to define yourself as an entity with only one focus.  For some it works, but most people offer their passion in a multi-layered way because the traits they possess, and which define their offering are multi-faceted and contain many parts.  Huh?  In more simple terms:  We are more complicated then that.

This brings me to another question then:  If you are branding yourself:  Gary V = Wine Guy + Business Guru -  Nicholas Wade = Science Journalist + Compelling Author  – Joe Nobody = Auto Mechanic + Photographic Artist, then how do all these people present themselves to the world?

I believe when we brand ourselves we are searching for a deeper unifying principle with which to identify ourselves to the world.  For Gary that could be:  “Passionate Business Developer”, for Nicholas: “Man of  the Scienctific Pen” for Joe: “Mechanical Artist”.

Essentially, you are isolating a core intention with which to center yourself in the world, BUT, the marketing and branding must be multilayered.

Why should a person be asked to put themselves in a box?  It’s not genuine, it’s not WHO THEY ARE.  What is important is that a person’s energy shines through whatever medium they are communicating with, so that they can touch their audience, this is how their message becomes magnified.

That’s basically what I told Kevin Pyle, “You have to be yourself, or it won’t be real and it won’t work”.

Checkout Kevin’s Blog and his Books.

I’ll be chiming in with a post about the “unifying principal” in a future post. With the help of a Twitter sage: @holymully I hope to give out a great key to developing your passion.

Are you using Social Media properly for your Small Biz?

October 26th, 2009

Got a small business? Are you Crushing It! as GaryV says? Are you using all the amazing Social Media tools that are mostly free to push your to the next level?

From Mashable:

Whether your company is just starting out, just starting to turn a profit or already on the verge of an acquisition, as an entrepreneur you’ll be constantly evaluating the tools that will help get your business to the next stage.

Even if the ink on the business plan isn’t dry yet, you want to be armed with the social media tools that will play an important role in company communication, product and brand promotions, and business development for your startup. Some of the tools in this list will be familiar, but it’s worth taking a moment to reframe how they might become power tools in a business context.

Click Here to Read the list of Mashable’s 10 Best Social Media Tools fro Entrepeneurs.

Want to Make a Change in Your Life?

October 26th, 2009

Sometimes we need to make a change in our lives, whether it be to accomplish a goal, do better as a person, abandon an unhelpful routine or  discover a new part of ourselves.  These changes can be hard, especially when you are fighting against days, months or years of ingrained behavior.  @imrananwar on twitter sent out a link to this post on Zen Habits:

I’m a living example: in tiny, almost infinitesimal steps, I’ve changed a laundry list of habits. Quit smoking, stopped impulse spending, got out of debt, began running and waking early and eating healthier and becoming frugal and simplifying my life and becoming organized and focused and productive, ran three marathons and a couple of triathlons, started a few successful blogs, eliminated my debt … you get the picture.

It’s possible.

And while I’ve written about habit change many times over the course of the life of Zen Habits, today I thought I’d put the best tips all together in one cheatsheet, for those new to the blog and for those who could use the reminder

For a great list of Tips and methods to affect some positive change in YOUR life, click here to read the whole post.

300guitars.com gets a new face

October 26th, 2009

Billy Penn and I decided that 300Guitars.com needed a facelift. The old design looked a little “old” and we wanted to switch the sites focus to really help promote the sites Author: Billy Penn.

Head on over and take a look, I’d love to hear your feedback here as well!

300Guitars.com Facelift

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