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  • 05Mar

    Sad Content

    Turn on your TV at 6 pm. What do you get?

    The news, right?

    Then turn it on tomorrow, and the day after, and the day after, and the week after.

    You can turn in on at any day and guess what?

    The news is still on at 6 pm.

    Now imagine if you tuned in on a Monday, and they had a sitcom. What if you tuned in on Tuesday and oops, it’s an adult movie with clothes flying all over the place. And then maybe on Wednesday it’s the news again.

    Would you continue to watch that channel for news? Or would you simply go to a channel that was more reliable?

    Many people don’t understand that the most important thing in content marketing is reliability. I don’t care if you put out ten or twenty or seventy-three pieces of content a month.

    I just want to see it same bat-time, same bat-channel. So be reliable.

    If you’re going to write an email newsletter, the first thing you need to know is that it needs to be published on a pre-fixed schedule from now until the year 2025. If you’re going to post videos on YouTube, plan for 2025 too.

    It doesn’t matter if email newsletters or YouTube will change or even continue to exist in the years to come. What’s important is that you’ve created a channel, and you’re the content producer. And you jolly well better show up, or I’m leaving you for a more reliable channel.

    • It’s not just your credibility that takes a beating; it’s also your sales.
    • And not just your sales, but also your pipeline of new customers.
    • And not just your pipeline of new customers, but also return customers.

    Your whole darned business really depends on your reliability of communication. Why? I’ll tell you why!

    It’s because if you don’t show up, the customer’s memory of you gets increasingly blurry. And that’s only one part of the problem. The other part is that if you don’t show up, and the customer wants to buy your product or service, they’ll buy the product or service anyway… from someone else.

    • Remember the time you bought an iTunes album, just because you got the newsletter?
    • Remember the time you bought something online just because you saw a video?
    • Remember the time Oprah recommended a book, and you traipsed off to buy that very book?

    Of course this brings us to a very important juncture: The problem with perfection.

    What if you don’t really like the quality of your current content? I have news for you. You’re never going to be completely satisfied—ever!

    But you’ll look back at your work six months from now, and the work you’re doing then will be much better, even though you still think it’s not good enough. You’ll look back at today’s work two years from now, and you’ll wonder how you ever got anyone to pay attention at all.

    If you really want to get better, you won’t get better wondering about it. You’ll get better only by producing content consistently. You have to put out newsletter after newsletter, video after video, to get better.

    Put out what you have today. It doesn’t matter how crappy it looks to your eyes… just put it out. And then improve as you go.

    People will put up with less than polished prose, or less than professional video or audio, but they won’t put up with fruity frequency. They’ll simply change the channel and go elsewhere.

    If you don’t want customers and prospects to leave, you need to have a plan.

    So here’s your plan:

    1. Get started today by putting a schedule in place.
    2. Promise this schedule to your audience (even if you have a list of three people).
    3. Get your content out on the day/days you promised.
    4. Don’t forget that reliability is everything, because quality comes from consistently doing.

    About the Author: Sean D’Souza offers a free report on ‘Why Headlines Fail’ when you subscribe to his Psychotactics Newsletter. Check out his blog, too.


    Thesis Theme for WordPress

  • 05Mar
    If you try to install RealPlayer, a media player available at real.com, you'll notice that the setup downloads Google Chrome. The option to install Google's browser is enabled by default and I assume that most people will not bother to disable it.


    RealPlayer seems to be first third-party application used to promote Google Chrome. The browser has replaced Firefox in Google Pack and it's installed along with Google Earth if you're not paying attention.


    Despite being the most aggressively promoted Google product, Chrome's market share is still low: according to Net Applications, the global market share for Chrome was 1.15% in February, compared to 0.78% in September 2008. "The biggest challenge all [browsers] face is that most people don't even know what a browser is or that there's choice," told Wired.com Brian Rakowski, director of product management at Google.

    { Thanks, Jason. }

  • 05Mar

    1. Respect (from the audience)
    2. Love (to the audience)

    There are no doubt important evolutionary reasons why this is true, but in my experience, every great presenter earns the respect of the audience (through her appearance, reputation, posture, voice, slides, introduction, etc.) and captures the attention of the audience by sending them love.

    Love takes many forms. I love you enough to teach you this. I love you enough to help you. I love you enough to look you in the eye. Or, in the case of rock and roll presentations, I love you enough to want to engage in various acts with you, right now, backstage.

    Margaret Thatcher was a great presenter, even though she had none of the glib charisma people expect from someone with that title. That's because people (even those that disagreed with her) respected her before she started, and they understood at every moment that her motivation was to motivate and improve the lives of those she was presenting to.

    In the famous interrogation scene in Basic Instinct (link not included so no one yells at me), Sharon Stone does a brilliant presentation. She instantly earns (a sort of) respect from the cops and their undivided attention at the same time. She replaces love with sex, and it works.

    Tony Robbins is considered an astounding presenter for a similar reason. His stage presence and reputation and energy and sheer size earn him respect, and his generosity and complete connection with the audience is received by them as love. The result is a connection far bigger than the content alone would account for.

    If you have love but no respect, you're a lounge singer. Fail.

    If you have respect, but no love, you're like one of the rare self-promotional talks at TED. Fail.

    Consider this clip from Patton. In 28 seconds, George C. Scott delivers both.

    When you create a presentation, think about what your status will be as you begin the presentation. What can you do to prewire, to earn more respect from the start? How can you be introduced? Lit? Miked? What can you wear? If your reputation doesn't precede you, how do you earn it?

    Don't apologize at the beginning of the talk. For anything. Don't hide in the dark. Don't hide behind a wall of bullet points.

    And then, as the talk (pitch/presentation/interview) begins, don't focus your energy or concern on yourself. It's not about you. It's about them. The presenter who loves his audience the most, wins.