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Informative Articles

Advertising On A Budget - Part 2: Thinking Small
This is the second article of a three-part series. I'm illustrating the marketing challenges of a small business, PrescottWeddings.com. Our goal was to both build the PWC brand and drive traffic to the Web site. Advertising regularly was...

Branding Fiasco -- Better Be Who You Say You Are!
Our experience as customers offers great instruction into the concept of branding. Come with me on a recent "experience" and you'll see what I mean. Here's the situation: I want to order an 800 number. On my AT&T bill is a customer services number....

Communicate your Brand
Tactical communication for your brand A Great Brand Means Nothing if No One Knows about It By Karen Post All right, you’ve spent time, money and resources on developing your brand. You clearly know who you are, you’ve decided on your brand...

Do I really need to write articles for e-zines?
When I was first advised to start writing articles, this was the first question I asked. As I was totally freaked out at the thought of me writing for others to read. Many people subscribe to e-zines and the readers often trust the recommendation of...

Finding Your Niche: What Do You Want to be Known For?
In my experience, there are two kinds of small business owners: one that knows whom their market niche is and utilize it, and another who tends to waiver or not want to "set in stone" their target market. With the latter group, I always probe for...

Lessons from the Power Brands
Lessons from the Power Brands You have heard of power brands like Harley-Davidson, Nordstrom, and Domino’s Pizza. Their names evoke specific emotions and feelings. Each of these brands stands for something special. They are the modern day version...

Managing Your Brand
Branding is becoming a serious problem nowadays and you really have to analyze everything when launching a new brand especially if it already exists. Brand management is slowly becoming very difficult and you have to be one step ahead. Most...

So you're thinking of having your own website?
If you’re daydreaming about having your own website and you’re reasonably new to the world of computers and the internet, there are a few basic things you really should consider first. I’ve listed 10 baby steps to take first that could possibly...

The super brand Marlboro
The Marlboro cigarettes story began in 1847 and was marketed mainly to women in London. This marketing strategy did not go over so well. In the 1920's, Marlboro cigarettes were then introduced to the American market as the cheap Cigarette of choice...

Viral Marketing Techniques Every Web Site Should Be Using
Viral marketing can work wonders for any business, web site or product. It can be a great source of sales leads, one-way links and targeted traffic. Yet, many marketers are not taking full advantage of this 'viral factor' in their marketing...

 
 
 
Thoughtleading: The Art of Separating Yourself from the Pack


Lately the age-old business dilemma of how to stand out from the crowd has been haunting companies and professional service firms more than ever before. All too many firms nowadays look too much alike, with marketing strategies seemingly unable to distinguish them from their competition. Glossy brochures, snazzy websites, press releases, advertising: when everyone employs the same methods, everyone ends up vying for the same narrow window of client and prospect attention.

To escape this marketing black hole, many companies have adopted an uncommon strategy that elevates both principal and firm above the fray. This approach positions the firms expert professionals as thought leaders.

Names of superstar thought leaders are not only well known but the stuff of legend: Bill Gates, Tom Peters, Richard Branson, Martha Stewart, to name a few. Rather than abandoning marketing to a marketing department, they inject themselves into the heart of the process, churning out books, articles, conference speeches, media interviews to keep their visibility machines boiling. Amid the resulting excitement and industry debate, they simultaneously personalize their company, expand their products exposure, and deepen both market share and loyalty from their customers.

Richard Branson, for example, has taken his Virgin conglomerate literally to new heights by attempting such stunts as piloting an air balloon around the world. Martha Stewart, despite her legal troubles, has made herself and her firm rich beyond words by melting away the branding lines that traditionally divide a companys products from a CEOs personality. These are only two examples of results the process can produce.

This capacity to reach beyond traditional marketing approaches is available to us all, a process that only needs to be committed to and then implemented within often-ignored channels. There are two main vehicles to employ: (a) publishing articles and/or books, and (b) delivering talks and presentations. Such center-spotlight marketing attracts attention and recognition from a target market in ways that more commonplace marketing tools cannot attain.

Dan Cassidy, President of Argus Consulting Ltd (Concord MA), for example, has published many articles in leading HR and benefits planning journals in the US, Canada and the U.K. Attendant publicity around these publishing credits has led to Cassidy be interviewed by such high-profile media outlets as The Street.Com, Institutional Investor and Wall Street Journal Radio. As a result, Cassidy is known beyond the borders of his own client/prospect community for a higher-level benefits planning expertise. To capitalize on this heightened credibility, he never fails to calls attention to these media credits whenever strategically advantageous occasions arise, such as during a trade show, marketing campaign or in the midst of an actual sales call.

Given thought leadership's competitive advantages, taking the plunge would seem to be a no-brainer. Yet many consultants and companies hesitate out of fear that the process will not work for them, or out of ignorance of where to begin. Yet embarking on just two simple stages will get the process moving in the right direction, building confidence as the effort succeeds.

Stage One: Publish your ideas as articles in business publications, a seemingly daunting task until this challenge is broken down into baby steps. First compose a list of article ideas

 


that align with your business objectives, asking yourself: Which services do I most wish to promote? What expertise/service do I most want to be known for? Are there services even my oldest customers may not realize my company has to offer? Your answers will translate into publishing ideas.

Next, after answering such questions, go searching for an editor who sees a fit for your ideas with her publication. Pitch to magazines read by decision-makers who typically hire your firm or by referral sources that can spread word of month about your firm. Create this list using library directories or by searching the Web.

Whats important to realize at this point is that business editors out there regularly depend on professionals just like you to feed them publishable ideas. After all, they only can know what to publish in their pages as a result of input from those of us on the front lines. So dont underestimate the publishability of your day-to-day knowledge, expertise, value or insights. Ideas that might seem mundane may be viewed as among the best-kept leading edge secrets in the business world when you share them with an editor.

After you getting published, Stage Two involves speaking at business events. Some engagements may come about because a conference planner read your article and invited you to come and speak about it, but most gigs will get arranged when you actively leverage your published works. Send email announcements to your business e-list, send a news release announcing your published articles, post the article on your companys website, pass out your article to customers, colleagues, prospects, employees, even vendors. Dont sit around and wait for people to see it, instead leap into action, insuring that your work gets read. Build a buzz!

At your actual talks, always distribute your article for free, promoting your availability as a speaker too. And when you get offered any kind of speaking gig, dont turn it down! Larry Winget, a highly sought-after motivational speaker, has stated, The very best way to get speaking engagements is to simply go out and speak! Exposure breeds exposure, exponentially growing your speaking schedule. Speaking can then lead to more article assignments as you never know when an editor may be sitting out there in your audience and loving what you have to say.

By taking these actions, your credibility, and that of your firm, will leapfrog you over your competitors. Third party endorsements from publications and conference planners will solidly establish you as an author/speaker and a leading thinker in your field, elevating your firms services as well. Once this happens, bona fide thought leadership will have officially arrived. Once that happens, enjoy the ride!

Ken Lizotte CMC is Chief Imaginative Officer (CIO) of emerson consulting group inc. (Boston, San Francisco, Toronto), specializing in transforming consulting firms, law firms, companies and business experts into thought leaders. Author of four books and a popular keynoter, Ken is also President of the Institute for Management Consultants New England, an advisor to Harvard University, co-founder of the National Writers Union and a contributing columnist for the American Management Association.

Phone: 978-371-0442.

Email: ken@thoughtleading.com

Website: http://www.thoughtleading.com