How To Get Ideas For Content

When you’re starting to build products or even newsletters and blogs, the constant quest for content can be quite overwhelming. Where is that next article going to come from? What tips can you share with people on Twitter this week? How are you going to add value to your membership site next month? What are you going to write that eBook about anyway?

Here I give you 16 ways to generate some ideas for content. Next time you look there may be 17 or 18 – I keep coming up with ideas and I’ll add them on the list as I do, so keep coming back here! Continue Reading →

Niche Marketing For Coaches

nichemarketingforcoachesEvery now and again, along comes one of those books that dramatically impacts on your coaching business, mainly by giving you aha moments and making you think ‘of course, that’s so obvious! I’ll never see things the same way again!’

For me one of those books was Hannah McNamara’s Niche Marketing for Coaches. Hannah has a great style and talks in ‘plain english’ to explain the concepts of how to find your niche, and what to do with it once you’ve got one!

I’ve blogged about her book before, but I’m doing so again today as all this week I’m helping her to promote it as she’s got some fantastic bonuses to offer if you get a copy before midnight on Sunday this week.

These include 4 months free membership to my members area here at More Than Your Time, so if you’ve been thinking about signing up with me, now’s your chance to get in for free! Plus loads more goodies too worth over £1740.

Just click here to check out Hannah’s book and all the offers. Believe me, if you haven’t got or read this book, you’re going to struggle to grow a successful coaching business.

 

 

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3 minute video: How to set yourself up on Twitter

Here’s the good news – getting started on Twitter is way easier than you think! 

 

Laura Roeder, the social media online marketing publicity coach  has  made a quick screencast that walks you through the process of creating an account and getting up and running with using it in just three minutes. Continue Reading →

How To Run Your Own Tele-Classes

This is a step-by-step guide to get you started with running your own tele-classes, for someone who has never done it before!

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Market Your Business Online with Biana Babinsky

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Get Clients Now! with CJ Hayden

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Thomas Leonard Success Strategies

For those of you who haven’t come across her, Andrea J Lee is a thought-leader in the field of personal and business coaching. Amonst many achievements, she is the author of Multiple Streams of Coaching Income, which is how I came across her and her work.

 

For those of you who haven’t come across him, Thomas Leonard was the ‘father of modern professional coaching’. He was the founder of the International Coaching Federation, CoachU and Coachville and so had a great business as well as coaching skills and has been an inspiration to many coaches both before and after his death.

Andrea worked closely with Thomas as the General Manager of Coachville and in the call she shared some of his ideas in a prelude to her upcoming series: Thomas Leonard Success Strategies Programme. Here is a brief summary to get you thinking:

1. Find the extreme: Thomas did this by being the most, the freshest, the most remarkable. Only by being extreme can you get yourself  noticed. One example was when he reduced the price of Coachville from $79 to $0 and got thousands of additional members. Andrea suggests the way to implement this for yourself is to ask yourself: what do I think? and so start to realise how you can take an extreme stance.

2. Own a format: Thomas used the Top Ten format a great deal, he ran his live events a particular way. They were his signature. Andrea asked: what format could you start to use that could become your signature?

3. Serve your market’s market: Thomas asked what he could do to allow his coaches to serve their clients better. Andrea asks us to ask ourselves the same question – personally I thought this was a great question and provoked lots of thoughts for me to bring into my business model.

Of course this is just a brief summary of the call, but you can download it free by going to her site here. By the way, Andrea had over 1200 people sign up for this call, so she know’s what she’s talking about when it comes to selling more than just your time. Make sure you sign up to listen to her talking with me next week.

Five Steps To Successful Article Marketing by Biana Babinsky

Biana and I are running a tele-class on Sunday 8th March about her 5 top strategies to market your business online, and one of them is article marketing. So with that in mind I wanted to give you a little taster of Biana’s advice by sharing one of her articles with you. Oh and just to let you know, you can get Biana’s free report on how to market to clients online here. I highly recommend it.

Biana Babinsky, www.marketingsalad.com

Get Clients With Article Marketing

Step-by-step directions for writing effective articles, posting them online and using them to get clients.

Click Here For Article Marketing Home Study Guide

On a client call a few months ago my client asked me a very interesting question. He said: “If you had to promote a new product or web site, or if you just wanted more web site traffic and you could only use one online marketing technique, what would you do? What would that marketing technique be?”

I love questions like these from clients, as they show that they are engaged and really want to learn how to become more successful online and promote themselves better. I didn’t have to think too much about this question, though. My answer to him was article marketing.

Article marketing has been my favorite online marketing technique to use and to recommend to my clients for a very long time. This is because article marketing can bring targeted traffic to your web site as soon as you start using it.

When I just started using article marketing, I saw immediate results. First, I saw increased traffic to my web site from articles that I had posted in article directories. After some time, my articles started getting reprinted on other people’s web sites, blogs and in newsletters. This resulted in even more newsletter subscribers and clients from exactly the same articles.

So how do you start with article marketing? Here is a 5-Step Plan to help you get started with using article marketing for promoting your business, products and services:

- Understand The Goal Of Article Marketing. Any time you are taking action you need to know exactly why you are doing it and what results you are expecting from it. With article marketing, your goal is to start a conversation with your potential customers, let them know about who you are and what you do and ask them to take the next step in this conversation — visit your web site, subscribe to your newsletter, buy, etc.

- Find Good Topics For Your Articles. In order to start the conversation with your potential customers (and have them respond!), they need to be interested in having this conversation. If they are not interested in conversing, they will drop the discussion before it even starts.

How do you get them interested in the conversation? By writing articles on topics that they are interested in! Good topics for your articles are ones that your target customers are interested in.

- Write The Actual Article. Now that you know what the topics are, pick one and write an article on it. Once your article is ready, let it sit for a day or two, then come back to it to make revisions and changes. If you made any mistakes, now is the time to correct them. You want your articles to have good grammar and spelling.

- Create Effective Article Resource Box. Your Article Resource Box is the most important part of your article. It introduces you to your article reader and contains link(s) to your web site. This is your one chance to continue the conversation you started with the article!

- Submit Articles To Article Directories. Congratulations on your new article! Now is the time to submit it to article directories to get exposure for you and your business.

Use this 5-Step Article Marketing Plan to start your article marketing campaign and get more traffic and clients!

About the author: Biana is the author of the Complete Step by Step Online Marketing Course“, your how-to guide to marketing your business online. Get it now at Complete Step by Step Online Marketing Course.

If you’d like more articles from experts such as Biana, don’t forget to sign up for our newsletter By Coaches For Coaches on the left.

Hannah McNamara asks ‘Why Niche?’

Hannah McNamara

Hannah McNamara

What do you want to be when you grow up? I remember this question being asked in school and the boy next to me telling me he wanted to be a burglar. Interesting career choice when you’re 7. Makes you wonder what his family life was like. When you’re that age and people start asking you what you want to be, you don’t really have any idea what the possibilities are. I looked around, remembered that the house opposite was having building work done and said I want to do that – to be a bricklayer, I meant. You could think “Go Girl!” and say that in this day and age (it was 1980) girls could grow up to be whatever they wanted to be or you could ponder on whether that was really the right career choice for a little girl who was the smallest in her class.

Then I found mud. More precisely I started digging and found things buried in the garden. Nothing valuable – an old tin can, a wrapper from a cake and some twisted wire, but it was exciting to uncover things that I didn’t know were there. As soon as we covered ancient Rome in school I was hooked. I wanted to be an archaeologist and when I watched Indiana Jones for the first time I was even more convinced! This continued for a number of years – I even studied Latin – until my dear grandfather told me there was no money in it. Back to the drawing board.

Faced with the uncertainty of having to choose who I was going to be (which I thought meant for the rest of my life) I consulted the careers advice service in school. They did a personality profile. Apparently I was perfectly suited to either being a gardener or a prison warden. How they came to that conclusion is a mystery, but suffice it to say that wasn’t much help. So for a few years I meandered around and at the age of 16 decided to choose Business Studies at A’Level. Bingo! Over the course of the next few years I went to University to study business, worked in Marketing and learned as much as I could about not only how business worked, but also what made people tick. It fascinated me that there were subconscious decisions going on all the time and I was intrigued to know the answers to questions like, “What makes someone choose that brand of shampoo over another?” and “What impact would a price change have on customer perceptions?”

I came to realise that much of what happens in the world today is connected to how you see yourself. We know that people have various filters which influence perceptions. It impacts on the paths we choose for ourselves and it impacts on whether people decide to choose one coach over another.

Lots of people talk about choosing a niche and it’s seen as something that’s quite straight-forward – something like, “Well, once you’ve chosen your niche, you create products for that niche and target the media catering for that niche”. Yes, this is all true. But too often we get completely stuck at the point of choosing a niche because we think we’re being asked that “What do you want to be when you grow up?” question without knowing all the facts.

Just as when you’re 7 you simply don’t have enough information upon which to make an informed decision, when you begin your journey as a coach you may feel pressured to choose a niche – to decide who you are going to be.

As the author of a book on Niche Marketing, you might expect me to wax lyrical about the reasons you should choose a niche and how you’re somehow naughty or not a real coach if you haven’t decided on one yet. In fact, I’m going to encourage you not to stress yourself out over it.

If right now you want to be a bricklayer (to use the example above) then focus on being a bricklayer. If you’re working as an independent coach, you have the freedom to change course as appropriate if it doesn’t work out. You can reinvent yourself according to what the market tells you they want.

You do need to trust your instincts. Don’t worry too much about trying to ‘be coach-like’ or being ‘non-judgmental’ when you’re making decisions about what kind of coach you want to be. You need to use your judgment and you need to be yourself. If you try to shoe-horn yourself into being a particular kind of coach because everyone else seems to be like that you are not being true to yourself and your coaching practice may suffer. Equally, don’t knock yourself out trying to be unique or choose too tight a niche – I only coach one-legged accountant called Marjorie. Being a business coach specialising in leadership, for example, is often enough to get you going.

I’m going to make a confession. I’m not a nice person all the time. I get annoyed with things. I’m a stickler for professionalism and when people behave in an unprofessional way it winds me up. I don’t like B.S. I like business suits and don’t wear tie-dye (a personal choice). Sometimes I utter a naughty word – usually a four-letter one when I’m in the office and I can’t find something. Sometimes I make snap judgments about people I meet (and the more I’ve learned about people through being a coach, the more I learned to trust my instincts). Does that make me a bad coach? Well, let me tell you this. When I gave up on trying to be what other people wanted me to be, my coaching practice got a whole lot busier. I sometimes utter a naughty word in coaching sessions for emphasis or to break the ice. My clients seem to like it. This might not work for everyone, but it works for me.

When I tried to get clients as a life coach it didn’t work. I used to hear comments like, “You don’t look like a life coach” and “You’re different from other coaches I’ve met”. I came out of the closet, so to speak. I’m loud and proud – I love business! I love the buzz of it. I love making money – it’s the tangible proof that I do a good job. I love helping business people to sort out their issues with their staff (and themselves). I love showing people how to manage their time better and be more efficient and effective at work. I love brainstorming ideas and seeking out new opportunities. I love being the person who challenges them to think outside the box – and rein them in when they go off at a tangent. I especially love small businesses because the people you work with can implement their ideas almost immediately without putting a proposal in, waiting for the quarterly meeting, running the gauntlet of office politics and then, maybe, just maybe being given the go ahead to make a simple change which has a huge impact.

I’m a business coach. What about you?

Hannah is the founder of www.marketinghelpforcoaches.com and the author of Niche Marketing for Coaches.

If you like this article and want to see others like it by expert coaches, just sign up to my newsletter By Coaches For Coaches on the left.

Do You Have A System For Your Marketing?

We all know there are lots of ways to potential clients interested in what you’re doing, twittering, blogging, newsletters, tele-seminars and I’ve been doing a lot of thinking lately about how to bring this all together into some kind of marketing system. This way you’re not constantly thinking, right, what should I be doing next on my marketing; you already know. I wanted to share my current strategy with you in the hope that it helps you too!

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