The Art of Storytelling: Start With the Heart

“Tell Your Story” by alana in love – click for info

This is a guest post by Tiffany Silverberg.

When you are telling your brand’s story, start strong to engage your readers until the end. Consider the last time you picked up a novel or went to the movies. If the beginning didn’t hook you, chances are you left the book behind just a few pages in or left the theater feeling jilted and unsatisfied.

A good start plops you in the middle of the action.

Don’t make your reader search through a sea of words to find the point. Get to it. Place your main point, your thesis statement, your hook, at the beginning. In this way, you will not only grab hold of readers, you will touch even wayward readers with the key point.

Usually, you need to turn the story upside down.

Most tell their brand story by starting with the problem. Cancer, unemployment, illness, boredom – dominate the first paragraphs of most about pages. But as a buyer, when you go to a page of rainbows and yellow umbrellas, and find yourself in the midst of a paragraph about clouds and raindrops, chances are great you will close the window before you get to the point.

Give us a peek into the positive transformation.

Let’s go back to that novel or movie. You probably approached it at the recommendation of a trusted story that gave you a synopsis. “It’s about a girl who overcame all her fears.” “It’s about a guy’s determination to win a game.” If the recommendation only included “Her life was as lost as a rain-soaked kitten” or “It didn’t seem he could accomplish anything” – the negativity would have kept you far away.

Tell us up front what mountain you climbed, what you created, who you’ve become, and how your brand brought you there. Explore the negativity after the positive has won our hearts.

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Tiffany Silverberg is Navy wife and foodie with an independent streak. As a freelance writer, she brings years of journalism and language experience to non-profits, businesses, and families, telling their stories online and offline. You can visit her website at tiffanysilverberg.com and find her on Twitter and Facebook.

Personal branding is a way of life.

Personal branding isn’t just about business. Having a style, a language, an affect to call your own is really about understanding the person you truly are.

A personal brand isn’t about sensationalizing. Crafting your personal brand must be a work of radical honesty.

Your personal brand is a reflection of how you see yourself in the world and how you want to be seen. It’s the choice to reflect your own image of who you are instead of allowing others to dictate who you will be.

The difficulty in personal branding comes not from being able to craft the image but from actually knowing yourself.

  • Too often we rely on others values.
  • Too often we follow others paths.
  • Too often we assume others quirks.

Know yourself. Know what you value, what path you’re following, and know those little things that make you, you. Know what you want. Then turn up the volume to 11.

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If you’re in the greater NYC area, come join me for a panel on branding hosted by Uncommon Goods. We’ll be jamming on all the ways consistent, thoughtful branding is a key part of success. Click here for details.

defy the form; declare your identity

image by pepperink - click for more info

I was recently asked to describe what I do on a form. I could have easily written career coach. Or small busines coach. But the inside of my head kept repeating, “I’m a biz illuminatrix.”

That feels accurate. The words feel good around my work. But would people think I was nuts? Or even know what I mean?

I had a short fantasy about what all the people reading it would think.

“Oh, ok. She doesn’t really know what her businss is about. Who would hire her? That’s not even a word!”

Yes, I was bullied by imaginary people over my word choice on a standardized form.

But you know, what? I AM a biz illuminatrix. It’s in the feedback I get from clients, where I lead from, and what I strive to do. As a description, it’s not conventional and it’s not convenient. It’s evocative. It’s rebellious. It’s what you get when you get me.

So I went with it. Say hello the world’s first (?) Biz Illuminatrix.

I invite you to join me in defying the forms.

What identity will you delcare for yourself? Serve it up in the comments, raw and real.

Gathering light,

branding vs being, or what is independence really?

self scan ~ From the Heart

It’s the 4th of July – aka Independence Day – here in the USA. We celebrate our independence as a nation with fireworks and picnics, families and friends.

Living in America means we have certain freedoms that cannot be denied, but how many of us really feel independent in our work? As entrepreneurs we are all about taking the reins on our own, and not working for “the man.” As the economy wavers, the job market shrinks, and the notion of a lifelong career dies, more and more of us are turning to ourselves and our true passion to make a living and create a new economy.

We are claiming our independence, but how do we stand out as our force of independent workers grows? And what is independence, really?

Branding is a buzz word that tends to make me flinch, but I am spending my summer doing for myself. This makes me question what is it about branding I don’t like and why do I need to do it anyhow?

Branding, in my head, implies big business, money hungry, passionless consumer culture, and I don’t like that. Branding also implies strategic pull-the-wool-over-your-eyes and make-you-want-it advertising, and I don’t like that. While these things may be true in the big biz, big box culture, they don’t have to apply to the independent worker.

So what does branding mean to me? I did a little exploring to see what others are saying.

Your Brand is Your Personality
- Karen E. Klein in the article A Practical Guide to Branding

My brand is my personality, my work’s personality, my way of being me. My work as an expression of me. Yes! This I can grasp. The article discusses the use of the words “branding,” “marketing,” and “advertising” interchangeably, and thus confusing the proper use of branding. Yes, this is exactly what I have done.

Also in this article:

The Promise You Make to the World

Steve Cecil, a copywriter and verbal-branding expert with Where Words in San Carlos, Calif., says a brand is a promise and branding is the act of devising the promise your company makes to the world. Marketing, he says, “is the strategy that differentiates your brand promise from all the other brand promises in that increasingly crowded house called “your category.”

While the above article does in fact refer to some big business models they are saying that making it personal is core of branding and I can wrap my brain around that. It is what I am trying to do. By creating a personality for our work we are saying this is who I am, if you like me you will like my work.

Catherine Caine, marketing and branding (she calls it naming) coach at Cash and Joy, wrote last week about quality and clarity and why they don’t sell.

Stop selling me on quality and clarity.

Or hand-made, limited-edition, professional, ground-breaking or unique. (Or ten thousand other shorthand terms.)

Tell me why those things matter. To me. Right now.

Don’t say, “It’s a high-quality print.” Tell me, “This will look as good at your newborn’s 21st birthday as it does now. And his retirement party.”

Don’t say, “Together we’ll uncover clarity about your relationship.” Tell me, “Stop teetering on the edge of getting fired because you’re so distracted by your boyfriend’s cheating.”

Of course, that’s what you’re trying to say. You’re the expert, to you it’s obvious why quality is better, what clarity can enable, or why the professional version is superior.

But to me, they aren’t the value. They’re the tool to get the thing I really want.

Respect that, and my wallet is yours.

I have to admit, while I don’t agree with everything she says in this article, I high tailed it over to my about the work page and changed up my “high quality print” description.

With a quite different point of view, alternative medicine man Michael Max says:

Enough with Branding Already

You are not a brand, nor do you have one; you have a reputation. Yes, a throw-back word from perhaps half a century ago; reputation. Everything that you hear about “branding” is nothing more than the common sense steps you would take to preserve and polish your reputation. Branding, it’s impersonal. Reputation and the responsibility that goes along with it; vital as the air you breath.

In a nutshell, it comes down to this; branding is what you say about you, while reputation is what others say about you. You can talk till you’re blue in the face, and leverage your online presence with toots from you own horn. But, none of it will be nearly as compelling the gossip about your business over dinner, or the way someone you have truly helped will relentless promote your services to those they care about.

We are intensely social animals, and reputation (along with it’s twin sister, trustworthiness) is the lifeblood of ongoing and sustainable business interactions.

Well, I have to agree with this, too. While he is really just mincing words and trading reputation for brand, he makes a good point and not really different from the previous. We are selling a personality and with that comes reputation and relationship.

And that brings me round to the independence part of this story. As entrepreneurs we usually start out alone, but if we are to succeed we must become extremely social. We may still do the bulk of our work in solitude, but building a successful business or “brand” means building relationships and communicating regularly with our customers. We may have logos, but they aren’t intended to grab attention from the aisles in the market. We are trying to stand out in a far different sea where we attract our audience with personality.

I am satisfied with this, but it does raise another question. I’ve heard it said that your ideal customer is not you. That may be so, but they do need to like what I stand for. Doesn’t that make them at least a little like me?

What about you? How does your personality jive with your work and how do you describe it?

Success doesn’t know where you live

This is a guest post from Andrea Mansfield.

Rumor has it that being a “starving artist” is so over.

I like this rumor and believe it to be quite true. In fact, creative thinkers, makers, doers, and shakers are hungrier than ever for their BIG creative endeavor to go viral.

But no one tells you that when you attempt this you first have to enter the world of business. Blah, right? We don’t want to be business people, we want to be creative people! Can’t we compromise?
Yes, but don’t compromise your idea, your worth, and your creativity for the sake of business.

Your initial approach to business might look a little something like this:

Creative idea/product -> try and appeal to everyone -> be a price competitor -> repeat

I think being a creative business owner can look something like this instead:

Creative idea/product -> solve a problem -> narrow your market to a specific niche -> learn everything you possibly can -> become THE industry expert -> mark up your value -> stream your quality -> be a business pro -> evolve

You have a great passion for being a creative thinker. You have this wonderful gift to use your ideas and make our communities a more self-supported place. No matter how much you LOVE what you do, you will not succeed if you ignore being a creative business owner, too.

Turning a profit is possible and you will never run out of good paying customers, but first you have to decide exactly what it is your creative business is here to do.

We don’t get to follow that good ol’ traditional business model. It’s time to build your own! The traditional business model says you test some idea, find your market, hire on those to recreate it, build your business, manage your team, and eventually retire or sell.

But wait, your creative business solely relies on something only YOU can provide: your passion! You can’t hire that out.

We don’t want to be managers, we want to be creators, dreamers, and inspired thinkers. And we also want to be successful at it. You get to decide what successful is for you – and when you do, YOU must make it happen.

No one is going to knock on your door and offer to make your creative business an overnight success. And you don’t want to be an overnight success! How boring if we were instantly a hit with anything we tried.

What if you were just as clever with the business piece of you as you are with your ideas? What if you LOVED marketing your idea, promoting your mission, developing new products, and actually looked forward to tax time every year?

When you focus some energy on not only what you create but why you create it, who it’s for, where you are taking the idea, why you want to go there, and how you’ll know you have arrived, you’ll find a well curated business.

Wouldn’t that feel great?

Want to dig deeper? In my new online course, Branding the Experience, you’ll go from creative dreamer to a successful branded business. You have to do the work, you have to take action, and you have to try new things. But then you get to reap the rewards and get on a path to success – your way!

 

Andrea is the founder of Brand & Bloom, the result of her love for the small creative business process. She encourages small creative business owners to narrow in on WHY they opened their business, WHAT it means for them and their community, WHERE they want to take their venture, and HOW they will know they have arrived. Check out her free resources for your biz!