When did you last update your Instagram bio?
Here’s 5 Quick Tips tips to add value to your profile.
“People make up their minds within 90 seconds of their initial interactions with either people or products. About 62 to 90 percent of the assessment is based on colours alone.” If colour is one of the strongest influences in determining the likability and familiarity of a brand, we’d be crazy to not pay attention to it! So, here’s a few questions you can consider to determine whether you’re using colour to your marketing advantage?
How many times as a business owner have you been afraid to “tell the truth”? You’ve bitten your tongues, or said a censored version of what you were really thinking, or downplayed a situation that involved a tonne of work, or deflected, or answered an email or text at 9pm even though it was outside “business hours”, or said yes when you really should have said no…
A brand story is a critical piece of any marketing strategy that communicates the mission and vision behind your business through storytelling. In short, it’s your “why”. By communicating your “why” you should be able to increase the perceived value of your business, gain loyalty and engagement from your ideal client, effectively communicate your vision and purpose. Here’s how to write your brand story.
In previous posts I’ve talked a lot about individual social media platforms and paying attention to where your target client would “hang out” online. Because it’s hard to process all of this information individually, here I’ve synthesised the key points across the 4 most popular social channels; Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.
I don’t consider myself your “traditional” business and marketing strategist. I don’t create 50+ page reports. I don’t advocate the use of multiple social media channels. I don’t spend hours designing org charts for the future. All of these things are valuable, but they’re not the way I do business, and here’s why.
So you’ve got a Pinterest account and you play around pinning from time to time. You try to remember to pin a new blog post when you finally share it because you’ve heard that’s important, but much beyond that… you probably feel like “using Pinterest for business” is all a bit confusing.
Here’s my short-hand guide to why you should be using Pinterest for your business, and how you can do it relatively easily!