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Not only do you want to attract your ideal customer, but you want to repel the people who you know are not right for you. In this episode, we provide specific examples that illustrate why understanding your WHO is so important, and then we lay out a proven strategy for empathy that will help you get into the eyes, ears, and mind of your ideal customer.
Listen to Site Success: Tips for Building Better WordPress Websites below ...
season-1-episode-5.mp3">Download MP3Subscribe by RSSSubscribe in iTunes
Important links from this episode:
Jerod Morris: Welcome to Sites, a podcast by the teams at StudioPress and Copyblogger. In this show, we deliver time-tested insight on the four pillars of a successful WordPress website: content, design, technology, and strategy. We want to help you get a little bit closer to reaching your online goals, one episode at a time.
I’m your host Jerod Morris.
Sites is brought to you by StudioPress Sites — the complete hosted solution that makes WordPress fast, secure, and easy … without sacrificing power or flexibility. For example, you can upload your own WordPress theme, or, you can use one of the 20 beautiful StudioPress themes that are included and just one click away. Explore all the amazing things you can do with a StudioPress Site, and you’ll understand why this is way more than traditional WordPress hosting. No matter how you’ll be using your site, we have a plan to fit your needs — and your budget. To learn more, visit studiopress.com/sites. That’s studiopress.com/sites.
Welcome to Episode 5 of Sites.
As you may have seen, last week we announced the show on Copyblogger — its official public introduction — and the response has been swift and overwhelming. Thank you to everyone who has subscribed, left ratings and reviews over at Apple Podcasts, and reached out to me on Twitter with kind words. I really appreciate it.
We are just getting rolling here with Sites, and I look forward to continuing on this journey with you toward better, more powerful websites.
So … in our first four episodes, we did one complete cycle through our four pillars of a successful WordPress website. Now in this episode we find ourselves back at the beginning … with content.
In Episode 1, we discussed the simple three-step process for creating a winning content marketing strategy — understanding the who, the what, and the how. That episode is an important precursor to this one, so I recommend you listen to it.
In today’s episode, we’re going to build on that overview and dive deeper into the first of the three steps: the WHO. Then in the next two content episodes after this one, we’ll discuss the WHAT and the HOW.
Why is the WHO so important?
Here is a quick review from Episode 1:
Before you can get someone to buy from you, you need to know what to say to them, and how to say it. You’ll never get that right unless you know who you’re talking to.
Call them personas, avatars, or even characters if you like.
Your first step is to do the research that allows you to create a fictional, generalized representation of your ideal customer.
Don’t underestimate the importance of the word ideal in “your ideal customer.”
That, of course, is an excerpt from Brian Clark’s blog post The Simple 3-Step Process for Creating a Winning Content Marketing Strategy, on which Episode 1 was based.
This week’s episode, Episode 5, is based on Brian’s follow up post, titled: How to Attract Your Ideal Customer with Perfectly Positioned Content.
I will perform that post for you now, edited slightly to fit the audio medium. Immediately after the reading, I’ll issue this week’s hyper-specific call to action.
Here now is Brian’s post, How to Attract Your Ideal Customer with Perfectly Positioned Content.
“Hello, I’m a Mac.”
“And I’m a PC.”
You remember Apple’s “Get a Mac” series of commercials that ran from May 2006 to October 2009, right?
The commercials were short vignettes featuring John Hodgman as the sweet-yet-bumbling PC and Justin Long as the creative, hip Mac.
Those 66 short spots were named the best advertising campaign of the previous decade by Adweek.
The success of the long-running campaign leads one to believe that Apple certainly knows who its ideal customer is. Of course they do … because they chose their ideal customer, right from the birth of the Macintosh itself.
That doesn’t mean that everyone responded favorably to the ads. While researching for this piece, I ran across a commenter who maintained that the campaign had “backfired” because the PC character had actually been more appealing to him.
No, the campaign didn’t backfire (no one runs a series of ads for three years if they’re not working). Instead, Apple chose who not to attract as much as they chose who they hoped to convert.
Apple knew they were never going to get hardcore PC people to switch to a Mac. Instead, Apple used these 66 humorous little stories to target those who were more likely to “swing” toward Apple — after being educated about the benefits by the contrast between the two characters.
Sounds like really great content marketing to me. In fact, given the nature and duration of the Get a Mac campaign, it resembled serial online video marketing more than traditional advertising.
So, the first (and most important) step in our 3-step content marketing strategy is determining your “Who.”
Who do you want to attract and speak to, and just as importantly, who do you want to drive in the other direction? It all comes down to your values, first and foremost.
Apple’s values were well reflected in the Get a Mac campaign — creativity, simplicity, and rebellion against the status quo. These core values were consistently present in the prior “Crazy Ones” campaign, and before that, the iconic “1984” ad.
Some feel that Apple has lost the ability to innovate since Steve Jobs passed. Whether or not that’s true, I think the perception of Apple has changed among those of us who were initially strongly attracted, because their advertising now, for the first time, tries to appeal to a more general audience.
Steve would definitely not approve.
Modern marketing is about matching up with the worldview of your ideal customer. Outside of a monopoly, there is no such thing as marketing that appeals to everyone, and yet, companies still try and routinely fail.
On the other hand, think of Patagonia. The founder of the outdoor clothing and gear company invented an aluminum climbing wedge that could be inserted and removed without damaging the rock face. This reflects Patagonia’s founding core value:
“Build the best products while creating no unnecessary environmental harm.”
Of course, not every company has a core value built into the founding story. Most businesses exist to simply sell things that people want, so it’s up to management to find the core values that they want to reflect in their marketing to attract the right kind of customer.
For example, there’s nothing inherently ethical about ice cream, beyond ingredients. So Ben & Jerry’s adopted the values of its two founders, which had nothing at all to do with ice cream.
Not everyone who likes ice cream necessarily agrees with reduced Pentagon spending and the fight against climate change, but the people who do care about those things turned Ben & Jerry’s into an iconic brand.
It doesn’t have to be all sunshine and light, either. If your core values fall in line with a “Greed is good” mentality, you’ll certainly find people out there who share this worldview. You just have to unflinchingly own it.
You need to understand who you’re talking to, yes. But you don’t just accept who you find — you choose who to attract.
In the Get a Mac campaign, Apple literally created a character that personified what their ideal “swing” customer aspired to be. It’s time for us to do the same.
You can call them personas or avatars if you like — I prefer character. That’s because the first step is the research that allows you to create a fictional, generalized representation of your ideal customer.
As far as fiction goes, we’re creating a character that will be the protagonist in their own purchasing journey that your content will help them complete. Since this journey is based on as much reality as we can glean from our research, it’s more like a fictionalized drama “based on actual people and events.”
When I say the prospect is the protagonist, that means the hero. Your content is a powerful gift that positions your brand as a guide that helps the hero complete the journey that solves their problem. If this sounds like Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey to you, nice work — we’ll elaborate on this aspect in the “What” portion of the strategy.
This journey does not take place in the context of you wanting to sell more stuff. It’s understanding how the prospect thinks, feels, sees, and behaves in the context of solving the problem that sets them on the journey in the first place.
And don’t forget about instilling them with your shared core values. Why would this person choose you to assist them on the journey, out of a sea of other choices?
Because you already see the world like they do in an important way, and they’ll pick up on that shared worldview immediately upon coming across your content. Your core values are your secret attraction spell.
Instead of hiding your world views in the hope of never offending anyone, you now realize the power of being loud and proud — and attracting like-minded people who see you as the only reasonable choice.
Now, most people don’t end up using this representative character in their content, like Apple did with Justin Long in the Get a Mac commercials. It’s really a composite to refer back to so that you never lose sight of who you’re talking to, what you should say, and how you should say it.
On the other hand, the Get a Mac commercials were just two guys standing and talking in front of a minimalist, all-white background. If you’re thinking in terms of online video marketing, you could do a lot worse than looking to this campaign for inspiration.
And think about your explainer videos. Wouldn’t a character that represents who you’re talking to give you an edge over competing marketing approaches?
At a minimum, contemplating the actual use of the character in your content will force you to get things just right. Let’s look at a method for doing that.
Given that you’re seeking to attract people who share your values, it’s tempting to overly identify with your audience. While you’re going to have things in common, it’s dangerous to think your ideal customer is similar to you in other ways.
You’re a subject matter expert at what you do, for starters, and they are not.
You need to make sure you don’t fall victim to the curse of knowledge, a cognitive bias that occurs when a person with expertise unknowingly assumes that others have the background to understand.
This one assumption alone can sink your content marketing efforts. Plus, you don’t want to assume that the audience shares other characteristics that you have — you want to know, as well as you can, what they’re thinking, feeling, seeing, and doing.
In other words, for you to have the empathy to walk the buyer’s journey in their shoes, you must first see things from their perspective. Then you’ll be in a position to create the content that “coaches” them along the journey.
Let’s take a closer look at empathy, the definition of which consists of two parts:
It’s often said you want to enter the conversation that’s already playing in your prospect’s head. By matching up values and worldviews, you’re also aiming to enter the conversation in the prospect’s heart, and that’s how your marketing triggers the right motivation at the right time.
The process we use for achieving this is called empathy mapping. At the foundation of the exercise is this statement: “Our ideal customer needs a better way to BLANK BECAUSE BLANK.”
Empathy maps vary in shapes and sizes, but there are basic elements common to each one:
To get started, you can download and print a large version of the empathy map we use at Copyblogger and StudioPress. Just go to the show notes for this episode: studiopress.blog/sites05. You’ll find the link to map.pdf">download the empathy map right under the player.
The map allows you to easily organize all of your research and other relevant materials. The four quadrants represent the sensory experience of your ideal customer while in the prospect phase.
Ask yourself questions such as:
Jot down needs and insights that emerge as you work through this exercise. Then simply paste those notes in the proper boxes on the large empathy map.
At the bottom of your empathy map, you can also draw two boxes: Pains and Gains.
In the Pains box, you can put your customers’ challenges and obstacles. Ask, “What keeps my customer up at night?”
In the Gains box, include the goals your customers hope to accomplish. Ask, “What motivates my customer to solve their problem?” and “What are their hopes and dreams?”
You’re now ready to create a written composite of your character. Some people do several paragraphs, or perhaps a page of description. You, being the smart person that you are, might consider taking it further by creating a character bible, just like novelists and screenwriters do.
In this context, a character bible is a detailed outline that lays out everything about your prospect in one place, so you can easily access their personality, problems, and desires.
It may seem like a lot of work, but you’ll be happy you did it once you start coming up with the “What” and the “How” of your content marketing strategy.
*****
That was a reading of Brian Clark’s blog post How to Attract Your Ideal Customer with Perfectly Positioned Content, the second part of a multi-part, step-by-step series on content marketing strategy that we’ll be continuing here on Sites. I know it was pretty detailed and a lot to remember just listening, especially everything about the empathy map and all of those questions.
You can see the entire transcript for this episode, find a link to Brian’s blog post, and download the empathy map (one click, no email address required) at studiopress.blog/sites05.
When we pick up the series again four weeks from now, the next time we discuss content, we’ll take the next step and begin the process of figuring out “what” information your prospect must have to complete their journey with you. You’ll go from stepping into your prospect’s shoes to walking the buyer’s journey with them.
Now here is this week’s hyper-specific call to action:
This one’s pretty obvious right? I mean, Brian basically laid out the call to action right there at the end of the blog post when he said, “You’re now ready to create a written composite of your character.”
So, that’s your call to action: go create a written composite of your character.
But just don’t do it off the top of your head, willy-nilly style. Make sure you do your research. Ask yourself all of the questions that Brian laid out for you. Questions like “How do they feel about the problem your product solves?” and “What do they hope to gain from using your product?” And there were others.
Doing your research and answering these questions will help you fill out your empathy map, which is a part of this call to action. Don’t skip steps and don’t look for short cuts! Doing the work at this stage will set your website up for long-term, sustained success.
Again, go to studiopress.blog/sites05 to see the full transcript of this episode, which includes all of those questions bulleted out, as well as the link to download the PDF for the empathy map.
Coming next week, we move on to design and discuss a topic that is closely related to what we discussed this week. We’re going to discuss 3 Ways Your Web Design Can Better Connect You to Your Audience.
And guess what you better know about your audience before you can create a design that helps you connect better?
Exactly. The stuff we discussed in this episode. So make sure you take that call to action!
That’s next week, on Sites.
Finally, before I go, here are a couple more quick calls to action for you to consider:
If you haven’t yet, take this opportunity to activate your free subscription to our curated weekly email newsletter, Sites Weekly.
Here’s how it works: Each week, I find four links about content, design, technology, and strategy that you don’t want to miss, and then I send them out via email on Wednesday afternoon.
Reading this newsletter will help you make your website more powerful and successful. Go to studiopress.com/news and sign up in one step right there at the top of the page. That’s studiopress.com/news.
Also, if you enjoy the Sites podcast, please subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts (formerly known as iTunes), and consider giving us a rating or a review over there as well.
One quick tip on that: to make the best use of your review, let me know something in particular you like about the show. That feedback is really important.
For example, one of our early reviewers says: “I’ve been a fan of Copyblogger for many years and now I’m ready for this podcast to help my artist brain build my online business (oy). I’m ready to create the site I’ve wanted to build for how many years now?? I’m super excited about the guidance this show will give me for building my dream site. Thank you Jerod Morris.”
You’re welcome … and thank YOU.
To find us in Apple Podcasts, search for StudioPress Sites and look for the striking purple logo that was designed by Rafal Tomal. You can also go to the URL sites.fm/apple and it will redirect you to our Apple Podcasts page.
And with that, we come to the close of another episode. Thank you for listening to this episode of Sites. I appreciate you being here.
Join me next week, and let’s keep building powerful, successful websites together.
This episode of sites was brought to you by StudioPress Sites, which was awarded “Fastest WordPress Hosting” of 2017 in an independent speed test . If you want to make WordPress fast, secure, and easy — and, I mean, why wouldn’t you — visit studiopress.com/sites today and see which plan fits your needs. That’s studiopress.com/sites.
005-1.png" alt="[05] How to Attract Your Ideal Customer with Perfectly Positioned Content">
Not only do you want to attract your ideal customer, but you want to repel the people who you know are not right for you. In this episode, we provide specific examples that illustrate why understanding your WHO is so important, and then we lay out a proven strategy for empathy that will help you get into the eyes, ears, and mind of your ideal customer.
Listen to Site Success: Tips for Building Better WordPress Websites below ...
season-1-episode-5.mp3">Download MP3Subscribe by RSSSubscribe in iTunes
Important links from this episode:
Jerod Morris: Welcome to Sites, a podcast by the teams at StudioPress and Copyblogger. In this show, we deliver time-tested insight on the four pillars of a successful WordPress website: content, design, technology, and strategy. We want to help you get a little bit closer to reaching your online goals, one episode at a time.
I’m your host Jerod Morris.
Sites is brought to you by StudioPress Sites — the complete hosted solution that makes WordPress fast, secure, and easy … without sacrificing power or flexibility. For example, you can upload your own WordPress theme, or, you can use one of the 20 beautiful StudioPress themes that are included and just one click away. Explore all the amazing things you can do with a StudioPress Site, and you’ll understand why this is way more than traditional WordPress hosting. No matter how you’ll be using your site, we have a plan to fit your needs — and your budget. To learn more, visit studiopress.com/sites. That’s studiopress.com/sites.
Welcome to Episode 5 of Sites.
As you may have seen, last week we announced the show on Copyblogger — its official public introduction — and the response has been swift and overwhelming. Thank you to everyone who has subscribed, left ratings and reviews over at Apple Podcasts, and reached out to me on Twitter with kind words. I really appreciate it.
We are just getting rolling here with Sites, and I look forward to continuing on this journey with you toward better, more powerful websites.
So … in our first four episodes, we did one complete cycle through our four pillars of a successful WordPress website. Now in this episode we find ourselves back at the beginning … with content.
In Episode 1, we discussed the simple three-step process for creating a winning content marketing strategy — understanding the who, the what, and the how. That episode is an important precursor to this one, so I recommend you listen to it.
In today’s episode, we’re going to build on that overview and dive deeper into the first of the three steps: the WHO. Then in the next two content episodes after this one, we’ll discuss the WHAT and the HOW.
Why is the WHO so important?
Here is a quick review from Episode 1:
Before you can get someone to buy from you, you need to know what to say to them, and how to say it. You’ll never get that right unless you know who you’re talking to.
Call them personas, avatars, or even characters if you like.
Your first step is to do the research that allows you to create a fictional, generalized representation of your ideal customer.
Don’t underestimate the importance of the word ideal in “your ideal customer.”
That, of course, is an excerpt from Brian Clark’s blog post The Simple 3-Step Process for Creating a Winning Content Marketing Strategy, on which Episode 1 was based.
This week’s episode, Episode 5, is based on Brian’s follow up post, titled: How to Attract Your Ideal Customer with Perfectly Positioned Content.
I will perform that post for you now, edited slightly to fit the audio medium. Immediately after the reading, I’ll issue this week’s hyper-specific call to action.
Here now is Brian’s post, How to Attract Your Ideal Customer with Perfectly Positioned Content.
“Hello, I’m a Mac.”
“And I’m a PC.”
You remember Apple’s “Get a Mac” series of commercials that ran from May 2006 to October 2009, right?
The commercials were short vignettes featuring John Hodgman as the sweet-yet-bumbling PC and Justin Long as the creative, hip Mac.
Those 66 short spots were named the best advertising campaign of the previous decade by Adweek.
The success of the long-running campaign leads one to believe that Apple certainly knows who its ideal customer is. Of course they do … because they chose their ideal customer, right from the birth of the Macintosh itself.
That doesn’t mean that everyone responded favorably to the ads. While researching for this piece, I ran across a commenter who maintained that the campaign had “backfired” because the PC character had actually been more appealing to him.
No, the campaign didn’t backfire (no one runs a series of ads for three years if they’re not working). Instead, Apple chose who not to attract as much as they chose who they hoped to convert.
Apple knew they were never going to get hardcore PC people to switch to a Mac. Instead, Apple used these 66 humorous little stories to target those who were more likely to “swing” toward Apple — after being educated about the benefits by the contrast between the two characters.
Sounds like really great content marketing to me. In fact, given the nature and duration of the Get a Mac campaign, it resembled serial online video marketing more than traditional advertising.
So, the first (and most important) step in our 3-step content marketing strategy is determining your “Who.”
Who do you want to attract and speak to, and just as importantly, who do you want to drive in the other direction? It all comes down to your values, first and foremost.
Apple’s values were well reflected in the Get a Mac campaign — creativity, simplicity, and rebellion against the status quo. These core values were consistently present in the prior “Crazy Ones” campaign, and before that, the iconic “1984” ad.
Some feel that Apple has lost the ability to innovate since Steve Jobs passed. Whether or not that’s true, I think the perception of Apple has changed among those of us who were initially strongly attracted, because their advertising now, for the first time, tries to appeal to a more general audience.
Steve would definitely not approve.
Modern marketing is about matching up with the worldview of your ideal customer. Outside of a monopoly, there is no such thing as marketing that appeals to everyone, and yet, companies still try and routinely fail.
On the other hand, think of Patagonia. The founder of the outdoor clothing and gear company invented an aluminum climbing wedge that could be inserted and removed without damaging the rock face. This reflects Patagonia’s founding core value:
“Build the best products while creating no unnecessary environmental harm.”
Of course, not every company has a core value built into the founding story. Most businesses exist to simply sell things that people want, so it’s up to management to find the core values that they want to reflect in their marketing to attract the right kind of customer.
For example, there’s nothing inherently ethical about ice cream, beyond ingredients. So Ben & Jerry’s adopted the values of its two founders, which had nothing at all to do with ice cream.
Not everyone who likes ice cream necessarily agrees with reduced Pentagon spending and the fight against climate change, but the people who do care about those things turned Ben & Jerry’s into an iconic brand.
It doesn’t have to be all sunshine and light, either. If your core values fall in line with a “Greed is good” mentality, you’ll certainly find people out there who share this worldview. You just have to unflinchingly own it.
You need to understand who you’re talking to, yes. But you don’t just accept who you find — you choose who to attract.
In the Get a Mac campaign, Apple literally created a character that personified what their ideal “swing” customer aspired to be. It’s time for us to do the same.
You can call them personas or avatars if you like — I prefer character. That’s because the first step is the research that allows you to create a fictional, generalized representation of your ideal customer.
As far as fiction goes, we’re creating a character that will be the protagonist in their own purchasing journey that your content will help them complete. Since this journey is based on as much reality as we can glean from our research, it’s more like a fictionalized drama “based on actual people and events.”
When I say the prospect is the protagonist, that means the hero. Your content is a powerful gift that positions your brand as a guide that helps the hero complete the journey that solves their problem. If this sounds like Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey to you, nice work — we’ll elaborate on this aspect in the “What” portion of the strategy.
This journey does not take place in the context of you wanting to sell more stuff. It’s understanding how the prospect thinks, feels, sees, and behaves in the context of solving the problem that sets them on the journey in the first place.
And don’t forget about instilling them with your shared core values. Why would this person choose you to assist them on the journey, out of a sea of other choices?
Because you already see the world like they do in an important way, and they’ll pick up on that shared worldview immediately upon coming across your content. Your core values are your secret attraction spell.
Instead of hiding your world views in the hope of never offending anyone, you now realize the power of being loud and proud — and attracting like-minded people who see you as the only reasonable choice.
Now, most people don’t end up using this representative character in their content, like Apple did with Justin Long in the Get a Mac commercials. It’s really a composite to refer back to so that you never lose sight of who you’re talking to, what you should say, and how you should say it.
On the other hand, the Get a Mac commercials were just two guys standing and talking in front of a minimalist, all-white background. If you’re thinking in terms of online video marketing, you could do a lot worse than looking to this campaign for inspiration.
And think about your explainer videos. Wouldn’t a character that represents who you’re talking to give you an edge over competing marketing approaches?
At a minimum, contemplating the actual use of the character in your content will force you to get things just right. Let’s look at a method for doing that.
Given that you’re seeking to attract people who share your values, it’s tempting to overly identify with your audience. While you’re going to have things in common, it’s dangerous to think your ideal customer is similar to you in other ways.
You’re a subject matter expert at what you do, for starters, and they are not.
You need to make sure you don’t fall victim to the curse of knowledge, a cognitive bias that occurs when a person with expertise unknowingly assumes that others have the background to understand.
This one assumption alone can sink your content marketing efforts. Plus, you don’t want to assume that the audience shares other characteristics that you have — you want to know, as well as you can, what they’re thinking, feeling, seeing, and doing.
In other words, for you to have the empathy to walk the buyer’s journey in their shoes, you must first see things from their perspective. Then you’ll be in a position to create the content that “coaches” them along the journey.
Let’s take a closer look at empathy, the definition of which consists of two parts:
It’s often said you want to enter the conversation that’s already playing in your prospect’s head. By matching up values and worldviews, you’re also aiming to enter the conversation in the prospect’s heart, and that’s how your marketing triggers the right motivation at the right time.
The process we use for achieving this is called empathy mapping. At the foundation of the exercise is this statement: “Our ideal customer needs a better way to BLANK BECAUSE BLANK.”
Empathy maps vary in shapes and sizes, but there are basic elements common to each one:
To get started, you can download and print a large version of the empathy map we use at Copyblogger and StudioPress. Just go to the show notes for this episode: studiopress.blog/sites05. You’ll find the link to map.pdf">download the empathy map right under the player.
The map allows you to easily organize all of your research and other relevant materials. The four quadrants represent the sensory experience of your ideal customer while in the prospect phase.
Ask yourself questions such as:
Jot down needs and insights that emerge as you work through this exercise. Then simply paste those notes in the proper boxes on the large empathy map.
At the bottom of your empathy map, you can also draw two boxes: Pains and Gains.
In the Pains box, you can put your customers’ challenges and obstacles. Ask, “What keeps my customer up at night?”
In the Gains box, include the goals your customers hope to accomplish. Ask, “What motivates my customer to solve their problem?” and “What are their hopes and dreams?”
You’re now ready to create a written composite of your character. Some people do several paragraphs, or perhaps a page of description. You, being the smart person that you are, might consider taking it further by creating a character bible, just like novelists and screenwriters do.
In this context, a character bible is a detailed outline that lays out everything about your prospect in one place, so you can easily access their personality, problems, and desires.
It may seem like a lot of work, but you’ll be happy you did it once you start coming up with the “What” and the “How” of your content marketing strategy.
*****
That was a reading of Brian Clark’s blog post How to Attract Your Ideal Customer with Perfectly Positioned Content, the second part of a multi-part, step-by-step series on content marketing strategy that we’ll be continuing here on Sites. I know it was pretty detailed and a lot to remember just listening, especially everything about the empathy map and all of those questions.
You can see the entire transcript for this episode, find a link to Brian’s blog post, and download the empathy map (one click, no email address required) at studiopress.blog/sites05.
When we pick up the series again four weeks from now, the next time we discuss content, we’ll take the next step and begin the process of figuring out “what” information your prospect must have to complete their journey with you. You’ll go from stepping into your prospect’s shoes to walking the buyer’s journey with them.
Now here is this week’s hyper-specific call to action:
This one’s pretty obvious right? I mean, Brian basically laid out the call to action right there at the end of the blog post when he said, “You’re now ready to create a written composite of your character.”
So, that’s your call to action: go create a written composite of your character.
But just don’t do it off the top of your head, willy-nilly style. Make sure you do your research. Ask yourself all of the questions that Brian laid out for you. Questions like “How do they feel about the problem your product solves?” and “What do they hope to gain from using your product?” And there were others.
Doing your research and answering these questions will help you fill out your empathy map, which is a part of this call to action. Don’t skip steps and don’t look for short cuts! Doing the work at this stage will set your website up for long-term, sustained success.
Again, go to studiopress.blog/sites05 to see the full transcript of this episode, which includes all of those questions bulleted out, as well as the link to download the PDF for the empathy map.
Coming next week, we move on to design and discuss a topic that is closely related to what we discussed this week. We’re going to discuss 3 Ways Your Web Design Can Better Connect You to Your Audience.
And guess what you better know about your audience before you can create a design that helps you connect better?
Exactly. The stuff we discussed in this episode. So make sure you take that call to action!
That’s next week, on Sites.
Finally, before I go, here are a couple more quick calls to action for you to consider:
If you haven’t yet, take this opportunity to activate your free subscription to our curated weekly email newsletter, Sites Weekly.
Here’s how it works: Each week, I find four links about content, design, technology, and strategy that you don’t want to miss, and then I send them out via email on Wednesday afternoon.
Reading this newsletter will help you make your website more powerful and successful. Go to studiopress.com/news and sign up in one step right there at the top of the page. That’s studiopress.com/news.
Also, if you enjoy the Sites podcast, please subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts (formerly known as iTunes), and consider giving us a rating or a review over there as well.
One quick tip on that: to make the best use of your review, let me know something in particular you like about the show. That feedback is really important.
For example, one of our early reviewers says: “I’ve been a fan of Copyblogger for many years and now I’m ready for this podcast to help my artist brain build my online business (oy). I’m ready to create the site I’ve wanted to build for how many years now?? I’m super excited about the guidance this show will give me for building my dream site. Thank you Jerod Morris.”
You’re welcome … and thank YOU.
To find us in Apple Podcasts, search for StudioPress Sites and look for the striking purple logo that was designed by Rafal Tomal. You can also go to the URL sites.fm/apple and it will redirect you to our Apple Podcasts page.
And with that, we come to the close of another episode. Thank you for listening to this episode of Sites. I appreciate you being here.
Join me next week, and let’s keep building powerful, successful websites together.
This episode of sites was brought to you by StudioPress Sites, which was awarded “Fastest WordPress Hosting” of 2017 in an independent speed test . If you want to make WordPress fast, secure, and easy — and, I mean, why wouldn’t you — visit studiopress.com/sites today and see which plan fits your needs. That’s studiopress.com/sites.
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