How To Generate Article Topics When You’re Half Asleep

Posted on 30. Apr, 2012 by in Blog, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

How To Generate Article Topics When You're Half Asleep

If you keep writing every day, you’ll have a problem. You’ll have more article ideas than you can write. Every day will sprout thirty-fifty new ideas that you can never turn into articles. But when you’re starting out, this problem is quite the opposite.

You may wake up and can’t think of a thing

Or you may be so tired that your brain refuses to co-operate.

So here’s what you do next: You find a few books

You can do this offline, or online. But allocate a fixed amount of time. And here’s how you go about it. Let’s say I want to write about PHP. I know diddly squat about PHP. So that’s the same as waking up and not being able to think of a thing to write.

So since the library is closed at this hour, I go online and look for a Dummies book

And I look at the contents page and voilà—there are a ton of topics just waiting for me. Not just topics, but subtopics. Yipeee-yahooey! Now I have my topics and my sub-topics.

But waitasec, isn’t that cheating?

Isn’t that plagiarism? Yes it is, if you copy the answers. Not if you copy the questions. The questions are simply the titles on the contents page. So let’s say the titles were the following:

Understanding PHP Data Types
Building SQL Queries
Troubleshooting a PHP Script
Setting Up Your Computer for PHP and MySQL Web Site Development
Considering the Various Uses for the PHP Scripting Language
Keeping Up with PHP and MySQL Changes
Use PHP Statements to Create Programs
Communicate with a Database through PHP MySQL Functions
Access and Adapt a Database with MySQL Queries
Knowing the MySQL WHERE Clause Format
Make MySQL Database Changes with the ALTER Query
Special Characters to Use in PHP Expression Test Patterns

Now fifteen thousand writers can take the very same topics and no two articles may be the same. Why? Because you’re going to approach the same questions from your level, your experience, your stories, your objections, your style. It simply cannot be the same.

And I found these points in fifteen seconds

You could spend hours trying to dream up the perfect topics and sub-topics, but they’re all ready and formatted for you on the Internet—if you just look. So look. Set a timer, and then go for the topics. Cut and paste the topics and then it’s time for outlining.

And by this time the expert in you can still be asleep

Because you’re still not writing yet, and are in outlining mode, you’re just having a party, by coming up with questions. So let me give it a shot with PHP (not that I know anything about it).

Building SQL Queries
What are SQL Queries?
What are the steps to building an SQL Query?
Where do SQL Queries mostly go wrong?
What are the practical applications for SQL Queries?
But surely we can do without SQL Queries…
Summary
Next step

Now if you’re a PHP programmer, I’m betting that you’ll be at least slightly interested in my questions. Some may be slightly off base, but most of them, when answered form a pretty good article.

But some answers may be too big. For example: Where do SQL Queries go wrong? So no problem. Just list the places where it can go wrong—yes, just a list. Then start up a new article called: Where SQL Queries go wrong and outline it—and phew—you have another outline!

Your topics and sub-topics don’t need to be in your head

They can be on the Internet, in the library or in the contents page of every book on your topic (hey, there’s this site called Amazon.com). If you want to write topics on starting a business, it’s there. If you want to write on WordPress, it’s there too. If you fancy gardening, kite building, even getting a divorce—it’s all there on the book stores. And not just one book, but forty or fifty books.

Which is why you need a timer

Because you can get stuck there all night trying to decide which topics and subtopics to choose. One thing is for sure, though: You can be half asleep forever, and never have a problem when coming up with topics and sub-topics.

And that’s just for starters. Once you start writing you’ll have the opposite problem. Too many ideas and not enough time to write!

P.S. How do you generate ideas for your articles? Share your ideas here.

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“I wasn’t sure Sean would have anything new to say or would offer
advice that would be easy to apply.

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I was also concerned that I would be deluged with a lot of information and sales pitches that I would get overwhelmed and not be able to implement anything.

But after I checked out his site I was impressed by all the free offerings. And it seemed so well organized I didn’t feel overwhelmed or confused. I tried a few ideas out and was so happy with the positive results that I bought the Brain Audit.

After reading (and re-reading!) the Brain Audit I felt like a blindfold had been lifted off my eyes. It made so much sense and I kept thinking how it seems so obvious but no one has ever put all the pieces together like this before.

I am happily communicating with patients much better, and attracting more of my ideal type of patient.

So if you want to break through to get better results and are willing to do a little painless work, then do yourself a favor and get the Brain Audit.

Tyme Gigliotti, Licensed Acupuncturist
Baltimore, MD, USA
Read more at http://www.psychotactics.com/brainaudit


In your small business, how can you get reliable answers to your complex marketing problems?
Find out more at http://www.5000bc.com/

 


Top Selling Products Under $50


1) You already know that 80% of a sales letter depends on your headline.
So what’s the remaining 20% that causes customers to buy? Find out more

2) Do You Often Hit A Wall Called ‘Writers Block’?
Learn how the core elements of outlining can save you from the misery of writing your next article.

3) Do you know that visuals immediately improve your sales conversion?
Learn how to create drama and curiosity and help improve your web page conversion with visuals.

4) Do your websites, brochures, presentations, etc… confuse your clients?
Put some sanity into your design, even though you are not a designer?

5) Chaos Planning
Year after year you sit down and create a list of things you want to achieve. Then suddenly it’s April, and you’ve not really moved ahead as you’d expected.
Learn Why Most Planning Fails: And The Critical Importance of Chaos in Planning.


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How To Start Your Story-Based Articles With Greater Impact

Posted on 26. Mar, 2012 by in Blog, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing, story telling

How To Start Your Story Based Articles With Great Impact

Yesterday I went to buy some walking shoes.
And I ended up spending $2000. And that’s not counting the shoes.

Now, did that opening get your attention?

Sure it did. It sucked you in. And the reason you hear that strange sucking sound is because I didn’t start off the article like most people do. Most people slide logically into an article. But you can use the power of the story. And not just the story, but the middle of the story. Because there, smack bang in the middle, lies the drama—the part that really captivates your reader.

So how do you know what to pick as you unfold your story?

The answer is actually quite mundane—even, counter intuitive. To get that drama, you don’t have to pick anything particularly exciting. You just have to make it exciting for me.

So let’s say we went back into my world of yesterday

Were the purchase of the shoes the most important point?
Or was it the purchase of a draughtsman’s table?
Perhaps it could be Italian food we had for dinner. Or just about anything.

In a story, you have at least three-four exciting points and any one of them can rise to the surface. Yes, any point is exciting. What really matters, is how you bring a factor of excitement to the story. As you explain the details, the simple fact becomes interesting.

And master story tellers know this to be true

They know that even a mundane story can be brought to life in the way you recount it. In a presentation at TED.com, speaker, Hans Rosling tells a seemingly mundane story of a washing machine. And Hans has many options when telling this story, but he chooses to talk about the ‘button-driven miracle’ of the machine. And he stays with that angle to get your attention.

And here’s how it unfolds…

“I was only four years old when I saw my mother load a washing machine for the very first time in her life. That was a great day for my mother. My mother and father had been saving money for years to be able to buy that machine.

And the first day it was going to be used, even Grandma was invited to see the machine. And Grandma was even more excited. Throughout her life she had been heating water with firewood, and she had hand washed laundry for seven children. And now she was going to watch electricity do that work.

My mother carefully opened the door, and she loaded the laundry into the machine, like this. And then, when she closed the door, Grandma said, “No, no, no, no. Let me, let me push the button.” And Grandma pushed the button, and she said, “Oh, fantastic. I want to see this. Give me a chair. Give me a chair. I want to see it.”

And she sat down in front of the machine, and she watched the entire washing program. She was mesmerised. To my grandmother, the washing machine was a miracle.”

So what’s the interesting part in this story?

It could have been that the clothes came out extremely clean. It could have been the sound and how they were captivated by the sound of the machine. It could have been the changeover from hard labour to just a button-driven miracle. Hans chose the button-driven miracle. But as you can see, he could have chosen anything as long as he used emotions to drive home the story.

You can feel the excitement, the awe, as Hans tells the story. And it’s these set of emotions that keeps the drama going and the heart pulsating.

Which brings us to this bizarre set of conclusions

1) That you can pick any story, or any subset of a story to get the drama going. And you often find this drama somewhere in the middle of your story.
2) The most important factor is one of enthusiasm. Bringing out the fear, the surprise—all of those emotions are what keeps the reader engaged.

One of the best ways to get the reader’s attention is to tell a story. But easily the best way to get that story raging ahead is to pick something—anything from the middle of the story and use it to start your article.

And as you work down your way through your story, you’ll find at least two-three spots where you can harvest great emotion or unusual drama. Now that you have that emotion/drama, it’s just a matter of putting that stuff at the top and drawing your reader in.

It’s a beginning no reader can resist.

Have a look at these products


“What do your customers think? What would make them buy?

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In the Brain Audit – Sean teaches 7 steps on how to form killer communication pieces that makes people buy from you. The Brain Audit is a simple psychological system that everyone can use in their communication to increase their profits.”

Ankesh Kothari – Biztactics, USA
Read more at http://www.psychotactics.com/brainaudit


Top Selling Products Under $50


1) NEW! You already know that 80% of a sales letter depends on your headline.
So what’s the remaining 20% that causes customers to buy? Find out more

2) Do You Often Hit A Wall Called ‘Writers Block’?
Learn how the core elements of outlining can save you from the misery of writing your next article.

3) Do you know that visuals immediately improve your sales conversion?
Learn how to create drama and curiosity and help improve your web page conversion with visuals.

4) Do your websites, brochures, presentations, etc… confuse your clients?
Put some sanity into your design, even though you are not a designer?

5) Chaos Planning
Year after year you sit down and create a list of things you want to achieve. Then suddenly it’s March, and you’ve not really moved ahead as you’d expected.
Learn Why Most Planning Fails: And The Critical Importance of Chaos in Planning.


NEW PRODUCT! Black Belt Presentations: How do you create presentations that enthrall, hold and move an audience to action?


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Three Core Elements of Storytelling (And Why You Need To Write Stories Right Away)

Posted on 05. Mar, 2012 by in Blog, online writing, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing, story telling

Think of a story.
Any story.
Maybe just Cinderella, for instance.

What does it bring up right away to your mind?

1) Sequence
2) Suspense and
3) The roller coaster

Three Core Elements of Storytelling (And Why You Need To Write Stories Right Away)

Stories are like magic lamps. They have a sequence, there’s suspense and sure to be a roller coaster.

So if we examine Cinderella’s story we see:

1) There’s the sequence of the daughter who is mistreated and made to work in the kitchen.

The other daughters romp about doing what spoiled daughters do. And they fancy their chances with the prince. But things don’t go their way, and in turn, Cindy manages to get a fairy godmother. And blah, blah, blah.

And there’s a sequence of events each building into each other. But a good story must have some drama, some suspense.

2) The suspense

Suspense follows us all around the storyline. Cinderella’s mother dies and she’s doomed to sleeping near the fireplace (which is how she gets the name, Cinderella). But then the godmother appears from the blue—and suspense builds up—because now Cinderella has a chance like everyone else. Will she make it? Won’t she? She does. And then just as Cindy’s hitting it off with the Prince, the clock goes nuts and her life is miserable once more. What on earth is happening? What’s with this girl? Is she just going to be a loser? Yup, that’s all suspense.

3) Then there’s the roller coaster

Good times, then bad. Then good, then bad. Your story doesn’t have to swing wildly, but it helps to have contrast, because contrast changes the pace of the story. So just as things are really yucky, along comes the knight in shining armour. Or just as things are looking great, an avian flu threatens to kill the entire population. Cinderella’s fortunes seem to bounce up and down, which keeps the interest in the story.

Now let’s head to your story…

Every story you write tends to have sequence, because without sequence a story has no meaning. But suspense? You have to insert a certain amount of suspense. It’s always there in your story, but when you insert a ‘what the heck is happening’ factor, you instantly build suspense. And finally the roller coaster. If your story has been coasting with the fairies for a while, then it’s time to bring out the ogres—and vice versa.

And there are reasons why this storytelling is important:

1) Most writers are unable to capture the core elements of a story. Even if they do get the sequence right, they rarely build in suspense or the roller coaster. That’s because they aren’t aware of these elements, or just don’t know how to go about it. But you, you can practice and get a lot better.

2) Most articles are almost always how-to or reporter-like. This means that your articles automatically stand out when compared to millions of other articles on the Internet. And because most writers avoid this story-telling, your articles are instantly more appealing—and different.

Does it just have to be a story or can you have a case-study?

Case studies also have the same three elements, but you still have to work in the suspense and the roller coaster. The key factor is to realise that you’re already off to a brilliant start with a story because you have the advantage of sequence. And with a bit of practice, suspense and the roller coaster will become part of your case-study (or story-telling).

Kids sit at rapt attention when listening to the story of Cinderella

No matter how many times you tell the story, they’re keen as mustard to hear it again. Now you know why. And you can take the same elements and use it in your articles.

And then everyone who reads it will have that same mustardy-feeling too

The three core elements of storytelling are sequence, suspense and the roller coaster. How have you used these elements in your articles? Share your story here.

Why You Need The Brain Audit


“Before I bought the Brain Audit I felt lost and like a desperate salesman.

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I was one amongst a million more service based businesses. But now with the psychological marketing tactics that I learned from the Brain Audit, I feel confident.

And I fell especially unique when it comes to advertising and marketing because most of my competitors don’t know the marketing principles taught in the Brain Audit!

I feel like a real professional marketing expert.

Luis Depazos, Entrepreneur, Miami, Fl. USA
Find out how The Brain Audit can help you


Top Selling Products Under $50


1) NEW! You already know that 80% of a sales letter depends on your headline.
So what’s the remaining 20% that causes customers to buy? Find out more

2) Do You Often Hit A Wall Called ‘Writers Block’?
Learn how the core elements of outlining can save you from the misery of writing your next article.

3) Do you know that visuals immediately improve your sales conversion?
Learn how to create drama and curiosity and help improve your web page conversion with visuals.

4) Do your websites, brochures, presentations, etc… confuse your clients?
Put some sanity into your design, even though you are not a designer?

5) Chaos Planning
Year after year you sit down and create a list of things you want to achieve. Then suddenly it’s March, and you’ve not really moved ahead as you’d expected.
Learn Why Most Planning Fails: And The Critical Importance of Chaos in Planning.


NEW PRODUCT! Black Belt Presentations: How do you create presentations that enthrall, hold and move an audience to action?


[next_step]

Understanding Plots and Sub-Plots When Writing Salesletters

Posted on 23. Jan, 2012 by in Blog, Copywriting, Headlines, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

Understanding Plots and Sub-Plots When Writing Salesletters

Imagine you’re having a discussion with a hyperactive, talkative teenager.
And the conversation goes like this…

“We went to the mall, and like, there was this fire in the mall. And we went from there to the cinema, but we didn’t have any money and anyway the popcorn machine was broken, and so we didn’t really want to go to the movies without popcorn. But right after that we went to have some pizza and there was this creepy guy outside the store. But listen to this—because that’s not the best part. The best part is the Sylvie dumped Josh, and like, they ran into each other in the street…”

When we, like, write copy for our website, we like, sound a lot like that teenager

What we tend to do is go all over the place with our copy. First of course, we’ll try to stuff in about five concepts in our headline. Then we’ll try and fill in a whole bunch of sub-heads that we want to drive home.

And then our first paragraph tries to cover all the possible points. And like that teenager, we have the entire story in our heads, but nothing quite gets across to the client. And that’s because you’re trying to cover way too many points too quickly.

And as you’ve worked it out for yourself, this bounce and jumping around is exhausting for the reader or listener, and hence is a big mistake.

So let’s see how this mistake unfolds when we write copy by examining an actual piece of copy.

Headline: Are You Fed Up With Unprofessional Contractors …
Body text:
That don’t call you back or even show up?
Are you done with contractors that lack the ability to communicate in a timely manner?
Or run away from problems that crop up during and after a project?
Are you over dealing with the hacks of the world?
Have you enough of sitting home babysitting people that are you uncomfortable with?

So what’s wrong with that sequence?

Technically, nothing. The headline is perfect. It gets my attention without too much of a fuss. But then I go to read and I get between three-five main plots and no sub-plots. And how do we know they’re main plots? Because we can list them out and see for ourselves. They all want to take centre stage.

Main plot 1: Don’t call you back or even show up
Main plot 2: Lack the ability to communicate in a timely manner
Main plot 3: Run away from problems that crop up during and after a project
Main plot 4: The so-called professional is nothing but a hack.
Main plot 5: Discomfort. Having to babysit people that are you uncomfortable with

Just like that teenager’s story, it’s possible for us to jump from one to the other, without so much as pausing for breath. So now that we know we’re creating bounce, how do we get rid of this bounce? And how do we still use all of the point we want to cover on our web page?

Here’s how you do it.

Just like a movie, you have a main plot. And you have sub-plots. So what’s your main plot? It’s the client’s most pressing problem. That’s obvious, isn’t it? You’d want to get the client’s attention by driving home the biggest, scariest, buggiest problem, wouldn’t you? And here’s how we go about it.

Headline:
Write your headline. Let it cover ONE big problem (that big, buggy problem)
Body text 1: Drive home the problems involved with that ONE point.
Body text 2: Drive home the consequences of that ONE point.
Body text 3: Drive home the solution to that ONE problem.
Move to the next point.

So how does this look when we put the teenager’s story in this format?

Headline: We went to the mall and there was a fire.
Body text 1: What happened next (at the mall)
Body text 2: Then what were the consequences?
Body text 3: How did we escape the fire?

With the teenager, she’d complete one story, and move to the next. And the next. But you may have made your point with a single story. So what do you do with the rest of the stuff that you so badly want to get across? You bring it up later. Let’s see how. But first let’s get back to our example.

Headline: Are You Fed Up With Unprofessional Contractors …
Body text: That don’t call you back or even show up?
Body text 1: What’s the problem with not calling back or showing up?
Body text 2: What are the consequences? Describe the emotion that the client feels, in detail.
Body text 3: What’s the best way to avoid such a desperate scenario?

And then you present your service

Body text 4: Presenting XYZ contracting company.
Body text 5: Drive home the point of calling back. How you do it. When you show up. How you follow up.

Notice we haven’t gone to Point 2 yet. And yes, I know, you’re itching to drive home that point

But notice something? The customer doesn’t care about your itch. They’re locked in to what you’re saying. You’re the first person they’ve met who isn’t like that teenager, jumping from story to story.

The customer’s biggest problem is ‘unprofessional contractors that don’t call back or show up’ and you’re doing just that. The customer wants to know more about that story in detail, before they’re ready to move to the next story.

So once you present your company and why you bring the ONE solution, you can now move on to the next story.

Except you don’t have to tell the next story in as much detail. You can now roll out the remaining stories in slightly less detail in a feature/benefit format that looks like this:

Feature 1: Benefit 1. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah and more blahdee blah, blahdoo, blah, blah, blah. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah and more blahdee blah, blahdoo, blah, blah, blah. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah and more blahdee blah, blahdoo, blah, blah, blah.

Feature 2: Benefit 1. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah and more blahdee blah, blahdoo, blah, blah, blah. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah and more blahdee blah, blahdoo, blah, blah, blah. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah and more blahdee blah, blahdoo, blah, blah, blah.

And so on with Feature 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8—and so on. And add benefits to every one of those features

You can have as many as 8-10 paragraphs rich with details of the problem and the solutions you bring to the customer. And having locked into the main problem and seeing how you bring that solution, the customer will happily trundle through the rest of the points, and get more convinced by the minute about your expertise and professionalism.

In short what you have is a main plot. And you drive home that main plot.

And then later, pull in the sub-plots, but without the same level of intensity as the main. Just remember that you can pick any plot to be the main plot. (e.g. ‘Sylvie dumping Josh’ has more drama than ‘no popcorn at the cinema.’ And then re-tell your story on the sales page.

ONE plot at a time  :)

Do you have a question on ‘Understand Plots and Sub-Plots when Writing Salesletters? Ask it here.


Next Step
“There are marketing books and there are marketing books – I bet there are not many you have read many times over?

The Brain Audit really teaches you the art of persuasion because it gives an insight into how people’s brains work. I have used the principles in writing WebPages, writing articles, making presentations, networking, negotiating and even writing submissions for a judge!

But the best bit about the Brain Audit is that it actually works.The principles are easy to understand.

Would I recommend it to people serious about getting on in business? Absolutely.

mikes

Michael Smyth, approachablelawyer, Auckland
Judge for yourselfThe Brain Audit: Why Customers Buy And Why They Don’t


I was wary of signing up and paying for a forum or another membership site

“If you suspect that your business could be bringing in a lot more revenue but you don’t have a clue how to make that happen without hype or hassle, 5000bc is a must-have resource.

I honestly didn’t see what 5000bc could offer me that I couldn’t get from Sean’s books. Besides, how could a bunch of people – most of whom are not business experts – help me build my business?

I joined anyway because the price was right and I wanted the information that came with the premium membership. ;-)

The information and support I received from Sean and my fellow “cavers” about a single Web page was directly responsible for selling $10,000 worth of books in less than two weeks.

Unlike many Web communities, 5000bc members are active and to the point. Sean keeps adding content that drills down to specific problems in business and then shows you how to solve them.

Try it. You won’t regret it.”

5000bc: Small Business Marketing Memembership| Molly Gordon testimonial
Molly Gordon, Master Certified Coach
Shaboom Inc, USA

Judge for yourselfHow 5000bc can make your business succeed.


Products: Under $50
NEW!
You already know that 80% of a sales letter depends on your headline.
So what’s the remaining 20% that causes customers to buy? Find out more

1) Do You Often Hit A Wall Called ‘Writers Block’?
Learn how the core elements of outlining can save you from the misery of writing your next article.

2) Do you know that visuals immediately improve your sales conversion?
Learn how to create drama and curiosity and help improve your web page conversion with visuals.

3) Do your websites, brochures, presentations, etc… confuse your clients?
Put some sanity into your design, even though you are not a designer?

4) Chaos Planning
Year after year you sit down and create a list of things you want to achieve. Then suddenly it’s March, and you’ve not really moved ahead as you’d expected.
Learn Why Most Planning Fails: And The Critical Importance of Chaos in Planning.

5) Nothing bugs you more than a painful client.
A client who hassles you at every step of the way. Learn how to use the power of the ‘six critical questions’ to get incredible testimonials—and attract clients that make every day an absolute joy.


NEW PRODUCT! Black Belt Presentations: How do you create presentations that enthrall, hold and move an audience to action?

[next_step]

Why Some Articles Are Better Than Others

Posted on 07. Oct, 2011 by in Blog, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

Why Some Articles Are Better Than Others

I was sitting at a cafe one day, when a client was raving about my articles. Of course, I was smiling from ear to ear–as you do when  someone is a big ‘fan.’

“So how come I’m mesmerised by your articles?” he asked.
“What’s your big ‘s-e-c-r-e-t?”

“One word”, I said.

Every article boils down to one word.
Most articles go up the hill, down the valley, into the mountains and into the woods. Our articles don’t.

They stick to one word.
One angle.
They drill down like crazy.

So if you were talking about a topic like ‘pricing’, it’s almost too vast a topic. But what if you stripped it down to one angle?

Like how to increase prices by 10%.
Or how to increase prices by 10% on your website.
Or how to increase prices by 10% with a live presentation.
Or how to increase prices by 10% with specific terminology.

You see what I’m saying?

Most writers don’t follow this level of drill-down.
They write about massive topics.
They don’t have specific ideas.
And then the article feels soggy. And non-crunchy.

You see any dope can write articles.

And most articles are dopey anyway.
Because they don’t follow a structure. Or a grid.
They don’t understand drama. They don’t understand sandwiching.
They don’t understand the intensity or the difference between mystery.

And suspense. And when to use what.
So the article falls apart before it even gets off the ground.

And that’s not all.

There are also the myths.

The stupid myths of talent.
That some people are better writers than others.
That some people can think better than others.

But what if that were indeed a myth?

Because it is a myth. Writing good articles is within your control if you understand the structure and flow.

http://www.psychotactics.com/article-writing-live-course
and get the newest bonus. (Note: There is a form to file in, before you get the bonus)

So what does the bonus cover?
When structuring, does length of the article matter? And why not?

Find out for yourself.
Sean D'Souza
Warm regards,
Sean

P.S. About that client who was raving. We got $35,000 worth of business from them. Not only did the article impress the client,  but it was then easy for the client to show the articles to her  bosses, who in turn were sold.  So yeah, long story short: Well-written articles work to get you a chunky bit of business. But find that out for yourself at the link  above. :)

P.P.S. The goodies are free. However if you are considering the course you should look at the Home Study, as it has very precise instructions on how to get outstanding at article writing. If you’re a member of 5000bc.com we may also put together a  Home Study course group in the Cave.

P.P.P.S. The Home Study prices will be increased shortly. Get it while you can at the existing price (Note: We’ve raised prices consistently year after year).

The Secret to Becoming an Expert in Your Customer’s Eyes?

Posted on 30. Sep, 2011 by in Blog, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

The Secret To Becoming An Expert In Your Customers Eyes

How do you become an expert in your customer’s eyes?
How do you become the person the customer most wants to work with?
How do you then increase prices 500% and still have customers wanting to work with you?

To understand how this unusual situation occurs, let me tell you a story:

I was a cartoonist by profession.
Then one fine day, I decided to get into ‘marketing.’

Now tell me honestly:

Would you hire a cartoonist to show you how to attract customers?
Would you hire a cartoonist to show you how to improve your website?
Would you hire a cartoonist for anything–but–to draw cartoons?

Why would you?

I wouldn’t.

And that was the uphill battle I faced: No one knew me as an expert.
Now it didn’t matter how many times I looked in the mirror and called myself an expert.

I still wasn’t getting any respect, let alone pesos in the bank.
And it drove me crazy.

But there’s always a way out of crazy-land

So here’s what I did.
I started writing articles.
And it was painful writing those articles.
I’d write one article after slaving over it for two days.
And then sometimes after two days, I’d trash the article and start all over again.

Did I say there’s a way out of crazy-land?

Well, it sure didn’t seem so, because this article-writing-jazz was
driving me loco.

But here’s what I found too.
That there were systems. And techniques.
Techniques that enabled me to write faster.
That enabled me to make an article almost like a movie.
That enabled me to see a pattern as to which articles would go down the gurgler, and which articles would get lapped up by the readers.

That there were certain articles, when published, that got customers to my website in droves. I’d wake up, and suddenly there were fifty, or a hundred new subscribers.

Sometimes as many as two hundred or more.

And then as the weeks and months passed, I started getting calls

Calls to help customers with their website (um, after I wrote a website-based article).

And then emails. To help customers to help them attract clients (um, again, it was an article that did the job).

You’re guessing what crossed my mind, eh?

Not only were the articles pulling in customers to the Psychotactics website, but these customers were asking me to work with them.

Me, a cartoonist, work with them?

I have to say, I was scared out my wits. (For two whole years actually). But after two years of writing articles (and I just wrote about 20 articles in the first two years), even I began to see a trend.

I figured I could go nuts and cold-call…

Or I could sit at my computer and write an article. And have a customer call. (Ooh, I did like the sound of that phone ringing).

But you have to remember this was back in the year 2002-2004.

Back then, the Internet was a bit of a novelty. People doled out their email addresses like peanuts. Today it’s not that easy to  have two hundred people stream through your website. Which means that it’s not enough to just write an article.

There are squillions of articles on the Internet today

And those articles are competing with audio.
And video.
And heck knows what else.

So the questions do cross your mind:

1) How do I write so that my clients actually read my articles above all that noise?
2) How do I write, if I struggle to put a paragraph together?
3) Is there a ticket out of crazy-land? Can I really become anexpert in my client’s eyes?

There indeed is a ticket

And if you’ve been putting off writing, because you think it’s hard, well, it’s time to get that ticket out of crazy-land.

Information (um, Article Writing) creates expertise

Ask every author on Amazon.com
Ask every top consultant.
Ask every top trainer.
And ask a cartoonist.

But don’t take my word for it. Judge for yourself.
Get some solid methods to write better articles at this link.

Don’t wait. This link won’t stay up forever. :)
http://www.psychotactics.com/article-writing-live-course

Sean

P.S. The goodies are free. However if you are considering the course you should look at the Home Study, as it has very precise instructions on how to get outstanding at article writing. If you’re a member of 5000bc.com we may also put together a Home Study course group in the Cave.

P.P.S. The Home Study prices will be increased shortly. Get it while you can at the existing price (Note: We’ve raised prices consistently year after year).

How To Become An Expert In Your Industry

Posted on 24. Sep, 2011 by in Blog, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

Article-Writing: How To Become An Expert In Your Industry

Imagine you had a fairy godmother.

And she gave you one wish: The wish of ‘perceived expertise’. This ‘perceived expertise’, means that your customers would look at you and say: “There goes the expert in the field. I only want to work with her/him.”

I had such a godmother. And I got a wish from that fairy godmother in the year 2002.


You see I’d just started up my consultancy in marketing

I’d moved from India to New Zealand. No one knew me in these parts. No one knew if I was good at what I did. Or just plain useless. And what was worse, was I wasn’t quite sure either.

Then one day, that fairy godmother whizzed into the room

“Write articles,” she said.
“Write articles?” I echoed.
“What good are articles going to do for me?” I thought condescendingly.

But as fairy godmothers go, they can read your thoughts

And so there I was, um, writing articles. And remember, I didn’t even know my subject well enough. To me, marketing was a whole new world. But then something magical happened. Something I just didn’t expect. When I sat down to write, I started to get ideas.

Ideas that I didn’t know existed in my head.

And as I read more books (both business and non-business books), I got even more ideas. When I put those ideas on my website, and put up a little ‘Subscribe’ link right at the very bottom–I started getting subscribers.

I wasn’t even selling anything online (or offline for that matter)

And there I was..ahem…building an audience.
An audience that wanted to listen what I had to say.
An audience that went from just friends and family, to a chunky hundred people.
Then a thousand. And it kept growing.

I wasn’t doing any advertising

No publicity. Heck, I barely knew how to do my own marketing.

Yet these articles were like a magnet. They pulled people from every part of the world to my…um…pretty crappy website (you should have seen it in the year 2002). And offline, I was starting to get inquiries too.


“Can you give us some advice on these marketing matters?” they said

“Can you train our staff?” they said.
Can you do this, and can you do that.

And on and on it went.

But articles were hard work for me

It would take me two days to write a single article. And I’d curse and struggle. And to write one article a month was a big achievement for me.

But hey, I did have a fairy godmother

And fairy godmothers grant wishes, so I took her up on the wish. “Make me write great articles that captivate. And show me how to write them at high speed (so I don’t have to spend two days over a single article)” I said to her.

“Article writing is about structure”, she said

“Structure and drama,” she continued.
“Structure and drama and the ‘next step’,” she crescendoed.
“Drama pulls you in. Structure keeps you there. And then the next action gets your client to move to the next step.”

And just like that I learned how to write articles. And now it’s your turn.

Will you let me be your fairy um…godmother?

Do you want to learn how to spot drama? Learn how to spot structure? And understand how to use the power of the next step? Well, ask and you shall receive. But hey, there are no magic wands here. You’ve actually got to go to the link below.

And there you’ll be taken to a page with instructions. Instructions on how to get some goodies. Goodies to drama, structure, and the next step.

So, tah-dah, here’s the link:

http://www.psychotactics.com/article-writing-live-course

See you on the other side! :)

Announcing: The “Toughest Article Writing Course”-2012 in the World

Posted on 16. Sep, 2011 by in Blog, online writing, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

Article Writing Course For Small Business

On Saturday 24th September 2011, you’ll get the details for what’s easily the “toughest article writing course in the world.” And it’s the toughest course because it’s not just another information-dump. Instead of getting even more information, you actually acquire–then master the skill of article writing.

And not just master it, but write with a sense of drama that keeps readers hooked from start to finish.

And as you’d expect, few get in.

There are two reasons why few get in:

1) We don’t take 1000 participants
Or even 500. Or even 50. Last year we stopped at 18. And the course was oversubscribed many times over. The doors still remained closed. This isn’t because we’re prima donnas. It’s because the group can’t sustain more than a fixed number when learning how to write. It’s important for the group and for learning–hence the “atom-sized” group size.

2) The results are staggering
There is probably no course (and you can check) that turns almost 95% of the participants into stunning writers. How stunning is stunning? Well let’s put it this way. The folks who’ve done our course can write on any topic–no matter whether it’s their expertise or not. And write with supreme authority.

And we’re going to send you goodies on Saturday 24th September

Just so you can learn how to create drama and flow in your articles and learn how it’s a matter of structure and a very systematic approach. But for now, here’s a link that will give you an insight into what makes the course so unique.

Read it, because for one, it’s not boring. And two, it will give you an idea how you should be marketing your own products/services.

http://www.5000bc.com/pdf/protege/Prospectus_Article_Writing.pdf

This is it.  168 hours to the special announcement of the 2012 Article Writing Course. Or as one participant calls it: The Article “Writhing” Course.

Tick, tick, tick :)

Sean D'Souza: Psychotactics

The Importance of Inserting the ‘Mistake’ In Your Article

Posted on 15. Aug, 2011 by in Blog, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

Article Writing: Importance of Inserting MISTAKES in your Articles

I remember the time I was watching a video on the ‘water test’. The ‘water test’ is a method to accurately gauge if a pan is exactly at the right temperature, as the accurate temperature prevents the ingredients from sticking.

As you might have realised, I had my nose to the video to make sure I wasn’t getting the steps wrong. Yet when I tried it on my pan at home, I couldn’t replicate the water test. No matter how many times I watched the video and tried the exact steps, I still couldn’t get the ‘water test’ to work.

The reason? I was using a non-stick pan

Yeah, mine was non-stick and the pan in the video was a stainless steel pan. Heck! You think I would have seen the difference. But I never did, and your readers have the same problem when they’re reading your articles.

And that’s because they’re not just reading. They’re trying to read, assimilate and execute the learning at one go.

And in doing so, they miss out some valuable points

In effect, they make ‘mistakes’. And those in-attentional mistakes can be avoided if you take the trouble to educate your reader. Of course the easiest formula to achieve this goal is to do the following:

Step 1: Give the reader the steps to follow.
Step 2: Point out the hurdles along the way.

Step 1: Give the reader the steps to follow

Let’s say you’re teaching the reader how to cook a delicious chicken tikka masala. Obviously, you’d give them steps, because the reader is now following a recipe. And that’s what most recipes do. They tell you what to do. But they don’t tell you what possible problems or mistakes you could make while executing the dish. Which is where Step 2 comes into play.

Step 2: Point out the hurdles along the way

So ha jee, we have shown the reader how to make the chicken dish, but now we need to point out where they can go wrong. They may fry the spices too long, causing a bitter after taste. Or the gravy may turn a bit sour. And when we point out these mistakes, we help the reader avoid the obstacles in advance.

This gives your article two solid advantages

Any article that covers both the how-to as well as the mistakes immediately marks itself out as a solid, enduring piece of information. The second advantage however, is that if your article instantly gets beefed up to a nice, solid consistency every single time.

But what are the mistakes you can make when adding ‘mistakes?’

The problem with article-writing isn’t that you have less information. In fact the reverse is often true. You have the curse of knowledge. So you try to stuff your article with a whole lot of how-to information. And then while the reader rolls around with indigestion, you proceed to add even more on his plate.

And there’s a way around this problem

You want to balance out the how-to with the mistakes. If you have two or three steps involved in the how-to, then a mistake or two is fine to slip in, just to balance things a bit. But should you find yourself generating half a dozen mistakes or more, it’s probably a better idea to write an article (or two) that covers the mistakes alone.

Pointing out the mistakes a reader can make are crucial

I sure as heck should have known that I should have been using a stainless steel pan. The pan was right in front of my eyes in the video I was watching. And yet I missed it. And so will your reader.

So point out the mistakes and both you and your reader will go on to make many more perfect chicken tikka masalas for a long, long time.

So do you have a story you would like to share? Share your experience here

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