Archive for the ‘Business Coaching’ Category

Restore and Nurture Your Creativity

Monday, August 15th, 2011

How’s your creativity faring? Have you been restoring and replenishing it? Just like our bodies, our creativity needs to be constantly nourished.

Earlier this month, I had the chance to drive up the Oregon Coast and bask in the raw beauty of its rugged cliffs, crashing surf, towering dunes and windswept beaches. At each turn in the road, I caught myself gasping at yet another marvelous view.

Most days, sunshine brought out the ocean’s palette of blue hues and showcased the landscape’s texture. Some mornings, fog blanketed the shore, softening edges, muting details, and awakening me to shapes and forms that go unnoticed on sunny days. I could feel my creativity savoring every morsel of inspiration. I came home replenished.

If you have the opportunity to get away on a vacation, a day trip or even for a few hours, I hope you do! If you can’t, then find other ways to nourish your creativity. Leaf through a book of photos of a dream destination. Or create something outside your primary creative expression. For example, if writing is your primary creative outlet, prepare a fun dessert, work in a garden or arrange a colorful bouquet.

What are you doing to restore and replenish YOUR creativity?

Reflections on Be-ing

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Several readers sent me descriptions of how they practice be-ing and revive their creativity. Here are some for you to read. You may find something new here to tap into the power of be-ing:

Betty from British Columbia shared:

  • going to gratitude—stopping to note what I have, where I am in life and who is in my world-emphasis on the pause part
  • window shopping at fresh grocery markets and unique shops
  • people like you who refresh my perspectives and pause me to consider new directions
  • women relationships that are deep and connected
  • always nature as you suggested.

Alex from Missouri said:

“Thank you for that wonderful, refreshing reminder to BE. I love sitting out on our back patio and watching the cows graze.  A peace comes over me and I feel renewed.  I take time to BE frequently and it feels so good.”

Susan from Switzerland related how she experienced be-ing on a recent vacation in Mallorca, a mountainous island off the coast of Spain.

“Our cottage was up the mountain, in the middle of a citrus grove. We drank fresh-squeezed orange juice, grapefruit juice and lemonade. Kurt would sometimes go off in the morning on day-long hikes up in the mountains and I would stay at the cottage alone.

On those days I would sit outside by the swimming pool and listen to the bleating of the goats and sheep in the hills and the singing of the birds. Sometimes I would sketch the mountains or read my book. Sometimes I just sat and breathed. Other days I would go hiking with Kurt through the olive groves and the rocky paths along the mountains facing the dark blue Mediterranean. But the days I was alone with myself were my favorite. Just being. I came back from vacation re-energized and ready to face life with a new vitality.”

What do you do to tap into the restorative power of be-ing?

April Writing Teleclasses: 7 Topics at Super Savings!

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Looking for writing instruction on a specific topic and only that topic? Then take a look at the writing  topics offered this month as one-session teleclasses.

These information-packed teleclasses combine instruction and discussion. You get the tools and techniques AND you get your questions answered.

No long-term commitment. No huge $$ investment. No paying for a buffet of topics when right now you want just one dish.  Right now, that “dish” may be how to revise your novel’s first draft. Or how to write write web page headlines.

Get the critical information you need right now at a highly affordable $22 per topic chosen.

Don’t miss out. Register now.

7 Biggest Website Content Writing Mistakes: #7

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

Mistake #7: Not Telling Your Website Visitor What to Do Next

How many times have you gone into a store, asked a sales clerk to explain all the features of a camera, computer or some other product, showed lots of interest and were ready, even eager, to buy — and the sales clerk never “asked for the order”?

He could have asked you in a number of ways, such as “How would you like to pay for this?” Instead, he waited for you to say, “I’ll take it!” But you didn’t. Instead, confused by his behavior, you walked out of the store thinking “I better go look at some other stores.”

This kind of scenario happens time and again. It seems amazing but studies show that 60% of salespeople do not ask for the order! If that’s the case with professional salespeople, imagine how many website owners make the same mistake.

Once you have someone exploring your website, it’s up to you to make it easy for them to transform from a visitor to a potential customer, and then from a potential customer to one who wants to buy what you offer. Otherwise, by default, most visitors will simply leave your site.

How to Avoid the Mistake of Not Telling the Visitor What to Do Next

It’s simpler than you may think. Tell them what to do next and exactly how to do it.  

Ask yourself what outcome you want to have happen. Depending on your business, their next step may be to buy a product or schedule an appointment on their first visit to your website.

More likely, though, the next step is to take an action that builds trust in you. This is especially true if you provide professional services. In this case, their next action could be to sign up for your newsletter or download a free special report. These types of next steps help establish trust and build a relationship with your visitors.

Be sure to describe how to take that next step. Make it easy for them.

In summary, ask for the order in the ways most appropriate for your type of business.

7 Biggest Website Content Writing Mistakes: #6

Monday, March 7th, 2011

Mistake #6: You Waste the Most Valuable Eye-catching Content Space on Your Website Pages

You have to get your website visitor’s attention as soon as their eyes hit the page. They want to know in that very instant whether your website has what they’re looking for or if they should move on.

The page headline or title is the first place their eyes land in the content area. It occupies the most critical space on your page. This is the prime space to let your website visitors know what your product or service is.  

But countless websites put these words in this precious space: Welcome!  

Your home page headline is your promotional ad. A powerful, descriptive headline needs to fill this valuable space !  

It tells visitors right away what your website is about.  It’s the hook that gets your potential client to read on and explore your website further.

The space at the top of the content area is also critical on your sales, product and services pages.  You need effective headlines on each of these pages, too. 

The most effective promotional headlines address your potential client’s problems and offer solutions. Several types of headlines accomplish this, such as the How To headline, the Question headline and the Command headline. 

Here’s an example of a How To headline: How to Make Time in Your Busy Schedule to Train for a Marathon

Headlines define the focus of a page. They tell your website visitors what to expect. And they also make writing the rest of the page’s content much easier for you. 

To Avoid the Mistake of Wasting the Most Valuable, Eye-catching Content Space on Your Website Pages

To start, look at each of your web pages and ask yourself, Is this headline effective or am I wasting space?

To be effective, the headline needs to tell the visitor what the page is about. For promotional pages, such as your product or services page, the headline also needs to identify the problem that your offering solves. It needs to indicate the benefits of using your product or service.

If your headline is wasting space, replace it now with a benefits-rich title.

Get Great Results