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8 Ways To Grow Your Audience

8 Ways To Grow Your Audience

“So much easier to aim for the smallest possible audience, not the largest, to build long-term value among a trusted, delighted tribe, to create work that matters and stands the test of time.”
~ Seth Godin

The cold hard truth is that you can’t succeed in business if people don’t know you exist.

A group of people who not only know you exist but who are interested in you and your work is what I call your business audience.

These are the people who follow you on social, the people subscribed to your newsletter, the people in your network, who you have some sort of business-related connection with. Essentially they are the people who are listening to what you have to say and are on some level interested in what you are selling.

Without an audience to sell to. It’s hard to build a thriving and sustainable business. It’s hard to get clients, fill programs and workshops, grow your list and create passive income.

Now I’m not saying you can’t succeed in business without 10,000 followers on Instagram or at least 2000 subscribers on your email list. I’m doing pretty well myself without either of those! But you do need people to sell to or your marketing efforts and launches will feel like shouting into the abyss.

If you’re feeling like one of the best kept secrets in your industry, I highly recommend spending time working on some or all of the following. many of the links below take you to further reading, so if you are serious about taking action on these strategies, feel free to go a bit deeper by clicking the links.

1. Content Marketing

I know, I know, everyone and their dog has probably told you how important it is to create content for your business and unless content creation comes naturally to you, it can feel like a real drag. However, it’s undoubtedly one of the best ways i know to grow and nurture your audience.

Two things are important here.

Firstly, you need a content marketing system. It’s no good creating content without a clear strategy or some intention behind what you create. I teach a create — repurpose — promote model, which moves you away from spending hours on one blog post only to post it, get a handful of views, for it never to be seen again.

No wonder content creation feels hard when we put in all that effort for little return. It’s not enough to create your content and share it once, you must make the most of everything you create and do your best to make it as visible as possible.

Secondly, if you struggle with content, it might be because of how you are thinking about it.

When we create content with the sole purpose of getting the sale or enticing people to buy from us, it takes all of the creativity and joy out of it for us (as well as the recipient of our content!). Reframing how you think about marketing is a must here. Focusing on how our content can serve our audience, feels much better to create and is in my opinion much more effective at resulting in a sale.

2. Authentic Outreach

If you’ve spent any time in my world at all you’ve likely heard me talk about authentic outreach. The art of reaching out to individual members of your network with the dual purpose of connecting and serving.

It might seem odd to recommend a 1:1 strategy for audience growth, but once your network is activated, you’ll have other people sending people your way on the regular. Besides 1:1 outreach is what can lead to a plethora of other audience building activities like being invited onto podcasts or guest teaching.

I recently did an interview with Sarah Santacroce on this very topic so if you want to go deeper, you can watch that here.

3. Market Research

I’m a huge fan of doing market research and I typically recommend that my clients do this by running what I call a market research campaign. This is where we pull together an invitation that describes our ideal client and the problem that we help solve for them (our niche!) and then invite those very people into conversation with us.

In that conversation you then ask them important questions about their struggle and what they need from a service provider like you and in return, if you want to, you can offer the person some guidance or help. I like to offer 60 minute calls and spend 30 minutes on research and 30 minutes on serving.

The great thing about these is that you can share the invitation far and wide, in relevant groups on social media and with your network, asking that they share it with anyone who fits the bill. As you’re not selling anything, people are much more willing to share and participate and in doing so, many more people get to know what it is you do in the world and who you serve.

4. Paid promotions

This is the third prong of my content marketing strategy and is the best way I know to get my content and, therefore, my business in front of new people. The key here is to stop using ads to sell your products and services to a cold audience and instead pay to promote your free, valuable content first to your warm audience and then to a cool audience. Warm being those who already follow you on social and visit your website and cool being people you’ve identified as possible clients based on interests and demographics.

In my business, for example, every week I spent 5–10 euros paying to promote Facebook text posts (repurposed content from old newsletters just like this one!) to my warm audience first and then to people who I have identified as likely to have an online business. It’s not a ton of ad spend but it definitely ensures more people see my stuff.

Serving rather than selling with my ads is how I’ve grown an engaged and loyal audience.

5. Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

There’s so much more to say about SEO than I could possibly share here but if you already have a substantial backlog of content/blog posts on your website, but you’re not getting the traffic you need to impact your bottom line, it may well be worth looking into SEO.

I got serious about SEO when I started to get clients from a blog post I wrote years ago. Turns out people were searching for alternatives to discovery calls and my blog post about gift sessions was ranking on the first page for “discovery calls alternative”. If I can accidentally get clients via Google from a blog post, imagine what can be done if you are actually intentional about SEO!

Inspired by my accidental success, this year I took part in a 4 month SEO intensive program and although I did learn a lot of the more technical stuff, the biggest aha I had was to really take into account the topics and questions my ideal clients might be searching for online and integrating those into my website copy and content. Writing my titles and content in such a way that it answers those search queries has been huge for me.

If you’ve yet to get serious about content, you can skip SEO for now and come back to it when you have content worth optimizing. And if you are keen to learn more, check out Love at First Search for lots of great articles and free resources on SEO.

6. Collaborations

This is one of my all time favourites, which makes me smile because just a few years ago, the word collaboration made me cringe. I’ve always been a “go it alone” type but in recent years, collaborating in my business has been fun, rewarding and financially fruitful.

Collaborations can come in many forms but one of my favourites has been guest teaching for other people’s audiences. I’ve taught classes for free to many of my colleague’s audiences and as a result have always got more subscribers, applications to work together and sales.

I’ve been around the block long enough to be invited into some places where large numbers of my ideal clients are hanging out (places like Tad Hargrave’s membership) but years ago, when nobody knew I existed, I was the one going out and creating those connections, interviewing people, inviting people to teach to my audience and generally doing what I could to support my colleagues.

All of these helped to grow my audience and visibility and now I’m often the recipient of the invitation rather than the other way around!

7. Gift session campaigns

Gift session campaigns are one of my favourite strategies for getting you and your business in direct contact with your ideal clients. Time and time again, my clients report back to me that they have signed up new clients as a result of a gift session campaign they’re running.

Similar to Market Research Campaigns, the idea is to create an invitation that speaks to a specific problem and your specific ideal client, which you then promote and share far and wide, then watch as people who fit your ideal client description start to sign up for gift sessions with you. There’s no selling here, but when done well, you can get subscribers, testimonials, referrals and of course new clients.

8. Generous freebies

Traditional online marketing advice will tell you that the best way to grow your audience is to offer a free opt-in to your newsletter. Typically this is a pithy, PDF with something along the lines of the “5 Top Tips to XXX”. I believe that people got tired of this sort of opt-in years ago. It’s also much more common these days for people to sign up for a newsletter just to get the freebie only to unsubscribe straight afterwards. That’s why I usually recommend that my clients do something else.

This is what I call the generous freebie. Freebies that are actually worth sticking around for, demonstrate expertise and build trust and deepen relationships. Gift sessions are an example of this, as our other mini services you can provide like website or copy reviews or free classes or workshops. Others might include a free 5–7 day challenge — one that offers real value.

An innovative freebie I love is Lauren Van Mullem’s Craft and Copy sessions, where you go and do crafts with Lauren (online), whilst getting the chance to ask her anything about your website copy.

So there you have it, 8 of my favourite audience growth strategies, all of which are designed not only to add numbers to your list but to build meaningful relationships with your ideal clients.

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The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

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How To Reach Even More People Without Burning Yourself Out

How To Reach Even More People Without Burning Yourself Out

In this article I share the best way to reach a wider audience and how to do so without burning yourself out.

Yes you might have guessed that I am talking about content again but bear with me.

If you’re anything like the many business owners I’ve coached, you fall into one of the following three categories:

1. You have a complete block when it comes to creating content and struggle to do it at all or you do create it, but only when the mood takes you and so not consistently at all.

2. You do create content somewhat consistently, but you know you don’t do a very good job of sharing it and have a feeling that not enough people are seeing it (which, in turn, feels discouraging).

3. You are very consistent in your content creation and have a whole strategy around having it be seen by as many people as possible.

I’ll let you into a secret, I rarely coach anyone who falls under number 3, but if you think about the established businesses you follow and buy from online, you can bet that they do.

Which is why, I personally, have #3 as a clear goal that I work on week after week. It’s also why I’m like a dog with a bone, with my clients, when it comes to content. Consistent content creation is one of the key factors in the success of my business.

I’ve said it before but I’ll say it again:

Your content is your absolute best way to let your audience know about you, your point of view and your expertise. 

But I get it, just thinking about consistent content creation can feel exhausting. I’m here to tell you that it needn’t be this way. Repurposing your content can increase your reach at the same time as lessening your workload. Say what??

Let me explain. What do I even mean by repurposing your content? Well for me repurposing means taking something you have already created, a blog post, a PDF worksheet, a social media post, a newsletter and turning it into another piece of content.

Let me give you some examples of how I do this in my business.

I turn old newsletters into Medium articles, which then become blog posts, which then become LinkedIn articles which then become Facebook posts. You can see here how I turned this newsletter into this Medium article, this blog post and this LinkedIn article. Obviously I needed to make a few tweaks and this case I changed the title a few times, but essentially, it’s pretty much the same content, shared over the course of several months.

I also turn workbooks or other resources into blog posts. For example, you can see how I turned this workbook from a free challenge I ran last year into this blog post.

3. I also occasionally re-use blog posts as social media posts. No extra work required, literally just copying and pasting segments of a longer piece into shorter bite-size posts.

4. I even repurpose video content. For example, I used the notes I prepared for this Facebook Live to create this blog post.

Now I know what you might be thinking, the biggest objective I get from my clients when I share this approach is that they worry about coming across as repetitive to their audience. Please trust me when I tell you that this is in fact quite difficult to do and I’ll tell you why.

The percentage of people who are currently seeing your content, reading your blog posts, newsletters or social media posts is incredibly low.

The stats tell us that on average just over 20% of people on your mailing list are reading your emails and the percentage of people who are seeing your business facebook posts is around 6.4%. So you see, the majority of your audience aren’t in fact seeing your content at all. Which is why, sharing your content more widely and repurposing regularly is an absolute must if you want to truly reach and engage with your audience. You could share the same content in a newsletter, then as a social media post and then as a blog post and I guarantee that a large chunk of people in your audience still won’t see it!

So you see repurposing and doing it regularly is the surest way to reach more of your people without burning yourself out.

Want to learn a content strategy that adds value instead of adding to the noise?

Introducing the my Kinder Content Marketing Training. Learn a more compassionate and easeful approach to content marketing. Over 4.5 hours of video footage plus a comprehensive resource guide on my 3-part strategy to get more eyes on your content for only 60€. Click here or the image below for more details and to buy. 

A Simple + Soulful Framework for Audience Growth

A Simple + Soulful Framework for Audience Growth

“The best content in the world won’t drive revenue if nobody sees it.”

~ Anonymous

Growing your audience is essential to the long-term sustainability of your business. Given that only a small percentage of your audience will ever buy from you, if you don’t continue to grow your audience over time, you will reach a point where you’re no longer able to generate revenue. If you are at a stage where you’re yet to even start selling your products or services, then growing your audience is an essential step to achieving that all important first sale.

Of course, with a simple Google search, you’ll find a gazillion different ways to grow your audience, many of which involve doing everything you can to stand out from the crowd and attract your ideal client. From having the perfect brand, to implementing fancy and complex sales funnels with expertly designed squeeze pages, along with irresistible freebies and opt-ins, plus suggestions that you spend the bulk of your business day posting endlessly on social media.

As you might have guessed it, I advocate a different approach.

In this post I share with you the exact framework I use to grow my audience from a place of genuine service.

Depending on how long you’ve been following my work, you may well have heard me talk about the importance of content creation for business growth. In this post I want to go deep into how exactly I do this and share with you the 3 key elements my framework includes that has, this year, been having a huge impact on my audience growth as well as the level of interaction on my content, at the same time as feeling fun, fulfilling and easy to implement.

These 3 elements are CREATE – REPURPOSE – PROMOTE. Allow me to talk you though each of these in more detail.

Create

It would be so easy to take up the mantle of content creation and end up overwhelming yourself or getting burned out. If we listen to conventional advice on the topic, the amount of content we should be creating on a daily basis feels not only punishing but frankly unsustainable for many busy business owners.

What I do, and what I recommend you do, is get into a rhythm of creating just 1 or 2 new pieces of content a week. My two new pieces of content are my weekly Soulful Strategies e-letter (usually created and sent on Mondays) and a weekly video (created and shared on my Facebook page on Thursdays). If you’re currently not creating content consistently then I highly recommend that you start with just one new piece of content and work to get consistent with that before attempting to bring in a second. I didn’t start creating my weekly videos until I was well into a consistent rhythm of sending out my weekly letters. If you’re serious about growing your business, then one piece of content a week should be pretty achievable.

Now with these two new pieces of content I have a content schedule that sees me sharing content on a daily basis. So how do I create all that content from just two original pieces? Read on to find out.

Repurpose

Repurposing content is one of those secrets that people either don’t know about or overlook the importance of. You may have heard me mention before how few people are seeing the content you create. If you send a newsletter, you’re lucky if even a quarter of your list are opening your emails. If you post on your Facebook business page you’re lucky if even 10% of your followers see the post. With stats like these, it’s absolutely essential that you get better at making your content visible (or you’re in danger of completely wasting your time). Repurposing is a key element to this.

In my business, I take the content I write for my weekly letters and 2 weeks after they go out as an email, I repurpose them into a blog post (just like this one!). All this usually takes is a few tweaks to the copy to make it read as a blog and the creation of a branded graphic to accompany the post. After publishing on my blog, I then share a link to it on my Facebook page and a few weeks after that I tweak the content again (usually to shorten it by a few hundred words) and re-publish it as a text post on my Facebook page.

So you see, from just one initial piece of content I now have 4 pieces (newsletter, blog post, linked post on FB and an FB text post) with nothing more than a few tweaks to the copy along the way. What this does essentially is increase the visibility of my content across my audience. This alone, however, is not enough to grow your audience. For that read on for the third element.

Promote

To make my content even more visible, I have implemented a FB advertising strategy to promote my content. Hat tip here to George Kao’s incredible FB Marketing Course. The strategy in a nutshell is to advertise my free content (mainly the repurposed text posts I mentioned earlier and my weekly FB Lives) to my warm audience. Warm meaning people who have visited my website, signed up for my updates or engaged with my FB page. I’m not selling anything with these “adverts” I’m simply making sure that more than the usual 10% of my audience see what I’ve created for them. As well as this, I advertise the exact same content to a cool audience. By cool, I mean an audience I have created based on the demographics and interests of my target audience.

With just €100 a month, I create 3 content promotions a week and reach hundreds more people than I would otherwise.

The results

Since embarking on this strategy the results have been amazing. More subscribers, more sales, more likes, more engagement, more personal messages from people thanking me for my content and telling me how useful they are finding it.

It’s been wonderful and as a result I’m excited to share this strategy with you. Content creation is definitely a core part of my day-to-day activities in my business, but with this strategy it doesn’t feel arduous or pointless, by streamlining what I create and making sure that I spend adequate time on the sharing/promotion of my content is allowing me to reach (and support) more people than ever and the positive feedback this brings works wonders for motivation.

When you hear from people that they appreciate what you are creating, it’s far easier to stick to your content creation schedule than when you publish to crickets and wonder if anyone is even reading it.

Kinder Content Marketing Workshop

If you want to go deeper into my content marketing strategy, you may want to consider purchasing the recording of the 3-part Kinder Content Marketing Workshop I ran earlier in 2021. To get all the details and immediate access to the recordings and workbooks head here or click the image below.