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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
This is great advice. Too many times, I get caught up in trying to make sure I'm providing "valuable content" that I forgot that the readers will be the ones judging whether or not it's valuable.
I especially appreciate you comment about providing a solid map of where you're taking the reader. Reminds me of my dad's advice the first time I had to give a speech in grade school. He said simply, "Tell them what you're going to tell them, then tell them, then tell them what you told them." I've used that suggestion many times in speeches. I expect it will also work in blog post.
Thanks again for the good words.
Steve DeVane
You are one of my heroes. So kudos straight off the bat. (I'm English so forgive the idiom.)
However, my take on this is that it's not about making your reader feel like a super hero, but giving them something that will let them feel like a super hero when they pass it on.
It may be a little semantic, but i think it's one of your own values. If you can articulate something you can pass on, that's the key.
Was going to write more, but I think that's the key. Not helping you get it. But helping you to get others get it.
You get it? :)
Steve Seager
Always love story-telling blogs and this is a super-heroic take on the form.
May I draw your attention to another method I've identified? Its got a five-box checklist which is presented in an un-checklist-like manner, some cool examples (including Elvis on the Moon) and it takes about 3 minutes to read. What's not to like?
Its on my website so do take a look if you get time. All the best!
Thanks,
Anthony
Www.pryourstory.com
But its the 40+ year old Jungle Book that captures his imagination and is the one he loves and wants to watch everyday.
Why?
Because great storytelling works no matter how old the story is, and to my son Mowgli is a superhero who dresses just like him.
Good post Chris ;)
Open-ended stories, like cliff-hangers also can be appealing.
Earlier this year I wrote an article about storytelling for people in the meeting & convention industry. How the Wynn Las Vegas has embraced storytelling to improve their service and culture helped inspire the article. http://tinyurl.com/nlboqs
As a reader (rather than a writer in this instance) I couldn't agree with you more.
And as a writer I now have a set of very succinct rules to direct measure my own performance against.
Thanks :-)
Concise is great for an interview or for a blog post about your product.
Great point. I love the story of the lady who has dinner with two presidents. After dinner she comments that the first made her feel like he knew everything in the world - the second, that she knew everything in the world
and it will touch lives.
This is a really informative post and its going to help a lot of people who are blogging out there who develop a mind block easily even if they have some content in mind.
Thanks for sharing