Content writing

Developing Your Brand Voice in 4 Easy Steps

Let’s talk about developing your brand voice.

Brand voice exercise - 4 steps to create your unique brand voice

First of all, I won’t ask you to sing (unless you’re reading this in the bathtub, then by all means take advantage of the acoustics.)

All I ask is that you think about the way you communicate for your business, everywhere and anywhere.

There’s what you say, your message. And there’s
how you say it, your voice.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

If you’ve seen your new-ish business grow over the years but you’re starting to see a profit plateau, this is for you.

If you can’t figure out how to talk about your products or services in a way that sells, this is for you.

If your engagement metrics constantly fluctuate, this is for you.

If your bounce rate makes you wonder if you built your homepage out of elastic, this is for you.

If that IG follower count is driving you nuts, this is for you.

What you’ll get:

  1. A sneak peek of my Brand Style Guide
  2. 4 simple steps to develop your brand voice
  3. An easy-to-reference, good-as-gold guide for anyone writing for your business…anywhere.

Instagram followers and The Mirror of Erised

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My best friend has a magic mirror.

You look in it and are transformed, instantly 3 inches taller and 10 pounds lighter.

When we were younger, we’d get ready for a Saturday night out, mesmerized by this thing like it was the Mirror of Erised.

We knew it wasn’t real, but ooooh if it didn’t make us look great.

That’s what your Instagram follower count can do to you too.

If you watch it go up and down, you can drive yourself insane. Was it something I said? Was it the filter I used? Was it the wrong emoji? Was it my hashtags? Posting time? Aesthetic?

I love to split test, but with that many variables, it’s too easy to throw your hands in the air and say “It must be me. They don’t like me.”

But that’s just not true. They didn’t “like” your picture, or your feed. Or maybe they did but you drew the short end of the selfie stick on the last #UnfollowFriday. (She just wanted to create more margin. We all need more margin.)

And the people who did unfollow you because of what you said? Let. It. Go, Elsa.

Because those followers were your skinny mirror.

They added to a vanity metric, but they weren’t real! They weren’t there to interact with your post or probably ever do business with you.

So don’t try to write in a way that pleases everyone, attracts every DM TO PROMO! account out there, and doesn’t do your business any real favors.

Write to your people.

Do you know how to talk to them in a real, profitable way?

Do you own your brand voice?

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I use Instagram as the example, but the same principles apply to your email list, blog readers, Facebook group, Pinterest, Twitter.

Speaking in your brand voice with total confidence lets you see those unfollows and unsubscribes as a good thing. Your voice subtly communicates your brand’s values and value – the right people will like what you have to say.

And when those people opt-in, loyally follow, and double tap on the reg, your marketing efforts become much more effective.

What is a brand voice?

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Your brand voice is how you talk to your people. And if you think it’s not important, I want to nudge you over to this particular definition:

“It’s the interplay of personality, substance, tone, and style.

Though our voice is constant regardless of who we’re talking to or what we’re saying, we adapt our tone—from serious to empathetic to lighthearted—to fit the context and the customer’s state of mind.”

That’s from Microsoft’s (thorough!) Style Guide.

The major brands you know and love use style guides just like this. They’re designed to help employees and contractors (like, you know, copywriters) maintain consistency no matter where they’re talking about the brand, what they’re saying, and to whom they’re speaking.

This includes, but is not limited to:

  • website copy
  • direct marketing
  • customer service communications
  • instructions
  • newsletters
  • press releases
  • captions and comments on social media
  • product labels
  • billboards
  • prank sticky notes slapped on your sister/CFO’s back

A cohesive voice communicates stability, trustworthiness, and professionalism while differentiating the brand.

And you don’t need to be a multibillion-dollar corporation to make brand voice work for you.

Small biz. Big voice.

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Like I mentioned above, a brand style guide is clutch for anyone writing for your business. If my copywriting, content, or ghostwriting clients don’t have one, it’s the first thing I create for them.

Not only is it useful for me, it gives them and their other contractors or employees a guidebook to use for years to come.

So when you’re struggling to write a month’s worth of IG captions that will attract the right followers…brand voice guide.

When you add a new product or course and DIY the sales page copy…brand voice guide.

When you delegate comment response and non-client email to your VA…brand voice guide.

When you outsource the email sequences for your next promo…brand voice guide.

The brand voice section of my style guides is always one of my favorite parts to write.

It blends both business goals and personality, encourages creativity, and makes a powerful tool for connecting with my clients’ clients. And connection = cash (or PayPal, Square, or your preferred secure checkout method.)

While my whole style guides are giant, juicy tomes of brand nerdery, this brand voice slice is a great way to get a taste.

Work through these steps to establish a consistent brand voice that you can use whenever you talk about your products or services.

Step 1. Establish communication goals

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In order to know how to say something, you gotta know why you’re saying it.

Everything you say to your audience needs to have a purpose – otherwise, you’re just adding more noise to an already buzzing world. But when you consider your communications strategically, you can assign a desired outcome to everything you say.

Taking the time to do this will save you thousands in marketing costs and will earn you many times that in closed sales.

Start by answering:

  1. What do I want my audience to feel when they interact with my brand?
  2. What do I want my audience to do when they interact with my brand?
  3. What do I want to make my audience aware of?
  4. How can I educate my audience?

Example:

If I were developing a brand voice for an upscale, eco-friendly, exclusively 5-Free Polish nail salon this might look like:

To make our clients feel…Healthy, relaxed, and chic.

To encourage our clients to…Pamper themselves with a service that makes them look good and feel good (without the harmful chemicals.)

To make our clients aware of…The 15 gallons of water waste that a typical salon pedicure entails.

To educate our clients on…The hygienic and cosmetic benefits of a low-water or waterless nail spa service.

Refine and edit until you have goals that are broad enough to apply to everything from email subjects to your FAQ page.

Step 2. Create ground rules

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Peter Kavinsky shake to make it official.

You can’t break the rules until you learn them. But when it comes to your brand voice rules, DON’T BREAK THEM.

Instead, make them broad, easy to follow, and focused on your audience. You can delve into the nitty-gritty (parentheses, em dashes, title case, etc.) in other places.

For your brand voice, keep the ground rules focused on:

  1. What makes your brand different? Refer to your onliness statement if you have one (you should have one.)
  2. How does your audience talk about the problem(s) your product or service solves?
  3. How you want your audience to feel?
  4. What action do you want them to take?

Example:

For an online home decor boutique, this might look like:

We apply an editorial experience to online shopping.

Communication is direct, friendly, and sounds like a real human wrote it.

Everything we write sounds natural, conversational, and inviting.

Sensory language is used to engage customers and increase their average spend.

Copywriter pro tip – start with this as your #1 rule:

Communication is clear and written in the customer’s own words whenever possible.

Step 3. Brand tone of voice

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Again – your brand voice isn’t about what you’re saying, but why and how you say it.

So now you’ve:

  • Determined what kind of action you want your audience to take whenever they read your sweet talk
  • Established ground rules for how you communicate

In this step, you’ll figure out the way you talk – your tone of voice.

Your brand’s tone of voice should reflect your brand’s (or your own) values and should help build connection with your audience by showing them the humanity behind the brand.

Think of your brand voice as the meal and your tone of voice as the flavor – here’s where you let your glorious personality shine through.

Think about 3-5 adjectives you’d use to describe your overall brand voice. You can stop there, or you can elaborate with specific guidelines that also demonstrate your tone.

Example:

Using the home goods boutique example again, check out this tone of voice mission statement:

Our voice is all about warm hospitality. We want our customers to feel like we’re welcoming them to our home on the web. Talking to our customers in a way that’s friendly, conversational, excited, and professional reflects our commitment to providing a sensory online shopping experience.

Our voice is:

  • Friendly – we want to make our customers feel like they walked into our perfectly styled boutique. We want to welcome them, hand them a virtual espresso, and invite them to browse through the beautiful home goods we’ve curated just for them.
  • Conversational – we “chat” with our customers while they shop. We share our favorite things, from our newest collection to the best eggs benedict in town.
  • Excited – we match their enthusiasm for creating a beautiful home (have you seen our throw pillows?!)
  • Professional – we take customer satisfaction seriously. Especially when writing for customer service, we remain conversational and informal, but always highly professional.

Step 4. Talk it out

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We can talk shop for hours about the tone and style of your brand voice. I should go put on my coziest jammies and fluffiest slippers right now because if we get started I’ll stay up until midnight with you mapping out the perfect brand voice.

But not every contractor you hire may share slumber-party-levels of enthusiasm for your reasoning behind the use of sentence case on your Call To Action buttons.

That’s where concrete instructions and tips come in handy.

When making this list, ask yourself:

  1. What kind of content does your brand share on social media? Why? (Again, paint with broad strokes here – this is your brand voice, not your social media marketing strategy.)
  2. How do you build trust and connection with your audience?
  3. What style do you use? Are you wordy? Hemingway-approved?
  4. What’s your tone? (See step 3!) Are you serious? Bubbly? Sweet? Bold?
  5. What are your top style rules?
  6. What’s your brand voice mission statement?

You might find that some of these answers get long. That’s GREAT. Just break them up so you’ll have even more concrete examples and easy-to-follow tips.

Example:

An e-interior designer who specializes in preppy, Southern-style design might end up with something like:

Our Brand…

  • Shares client before and afters to demonstrate our skill.
  • Shares concept boards to attract ideal clients.
  • Shares decorating tips & tutorials to establish expertise.
  • Makes use of personal anecdotes to foster connection.
  • Tells authentic stories to build trust.
  • Is effusive, colorful and enthusiastic.
  • Loves Southern-isms near as much as we love family heirlooms and gingham.
  • Is always positive and helpful.
  • Asks open-ended questions to start conversations.
  • Uses first-person plural when referring to the brand. (“We”, not “I”)
  • Uses sentence case for everything but titles.
  • Affirms the grace and goodness of the Oxford comma.
  • Communicates our love for designing spaces that serve as perfectly collected backdrops to sumptuous meals, impeccable parties, treasured family memories, and the art of Southern living.

This is The Voice!

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Taking the time to bring your brand voice to life is worth it.

It might seem kind of navel gaze-y or unnecessary, but it makes you think about why you say the things you say.

Your brand voice will help you build a profitable content strategy, so you’re not just creating more noise on social media.

Your brand voice will help you write copy that converts (to an opt-in, to a follower, to a sale, to a client.)

Your brand voice will help you scale your business with an easy guide to add to your onboarding process for anyone writing for your business in any capacity.

Your brand voice is part of what makes your brand a business – a majorly profitable one, at that.

Tell me: do you have a dedicated brand style guide, or a smaller brand voice guide to help you and your contractors or employees?

How To Write The Perfect Blog Post

How to write the perfect blog post, every time, in 13 steps!

How to write the perfect blog post

Let’s talk procrastisnacking. 

My go-to is something salty. Something bite-sized. Something I can mindlessly munch, one handful at a time. Definitely something that requires multiple trips to the pantry, interrupting whatever task I’m avoiding at the time.

I highly recommend Trader Joe’s Thai lime and chilli cashews. But I DON’T recommend procrastisnacking your blog post writing.

If you’re stressed out and frustrated by your business’ blog, put down the nuts and let’s nail down your new process for how to write the perfect blog post.

I’ve been there. We all have! In my past life as a luxury brand’s marketing director, I needed to publish fresh blog posts daily (and that was after years of publishing multiple times a day plus creating the editorial calendar for a team of freelance bloggers.)

I know what it’s like to feel like your blog writing process takes too long and that it’s not benefitting your SEO as much as you want it to.

But I’m here to pour you a fresh cup of coffee, close out of all your open social media apps, and help you write the best WordPress post ever.

It’s not a magic wand you can wave over your brainstorm mind map to spontaneously flesh out whole blog posts…

…but it’s damn close.

Let’s cover:

  • The exact formula you can use to create an epic blog post, every time.
  • How you’ll say goodbye to procrastination and writer’s block today.
  • The ways you can publish high-quality content that draws traffic to your site for years to come.
  • Why WordPress, specifically, is where you can create the perfect blog post.

WordPress: The Amazon Prime of Blog Platforms.

An endless array of options, highly tailored to your preferences, robust, and near-instant gratification. 

The only way Prime and WordPress blogs differ is that WP does have a slightly harder learning curve. WordPress is also less likely to deliver a “surprise” bee venom serum you forgot you ordered while on a deep dive down the K-Beauty rabbit hole.

But the initial challenge of figuring out how to use WordPress? Worth its weight in gold hydrogel & snail mucin eye patches.

WordPress is more than just a blogging platform. It is a comprehensive Content Management System or CMS that comes with all the tools you need to build any site, from E-commerce stores to professional business websites.

– Business.com

While that article pegs about 19% of the web as powered by WordPress, web technology survey firm W3Techs places it closer to 30%. Check out this chart from VentureBeat:

If you go with WordPress over the competition, you’re in good company. But peer pressure shouldn’t sway you – WordPress’ ability to grow with your business and your blog should.

The near endless amount of plugins (which are like apps for your blog) lets you create a powerful website that meets your needs as you grow. Especially when it comes to SEO.

Lindsey of Pretty Darn Cute Design explains some of the main reasons I love WordPress in her post 10 Reasons WordPress Will Always Be Better Than Squarespace

So now we know how to write the perfect blog post with the most powerful platform. What’s next?

The Million Dollar Question

How often should you write a blog post?

According to Hubspot: 

Companies that published 16+ blog posts per month got almost 3.5X more traffic than companies that published between 0 – 4 monthly posts.

Six.teen. 😲

And that’s not all:

Companies with 1 – 10 employees: The small companies that publish 11 or more blog posts per month drive much higher traffic than companies of the same size that publish fewer than 11 blog posts. Those that published 11+ posts per month had almost 3X more traffic than companies publishing 0 – 1 monthly posts, and about 2X as much traffic as those publishing 2 – 5 monthly posts.

Hi, I’m a professional writer and I don’t publish that often. Would I like to? YES! But I love my clients even more than I love nerding out about WordPress, and writing 11+ blog posts a month wouldn’t leave much time for them.

So I’m consoled by this next bon mot:

One of the best things about business blogging is that your posts will continue working for you long after they’re published. If you’re producing relevant, valuable content, then people will find your old blog posts in search, on social media, and through links on other websites — and some of those visitors could convert into leads.

Relevant, valuable content. Quality. Over. Quantity.

The best course of action is to write a WordPress post as many times as you can each month while still making sure it’s valuable, relevant, and evergreen. A 400 word post on last night’s episode of This is Us just won’t cut it.

And speaking of word counts…

How Long Is The Perfect Post?

At least 1500 words. 

“But no one wants to read a blog post that long!”

No, but they do want to skim. And the numbers don’t lie.

Per QuickSprout:

Once the word count exceeds 1,500 words, it’s in the golden share zone.

How To Write The Perfect Blog Post With 13 Ingredients

Now that we know where, when, and how long to blog, let’s talk about how to actually do it.

Whipping up fresh content is similar to creating Sunday dinner. This isn’t a 30 minute, weeknight one sheet pan wonder. What we’re making is a gourmet blog post, with some prep work and planning involved. Don’t worry, the end result is nowhere near as delicate as a souffle.

1. Get Ready

Personally I use the Annual, Quarterly, Monthly method for my editorial calendar.

Annually, I take a zoomed out view of where I want to be when I’m 80, using my Powersheets. I always include my professional goals during my Powersheets prep, but this is my first year owning my own business! So I’m psyched to use the specific Powersheets for Business tools during my annual prep later.

How to write the perfect blog post

For now, I’m focusing on the quarterly and monthly goals and topics. I’ve found Planoly’s (freeeeeee) tools for this 10x more helpful. As in, they help me plan literally 10 times more content than my previous method of doing a month-at-a-glance check in with my editorial calendar plugin.

How to write the perfect blog post

I also love Hailey Dale’s comprehensive tools for content planning, and if you don’t have any kind of system in place already, for the love of cheese curds start with her free guide.

How to write the perfect blog post

2. Get Thinking

Grab your editorial calendar with both hands, give her a quick spin around the living room floor to “This Will Be Our Year” and kiss her on both cheeks. 

Because she’s already done 60% of this step for you (80% on a good day.)

Your editorial calendar has your exact post topic and more often than not a couple thoughts, quotes, or ideas to get you started.

3. Get Messy

This is like a rough draft’s rough draft. It could look like:

Intro

Great Point

Point

Point

Excellent Point

Conclusion

CTA

But sometimes that’s what we all need to just start writing. Mine typically include a bunch of weird half points and possible crossheads floating around on the page. That’s okay though. This is just to get started, not to make anything pretty.

4. Get Googling

Research time! 

I use Airstory web clipper for my research. It’s the best. 

A great alternative is Evernote.

When I wrote in Google Docs I’d have to copy + paste my quote/study/data point, whatever, then go back and c+p the url for my source. Then more copy and pasting when it came time to organize and write. Woof.

Do you need to use Airstory? Definitely not. If you’re easily distracted by shiny new tools and they only help you procrastinate, stick with Google Docs. If you have an efficient system stick with Evernote.

But if you’re looking for something better, try Airstory. It’s FREE. 

For a client, I might dedicate 3-5 hours to research, depending on the topic. For my own blog posts, it’s usually a lot less. More like 1 hour for a post like this.

My secret is Airstory. That little web clipper is more intuitive for me than Evernote or Pocket. I use and enjoy those tools, but for whatever reason, when I’m clicking my TBR board on Pinterest or even just being extremely online on Twitter, I remember to reach for Airstory.

When you’re a writer, you’re always researching. Even when you don’t think you are. I can save nuggets of wisdom or awesomeness when I’m catching up with Bloglovin’ or working on personal development.

Then when I have an actual topic, I can pull from my library of existing research, and add to it as the topic warrants.

5. Get Organized

Not a typo! I go back into outliner in Airstory once I feel happy with the amount of research I’ve done.

But now that I’ve got alllllll my info in there, I can create a final outline.

By the end of this step I have a nice, clean looking outline that most humans would recognize as such.

6. Get Writing

Now that you’ve already outlined, researched, and outlined again, it’s time to knit.

Knitting…

Joanna Wiebe of Copyhackers used this to describe her process once and I just…it’s perfect, y’all. It’s more than weaving words together, it’s fusing facts and story and FLAVA into one cohesive thing.

It’s taking the tangled heap of data points, quotes from other people, and allusions to Bachelor in Paradise, thoughts from my brain poured out onto the blank page, and arranging them in a way that slowly starts to make sense.

7. Get Out Your Red Pen

Pasta salad.

Thanksgiving leftovers.

Bolognese.

An open bottle of good Cabernet.

The wild boar ragu at Spiaggia.

I’m not just hungry. These, like your editing, get better with time.

Let those flavors meld. Let your word juice marinate (ew, sorry.) Let the spices intensify. Let it breathe.

And come back to your post with a clean palate and clear eyes.

Give it a day, at least, before you edit.

I had my editing checklist here, but then I noticed Pinterest expert Cath Oneissy‘s process was about the same. And you should read absolutely everything on her website. So start with this, then go check her out (after you pin this post for later, of course.)

8. Get Clever (But Mostly Clear)

Time to write our headline! We saved the best step of writing for last, because on average 80% of people will read your headline, but only 20% will read the rest. So it’s worth writing 25 different versions, then taking extra time to add some shine to your subheadings and ensure they’re in H2 format. Which takes us merrily along to our next step!

9. Get Your H2’s In Order

This post won’t get too in the weeds on how to format your blog post, but I do plan to write a full post detailing the best way to do it. I want to play around with Gutenberg for a little while first.

Essentially you want to:

How to write the perfect blog post

10. Get Found

I’m not an SEO expert but I’ve been in the digital marketing world for so long that SEO-boosted writing comes naturally. 

It’s second nature to me now, but when I started I used this checklist:

  • Include your keyword in your headline
  • Include your keyword in your first paragraph
  • DON’T KEYWORD STUFF
  • Optimize your images (see below)
  • Categorize your posts meaningfully
  • Use relevant tags & make your keyword one of them.
  • Use your Yoast plugin

Write for humans first, then the engines. Google’s algorithm is almost sentient, anyway. So serve your readers with valuable content, use SEO best practice, and don’t sweat it. If your content is valuable and you consistently keep adding to it, that’s good Internet anyway.

It’s what the pro’s call white hat.

11. Get Camera Ready

Your images are key for your blog post’s performance.

And not just at the promotional phase!

You need to have beautiful, thoughtfully created graphics to go along with your post, or it will not get found. And then it doesn’t matter that you know how to write the perfect blog post: no one will ever know.

Those are the images that will get re-pinned (my favorite source of blog traffic.) Those are the images that will stop people mid-scroll.

You don’t need to be a professional photographer, or a graphic designer.

If you have the budget, get a stock photo membership – I love my Styled Stock Society membership!

If you don’t, sign up for Canva. Create graphics in your brand colors. 

And that’s only the beginning. Once you upload your images, you want to make sure your optimizing them for search, too!

One of my clients saw a 78% increase in search traffic, and it was only from Google images.

When you upload your image(s):

  • change the title
  • make your keyword your alt text
  • add a description that contains adjacent keywords. Keep it short and sweet, this is less for SEO and more for any visually impaired readers who rely on visual descriptions.
  • Select “Link to None” to avoid annoying pins to nowhere
  • Make sure your file size isn’t too big. It’ll slow down your site’s load speed.

Lindsay Humes of white Oak Creative has an excellent guide to optimizing your WordPress images.

Bloggers spend a lot of time creating beautiful images for their websites, but they often miss out on optimizing these images for their sites. It is one of the most common and frequent mistakes I see. When adding images to your WordPress blog, there are five things you should do to maximize their SEO.

12. Get It On The Calendar

Finally, an easy step! Schedule your blog posts according to your blog’s best performing traffic times.

Preview it to look for weird formatting bugs or broken links.

13. Get Sharing!

How you promote your post warrants another blog post entirely. But I really like Hailey Dale’s philosophy on promoting your blog posts so they work harder for you:

A simple ratio, I work with is 2:1. For every single piece of content you create, spend twice that amount of time promoting it. If it takes you two hours to write and publish? Spend 4 hours marketing it.

Action Items

Now you know exactly how to write the perfect blog post. Here are the action items you can implement today:

  • Create your editorial calendar so you can publish high quality, in-depth content as often as possible for your business. If you’re a small business with 1-10 employees aim for as many posts over 1500 words as you can. The ideal is 11+, but the goal is as many as you can write and still make them good.
  • Choose a post topic, outline, research and write your rough draft.
  • Take some time away from the post, then come back to edit using an editing checklist.
  • Write your headlines.
  • Optimize your post with Images, Formatting, and SEO.
  • Publicize your hard work!
  • Bonus: See how you can batch the elements of this process for even more efficient blog post writing.
How to write the perfect blog post