Ian Brodie

Ian Brodie


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AuthorIan Brodie
Ian Brodie

Ian Brodie

https://www.ianbrodie.com

Ian Brodie is the best-selling author of Email Persuasion and the creator of Unsnooze Your Inbox - *the* guide to crafting engaging emails and newsletters that captivate your audience, build authority and generate more sales.

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How I became human again

Posted on October 4th, 2015.

Like many business owners I've always found it difficult to disconnect from work.

There always seems to be another client to help out, another tweak to my website, more I could do on social media.

I'd even work in the coffee shop when I went there every few days.

Without realising it, I was letting work take over my life.

Then a little while ago, Kathy suggested that instead of driving to the coffee shop I should walk there.

Can't do any harm for a few days I thought. It's about a 5 mile round trip. About an hour and a quarter. And the walk will do me some good.

So for the next few days we walked to the coffee shop.

And then we started walking in the evenings when we hadn't been out that day.

Pretty soon we were walking for about 90 minutes almost every day of the week.

Now at the start, my big concern had been the time. 90 minutes is a long time out of the working day. 

And indeed, for the first few weeks I ended up working late to make up the time.

Then over time I realised that despite taking 90 minutes out of the day for our walks, I wasn't getting anything less done. 

In fact, because I was spending more time away from the computer with time to think, I was having better ideas. And I was much more effective with my time when I was back at home.

I even started getting to bed at a reasonable hour – a big change for me.

Now I'm not saying you should suddenly start going for walks yourself. But I do believe that all of us need to find our own way of getting our work life balance right.

And it's my experience that by taking time out to think, away from your computer and the other trappings of work, you're much more effective when you return.

More importantly, you get to spend time with the people you care about and get a life back. 

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Convert More Prospects Into Clients With Case Stories

Posted on September 30th, 2015.

In this week's 5 minute marketing tip I share what's probably the most powerful method I know for engaging with potential clients and converting more of them into paying clients.

I show you how to use the technique live, and how to prepare so you've got a store of case stories you can use

This is something that will just take you a few minutes to prepare, but can reap huge rewards.
 
Click here to watch the video »

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Clear out your marketing trash

Posted on September 27th, 2015.

A little while back Kathy gave me one of those looks that said “I've got a job for you and you're not going to like it”.

In this particular case the job in question was cleaning out the storage areas in one of our converted rooms in the loft.

We had the loft converted and then extended about 16 years ago, so surely there couldn't be too much rubbish up there, I thought.

Boy, was I wrong.

The storage area was jam packed with all sorts of rubbish. Mainly packaging from all the electronic gadgets, computers and printers I'd bought over the years.

I even found an old Zip drive (remember those?).

Many hours later and a trip to the tip to recycle all the cardboard and we finally had some space back in the loft.

All of a sudden we could put the furniture where we wanted it. We could move about without tripping over stuff. Everything in the room was just easier.

I got to thinking that maybe my marketing could do with some “spring cleaning” too. 

Sure enough, a few minutes thought identified a whole bunch of stuff that was clogging up my time. A regular event I go to out of duty that I get pretty much nothing from. A whole bunch of landing pages that lead to old email sequences that have long since been superseded.

Usually whenever we take on a new idea or project in our marketing we add it to the portfolio of things we're doing. And eventually, over time, we get as clogged up and overcrowded as my loft had become.

You might want to consider a bit of spring cleaning for your marketing too. Even better: whenever you add new activities, replace an existing one rather than just adding to the clutter.

It's just so much easier to get things done without all that clutter.

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How to Harness the Power of Stories to Win Clients

Posted on September 24th, 2015.

Today's podcast is all about how to harness the power of stories to attract and win clients.

My guest is Lisa Bloom, the founder of Story Coach. On the podcast Lisa explains why stories can be so powerful in our marketing, how to find stories to use for your business, and how to craft those stories for blog posts, articles or any purpose you want to put them to.

Click here to listen to the podcast »

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The Secret Step To Getting More From Networking

Posted on September 21st, 2015.

This week's 5 minute marketing tip is about a simple step you can add to your face-to-face networking that will make a big improvement in your results.

It's one of those things that's blindingly obvious when you hear it, but I bet you're not doing it.

I wasn't.

If you're like me and you don't do a lot of face-to-face networking, it'll make your time much more productive. If you do a lot of networking it'll help you get much better results.
 
Click here to watch the video »

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How to break your marketing

Posted on September 20th, 2015.

Kathy and I were driving home late one night recently listening to the radio when we heard an ad from “the recruitment provider of choice for logistics operatives”.

We kind of looked at each other and grimaced when we heard it.

I think what they really meant was they found better jobs for truck drivers.

No matter how smart your targeting is, no matter what kind of brilliant offer you have, or clever tactics you might be using, if you can't communicate with your target clients in language they'll understand then your marketing is doomed.

I mean really, what makes people write phrases like “the recruitment provider of choice for logistics operatives”?

Who do they think is going to listen to that and go “oh wow, just the people I want to speak to”.

Of course, it's easy to drift into corporate-speak every now and then (though hopefully not as bad as this example). But if you do, your marketing is going to struggle to connect.

So make sure before you send that next email or update your website home page that the language you're using is plain and understandable by your target clients.

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One topic? Really?

Posted on September 16th, 2015.

n yesterday's video on “the Rule of One” for getting more impact with your emails, one of my rules was that you should focus on just one topic in each email.

Now I know that might sound difficult. I know you've got so much value to share with your audience you want to give them as much as possible every time you email.

But in this case, less is more.

No one wants to get the Encyclopedia Brittanica in their inbox every day.

If you've got lots to say, email frequently with one point in each email rather than sending less frequent emails with lots of points in them.

Few people have enough spare time on any given day to read 7 points in a 2,000 word email.

But most of us have a couple of minutes free each day to read one point in a 300 word email. 

So split your huge email into 7 short ones.

Many more people are likely to read it.

It breeds discipline too. Forces you to compress your thoughts and take out any extraneous material.

Give it a go :)

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How to Get More Impact from Your Emails With the Rule of One

Posted on September 15th, 2015.

You've put a ton of effort into getting email subscribers. You're emailing them regularly with great content. But they just seem to be falling flat. You're not connecting or engaging.

It may well be that the cause is you're breaking the Rule of One.

In this week's 5 minute marketing tip video I explain the Rule of One and how to use it to get more impact from your emails.
 
Click here to watch the video »

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How I Learnt To Be Myself (And Get More Clients)

Posted on September 10th, 2015.

It just wasn’t working and I had no idea why.

Back in my early 30s my bosses at the time decided I was ready to start doing more business development. I’d been successfully running consulting projects for a while and was popular with senior clients. Now was the time for me to learn the executive relationship building skills I’d need to bring in new business.

So off I went to our “Executive Relationship Building” course where some of our very best rainmakers had learned their skills. I felt quite privileged as I was one of the youngest people on the course by quite some way.

The course was great. Everything made sense to me and felt like something I could do. And previous attendees had reported great results almost immediately.

But 6 months later, after using what I’d learnt pretty much by the book, I’d got nothing. It seemed that it just wasn’t working for me.

It took a conversation with one of my most unusual mentors before the pieces slotted into place.

Click here for more »

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[Podcast] How Setting Up Your Own Mastermind Group Can Power Your Business Growth

Posted on September 8th, 2015.

Dov Gordon was a man on a mission.

He knew the value and power of Masterminds from his work running them for groups of CEOs. But for his own business he wanted something more.

In a traditional mastermind business leaders and entrepreneurs meet to help each other out with advice, challenge, motivation and guidance.

Members share their goals, their challenges, their opportunities. And they get input from the bright business minds around them to challenge their thinking, give them new ideas and perspectives, share their experiences of similar situations. Masterminds often share best practices and emerging trends too so that members benefit from the early experiences and experiments of others in the group.

And sometimes a mastermind can act as an accountability group too. With members motivated to push through barriers and hit their goals because they've shared those goals with their mastermind partners.

Powerful stuff. But Dov wanted more.

He wanted a group that not only helped each other with ideas and feedback, but that also helped each other directly. He wanted a group of businesses with complementary products and services where members would be willing to directly promote each others' businesses (as long as they met the core criteria of being of high value to their own clients, of course).

After looking around and struggling to find such a group, Dov decided his best course of action was to set one up himself. To find compatible businesses he would feel comfortable working with and promoting to his audience. And who shared a similar client-centric mindset, ethical appoach to business and willingness to help each other.

I was one of the original members that Dov first contacted, along with people you might know like Mike Seddon, Stefan Drew, Danny Iny, Steve Gordon.

The plan worked even better than Dov had hoped. The entrepreneurs in the group helped each other out and their businesses grew and prospered. Friendships blossomed. The group grew.

Dov believes you can do the same thing yourself.

The sort of businesses and people you want to partner with will be different, of course. But the principles remain true.

In this podcast interview Dov shares the steps he took to build his mastermind group. How to identify and onboarded new members. What to looks for in good members. How to encourage contribution and commitment. When to let go of the reins and when to take a firm hand.

If you follow the steps and the philosophies Dov lays out you can build your own successful mastermind too. Not just as a support mechanism, but as a real driver of your business growth.

Click here to listen to the podcast »