Top Misc Content on Internet |
- Seven Wonder Ways to Supercharge Your Call Center
- Starting a Chocolate Fountain Business - 7 Steps to Success
- Get It Read: 7 Tips for Writing Better Email Subject Lines
- Content is King « Boagworld
- We Think, Therefore We List (With A Bullet): A Web Phenomenon : NPR
- Better User Experience With Storytelling – Part One - Smashing Magazine
- Brain Traffic - Web content experts and writers
- "Mommy, Where Does Content Come From?" 11 Easy Ways to Create Great Stuff : Marketing
- We Think, Therefore We List (With A Bullet): A Web Phenomenon : NPR
- How To Make (And Keep) Your Blog Content In Demand
- "Mommy, Where Does Content Come From?" 11 Easy Ways to Create Great Stuff : Marketing :: American Express OPEN Forum
- 10 Tips on How to Get Your Writing Groove Back!
- Second And Park | Web Copy That Works by Tiffani Jones
- 11 Easy Ways to Create Great Stuff : Marketing :: American Express OPEN Forum
- Writing for the Web
- "Mommy, Where Does Content Come From?" 11 Easy Ways to Create Great Stuff : Marketing :: American Express OPEN Forum
- A Three-Step Approach to Strategic Content Development | Copyblogger
- The Alfred Hitchcock Secret to Compelling Content and Copy
Seven Wonder Ways to Supercharge Your Call Center Posted: 30 Jan 2010 09:00 PM PST Magic mantra to improve the efficiency and productivity of call centers. Super-seven ways to kick up the performance levels and efficiency of call centers' employees. |
Starting a Chocolate Fountain Business - 7 Steps to Success Posted: 30 Jan 2010 09:00 PM PST A chocolate fountain business can be a profitable way to work from home and set up a successful catering company. Since the majority of today's businesses are online, this article focuses on setting up an internet based business which is capable of earning over £30,000 per annum. The article acts as a beginner's guide to starting out in chocolate fountains and establishing a professional catering service. |
Get It Read: 7 Tips for Writing Better Email Subject Lines Posted: 02 Feb 2010 06:45 PM PST |
Posted: 02 Feb 2010 06:30 PM PST |
We Think, Therefore We List (With A Bullet): A Web Phenomenon : NPR Posted: 02 Feb 2010 06:12 PM PST |
Better User Experience With Storytelling – Part One - Smashing Magazine Posted: 02 Feb 2010 02:21 PM PST |
Brain Traffic - Web content experts and writers Posted: 02 Feb 2010 11:16 AM PST |
"Mommy, Where Does Content Come From?" 11 Easy Ways to Create Great Stuff : Marketing Posted: 02 Feb 2010 10:02 AM PST Good article on content creation ideas, because hey, we all get writer's block every now and then and most of the time always. |
We Think, Therefore We List (With A Bullet): A Web Phenomenon : NPR Posted: 02 Feb 2010 08:40 AM PST 9 reasons to turn an article into a list |
How To Make (And Keep) Your Blog Content In Demand Posted: 02 Feb 2010 07:23 AM PST |
Posted: 02 Feb 2010 06:42 AM PST |
10 Tips on How to Get Your Writing Groove Back! Posted: 02 Feb 2010 06:18 AM PST If you're a writer and a blogger, your writing muse is very valuable! Therefore, and strictly from experience, I decided to share with you the top ten tips of getting your writing groove back! |
Second And Park | Web Copy That Works by Tiffani Jones Posted: 02 Feb 2010 02:29 AM PST |
11 Easy Ways to Create Great Stuff : Marketing :: American Express OPEN Forum Posted: 01 Feb 2010 11:09 PM PST Creating great content is increasingly a cornerstone to lead generation and lead nurturing. In other words, it's key to attracting new customers and to deepening relationships with existing ones. But many companies have trouble creating enough of it. So blogs languish. Flip cameras gather dust. Your Twitter feed is as sparse as Oprah's. How can you create and distribute a steady flow of stuff that your customers actually care about? Here are 11 ideas: |
Posted: 01 Feb 2010 07:24 PM PST |
Posted: 01 Feb 2010 05:32 PM PST |
A Three-Step Approach to Strategic Content Development | Copyblogger Posted: 01 Feb 2010 04:39 PM PST |
The Alfred Hitchcock Secret to Compelling Content and Copy Posted: 02 Feb 2010 06:19 AM PST The McGuffin has been a powerful storytelling device for a long time. It was Alfred Hitchcock who popularized both its use and the name that sounds like it should be on a dollar menu. The McGuffin has a cool job: to keep the plot, character, or situation rolling along. It draws us into the story and drives the action. The McGuffin is often an object of high value, which everyone covets. It can be ambiguous, entirely undefined, generic, or left open to interpretation. Remember the suitcase in "Pulp Fiction?" Classic McGuffin. Though it showed up a few times throughout the film, and was important enough to get a handful of people peppered with bullets, we never actually saw what was in the suitcase.
And consider "The Maltese Falcon," one of the most famous McGuffins of all time. Though the falcon in question drives the entire story and moves us from scene to scene, we never actually see it at all. That is what's cool about the McGuffin. Its purpose is served so long as it moves the story along. In many stories, by the time we should be demanding to know what the McGuffin actually is, we have forgotten about it entirely. That's because we've been deftly redirected to the author's true purpose. If the author executes the McGuffin well, you'll barely notice the technique. And that's how it should be. How the McGuffin can make you moneyWriting online to build your business means you are directing the story. Whether you want people to download your product, subscribe to your newsletter, or hire you for $250 an hour, you must drive them to that decision. The McGuffin is the wind that will sail a prospect's ship into your harbor. Your offer is the anchor. There's a good chance you're already using the McGuffin without even realizing it. While talking about your highly productive methods for moving mountains and getting things done, aren't you really laying the stage for your new How to Move Mountains and Get Things Done! info product? When you're telling interesting stories about your life as a freelancer, aren't you really showing how terrific an experience your customers are having? (If not, you might want to think about changing that.) The engaging stories about your topic are the McGuffin — the interesting, attention-focusing "grabber" that pulls your readers in. But where they go once they're there is up to you. Handle with careMany poorly written novels and films show the McGuffin can be horribly mishandled. If you misuse the McGuffin, you will leave your prospect feeling unsatisfied at best and betrayed at worst. Don't promise the beach and then drive to the desert just because there's sand. It’s fine to shift gears after you’ve brought a reader in with your fascinating McGuffin. But the place you're bringing your readers still needs to make sense, and to deliver an experience she wants. If you surprise your prospect with a smile, you will likely keep her coming back for more. Startle her with disappointment and she will leave and never come back. At its best, the McGuffin is a pleasure and can help the audience to enjoy the ride. I don't hold it against Tarantino for never showing me what's in the suitcase, any more than I'd hold it against Brian for letting me know about Thesis after I came here for some advice on my headlines. I love "Pulp Fiction" more with every viewing, and my affection for Thesis deepens with every site my business builds. I don't mind the change in direction, because I've been led somewhere I want to go. This story about the McGuffin is, of course, a McGuffin itself. My real intent? To show an interesting technique that both helps other writers and, of course, gathers more copywriting clients for my own business. How about you? What curiosity-provoking, desire-inducing McGuffin could you be writing about on your blog that would drive your readers to take action? And once they’ve shown up, where will your copy take them next? About the Author: Sean Platt writes direct response copy, as well as helping authors write, publish and promote their book. Follow him on Twitter. |
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