April Bowles - Make Your Creative Business Uniquely Irresistible Workbook (2) (2017 - 08 - 29 18 - 48 - 38 UTC)
April Bowles - Make Your Creative Business Uniquely Irresistible Workbook (2) (2017 - 08 - 29 18 - 48 - 38 UTC)
April Bowles - Make Your Creative Business Uniquely Irresistible Workbook (2) (2017 - 08 - 29 18 - 48 - 38 UTC)
uniquely irresistible
April Bowles-Olin
table of contents
Favorite Brand:
Favorite Brand:
Favorite Brand:
How can you pull some of those pieces into your business to make it more
unique and one your customers’ favorite brands?
Write your one sentence brand message. (Try out a few different options and
pick the best one.)
What’s the meaning that your customers associate with your products? (cute
yoga clothes)
Why will your customers fall head over heels in love with your brand?
What if you had all the time and money you could ever want? Then what
would you do?
What lessons have you learned that impact who you are and how you can
help others?
Did you build your business around your experience, strengths, personality? If
you didn’t build your business around yourself, why not?
What’s one thing you can do today to add more of yourself into your business?
What are your beliefs? (Example: I believe that healthy competition breeds
success.)
What truly motivates you? (Example: I’m motivated by by naysayers who write
blog posts about why you shouldn’t follow your passion.)
What makes you feel really good about yourself? Is this part of your business?
What business decisions have you made from following your truths, beliefs and
values?
Have there ever been decisions that you knew weren’t aligned with your values
but you made it anyway? Why? What happened?
Exercise: Find three pictures of yourself that show the “real” you. What do you
like about them? What do they say about you? (This is just another fun, creative
way to think about how you are unique.)
Is there anything you do within your business that you do just because it’s the
norm and the way it’s always been done?
Where does your customer spend her time online? What does this say about
her?
What does your customer ACTUALLY do, not what she says that she does?
What’s the difference them and what does this say about her?
What do they desire? You have to give them what they desire--not just what
they need.
How could you apply this knowledge to your blog posts, email newsletter, social
media updates?
How could you apply this to the product or service that you’re currently working
on or marketing?
What’s an extra step you can take every once in a while to show your
customers you care about them?
What’s one thing you can put into place now to improve your customer
service?
How do you want your customers to FEEL when interacting with your business?
When they’re on your website, trying to contact you, purchasing from you,
using one of your products? Pick three main feelings.
Then, interact with your business as if you’re the customer. Try to imagine every-
thing as if it’s the first time. How does your website make you feel? Is it easy to
navigate? Check out through your shopping cart. What is that experience like?
How did it make you feel?
Send yourself your product in the mail. Experience how you feel when you get
it. What’s the packaging like after it has been shipped? Does it hold up? Open
the product. Does everything look good?
Test your employees. Call and ask for something as a customer or email them
from a different email account to make a complaint. See how they handle it.
Objection 3: That works well for so-and-so, but not for me.
How do you delight your customers? What do you make them feel?
Jot down a couple sentences for two to three different business-related stories.
Try out these stories on some of your friends and see which ones they respond
to--which ones they are most interested in. You want to practice and hone your
storytelling skills.
How can you use this information in your branding and marketing?
You let your target market know how you can help them
If you included a third-person bio, it’s only a small part of the page