Monthly Archives: April 2020

Uncovering New Possibilities in the World of Marketing

Uncovering New Possibilities in the World of Marketing written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

Marketing Podcast with Ben Shapiro

Ben Shapiro headshotOn today’s episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, I sit down with modern Renaissance entrepreneur Ben Shapiro.

Shapiro got his start at eBay, where he served as their manager of business development and SEO. He then went on to found his own business and run marketing for a number of early stage startups.

In more recent years, he transitioned into marketing strategy consulting and now runs several popular podcasts, including the MarTech Podcast and Voices of Search. (See why I called him a modern Renaissance man?)

We do a deep dive into the current marketing landscape. A lot is changing, but with change comes possibility. Shapiro weighs in on how to follow your intuition, tap into your network, and look for opportunities to grow and to help others.

Questions I ask Ben Shapiro:

  • Are we at a point where podcasting might become over-saturated, or is this the format people want for their content?
  • What is the story of StrumSchool.com?
  • How are you investing in yourself right now?

What you’ll learn if you give a listen:

  • What really matters when it comes to creating a successful podcast (or great content in any format).
  • Why companies should consider getting into a content business.
  • How to approach going independent, whether that’s the next big step in your career, or you’re doing it for the time being in between roles.

Key takeaways from the episode and more about Ben Shapiro:

Like this show? Click on over and give us a review on iTunes, please!

This episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is brought to you by AWeber.

With more than 20 years of proven success helping more than one million small businesses around the world, AWeber’s powerfully simple email marketing solutions make it easy for you to connect with people and build your business.

AWeber empowers you to quickly and easily build lists of subscribers, send and automate emails and newsletters, and analyze your campaigns’ performance. AWeber’s solutions, along with their award-winning customer support, eliminate the complications that can come with email marketing. Go to Aweber.com for a free, 30-day trial.

Knowing What to Fix Next in Your Business

Knowing What to Fix Next in Your Business written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

Marketing Podcast with Mike Michalowicz

Mike Michalowicz headshotOn this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, I sit down with entrepreneur, author, and speaker Mike Michalowicz.

Michalowicz founded and sold two multi-million dollar businesses before his 35th birthday. As an entrepreneur himself, he’s passionate about supporting others on their entrepreneurial journey. He’s dedicated his life to unearthing and sharing entrepreneurial strategies with business owners everywhere.

Along the way, he’s created the Profit First method, which is used by thousands of companies to drive profit, and Clockwork, which helps businesses run more efficiently.

Today, he stops by to discuss his latest method and accompanying book Fix This Next: Make the Vital Change That Will Level Up Your Business. So many leaders and entrepreneurs struggle to identify the real problems within their organizations. This method helps them hone in on their most pressing business issues, address those first, and go on to secure steady growth for their company.

Questions I ask Mike Michalowicz:

  • You’ve built whole consultant networks around your books. How does that work?
  • What do the results look like for businesses that take a profit-first approach?
  • Where does Fix This Next fit into the broader ecosystem of your work?

 What you’ll learn if you give a listen:

  • What the concept of Parkinson’s Law says, and what it has to do with how your business handles finances.
  • Why it takes more information for us to be able to tap into the five levels of needs for our business.
  • How the hierarchy of business can help you avoid desperate moves and get deliberate in what you’re doing next.

Key takeaways from the episode and more about Mike Michalowicz:

Like this show? Click on over and give us a review on iTunes, please!

Klaviyo logo

This episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is brought to you by Klaviyo. If you’re looking to grow your business there is only one way: by building real, quality customer relationships. That’s where Klaviyo comes in.

Klaviyo helps you build meaningful relationships by listening and understanding cues from your customers, allowing you to easily turn that information into valuable marketing messages.

Want to learn more? Head to Klaviyo.com/ducttape to schedule a demo.

Why Great Leaders Stay Curious (And How to Do It)

Why Great Leaders Stay Curious (And How to Do It) written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

Marketing Podcast with Michael Bungay Stanier

Michael Bungay Stanier headshotToday’s guest on the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is Michael Bungay Stanier, author, speaker, and founder of Box of Crayons.

Bungay Stanier’s book The Coaching Habit is the best-selling coaching book of this century—having sold over 700,000 copies—and has pushed the concept of coaching in business and leadership into the mainstream.

He is also the founder of the learning and development company Box of Crayons, which helps organizations become curiosity-led.

Which takes us to Bungay Stanier’s latest book, The Advice Trap: Be Humble, Stay Curious & Change the Way You Lead Forever. So many business leaders feel like they need to have all the answers. In reality, the opposite is true. The leaders who are able to cultivate a sense of curiosity and avoid jumping right to giving advice are best positioned to lead happy, empowered teams who get more done.

Today on the podcast, we discuss this latest book in greater detail, and Bungay Stanier shares what leaders can do to avoid the advice trap.

Questions I ask Michael Bungay Stanier:

  • What is the advice trap?
  • How do you know when you should be curious versus give advice?
  • What about leaders who want to hold all the cards, is that the other side of the same coin?

What you’ll learn if you give a listen:

  • What role curiosity plays in leadership.
  • The three reasons why having advice as your default response probably doesn’t work.
  • What the personas of the advice monster are.

Key takeaways from the episode and more about Michael Bungay Stanier:

Like this show? Click on over and give us a review on iTunes, please!

Gusto Logo

This episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is brought to you by Gusto. Everyone loves payday, but loving a payroll provider? That’s a little weird. Still, small businesses across the country love running payroll with Gusto.

Gusto is making payroll, benefits, and HR easy for modern small businesses. You no longer have to be a big company to get great technology, great benefits, and great service to take care of your team.

To help support the show, Gusto is offering our listeners an exclusive, limited-time deal. Sign up today, and you’ll get 3 months free once you run your first payroll. Just go to Gusto.com/TAPE.

How to Conduct a Small Business Brand Audit

How to Conduct a Small Business Brand Audit written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

Marketing is an ongoing process. Once you’ve established your systems and processes, it’s important to continually check in and reevaluate. And that’s because, in the course of running a business, things change. Your brand expands or shifts focus. Your customers’ needs and expectations fluctuate. It’s important that you marketing efforts remain fluid so you can keep pace with the natural evolution of your business.

Conducting a brand audit is part of this process. This is a smart place for marketing consultants to begin when they start work with a new client. It’s helpful for small business owners to have an outside set of eyes evaluating their brand and providing feedback. And if you’re a consultant yourself, it’s important to audit your own brand once in a while!

These are the essential elements that anyone should consider as they conduct a small business brand audit.

Brand Name

Start with the most visible part of the brand: the name. Does the name of your business communicate what you do? Oftentimes, businesses will shift focus as time goes on. While they may start out doing one thing for a particular type of client, as they head out into the world and begin interacting with real people, they may discover that customer needs are different than they anticipated or that there are complementary offerings their business should provide to give more comprehensive service.

It’s smart for a business to pivot in order to meet demand, but it’s also important that you consider a change in brand name if your original name no longer describes what you do and who you serve.

If you decide that a change in name is appropriate, there are a number of elements to consider. Is the new name you’d like to use under trademark elsewhere? Is there an appropriate domain name available online to reflect your new brand name? Do you have a web designer on hand to help facilitate the switch from your old website to your new online home? And do you have a plan in place to inform your existing customers about the change and to ensure they still feel welcomed and well-served by your business under its new name?

Logo and Icons

After the name itself comes your logo. Your logo will be stamped on almost everything you create and do, so you want to make sure it represents you well. Does your current logo reflect the look and feel you’d like to convey for your organization?

There are a number of design elements that go into setting the tone on your logo and branded visuals.

Color Palette

Can you identify three to four complementary colors that will help tell your story? It’s important to keep things to a narrow set of colors. When you introduce the whole rainbow into your design elements, you muddy the waters and make it difficult for your audience to find a through line in the story you’re trying to tell with your logo and color palette.

It’s also important to settle on colors that work well together. You likely remember the concept of complementary colors from elementary school art class, but are you familiar with the other types of colors that play nicely together?

This overview from Canva on the color wheel and color theory provide insight into how to match colors on the color wheel. Whether you opt for complementary colors (which are opposite each other on the color wheel), analogous colors (neighbors on the color wheel), or one of the other combinations that make sense from a color-theory perspective, it’s important to settle on a narrow range of colors that tell your story while looking great together.

For the Duct Tape Marketing brand, we’ve settled on several shades of blue – a monochromatic color scheme – plus a complementary orange accent.

Fonts

Along with color palette, you must be mindful of the fonts you select for your brand. The types of fonts you use can speak volumes about the type of business you are.

Again, it’s not advisable to embrace a wide range of fonts. Instead, it’s best to limit yourself to two to three fonts that you use consistently across all of your marketing assets. As with brand colors, the more fonts you introduce, the less clear your intent and brand story become.

Things like the font style, size, weight, and spacing all convey information to your viewers. A bold, serif font that takes up ample space on the page may convey authority and strength, while a thin, delicate script font might signal a homey, warm quality.

The font you select for your logo is important, but it’s also critical that you select complementary fonts for the rest of your assets, such as your website, printed materials, and social media content. This guide from Canva on how to pair fonts shares a lot of useful tips to help you get started.

This font outline is from the Duct Tape Marketing style guide. Notice how we’ve limited ourselves to three fonts but use them in a variety of ways down the page.

Pairing a serif with a sans serif is an easy way to create a clear contrast between two font styles in a design. Playing with font size and weight can help direct the eye. Larger fonts often grab attention, as do bolded and all-caps messages. Avoid using fonts that are either too similar or too different. Clashing fonts can distract audiences from the messaging contained within the words on the page.

Images and Graphics

Beyond your logo itself, you want to pay attention to the other visual, image-based elements associated with your brand.

Are the images you’re using professional? If you’re creating your own images, invest time in getting them right. Use a high-quality camera for any photos you take, and ensure that there’s a consistency in look and feel. You should try to tie your brand colors into your visual elements, too. Can you incorporate your brand colors into your company headshots by having yourself and your team wear a piece of clothing with your brand’s colors?

If you’re creating icons or digital images, crafting them in a professional editing tool can help you manage things like spacing, alignment, and adherence to your brand colors and font styles. Canva is a great drag-and-drop tool for ensuring consistency across your various marketing assets. And if you’re well-versed in Adobe products like Photoshop or InDesign, you have even greater control over the images you create.

For brands that are putting out lots of content, it can be helpful to rely at least partially on stock images. But when you do, take care in the images you select. Your audience has a keen nose for stock images, and the wrong ones can feel very inauthentic (we’ve all seen the cheesy stock photos of the smiling team gathered around the white board in the office). Again, if you’re using stock images try to find ones that align with your brand’s identity and color palette.

Don’t Forget About the Layout

Many brands believe that once they have their logo, color, and fonts in hand they’re good to go. But the reality is that they’re not quite finished yet. How all of those elements flow together and relate to each other is equally important. Whether or not you present them in a unified manner can truly make or break your brand recognition.

Establishing a brand style guide that dictates how all of the various elements of your brand interact with each other in any of your branded content is key to guaranteeing consistency across all of your marketing materials. Whether it’s your marketing team creating a new social media campaign, your sales team pulling together a pitch deck, or your newest team member ordering up business cards, you want to be sure that all of the elements of your brand’s style look the same across the board.

Conducting a small business brand audit is key to ensuring that your business is represented appropriately on- and offline. You want the various elements of your brand’s style to sync with what you do and who you serve. And because that sometimes shifts, it’s important that you make adjustments to your image, too. Reassessing these crucial design elements help you ensure your messaging and mission are always aligned.

Weekend Favs April 4

Weekend Favs April 4 written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

My weekend blog post routine includes posting links to a handful of tools or great content I ran across during the week.

I don’t go into depth about the finds, but encourage you to check them out if they sound interesting. The photo in the post is a favorite for the week from an online source or one that I took out there on the road.

  • SEO Heartbeat – Get automated reports on your website’s SEO health.
  • WFH Scheduler – Share tasks, define workspaces, and get the whole household on the same work from home page.
  • Fibery –Build a work management platform that fits your team’s needs and keeps you all on track.

These are my weekend favs, I would love to hear about some of yours – Tweet me @ducttape

The FearLess Business Podcast – The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur

The FearLess Business Podcast – The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

John Jantsch sits down with host Jamie Lieberman on the FearLess Business Podcast to discuss how to find resilience in your entrepreneurial journey and his latest book, The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur.

While he wrote the book a year ago, the concepts of self-reliance and resilience feel particularly relevant in this current moment, as we face the global health crisis and times of uncertainty in all areas of life. Centered around quotes from transcendentalist authors, a time period that Jantsch identifies as the first counter-culture period in American history, The Self-Reliant Entreprneur is designed to help entrepreneurs trust in themselves and their journey

To learn more about the book, check out the episode below.

Listen: John Jantsch on the FearLess Business Podcast

Productive Flourishing Podcast – The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur

Productive Flourishing Podcast – The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

John Jantsch sits down with host Charlie Gilkey to discuss his latest book, The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur.

Jantsch founded his own marketing firm nearly three decades ago, so he’s been on his own entrepreneurial journey for quite a while now. While he’s written several books on marketing, this latest book is a departure. He knows that being an entrepreneur is hard, and that to succeed, personal development needs to become a part of the process. He wrote The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur to help individuals to find their own path, gain trust in themselves and their ideas, and flourish in both their personal and professional lives (which are so deeply intertwined).

To hear more from Jantsch about developing a practice to develop self-reliance, gratitude, and resilience, check out the episode below.

Listen: John Jantsch on the Productive Flourishing Podcast