So the first way to make your content sound more interesting is to properly segment it and adapt it to the market fragment or specific target group that you want to communicate with through your profiles.
The second thing is the personal input, perspective and own experience that we talked about.
Whenever you think about a specific topic or look for inspiration, you should ask yourself two questions:
1) What have I learned about this topic or experienced in recent months?
2) What specific customer segment do I want to talk to about this? Who do I want to talk to? Who should see this content?
And although these two questions seem very simple, as is usually the case: the answers china rcs data to them can be complicated or difficult to reach. And at the same time, we can bounce far enough from these simple things to effectively conduct such a content creation process.
The first question is, contrary to appearances, very creative. Why?
Because it forces us to self-reflect and directs us in advance to the fact that we will not share general, commonly known rules that someone can read in 10-20 other articles, or hear in other podcasts or films, but how we look at a given thing. And at the same time, it forces us to create content about ourselves. Because contrary to appearances, a personal brand is about sharing your own story.
The world has enough content on how to do X, and definitely not enough content on how we did X.
This can of course be expanded upon to include the second question we talked about, which is the segment for Y.
For example, I usually frame it in one sentence:
-
- Posts: 495
- Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2024 8:30 am