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22nd September 2009

How to Say Nothing in 500 Words

How can you make your blog jump off the page and make readers’ eyeballs pop out? After all, lots of other people are saying just what you are, so what’s different about your stuff?

Good writing flaunts the concrete.

This problem was addressed by Paul Roberts, a 1950’s college English teacher who no doubt kept Folgers stock high due to efforts keeping awake while reading students’ lackluster essays.

Roberts wrote the famous essay, “How to Say Nothing in 500 Words,” and said, “Can you be expected to make a dull subject interesting? As a matter of fact, this is precisely what you are expected to do. This is the writer’s essential task.”

He says that all subjects are dull until somebody makes them interesting. “The writer’s job is to find the argument, the approach, the angle, the wording that will take the reader with him,” he says. Thus, instead of writing an essay about why college football is bad, and lapsing into a lot of tired old arguments, Roberts suggests zeroing in on a concrete image to give the idea some legs:

Picture poor old Alfy coming home from football practice every evening, bruised and aching, agonizingly tired, scarcely able to shovel the mashed potatoes into his mouth.  … What will he look back on when he graduates from college? Toil and torn ligaments. And what will be his future? He is not good enough for pro football, and he is too obscure and weak in econ to succeed in stocks and bonds.

This is what grips the reader — how to begin with a general argument and give it flesh with specific details. In the essay, Roberts offers a lot of good writing advice as well, such as how to avoid “padding” your essay with non-essential words, how to avoid trite expressions, and how to get right to the point.

Paul Roberts never saw a blog, but he’d be able to pen a whopping good one today.

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posted in Business, Web Promotion | 0 Comments

15th September 2009

Americans Turn Toward Internet, Distrusting Traditional Media

A new study says that Americans’ trust of the media is the lowest it’s been since at least 1985, and that’s not surprising considering what happened this past weekend.

Websites and blogs are attracting people away from traditional news sources.The large grass-roots conservative groups that marched on Washington, D.C. on Saturday went underreported. The Chicago Tribune said that “tens of thousands” came to the protest, which consisted of people unhappy with threats of a growth in socialism, spending and left-wing policies in the government.

WLS Radio’s Don and Roma, conservative talk show hosts in Chicago, however, said today that hundreds of thousands had come to the demonstration.

People have a sense that their news is sometimes pitched in a certain way. A Pew Research Center survey released Monday, reported in TechNewsWorld on media credibility, shows that now just 29 percent of Americans surveyed believe the media gets the facts right, the lowest since 1985.

“Those downward trends may intersect with rising chart lines for the use of Web sites and blogs as news sources,” TechNewsWorld said.

It’s all the more reasons why small businesses and non-profits should utilize even more their websites, blogs and videos.

Videos Watched More, Too

Also, Americans are watching internet videos more than ever, according to a recent report. Time spent watching these videos increased 46% in the second quarter, compared to a year ago, according to a Nielsen report, as reported in the Chicago Tribune Sept. 11.

Another recent report found that people are using the internet to relax and get their minds off the recession. “This fits within a broader trend of the internet increasingly becoming a go-to source for people to relax, take it easy and have fun,” said Aaron Smith, of the Pew Internet & American Life project.


Our New Videos

Check out the solemn, prayerful scenes in the new video produced by TreeFrogClick about the Poor Clares of Santa Barbara, CA. They’ve gotten 88 views in less than a week.

Or listen to the grand-sounding Bach in the background of the video we just made for the Benedictines of South Texas.

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posted in Business, Trends | 1 Comment

8th September 2009

Young Businessman Overcomes Personal Odds to Achieve Success

Daniel Gutierrez was a young manager working late at night to prepare for the grand opening of a huge Best Buy store in south Los Angeles. His newly-hired staff, many of them recruited from that poor neighborhood, were hustling in a mad rush to open. But many of them were so stressed from the pressure that they rebelled in an angry manner and threatened to leave.

Gutierrez, not knowing what to do, hopped up on a sales counter and told them in a loud voice that they could go but if they did they shouldn’t bother to come back. Then he calmed down and said that they would work for two more hours. He also gave them a preacher-like sermon on how, if they worked together they would accomplish something monumental. The employees walked back to their work.

Difficult Family Life

This example of leadership is one of the exciting moments of the life of a popular motivational speaker whose roots were that of a difficult family life that included divorce and drug use, but who grew into a successful leader who now gives back to his community. As President and CEO of Pinnacle Achievement Group, Gutierrez calls himself “the world’s #1 Latino motivator,” and is a consultant to Fortune 500 companies, providing inspirational management coaching.

“I refuse to give up,” he says in his book, Stepping Into Greatness. “Not because I’m proud, but because I believe in my dreams, and I know that what God has begun in me, He will finish.”

This Texas native is another example of an entrepreneur and motivational speaker who has overcome personal adversity through an outgoing personality and incredible drive. What impressed me was his wide swings between his religious experience as a preacher-in-training to drug use and other immoral behavior.  And yet the good in his life triumphed.

His life shows how the use of one’s God-given talents for the good can lift a person above temptation of any kind. His website is at danielgutierrez.com.

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posted in Business, Success stories | 0 Comments

1st September 2009

Social Media - Is It All What It Promises?

Is social media really all that it’s cut out to be? I have to admit, I am skeptical when I read about the promises of tremendous success in selling a product or service just by chatting now and then with people you have never met. Who has the time to do all this?

Is social media really worth it?

I’m going to review several ways that I use social media and what kind of results I get. And I’ll try to be honest.

First of all, this column is sent out both to a newsletter list, and it is posted on my blog at SpunkyBiz.com, so I get double results for a single effort. Most of our clients at TreeFrogClick are on the newsletter list, so it’s a good way to keep my services on their mind, as well as to inform them on how to use the internet. It takes me about an hour and a half to both post the article on the blog, get the artwork, and send it via email. Occasionally I post it on one of the free press release sites.

I also have a profile on FaceBook, which for me has put me in touch with a lot of old friends and school chums. With most of these people, I have to admit, the renewed relationship really doesn’t go anywhere, but I did get a message from a friend recently who is putting me in touch with a potential client whom I’d like to serve.

Another popular approach, Twitter, is a very fast-moving message board, and the advantage here, so far, is that I find good business writers that I follow that provide an education in my field of online promotion.

In our YouTube channel, at GodCalls, which is for single persons looking for a religious vocation, our  seven videos have been viewed 1,100 times in about four months, which is a lot of exposure.

Yes, It Takes Time

The big difference between social media and paid advertising is of course, social media takes a lot of time. It means building relationships with people rather than simply paying a fee for a static ad somewhere.

“Social media is all about sharing, opening up, being transparent, providing real value to our customers. It’s about long-term relationships, not short-term campaigns,” says marketing expert Mark Ivey.

Since many small businesses and non-profits don’t have a lot of time to converse with others, or the time to learn it all, this is where our services at TreeFrogClick come into play.

Advertising is changing. Social media is worth it  — and it may help to hire an expert.

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