Category: Blogginess

Let’s Pitch

5 pitching tips, alison chino, arkansas women bloggers

 

Last month we looked at The Power of the Ask.

I encouraged you to think about what you really want. Dream big, make goals and then ask for the help you need.

So this month I want to talk about what those asks or pitches could look like.

Lots has been written about pitching on the internet. And you can even use Google to find templates for the specific kinds of things you want to pitch.

But for what it’s worth, here are the five things I’ve learned about pitching:

5 Tips For Writing Pitches

 

1. Keep it short.

Your initial email to someone should walk a fine line between including enough information to peak interest but being brief enough to be glimpsed in about five seconds. The bottom line is you don’t have much time in someone’s inbox to get their attention. If you ramble on, you’re going to lose them. 

Imagine you are actually receiving this email you are writing.

Is it clear? Are there parts you can leave out? 

Go ahead and write out your whole idea but then boil it down to just what they need to know.

One of my favorite copywriters, Alexandra Franzen, always says, “Brevity is sexy.”

And she’s right!

2. Do your homework.

A few times a year, Stephanie (who runs Arkansas Women Bloggers) asks for pitches for articles that are paid. She always says, “Please review the website so as not to pitch me something that has already been done.” 

If you pitch a magazine with an idea that was in their last issue, they might think you are not actually reading the publication you want to write for.

Are you trying to work with a company? Follow them on social media and pay attention to what they are promoting. Then write your pitch to include their goals as well as your own.

3. Flatter with sincerity.

For years, every email I wrote began this way:

Hi. My name is Alison Chino and I write a blog for a small, but committed audience about food, travel and family. Blah, blah, blah.

First of all, see Rule #1.

Secondly, it’s just boring.

Now I try to start my email with a brief statement about something specific I love that the company/magazine/person is doing. 

Of course, it needs to be sincere. But if you’ve done your homework (#2), you should be able to easily recall something great they are doing that you want to be a part of!

4. Pitch often, but don’t blanket pitch.

If you want a lot of work as a blogger, especially when you are first starting out, you will have to write a lot of pitches. 

But at the same time, it’s not a great idea to send out the exact same email to fifty people. It is much harder to write specific emails/find out peoples’ names/be sincere and personal, but it’s so much more effective.

Set a goal of how many pitches you want to send per month and then set some reminders to encourage you to get them out there.

(Side note: As far as goal-setting goes, setting a goal like “Send five pitches per week” is so much more tangible than a goal like “Work with so-and-so.” Because the first goal depends only on you! Tasks you can check off of your list are my favorite kind!)

5. Expect rejections. 

All of these best-selling authors experienced rejection so you’re in good company when you get a “No” from someone or you don’t hear back at all.

One of the ways I’m learning to deal with pitches not landing is that I try to send my pitches at a time when I can close my computer up and not think about them again for a few days.

After you send a pitch, congratulate yourself (YOU DID IT!), check it off your list and then go work on something else. Instead of obsessively checking your email to see if you have heard anything, close your computer and go for a walk. Or send your pitch off right before you leave for your next yoga class. 

I am trying to apply the same lesson in pitching emails as I do in prayer and meditation:

Learn the art of enjoying the space to dream during the seasons where I am waiting for a reply.

XO

Alison

PS. Do you have other questions about pitching I did not cover? Or tips to add that have been helpful for you?

 

 

#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 3

By Elizabeth Michael
If one of the templates helps you measure your business objectives, then you can set up your goal from a template. Here is how you set up a “Custom” goal.

#15

Click the “Custom” button.

#17

We will go through setting up a custom goal that measures a destination, like filling out an email inquiry form and upon completion, landing on a specific URL (www.yourwebsite.com/thankyou/ with the “/thankyou/” being the important part).

Type the last part of your URL, “/thankyou/” into the destination field and in the drop down menu to the left, select “equals to.” You can assign arbitrary dollar amounts to goal completions. Here, I have said that getting an email is worth fifty cents to me. Then click “Create Goal.”

#18

Once you have created your goal, it will start to track and report your goal completion rates. Above, you can see two established goals and their results. You can view this by clicking on the “Reporting” tab and on the left hand menu, click on “Conversions” and then “Goals” and “Overview.”

And, there you have it! You can now set up Google Analytics and Goals for your blog. I hope this saves you time measuring your success and reporting. If you have any questions, you can contact me on Twitter – @lizzymichael.

#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 1

#AWBU2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 2

Living and Telling Great Stories: #AWBU #Recap {Part 2}

great stories, noteworthy days 

Last month I shared that one of the great stories we can be telling on our blogs is the story of the Sacred Everyday.

This month I want to talk about another kind of story we can be creating and telling on our blogs: Noteworthy Days.

Sometimes, one of my kids gets invited to a birthday party. Now birthday parties are torture to me but they are so fun to little kids. So they bring home the invitation and put it on the fridge and the party is like two weeks away but they know that next Thursday is a party after school. My youngest, Simon, will count the days until the party. When the next week rolls around, he will be thinking about his week and he’ll be like, “Ok, on Monday I have swimming and then there is Beavers the next day (that’s the UK version of scouts) and then just two more days until Jonathan’s party!” The morning of the party, he will come in for breakfast and say, “Today’s the party!” You can tell that he’s going to look forward to it all day.

It’s a special day.

It’s a noteworthy day. It’s worthy of noting. (Or blogging)

Here’s the thing about living a great story.

We don’t have to wait around for an invitation to a birthday party to have a noteworthy day.

We can create them for ourselves.

I think we can get caught in the trap of waiting for something extraordinary to happen.

We don’t have to do that.

We just need a little bit of dreaming and a willingness to be intentional.

In his book on finding a great story, Donald Miller has this friend Bob, who is living an incredible story and so he asks him what his secret is. This is what he says:

Embrace whimsy.

Then he defines whimsy as that nagging feeling that life could be magical; it could be special if we were only willing to take a few risks.

When you look back on your life, what days stand out to you?

For me a lot of the days that stand out are ones from my teenage days.

Sometimes I think in order to embrace whimsy we need to get in touch with our teenage selves, or our college selves.

Do you remember how you would sit around with your friends and invent crazy things to do? If there was a free weekend, we filled it up.

We would go fishing or camping, or we would figure out how to build a fort in the woods. We wasted a lot of time, but we wasted it well.

I remember this one time my roommate and I were walking across campus. We were coming from dinner to our dorm room and from a distance we could see that there was a bunch of furniture in the courtyard. We got closer and we realized it was our furniture. As a practical joke, someone had moved our entire dorm room outside.

Now at the age of forty, I’m like, “Who has time for that kind of thing? That was ridiculous.”

But back then, we thought it was hilarious.

We decided that instead of moving all our furniture back in, we would just use our room outside. We stayed outside for the rest of the evening, doing homework and talking to people who went by. Then we even slept outside. It made everyone who walked by smile to see us out in the courtyard, in our room.

It was just a small silly event, but I remember it.

We remember the crazy things we do in life. We remember the ridiculous things we do in life.

Here are a couple examples of bloggers who are intentionally creating noteworthy days:

 A UK adventurer/blogger called Alistair Humphreys has coined the term, Microadventures, and has a book by the same title, and it’s all about how you don’t have to have a lot of time or even resources to have an adventure. It’s interesting because he does these huge crazy trips all over the globe, but then he wrote a book about how in order to have an adventure, all you need is an afternoon. One day. Maybe a weekend.

And it’s true.

Sarah Von Bargen of Yes and Yes makes a new list of things she wants to do every year on her birthday. She keeps the list in her sidebar, so you can follow along when she checks something off. One of my recent favorites of hers was to Take a trapeze lesson.

So, make a list of 30 things you want to do this year. Just brainstorm. It’s ok if you don’t finish them all. You can throw your list away in a year and make a new one!

Put something on the list that you’re a little bit afraid of. Then put it on the calendar.

And then embrace whimsy when it comes your way.

The week before I was leaving for AWBU, a gal texted me and said that because it was sunny, she was going to the beach to have coffee if I wanted to go. She said no worries, she had two books with her if I was busy. I had so much to do to get ready to leave town and it was one of those texts that I totally could have ignored or just said, sorry, can’t today. Or whatever. But I didn’t. I thought, she’s right. The sun is shining in Aberdeen. So I went. And it turned out to be the most glorious day. We sat outside at this little café that I have never been to before. The old man that served us our coffee treated us like queens. She told me a story about her life that made me happy cry. Then we walked on the beach and through the amusement park. It was a noteworthy day. I’m so glad I didn’t miss it.

So go ahead and put in a bit of effort to make a day stand out here and there. Of course we still have to get the laundry done and make the work deadlines and have normal days, but that does not mean we can’t have NOTEWORTHY DAYS.

If you blog about or make a new goal to create a noteworthy day, I would SO love to hear about it. Leave me a link in the comments or tell me on Twitter! And stay tuned because next month I have one more category from my talk about living and telling great stories from AWBU!

Investing In Self – Dream Boards:Realizing the Dreams Within Us {Making the World a Better Place to Be(and to Blog)}

Dream boards are an amazing self-exploration tool.  I have used these for years in my art classes as a way for students to begin thinking creatively and introspectively.  Dream boards are meant to be a visual representation of the dreams and goals we have.  They are meant to be more about who we want to be then stuff we want to have. They are not meant to be a wish-list or a to-do-list but are meant to visually remind us of the goals and dreams that we have for ourselves.

Time:
One or more hours (Uninterrupted would be the best so convince your husband to entertain the kids!)

Materials:
Magazines, photos, printed Pinterest images
Scissors
Glue (Such as Mod Podge or watered down Elmers glue)
Cheap Paintbrush
Paper, Poster board or Canvas
Your favorite music
A refreshing beverage

dream board materials

Step 1

RELAX!  Take this next hour or so for yourself and only you.  Put on your favorite music and grab a glass of wine or a refreshing soda.  A comfortable pair of pants and your favorite t-shirt will also help you to relax and focus.

Step 2

Go through your magazines and pictures and begin collecting words and images that “speak” to you.  You are just picking things you find appealing. You don’t necessarily have to have a theme although I have done themed dream boards in the past that turn out nice.  There is however something appealing about selecting images and words organically and randomly.

dream board pages

Step 3

Weed out any images that you have decided not to use for this board and start trimming up the ones you plan to keep. (Note: Don’t discard the unused items as you may want to use them in another dream board later on.)

dream board cropped

Step 4

Begin laying your words and images on your canvas or paper.  Don’t glue anything down yet!  Right now just focus on finding an arrangement that is pleasing and meaningful to you.

dream board layout

Step 4a

If you feel so inclined you might want to put some layers of paint down on your canvas or paper before moving to step 4

dream board painted canvas

Step 5

Glue down your items.  I like Mod Podge but Elmers glue with a little water added to it works great too.  I begin by brushing some glue onto my canvas.  I then place down my objects and paint more glue over the top of them.  Don’t worry if you get air bubbles…they just add to the beauty.

dream board gluing

Step 6

Hang up your beautiful work and admire your hard work.

dream boards finished

Step 7

Reflect! Take some time to reflect and free write about your board.  What do you see? What surprises you? Is there something your thought would be there that isn’t?  What are you doing to achieve your goals? What should you be doing to achieve your goals?  What does my husband (or children, or close friends) think my dream board says about me? We are bloggers after all so why not write a post about your dream board.

Post by Alison Chino of AlisonChino.com