Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Let your audience see the real you.


Our writing and our life most be integrated, so that our contents have the greatest possible sense. When someone reads our web site, they’ll eventually come to know a great deal about us as persons.

Is always a good choice to write about personal stories, including most painful and difficult experiences. Don’t do this to win acepptacion but rather because those stories help make a point (no matter where you find yourself today, you always have the opportunity to grow in some small way, and no matter how small those changes are, they’re going to add up over time to
create massive lifelong growth.) That’s a lesson we all need to remember.

We most find ways to turn our darkest experiences into lessons that might help others in similar situations, it actually transforms those painful memories into joyful ones.

Allowing people to know the real you makes it possible to build a relationship with your audience that’s based on intimacy and friendship. Communication between equals — between friends — is more effective.

More genuine communication means better connections with your audience, which means more repeat traffic and more referral traffic. This isn’t a manipulative game though, and excessive or overly dramatic self-disclosure for the purpose of linkbaiting will only backfire. Your reasons for storytelling must be to benefit your audience. The traffic benefits are a positive side effect.

0 comments:

Post a Comment