strategy guidebook

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STRATEGY GUIDEBOOK PEACHTREE CREATIVE

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Creative Strategy Guidebook

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Page 1: Strategy guidebook

STRATEGY GUIDEBOOK

PEA

CH

TR

EECREATIVE

Page 2: Strategy guidebook

Secrets to Gain a Following For Your BiG idea77

Now matter what your big idea is, if you want to successfully get the word out, consider these seven basic strategic approaches.

Marketing is a hassle. i totally agree

with you. You’ve got your big idea produced, and it sure would be a

heck of a lot easier if people would automatically flock to it like a

nine year-old boy to videogames. (in case you don’t know,

videogames are complete crack to nine year old boys.)

Of course, this doesn’t happen.

You’ve got to get the word out. To some extent, other peo-

ple can help you do this, but when it comes down to it, the

number one champion for your big idea is you. So, the

first step is to admit your ownership. Say to yourself:

i am responsible for marketing my own big idea.

There, that wasn’t so bad. The rest is cake.

Just follow these seven strategic approaches.

by Len Wilson

Page 3: Strategy guidebook

1. Tell a Story.

1W h a t I t I sMaybe you have heard the old used to be journalism axiom to give people the “who, what, where, when and how.” The assumption that good information was sufficient to create engagement and get people involved. That’s dead, my friend. Yet, many of us still unconsciously do this. We write up a few paragraphs, the equivalent of a press release, put it through a few channels, and think we’ve done due diligence. Later, when we’ve already blown it, we discover this doesn’t work.

Here’s the first strategic principle:

Information is a poor substitute for a good story.

The audience will not tune in to watch information. You wouldn’t, i wouldn’t. No one would or will. The audience will only tune in and stay tuned in to watch drama.

~ David Mamet

The solution is to focus on the story rather than the data. Rather than provide information about an event or program, tell a story about a life changed by the event or program.

Advertise the fruit, not the seed.

D i g D e e p e rStories come from a variety of sources. i list five at lenwilson.us/stories-church/.

W h a t To D oFind someone whose life was changed for the better as a result of your big idea. Ask this person to write up a short summary about his or her experience or write one for them. it doesn’t have to be professional – just get the story down. With it, you’ve acquired a powerful piece of marketing to put on social networks, blogs, and so on.

Post a story at peachtreepres.org/story, and we’ll take it from there, helping to get it published throughout the church community.

I met a young lady in the park who found herself homeless after enduring an unsafe living arraignment with her mom and her new boyfriend. The young lady had only been on the streets a short time but had not anticipated what living on the streets might entail. Unfortunately, she found herself homeless for much longer than the “couple of days” she envisioned. She only had a backpack with a few shirts, zero toiletries, and toothbrush. When I asked what she needed most, with a smile and small chuckle, she said “a shower and deodorant”. When I pulled the toiletry bag out of my backp ack - she wept. It was as if the kit represented much more than just the items she needed. Through tears and a cracked voice she said “I really needed this”. We were able to place her at the Cov.

Save your travel sized toiletries this summer.This fall, Presbyterian Women and Covenant House will again join forces to gather these valuable resources for women in need. ”

“A story from: Kellie Glenn, Covenant House Development Coordinator

How toHelp Change Lives:Help Change Lives:

Page 4: Strategy guidebook

2. Ignore Somebody.

2W h a t I t I sLiterary types talk about “ideal readers,” character profiles of people to whom you should write. Who are the people who would benefit the most from my big idea?Here’s the catch. We want to reach everyone, but this is a mirage that will leave you starving for readers.

Ignore “people” and get specific with who you’re targeting.

Who is part of your core tribe of faithful readers?

if you do this well, you’ll find an interesting result. The irony about any great idea is that when it finds its target audience, it expands. in order to reach many, you must ignore many and focus on a few.

The story you tell depends on those to whom you tell it.

D i g D e e p e rTo better understand target audience, at http://lenwilson.us/ignore-people/

W h a t To D oWrite out three sentence profiles of five people that might benefit the most from your idea. How do these people think? What motivates them? in what social settings do they operate? Creating these sketches will inform your language and marketing approach.

Page 5: Strategy guidebook

3. Create an Experience.

 

3W h a t I t I sFor years, marketing professionals discussed a product or service’s F&B, or “features and benefits.” Whatever the product did that was unique or better than the competition – its best feature – made for its best ad. The quintessential F&B campaign was ivory Soap’s mid 20th century classic, “99 44/100% pure.”

Nike’s Just Do it campaign, in the early 1990s, overturned the F&B approach for experience. A video of a woman running up the mountain to a stirring rock soundtrack replaced information about the shoe. Cognitively, it can be baffling

(anyone remember the EDS Herding Cats

Super Bowl ad?), but experientially, it creates engagement and retention based on meaning, not a singular transaction.

instead of just shoe data that creates a sales lead, the perception of the running woman brought meaning to the Nike shoe.

Now, 20 years later, experience is almost synonymous with participation. People want to interact, take surveys, play games, post comments, make ratings, navigate interactive features, and so on. This is all part of meaning making. Good marketing now understands that there’s a relationship in the exchange that goes beyond a simple transaction. For ministry purposes, ask this question:

What kind of life change does your big idea create?

Marketing is the art of telling a story that moves people to act. - Bernadette Jiwa

D i g D e e p e rExpert marketer Bernd Schmidt captured the move from traditional to experiential marketing with a focus on five ways that we experience the message: Sense, Think, Act, Feel, Relate. i explore these five in more detail in this post at lenwilson.us/five-things-experience-message/.

W h a t To D oBrainstorm a list of ways to engage the five sensory modules. Use food, scents, striking images, familiar music, or hands on activities. For example, serve free coffee with branded coffee cup sleeves. Consider applications for your message. The sprout garden, planted in the spring of 2013 and growing all summer, is a living example of our seed packing event scheduled for October.

Page 6: Strategy guidebook

4. Find an Image.

4W h a t I t I sThe old marketing emphasis was on information extended to images as well. Sticking with soap, consider the difference in these two ads for Tide detergent, to the left. The one on the left side of the image is from the 1950s and the one on the right is from today. Many of us still write too much ad copy and have yet to discover that a single image can capture the essence of the message in a way that tons of copy can’t.

This isn’t to say all text is bad. in some cases, such as the next item on my list, text can

be good – but only if it’s used to create engagement through experience. But use sparingly, and consider: even in social media environments such as Facebook, images generate over 90% more clicks than text alone.

D i g D e e p e rFor more on the types of images and how to use them in ministry settings,

go to lenwilson.us/images-in-worship/.

W h a t To D o

Find a core image that expresses your big idea.

This is easier said than done. Learning to think visually can be difficult, especially for those trained in propositional and expository educational systems. Start with brainstorms about the fruit – the results of your message. A lot of people get hung up on visualizing the problem. Focus instead on your solution.

Mine your source material, such as a book or related text, for illustrations and concepts. For example, a sermon series on the Ten Commandments took on new energy and life by correlating it to the metaphor of staying on a path, which has particular resonance for north Georgians who love the mountains and outdoor life.

 

Page 7: Strategy guidebook

W h a t I t i sYou love your message. You champion it, you know it intimately, you expound on its virtues. With this insight, you have likely lost perspective – you no longer have any idea what it’s like to be an outsider.

Insider knowledge makes effective communication difficult.

You are deep into your own well. Regardless of the focus of your message, it’s safe to assume that you’re at the bottom, and most of the people to whom you’re communicating are at the top. We forget what’s it like for the unengaged. You’ve got to figure out how outsiders talk about your topic, and use their language.

D i g D e e p e rCultivating disciples starts with shifting our thinking from our perspective – what our event, ministry, program or message is about – to the perspective of the storyreceiver.

Understanding your reader is strategic caring.

Learn more about strategic caring with my description of how communication and discipleship are connected on the funnel, at lenwilson.us/funnel/.

W h a t To D oTo break out of your insider point of view, brainstorm popular conceptions – good and bad – about your message. What do people think about when they think of what you’re saying? This means acknowledging some things that might drive you crazy – persistently popular but uninformed caricatures of your idea.

What do other people say when they talk about your topic?

Pay attention to the language they use. Consider the title of this guide even: ”Get the word out.” i never use it, and don’t even like it. But i’m an insider. Outsiders use this phrase, so i put it in the title; it’s an idiom people recognize.

5. Assume People Don’t Care Yet.

5

Page 8: Strategy guidebook

6. Grab a Hook.

6W h a t I t I sMost of us are secretly insecure about the ability of our message to work. We develop solid content but it’s often missing one key ingredient. it doesn’t really inspire. Typical-ly, the missing ingredient is a good hook. The hook is the central metaphor that holds up your entire idea.

The hook is the key to making any big idea extraordinary.

Sometimes i hold on to a big idea, for months or even years while i wait for the perfect hook. Without it, my idea is rudderless. Once i have it, i can’t stop writing.

D i g D e e p e rCreating compelling hooks is not a master skill. Anyone can learn to do it with practice. Here are a few tips to creating a good hook, from my guest post on Tony Morgan’s blog, at tonymorganlive.com/2012/05/09/the-hook-how-to-make-any-idea-extraordinary/.

W h a t To D oHere are six tips i’ve learned for finding a killer hook:1. Go to the source for inspiration first. For sermon series and church-related branding

and hooks, i go to the Bible first. Reading the biblical text opens up a variety of ideas and options.

2. Read a thesaurus. Different synonyms have different etymological locations and histories, and can reveal stories and metaphors.

3. Make a list of 20 keywords for your topic. Sometimes this will spark an association or core metaphor that embodies the concept.

4. Be patient. Sometimes it takes days or even weeks for the right idea to appear. if it’s brewing on low, unrelated readings can trigger a solution. For example, i looked for weeks for a good hook on the 10 Commandments, mentioned above, and found it one morning in a friend’s Twitter feed. The result was The Path.

5. Sleep on it.6. Keep a journal or tool like Evernote very, very close, and write down everything that

pops in your head. This takes practice.

Page 9: Strategy guidebook

7. Use the Content Itself

7W h a t I t I sOne of the latest marketing trends is “content marketing.” i love the term and the idea, but it kinda makes me laugh, because content marketing is sort of a more developed form of common sense communication. it’s really nothing more than just using your content as a marketing tool. Here’s how to think about content marketing (i didn’t invent this pithy phrase, but i can’t remember where i first read it):

Content Marketing is a move from hype to help.

D i g D e e p e ri’ve learned a lot about content marketing from simple web research. One of the best sources is CopyBlogger.

W h a t To D oWhat are the tweetable moments of your post? Find them. i’ve highlighted and center justified several in this blog post. Use these as the teasers and kickers for your promotion. (A kicker is a single, punchy sentence – a “sound bite” that people can apply.)

Publish ten one sentence kickers that explain your big idea.

Create a social media posting schedule for publishing your kickers, each with a link back to your big idea. By doing this you’re providing real DiY content and help for your readers, and oh by the way, here’s where to learn more. it’s a common sense response to people’s internet expectation for free.

Find three single sentence from your content that

capture your big idea.