the complete guide to success story marketing

(New) Storytelling Power in PowerPoint?

Author: Casey Hibbard; Published: Jan 14, 2010; Category: Case studies in the sales process; Tags: , ; 2 Comments

PowerPoint gets a really bad rap. It seems indispensible in business presentations, yet it can be so darn boring.

That’s because most presenters do it the same way – a virtual storm of bullet points with a few photos slid in.

But maybe there’s help – and hope – in PowerPoint 2010.

In her recent blog post, Paula Tesch of Duarte shows us the new cinematic capabilities of PowerPoint 2010. Duarte Design’s Five Rules for Presentations gives practical presentation tips – and does so using the new PowerPoint.

Pretty impressive! It’s hard to believe this is PowerPoint.

I still wonder how difficult it is to use the tool to create something so dynamic. But I’m excited about its storytelling possibilities.

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5 Hottest Ways to Use Customer Stories in ‘10

Author: Casey Hibbard; Published: Jan 7, 2010; Category: Case studies in the sales process, Case study writing, Using Customer Stories, Using case studies in social media, Video testimonials; Tags: , ; 2 Comments

 

Ever walked through the living room when someone else is watching TV (on your way somewhere else), and just had to stop right there and watch?

I’d be willing to bet it was a compelling story that drew you in (if it wasn’t some sultry hamburger ad).

Humans have always told stories and it’s still the best currency for communication.

If anything, we rely on stories more than ever to be seen or heard in a sea of messages.

What’s changed are the media we use.

So what’s hot now in sharing customer success stories and case studies?

Here are my 5 predictions for the hottest ways to use your stories in ‘10. Drop a comment on your top ways.

1. Blogs
An estimated 77% of active web users read blogs. They’ve proven to be powerful drivers of search engine traffic.

Even better, those following your blog are interested in your particular topic, giving you the perfect target audience.

Share your best customer stories on your blog – either in full or linked back to the full story on your website.

Focus on the customer’s experience and path to success, not just tooting your own horn.

Here’s a great example.

And finally, be sure to get the customer’s permission before you publish anything with their name on it.

2. Twitter
Enticing Twitter content gets fresh eyeballs on your blog or website. A decent percentage of my own web traffic comes from Twitter.

Customer stories are among the more interesting pieces of content you can share.

Mention a compelling customer story and link back to it on your blog or website.

Several of my clients regularly Tweet their customer stories, proving to be a source of new traffic to their sites.

Be sure to give it a compelling headline, and keep the Tweet short to encourage Retweeting.

Remember to follow what has become Twitter protocol of sharing more helpful links/Tweets than self-promotional ones.

3. Video
Video continues its hot streak.

Consider capturing short versions of your customer success stories and comments on video, or use video technology that allows viewers to navigate to chapter marks.

Some surveys indicate two-thirds still prefer written stories, but if possible, have multiple ways that your audience can consume your stories.

Then post the videos on your website, blog, YouTube (the third largest search engine) and other sites like Viddler.

Check out more video tips here.

4. Sales Conversations
Sure, you may have your video and written stories nicely displayed everywhere.

But you don’t really know whether those powerful stories have reached the right prospects.

Make sure those hot prospects know your best customer successes. Encourage sales reps to tell them in sales conversations.

To that end, communicate clearly and often to reps where your customer case studies and success stories reside on your website or intranet.

Discuss those stories in sales meetings.

Do everything you can to ensure that when a rep talks with a prospect, she knows just the perfect story to mention in conversation.

5. Awards
I’m big on awards these days – after seeing some Fortune 500 companies jump at the chance to tell their stories for awards opportunities.

Why? We all like to be recognized for our efforts. Your customers are no different.

If they’re doing cool, best practices things, and your solution helps with that, find relevant awards programs and ask their permission to submit them.

You might be surprised how on board they get for an awards submission when they might not publish their story as a case study.

If your customer wins, their story gets natural publicity through the awards process.

Also, once you have all the juicy details, ask if you can make that public on your website.

What are your predictions for the hottest ways to use customer case studies and success stories right now?

 

 

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The “Stories That Sell” B-Day Give-Away

Author: Casey Hibbard; Published: Jan 5, 2010; Category: Case studies in the sales process, customer stories in PR; Tags: , , ; No Comments

Today’s a big day! It’s the first anniversary of the release of the book, Stories That Sell.

It’s been a great year, and in honor of the occasion, I’m giving away a 43-page PDF excerpt of Stories That Sell, which covers the whys and hows of creating, managing and using customer stories.

This meaty chunk of the book comes straight from the chapter on ways to use customer success stories and case studies in sales, marketing and PR.

Tons of real examples will inspire you to use your stories more extensively and creatively to grow your business or cause in 2010.

Download it now!

Wishing you all you hope for in 2010!

 

Coming later this week: The top 5 ways to use your customer stories in ‘10

 

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Buyers Link to Case Studies from Blogs, Wikis

Author: Casey Hibbard; Published: Nov 20, 2009; Category: Case studies in the sales process, Using Customer Stories, Using case studies in social media, Value of Customer Stories; Tags: , ; No Comments

In just the past six months, marketers have really begun embracing social media. They’re blogging, building Facebook fans and Tweeting.

Yet, much of it is still experimentation.

The question is, how do you get people to link to the content on your site from social media venues?

Case studies are a top draw for technology buyers, but mostly linked from blogs and wikis versus other social media, according to a recent report from IDG Knowledge Hub.

 

The report, Social Media and the IT Investment Process: Linking Social Conversations to Content, includes findings from a survey of 100 information technology buying team members regarding the links they most want to see.

According to the report, the wrong content types can be worse than none at all.

"Over 40% of social media participants are interested in pursuing links to vendor-generated content…Winners’ will be vendors that build a relevant content bridge to draw the conversation towards their own hosted platforms and insight."

What works?

The report points out that preferences vary by investment type, buying role and the type of business impact (technical, financial, business impact).

Here are the top three preferred content items for various social media tools:

Blogs

Case study, advertisement, tutorial/how-to

Discussion boards/forums

Tutorial/how-to, free-event registration, evaluation version

Messaging/live chat

Free-event registration, ROI calculator, presentation

Microblogs

Advertisement, technical knowledgebase, free-event registration

Social networks

Free-event registration, advertisement, ROI calculator

Wikis

Tutorial/how-to, technical white paper, case study 

Do you track your content consumption by incoming links? What are you seeing in terms of linkage from social media?

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When You Need 2 Versions of the Same Case Study

Author: Casey Hibbard; Published: Mar 14, 2008; Category: Case studies in the sales process, Case study writing, Customer permission for case studies, Managing the Process with Customers, Writing Customer Stories; Tags: , ; No Comments

A sales rep I’m assisting with a case study has two objectives: sell network management software to other U.S. divisions of a major account, and sell to other companies like the featured customer.

The customer contacts are willing to be much more open about what they share with other divisions in the same company than what they’ll divulge to the public and competitors. So why not create two versions of the case study?

Version 1 of the case study, for internal-only use, has frank discussion about the challenges this customer faces in managing its network. The internal-only version also doesn’t have to go through the same rigorous approval cycle as the public customer story.

Version 2 of the case study, for external audiences, has less detail about the customer’s internal issues and practices.

That allows this sales rep to have the story he needs–quickly–for a big meeting with multiple divisions of this customer company, and then what he needs to penetrate the industry.

It’s a little extra work, but it’s worth it to reach the right audiences with the right information.

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