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Our Writing Agency Turns Ten! A Note From Our Founder

Shout Outs & Reflections for RedShift Writers' 10 Year Anniversary

You’ve probably heard it before: most businesses fail within the first five years. But in 2022, RedShift Writers officially crossed the rubicon where so many other businesses have faltered. On December 10th of last year, our content strategy and writing agency officially turned ten years old.

 

How were we able to survive when others haven’t? Reasons for success (or failure) vary by industry, and some things are outside of our control. Some folks have a great idea and plenty of demand, but lack the capital to realize their goals. Other companies struggle because of unforeseen circumstances or misfortune such as weather events or the pandemic.

 

For companies that do manage to succeed, you’ll notice one nearly universal quality: a clear, defined, unique presence in the market. A brand position is hardly a magic bullet (this is business, so nothing is), yet the more specific you are in what you do, the more you stand out, and the better positioned you will be to last for years to come.

A Strong Position in a Rapidly Changing Market

At RedShift Writers, we focus solely on content strategy and content writing to help companies secure a leading position in their market. That’s it. Whereas many firms offer a dozen service offerings, we focus specifically on a service that companies need and want, and consistently research and deliver the best ways of strategizing and producing market-winning content.

 

That position has allowed us to survive tremendous tumult and mass disruption of our industry. When we first got started, smartphones were just becoming ubiquitous. Social media was in its Wild West phase: Facebook was less than ten years old, and Twitter was still in kindergarten. Google AdWords was on its way up, but for our first seven years, print advertising was still a bigger line item than digital ad spending. Slowly, the blogosphere started to scoop traditional news sources and chew up the revenues of traditional mainstream media companies. 

 

As for search engine optimization, practically nothing is the same. From the day we started to the present, SEO has evolved from stuffing keywords into paragraphs into a far more complex strategy of meeting user needs, building community, establishing relationships with partner sites, and producing the most helpful content possible.

 

These changing conditions led to a world where target consumers in every market became inundated with more noise than ever before. The 24-hour news cycle filled up every second of the day, and smartphones crammed with apps began to vibrate nonstop in our pockets, creating a world where only the most impactful messaging stands out while the rest fades away, doomed to the dustbin of your browser’s search history.

 

At the time of our launch, companies saw the need for high quality content, but their options were limited. Some hired in-house staff writers and content strategists, but bringing on employees can be expensive, and a lot of people weren’t sure what to look for in a content strategist. Freelancers were easier to hire and less risky than taking on employees, but freelancers could be hit or miss. When companies hire a freelancer who can’t get the job done, they end up right back where they started with less time, less money, and the same old problem.

 

Another option was full service marketing firms. These firms could often get the job done, but they tended to be more expensive, and stretched across a wide variety of clients and service offerings. Some clients of full service firms find themselves waiting for their requests to move through a week-long queue, which isn’t tenable for the standard marketing cycle. Full service firms were expensive, too, often paying overhead for an office, account reps, and a wide variety of tools to bring their service offerings to life—and then passing those costs on to their clients.

 

For years before I started our writing agency, I was an employed content strategist by day, and a freelancer for a full service firm by night, so I had a chance to see the strengths and weaknesses of all of these options, which birthed a novel idea: a firm with a reliable method of producing content, a stable of writers who could match the capacity of a growing business, and more competitive pricing than a full service firm.

 

That vision became RedShift Writers. 

Early Wins & Recent Accomplishments

Because we had more than one writer at any time, we could ensure that every piece of content we produced was viewed by two sets of eyes, strengthening our quality assurance beyond that of a lone freelance writer. And because we only focused on content, we could develop a stronger content strategy, honing in on a unique selling proposition that truly separated our clients from their competitors and drove measurable ROI.

 

Early wins included building out a PR and marketing function for a test prep company, which led to thousands of dollars in earned media and customer referrals. We provided support to some of the same full service marketing firms that served hundreds of different clients, successfully filling in gaps to produce robust strategy, content campaigns, and website content that ranked at the top of Google.

 

We also saw the power of content to support businesses beyond just their external campaigns. Our writing helped land companies on the Inc. 500 and NASDAQ Milestone Makers, and make lists such as the 40 Under 40. Our clients have also leveraged stronger written communications to hone in on their position and create more alignment between their product, sales, marketing, and leadership teams. Particularly in the SaaS space, our customers have been able to grow from startups into thought leaders, thanks in part to our support. The numbers stand on their own: the web traffic of our largest client in 2022 eclipsed the web traffic of its next four competitors combined. 

The Next Ten Years

In 2023, we are proud to say that we have a growing team with deep content knowledge and an unending curiosity to innovate what we do. We have expanded our content offerings while fortifying our position as a leader in our market, adding content workshops, positioning briefs, and content roadmaps that bolster the efforts of entrepreneurs, CEOs, CMOs, web developers, and other key business visionaries. 

 

Our research and development efforts consistently scan for the latest competitive advantage, whether it means updating our processes, adjusting existing templates, or exploring trending, experimental tools such as Jasper, Copy.AI, and Chat GPT. At every turn, RedShift Writers follows our own advice to our clients: to position, innovate, and stay first in the mind of our market.

 

We have the utmost appreciation for all of the people who have helped us and supported us along the way: our clients, mentors, vendors, and of course, our dedicated team of writers.

 

Cheers to all of them, to you, the reader, and to many more years of producing high-quality content so that companies can achieve their mission.

 

With gratitude,

 

Daniel J. Cohen

Reflections from a Few of Our Writers

I’ve been lucky to be a part of RedShift Writers since 2020. Over my time with the team, I’ve written content for Hospitality Health ER, John Moore, Tekmetric, and Ampersand, as well as helped out on internal RedShift Writers projects. I’ve drafted SEO blogs, optimizing keywords to drive website traffic, creating website content, and producing timely campaign projects. No matter the project, the companies’ story is always at the forefront. I love learning and capturing their stories through the content we write, getting to know their audiences, and producing content that helps businesses reach their short and long term goals.

I can’t wait to continue to grow with RedShift Writers’ skilled leadership team and my talented co-writers.

Happy 10th birthday to RedShift Writers! Here’s to more learning and growing in the next 10.

Morgan Acree

One of the biggest things I’ve learned at RedShift is that there’s a balance between creativity and consistency, and when you strike the right balance between the two, that’s where writing magic happens. I appreciate how RedShift has created a supportive environment that helps writers grow as professionals and take care of themselves after they put down the pen (well, more like stop typing on the keyboard). Thank you for everything, and I’m excited to kick off 2023 with everyone.

Tina Nazerian

I am proudest—aside from coming on board to this wonderful staff—to have played a role in the rigorous revamps of client websites, where I learned how to generate matchless content tied to a more focused position. My time with the company has taught me more than I thought I could ever know about copywriting, deepened my appreciation for grammar and the optics of building a sentence, and enriched my writing experiences inside and outside of work. One major milestone I remember fondly was completing training and feeling legitimately confident that I could grow and succeed here. I am looking forward to reaching the one-year mark and beyond! Happy writing to all my writers!

Matt Casas

I remember meeting Daniel about 8 years ago in the backyard space of Poison Girl, a bar here in Houston. Having just finished a class on Milton’s polemical tracts during my second-to-last semester of college, my mind was hyper-fixated on the subject of rhetoric that night. I’m not sure if it was fate or pure chance that the only available seats were the ones next to Daniel’s party, but when I sat next to him and he asked what I studied, it immediately opened the floodgates to a conversation about language and persuasion that has continued between us to this day—and that I imagine will stretch far into the future.

When I look back at all the clients we’ve worked with, the number of pages we’ve drafted, the strategies we’ve come up with, and the challenges that we’ve been able to overcome, I feel invigorated. I have to thank Daniel for being an excellent mentor during my first year. But more so, I’m thankful for what our relationship has become, one in which we share a creative tension (dare I say, synergy) that has led to the company we are today.

What makes RedShift Writers truly special is our team. Tina, Morgan, and Matt have each blown me away with their keen ability to think critically about the words on a page while also having a good time. This sense of play and wonder permeates everything we do at RedShift, and I believe that it makes its mark on the content that we write for our clients. We help position companies with great strategy and content, but more subliminally, we’ve become a company that can create worlds and stories that people want to be a part of.

Alex Oriani
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Alex OrianiOur Writing Agency Turns Ten! A Note From Our Founder
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Complete Guide to Business Content Distribution Strategy

How to select and master the right content distribution channels to get in front of your key audience

Many business leaders have gotten the memo that content can expand their business, but have not yet implemented a content distribution strategy for their content. Well-written content can take hours to write, but if it’s not posted online and put in places where your audience is going to find it, all that time spent writing has no payoff. If you do not have a plan to share that content with the world, you are losing potential value when you could be gaining traction with your customers.

 

Fortunately, content distribution is easy enough if you know how to do it. In this guide, we explore how to distribute your business content by exploring categories of content distribution channels. Not all of these channels are necessary for every business, but leveraging the right channels for your business can gain momentum for your content and make an impact in your market.

 

Understanding content distribution will make it easier to assign directives to others to distribute content, too. In turn, getting a good grip on how distribution happens will make it easier to hire the right PR firm, community engagement group, social media agency, or any other vendor who focuses on fulfilling part of your content distribution strategy, making your bidding processes simpler, more efficient, and easier on your budget.

 

This guide will examine the tactics and benefits of six types of business content distribution channels: 

 

  1. Press relations
  2. Guest appearances
  3. Community outreach
  4. Search engine marketing
  5. Owned content
  6. Direct sales

 

These channels offer you a wide variety of options for your business content distribution strategy and are often best used in concert with one another.

 

As you read about each type of channel, it may help to pause and visualize how these channels can be applied to your business. 

 

What are some ideas you can implement immediately to achieve instant upgrades?

Do you have the budget and personnel to make it happen? 

Who can you talk to? 

What are your alternatives?

 

If you ask yourself those questions and truly assess the ideas we have gathered, we promise that by the end of the exercise you will find several easy opportunities to increase how many people see and engage with your brand. 

 

Let’s begin.

Channel Type 1: Press Relations

Press relations, AKA public relations (PR), is about talking to journalists and finding ways to earn media for what you do. Positioning yourself with the media opens opportunities for you to get in front of larger audiences, creating a stir for your business or organization.

PR isn’t cliodynamics. It’s a function any business can use to amplify its message.

Press Relations Benefits

  • Increases brand visibility
  • Builds brand authority
  • Stronger relationships
  • Backlinks

 

Press Relations Tactics

 

Press Relations Tactic 1: Send out press release or press announcement

 

Press releases are a timeless tool, especially in the world of B2B business. Press releases have a simple format that is easy to mimic and use to generate buzz about your company.

 

The idea behind a press release is to send the journalist a version of the story that you wish they would write, but still sounds reasonable and realistic. Journalists will often quote press releases directly if the information is presented in a professional manner.

 

Reasons to Write a Press Release

 

  • New product
  • New hire 
  • New company
  • New funding
  • Big conference
  • Performance milestone
  • Awards
  • Partnerships
  • Mergers and Acquisitions

 

Press Release: Morgan McAllister Joins RedShift Writers as Senior Content Writer

 

Press Release: Senior Content Writer Morgan Acree Joins RedShift Writers

Press Relations Tactic 2: Send out press kit

 

A little more extensive than a press release, a press kit includes several pieces of collateral to tell journalists about your company or recent company news. Press kits are versatile and can be used for a wide variety of purposes.

 

A press kit usually includes:

 

  • Press release
  • Company bio
  • Headshots and leadership bios
  • Product sample(s)
  • Any other relevant information, such as an event invite or upcoming calendar schedule of events

 

Press Relations Tactic 3: Reach out with tips or expert insights

 

Just as journalists may print parts of a press release verbatim because they need content fast in order to do their jobs, they may also take quotes verbatim from experts in the field regarding a story that they are writing. When you create a piece designed to drive thought leadership for your company, make sure to send it to journalists with a note letting them know you are available for interviews and would be happy to lend insights or answer questions. In turn, you may end up in their stories as a voice of authority.

 

Press Relations Tactic 4: Hold a press conference

 

Need to share information that is highly newsworthy to multiple outlets at once? Plan a press conference. You can hold press conferences in person or virtually depending on your needs, the reporters you are trying to reach, the weather, etc.

 

Press Relations Tactic 5: Host an event

 

Whereas a press conference is simply the speakers and the press, an event takes a lot more work. But if you do it right, the event itself can become a story and draw the attention of journalists.

 

Types of Public Relations Events

 

  • Grand openings
  • Parties for customers and other stakeholders
  • Live product tests
  • Product launches
  • Book releases
  • Conferences
  • Workshops
  • Panels
  • Speaking events
  • Publicity stunts
  • Galas

 

Press Relations Tactic 6: Conduct a research study

 

Journalists love data points. It helps them keep things factual. When you send them sound research that has been tested via survey, it takes some of the work off their plates. If you have enough time, try launching a survey and sending the results out in a case study or white paper angled toward your business needs.

 

Press Relations Tips

Press Relations Tip 1: It takes time

 

Do not expect that you will send out a press release and journalists will swoon. You have to build relationships with journalists before they pay attention, and it will take time to calibrate your news pitch so you can learn what they are looking for from sources like you. Keep a journalist database that includes all journalists for your particular beat. If you want to get fancy, you can use a PR database to blast press releases to a bunch of lists of influencers all at once.

 

List of PR Distribution Databases

Cision from PR Newswire
Businesswire
Prowly
GlobeNewswire
PR Buzz

 

If you cannot afford a fancy system like one of these, you can also just email journalists directly and follow up with a phone call. If you send the same email to a lot of journalists, use the BCC function on your email or you will send a spammy-looking email that ticks people off.

 

Press Relations Tip 2: Not everything is news

 

I once knew a window company who wanted to be in the New York Times. Why? Because they read the New York Times, and they wanted to be somewhere with a lot of attention.

 

The problem is that nothing about them warranted a story in the New York Times. The effort it would have taken to pull off such a miracle would not have been worth the cost. It would have been cheaper to take out a full page ad. The New York Times covers some of the nation’s most pressing stories. Its readership just isn’t that interested in glass windows.

 

Not everything is news, and sometimes you have to accept that your company is not as newsworthy as you think it is, or at least not yet. Good PR firms have to explain this to their clients all the time. 

 

If you want to be newsworthy, get creative. Find an angle and pitch journalists that are relevant to your beat and your story. Start small, build press, and use your momentum to grow your presence in the media over time.

 

Press Relations Tip 3: Measurement is tricky

 

I received my masters degree in the field of public relations. Throughout my program, measurement was a hot topic because the impact of PR is difficult to quantify. How do you measure public opinion? How do you assess sentiment? Is it about how many stories you land? How many column inches you take up in the paper? 

 

What about how positively your brand is presented in the media? How do you measure that?

 

There are all kinds of fancy tools to measure sentiment, but there is no magic bullet to measuring public relations. The key is to come up with a goal before you launch your PR efforts so you can measure using the same key performance indicators at the beginning and end of the campaign. You will likely find that your PR performance is tied to other parts of your company such as marketing, especially in the age of digital public relations, where site traffic and other web analytics are used to measure the reach of a news story.

 

Press Relations Tip 4: Be strategic

 

Remember, not everything is news. However, what is news to you may not be news to me. If you are launching a new little library program in your small town, the small town paper may find that newsworthy even if CNBC does not. Your new product offering may not break into the business section at the Chicago Tribune, but a credible business blogger may still write about it. Be strategic in listing out the parties that are most relevant to your business and most likely to run a story about you, and you can save yourself time and effort.

 

Also consider using press relations tactics in coordination with a larger public relations campaign. For example, you may want to plan an event, then send out a press kit with a press release to promote the event. You can even hold multiple events or a press conference followed by a product launch to build a narrative with continuous buzz. 

 

The more methodical you are in your public relations efforts, the more successful you will be.

Channel Type 2: Make Guest Appearances

When you are invited to be a guest on podcasts, shows, or in the editorial pages of publications, it can build credibility for your business. It puts your ideas in front of a mass audience.

 

While being a guest in the media is an extension of press relations and can be used as a complement to previously mentioned press relations tactics, guest appearance outreach is unique enough to warrant its own focal point.

 

Guest Appearance Benefits

 

  • Builds credibility/authority
  • Spotlights ideas
  • Strengthens and expands relationships
  • Builds awareness

 

Guest Appearance Tactics

 

Guest Appearance Tactic 1: Write a guest post or editorial

 

Are you a good writer? Or do you have a good content writer on staff or available as a vendor? A guest post or editorial may be the way to go.

 

Many news outlets and blogs accept guest posts or editorials because they need content to fill their pages. Your target audience is likely tuning in to many of those outlets; if you are already researching outlets for PR opportunities, you will likely come across guest post and editorial opportunities along the way.

 

Make sure to only submit to relevant media, and to come up with a great angle for the beat. Otherwise your post will not get placed and your efforts may be wasted.

 

How to find guest post opportunities

 

  • Search Google

 

Type “submit a guest post” into Google and see what comes up. There are a ton of lists out there put together by content marketers about the “100 best places to guest post” by year, niche, etc. It’s easy to find if you Google around a little.

 

  • Connect with bloggers and editorial boards

 

Network, like you would with journalists.

 

  • Join chambers and organizations

 

Most business chambers have access to places where you can submit short blurbs about your company.

 

  • Trade space with partners and clients

 

Like the business chambers you are a member of, your clients and partners want you to succeed. Many will give you space for free.

 

  • Check in with your alma mater

 

Your alumni association probably has a newsletter. The school newspaper would probably run a story, too.

 

Guest Appearance Tactic 2: Appear on podcasts and streaming shows

 

It seems like everyone has a podcast. Podcasts need guests because the podcast business model, like that of news outlets, demands a regular churn of new content.

 

Find podcasts and streaming shows that are relevant to your beat and your business, then reach out. They may be happy to host you.

 

How to find podcast guest opportunities

 

  • Search Google

 

Use a search strategy similar to the one we used to find guest post opportunities.

 

  • Scan YouTube, then Twitch

 

There are a lot of streamers out there. See if any of their shows align with what you do.

 

  • Check Twitter

 

Twitter is an interesting place to look for podcasts because it shows you what is trending. Podcasts are made for trend marketing.

 

Guest Appearance Tactic 3: Do some public speaking (solo or panels)

 

Public speaking organizations now carry clout. Ted Talks, Ignite Talks, Spark Talks and other innovations in oratory have led to widespread speaking events with market focus and professional, global branding.

 

Public speaking does not have to take place in front of a large audience in order to benefit the speaker and their business. It is easy now to gather pictures and videos of people talking to an audience, both digitally and in person.

 

The content of our speeches shapes our dialogue. It can move minds.

How to find public speaking opportunities

 

  • Search Google

 

Again, repeat what we did in the guest post opportunities section.

 

  • Talk to schools

 

Connect with schools you attended; schools you have donated to; programs at universities in your city that in any way connect to your business; and student organizations that are relevant to your company.

 

  • Talk to professional organizations

 

These groups are often looking for guest speakers to pitch their business. For example, Business Networking International (BNI) groups exist across the United States and are always seeking new guests.

 

Guest Appearance Tips

 

Guest Appearance Tip 1: Do your research

 

No matter what you are pitching, you need to pitch the right people the right way with the right information, just like you would with journalists. Sites that take guest posts usually require that you meet certain editorial guidelines. Positioning to be a podcast guest means understanding the podcasters and their audiences. Organizations accepting submissions from public speakers have similar processes to follow. Comply with what is needed to land these opportunities.

 

Guest Appearance Tip 2: Write strong content

 

If you are guest posting, turn in a great piece. You can update content on your own site, but you do not usually have that luxury with a piece on another site. Make sure your content is powerful.

 

Guest Appearance Tip 3: Practice your speech or presentation

 

Public speaking is difficult, even if you are naturally good at it. If you want your speech to land, you need to put in work before you step on stage.

 

Guest Appearance Tip 4: Prep for all interviews

 

Like speeches, interviews require prep, although it is prep of a different kind. Interviews range greatly in nature, so how you prepare will, too. If you do not know a lot about handling interviews, please find someone who does.

 

Guest Appearance Tip 5: Do as much advanced work as possible

 

There are two reasons you want to be prepared before going on the road. First, if you are doing a five-city tour, you do not want to have to write social media posts and press releases, or film a bunch of videos or record audio while you are trying to prepare for your speech. The bigger the opportunity the more true that rings; no one wants to write a 500 word post after a long ride from the airport to the hotel.

 

The second reason you should prepare content in advance is that you can optimize performance by making sure it goes out at the right time, and preferably as soon as possible. The longer content is out there, the more chance it has to pick up traction and traffic. Put a longer tail on the impact of your guest appearance efforts by doing that work in advance.

 

Or better yet…

 

Guest Appearance Tip 6: Hire creative professionals to help

 

All tasks involving pitching people can be sourced one way or another. So can all the writing, design, development, etc. There are vendors, free lancers, and employees who can pick up different parts, make a good living, and thrive. Don’t do it all yourself. Find the right help.

Channel Type 3: Community Outreach

Akin to press relations, community outreach involves finding all of the community groups that communicate with your company. Community outreach tends to look beyond corporate media relationships to the grassroots connections you can make for your business, no matter your size or focus. 

 

Community Outreach Benefits

 

  • Softer sale
  • Authentic connections
  • Shows values
  • Qualifies leads
  • Brings people together

 

Community Outreach Tactics

Community Outreach Tactic 1: Pursue social good

 

What causes do you care about? How do you want to make a difference? Where do you donate charitable funds?

 

Social good spaces are where you can meet a lot of people whose values align with your own because these spaces are actually built around those efforts.

 

There are a million social good spaces out there, so searching for a space can become a time-consuming process. Fortunately, social good organizations tend to communicate clearly about what their mission is, so it should be easy for you to quickly tell whether or not their efforts align with yours. Research different programs and applications for things you care about and send them content.

 

Social good opportunities also carry direct business advantages: they clarify what you stand for, build goodwill, and save you money on taxes. If you launch your own social good project, remember to send out a press release about it. You may as well tell the world and inspire others to do something good, too.

 

Community Outreach Tactic 2: Join trade and professional groups

 

Every profession brings a different mix of people. If you work in construction, you probably know roofers, plumbers, window and cabinet companies, architects, designers, lawyers, and many other people who are in and around the construction process. Since we are a writing company, we tend to network a lot with marketers such as web developers, graphic designers, PR teams, social media strategists, and other roles in the marketing profession. 

 

You are probably already thinking about the spaces that are relevant to your own industry. Go network in those spaces. They offer a lot of room for business growth.

 

List of Professional Group Examples

 

  • Practitioner (Role) Groups
  • Industry (Vertical) Groups
  • Local (Geography) Groups
  • Age (Generational) Groups
  • Identity (Culture) Groups

 

There are plenty of other ways to sort and find groups to network with. Remember: in addition to joining groups that are directly relevant to your industry, also find groups frequented by your prospects. If a client has been ideal for you, network in their industry space. For example, if you are a cleaning company who has found success with medium-sized businesses in tall buildings, attend events that those companies go to. You can find a lot of information about a company just by Googling them.

 

Those who you compete with may still trade leads with you, or even want to partner up on something fun and prosperous, so be sure to be among others in your industry sometimes, too. 

 

You likely already know who many of those folks are.

 

Once you find the groups you want to engage with, check out all the ways you can get in touch with them.

 

Possible sub-distribution channels within community outreach include:

 

  • Online forums- Usually on social media.
  • Luncheons- Rubber chicken and conversation.
  • Galas- Fancy shmancy suit and tie stuff.
  • Educational Events- Workshops, speeches, and presentations.
  • General Networking- Coffee, bar nights, bowling, whatever.

 

Your industry also likely has a ton of certifications and awards. Consider applying for both.


If you’re a B2B business, you will probably also see a ton of opportunities for your clients to connect with their customers. Let them know about those as a matter of service, and build ways for them to make it happen. (Customer experience hacking makes life better for everybody. Boom!)

 

Community Outreach Tactic 3: Join business chambers

 

Business chambers are easy to find. They operate much in the same way as professional and trade groups, and you can find them the same way. Structurally, they offer similar opportunities, but are composed only of business owners. These groups have a lot of decision makers in them.

 

Community Outreach Tactic 4: Seek out opportunities from government bodies

 

Government groups are also fairly easy to find, and there are a ton of them out there. If they are important to your business or could add a prosperous dynamic to what you do, check them out. To get started, search for Small Business Administration opportunities in your area. You can also search for economic development councils, especially ones that are related to local public universities or municipalities.

 

When we think of the government, a lot of people think about elected officials. The government definitely is inclusive of those folks and their staff, but it is much, much more. There are departments at the local, state, and federal level all putting out projects and vying for budgets and attention. There is a market there.

 

You can also find quasi-governmental bodies, such as public commissions, public-private partnerships, or public honors for private entities. Maybe you can get a client an award at City Hall. 

 

Community Outreach Tactic 5: Attend art and culture events

 

Museums, galleries, and recreational establishments all hold different events with paintings, DJs, discussion groups, movie screenings, concerts, tastings, and plenty more. A few are bound to overlap with your interests and purpose. Go connect. Have fun!

 

Not sure where to start? Ask yourself: what is the largest cultural event in your area? The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo is the largest annual event in mine. It has a ton of committees and individual tents where people need assistance for the day. You can network there just by getting involved in the organization.

 

Community Outreach Tactic 6: Go for the goal at sports and recreation events

 

A lot of wealthy people love sports, and not just the most popular sports. In most large American cities, football, baseball, basketball, and perhaps hockey are the biggest sports. However, squash is a well known game in many parts of the world, and is a favorite of people who are wealthy enough to have memberships to very nice squash courts. If you network with the squash crowd, you can sell them your service, or you can sell a service specifically around squash. Either is an opportunity made real by those willing to network in squash circles.

 

Community Outreach Tactic 7: Support schools

 

Kids deserve to learn in a good environment, so schools can use all the help they can get. There are opportunities at all levels of education to get involved.

 

You can:

 

  • Talk to classes
  • Join PTOs
  • Volunteer
  • Support a good policy
  • Launch a scholarship

 

There are certainly good business opportunities here, but make sure they follow true goodwill if you are going to go in that direction. Schools are a good place to engage and be helpful as you network.

 

Community Outreach Tips

 

Community Outreach Tip 1: Make a non-mutually exclusive list of all stakeholder audiences

 

Write down literally all possible stakeholders for your company. Every kind of consumer, influencer, community member, media outlet, regulator, partner, etc. Start with categories; you do not have to be specific. 

 

Once you have all of your audience categories listed, you can use the list to further guide research into those audiences. You may already have a list of names in a company CRM. You can also easily hire people who will build large lists that can help you take shortcuts as long as you give those vendors strong direction on what information is to be gathered.

 

Community Outreach Tip 2: Focus your efforts

 

Unless being in a ton of different communities is essential to your brand, as might be the case with a PR firm, be judicious about community outreach. You do not need to be in every area. Find the ones that make sense for you and focus on those.

 

For example, if you want to position your business to win government contracts, you probably need to get good at responding to Requests for Proposals (RFPs), and get to know the people who draw those up so you know the best way to respond to them. Public meetings to discuss those bids are eye-opening if you have never attended them. 

 

Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas is currently undergoing a $1.5 billion airport makeover that started in 2014. That money was bid out to the public by the City of Houston, who owns the airport. When a bunch of people show up to a meeting about how to bid on more than a billion dollars in drywall, carpet, ceilings, floors, fabrication, transportation, catering, and whatever else is needed to complete that bid, that’s an opportunity for many businesses to find clients.

 

Where do you need to go to find those clients fast so you don’t scour the whole world in search of something undefined?

Community Outreach Tip 3: Connect people when possible

 

People love to be connected to other people in a mutually beneficial way. Think of other people and connect them with a well-worded email or text about how great they both are and how you thought they might work well together. The people you connect will benefit from their relationship with one another, and both parties will remember you as a connector who is worth keeping in their network. Not only do you get good business karma, but they will also be likely to return the favor down the road.

 

Community Outreach Tip 4: Let genuine interest guide you

 

Something about the communities you engage in must ring true to you. Otherwise, hire someone else to do your community outreach work. It is okay if a group is not for you, but then you are not the one meant to network there.

Channel Type 4: Search Engine Marketing (SEM)

Search Engine Marketing (SEM) involves making your company easy to find on search engines.  It includes both Search Engine Optimization (SEO), which is called “organic search,” and Pay Per Click (PPC), which is called “paid search.”

 

The goal of SEO is showing up on search engine results pages (SERPs) or in tables and snippets at the top of SERPs, then driving traffic to your website. The goal of PPC is to drive leads by getting people to click the paid ads that show up at the very top of search results.

 

Search Engine Marketing Benefits

 

  • Softer sale
  • Big reach
  • Measurable
  • Flexible
  • Fixable

 

SEM Tactics

 

SEM Tactic 1: Research keywords and write targeted content 

 

Creating and distributing well-conceived, well-executed content through the right distribution channels is going to feed into SEO. In other words, posting content is going to generate traffic to your website.

 

Part of making your content powerful is optimizing it. To optimize your content, start with keyword research tools to find keywords that are commonly searched by your audience. 

 

There are a ton of SEO research tools that evaluate keywords, including:

 

 

The basic idea behind keyword research is to find the ideas that people are searching for online (keywords), then create content that shows up when they search for those ideas. It is best to target keywords that are:

 

  • Relevant to your business
  • Easy to rank for
  • Aligned with the search intent of your prospect

 

Once you find those keywords, you can design a whole content strategy around them and leverage search engines for content distribution. Make sure to include the keywords in the headline and first paragraph, and to sprinkle them naturally throughout the article.

 

SEM Tactic 2: Optimize on-page content 

 

Even if your articles are angled toward search engines, you must still optimize the SEO-specific fields on your site associated with each page or post in order to achieve true search engine optimization.

 

These fields include:

 

  • Title Tags
  • Meta Descriptions
  • Custom URLs
  • Alt Text on Images
  • Headings


If you update your own website, you probably have a plug-in that tells you how to fill these out. If someone else updates your site, check in with them to see how to update each of these sections so you can include keywords for each.

 

SEM Tactic 3: Build backlinks

 

A link from another site to your site is called a backlink. Backlinks show Google that you are a legitimate site. The more backlinks you have from sites that are recognized by Google’s search engines, the more likely your site will rise in search rankings. 

 

Common Backlink Tactics

 

  • Press Relations
  • Guest Posts
  • Guest Appearances
  • Community Outreach
  • Signing Up for Directories and Other Listings
  • Creating Content People Want to Link to
  • Social Media

 

SEM Tactic 4: Enhance your technical SEO

 

Technical SEO is not so much a central part of your content distribution strategy as it is a prerequisite for Google to like your website. If your site has a lot of broken links, loads slowly, or is difficult to navigate because the link structure does not make much sense, then Google won’t like it.

 

A good web developer and a content strategist can make your site much technically cleaner.

 

SEM Tactic 5: Invest in pay per click (PPC)

 

Pay per click (PPC) is the paid advertising side of SEM. Google’s pay per click program is called Google AdWords. It allows you to create ads based on certain keywords, similar to how you practice SEO. The difference is that when you pay for PPC, you show up in the advertisements above the organic search results. When users click these ads, you are charged a certain amount for each click (get it? Pay *per* click).

 

Pay per click campaigns, like other ad campaigns, depend on targeting the right customers (through search intent) and writing a sharp headline and description text to compel them to click. Google AdWords fortunately offers lots of guidance for how to maximize your ads throughout the process.

 

Search Engine Marketing Tips

SEM Tip 1: Follow Google’s rules

 

Google is the world’s largest search engine. It is most likely that the majority of your prospects are using Google as opposed to other search engines. Some smaller search engines also tether themselves to Google’s philosophies and approach, so following suit with Google will set you up for general success.

 

It cannot hurt to check out other search engine performance too, so take a look at sites like Bing and Yahoo at some point to see if they are worth your time to optimize for. But start with Google. If your site ranks well on Google, chances are it will rank well on Bing and Yahoo, too. 

 

SEM Tip 2: Keep building content

 

Activity begets more activity. Keep writing and designing content in various forms. Write, design, make videos and presentations, and do anything else you can to build up your site content and provide value to your audience. Search engines will reward you for it.

 

SEM Tip 3: Test, check, adjust

 

Google does not entirely share how its search engines work, so you need to observe your content and site performance over time. Keep an eye on your web traffic and performance through Google Analytics, SEMRush, or HubSpot and then adapt to overall trends.

 

One way Google does help out is by telling you when a big update is coming, so even if you do not know exactly how it works, you can still measure changes that come with general search engine updates. Even better, see what SEO specialists are saying about Google updates whenever they happen so you can shortcut some of the dirty work of testing the changes yourself.

 

SEM Tip 4: Source help if needed

 

SEM takes a lot of time and dedication. A little investment can go a long way. Consider hiring vendors to make the most of your search engine marketing efforts sooner rather than later.

 

Potential vendors who can upgrade your SEM performance include:

 

  • SEO vendors
  • PPC vendors
  • Content writing agencies
  • Graphic designers
  • Web developers
  • Videographers
  • Photographers
  • Social media companies

Channel Type 5: Owned Content

Owned content distribution channels are all the ones under your control, from your website to your office and every other asset. If you have vehicles, you can put a sign on them. Same with  a wall that you own. 

 

Owned content can be pushed out through channels you do not own through guest posts and press relations, but it is mainly designed for content that goes directly on your website, brochures, phone scripts, and other major collateral. It may also be pushed out through spaces that are quasi-owned. For example, you control most aspects of your social media pages, even if you do not control the websites that host them. Therefore, these pages are under your control but not technically yours. Nevertheless, they are a big opportunity to connect with your audience.

 

Owned Content Benefits

 

  • Ownership of ideas
  • Direct attention and SEO traffic
  • Builds value in the company
  • Certainty in distribution

 

Owned Content Tactics

Owned Content Tactic 1: Update your website

 

Since your website is basically your digital storefront, you should always leverage it for authority and performance. When people land on your site, you want them to understand your service and start looking to buy.

 

Just like a physical location, the changes you can make to your website are limited only by your imagination. Unlike a physical location though, they are far less limited by your budget.

 

When looking at ways to update your website with fresh content and a new look, there are several broad categories of subtactics worth exploring.

 

Website Update Tactics

 

Add Pages

Adding new pages to your site will expand your sitemap, increasing the likelihood that pages will be indexed by Google, linked to by other websites, or browsed by website visitors.

 

Possible new web content for your website includes:

 

 

Update Pages

 

If you do not want to add an entirely new page, you can also add content to an existing page, or otherwise change the content on the page.

 

Possible page updates you can make to your website include:

 

  • Adding or changing the footer of your website
  • Adding sections of new web content to an existing page
  • Adding new photos, videos, or graphic illustrations
  • Editing or enlarging existing paragraphs
  • Adding plug-ins and widgets to your page such as graphs, tickers, countdown clocks, and social media feeds

 

Change Pictures

 

Altering the images on your site by upgrading them to higher quality or optimizing the alt text can be a fast, easy way to improve the optimization of your site.

 

Change Template

 

Changing your website template may require a larger overhaul effort than other tactics, but moving widgets, plug-ins, content, and graphics around can make a big difference in your content performance. Some digital marketing CMOs spend their days testing two versions of the same page (AKA A/B testing), then directing traffic to only those that perform best. Eventually, they are able to optimize the template of the website for the best possible performance. Any company, whether it’s a small business, a medium-size business, or a conglomerate, can take the same approach.

 

Owned Content Tactic 2: Launch email campaigns

 

Decades ago, businesses depended on a mailing list and a phone list to reach their customers. Today, email lists have become the new central repository for most customer information.

 

Email campaigns target prospect lists that you have either tailored or purchased specifically for your needs. Oftentimes, these campaigns are aimed at people who actually opted in to receive more information, making for fertile ground for rich interaction with your intended audience.

 

Email campaigns are based on sequences of emails tied to user behavior. 

 

Types of Email Campaigns

 

  • Direct sales emails: Make the ask for purchase.
  • Educational emails: Inform the customer, providing them some new knowledge that is relevant to their interests.
  • Promotional emails: Highlight a specific offer.
  • Seasonal emails: Highlight something related to the time of year and your customers’ seasonal interests.
  • Drip campaigns: Send out a series of continuous emails designed around a specific objective for your company.
  • Reengagement emails: Loop in “cold” customers who have fallen out of touch.
  • News emails: Inform customers of something happening now.

 

Each of these email campaigns can be used in sequence with one another and in varying patterns to maximize results. Some individual emails or email marketing campaigns can fulfill more than one purpose, adding more depth and texture to your efforts.

 

Tweak your email campaigns the same way you do your website. Try sending out two batches to the same group with only one changed variable. See which version of the email gets better results. Go with what works.

 

Owned Content Tactic 3: Enhance your social media presence

 

Social media networks were once a secret weapon. Now, many of the largest social media sites have gone mainstream. But social media is constantly evolving to offer new opportunities to engage your audience, whether its emerging social media networks or new ad services added to older networks. 

 

Social media presents the opportunity for direct engagement with customers, but direct engagement must be used cautiously. For many brands, the time commitment and risk of PR mistakes outweighs the potential benefits of an ongoing discussion with your market. Nevertheless, almost all companies can find a reasonable, positive way to use social media. And in many industries, it is vital to push a consistent social media drip to keep audiences engaged.

 

Social Media Content Distribution Tactics

  • #Hashtag campaigns: Design a campaign and assign a #hashtag to it.
  • Live streams: Talk directly to your audience.
  • Webinars: Plan a digital event or workshop and gather a crowd.
  • Cool art: People love to share imagery. You can always use memes.

25 Social Media Content Distribution Channels

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Reddit
  • Quora
  • Snapchat
  • Vimeo
  • Twitch
  • Google Reviews
  • Flickr
  • Medium
  • Discord
  • SoundCloud
  • Nextdoor
  • Meetup
  • Clubhouse
  • Periscope
  • Triller
  • Goodreads
  • Yelp
  • Vimeo

 

You do not have to be on all of these, and there are tons of other social media channels out there beyond these 25.

 

Owned Content Tips

 

Owned Content Tip 1: Plan your calendar

 

Instead of trying to keep up the pace with day-to-day churn, plan your calendar out in advance so you can develop quality content on a regular basis. Site updates, email campaigns, and social media can quickly grow into an enormous beast within your marketing department. If directed properly, owned content can benefit your business, but it can also be overwhelming to manage. 

 

Keep a clean, easy-to-use content calendar that you can lean on to know what’s next. Hold periodic meetings to discuss what is on deck and to brainstorm so you can stay ahead of the calendar, no matter what content distribution channel you are discussing.

Owned Content Tip 2: Be consistent

 

Keep producing and testing content. Activity begets interest over time. Stay at it.

 

If you are unsure where to get started, remember that you do not have to turn everything on at once. Think carefully about your overall content strategy before focusing on distribution instead of diving headfirst into trying to do everything at the same time. Planning will save you a ton of time, headaches, and budget.

 

Owned Content Tip 3: Ramp up

 

Start small, then grow. You have to walk before you can run. You have to get a handle on one owned content channel before diving into another.

 

Owned Content Tip 4: Align and integrate all owned content efforts

 

Whatever is happening in your email campaigns should complement what is happening on your blog. Your social media should push out blog posts and videos. Your videos should have transcripts and images. Seek alignment in your voice, style, and activities across all channels.

 

Owned Content tip 5: Lean into your strengths

 

If you’re good at video, use video. If you prefer to write, write. Leverage your company’s natural talents and hire out the rest of the work.

 

Owned Content Tip 6: Optimize

 

Social media channels in particular operate according to specific rules. Similar to search engine marketing’s relationship to Google and other search engines, social media companies require marketers to play into certain algorithmic preferences, usually discovered by posting and testing the performance of your content. Perform tests to figure out what works best.

 

Owned Content Tip 7: Hire content writers, graphic designers, web developers, and other strategists

 

Remember to lean on hired talent! You do not need to do everything, and in fact, can’t. 

Channel Type 6: Direct Sales

Last but not least are all of your sales channels. To exist, a business needs at least one customer (or client, if you prefer that term). Your sales team knows a lot about your product and your audience. Your marketing team and your sales team must work together for you to maximize the impact of both. If your marketing team develops collateral that is useful to sales, you will see a higher quantity of larger sales close at a more rapid pace.

 

Direct Sales Content Distribution Benefits

 

  • Warms up leads
  • Closes sales
  • Cross sells and upsells by introducing new products and ideas

 

Direct Sales Tactics

Direct Sales Tactic 1: Leverage telemarketing

 

In spite of severe regulatory restrictions implemented over the past few decades, telemarketing still works. Your phone team is usually one of your most dedicated sets of evangelists from inside your company. Successful telemarketers operate via adaptable scripts and know how to navigate almost any possible conversation with a prospect.

 

Use telemarketing as a chance to impress any new messages upon the people you’re calling. Just like your service department, your sales team can carry forward important brand messages as they talk to your audiences. Make it part of their script to offer marketing collateral as a followup to their calls. Invite them to events. Get the message through on the phone.

 

Direct Sales Tactic 2: Make your pitch face-to-face with door-to-door sales

 

Never underestimate a sales rep who can pitch people one by one. These folks are persistent. They have to be; the failure rate is too high.

 

Face-to-face sales reps can hand out brochures or promotional items of follow up via digital means. Make sure to leverage their good-old-fashioned content distribution capabilities.

 

Direct Sales Tactic 3: Attend trade shows

 

Trade shows and conferences are where many companies build authority. In many industries, there are specific shows that everyone goes to. These shows get plenty of publicity that you can use to your advantage.

 

Consider preparing well in advance for trade shows so you can maximize all opportunities and prepare your content for distribution. With so much foot traffic, you should be able to get your content out to critical prospects without too much trouble.

 

Direct Sales Tactic 4: Launch direct mail and email campaigns

 

With direct sales emails and direct mail campaigns, you can send content directly to a client’s inbox.

 

Direct Sales Content Distribution Tips

 

Direct Sales Tip 1: Connect sales to marketing

 

If your marketers, product leaders, and sales reps are connected, you will eventually see powerful content messaging and distribution arise from their relationships. Make sure they are collaborating.

 

Everything you produce for marketing can be turned into sales content. If you are writing ebooks for key audiences, those can be broken into tip sheets and all other kinds of material that are direct sales content delivered to the prospect by hand from your sales team. Leverage all of your efforts together. Use the content you develop in one place to be distributed through plenty of other channels.

 

Let no good content go to waste.

 

Direct sales tip 2: The sale is the point

 

While direct sales channels are good content distribution channels, the sale takes priority. A lot of sales discussions are facilitated through conversation as opposed to content.

 

When it makes more sense to sell than to distribute content, focus on closing the sale.

Jumpstart Your Content Distribution Strategy

A sound content distribution strategy is essential to your business. Content distribution expands your reach, putting your message in front of new audiences and creating room for new opportunities. While you do not need to leverage every channel, taking the time to find the right content distribution channels can pay off for years to come. Smart content distribution strategy multiplies the effect of your content, making better use of your time and resources.

 

Now that you have an immediate list of the most common channels to explore, you should be able to find the ones you want to leverage and start amplifying. 

 

Need help figuring out where to start?

 

If you have any followup questions, contact RedShift Writers for a conversation. Our experience in content strategy spans both content production and content distribution. RedShift Writers has deep experience in writing and distribution in both the public and private sector. Whether you are exploring content strategy for social media channels, news outlets, newsletters, ads, or any other medium, drop us a line at 832-489-7643.

 

See RedShift Writers’ full service offerings.

 

Have questions? Read our FAQs.

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Daniel J. CohenComplete Guide to Business Content Distribution Strategy
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Five Powerful Phrases for Writing Partners

Five Powerful Phrases for Writing Partners

No writer is an island. By finding our fellow writing partners and working together on projects rather than always flying solo, we can exponentially improve our writing. There is something irreplaceable about bouncing around words and sentence structure with another person to help us pinpoint exactly the right way to convey our intended meaning, to shape our inner thoughts, and to fashion them into a piece of writing. When we write with another person and establish a rhythm, we improve our skills and produce better work.

 

Building a relationship with another writer takes time, though. It’s one thing to proof a piece for grammatical errors. A step above that is to give somebody basic feedback on their work by telling them what you like or don’t like. But where two writers often achieve their full potential is when they establish a rhythmic back and forth discussion about the piece that makes beautiful prose move across the page. Powerful collaboration takes time, dedication, and a willingness to truly understand one another.

 

Over the past few years, RedShift has established numerous successful partnerships among our writers and between ourselves and our clients. One thing we have noticed that has enhanced our collaborations between writing partners is the use of certain magical phrases that keep our minds and our conversations active. These phrases have led to some of our best work. Try them out to see if they help you, too.

1) Try it.

There is a push-pull relationship that often happens in a successful writing partnership in which both writers have different perspectives on a piece of writing. One writer conveys what they think, and the other writer listens; then, they switch. Eventually, both writers need to hear each other out and decide how to integrate either one or both perspectives into the piece. Sometimes, we may even uncover a new perspective that unlocks additional creative potential. 

 

At the end of the day, though, the words we use aloud to communicate with one another are not foolproof. We may struggle to use words to get our point across during the writing process, even if we are gifted with words to begin with, and doubly so if we feel strongly that our preference is the better one and that nothing else will do for a given part of the writing.

 

If you’re working with another writer on trying to find the right way to say something, and the person you’re working with starts to verbalize the sentence aloud (“What if we put it like this…”), that’s usually a good opportunity to say “try it.” Then, they can write it down on the page before it leaves their head, striking while the iron is hot. 

 

Conversely, if your writing partner seems on a roll and you don’t want to interrupt, try jotting down what they’re saying. Your writing partner might speak faster than you can type, so you may only be able to jot down the beginning of what they say. By writing it down, you can remind them of where they started so they can retrace the thread and capture the whole idea.

 

“Try it” tells your writing partner to feel free to play with what is there. It dissipates all of the judgment that might have been looming in the air. The person saying it opens themselves up to the idea in front of them, and the person then challenged to “try it” is given the motivation to outline their vision on the page so both partners can assess it.

2) Show me.

“Show me” busts down a lot of the same barriers as “try it.” It’s a phrase that implicitly reminds us of how we should usually write: by showing, not telling. It also expresses from one writing partner to another that while an idea may be good, they are having a hard time immediately envisioning it. If we are shown an idea, we can then make a healthy assessment of it. 

 

“Show me” helps overcome a lack of visualization. If you’re helping your writing partner write an instructional piece about how to clean a dog’s paws, and you notice there’s a lack of detail that could confuse the reader such as “take a wet wipe and rub it on your dog’s paws,” you could ask the writer to “show me” what that looks like. 

 

They may say something like, “Well, the wet wipe should be made of natural ingredients. You also want to clean the pads of their paws, and wipe between each digit of their paw. Oh, and the dog will probably try to pull their paws away if they are sensitive, so you may want to have someone help you calm them and keep them still.” And suddenly you have a lot more information and detail to work with. You could even go on to ask, “Can you show me what different dirty paws look like?”, to which your writing partner might respond, “Sure! They could have muddy paws, dusty paws, paws with dirt caked on the nails…” and now you’re writing a far more helpful and informative piece. 

 

“Show me” can also stave off what Stephen Pinker calls the Curse of Knowledge, the assumption that someone knows more than they actually do. The Curse of Knowledge leads to writing that goes over the reader’s head. They won’t understand it unless they go look it up themselves. If you want them to understand the concept you’re discussing without the same amount of knowledge that you have, you will need to break some concepts down for them. “Show me” encourages writers to outline their thoughts in a way that can be understood, or “seen”, by the reader.

3) Break it.

Many writers talk too much on the page. We write too many words. We say the same thing over and over again, going on and on to make our point. 

 

Sometimes, readers need a pause to process what you are saying. A long complex-compound sentence can be powerful once in a while. But if your piece consists entirely of long, complex-compound sentences with no paragraph breaks, you’re going to overwhelm the reader with a wall of words. 

 

“Break it” is helpful when a sentence with multiple clauses becomes unwieldy and would simply be better if it were made into more than one sentence.

 

Here’s an example:

 

The people gathered around, pointing at the seals flopping around on the pier, drawing the attention of onlookers from a passing boat, who snapped pictures as the ship made its way toward the dock.

 

There are multiple ideas going on here: 

 

  • Seals are flopping around
  • A ship is sailing by
  • There are people on the ship
  • Those people are taking pictures of the seals

 

Putting all of that in one sentence is not only confusing but also leads to grammatical errors; in this case, the passing boat is supposedly “snapping pictures” as it sails “toward the dock”, which isn’t what the writer means. 

 

If we “break it” and rearrange it, it will read better.

 

We might edit it to read:

 

People gathered around to gawk as the seals flopped around on the pier. Onlookers from a passing boat pointed and took pictures as they sailed toward the dock.

 

See how there is less going on in any given sentence and you can follow the train of logic from one idea to the next? When we “break it”, we make the sentence into smaller, more easily digestible pieces.

 

“Break it” can also apply on the paragraph level, too. If you look at the page and it seems like there are no paragraph breaks in sight, you may want to separate each large idea into individual paragraphs. 

 

“Break it” naturally leads to conversations about reorganizing and restructuring a piece of writing to be easier to read. Sometimes you’ll find that the conclusion of one paragraph is better as the lead sentence of the next paragraph, or vice versa. So feel free to also say “combine it”, “move it here”, “move it there”, and experiment with the order of your writing. 

 

Headings, section titles, subtitles, and lists are also great ways to break up information to make it more approachable and less intimidating to your readers.

4) See what you think.

Your writing partner has good ideas, and so do you. When you say to your writing partner, “Let me know what you think” or “Tell me what you think” or any other derivative of that phrase, it is a sign that you trust their opinion. In a healthy writing relationship, your writing partner will give you open, honest feedback, telling you what they liked about your writing and how you may be able to improve it.



If your writing partner is asking for your opinion, it’s important to remember that good writing is all about taking chances. The writer you’re working with is testing an idea on the page—using a new frame, playing with a new voice, or exploring new ways to structure their ideas—so it’s important to encourage experimentation while also letting them know your honest opinion. If we simply tell our writing partners, “It’s great!” or “I don’t like it” without telling them why, we are doing them a disservice. 

 

One good way to encourage your writing partner is by actively being inspired by their ideas. If they show you a piece that they framed as a funny list, you can let them know that you liked it by adding to their idea. Your writing partner might say, “I wanted to introduce this piece with a checklist for summer; what do you think?” And you can say something like, “Sandals, sunscreen… what if we add koozies?!” 

 

When you allow yourself to be inspired by your partner’s ideas, they in turn become inspired by your ideas, creating a positive feedback loop or a creative flow between you and your writing partner. 

 

You may be thinking “Doesn’t that remove my fingerprints from the piece?” or “What if every time I say ‘see what you think’, they think that my idea stinks and delete what I have written?”

 

If those thoughts enter your head, remember three things: 

 

First, when you have a collaborative relationship with a good writing partner, the end piece is co-authored equally. No one owns any particular words or paragraphs. Your contribution to the piece is not the words you typed, but rather the effort you put in to get to the final product. Let the ego go. It’s not about who is the better writer; it’s about the greatness you can achieve together. 

 

Second, just as you want your partner to “see what you think”, they deserve to have you ask what they think, too, especially when it can make your piece so much better. If your writing partner is inspired by what you wrote and wants to add to it or heighten it, don’t be afraid to allow ideas to evolve with their contribution, even if it means re-writing some of what you wrote. Some of the words you write are going to get deleted, and that’s okay. Those words got the conversation going, and established a framework for the piece.

 

Lastly, if you are feeling too much friction to keep up basic communication with a writing partner, you may want to take a step back and talk about the relationship. If they always seem to shoot your ideas down, talk about it. Let them know how it makes you feel. Stay calm, but be firm that you feel like your creative potential is being hampered. If they are not clear about why they dislike your ideas, you may want to ask them, “Why? What don’t you like about my idea?”

 

As writers and general creatives, we can sometimes let our egos get in the way, so actually letting someone know how it makes you feel when they don’t provide constructive feedback may help them become a better collaborator. Of course, there may come a time when you need to move on and explore the possibilities that other writing relationships have to offer. 

5) I like that.

While it is always important to give honest feedback and to suggest how to improve a piece of writing, sometimes a person simply needs confirmation that their writing is good.

 

“I like that” can be a simple, positive nod to a phrase that stuck the landing. If you’ve both been searching for the right word or phrase and someone finally lands on it, you may find the other writing partner saying “I like it” or “Yeah, that’s it.”

 

“I like that” can also be used to encourage someone to carry an idea even further. If your writing partner uses a particular word such as “howdy” to evoke a folksy or plain tone, you can say, “I like that. That’s folksy,” to encourage them to explore other folksy language and build on that tone.

 

Telling your writing partner that an idea works gives them new techniques for their tool kit and makes them feel more confident about writing outside the box. 

 

Try telling your writing partner every once in a while that you appreciate working with them and are grateful for that opportunity, too. If you want people to enjoy working with you, encourage them. Lift up their strengths. The opportunity to write together is priceless.

What phrases do you use when working with a partner?

Every writing relationship is unique. Different writing partners may vary the words they use when working together. These are just five of the phrases we use at RedShift Writers.

 

Keep a running list so you can recognize the phrases that unlock creative potential in your writing relationships. Show us the phrases that will make us say “I like that” at contact@redshiftwriters.com

 

Looking for writing partners? Consider joining us at Community Writing Hour

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Daniel J. CohenFive Powerful Phrases for Writing Partners
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Silky Joshi Malik Releases Total Nobody Who Ran For Office and Lost-ish

RedShift Writers Client & Author Silky Joshi Malik Releases Essay Collection, Detailing 2018 Run for Office

(Houston, TX, October 16, 2020)—Houston-based content writing firm RedShift Writers is pleased to announce the launch of The Total Nobody Who Ran for Office and Lost-ish, an essay collection by Silky Joshi Malik that chronicles her 2018 run for United States Congress and the lessons she learned from her experience. 

“I feel so inspired when I see women of color fearlessly dive headfirst into the world of politics and make an impact. I have always spoken my mind and fought for myself and those around me, but there were so many unforeseen challenges and insecurities that I overcame when I finally decided to throw my own hat into the ring. I wrote this book to inspire young women to partake in politics and to show them that losing has its own perks. This is an extremely important time to share these kinds of stories if we want to see new types of leaders in this country,” says Silky Malik.

Silky’s run marked the first time an Indian-American woman ran for Texas’ 2nd congressional district. Although she came in third, Silky considers the experience an overall win in terms of the lessons she learned about herself, her friends, her family, and the political process.

“Daniel and Alex from RedShift Writers helped me put my thoughts in order and overcome early bouts of writer’s block. They helped me realize that writing doesn’t need to be perfect at first. It’s more important to get thoughts and ideas onto the page, which spurs more ideas until it all clicks together into one, complete book.”

To learn more about Silky and purchase a copy of The Total Nobody Who Ran for Office and Lost-ish, visit www.silkyjmalik.com.

About RedShift Writers

RedShift Writers is a content writing company dedicated to the principle that stories change history. We capture the spirit of who you are through in-depth research and develop content writing and strategies so you can build a relationship with your audience. RedShift Writers helps authors through all stages of the writing process from conceptualization to the final draft. Services include planning, brainstorming, creative consulting, writing, editing, proofing, and pitching to publishers.

 

 

For more information, visit redshiftwriters.com

Media Contact: Daniel J. Cohen

Founder & Lead Writer, RedShift Writers

daniel@redshiftwriters.com // 832.489.7643

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Alex OrianiSilky Joshi Malik Releases Total Nobody Who Ran For Office and Lost-ish
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RedShift Writers Launches Grant & Proposal Writing Services

RedShift Writers Makes New Hire, Launches New Line of Grant & Proposal Writing Services

New Offering Brings Potential Expanded Revenue Streams to Businesses, Organizations, and Individuals Fighting for Funds During COVID-19

(Houston, TX, May 11, 2020)–Houston-based content writing firm RedShift Writers is pleased to announce the expansion of its services to include grant and proposal writing. To assist in the expansion of the new offering and ensure a quality experience for existing clients and future clients, the company has also brought on Houston-based artist and writer Willow Naomi Curry to lead grant strategy, authorship services, and narrative design.



“With so much uncertainty right now in the market for businesses, governments, and nonprofits, our team is taking every possible step to assist our current clients and others who are seeking to adapt by positioning them for opportunities they may not have previously pursued or by upgrading their current strategy,” said RedShift Writers Creative Director Alex Oriani. “Willow’s experience and her phenomenal writing capability instantly boosts what we can do for these entities, and we are fortunate and excited to coordinate with her for the next chapter in our company history.”

 


Curry brings a wealth of experience in successful grant writing, netting more than $30,000 in locally and nationally competitive grants in the 2019 fiscal year. The grants funded a variety of community-engaged creative projects that Curry led and oversaw from beginning to completion.

 

Driven by a rigorously developed in-house process and database, the company’s new services include proposal writing for grants and government/commercial procurement notices, tailored funding and contract opportunity research for clients, interim and final report writing, auxiliary support to existing development staff, coaching and training, and grant/proposal consultation. Businesses and organizations wishing to utilize the services will be able to book free consultations to learn what RedShift’s team can provide at contact@redshiftwriters.com

About RedShift Writers

RedShift Writers is a content writing company dedicated to the principle that stories change history. We capture the spirit of who you are through in-depth research and develop content writing and strategies so you can build a relationship with your audience. RedShift specializes in writing for websites, SEO articles, blogs, guides, books, grants, and other longform content.

 

For more information, visit redshiftwriters.com

 

Media Contact: Daniel J. Cohen

Founder & Lead Writer, RedShift Writers

daniel@redshiftwriters.com // 832.489.7643

read more
Alex OrianiRedShift Writers Launches Grant & Proposal Writing Services