The Launch With Words starter pack has a blogging prompt for a case study in the Month of May.
“This is a great time to go to your inspiration journal and look for a case study that can be written. Get the content published before people start going on vacations and forget about hiring a small business.”
A case study should answer the following questions:
What was the problem?
What were they doing before?
How did they find your product/service?
What is the solution?
What are the results?
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Welcome to the Launch With Words podcast, with your host, Bridget Willard. We're going to talk about all things, content, blogging, articles, videos, whatever has words and goes on your website.
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Hey, thanks for hanging in with me here on the Launch With Words podcast, a supplement to the Launch With Words plugin and blogging prompts that you can find on my website for the starter pack. For example, we're going to talk about case studies today, which are marketing gold. You remember that Velveeta commercial, um, where it's, uh, shells and cheese or whatever the guy's like "liquid gold." Well, we want marketing gold.
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We want something that's, you know, can be used over and over and over again that accomplishes many purposes: marketing and uh, persuasion to new customers, you know, validation of concept, proof of expertise. And you know, those can be done with case studies.
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In May for the starter pack, um, that's, that's the big prompt. Uh, because it's right before the summer, you want to get people before they start vacationing and forget about hiring small businesses to do things, um, families that have kids, uh, use this time away. You know, even if we're remote working, even if we have a business things just get busy. Should they? That's another question. But we can't roll the clock back to 1984 when we all ran the streets and came home when the streetlights came on.
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So a case study should answer the following questions. Who is the business? Your customer. What was their problem? How did they find your product or service? What's the solution? And what are the results? You could also say, what were they doing before? Right? So the problem was they weren't blogging. The business is you. Uh, they found Launch With Words from this podcast, they installed it on their blog, um, on their WordPress website. They set aside two hours every month to write and publish. And the results are the traffic from Google went up 10%nfor example. You know? The search, the search traffic went up.
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Um, case studies are the best because people sometimes don't understand what, what your product or service does necessarily. We did this, um, back when was working with Riggins Construction & Management, Inc in Santa Ana, California with the epoxy injection video, I did it not only showed that it was more than just cosmetic, but show how important it was. And that was a very large sales tool for us. I'm sure it still is. It's on the internet. You can watch it. It's the most ridiculous video I've ever made. But Hey, you know, it worked and that's the whole point is people need to know that other people have hired you for this exact same use case. Some people call them use cases. And it's tempting to make a PDF or a slide deck. And you know what, if you want to do that, do that. But the internet is blind. You want words.
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Like one of the reasons I'll let you in on a secret. One of the reasons why I started the Launch With Words podcast was so the phrase "launch with words" would be on the internet more." Right? So there's going to be 10 episodes and this episode eight. And all of those transcripts, they are going to come up on a Google search for when people look for Launch With Words. So it's not just of starter pack. It's premium packs. And so far there are two available, right? But this isn't an infomercial for me. I it's just, it's just a for instance. You know?
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