The Four Levels of Content




Top Secrets of Marketing & Sales show

Summary: Today I'd like to share with you the recording of a live interview I did yesterday with Brandon Pecharich from Promo Corner, in which we discussed The Four Levels of Content. If you need to get clients on social media, this will explain how to do it. It's available below as video, audio or text. I hope you find it helpful.<br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> Brandon: Hey everybody, Happy Tuesday! I hope you're having a super productive week out there. You are watching Express Training Bites here at Promo Corner. You're probably watching it on Promo Corner's Facebook Page, Promo Show's Facebook page or maybe Promo Corner's LinkedIn or YouTube. So we are on all types of different social media. And we have today on Express Training Bites an industry icon. Somebody who I have looked up to as a sales professional in the industry. And it is Mr. David Blaise. Thank you so much for being here today. And you're actually going to be speaking about something that you spoke about in January at Expo. Is that correct?<br> <br> David: Yeah, it was part of what we covered at Expo. At Expo, we were talking about just this whole idea of migrating people from social media into your sales funnel, essentially, and how that happens. Because it's not like throwing spaghetti against a wall and hoping it sticks. There's actually some strategy to it, methodology to it. If you choose to go in that direction.<br> <br> Brandon: That is awesome. That is such a huge and valuable piece of content that we've got here today on Express Training Bites. So for people that don't know who you are -- because this industry is constantly evolving and there's new people almost every day -- why don't you take a couple of minutes and kind of introduce yourself, David?<br> <br> David: Sure. David Blaise from TopSecrets.com, also SmartEQP.com. I've been in the promotional products industry since 1988. I feel like I should be sitting down instead of sanding up , but, I've just been in the industry for a long time. Love the industry. Started speaking at some of the major industry trade shows back in 2001. I've spoken at nearly every one of them since. I was at Expo in January. And that's what led to this discussion.<br> <br> You know, in the early days of the training that I did, a lot of it was related to people who were just getting started in the industry. And we created a training program called Getting Started: How to Launch a Wildly Successful Career in Promotional Products Sales. And to this day we have new people who are coming in and they go through that training. And within about six or seven hours, they're pretty much grounded and up to speed, so that you wouldn't be embarrassed to have them stand in front of a prospect and represent your company.<br> <br> But over the years, what I've found is that a lot of the training that I do, particularly for private groups, I love interacting with people who have been doing it for a long time, who may be running into different struggles that they hadn't encountered before. And to say, "okay, where do we go from here?" One of my favorite trainings that I did, of all time, was I was hired to speak in front of a group of people who've been in the industry for 25 plus years. And this was easily 10 years ago. I was quite a bit younger myself. The people that I was speaking to were older, and we were trying to figure out what am I going to talk about to these people?<br> <br> And, we finally decided I was just going to bring a flip chart and go around the room and say, "okay, what's the biggest issue you're dealing with?" And we just did that. We went around the room and it was fantastic. Because when you're able to interact with people who understand the industry and who know the ins and outs, but who perhaps have gotten stuck in a tunnel or funnel or somewhere it's, "I'm so used to doing things a certain way." You lose sight of the fact that there are a lot of different things t...