Influencer Advisor

Your digital content must entertain enlighten and engage your ideal audience.

 
You are no longer an advisor who can under promise and over perform… you must become an influencer who is able to elicit an emotional response with your published content.
 
Whether you are addressing your current clients or prospective clients, your content must entertain, enlighten and engage to the point of eliciting a decision. Your clients are deciding to trust you and to stay with you as a trusted source of wisdom. Your prospects are deciding to make a change for the better if your purpose is aligned with theirs and you can prove tangibly exactly how your value is in their best interest.


 

Every day your business is held in the balance of relevance that must be demonstrated tangibly through multiple mediums.

 
Simplify the process of remaining relevant in a robo world by building your business on purpose. 
 

Enlightened Content

Value Design for Advisors

The Path to Enlightened Content is Infinite

 

Your content must engage entertain and educate your audience.


So how are you going to do that while you are doing your other job as trusted wealth steward?


 
 
The content you publish is indelibly tied to your stewardship business model… you might not see it yet, but the path you choose today will either help you survive in a robo world or it will create your imminent failure. 
Either way, your business decisions are your own. 
 

How can you design an infinite measure of great content that is consistent with your focus?


 
 
Follow the path of design thinking… the path of Infinite Advisor Alpha… 
Your value is there and you should be too. It really is where you want to be. 
 
We make it simple for advisors like you to discover micro bits and pieces of value design twenty-four hours a day.
 
When the time is right for you, jump into a micro-module that helps to empower your existence in the new ecosystem of financial advice. 

Adapt and Survive

My Advantage

It’s very important that you are able to challenge yourself to think differently on a daily basis so that you can remain adaptable to the ever-changing landscape of financial services. It’s equally as important to be able to challenge yourself in a 100% confidential platform. No one is looking over your shoulder, no one is judging you. This is the opportunity for you to take complete control of your business. Build on purpose at TangibleAlpha.com It truly is nobody’s business but yours.

Curated Article

Last week in Newport, Rhode Island I was reminded of what a healthy and robust economy we’re currently living in.

On a quiet Tuesday night, the restaurant we dined at, The Mooring, was anything but quiet. There wasn’t an empty seat in the place. We saw tables turned over multiple times and a constant lineup of eager diners with no reservations anxiously hoping a spot would open for them.

Nearly every great restaurant was experiencing the same. In fact, if a business didn’t have this type of demand, we could make an argument they were likely doing something wrong. As one person at my meeting said, “It’s almost hard to NOT to succeed in this market.”

That restaurant reminded me of one of the “classic” questions from the marketing world: If I were to ask you, what’s the single most valuable competitive advantage a company can have, what would you say?

Some would answer by saying money, or proprietary technology, or a monopoly.

The late Gary Halbert, a famous, contrarian direct response copywriter often wrote that the single most important competitive advantage any business could have was a “starving crowd.”

Halbert argued that the only competitive advantage you needed was an audience, hungry and salivating for your products and services. These restaurants were getting it right.

I love Gary and have often talked about him in my Tidbits, podcast, and while working with clients.

But in this case, Gary was wrong.

Sure, a metaphorically hungry, starving crowd is important, and many businesses have done a fantastic job cultivating that type of audience, but what about the rest of the companies out there?

What about companies facing industry-wide disruption from the Amazons of the world?

My friend and colleague, Colleen Francis, who consults for some of the biggest firms in the Fortune 100 suggested the single biggest threat she sees all clients facing, in nearly every sector, is literally Amazon.

She calls the phenomenon the “Amazonification of Sales.” Colleen says that clients in every sector and every industry now expect the Amazon experience. They’re going online and price shopping. They expect fast turnaround times and speedy delivery. And they expect it, regardless of what you’re selling – even if you’re selling a 2 billion dollar piece of heavy manufacturing equipment, or making a multi-million dollar licensing sale.

I see this outside the Fortune 100 and in my privately-held midmarket clients all the time. They’re all facing customers and clients with exceedingly increased expectations almost solely because of their experiences with Amazon.

And this is why Gary was wrong. The single most important competitive advantage a business has isn’t a starving crowd.

It’s the ability and willingness to change.

It’s getting harder and harder to win with “what got you here.” The strategies and successes of your past can, if you’re not careful, create your downfall. (Consider Blockbuster passing up on buying Netflix).

As one of my colleagues said last week which I thought was brilliant, “If it can happen to #generalelectric, it can happen to you. Nobody is immune.”

So here’s a question for you to consider.

Are you experimenting with enough change?

None of us have even a smidgen of the resources available to Amazon, but it doesn’t mean we can’t be changing at a similar speed.

For example, Amazon, Google, Apple and others are famously known in business circles for innovating through small teams and constant micro-experiments running all the time.

What experiments are you running in your business?

What processes are you engaged in changing or improving?

What can you change about your sales process, your customer experience, your decision-making process, etc?

There’s enormous pressure in the business world to optimize for results today. But the magic lies in optimizing for today while innovating for tomorrow. Excellent management can balance those objectives carefully.

Your Challenge For The Week: Devise a low-risk experiment you can run for a short time and share it with me.

Here are a few examples.

If you’re a VP of Sales, consider a new step or reducing steps in your sales process.

If you’re in charge of #customerservice, devise a new way of handling complaints, criticism, and feedback.

If you’re in charge of #customerexperience, consider testing something new as part of the customer’s post-purchase experience, or try testing a new way of caring for customers in a retail environment.

If you often launch new products into the market, try pre-selling those products before launching them.

The key is to make your experiments low-risk, and low-stakes, but enough to help you change, pivot, adapt, remain relevant, and thrive well into the future.

As a bonus challenge: Ask all your subordinates (VP Sales, CMO, CFO, etc.) to make a list of all the processes, tasks, and repetitive things the company does on a regular basis. If you asked why they’re done in a certain way, and the response is, “Well, that’s the way we’ve always done it….”

Start there.

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