Being taken seriously in business takes time and effort, but you can shortcut your success with the right strategies. In this article, I share 5 reasons why people may not be taking you and your business seriously and what to do about it.
For context, there is a big gap between the skill of conducting business and the skill your business uses. For example, you may be good at coaching, but not at getting clients. Or you may be good at getting clients, but not at coaching.
Needless to say, this is a problem. But this problem can be solved by writing. As Jeff Bradford writes in Forbes, writing is the most important business skill because "good writing is fundamentally good thinking that follows a logical path and is easy for someone to follow. Writing out what you want to communicate forces you to organize your thoughts.."
Over the past two and a half years, we’ve seen businesses forced online and a rise in online entrepreneurship. Working from home made people realize they can work from anywhere and even start their own business online.
But the difficulty lies in the fact that now, almost anyone can start a business on the internet with very low barriers to entry. While that’s a great thing because it allows people who historically wouldn’t have been able to start businesses…
Well, you see a lot of charlatans scamming people and peddling false promises.
So, in this landscape, you not only have to prove you are good at what you do, but you also have to show you are serious about business. You may not have noticed it, but if you’re not getting as many clients as you should, it may be because people don’t take you seriously enough.
You can’t notice that because people don’t tell you that. In fact, people don’t even realize themselves they don’t take you seriously. Oftentimes, it’s an unconscious process. They see your business online, or they hear of you, and they don’t consider you as a serious option.
How do you know if people are taking you seriously?
If your market already does all these things, you may not need to read the rest of this piece (though I'm sure you can still learn something from it). If your market doesn't already do this, the rest of this piece is going to be important.
You can have a great business and be the best and still not be taken seriously. The prerequisites to having a business are a problem to solve and an effective solution to that problem. As long as you have those, you can make some sales…
But your business won’t reach its full potential.
To propel your business forward, you not only need to have but also demonstrate the following:
So here are 5 basic reasons people don’t take your business seriously.
By addressing those, you will make sure you broadcast your authority, credibility, and competence.
That’s the classic business mistake in the 21st century.
In the information age, business is a content game. People spend most of their time online in one way or another, so you need quality, engaging content to stay top of mind—or else people don’t know you exist.
Tips:
You can't post any type of content.
I see this all the time on LinkedIn. People seem under the impression they should write anything that will get them views. But if the content doesn’t speak to your audience or provides real value, it’s pointless.
Tips:
There is an entire school of thought that argues websites are dead and all you need is a social media profile and a sales page.
The truth is, this tends to work for offers that promise people quick financial returns and use a lot of manipulative tactics. These offers burn the market quickly and don’t last very long.
Tips:
(You don't need to do all of them.)
The online content marketplace is competitive. Every minute, readers have a dozen content choices. Present your content in a way that attracts and retains attention and is pleasant to the reader.
Tips:
Publishing content for your audience is great, but growth can be slow. The fastest way to grow is to partner with like-minded businesses and organizations who can promote you through mutually beneficial arrangements.
Tips:
These are 5 writing-related reasons people don't take businesses seriously.
Which one do you need to work on?