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#mine: CxL
lostinfic · 1 year
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Lucrezia Borgia + "accidents"
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dufrau · 5 months
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I’ve entered a new era of only wearing reasonably comfortable shoes. Any boot recommendations? I like my grant stones (fancy) and docs (everyday). I’m looking for like business casual/can be dressed up or down and I won’t be limping on the way home. Your great wisdom is very appreciated
Thursday is a good middle ground between those i think, they're pretty affordable and relatively comfy (lighter weight than grant stone and with more foam in the insole) and their styles tend towards a kind of smart casual kind of vibe.
In a similar price range to Grant Stone, I'm a big fan of Parkhurst. They dont keep a lot in stock and they only drop new boots every few months, but the vibe is like a slightly more rugged Grant Stone with a similar if slightly less heavy construction. My Parkhurst Allen is the boot i find the most comfortable out of all of mine.
I think Beckett Simonon is sort of right in between thursday and grant stone/parkhurst in terms of both price and quality, but those are made to order so you probably have to wait a month or two if you buy a pair. I dont have any so i cant personally speak to them though.
Im pretty interested in BLKBRD out of India, they look like theyre doing neat stuff at sub $300 prices but again i dont have any so i cant confirm the quality.
What Grant Stones do you have?? I have the jungle kangaroo brass boots and the navy cxl diesels and i love them both so much.
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keratoconusgroup · 7 months
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Contact bandage day 6
I wanted to reach out and ask others to share their experiences with the contact bandage. I’m set to have mine removed on the 4th of this next month and im not sure what to expect. Honestly my eye doesn’t hurt and the vision is variable. The contact however is annoying, I feel like I can feel it and I’m ready to have it out, however I’m hoping it’s the bandage that feels like this and it my eye. How was everyone else’s eye post cxl after the bandage came off? submitted by /u/CalendarRemarkable12 [link] [comments] https://www.reddit.com/r/Keratoconus/comments/1b2g0mh/contact_bandage_day_6/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
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sheikah · 3 years
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cesare + lucrezia 34 / ?
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bunnyella · 4 years
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Strictly Safe for work ! :)
• Call me Ella ✨ My big age is 20 but my little age is 4-7!
• I cope with trauma and depression through age regression
• This account is a safe place for SFW content and littles like me💛
• if you have any questions for me please don't be shy to ask!!
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peachie-frog · 5 years
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Canopy beds are wonderful and I love them. Like those beds with the sheer hanging fabric, or LED fairy lights, or the ones that look like glamorous tents? They’re just so beautiful and I love them.
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Is the federal carbon tax killing jobs? Experts say answer isn't 'black and white'
~CXL~
The Saskatchewan government says the federal carbon tax is killing jobs, but experts and even the province's trade minister say it's not that easy to calculate.
The government reports that jobs are down in the oil and gas sector by about 1,400 and by another 1,500 in mining compared with July 2018.
The province brought in its own tax on excess emissions from heavy industry in January, but consumers became subject to the federal carbon tax in April because Saskatchewan did not have its own pricing deemed acceptable by Ottawa. The province is taking its challenge of the federal tax to the Supreme Court.
"You're not going to be able to directly link exactly to the carbon tax," Trade Minister Jeremy Harrison told The Canadian Press in a recent interview.
"It is killing jobs because it's making us less competitive."
One of Premier Scott Moe's arguments against the tax is that it costs jobs.
Harrison concedes job losses in the energy sector are not the result of any one factor, but a confluence of different issues.
He points to a lack of new pipelines as well as to federal legislation that overhauls how large energy projects are approved and restricts tankers off the British Columbia coast. He says those things put Canada at a competitive disadvantage compared to other jurisdictions.
The carbon tax is another layer, says Harrison, although he adds it's hard to measure its immediate impact over a short period of time.
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Read More at https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/carbon-tax-jobs-1.5259377
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aaditya-diamonds · 3 years
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Thanks for the kind words! ★★★★★ "I love ❤️ this ring soooo much, that I bought 3 of them to stack. This ring is absolutely beautiful and unique. I get so many compliments on this ring(s). The shop owner is wonderful. She kept me informed and of the process, and even provided me with photos. She then kept me informed of my pkg in transit. OUTSTANDING CUSTOMER SERVICE!! This is most definitely a favorite shop of mine. Beautiful, fine jewelry. I will be back for more jewels 💎. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️" samsscho #uncommonjewelsin #etsy https://etsy.me/3meMZ6x https://www.instagram.com/p/CXl-D0KvFAZ/?utm_medium=tumblr
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alexfridaywebsite · 6 years
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What will make my website stand out from the rest? - Psychological theories behind the use of colour.
Whilst researching the best ways off making your website as interesting as possible, I stumbled across an article called “8 Effective Web Design Principles You Should Know” From CXL.  “CXL Institute is where the top 1% of marketers learn their craft” (CXL,2018.)
 The first of 8 principles I read was that about Visual Hierarchy.  The principle exercises the idea attached below, this shows the clear imagery of how effective visual hierarchy is within a website. The size of things is a brilliant way to show the importance of what your advertising on your website size is present throughout the majority of content on your chosen website.
 I have shown how visual hierarchy is present on the WIX website, focusing how our eyesight is automatically drawn into detecting the hierarchy.  The human brain will automatically separate the relevant information/most interesting/important .
Another principle listed on the article I found is that a fantastic way to create Hierarchy is the use of colour.  For example shown On the photo number 3 below,despite the ‘start now’ button being small, it is the colour that draws attention to us wanting to find out further information on how to “start now”. Further research on the importance of colour has shown me that, global companies such ‘Amazon’ and ‘Paypal’ use distinctive colours on their check out buttons for beneficial purposes.
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youtube
(Wilson,2018)
Above i have attached a youtube clip that I would totally beneficial when deciding on my colour schemes for my website. In this video blogger Darrel wilson talks about the psychology behind certain colours, and the way our brain absorbs this information from what colours it sees and processes what we think they represent. For example Darrel talks about the importance of associating certain colours with what your website is about, the colour green is used by the company Tropicana, whole foods & animal planet as the colour green is linked with nature, tranquility and relaxation. 
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Here Darrel talks about two of my favourite colours, Grey and Black discussing the psychological adaptations people have of these two colours. He provides us with a list of companies that primarily use these colours to represent their brands. As you can see above the brand Apple and mercedes-benz and tesla are all associated with the colour grey, this straight away shows me how the colour grey is associated with wealth, class, status and intelligence as apple is one of the most influential and successful brands worldwide. This is similar for the colour black, with the first two brands associated with the colour being Chanel and car company Rolls Royce, in my opinion these two colours ooze utter class, simplicity and elegance which is something I ideally want to have featured as a running theme throughout my website, along with my external research.
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Darren features an image of world wide brand Chanels website, as you can see it is luxurious, effortless very clean and simplistic, from this research it is clear to me that I will be using the colours Black and grey within my website.
In an online article for digital brand Tic-toc (Scott, 2017) discusses the importance of colour within web design, discussing how “ scientists have continued to study the psychology of colour and its impact”. Scott tells us that  “Studies suggest that people make a subconscious judgment about a product within 90 seconds of initial viewing. Up to 90% of that assessment is based on colour alone. “ With this statistical fact I have decided to continue my research into the theories behind colour more closely.
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(Sikorski, 2019) 
 Above you can see an excerpt from Stefan Sikorski’s online blog about Visual Literacy. The colours that interested me straight away were Black, Grey & White this is due to the themes that fit around them collectively.
Sophistication - When describing myself I would like to say I am a naturally sophisticated young actress, who is aware of how to present myself at all times, I want my website to reflect this. In addition to that I want my website to have an overall feel of sophistication, which i feel is achievable due to my sophisticated taste in visuals.
Power- As I feel that I am a powerful and serious actress I want my images  included on my website to represent that, in order to come across as powerful and strong and seperate me from any other ameatur actors websites.
Stability- I am at a position in my life were I feel very stable within my acting, as I have now had over 10 years experience within the performing arts industry, i would like this to come across when browsing my website. To add to this I want to feel stable with the content on my website, feeling content with the amount of hard work that I have put into it.
Security-  Security is something that fits in to my personality very well, i am very trustworthy and maintain a persons trust and secrets. I also want to feel secure with my showreel that will be featured on my website.
Strength of Character- As mentioned prior I feel that I am a strong person who has a very able ability to adapt to various characters that come my way, yet never loosing track who I am as a person, I want my website to reflect who I am for me, and to completely show off my skills and attributes.
Authority- Authority is a strong factor, one I feel I carry on a personal level, I feel this is shown through my acting with my ability to take direction as well as give it, this links in to elements I want my website to consist of.
Maturity- Maturity is something that I believe in very strongly, I believe that to be a successful actor you have to carry very clear traits of carrying maturity if you want a valuable career, I want this to be portrayed on my website, I will do this by selecting the most mature images of me possible.
Freshness- Freshness is a factor I would like my website to feature, as casting directors/agents are inundated with material daily I want my website to be a breath of fresh air from the rest, separating mine as a potential contender for representation. 
Hope- The element of hope I feel will be shown throughout my website, as an upcoming actress I want casting directors to feel hopeful when considering representing me as a client, being full aware of the potential i may carry.
Goodness- Goodness describes who I am as a person, i pride myself on being a good person, and I want to highlight that within my “about me” section of my website. This linked in with the innocence of light colours and elements of sophistication will be perfect.
Light- I want my website to be bright and clear as this is easy on the eye to look at, and will not affect any mood that you may be in that day when you browse through it. With elements of light on my website casting directors/agents will be able too see the youthfulness that i carry, from the light colours that may feature on my website (grey &white.)
Simplicity- Simplicity is something that I want to be present for the majority on my website as I do not want it to be cluttered in any way as it becomes distracting, messy and unprofessional when presenting myself to the public.
Having extensively researching into colour schemes I have decided that the three colours that will best represent my personality and promote me as an upcoming Actress are White,Black and Grey.
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lostinfic · 1 year
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The Borgias World War II AU
“Nations are tearing each other apart, bombs rain down on Europe every day, killing blindly. How could anyone fault us for an act of love?”
Poisons and Devotion on Ao3
PSD by @honeycoloring
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smoothshift · 5 years
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08 buick lacrosse cxl No heat. Blows cool air and AC works great. Need help! via /r/cars
08 buick lacrosse cxl No heat. Blows cool air and AC works great. Need help!
Hello everyone. I am having an issue with my heat. I was told it could be the Blend door actuators and that mine could have 2 since it's a dual heat/air system. A friend that is decent with cars said the heater core could be clogged so we cleared that out and not much stuff came out. He also said the hoses were hot to the touch and said that it was a good sign. What i need to know is if it is the blend door actuators,how many I have and if this is a simple DIY. I found a video for replacing one but it was for 00-05 and im not sure if there is anything different between the 3 years. He changed one in the glove box and it looked simple enough to check to see if it actually working but i was unable to find out if i had any others or where they'd be located. Thanks for the help.
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keratoconusgroup · 2 years
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CXL+TPRK Plec Vancouver
Hi everyone, i would like to thank everyone here for the support! I have a couple questions if anyone can answer them? Im looking at going to plec for there Slp ad cxl treatment and was wondering the canadacy requirements. I have already email and called but no response yet! What are the requirements for cornea thickness? (Mine are 428 and 447) What was the wait times? What was your experience and outcome? Can i get this with medium/severe keratoconus? If anyone has any answers it would be much appreciated!! submitted by /u/ShineForward9669 [link] [comments] https://www.reddit.com/r/Keratoconus/comments/10pf5za/cxltprk_plec_vancouver/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
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sheikah · 3 years
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It is a game of want, and wanting.
cesare + lucrezia 33 / ?
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bunnyella · 4 years
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Me and daddy got to draw together today! :D this is what I did
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nathandgibsca · 5 years
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I’ve Helped Create 150+ Case Studies. Here’s (Almost) Everything I’ve Learned.
FLAMING HOT TAKE ALERT: creating case studies is like flossing.
(The dental hygiene version, not that idiotic dance kids are into these days.)
Everybody knows they should be doing it. Almost nobody does. And when they finally do, it’s a painful, bloody, but oddly rewarding experience that has them vowing to do it again soon.
Because it just so happens that case studies are the single most powerful sales asset you can possibly have.
And I’m not exaggerating.
“Bold Claim, Klettke. Can You Back it Up?”
Abso-friggin-lutely.
Let’s start with the psychology behind what makes case studies burrow into our brains and influence our decision-making in ways other content can’t:
1. Stories turn our brains into super-happy chemical soup.
Cognitive scientist Véronique Boulenger found that reading (or hearing) words and sentences that refer to bodily actions actually activates the motor cortex in your brain. So, for example, “she kicks the ball” just lit up the part of your brain that controls your leg movements. But it’s not just your motor cortex.  In a fascinating Spanish study, researchers were able to show that odour-related words, like “garlic” and “cinnamon”, light up the olfactory cortex (your sense of smell). This is a lot of science-speak to say: your brain responds to reading (or hearing) about an event through a story in roughly the same way it would if you were to actually experience the event in real life. That’s a whole lot of empathy being built up in the mind of your reader. Not only that: storytelling, done right, can literally influence the chemicals in your brain. During a talk at CXL Live 2019, Dr. Brian Cugelman of AlterSpark explained that a good editorial hook can increase your dopamine levels, which gives you an emotional reward that temporarily makes you feel energized and curious. In addition, using a story to describe a threat can boost your cortisol levels, which grabs your attention and drives you to remove the pain or threat, real or perceived, ASAP. And even just reading about goals and challenges can spike serotonin levels, which triggers the pursuit of goals and loss avoidance.
2. Stories are memorable by design.  
When it comes to marketing, being forgotten is death. That’s where customer success stories curb stomp other content. According to Jennifer Aaker, a professor of marketing at Stanford Graduate School of Business, a story is up to 22x more memorable than facts alone. Done well, case studies are stories that help you stay top-of-mind and sell at the same time.
A story is up to 22x more memorable than facts alone.
jennifer aaker, stanford
3. Stories appeal to both the rational and emotional parts of the brain.
According to Dual Process Theory, there are two systems at work in the human brain: system one is fast and emotional, and system two is slow and rational. System one is always on, while system two requires focus and gets quickly depleted. The bad news is that the majority of our decisions are made by system one. While we’d all like to think of ourselves as logical people living in a logical world, but we’re actually instinctual people who rationalize our emotional decisions after the fact. The tension, emotion, and cold hard facts in well-written case studies appeal to both systems—a killer one-two punch that ensures you’re covered no matter which system is taking the lead at the moment.
4. Customer success stories replicate word of mouth marketing.
Reviews, case studies, and other voice of customer content mimic the effects of word of mouth—and word of mouth is super-mega-important to the modern buyer’s journey.
BrightLocal’s Local Consumer Review 2018 Survey found that 86% of buyers read reviews for local businesses. In fact, buyers read an average of ten online reviews before they even feel able to trust a local business.
But here’s the kicker: 91% of respondents under 35 trust online content as much as personal recommendations from friends and family.
“Nice Theory. But Does It Work in Real Life?”
Yep. The numbers are there, too.
Studies show that not only do buyers actively seek out case study content, they also spend more time engaging with it compared to other types of B2B content.
According to the Content Marketing Institute, case studies remain the preferred content format among B2B buyers, with 79% of respondents claiming they’ve consumed this type of content in the last year.
And in a study of 34 million (yes, million) interactions between buyers and content, Harvard Business Review found that case studies had an 83% completion rate, orders of magnitude higher than any other type of sales or marketing content.
The case for case studies (ha!) grows even stronger when you realize B2B buyers aren’t just more likely to read case studies—but much more likely to share them as well.
According to Demand Gen Report’s 2018 Content Preferences Survey, 64% of respondents share case studies with colleagues, which is second only to blog posts (74%).
64% of respondents share case studies with colleagues, which is second only to blog posts (74%).
Demand Gen 2018 report
That’s a HUGE deal, because so many business decisions (especially on SaaS platforms) are made jointly by people in different roles. Harvard Business Review found that the number of people involved in B2B solutions purchases climbed from an average of 5.4 in 2015 to 6.8 in 2017.
It’s no wonder, then, that the vast majority (73%) of content B2B marketers surveyed by Content Marketing Institute in 2018 said they use case studies for content marketing purposes. 47% said case studies were among their top three most effective types of content marketing when it comes to achieving specific objectives, a very close second to eBooks and whitepapers (50%).
Take Rankings.io, for example: Adding case studies into their sales and marketing mix helped them close over $175,000 worth of deals in one month. Chris Dreyer, founder and CEO, says:
“We closed over 179,444 worth of deals in the past month, and case studies helped close them all. If you’re trying to improve your conversions and showcase your expertise, you need case studies. Case studies are powerful lead magnets, they’re powerful presentations, and they’re great for sales.”
And (BONUS!) as we’ll dive into later on, case studies are also one of the only content assets that can be used across your entire funnel, and even reused time and time again.
But if case studies are so great, then why isn’t everyone investing heavily in them? The truth is that getting case studies right is difficult and time-consuming. It’s a heck of a lot harder than just plugging in a “Problem, Solution, Results” rubric.
And when you have a million ecommerce orders to fulfill or you’re deep into rewriting your SaaS onboarding flow, it’s easy for case studies to start looking like a “nice to have” rather than a “must have.”
Thankfully, I’m here to help. After more than three years of running Case Study Buddy, I’ve been part of putting together over 150 studies for clients ranging from enterprise SaaS companies to Fortune 100 clients I can’t even name without being sent to jail.
And I’m about to hand you YEARS of knowledge I’ve picked up the hard way.
How to Get Case Studies Right—the First Time
Getting case studies right the first time around comes down to four way-too-easy sounding steps:
Define your strategy
Choose the right candidates
Run a great interview
Write up the story
Put your case studies to work(strategically!)
Defining Your Strategy
Before investing a ton of time and money into creating a case study, you need to get really clear about why you’re doing this in the first place. Otherwise, you risk wasting hours of time and energy capturing stories that won’t ever help you accomplish your goals. Start by asking yourself three questions:
What’s my end goal? Maybe you’re trying to launch a specific service, promote a specific product or appeal to a specific industry. The stories you tell need to align with that goal.
Who am I targeting? Which types of buyers are you trying to attract with your case study? Do they have a specific role, or work in a certain industry? The people you profile should look like the people you’re trying to attract.
How will I use the case study? Where in the sales and marketing processes will you plug in this case study? How will you reuse different elements of the case study? Your use case will influence the way you go about capturing and telling the story (more on that later!)
As a quick example, conversion copywriter Kira Hug was keen to do case studies. With a ton of happy clients, she could’ve chosen any of them to feature. But Kira stopped and defined her goal. She wanted to use case studies to attract more clients looking for help launching products and courses. While a success story about one of her SaaS clients would’ve made her look great, it wouldn’t have helped her achieve that goal.
So instead, she approached Rick Mulready to capture a story that would support her goal.
Choosing the Right Candidates
In the example above, Rick was the obvious choice. But how do you find willing candidates and get them on board once you’ve got your strategy in place?
The first step is identifying candidates who have a strong positive affinity towards you. These three approaches to be the simplest:
Send out a Net Promoter Score (NPS) survey. Isolate all those who responded with eight or higher and reach out to them to gauge their participation interest.
Mine existing customer reviews online. Look for places where your advocates have already invested their time to sing your praises—whether that’s on G2Crowd, Capterra, Amazon, your ecommerce comments section, social media, reddit… you get the point. Find the most detailed reviews and reach out to the authors.
Send out an in-depth survey. If you want to take it a step further and capture more details right off the hop, a full survey is also an option. If you go this route, keep in mind that your goal is to turn your customers into storytellers, not butt-kissers. Ask them experience-based questions such as…
What was going on in your life that sent you looking for a solution like ours?
What does success look like for you?
How has our [service/product] helped you achieve that success?
Which features or benefits do you like best about [working with us/using our product]?
“How do I get buy-in?” Finding viable candidates is only the beginning. Now you need to convince them to do you a favor and go on the record. It’s arguably the hardest part of doing a case study—and the reason many companies quit before they even begin.
Don’t.
Realize that almost every rejection boils down to three factors, all of which you have an opportunity to counter:
1. Uncertainty.
Clients may say “no” because they’re uncertain about what will be exposed and how they will be presented. The best way to counter this is to give them control.
Often, countering this objection is as simple as assuring them that nothing will be published without their review and full consent. Another powerful countermove is to show them examples of other studies (yours or someone else’s) that mimic what the end product would look like.
2. Inconvenience.
People are busy! Some won’t want to take part in a case study because they assume it’ll take hours of their time. To counter this, make sure your client knows that the entire process will take less than an hour of their time, and spell out exactly what you’re asking them to do.
3. Selfishness.
“What’s in it for me?” is a common response when you ask someone for their time, which means you’ll need to frame the case study as something that benefits both sides. For example, you might share how big the audience you’ll share the study with is, or emphasize that you’ll be linking to them from your site.
“How Do I Make the Ask?
Keep it short and simple. This email template has worked wonders for me, and you can use something very similar on a live call:
“We’re so excited that you’ve [achieved a result] with our
. We want to showcase the good stuff you’re doing—to show people what you’ve accomplished in your space. We’d love to schedule a time to interview you for a case study.
You will always have the final say. Nothing will be published without your approval. All we need is 30 minutes of your time. And we’ll make sure you look like a rock star.
We’d like to get this case study published at the end of next month. Can we count you in?”
Running a Great Interview
Congrats! You’ve found the perfect candidate and they’ve given you an enthusiastic yes.
Now it’s time to get them on a call (or a video chat) and capture their story.
1. Prep your questions. Before your call, craft a list of interview questions you KNOW will help you capture the core elements of the story. Open-ended questions are ideal, because “yes/no” questions require absolutely no elaboration (and thus, no storytelling!)
I like to use the “BDA” (before, during, after) format to get to the heart of the interviewee’s experience and story:
Before: What were they feeling before purchasing from you?
During: What were they feeling during the purchase process?
After: What were they feeling immediately after? How about six weeks after?
This line of questioning encourages your interviewee to walk through each stage of the process step-by-step instead of spewing out platitudes.
You might ask, for example:
What does success look like for you?
What was going on in your business when you purchased [service/product]?
Most valuable thing [service/product] brings to the table, and why?
What results have you seen because of [service/product]?
Before the big interview day arrives, there are a few things to keep in mind:
Limit the number of interviewees to two. And honestly? One is even better. The more people you have on a call, the more they’ll talk over each other. Worse, you may lose juicy details because an individual may feel less confident being candid with someone else listening in.  
Test your tech ahead of time. Microphones, cameras, recording software… make sure it all works, and make sure you have a backup plan if it doesn’t! You don’t get a mulligan on this: clients are only willing to do you so many favors.
Prepare a list of questions early and send it to the interviewee in advance. The more comfortable and prepared your lead feels going in, the easier they’ll be to get  details out of. Nothing sucks more than asking about their ROI and hearing “I’ll have to get back to you on that.” Spoiler alert: they won’t.
Record the call. You’ll want to review the call later on, even if you take light notes live. Frantically jotting down notes doesn’t make for a very human conversation.
Follow up for more details if necessary. There’s a good chance your interviewee won’t remember specific dates and numbers, for example.
95% of your job is listening and asking “why?” You’re not there to talk – you’re there to listen and probe. It’s fine to ask the same question multiple times or investigate another angle—sometimes, clients are grateful to be asked again because they’ll remember new information.
How I Write a Powerful Case Study
First, the basics: just like every story has a beginning, middle, and an end, case studies should all follow more or less the same flow:a headline, a challenge, a solution, the results, and a call to action (CTA).
I’m we’re going to rip apart an example case study from Case Study Buddy client Pillar, a construction data company that provides risk management technology.
(Phew! Is it just me, or did it just get vulnerable in here?)
The Headline
What It (Really) Is The headline is the pillar (get it?) of your cover page, but it’s also the snippet you’ll lead with when sharing your study on your site, in ads, on your blog, and so on.
The headline has exactly ONE job: getting people curious enough to keep reading.
How to Do It Right A great case study headline draws your leads in immediately by leveraging one (or all) of the following:
A company they recognize or relate to
A pain they’re intimately familiar with
A result they desperately want to replicate
Here are some headline formulas that work well (in our experience):
How [service/company] helped [client] [result]
[Result] for [client]
[Client] gets [result] with [service]
How [client] eliminated [pain] with [service]
When in doubt, keep your headline simple and direct. Avoid jargon, complicated words, and creative adjectives.
Use metrics whenever possible. In Pillar’s case, “a 30 Million Dollar Fire” emphasizes the costly impact of not having risk management in place.
If you don’t have any big, sexy metrics to use, leverage the headline to highlight a relatable challenge or pain point instead.
joel klettke, case study buddy
If you don’t have any big, sexy metrics to use, leverage the headline to highlight a relatable challenge or pain point instead. For example, take a peek at this headline for Looop, a SaaS in the employee learning space.   Even though their study HAS great metrics, none of them were universal enough to appeal to the diversity of leads Looop would be sending the study to.
Instead, we chose to use the headline to address the shared pain point we knew all leads would have:
On the opposite end of things, here’s an example of a time we totally dropped the ball in the headline department for Elucidat, another great SaaS in the employee learning niche:
I mean, really? “[Company]: An Elucidat Case Study?”
Booooo.
At the time we thought this would throw the big, bright light on the impressive metrics below the headline. Instead, the case study hits like a wet noodle. Who’s going to want to keep reading?
If I could step back in time, here’s how I’d fix it:
The most important metric there (according to Elucidat prospects) is the 95% increase in efficiency, so I might write:
“How Integrity Inc. Increased Training Efficiency a Shocking 95%”
Juicy, right? Much better than the barf-worthy headline we rolled with. Live ‘n’ learn. One last tip for case study headlines: add immediate credibility, weight and intrigue by including a direct quote from the interviewee on the cover page that talks about the same result or pain in the headline.
The Challenge
What It (Really) Is
The “Challenge” section is the place where your story either takes off like a rocket, or falls flat on its face.
In this section, you introduce the hero of the story—your client—and the problem they were facing in a way that gets your reader to care about what happens in the end.
How to Do It Right
To suck your leads into the story, your “Challenge” section should jump right into the action, set the stakes and build tension to get them emotionally involved. For example, note the study introduction in the Pillar example above:
“At 2 AM on February 3 2017, a new 200-unit community in Maplewood, New Jersey burned down. AvalonBay had been only weeks away from turning over the first phase of apartments, and in one night their 18 months of progress had been reduced to nothing.”
This could have easily read: “A fire broke out at AvalonBay’s construction site,” or “AvalonBay is a blah blah blah zzzzzzzz…” Instead, you’re brought on an emotional journey. AvalonBay was careful and compliant, but disaster still struck. In less than 12 hours, 18 months of construction work disappeared.
As you build tension and raise the stakes, be sure to highlight core pain points that readers will identify with to make the story feel personal—like it could be about them.
AvalonBay’s disappointment and loss is almost tangible, even in just a few short paragraphs.
The Solution
What It (Really) Is
The “Solution” section is where you explore exactly how the hero’s pain got solved. Your job in this section is to help the reader experience the relief, security, and confidence that the actual customer experienced in having their problem solved. How to Do It Right Start with this: Don’t just focus on the how, include the why.
Why did you do things this way instead of that way?
What was the thinking behind your approach?
For example, Pillar doesn’t just say they installed intelligent sensors, they elaborate on the why:
“[…] designed to survive harsh construction site working conditions and don’t require users to manually check each sensor”.
For SaaS and ecommerce companies, this means going beyond mentioning the features or elements of a product the client liked and instead tying them to the actions and outcomes a lead could use them for.
As an example, check out this snippet from a study for PracticeIgnition, a SaaS that helps companies send proposals and manage the payment process:
Every time a feature is mentioned, it’s tied back to an outcome or task for the client.
And if something went wrong, be open about it.
You won’t find that in the Pillar or PracticeIgnition examples above, but consider ecommerce reviews. Being open about a product needing to be returned or exchanged, for example, highlights trustworthiness and customer care.
In real life, solutions don’t always go smoothly. People have to adjust. Changes have to be made. For example, your case study might acknowledge if your product had a steep learning curve for the client—before highlighting how you stepped in to help them out.
Authenticity goes a long way for both trustworthiness and likability. For that reason, Northwestern University’s Spiegel Research Center and PowerReviews found that, in moderation, bad reviews actually help boost sales.
The Results
What It (Really) Is
The “Results” section usually gets treated like a success metric dumping ground. Here’s a metric! There’s a metric! Look at all this success! Huge mistake. The real job of the “Results” section is to wrap up the story and not only share the happy ending, but what that happy ending actually meant for the hero of the story.
How to Do It Right
When recording the results, there are a couple guidelines to keep in mind:
Talk about the “ROI” and the “RO-Why-That’s-Important.” Terrible, I know. But so, SO crucial. Pillar, for example, highlights the direct impact on Head of Safety, Jeff’s mental well-being: “Jeff sleeps better at night knowing that AvalonBay now has preventative measures in place to stop future setbacks.” That human impact goes a long way and serves the narrative of the story best.”
Give the reader a reason to give a crap. AvalonBay’s story certainly tugs at your emotions, but some readers will still be thinking, “Not my fire, not my problem. I’ve never experienced a disaster.” That’s why the final quote in this section makes such an impact:
“There were 18 large construction fires in 2017—$480 million in losses. In 2018, there have already been eight fires and two fatalities. It shouldn’t take a disaster to get us to adopt an advance warning system.”
The Call to Action
The most important thing about your call to action (CTA) section is simply that you have one. You should always end on a CTA that relates back to the story you’ve told and the specific challenge you’ve addressed. It’s enough to clearly and directly reiterate those elements and then introduce a logical next step.
(Key word being “logical”. If you’re using your case study at the top of the funnel, your CTA might be very different than if you’re using your case study at the top of the funnel. You may want to create different CTAs to use, depending on the context.)
How long should a case study be?
I’ve published studies ranging from 450 to 4,500+ words.
But is one length the “right” length? Get ready to be momentarily frustrated because the answer is the dreaded “it depends.”
DocSend’s content completion rate study found that case studies between two and five pages had the best completion rates. Helpful intel, sure. But that’s still a HUGE range.
To narrow things down, stop fishing for a magic word count and focus on two things:
How you plan to share the study, and
The reader’s context at the time.
If you plan to send your case study attached to an RFP, for example, shorter is better as the lead already has a pile of information to sort through.
The same typically applies for situations where your lead is new to you: cold emails, ads, in-person sales pitches, and so on.
Longer studies are incredibly useful for situations where a lead is primed for detail: in your blog, sent as a newsletter, printed out as a meeting leave-behind, and so on.
And the best part is, you can use shorter formats as teasers to prime a lead to read the longer variant.
Use case and context should determine length—not some fancy magic number from a study.
Longer studies are incredibly useful for situations where a lead is primed for detail: in your blog, sent as a newsletter, printed out as a meeting leave-behind, and so on.
Joel klettke, case study buddy
Putting your case study to work
Done right, your case study has taken you a lot of time and effort to put together. That’s why it’s important to use your new piece of content strategically and squeeze out all of the value you possibly can.
There are two primary ways to do this:
Recycle, recycle, recycle.
Use your case study throughout the entire funnel.
At Case Study Buddy, we use the “Bite, Snack, Meal” model to repurpose case studies for multiple uses.
A bite usually takes the form of a slide deck, which is perfect for sharing on social media or during a pitch meeting. The focus here is compelling quotes, impressive metrics and high-level insights at a glance. You could also consider a lone testimonial pulled out of the interview a “bite” (or a nibble!)
A snack is a short-form case study, much like the Pillar example we looked at above. There’s room to tell the bigger story, but the format is still somewhat condensed and lacks elaboration. Snacks are ideal for onboarding flows and boost your credibility in cold outreach, for example.
A meal is a long-form case study. The Pillar example we looked at above was just four pages. The long-form version of the same case study extends to eight pages. This is the version you’d put up on your website for the world to see. It includes elaboration, the finer details, more quotes, etc.
Depending on your industry, funnel and revenue model, you will use each of these assets at different times. What’s important is that you have recycled the content to fit different levels of intent and different mediums of distribution.
Off the top of my head, here are no less than 20 different ways a SaaS or ecommerce company could put their case studies to use:
Pull client quotes into on-site testimonial
Bake a story into your cold email outreach
Share your wins as organic social media content
Leverage the success metrics in paid social media ads
Add quotes or metrics to your pitch deck
Publish the study in your blog
Use the full study as a downloadable lead magnet
Write up a Q&A style blog post based on the interview
Train your staff using real-world examples of why people love you
Hand out printed versions at conferences and trade shows
Add a link to your business card for networking events
Create a slide deck for talks or in-person meetings
Add a link to your email signature
Send them to leads as part of your onboarding sequence
Use notable outcomes as email subject lines
Give them to your sales team
Turn them into a video
Put testimonials near points of friction, like pricing
Win back lapsed leads or churned users with fresh stories
Upsell existing customers
…and we’re just getting started! Remember, these assets work across the ENTIRE funnel.
Take Pingboard, for example.
Initially, they weren’t sold on case studies, but after one test trial with Case Study Buddy, Pingboard became a believer. Now they collect one to two new case studies almost every month, and recycle those case studies again and again.
“There’s more than one way we get value from these case studies: They’re sales tools, marketing tools, brand tools, and even tools for new hires,” says Cameron Nouri, Director of Growth at Pingboard.
Today, their sales team uses case studies to explain how they can help to new prospects. Their marketing team has chunked out sound bites and testimonials, which they share via Twitter. Their blog team uses case studies to share real-life lessons and examples from buyer interviews.
The utility is near endless, and the content is evergreen!
You’ve just been handed a SHWACK of my best stuff.
The science is good. The stats are there to prove it. The process is sitting right in front of you.
But just like flossing, you can only be told it’s “good for you” or “essential so that your teeth don’t fall out of your skull” so many times. In the end, it’s up to you.
~joel
The post I’ve Helped Create 150+ Case Studies. Here’s (Almost) Everything I’ve Learned. appeared first on Copywriting for startups and marketers.
from SEO Tips https://copyhackers.com/2019/05/writing-case-studies/
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CANADA ADDS 73,700 JOBS IN JULY
~CXL~
Canada added 73,700 jobs in July from June, according to the “ADP Canada National Employment Report” released today.
“We saw strong job growth in July,” said Ahu Yildirmaz, VP and co-head of the ADP Research Institute. “The job gains were broadly distributed across the majority of industries with trade, leisure and hospitality, and construction leading the way.”
“Trade/transportation and utilities” added 18,100 jobs in July in the service sector, and “leisure and hospitality” added 12,000 jobs. The only service sector segment to lose jobs was “educational services,” which lost 4,000.
In the goods-producing sector, construction added 11,400 jobs in July while manufacturing added 7,800 and “natural resources and mining” added 3,100.
July’s gain follows two months of declines, according to the report. Canada lost 10,000 jobs in June and lost 37,000 jobs in May.
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Read More at  https://www2.staffingindustry.com/Editorial/Daily-News/Canada-adds-73-700-jobs-in-July-50920
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