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  • ILISE BENUN is the founder of Marketing Mentor, and has been teaching people to promote themselves and their services since 1988. Author of 4 books and many, many more articles, Ilise has been self-employed for all but three years of her working life.

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  • DEIDRE RIENZO is a copy writer who helps small business owners turn their ideas into words. She partners with web designers to create simple, compelling, and keyword-rich website content for their clients. The Marketing Mentor program is the driving force that has helped Deidre grow her business, and she blogs about her experiences, adventures, and struggles here at the Marketing Mix.

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« Peleg's Corner: To Make It Happen, Write It Down | Main | Ilise's Corner | How to Close the Deal, Part One: Listen Up! »

September 13, 2006

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Comments

Yes, Colleen, and have you noticed how people answer the question "what do you do?" as if they were asked, "what are you?" In other words, with a label?

It's more interesting (and engaging for the other person) if you say what you actually do and for whom. So, for example, I say, "I help people who hate to promote themselves get more clients (and maybe hate it a bit less)."

That always triggers a few good questions that allow me to elaborate.

"Verbal business card" - hadn't heard it called that before! Unlike its printed cousin, a verbal card is also much harder to lose. After a networking event, the only business cards I keep belong to people who made a memorable impression.

I'm in the process of moving from England to Canada, so I've found that I have to start marketing my business all over again. Following advice from my Canuck friends and family to "milk that accent for all it's worth", my new business card shows my name followed by "Web design with a different accent". Now people are starting to remember me as "that Web guy who talks funny".

>>and have you noticed how people answer the question "what do you do?" as if they were asked, "what are you?" In other words, with a label?

Absolutely. Verbs are infinitely more interesting and provocative. The conversational equivalent of the "yes, and..." that improv actors use as gospel.

Nigel - I hadn't heard it before Carl told me, either, but boy, did it stick! And not that having an English accent is ever a liability (well, Stateside, anyway), way to turn it into both a point of difference and an asset!

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