133: Tim Asimos on Content Marketing

This episode runs 51 min, 30 seconds.

David Lecours interviews Tim Asimos, CPSM about content marketing. Tim is VP and Director of Digital Innovation at circle S Studio

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Mentioned in This Episode on Content Marketing

  • How did you enter the world of A/E/C marketing?
  • Value of CPSM vs. MBA for A/E/C
  • What inspires you to write and speak?
  • Do you call this “content marketing?”
  • Are their personal and professional benefits to writing and speaking?
  • Using content during BD process
  • How much should firms be writing?
  • What other channels should firms publish content on besides their website/blog?
  • What does being a syndicated blogger mean?
  • How do you balance speaking and writing with billable work?

Production of PSM Show is underwritten by:

SMPS

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Read David’s Conversation with Tim

Announcer: Welcome to PSM. The Professional Services Marketing Podcast. It’s insight applied.

David Lecours: Hello and welcome to PSM show. The podcast for AEC Marketers. I’m David Lecours and I’m joined by a special guest, Tim Asimos. [inaudible 00:00:27] PSM. And our topic today is content marketing, the why, what, and how. I want to remind our listeners that we have a new title sponsor, which is SMPS. To remind here that business is transformed through marketing leadership. You can find out more about SMPS through their website, smps.org. And you can find more and the show notes for this episode at psm.show.

Announcer: This is PSM. It’s insight applied.

David Lecours: Alright, so Tim, welcome to PSM Show. I would love for our listeners to get to know you. And I thought a good way to do that was if you could just tell us sort of a short story of your career path and what led you into your current position.

Tim Asimos: Thanks, David, for having me on. Excited to be here and tell you a little bit more about myself as well as talk about one of my favorite topics, which is content marketing. Yeah. So I did not wake up one day and decide I wanted to be an AEC marketer. Believe it or not, I didn’t dream about it as a kid. It wasn’t my plan in college. I really kind of ended up in this industry accidentally. I started out in media and was working on my MBA. I wrapped up my MBA and was kind of looking to make a jump in my career. And also relocate. And by chance, I happened to get a job running the marketing department for a civil engineering firm. I had no idea what I was walking into. Was very, very, very much a shock to my system when I ended up there. It was overwhelming simply because everything I knew about marketing I felt like I had to check at the door when I walked in.

Tim Asimos: This was 2006. So I don’t know that I’d have that exact same experience if it was 2018. I think the industry has come a long way for as it relates to marketing. Still long ways to go, but back then, yeah, it was overwhelming. It was really exciting though at the same time. My first impressions were like, oh, I don’t know how this is gonna work. And then after I was there, well, one, I liked the firm. And two, I found the industry just fascinating. Especially civil engineering, honestly, I had never even thought about the work that a civil engineer did. You’ll hear a lot of civil engineers say if they do their work well, you never know they were there, you never know they existed. It’s only when they don’t do their job right that you kind of even know if there’s such a thing as a civil engineer, right?

David Lecours: Right.

Tim Asimos: It was a really interesting time. I got there before the great recession. So when I started, one of the firm’s biggest priorities were hiring staff. Sound familiar, right?

David Lecours: Yeah.

Tim Asimos: And then the economy bottomed out and fell. So that was a really interesting time to be in the business as well. Whether that was … I was in the industry about six years and was ready for a change. My passion was always digital marketing, content marketing. We were doing that when I was at the firm but not nearly the level I’d always wanted to do it. I’d actually started my career interning for an agency. So I kinda knew I always wanted to get back and the opportunity kinda came about and I jumped to circle S, where I am now. And the rest is history.

David Lecours: Alright. Well, we’re thankful you’re in this industry because you make a great contribution. And so back to your sort of history, I’m guessing that during your MBA you weren’t studying case studies for civil engineering marketing. Is that a fair guess?

Tim Asimos: No, yeah. That is very fair. It was big brand. It was the Amazons, the Procter and Gamble. It was … Maybe there was some B2B in there. Maybe an IMB or a Salesforce.com. Perhaps they were exploding at the time. Yeah, but nothing about civil engineering. I literally had to Google what is a civil engineer when I was even gonna apply and interview for the position. I just had no idea what it was. Interestingly, my father was a bridge engineer. But it was more on the structural side. I just wasn’t … Waste water, treatment plants. And I was like, “Oh, storm water. That’s why that big humongous lake is next to the shopping mall.” I didn’t know what that stuff was all about. So I had to discover that. I knew who to blame now for why parking lots sometimes are really frustrating to try to drive through. But yeah, it was interesting.

Tim Asimos: Fascinating. I’ve told this story before to SMPS crowds. I joined SMPS literally my first day on the job because all the people working for me were like, “You need to join SMPS.” I think they could tell that I did not know what I was doing as it relates to marketing for an AEC firm. The good news was I was confident as a marketer. So once I could figure out what this business does, I knew that my skills, and my knowledge in marketing would be helpful. I just needed to figure out what the heck we sold in order to kinda help the firm move forward.

David Lecours: So you got both an MBA and the CPSM, which are impressive. I have to say, I’m a little jealous on the CPSM because I actually earned mine back in 2005 and then I let it lapse. I didn’t keep up with the CEUs and I’m embarrassed to admit that. But anyway, between those two things, what do you think’s most valuable for AEC marketing?

Tim Asimos: That’s a touch question. Both have very different benefits. I think the CPSM is a validation both to your peers in the industry as well as the rest of the folks at the firm that you know what you’re doing in the industry. The industry is filled with people with lots of initials after their names. Some people have so many, I always tease they need a period at the end. It’s so long. Right? They have 10 acronyms after their name. So I think it’s a little bit of that. So it’s like, “Hey, we’re certified too in what we do.” I also think it’s helpful. Just the camaraderie of the industry with SMPS that these are people that have been in the industry a while and that have dedicated themselves to really becoming experts in AEC Marketing. So I think there’s a lot of validation there.

Tim Asimos: I will say the MBA for me, I think it was really like the growing up I needed. Not that I didn’t care in undergraduate. I did. But undergraduate is always a tough thing because while you’re excited about your career, you really have no idea what the real world’s like. You can’t apply a lot of those things to the real world because you aren’t living it. And all that social aspect is mixed in with undergraduate. It’s like you’re distracted whereas when I started my MBA, I had been out of school for two years. So not a lot of experience. But I just found the principles I was learning about so much more real because I could apply them at least in some way, shape, or form to what I did. Concepts made more sense. I didn’t have the social college sort of environment, so I was more dedicated. I got much better grades. I always like to share my GPA with my Masters degree much more than my undergraduate degree because I definitely was better at that than I was in the undergraduate level.

Tim Asimos: But I think for me, it just really taught me a lot of very broad business and marketing principles that as I walked into the career in AEC, I really walked in understanding business concepts, marketing concepts, brand concepts that really are the same in every industry. You just have to apply them differently. And so I think they’re both important in very different ways.

David Lecours: Yeah, the fusion of those together sounds ideal. And so that’s where you are.

Tim Asimos: Yeah. And my undergraduate was in communications so I was an advertising major.

David Lecours: Oh, wow. Perfect.

Tim Asimos: So then the design and the artsy kind of writing in communication sort of really rounded me out with between the two. I think that’s helped me kind of be right brain and left brain.

David Lecours: Yeah. Alright. Let’s focus our energy on this topic of content marketing. And I like to structure it the why. Then we’ll talk about the what and the how. So let’s talk a little bit about the why. So one of the reasons I wanted to have you on as a guest is I really admire your discipline that you write regularly. You speak regularly to the AEC community. What inspired this? Why are you doing this?

Tim Asimos: I think on a personal level, I’ve always liked to teach. I’ve always liked to share knowledge. I love to learn. So I’m a learner. But then once I learn, I love to pass that on. And so even back before I was with circle S, I did some speaking even when I was working with the firm. I like to share knowledge. I love seeing light bulbs go off in people’s head. My favorite thing to do specifically in this industry is to take out of industry concepts and make them tangible, and practical, and applicable in this industry. I think there’s so many things we can learn from outside the industry. But I always felt there was a disconnect. You bring an out of the industry speaker or workshop facilitator in. And they try their best to apply it. But because they don’t live it, they just … There’s some misses. And not everyone has the patience or even the ability at times to really think, well, how does this thing you just told me about Starbucks apply to my serving firm, right?

David Lecours: Right.

Tim Asimos: And I felt like I enjoy being that bridge to taking those out of industry concepts and just making them real. And so that’s always motivated me. I remember the first time I ever spoke at a conference. It was actually a Zweig. ZweigWhite back then. I think it’s just Zweig now. They used to do a marketing conference. I talked about SEO. This was like 2007 and it was a topic that no one had really thought about a whole lot in the industry. I mean, people were still having websites for the first time back then it seems like. I just love the whoa. Wow, I never knew that it could be a lot easier to understand than that. So I think that’s just … I like to be able to help people understand concepts and principles. My mom was a teacher. That probably has influenced me. There’s a little bit of a teacher in me. Maybe one day I’ll even be a college professor when my kids are grown up, and out of the house, and I’ll have more free time to burn. I’ll probably maybe even consider that adjunct professor kind of role. But I like teaching people.

David Lecours: Yeah. Absolutely. That’s so interesting. My mom was a first grade teacher as well. I think that’s part of the reason why I like getting in front of audiences and sharing knowledge. Yeah. So that’s cool. I sorta call what we’re doing here sharing expertise where clients gather. And the sort of name I put on it is content marketing. But there’s a lot of names out there. I’m curious if you have a favorite sort of name for this or do you just call it content marketing?

Tim Asimos: I mean, I call it content marketing and it’s one of those terms that people still … It’s kind of a bad term, right? Because the product is content but marketers have always had content. Probably too much content and a lot of the wrong kind of content. It doesn’t really get to the heart of what it is, which is really what I said I was passionate about which is teaching, and educating, and informing, and opening, and providing people with knowledge and information that’s helpful, and relevant, and useful to them. I always like to share most firm’s content is not helpful to the people that it’s targeted towards, right? Most of the time it’s this is what our firm wants to say to our audience. Not really a consideration of what is our audience interested in hearing, or reading, or watching, or clicking on. And so I love content marketing because it really focuses on what people care most about. And the term itself, it is what it is. It’s the term. I’m not one of those people to create a new term just for the sake of it.

David Lecours: Rebrand it, yeah.

Tim Asimos: But that’s what it is. And sort of the guy that coined that term, Joe Pulizzi, respect him a ton, he totally understands the intention behind content marketing, and he’s an advocate, and an evangelist for it. So if it’s good enough for him, it’s good enough for me. But yeah, thought leadership, a lot of times I’ll talk to clients about thought leadership, which is another term that a lot of people either don’t understand or it’s been thrown around a lot. But the principle behind thought leadership, one, we’re gonna have an original thought. And we’re gonna try to lead in the thinking of our industry. So whatever industry that is. I love that concept. We’ve got something to say. And we’re experts. And we’re not afraid to kind of put a stake in the ground and make a case for this idea, or this principle, or this concept. So I really like that too. A lot of times, firm leaders can wrap their heads around that more than content marketing because that just sounds like a buzz word or it just sounds like more of the same. So I really want to get it the heart of content marketing, which is really flipping marketing on its head.

David Lecours: What do you mean?

Tim Asimos: I mean, it’s instead of talking about your firm and how great you are, which is the natural inclination of every marketer, and sales, and business development person ever, it’s not selling. It’s like resisting the urge to say look how awesome we are. And instead it’s sharing knowledge and information that in essence, demonstrates how awesome you are without ever having to say it. And that’s just counterintuitive to a lot of marketers, a lot of sales people, and honestly, a lot of firm leaders are like, “We’re gonna do what? You want me to put out all that secret sauce out there on my website and then go and speak?”

David Lecours: Yes we do.

Tim Asimos: Yeah, “And you want me to share a presentation at a conference and not have the slide that starts out by saying this is our firm, and this is what we do, and these are all of our great projects?” Yeah, that’s exactly what I’m asking you to do. And they’re like, “What?”

Tim Asimos: So it’s a little counterintuitive to the traditional approach to marketing. But in an age where people are bombarded with messages, and marketing, and advertising, as consumers, we want things that matter to us. Not the things that interrupt our day. So the idea that you’re gonna interrupt someone’s day with a welcomed interruption, that’s really the goal I think of modern marketers is to be a welcomed interruption. Not on a nuisance, or an annoyance, or just another email in their inbox.

David Lecours: Yeah. It’s gotta be useful information. Or otherwise, just delete it.

Tim Asimos: Yeah. Absolutely.

David Lecours: So I don’t know about you, but I found it … So not only I think it’s a great marketing tool, I recommend it to my clients and I also do it from our firm, Lecours Design. But I found there’s really good personal growth benefits. I feel like I’ve become a better communicator, a better listener as a result of speaking. In terms of writing, it sort of helps me clarify my thoughts and what I really sort of believe on a subject. Have you found that to be true?

Tim Asimos: Oh yeah. Absolutely. Any of the best speakers, the best presenters, the best thought leaders if you will, the quote, gurus, although I don’t really like that term. But the gurus in the industries that they are also the best learners, right? They are life-long learners. And they are hungry for knowledge and information because the truth is especially in an industry, I’ll say marketing as an industry, as a profession that changes so rapidly, you have to stay ahead. And in order to do that, you have to continuously be learning. I mean, constantly tweaking your message. I’ll do the same presentation at 10 different conferences. And every single time I present, I’m updating, and tweaking, and adding this, and taking this away. My views are evolving to fit with, one, what I’m learning as a practitioner in my day job at my agency. As well as what I’m learning and hearing from others.

Tim Asimos: And that’s what I think to your point. Practicing content marketing, being a subject matter expert, writing thought leadership content forces you if you’re doing it right, you want to make sure that you are giving your audience the best information you can give them. And you have to do a lot of research. And you have to stay on your toes. Because simply regurgitating what else is out there a million times, the likelihood is there could be a lot of misinformation in there. So I do think, yeah, it keeps you current, it keeps you on your toes. And I learn so much. I mean, whenever I’ve had to teach anything. Any kind of class I’ve taught, any presentation, I know so much more about that topic after I got [crosstalk 00:17:39]

David Lecours: Right, right, exactly.

Tim Asimos: Than I would’ve ever known before. So yeah, it’s sort of a win win on the personal side.

David Lecours: So if our audiences are marketing directors of AEC firms, this is one of the sort of bullet points you can use when trying to sell this into your firm is that it’s gonna make the principles. It’s gonna make the sort of service line leaders. It’s gonna make the market leaders smarter and more effective at their job. And have these marketing benefits as well.

Tim Asimos: Yeah, absolutely. And one thing that I always try to emphasize, a lot of times when we’re helping clients with content marketing strategy, we want to identify who are the thought leaders, who are the people that are already recognized, that are already speaking at conferences, maybe they’re already writing in journals, and publishing articles, and they’re already the go to people on that particular subject matter in the firm. Those are the easy ones to identify but I like to say but who else below them is emerging? Right? There’s a lot of younger, less experienced folks in engineering, and architecture, and construction that you know what, they have a lot of knowledge, they are hungry.

Tim Asimos: And in some ways, and I say this without intending to offend anyone. But there can be times when that 20 something engineer may be more up to date on certain areas of engineering than the person who’s been engineering for 30 years simply because they’ve just been in a mindset of learning for so long with their school. And they’re in that stage of their career when they’re trying to get ahead that they’re just pushing themselves to grow, and learn, and advance. And so you don’t want to exclude those younger folks. And to the point that you were just making, yeah. If you say, “Hey, we need you to write an article about the benefits of urban stormwater management,” guess what? They’re gonna learn a lot and they may very well come back with some ideas that some of your subject matter experts hadn’t considered, or hadn’t heard about, or this study here, or this innovative thing this firm over in China did. You just never know what can come back.

Tim Asimos: So I think there’s a lot of benefits to the firm just from doing it without it being this direct sort of the big three letter term that every firm principle wants to bring up with ROI. Well, it’s like there’s a lot of return on this initiative that may not come in the form of we publish this blog post and here’s the project that we landed because of that blog post. Sometimes that could happen, but it’s a little bit more broad than that. But I think what you said, that is definitely an ancillary benefit is that the people doing it are gonna just become better experts because, again, they’re doing the research, they’re doing their homework. And they’re making sure that the thoughts that they’re putting out are as solid as they can possibly be.

David Lecours: Thanks for mentioning ROI. This wasn’t the plan. But our previous episode, 130, was on ROI. So go to PSM.show if you haven’t heard that episode and check that out. But I love what you said there. We can’t assume that the people that are creating the content are or even should be the leaders or principles of the firm. There is this principle in Zen Buddhism called beginner’s mind where you approach a problem and you approach things with this unknowing, fresh, blank slate. You don’t have assumptions. And I love what you said about the person maybe being more hungry and bringing a new, fresh perspective because they just look at it in an unexpected way. And isn’t that what we want? In order to differentiate our firms, we want to look at problems and solve them in a new fresh, more efficient, more cost effective, et cetera, et cetera kind of way.

Tim Asimos: Absolutely.

David Lecours: One thing that happened to me, just yesterday, I was pitching a new website. And in the meeting, the prospective client brought up an interesting question. And I said, “I could spend an hour answering that, but I know your time is limited and why don’t I just send you an article that I wrote on that topic?” And this is not a unique phenomenon. So what I found, and I’m curious of your take on this is that, I found once you’ve written the content, it doesn’t just live the life of going out in an email, it lives forever on your website and you can use it in the BD or sales process. Have you found that to be true or is that something you recommend?

Tim Asimos: Oh yeah. Absolutely. I think for me and my agency, I think it’s true for our clients as well. I mean, from my perspective, if you have a content marketing strategy that’s aligned with your target audience, the things that you’re writing about are the questions, the concerns, the pain points, the information gaps that your prospective clients have as well as your existing clients. So to your point, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve followed up with, “Hey, here’s a few articles related to our conversation.” Or frankfully, we even write some blog articles with a specific client in mind. A client emails us or calls us with a question. And to your point, it’s a long answer. And so that prompts us to write a blog post.

Tim Asimos: We had one client that said … We’re having a conversation about marketing and we’re throwing out all these marketing terms. And he was just real candid and said, “I gotta be honest. I don’t understand half of these terms that you’re throwing out. I’m not a marketing guy. Do you guys have a glossary or something you can provide?” And I was like, “No, but I promise you, I’ll get you one.” And so literally within a week, we wrote a blog post that’s like-

David Lecours: So this is cool. This inspired your editorial calendar.

Tim Asimos: Absolutely. It was like … I don’t remember what the post is titled, but it’s sort of like Business Owner’s Glossary of Marketing Terms or something of that effect and sent it to him. And he was incredibly grateful and thankful. And it’s a pretty high ranking post on our blog that gets a lot of traffic, a lot of views. So clearly other people have needed that. So we often will inform our editorial calendar. A lot with conversations, with clients, and prospects. And that really drives that. Because it’s like, well, if these are the things they’re always asking us and they clearly … Other people are looking for answers to those questions, again, it gets back to writing about the things that your audience wants to hear and read. Not what you want to say. And it’s really, really important. I mean, I do think there’s an element of sometimes answering questions your audience doesn’t know to ask, but they’re gonna be really intrigued to read it because they don’t always know what they don’t know or they don’t always know what to ask. So sometimes, you have to think about what should they know that they don’t know. But even that mindset is still from the lens of what’s gonna really matter and be relevant to the user.

Tim Asimos: So yeah, it’s definitely … It’s not just … If all you do is post your blog articles on your blog and leave it at that, you definitely are not maximizing the use of that content. It should be your business development folks should be having conversations with prospects. And coming back. And instead of sending out a boring old statement of qualifications that that prospect never even asked for, and then it gets thrown in the trash, you follow up with here’s a couple articles related to integrated project delivery that we talked about. And benefits of IPD versus design build. Whatever that might be. Whatever that topic or that conversation is, imagine when you can follow up with something that’s incredibly relevant and pertinent to that conversation. That’s when you’re gonna get some traction with that content.

David Lecours: Well and late in the sales cycle when somebody’s needing to be reaffirmed, they’ve kinda already made the decision to hire you, but yeah, there’s maybe a little buyer’s remorse in their mind. If you can follow up with that expertise to just reassure them, “Look, we know about this. We’ve done it before. We’ve written about it,” just instills that confidence that you really need to close the sale.

Tim Asimos: Yup, absolutely.

David Lecours: Oh, that’s really cool.

David Lecours: Alright. So I think we’ve pretty much covered the why. Let’s move on to sort of the what. And I’m curious if you offer suggestions to your clients on how frequently they should be putting out content. Like their word count targets or just times per month. Any thoughts on that?

Tim Asimos: Yeah, great question. I get asked all the time. I’ll start with frequency before I get into the word count. I always … My analogy that I always share is content marketing is a lot like working out. The more you do it, the more results that you’re gonna see. So I think publishing a blog post once a month, once every few months, once a year. You’re not gonna see a whole lot of traction from that. At the same time, it’s not realistic for me to be in the gym seven days a week. So three or four days is pretty good for me in gym. So same with blogging, right? Like hey, if once a week or once every other week is only what’s realistic based on staff, and availability, and resources. But the key is to be consistent and to do it enough. I’d say at a minimum, twice a month is really what you should be aiming for if you really want to have impact. I think weekly is an ideal. That’s where we are. We used to be at three or four times a week, which kinda makes my head spin to even think about.

David Lecours: Wow.

Tim Asimos: And that’s just … That wasn’t sustainable. And that was when we were pretty much blogging was our number one sort of form of content. As we do more speaking, as we do webinars, as we do other forms of content, it’s spread out a little bit more. So once a week is kind of a nice cadence. I think the main thing, too. And I use the word cadence, is if you want to attract an audience and kinda have sort of subscribers, if you will, having that regular cadence, they know, alright every week there’s gonna be a new post. Or every other week. or every month. That establishing that cadence, whether it’s your blog, whether it’s your email newsletter, or the emails you send out. People need to understand what that frequency is gonna be. But a lot of times I’ll see firms, they’ll go like, “Oh crap, it’s been three weeks since we posted to social media. So they try to make up for it.” so then all of a sudden they’re posting multiple times a day and I think collectively, their followers are like, “What the heck’s going on? Ah, stop. It’s too much.” So cadence is a good thing, right? We know those weekly new episodes are coming out on TV. Although, we’re all now getting suckered in with the binge watching with Netflix series. But and that’s neither in or there. But the cadence is really important to what people can expect.

David Lecours: Yeah. With our podcast, we put it out every other Friday. And people expect it. And it’s good to have that deadline. And yeah. I think people appreciate that rhythm.

Tim Asimos: Yeah. Absolutely. And I would say plan for the big day. So if you or every other week or once a week, don’t skip Thanksgiving week, or don’t skip the week of Christmas, don’t take a two week break. Because guess what? When people are on their holiday break-

David Lecours: Yeah, they have time.

Tim Asimos: They’re still reading. So keeping it regular. They’re just … Again, just like the gym analogy, when you take breaks, you’re just tempting yourself to never go back again, right? So I think with content marketing, you just have to do it regularly and be disciplined. And depending on your goals and your effort, not everyone’s trying to be back to the gym. Not everyone’s trying to be Mark Wahlberg. So that’s okay. But you have to establish what you’re trying to accomplish, and where it fits into everything else you’re doing, and really aim for that.

David Lecours: Yeah. I mean, you’re going to the gym every day. You’re looking so good. People aren’t gonna be hiring you for your mind, they’re gonna be just focused on your body.

Tim Asimos: Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. But it’s a simple thing. That’s the other thing that I find really interesting about marketing and as I talk and consult. None of this stuff is rocket science. I always hope I can bring new ideas and new perspectives. But at the end of the day, the key to being healthy is eat right, get sleep, and exercise. And you can come up with a million fads, and a million new things. Every day, there’s some new thing. But at the end of the day, it just kinda comes down to those simple principles. Marketing’s kinda the same way and content marketing is too. And we have to just dedicate ourselves to the principles.

David Lecours: Right. So you mentioned you guys are now in the rhythm of once a week. How many different contributors at your firm are creating content?

Tim Asimos: So that’s a great, great question. Not enough. We have a plan for 2019 involving a lot more people. You’ll probably see my name on the blog more than anyone. There are two to three others that fairly regularly contribute. But it is a lot of me. I think part of it is I have a passion for it. Part of it is it just kind of goes with the territory of my role. But not enough people. So I think the same would apply for firms. Most people, you’ll find someone who wants to publish blog articles in your firm. Rarely, rarely have I ever found an engineering firm or construction firm where there isn’t someone there that doesn’t have something to say and isn’t willing to put it onto paper. The problem is when you rely too much on any one person, they get burned out and you just want diversity of thought. I think in our agency, we’re smaller. We’re just a marketing agency. It’s okay that there isn’t as much diversity of thought. But if you’re a multi-discipline engineering firm and you do site, civil, and environmental, and surveying, and storm water, and infrastructure-

David Lecours: Different markets.

Tim Asimos: Yeah. That’s it. You can’t have one or two people writing all the content. You need people speaking about different things in the areas where your firm is more focused in growing that subject matter expertise and thought leadership. So you need more people. But the bigger motivation for marketers should be that person that’s gong ho about writing a weekly blog post today, fast forward six months, they might be very much burned out. Whereas if you have a few others in the mix and they’re only having to write once a month, once every six weeks, then if anything, the best thing can happen is they say, “Man, I really want to write more.” And then you can say, “Oh, well, how about you do a webinar. Or we might launch a podcast next year. Are you interested in that?” You can get them to contribute to other types of content beyond just articles.

David Lecours: Yeah. Absolutely. So you guys are going four times a month. It doesn’t have anything to do with length. Are there … And that’s where I sort of ask, word count. Is there a target?

Tim Asimos: Word count.

David Lecours: Yeah. Is that something that you guys do?

Tim Asimos: Yeah. So basic SEO, Google recommends more than 300 words, which immediately-

David Lecours: For a simple post.

Tim Asimos: A single post, a single page on a website which immediately eliminates probably 80% of web pages out there in the AEC industry that have … The architects have three words on the page. The engineers might have 3000. And the construction firm might have 300. So maybe they’re a little bit there. But a blog article, 300. And I would say minimum recommendation would be in a six to 800 words goal for that, I would say longer form content like 1200, 14, 16, 1800 words. Even in an era where everyone’s saying no one has attention spans, the data shows it delivers. It is more effective. The reality is good content people will focus on. When everyone says, “Oh, well, no one has an attention span.” Yeah, but we’re also the society that will binge watch Stranger Things in an entire weekend, right? So no, good content will keep people’s attention. And people crave long form content for this reason. They’re looking for an answer to their question. They’re trying to better understand a topic.

Tim Asimos: Think about it. What’s gonna give you more understanding of a topic? A 600 word article or a 1600 word article, right? So that’s where the longer form is more beneficial. It also improves your SEO rankings because a longer article … If Google has a choice between a 600 and a 1600, in their algorithm, more than likely, they’re gonna come to the conclusion that there’s more value in the 1600 word. With that said, a long article needs to be broken up. You need to have some bullets. Every paragraph should probably have a sub-headline. You need to have a list. 12 things, eight things, seven things. You don’t just want a 1600 word term paper because that might give people some bad flashbacks from high school, junior high, or maybe college. But yeah. You want to break it up. But at the end of the day, I always tell people, write as many words as are necessary to add value to the topic that you’re writing about. And for me, it always ends up being 1400, 1600 words. For others, maybe they can do it in 600, or 500, or 800, or 700. But you want to add value to that topic. And if you think about other articles that might exist on the internet on that topic, bring something new to the conversation. And oftentimes, a longer article gives you more ability to kind of expand on a topic and bring some in-depth insight to it.

David Lecours: Yeah. Absolutely. I mean, the benchmark I’d give clients is they should aim for 3000 words a month of fresh content. Google tends to reward that. But yeah, use that as a guide. Like you said, don’t just spill it with a bunch of junk. Tell the story or write the article as efficiently as you can.

Tim Asimos: Yeah. Those back to the high school term paper, those teachers could always sniff out the kid that wrote a three page term paper and it needed to be five and he just sort of fluffed it. I’m sure I never did that ever.

David Lecours: No.

Tim Asimos: But they fluffed the next to get five pages. Your users are the same way. They’re gonna start reading and they’re gonna be like, “This is just long for the sake of being long.” The goal’s not to be long, the goal is to be thorough and to be valuable. So kinda make that the measuring stick. But from my experience, that tends to give you more than 300 words if that’s the measuring stick.

David Lecours: So I noticed in your bio, it says you’re a syndicated blogger. What does that mean and is that something our audience can use as a tool?

Tim Asimos: So there’s a few wesites that syndicate my blog articles. So they kind of republish them through an RSS feed, I’ve given them permission to kinda republish the content. And so it just expands my audience beyond just people that find our blog and people just have a larger audience. Just like a syndicated radio show gets picked up in other markets and other stations. It’s kinda the same way. I know that in the industry, there’s definitely websites and publications that accept guest posts, and guest writers, and guest articles. I think actually that whole publishing today in 2018 is a lot more about articles on the internet versus getting in the magazine. That was always the goal from that PR angle of we want to get published. Get this article published. It’s a lot easier to do that now because a lot of publications would be at ENR or something like that. They’re looking for contributors. And so I think that’s a helpful thing to just get your content expanded beyond your firm’s website just to kind of amplify your reach and to attract a larger audience.

David Lecours: Yeah, I know I’ve had experiences where somebody has read a post and asked me to write on the same topic but a little bit different or a little spin and then it ends up being shown … In this particular case, I’m thinking of it showed up in one of the PSMJ Journals. And it just gave me that wider reach. Somebody ended up reading it that isn’t on my mailing list and it led to a project. And so it was fantastic that they were able to help sort of be the megaphone to amplify what I had already written. I fine tuned it. I wrote a new paragraph or two to make it fresh. But I love what you’re talking about there.

Tim Asimos: Yup.

David Lecours: So there’s this whole kind of ecosystem of content, right? We’ve been talking about speaking and if our listeners want to go back to episode 112, Josh and I did a whole talk on speaking. We’re talking about writing, we’re talking about blog posts, we’re talking about social media, possibly podcasting. The recommendation that I give clients is that all these things should point back to the hub which is your website. Is that something that you say or do you have another approach?

Tim Asimos: Yeah, I mean, I think the website is the hub. It should be sort of the headquarters of your digital presence. Your social media. The goal of the social media should be to get people back to your website. Which is why when we design and build wesites, we never recommend people put their social media up in their menu and their main header because it’s like you’re immediately inviting people to leave to go to your social channels when the goal is to get people to your website, not to get people to your social. So I think that the website is the hub that you ultimately want to send people to. Your email gets people back to your website. But I also think that the value is in that own platform. When you’re on Facebook, you’re at the mercy of Facebook. And their daily new algorithms that are increasingly more of a pay for play situation, whereas your website, you own it, it’s yours, and if you can drive people there, then that’s the goal. So I definitely agree with that. For sure.

David Lecours: Yeah and if our audience isn’t familiar with that term, owned media is media that you own. You don’t own Facebook, but you certainly own your own website. And you can control the whole experience. And you’re not dependent on the, like you said, the algorithm and whims of whatever platform, maybe your social shows up on.

Tim Asimos: Absolutely.

David Lecours: Cool. Alright. So I think we’ve covered why. We’ve covered what. Let’s get a little bit into how and then we’ll wrap it up.

Tim Asimos: Okay.

David Lecours: So I’m curious how do you balance … And this is sort of the question I get a lot from clients is how do you balance this writing and speaking with having to do billable work?

Tim Asimos: This is something I harp on a lot. The billable hour and it’s called utilization by a lot of the firms in the industry is the primary performance metric. And I just think in an age of client experience and thought leadership, it can’t be the only metric that you’re measure. There has to be unbillable time. Not only allowed, but encouraged for your people to serve clients better as well as to position yourself and the firm as thought leaders, as subject matter experts. So I think that, again, this is a paradigm shift if you will where firms are realizing it’s okay to not have someone be 90% billable. If 20 or 30% of their time is spent investing and nurturing client relationships is out there promoting the firm on a national scale as subject matter experts, that is gonna … It’s gonna be producing dividends for the firm long-term. So that’s really more of a long-term play than a short-term play. I think when you’re just focused on the billable dollar, it’s a short-term metric. Not a long-term value metric. And that’s where I think you have to kind of change your perspective.

Tim Asimos: So that’s my take on that. With that said, obviously, most subject matter experts are billable. I’m billable. My role, part of my role is sort of thought leadership is business development in addition to kind of overseeing our digital and our content effort. So I’m not expected to be billable at 80%. I’m expected to spend a chunk of time. But I know there’s a lot of seller doers. And this is even a challenge for seller doers. They’re literally called seller doers, but they get penalized when they-

David Lecours: They’re selling

Tim Asimos: Don’t have enough hours doing instead of selling. So this is where I just think the industry really has to kind of rethink some of the way we look at utilization and the billable hour. And there has to be a commitment that you’re gonna have to expect your people to spend time doing things that aren’t billable. But these are very, very, very important initiatives. And that’s when I think incentivizing, and rewarding, and measuring folks on things other than just utilization is when you’re gonna start to really get traction with people being willing to invest their time doing that.

Tim Asimos: With that said, a lot of my content creation happens after business hours. I’m not always writing blog articles or preparing presentations during the work day. A lot of that happens on air planes, in the hotel, late at night after my kids go to bed. So it’s not like … I keep going back to the analogy of working out, but it’s not on … You can find a million reasons. And I have found those reasons not to go to the gym. But if you really care, you’ll make time and you’ll figure out a way to work it into your already busy life in order to do it. I think it’s easy to come up with excuses why you don’t have time to do it. But it’s the people that are doing it and doing it well. They find time to squeeze it into a busy life.

David Lecours: And once you get a little bit of reward, you get some sort of return on that investment. Whether it be complements or praise. Or once you see you just gotta win one project that sort of the key factor was content or somebody heard you speak, now you’re really gonna be motivated. You’re gonna get that sort of adrenaline and dopamine hit of alright … And just a little return on investment, and it makes it all worth while.

Tim Asimos: Absolutely. Yeah. It’s kinda interesting, David, because you already have folks in the industry. They’re speaking at conferences, right? They do this all the time. No one’s having to convince thought leaders in an engineering firm or an architecture firm that you need to go speak at that higher ed conference, or that water treatment conference, or whatever it might be. They already go. They’ve been going for years. And they’re trying to speak. Blogging and all those other forms you mentioned are just taking that idea and putting it in a different format. So they clearly are making time to put together those proposals for call for speakers. They’re clearly making time to write that article for whatever engineering magazine that they’re trying to get published in. This is just a different medium, a different format, and it’s the same principle. So that’s kind of another way I like to point out.

David Lecours: [crosstalk 00:44:18] they’re already doing is they’re already writing proposals. And a lot of times those proposals are answers to specific questions that clients are have in terms of problems they’re trying to solve. So literally, within proposals, you could start pulling out a ton of content that would be great blog posts. Maybe content for a talk. And yeah, like you said, you’re speaking, just take that 45 minute talk and start to pull out all these little options or opportunities to share maybe in written form.

Tim Asimos: Absolutely. Yeah. I think there’s a lot of content. I always share this with firms that haven’t actually truly launched a content marketing program is don’t reinvent the wheel. There is likely already content as you described in proposals, in PowerPoint presentations already there that’s at the very least, it’s a starting point to where you’re not giving that blank sheet of paper to the engineer, to the architect, to ask them to write on topic. You’re getting them to edit that topic.

Tim Asimos: I’ll share an example. My old firm, when we were launching content marketing, we did a webinar. And one of our engineers, it was an hour long webinar and about 10 minutes into the webinar realized he was reading from a script, right?

David Lecours: Ouch.

Tim Asimos: I’ll be honest. It wasn’t the most energetic and exciting webinar, but halfway though, I had this light bulb. I’m like, “He wrote that entire script. It’s an hour of talking.” So after it was over, I said, “Hey, can I get a copy of your PowerPoint with the notes?” Oh yeah, sure. Well that was a dozen blog articles I was able to coble together from his notes. Obviously, I had to polish it and tweak it. But we’re talking I wrote 12 articles from that one webinar with very minimal effort. And he was tickled because all of a sudden his name’s showing up on the blog pretty frequently and he didn’t have to lift a finger. That sort of scenario likely exists all over firms everywhere, right? You’ve got your virtual design, your BIM person probably has tons of presentations that are just waiting there for you to kind of go through and sift through to see what you repurpose and turn it into an article or an infographic for a video even. So there’s just a lot of good content hiding in plain sight.

David Lecours: So another perfect example of that is so for this show, we send the audio file to a transcription service. Rev.com, if you’re interested in using them. No, we don’t get paid or anything. And they turn our audio file into the written word. And so now we’re starting to post the transcripts of these podcasts on our PSM.show website because some people just don’t like listening to audio. They prefer to read things. It creates content. It’s not as good as original content. I think Google’s algorithm is sophisticated enough to realize that it’s not the same. I mean, it’s original content, but it’s not written in a way.

Tim Asimos: Sure.

David Lecours: It’s a transcript. But anyway, there’s so many different ways. And I think your point here, and this was actually gonna be my next question but you already started to answer it is, some first steps for our audience to sort of begin at content marketing. And I think what I’m hearing you say is you’re already doing it. Just start to formalize it and sort of pull out the nuggets that are already being created.

Tim Asimos: Right, right. Yeah, we were meeting with a client. Our potential client yesterday. And they had thought leadership content on their website, but it was stuck in their news and event section. And I’m a real firm believer. It’s sort of like in the old newspaper business, there was a separation of editorial and advertising. That’s the sacred divide between promotion and original thought. And I think the same should exist on your website. Don’t throw your thought leadership content in the same place where you’re saying, “Hey, look at us. We’re awesome. We hired this guy. We won this award. Whatever. We just had this event and hot wing contest.” Whatever it might be that you see. Don’t put those in the same place.

Tim Asimos: And so I think part of that is making sure that you have the infrastructure in place as you’re getting started. If you don’t have a blog or if your blog is on another platform or another website. You really want to integrate into your website. One, so you get SEO credit, but two, so that it feels like it’s just part of who you are as a firm and you’re able to kind of promote that thought leadership throughout your website instead of just on a blog. And you know what? That word, sometimes, people … It’s a misnomer. They don’t understand that word or that word sounds … I don’t know. It doesn’t always … I don’t think it always hits principles the right way. So forget that word. Call it insights. Call it whatever you want to call it. Right? Just call it articles, thinking, ideas, whatever you want to call it. Just make sure that the user understands that I’m gonna go here for knowledge, not just more promotional news and information about the firm.

David Lecours: Yeah. No, that’s really important. And so I’ve always given this recommendation. If you’re sending out email marketing, maybe six to one or eight to one ratio of offering. So the six is meaningful thought leadership content marketing. Stuff they can use. And then you got … You’ve afforded yourself the opportunity to do the one, which is we won this project, we hired this person. Because if it’s all me, me, me, nobody likes a relationship with somebody that talks about themself all the time.

Tim Asimos: Absolutely. Yeah. I call that the 80/20 rule. 80% of the thought leadership and 20% of the firm news and firm promotion. If you give them 80% or six out of seven as you put it, that’s thought leadership, that’s educational, then you’ve earned the right for them to actually not be offended or annoyed. When you do have something to say about yourself, they’re like, “Okay, alright. They’ve earned the right.” Yeah, but to your point, I call it the boy who cried wolf. A lot of times, people will just send the same sort of boring stuff over and over and over again and people become conditioned to just ignore your email all together. And then you might actually post something great. But because you’ve bombarded them with a lot of things that aren’t relevant or aren’t interesting to them, they don’t pay any attention. So you gotta build that sort of reputation as somebody that sends out good stuff that’s interesting.

David Lecours: Well, Tim, speaking of reputation, it’s awesome to have you. Your reputation is really awesome and you follow it up with great content. I appreciate your time and you sharing your expertise. Talking about sharing your expertise. So meta.

Tim Asimos: Yeah, absolutely.

David Lecours: This has been fantastic. And I want to encourage our listeners that if you want to go back and read the show notes, if you want to read this article, you want to listen to it again, you want to share it with somebody else that you think maybe a principle in your firm that has been resistant to getting content marketing going, share this episode because I think there’s some good stuff in there that might help you make your case. And if so, go to PSM.show. If you want to contact us, just scroll down and drop us a line through the simple contact form. And that’s it for this episode of PSM Show. For Tim Asimos and myself, David Lecours, we’re out of here.

132: Website People Section

This episode runs 28 min.

David and Josh discuss the very important People section on your website.

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 Mentioned in This Episode 132: Website People Section

  • You should include your people on your website
  • But, won’t our competitors steal our best people?
  • Who to include in your People section
  • Photo options: headshot, full body, business, biz casual, casual, 
  • Include bios or bullet qualifications or Q&A
  • People do business with people they know, like and trust
  • Relationships can and do begin online (no, not Tinder)
  • Where to put your people beyond the People section
  • Have Ambassadors for markets and service lines
  • Can your People section help your firm win the talent war?
  • Photo group shots or just individual photos in case people leave the firm
  • Video protraits
  • What about people that refuse to have their photo taken

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SMPS

 

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Let us know what you think about this episode. Should we do more interviews? Or, would you prefer just Josh and David (no guests)? Or should we get rid of Josh and David altogether? Use the form on our homepage to let us know.

 

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Read the Episode

Announcer: Welcome to PSM, the Professional Services Marketing podcast. It’s insight applied.

David Lecours: Hello and welcome to PSM show, the podcast for AEC marketers. I’m David Lecours and I’ve got Josh Miles with me here as well. How’s it going, Josh?

Josh Miles: Going well sir, how are you?

David Lecours: I’m good, I’m glad to be back on the podcast. So today I have a topic that’s a perennial one and it relates to featuring your people or your staff on your website. Is that something you’ve ever dealt with?

Josh Miles: Oh my goodness, when it comes to websites there are always like three or four big emotional topics and there are a few things more emotional I think than people on websites.

David Lecours: Yeah, absolutely. I just want to remind our listeners that we have a title sponsor and they support the underwriting and the technical production of this show and that sponsor is SMPS, who reminds us that business is transformed through marketing leadership. If you want to find out more about SMPS check out their website where you can see their people smps.org. If you want to see our people, Josh and I, check out our website at psm.show.

Announcer: This is PSM. It’s insight applied.

David Lecours: Okay, Josh, let’s get into this. Of course, the first question that always comes up and it takes many different forums when a firm our audience is working on updating their website is it should, in fact, they feature their people on their website? I have strong opinion about this but first I want to hear yours.

Josh Miles: You know, David, I think it’s a funny question in particular when we think about especially the more design firm leaning groups in the AEC world where they’re really good at finding amazing photographers who take amazing photographs of buildings that are completely devoid of humans. I think when it comes time to add the photos of their people on their website, I think the gut feeling for most firms is they’re scared to do it. Why do you think that is?

David Lecours: Well, I think, in general, people are self-conscious of their own image, which is funny. In that we now live in this world of selfies and Instagram and Facebook, and man, in those mediums people don’t seem to be hesitant to post their own photos. But for some reason, there’s this very strong line in the sand of that’s personal and this is professional. As a professional, it’s all about our work, it’s not about me. I guess the irony of that is the thing that I always hear is like, “Hey, we’re in a relationship business. People buy us for us and it’s that personal connection.” Yeah, I feel very strongly that firms should feature their people. Now there’s lots of different ways we can do that, and we’ll talk about those, but, yeah, at some level you’ve got to feature the people that are doing the work.

Josh Miles: Yeah, I completely agree with that. I guess I would take it a step further too and say you probably should have some people in those beautiful [crosstalk 00:03:18] buildings as well because we didn’t make the buildings just for photos. We made them for the end user. I had the opportunity recently to attend a design intelligence conference called the Design Futures Council and they were talking about maybe the flipped idea that your hospital client is not asking you to build them a more beautiful hospital, they’re asking you to join them on their quest to cure cancer and building this new hospital is really just a step in getting to their goal. I think that super important piece of keeping the people in mind is huge for the industry as a whole. There’s nothing more personal than the people who are actually going to be doing the work and being able to introduce that team to everyone who’s checking out your website.

David Lecours: Yeah, for sure. Now one of the resistance or push backs I sometimes get from clients is, “Hey, if we feature our people on there, our competitors are going to steal them.” What do you think about that, is that a valid fear?

Josh Miles: If I had a nickel for every time I heard that, that piece of feedback. Well, I think in all seriousness, this is going to sound a little bit smarter lucky, but I think if firms worried as much about what it took to keep their most valuable people and worry less about having them poached, I think it wouldn’t matter. They could have the home phone or their … like anybody has a home phone, they could have their cell phone numbers printed under their bios and have nothing to worry about because they’re creating such an awesome culture and such a great place to work. As a side point, there’s this little thing called social media where maybe your best people might be on there too and that might be a better poaching ground than your website anyway.

David Lecours: I know, I always tell it like, “Well, look, your competitors already know who your great people are, your great people are visible experts. They’re out there speaking and writing and they’re on LinkedIn, and if it was so easy to just poach them because they happen to be on your website, yeah, then there are bigger problems that need to be resolved first before you consider whether or not you put your people on your website.”

Josh Miles: Somehow not showing the photo is a great defensive move though.

David Lecours: Right, yeah. They can’t see them but how can they hire them?

Josh Miles: Right.

David Lecours: But, yeah, I think it is so important but we know that people buy from people they know, like, and trust. The best way to get to know people and get to like them and get to trust them is to get to feel what they’re like. What I found is that these relationships now are beginning online, yes, there’s no substitute for meeting somebody in person. But it’s not an either or situation, you can meet somebody online and then meet them in person, or you can go vice versa. So we need to fluidly move in and out and having somebody available online on the website is such a great start. Not just for recruiting for projects but I’d love to hear your thoughts on having your people on there as a recruiting tool.

Josh Miles: Well, I think something that we’ve talked about in AEC marketing links over the past few years is this whole idea of a talent war and I think failing to showcase your people and your culture on your website is just a huge miss unless you have a horrible culture or a horrible place to work. If you’ve got a great company and a great place to work, I think the more that you can show that off, your team and your culture are some of the few meaningful differentiators who would be employee. I think it’s a huge wasted opportunity just to not show what that looks like.

David Lecours: That’s a really interesting point, it seems obvious but nobody else has your people. I know that we can’t differentiate solely on our people. I’ve never met a firm that doesn’t think that they have the smartest people and the best people. But there’s this makeup of each individual personality that when combined does make your culture and does make, hopefully, the firm different. I don’t think that can be understated.

Josh Miles: Okay, so this is maybe the most emotionally instigating question that gets asked around the boardroom table around websites, which is who should we feature on our website?

David Lecours: Yes, right.

Josh Miles: Whether it’s a large firm or a small firm or multi-office, multi-location, huge, massive firm, how do you consult with your clients and how do you recommend coming to a conclusion about who gets featured on the website?

David Lecours: Yeah, I used to say it was a pretty … Well, not easy, but easier decision and it was just based on size. If the firm was say 50 people or larger, featuring everybody was just instantly off the table. I’ve changed my view on that because the last two sites we’ve done, one was for a firm that has 175 people and one was a firm that has over 300 people. In both cases, we decided to feature every single person in the firm. Now, I don’t recommend that for everybody, it’s not for the faint of heart. It requires you to create individual pages for each of those people. But it was really important to those firms and so I guess it comes back to like everything, strategy. What is it you want to emphasize and doesn’t make sense? There’s definitely benefits to having everybody on there for recruitment and retention.

David Lecours: Everybody can then literally point to a URL to their own individual page and send that out to friends and family. We’re always trying to explain what we do for a living to our parents and having that link to your particular page on your company’s website is a great introduction to go there.

Josh Miles: See, mom, I’m actually on the website, that’s how you can sell.

David Lecours: Yeah, I am working, I am working. It’s a hard decision because you don’t want to alienate people and so then the question becomes where do you draw the line? Like, okay, let’s say the firm’s decided, “We’re not going to feature everybody but we’re going to feature VPs and above or directors and above.” I think you have to pick an arbitrary line and then decide, “These are the folks that are going to be featured.” I would say at minimum like let’s say I think you’ve got to feature your people, but the minimum, not number, but the minimum level of people that should be included are people that have some form of client level contact. That could take a lot of forms, that could take business development, marketing, of course, I mean, those people absolutely have to be on there. But also it could take the place of project managers and it could take the place of account people or it depends on how you’re structured.

David Lecours: I think if you have client level contact, you’ve got to be on there because during that client dating process where prospective clients are trying to get to know your firm for them to be able to do the research and get to know your people, the people that might be leading or working on your project through your website is a great feature.

Josh Miles: Let’s pretend for just a moment that there’s some really great argument as to why your people shouldn’t be on the website and I mean specifically in terms of individual bios. Let’s say we have maybe it’s a privacy issue or maybe it’s we do super secret projects and we can’t have our people who have security clearance. Something goofy like that, who knows. How else could a firm demonstrate culture through photography or through people if it’s not through bios?

David Lecours: I think event type of situations where you’re having like internal events or maybe you’ve put on an internal conference. I think you can communicate culture by showing off the thought leadership that you’ve shown. But, yeah, it is tough if you cannot show any individual photo of a person. Then maybe it needs to be some illustration. I don’t know why I’m going there but like in TV situations, crime dramas in particular, where they can’t show photography, but they’ll show an artist’s rendering of the scene. Maybe you use an illustration, which I’ve seen done actually pretty effectively and it actually adds a level of interest and uniqueness. So rather than a headshot, it’s an illustration of a person or it’s an illustration of a scene working together or an infographic that demonstrates culture, things like that.

Josh Miles: Maybe that’s a good segue from our maybe silly made up reason why you can’t show your people, but maybe in addition to the bios, where else would you recommend that our people show up on the website?

David Lecours: Yeah, I think, right. Of course, you should probably have some team or staff or people section and that’s the baseline minimum. But I think that people should show up in other places. Like if you’re going to have a section on vertical markets that you serve or you’re going to have a section on services that you serve, it’s a great idea to have ambassadors for each of those particular markets. So that if somebody is in that market, let’s say you work in airports and you have a prospective client that wants to get to know about your expertise in airports, they can reach out to somebody who is that Ambassador. Whether it’s via email or phone and ask particular questions. Even if they didn’t ask questions, it’s almost like just having that person there suggests this reassurance that there’s somebody that stands behind the work and it’s not just nameless, faceless, we’re going to hire a bunch of freelancers to fill in. No, there’s somebody dedicated to this market or this service and you can reach them if you need to.

David Lecours: Yeah, I think those ambassadors are really good. I also think that putting people in relationship to project descriptions if there was somebody significant who added a, I don’t know, level of detail or expertise, linking the person within the project description back to the team or staff section. Then, finally, I think it’s essential to list people where you are housing or archiving, you’re writing and you’re speaking. Any thought leadership should have links to people and who actually wrote the article and who gave the talk so that if you like what they wrote, you can link to them and get to know them on a deeper level. Then potentially follow them via social media or potentially sign up for a list, an email list, like I want to receive everything that that person writes or speaks about.

Josh Miles: I used to get really nerdy about, I say used to like I don’t anymore, but I used to follow a little more closely to Google SEO recommendations and one of the ideas that became very popular with Google for a while was this idea of an Author Box. Meaning like linking your Google+, if you remember that ghost town, to your blog posts. But I’d love the artifact that came out of that which was at the bottom of a blog post, having the photo and the mini bio of the person who wrote it and maybe links to other things. I would definitely recommend that’s another place where you could show off some of your thought leaders as connecting to all of those pieces. Having specifically using that photo again in that place.

David Lecours: Right, if you use the analogy to the print world, we would call that a byline, the Wall Street Journal article has. Well, they have a unique illustration style where they typically will show off maybe their journalist’s picture or headshot but it’s illustrated and then usually not all bio, but at least a minimum their name and their title or any area of expertise. Yeah, I think that’s really good. Let’s say we’ve got this people section, we’re going to feature people. We talked about maybe there’s some untraditional things, of course. Well, let’s talk about photography first. The next thing that often comes up is, “How do we take the picture of the person? Do we go full body shot? Do we do headshot? Do we put them behind their desk? Do we put them in front of a drafting table? Oh, no, we can’t do that, that says we don’t use CAD or Revit or the new tool. How do we actually shoot these people? Any suggestions there for our audience?

Josh Miles: Yeah, just a few years ago, I remember a Canadian firm that I had been introduced to and they had done was pretty novel at the time. They did square portraits that were actually pulled shots from Instagram for all the bios. So instead of taking the time to try to make everybody consistent and getting all the same lighting and bringing a professional photographer, they intentionally went the other direction and found the most creative selfie or photo of the staff person on Instagram and he shared that in the square and all of the colorized and dressed up, however it was. That was a really unique thing back then, I still don’t see lots of that but I think you have such a wide range of options when it comes to photography. Similar to working with a different graphic designer for your digital identity, I think we can really say a lot of different things stylistically with the photography too.

Josh Miles: Whether it’s really dark, serious stark lighting, or whether it’s really bright and airy and blown out, or whether it’s really colorful or whether your people are all photographed with their dog or their favorite thing. There’s just so many different things that you can do. What are some of your favorites that you’ve seen?

David Lecours: Yeah, I saw one recently where so rather than actually shooting everybody like individually against a backdrop, which is the traditional way to do it, this was the company had an internal event where it was a State of the Union for that company. They had speaker or a couple speakers and they had people out in the audience. They hired a photographer who was really good at shooting events and they actually used the photographs of this event. The photographer was tasked to try to make sure he shot everybody individually. All the shots are like environmental portraits where people are talking to other people and they’re out. It was a nice approach, it felt like it was a day at the work. It wasn’t like a post JCPenney portrait session of shot, it was people in their natural habitat. I thought it was a really cool way to do it.

David Lecours: Another thing I’ve seen done is, yeah, maybe you use a more traditional headshot for the gallery and then you click on that and you go to the person’s individual page and then they get the opportunity to submit their own photo that best shows off their personality. Now, we’ve done that before with clients and, yeah, we have to set some parameters and maybe there’s a little editing of like, “Well, maybe that’s not the best photo to show off in this environment. Keep that one for your own social media feed.” That’s a great approach. One of the things that I like to do where if you shoot somebody, let’s say you shoot their full body, you’ve now got three shots in one. You’ve got that full body shot which you can use in certain places.

David Lecours: You can do a waist up kind of shot from that same thing just by cropping in and it gives you a different perspective and aspect ratio. Then the third one of that is you just crop in really tightly to the shoulders and head, and that’s like a three in one approach that works pretty well.

Josh Miles: Any tips for firms who are maybe looking at this as a big expense line item in terms of weighing between, bringing in a professional headshot photographer versus trying to do in the DIY approach?

David Lecours: Yeah, so and this is also a challenge if you’ve got multiple locations. Let’s say you’ve got offices around the country to fly a photographer out to every single office and shoot every single person is probably cost prohibitive. But let’s say you bring in a photographer for your corporate office and you shoot the C-level executives, ask that photographer to set up a style guide and maybe suggest a particular backdrop that you can actually use in all the locations or particular lighting. You’re probably not going to get it as polished and professional as when you hire a professional photographer. But that photographer could give you some suggestions about how to gain some consistency across the entire organization.

Josh Miles: I think maybe along those lines too, especially, as our audience is largely marketers who are listening who might have to go up a few rungs of the organization to get that particular photo style approved or get some buy in from the principles. Something like Pinterest, just looking for headshot styles, or even going to design or advertising or marketing agency websites and look at how they do their people. I think you’ll find some maybe interesting and maybe some examples of what not to do. But I think that’ll give you maybe some inspiration as to what else is possible.

David Lecours: Yeah, ask your web designer for some suggestions because I think you’re spot on there in that marketing and ad agencies tend to be a little more progressive in this. They have creative license to do so. But I think you see folks are creative too, let’s show it off. Yeah, sure, we’re doing engineering and we’re building bridges but those are amazingly creative bridges. It doesn’t need to be super corporate or conservative.

Josh Miles: It’s not just about the photo, that what you do when it comes to the bio or what else should our listeners be thinking about?

David Lecours: Yeah, we need to get to know people, it’s not just what they look like, there needs to be some whether it’s a bio or … there’s a lot of different ways you can do this. I’ve certainly seen short bios and then a LinkedIn link that allows you to go on and see all the person’s qualifications. We’ve done it for clients in the past where we do Q&A. Like we write together with the marketing director 10 questions, and what we do is we distribute that to everybody that’s going to be featured. We say, “Hey, pick the five of those 10 that you feel most comfortable answering that are going to show you off in the best light.” That gives the person on staff some say and control over what gets published and they get to choose what questions they answer. It can be done as a narrative, maybe it’s a story about that particular person, maybe it’s some particular client problem that they solved and that thing is so iconic that that becomes the quick narrative.

David Lecours: If you do something like that, it’s probably good also in a sidebar to list their qualifications about maybe where they went to school and any professional degrees or associations that they have. But I think there’s a lot of opportunity here to be able to show people off. You can have downloadable PDFs, you can have information that let’s say it’s in a print proposal and you give a URL and then they can link back to the bio section and then you’re not using valuable word counts which are often so important these days in proposals. Spending time listing entire bios or narratives of their people. Have you seen anything else that stands out for how to show off your folks and words?

Josh Miles: Yeah, I think, again, be creative with this. I think there are so many different ways you could do it. You could have the, of course, litany of all the social media networks, or if you want the full story, you can always just go straight to LinkedIn because that’s presumably where you’re going to have probably the most complete resume or all the listing of experiences there. I don’t know, write a limerick or a haiku or a fictional story that’s clearly fictional. Just something that shows the personality of the firm and maybe the personality of the person. I think those are all really interesting ways that could potentially stand out from what your competitors are doing.

David Lecours: Josh, we’ve been focused on the individual person, but reality is that we work in these collaborative groups and many times the output is much greater and so shouldn’t we also show group shots and any suggestions around that?

Josh Miles: Yeah, and I love you always get into the issue of, well, what if so and so leaves or we have this certain amount of turnover? But I think the more that we can show more photo journalistic style shots that are not just the team of 12 posed against the wall, it’s more of here’s what it looks like when our design team is working on a problem together. Those photos, I think, have a longer shelf life even maybe many years after someone has left because it still shows the culture of how that team interacts and it’s less about Bob or Sally who’s in the photo and more about the context.

David Lecours: Right, and I always tell clients, “Hey, that person was at your firm at the time that photo was shot. This isn’t like photo realism where everything has to be up-to-date. You can keep a photo of somebody that isn’t in the firm anymore.

Josh Miles: It’s like a webcam.

David Lecours: Yeah, and well they say, “Well, could we just Photoshop them out?” I said, “No, it’s going to look ridiculous and you’ll be able to tell.” But I like your idea like hiring a photo journalist to shoot rather than maybe somebody that specializes in portraiture and some photographers can do both real well, but that’s a great way to show off scenarios that, “Yeah, if you’re going to show culture like show what it looks like and feels like every day and group shots often are a great way to do that. Then you can also have some fun and pose people, but in very untraditional ways. I’m thinking of a site we did recently where the photographer got up on a ladder and shot everybody. They were in a circle on their backs and their heads together and some of them are holding a favorite tool that they use in their job day to day, their engineers, and somebody in the photo is just cracking up.

David Lecours: I love it because like the traditional wisdom will say, “Oh, no, we can’t use that, somebody broke character, and I was saying, “No, no, no, we have to use that one because that’s the one that shows the humanity of what people are really like. We don’t want perfection, that’s not attractive, we want people to show off who they really are.”

Josh Miles: Yeah and I think the best images, photos otherwise, are the things that are really more concept driven and not that they have to be so art directed that they look static or stale, but something that feels intentional and that I love the idea that you’re describing of the people laying on their backs with their heads next to each other. That tells a story about what this team is like and you can certainly connect the dots for yourself about what that story is. But think about how could you pull your people together to do something that really stands out differently?

David Lecours: And then finally, we’ve been talking about still photographs, but wow, if we want to get to know somebody, isn’t video a great way to do that?

Josh Miles: Man, I love that idea and actually I think you might have been one of the first people that I heard talking about this. I think whether it’s more of just an Ambient Video, so it’s like this looping thing of Bob go work at his computer or whether it’s actual. Like actually interview of Bob talking to the camera about how he thinks about engineering or design or whatever it is, I think those could be really differentiating.

David Lecours: Yeah, for sure. You could take a bunch of those and combine them together to make a culture video but you could then break them apart and use them individually on people’s individual pages. I think that these video, I’m calling them video portraits, could be really, really cool.

Josh Miles: Yeah, absolutely.

David Lecours: Nice. Well, I think we’ve summarized all the key points. Anything else you wanted to talk about?

Josh Miles: Well, I think just in case everyone hasn’t gotten our point of view, clearly show your people on your website. It’s all a matter of what fits best with your culture and your firm but I think failing to demonstrate the people in the team and the culture that’s there is just a huge miss. I would just encourage firms to encourage their principles with some of these topics and all the reasons why you should feature your people.

David Lecours: I found that peer pressure can often be a great motivator, so find a firm that maybe you compete with or maybe it’s just a firm that’s admired in the industry and it’s like they’re showing their people and you can say, “Look, they’re not having their people poach, they’re not afraid to show off their people.” We need to be doing that too.

Josh Miles: Or at least they could say David and Josh said so.

David Lecours: Yes, exactly. Blame us, we’ll take the heat. Hey, Josh, I want to tell our listeners, there’s a relatively new feature in that we are transcribing all our episodes now going forward of PSM Show. So if you know somebody that for some reason doesn’t like audio and prefers to read things, every word that Josh and I say is now transcribed in the show notes of each episode. If you go to psm.show and find the episode. You have the opportunity to read the episode. Some people like that because they can go back and we, of course, do highlights of links or references or things like that. I just wanted to point that out.

Josh Miles: Well, now we’re going to be a little more accountable to what we’re saying on this.

David Lecours: I know, I know.

Josh Miles: It’s going to be written down.

David Lecours: Hey, if you guys have any questions or comments about this show or future guests or ideas, we’d love to hear from you. Go to psm.show, just scroll down and drop us a line in the contact form there. That’s it of this episode of PSM show from myself, David Lecours and Josh Miles. We’ll see you next time.

 
 
 

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