Attention Writing Twitter 📢

January, 2022 is gearing up to be Ship 30 for 30's BIGGEST cohort yet (1,000+ Shippers).

To celebrate, let's play a game.

1 RT = 1 digital writing tip we share inside the course.

Ready, go.
You can join the last Ship 30 for 30 cohort of the year here 👇

ship30for30.com
Digital Writing Tip #1: It's your content. You can do anything you want with it.

Atomic Essays can become:

• Newsletters
• Landing page copy
• eBooks
• Digital Products
• Course material
• Scripts for podcast episodes
• Etc.
Digital Writing Tip #2: You make your headlines more compelling by increasing the voltage ⚡️⚡️⚡️

You can do this to your:

• WHAT?
• WHO?
• FEELING
• PROMISE

More description in any one of these parts of your headline = ⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️ Image
Digital Writing Tip #3: You are not the main character. Your reader is.

This means, even if you're telling "your story" or sharing "your insights," you have to find a way for it to relate to the reader's wants, needs, questions, and desires.

They should see themselves in you.
Digital Writing Tip #4: All content can be reverse-engineered in 4 buckets.

• Actionable
• Analytical
• Aspirational
• Anthropological

We call this The 4A Framework.

Start here, and your writing will have 10x more clarity. Image
Digital Writing Tip #5: DO NOT START A BLOG.

A huge reason we started #Ship30for30 was to help writers avoid making the BIGGEST mistake when writing online.

Your blog has zero distribution.

Instead, we help writers start their own Social Blog.

typeshare.co
Digital Writing Tip #6: Write for the version of yourself 6+ months ago.

So many people want to write, but aren't sure what to write ABOUT.

Here's an easy framework:

Write for the version of you who didn't know what you know today.

Help that person.
Digital Writing Tip #7: Not sure how to structure your writing? Use a proven approach.

"Lists" have a bad reputation, but they're a terrific way to organize ideas.

You can organize just about anything into a list. Image
Digital Writing Tip #8: It's only clickbait if you fail to keep your promise to the reader.

If you write an amazing headline but the content is sub-par, you "tricked" the reader.

They call that clickbait.

But if DELIVER on the promise, guess what?

*Bookmarked*
Digital Writing Tip #9: Credibility can come in many forms.

Don't feel like you're "the expert" on anything?

Go out and curate what experts have to say about X.

Congrats!

You're now "the expert of curating experts on X." Image
Digital Writing Tip #10: Volume wins.

What makes a successful writer in 2021+ is not one single piece.

It's their body of work.

Their LIBRARY.

Don't obsess over the performance of any one piece.

Focus on building a library of assets.

📈📈📈📈📈
Digital Writing Tip #11: Don't compete in someone else's category. Create your own.

The book, "The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck" was the first self-help book with a "IDGAF" voice.

And it has sold millions of copies.

What happened next?

Lots of sub-par copycats. Image
Digital Writing Tip #12: The cost of reading your writing is TIME off someone's life.

Think about that.

When you write something, you're asking someone to *pay* with 30 seconds or 3 minutes of their LIFE.

Keep that urgency in mind when writing.

Make every word matter.
Digital Writing Tip #13: The easiest way to stand out? Use languaging.

Languaging = the strategic use of language to change thinking.

It's not a book. It's an e-book.

It's not art. It's digital art.

The word you pick to MODIFY the existing word changes how people *see* it.
Digital Writing Tip #14: The more you write, the more you write.

You'll only have so many ideas before you begin the journey of writing online.

But once you start, your flywheel will spin.

Everything you write gives you data on what ELSE you can write.

And so on, and so on.

• • •

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More from @Nicolascole77

18 Nov
Ryan Holiday is one of the best-selling nonfiction authors of the past decade.

To date, his books have sold more than 3,000,000 copies.

Here's the crazy story of how a digital marketer niched down and created his own category around Stoicism:
Ryan dropped out college at 19 to apprentice under best-selling author, Robert Greene.

This is clearly where his "become known for a niche you own" thinking started.

Each of Robert's books focused on timeless human qualities.

(This early inspiration was critical.)
Ryan then spent several years as the marketing director for American Apparel, before making his name helping launch Tucker Max's "I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell."

The book sold more than 400,000 copies in 2009 alone, and 1M+ copies to date.
Read 10 tweets
16 Nov
7 ways to niche down & create your own category (with examples):
1. WHAT do you do… that you are uniquely known for?

Velveeta is known for "the melt."

There are fancier cheeses. There are healthier cheeses. There are more indulgent cheeses.

But "the melt" is what turned Kraft's Velveeta into a $100M+ brand.

What's your "melt?"
2. WHO do you do it for… who are surprisingly willing to pay large premiums?

One such audience is scrapbookers—who love, love, love buying scissors.

To Staples, scissors are cheap & mass-produced.

To scrapbookers, scissors can be a luxury good.

$50-$75 per pair.
Read 9 tweets
10 Nov
I started writing online when I was 17 years old.

Since then, I've...

• Written 3,000+ articles online
• Ghostwritten 1,500+ articles online
• Published 5 books & 30 "mini-books"
• Built two 7-figure writing businesses

If I had to start from $0 again, here's what I'd do:
Step 1: Pick a social platform

I pick Twitter.

Say I want to be a freelance content writer. I search "marketing" on Twitter and look for high-performing content.

I start curating high-performing content, building out my profile.

Showing off my skills.
Step 2: Offer my skills for free

After curating some world-class work, I introduce myself to top creators.

Tag them or DM.

Anyone who responds, I offer my services for free.

"Let me prove what I can do."

Someone will say yes.
Read 14 tweets
9 Nov
How to clarify your niche framework:

WHAT | FOR WHO | SO THAT

• What are you writing about?
• Who is it for (be specific)?
• To deliver what sort of outcome?

Here's what this looks like in action 👇
"I write about productivity."

No!

WHAT: "I write about productive work habits."
FOR WHO: "For busy product managers at SaaS companies."
SO THAT: "So they can have more time to build meaningful relationships with their coworkers."

Wow, so much better!
"I write about real estate."

No!

WHAT: "I write about how to buy your first rental property."
FOR WHO: "For people who want to get started in real estate but have no money."
SO THAT: "So they can quit the job they hate and create a job they love."

Wow, so much better!
Read 5 tweets
27 Oct
Substack just launched 4 new product features.

• Writer & Reader Profiles
• Flexible Paywalls
• File Embeds
• NFT Embeds

Here's how each one works, and why I think Substack will be the next BIG digital writing platform 🧵👇
1/ Writer & Reader Profiles

I started writing on @SubstackInc very early on.

But my biggest issue with the platform was its lack of Discoverability Flywheel.

With Writer/Reader profiles, Substack is going to become the next big social writing platform.

Start now.
2/ Flexible Paywalls

Paywalls in the publishing world are still an emerging category.

NYT, WSJ, etc., are JUST now making the move.

Substack's flexible paywall feature + Profiles is going to turn every writer into a mini free/paid publication.

This is the future.
Read 7 tweets
22 Oct
The ABDCE Story Framework:

• Action
• Background
• Development
• Climax
• Ending

Here's how it works, and how it can help you write stories readers can't help but get lost in 🧵👇
Action

“It was a pleasure to burn.”

This is the first sentence of Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.

It immediately drops you into a moment of action. There is no build up, no need to "set the scene."

Boom. You're there.

And you're hooked (whether you like it or not).
Background

Only once you have the reader's undivided attention should you even *consider* giving them the background story.

Remember: it's hard to care about characters or ideas before you see them in action.

So start with a moment of surprise, then explain why it matters.
Read 8 tweets

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