Sharpen Your Social Media Systems

A March 25, 2026 verdict by a CA jury held Google and Meta (Facebook) responsible for the mental health difficulties suffered by a woman who since childhood compulsively used social media. The jury awarded $6M to the plaintiff and Meta is responsible for 70% of that amount. Heavy use of social media can lead to unintended consequences, for sure; nevertheless, most US citizens do not feel that social media is a menace to society. Datareportal found that 73% of US adults were active social media users as of October 2025, a response that verifies the often significant benefits that social media can bring to our personal and/or professional lives when it is used with discretion. All of you reading this post know that social media plays an integral role in the business sector, from lead generation to the buyer’s journey to post-sale customer service, positioning it as foundational to effective B2B and B2C sales and marketing.

 Satisfy new algorithms with AEO, GEO and SEO

Artificial intelligence has added more acronyms and abbreviations to the alphabet soup that a Freelance professional must memorize to show that you’re in the game, know what’s up and you’re worthy of receiving a new assignment. To achieve your goal of establishing a robust and respected online presence, you must once again get familiar with new search algorithms and then decide under what circumstances you might be persuaded to introduce new approaches that promise to enhance the search functionality of your sites. The obvious answer is to contact a Freelance colleague to discuss potential benefits for your digital platforms and conduct a cost-benefit analysis. Can you afford to dip into the new technology? Can you afford not to?

  • AEO. Answer Engine Optimization. AEO is meant to get your content selected as the prime answer to specific online queries and not just an alternate answer to what’s best-in-class. Incorporating AEO is meant to help your content be chosen as the best answer in our era of AI-powered overviews and voice assistants that are increasingly in the driver’s seat. AEO visibility is determined by how easily machines can read your content. The function of AEO is not to drive clicks as does SEO, but to become the certified best answer that AI agents showcase in all search engines used to post that query.
  • GEO. Generative Engine Optimization. GEO goes a step further than AEO and optimizes content so that AI-driven search engines and large language models (LLMs) like Perplexity and ChatGPT can understand the content and cite it in answers the search engines receive and generate. GEO structures content so that it’s easy to locate, access and cite. The function of GEO isn’t just to help your answer become the first on a list of responses, but goes farther to become a strategic approach that boosts your visibility, authority and citations in AI-generated responses.
  • SEO. Search Engine Optimization. You already know that SEO helps content attain a higher ranking in traditional online search engines like Bing and Google. SEO is driven primarily by keyword targeting, content quality and technical SEO (e.g., page loading time and mobile-friendliness). The function of SEO is to encourage clicks on your content and drive traffic to your website, et al.
  • Continue SEO techniques to boost social media content visibility. Keyword research, alt text, subtitles and long-tail keywords—think sentences—can all make your social media content more search-friendly. Why abandon what works?
  • Experiment with AEO and GEO. Add to your online content short social posts that directly answer questions known to be frequently asked by prospects and clients. Use question-based as titles for posts and provide clear, plainly stated answers. Maintain a conversational, yet professional voice for your Q & A inspired content (think FAQ frequently asked questions).

Social media is becoming the place for first-party data

As the presence of third-party cookies falls out of favor, brands are turning to social media platforms to access first-party data, which is regarded the most desirable. Additional sources of first-party that can be obtained with clear user consent include opt-in leadgen promotions, newsletter or blog subscriptions, webinar RSVPs and calls-to-action. The appetite for first-party data is driven by the desire brands have for customer information that is provided by the consumer him/herself, thus ensuring that the insights derived from that data are trustworthy and can be confidently used as the foundation of your CRM assumptions, strategies and activities. 

Brands are also turning to social media user comments for market and consumer info when trends and other marketplace developments evolve too quickly for traditional research methods to keep up. Social listening tools like Talkwalker use AI to pull specific brand insights from the vast quantities of data available on social media platforms, in real time. Social listening, another manifestation of that practice, tracks online comments made about your brand, industry and competitors across social media platforms. From an analysis of those comments, a the big picture will emerge of the unfiltered perceptions that your customers, prospects and others have about your brand. Social listening can also capture developing trends that are bubbling up and indicate where opportunities (or risks) that impact your entity are hiding. In short, social listening data can impact all areas of your brand.

Best practices for using social media as a first-party data source

  • Ramp up your social listening capabilities. Talkwalker can help you uncover valuable insights through a few simple AI-guided queries. 
  • Add social listening to your marketing activities. Social listening-derived data has a high probability of discovering marketplace perceptions, trends and developments that might yield potential opportunities for your brand and/or shine a light on possible risks that give you a chance to perhaps dodge a disaster. As noted, social listening has the ability to impact all aspects of your brand.
  • Test social media DM automation and/or gated content campaigns to push leadgen. You can launch a social post and announce publication of white paper, e-book, case study or other gated content resource as you simultaneously use automated DMs to collect leads and obtain first-party data from those who respond to your outreach. 

 How can you optimize social media posts for visibility? How can you adapt to updates in search algorithms?

While Bing and Google are still the go-to sites for online search, social media search is making significant headway as users increasingly conduct online searches on their platforms. Overall, 24% of US adults who use social media also use social media for online search as of April 2024, led by Generation Z (46%) and Millennials (35%). The platforms are keeping up and aggressively courting online search and capabilities are not limited to typing in the search bar. Instagram and TikTok support image and video visual searches and Pinterest Lens enables online visual searches for products by searching from a photo. Facebook supports basic voice search—take that Siri and Alexa!—58.6% of US adults have conducted a voice-activated online search at least once as of 2024. These statistics make clear that social media online search is a growing phenomenon that Freelancers cannot ignore. 2Q2026 is calling you to sharpen your social media systems to ensure that your platforms operate efficiently to give your sites visibility that opens the door to content that attracts viable leads and converts prospects into customers.

  • Content to address the needs of audience sub-groups. First, there are social media frequent followers and most are already buying your services or products–some are repeat customers and some make referrals. A second group is comprised of those who are on a buyer journey. They’ve recently discovered your brand, or they’ve only begun to learn what your company and solutions are all about. It could be that your company was swept into search results thanks to an algorithm update and your content has piqued a prospective buyer’s curiosity. This last group will appreciate product information and content that conveys how and where your solution works best. Include product/service how-tos in your brand story on your social media platforms to demonstrate how your solution delivers results.
  • Customize content for each platform. Because attention spans are short, making it’s more important than ever now. Depending on your business and customers, design content / express your marketing and sales messages to resonate with your audience and have many questions. What speaks to loyal customers and is not the same as what speaks to prospects who are browsing through the site getting to know you better. On all of your social media platforms, include basic information about your product and service because that is the brand story that prospects, especially, would like to see. You need to understand both and create content that speaks to the unique interests and agenda of each group. while both long-term customers and potential customers are interested in your brand story, be aware that those who know your brand well will have a different agenda than those who are learning about your brand and are trying to envision how the experience of working with your company might be.
  • Always have a hook. Catch people’s attention within the first three seconds to show your visitors that your content aligns with their needs and interests.  A focal point, an exciting announcement, an advance look at something new, or an enticing call-to-action can persuade a site visitor to linger and engage.

How should you manage multiple platform identities?

  • Articulate your core identity. Beyond the brand voice developed to resonate with the typical users of each of your platforms, identify the ideal language you’ll use to convey the overall message. Learn to express the core elements of your brand purpose, outcomes and results delivered, as well as the goals and pain points of your prospects. Confirm also how your customers and other followers prefer to engage on each of your platforms. Your LinkedIn and X followers may be more interested in case studies and other data-driven information, while your Facebook and Instagram followers may want to see a video of you discussing why your product or service has helped customers and keeps them coming back. The expression of your brand voice may change across platforms, but be mindful to always stay true to the essence of brand fundamentals.  
  • Map your platform identities to reflect user intent. Use social listening data to learn what users of each of your platforms want from brands that occupy your market niche and shape your content strategy and focus accordingly:
    • On X, you’ll be wise to give a no-nonsense news account using plain language and links to content on your website or other digital sources.
    • On TikTok, you can post create a series of brief, appealing, yet informative explainer videos that convey the use-case for your solution by showcasing one important goal or pain point in each video that your solution can resolve.
    • It’s time to incorporate visual elements into your LinkedIn content! Brainstorm stories you can tell so that you can shoot a 3-5 minute video. You might make an exciting announcement, or share a clip from your guest appearance on a webinar or podcast. LinkedIn data confirms that those who post videos see a 3X growth in followers.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: Chinnapong for Adobe Stock

Brave New World of B2B Marketing: What Customers Expect Now

The processes of marketing and sales in the B2B sector continues adjusting to local and global economic factors, as it responds to revolutionary technological advancements that are changing so much about how business is done. What might successful marketing campaigns and sales strategies look like as we approach 2027? What will define effective tactics? “Fasten your seat belts, it’s going to be a bumpy ride” is the correct answer for the time being. Most of all, whatever lead generation marketing strategies and tactics that have done a respectable job bringing in customers will need a review and a reset as you come face2face with the growing adoption of artificial intelligence-powered business tools. Also rocking the boat is the availability of online information that’s fueling the Do It Yourself B2B buyer journey that’s seducing more of your prospects. Funnels and channels are receding into history.

Search moves from keywords to trustworthy references

Let’s begin with what’s on track to become the most impactful development in both business and personal sectors—the arrival, and acceptance, of artificial AI-powered everything. You’ve surely noticed that keyword searches may not only produce a list of website links? More often than not, you also see an AI-overview that gives addresses your query in AI-generated complete sentences. AI-driven traffic is growing 165 times faster than organic search. An important outcome of this change is that your website will now play a lesser role in your marketing strategy—or maybe none at all. Recall that just a year ago, it was a given that the foundation of your digital presence (and marketing) was the website. So it’s not about getting your site into the Top 10 search results anymore. Now, it’s Google AI-verified citations that make your organization look credible. Maybe you should consider it another spin on EEAT (experience, expertise, authoritative, trustworthy)?

Today, search means earning a referral as a trusted source; if AI can’t recommend you, there’s little chance you’ll be able to interact with a prospect yourself and attempt to make a pitch. If you do nothing else this year, devise a strategy to upgrade your marketing searchability so you can optimize your online presence for AI search engines and demonstrate that your organization is trustworthy and deserving of recommendation. Freelancers who hesitate to hire a marketing company (maybe until you get beyond tax time?) can perform some DIY work to make your entity become AI-search favorable.

  • Establish visibility on digital sources these systems already trust. Online public relations mentions have considerable influence on AI visibility, so get a PR campaign going and get your entity (and yourself) mentioned in industry publications. Additionally, establish a presence on experts’ forums and industry publications.
  • Prospects tend to use longer, more conversational queries when conducting AI-powered searches, say the SEO experts at BrightEdge, who found that queries of eight or more words trigger AI Overviews far more frequently. You can align your company with this customer behavior when you brainstorm a list of the most frequently asked questions you receive; make sure that you include complex or specific queries. Next, drop those FAQs and your responses into the appropriate tabs on your website and social media, written as concise, problem-solving sentences that are placed in the appropriate tabs in your website and social media platforms. Your objective is to create opportunities for your digital content (i.e., marketing messages)to be referenced in AI searches.
  • Remember that prospective buyers expect to find relevant information about your services and products on your social media platforms. Prospects expect that questions can be asked and answered and that expectation makes social media ideal sites for AI-friendly conversational queries that portray your company as trustworthy. Prospective buyers will also appreciate demos, comparisons, pricing and outcomes. Brand stories may become less important as prospective buyers turn to AI search for content that shows how your solution will solve problems. Freelancers would be wise to post content that answers typical buyer journey FAQs because if your social content looks like ads, it might be ignored.

Funnels are responsive, static buyer journeys are done

The marketing/sales funnel as we’ve known it is on a slippery slope to obsolescence in 2026. If your approach to leadgen hasn’t changed in two years or so, it’s probably out-of-date because it is almost certainly unresponsive to nuanced customer needs. One-size-fits-all leadgen can’t keep up with the In Real Time B2B buyer journey behavior and expectations. Hyper-responsive AI-driven leadgen marketing/sales funnels are able to adjust timing, marketing (or sales) channels and messaging that responds to the behavior of prospective buyers IRT. That responsiveness is valuable to you because a dropped lead is lost revenue. According to research by Mc Kinsey, adaptive AI-powered marketing/sales funnels reduce prospect drop-off and make a sale more likely.

The typical marketing/sales funnel is being outclassed as buyers increasingly turn to AI agents for product or service summaries and reviews, performance comparisons and rankingsof competing products or services and, ultimately, purchase recommendations. Adobe Analytics reports that traffic to retailer websites from generative AI sources increased by 1,200% in February 2025 vs. July 2024.

What Freelancers must do now is to stop thinking of buying “stages”—Top of Funnel, Middle of Funnel, Bottom of Funnel— and start recognizing and responding to buying signals. Redesign your marketing/sales funnel to respond to behavior that does not follow the (increasingly irrelevant) TOFU, MOFU, BOFU stages. AI-powered “zero-click” journeys can distill the discovery-to-decision process—and simultaneously effectively eliminate opportunities for brands to influence prospects, differentiate from competitors—or even appear in the list of possibilities during the buyer journey. A survey of more than 1,100 US consumers by Bain & Company found that 80% of them rely on these “zero-click” results for at least 40% of their searches

AI ready to become the buyer journey influencer

The involvement of AI agents such as Gemini Deep Research and Microsoft Copilot that “streamline” the B2B buyer journey present a real challenge to Freelancers and others who have marketing and sales responsibility. Freelancers who are reluctant to adapt their leadgen tactics to include an AI-friendly protocol might have already begun to lose those who might have been customers. What’s scary is that it’s unlikely you’ll know what’s happening to your leads. Remember, the obligatory visit to your website is often omitted when the buyer journey is guided by the brisk efficiency of an AI agent. There will be no browsing through our services and about us tabs; no marketing content downloads that deliver (hopefully) convincing info for prospects to read and assess. When contact with the core touch point that is your website is bypassed, marketers will be unable to reach out and send a personalized marketing email that could start a dialogue, build trust and result in a sale. Since the “fingerprint” obtained from contact with your website will not be available, you won’t know which interested prospects might have become customers.

In the Brave New World that’s brought to us by AI capabilities, if the digital presence of your brand is scarce on platforms other than your website, your company and its services or products may be rendered effectively invisible to AI-powered search. As AI assistants guide prospective buyers through a frictionless process that moves from questions to product or service comparisons to recommendations, relatively quickly and seamlessly. There will be no need to study an e-book or envision how a case study might apply to a prospect’s needs and goals, no need to listen to a webinar or podcast. Products and services that are AI-friendly will be made available for consideration; marketing content that the AI agent finds on a trusted platform will be shared with prospects and will form the basis of the buying recommendation. It is clear that how you promote and sell your products and services will be upended.

Yet all may not be lost, thanks to basic human behaviors. Researchers at Bain and Company anticipates B2B prospective customers will respond to the growing presence of AI with, you guessed it, acceptance or avoidance. Still, wise Freelance professionals will be in a stronger position by implementing even a low-cost, no-cost strategy designed to make their brand more visible to AI search and AI agents. So, ramp up your social media content to become more service or product oriented and create content that provides info that substantively assists the buyer journey. Sell prospects the way they want to be sold and express your content in an AI-friendly format, as per your analysis of FAQs. Recognizing PR opportunities whose purpose is to obtain for your brand heightened visibility and favorable mentions in respected publications and give yourself another way to position your brand as trustworthy and deserving of an AI agent recommendation. Bain and Company predictions are as follows:

1). Prospective customers will go directly to the brand website, because that’s what they’ve always done. In fact, who are slow to adopt generative AI may dominate B2B marketing and sales processes enabling traditional sales channels to retain the lion’s share of traffic. That said, the growing use of AI agents and the ubiquity of AI-powered search is likely to chip away at traditional methods.

2.) Customers whose buyer journey is AI-supported will span the spectrum from casual shopping assistance to completion of a major purchase guided by an AI agent. These behaviors might slow down the inevitability of AI influence on the buyer journey.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © Dragoscondrea | Dreamstime.com

Revolutionize Your Email Marketing Campaigns

How many times over the past 10 years have B2B marketing experts declared email marketing dead? Oh, well—sometimes experts project their own feelings onto those whose behaviors they’ve been charged to study and predict. The experts, it seems, and not the customers, were ready to move on but like a cat, email marketing has nine lives. B2B email marketing in 2025 continued to earn the trust of customers and prospects and produced a confidence-boosting performance for marketers. The median B2B open rate reached 36.7%–42.35% , an increase from 34.2% in 2024, according to data from VerifiedEmail.

Email marketing continues to deliver exceptional return on investment of $36–$42 per $1 spent as of 2025, as reported by data published by Los Angeles, CA based VerifiedEmail and outperforming all digital marketing channels by 4–5x. Bold text, eye-catching images, interactive content and an irresistible subject line are how email marketers capture the attention of intended readers.

AI tools optimize performance of an evergreen marketing resource

A 2025 Boston Consulting Group survey of 251 marketing professionals concluded that 33% of survey respondents regularly use generative AI tools and 92% of respondents feel optimistic or very optimistic about the creative potential of GenAI over the next two to three years. GenAI tools like ChatGPT, the AI-powered chatbot developed by OpenAI and the AI-powered search engine Perplexity are primarily used to write articles and create images that accompany social media posts. Email marketers are finding inspiration in those capabilities and are off to a good start with AI technology. According to Salesforce research, AI is positioned to greatly enhance the impact of email marketing:

  • Managing campaigns: AI helps marketers understand which elements of an email campaign are effective and which do not resonate.
  • Content creation: GenAI platforms will support the text outline and compose the narrative, as well as edit your copy and also create the images that supply visual context to your marketing message.
  • Brainstorming: Marketers can use AI to jumpstart creativity and elevate the quality of the text you produce and help you to more efficiently produce the irresistible subject lines, eye-catching images and, most importantly, compelling topics that build the audience for marketing emails that deliver your newsletters.
  • Scaling output: AI can speed up completion of the normally time-consuming functions listed above—finding the right subject line, composing newsletter text, producing an image that enhances your text and, icing on the cake, analyzing the performance of your email marketing campaigns.

Getting in, getting noticed, getting opened

The volume of daily emails received by a working adult is often overwhelming and most inboxes are inundated with messages both business and personal. Nevertheless, the response to email marketing remains robust, propelled by the value and trust conveyed in highly targeted, personalized marketing messages that address the needs and priorities of decision-makers.

Still, recipients are inclined to require opt-in permission to control their email deluge. A double opt-in protocol that asks subscribers to both agree to accept your emails and also include another security layer by adding your company email address to his/her trusted contact list, your emails might still be blocked by spam filters. The unintended consequence is that 22% of permissioned email fails to reach subscriber inboxes.

Furthermore, like a determined salmon swimming upstream, reaching subscriber inboxes is only Step One in your marketing email’s journey. Step Two for email marketers is to prepare for how the email will be received and noticed by subscribers. Research indicates that as of 2025, 55% of email is opened on mobile devices, that is, smart phone or tablet. Responsive design is therefore required for your marketing emails. Furthermore, mobile devices allow only a limited view of the email subject line. Just first 40 characters of a subject line are visible on the iPhone email app.

Those 40 characters have a big responsibility. Marketers are advised to be very selective about what those 40 characters communicate to potential readers. Then again, shorter subject lines consistently outperform longer ones. The email marketing experts at Constant Contact point out that that all aspects of your email content—format, text and images—must be considered and optimal email design for different mobile devices may not be uniform.

An intriguing discovery is that including an emoji in the subject line can increase open rate by 56%. Still, a subject line that is considered relevant will likely be the more persuasive strategy for intended readers. Finally, there is the most important ingredient in this recipe and that is email content. The open and click through rates depend on the content delivered in the email. The subscriber has to feel that the subject you’ll cover—whether it’s a special offer, an announcement of some sort, or a hot industry topic—must be relevant and timely.

Email segmentation is the new normal

Email segmentation, along with email marketing automation, has been one of the biggest digital marketing trends over the last few years. Email segmentation has moved from what was considered an “advanced feature” to a capability that basically all email service provider platforms offer because basically all email marketers want to use segmentation in their email marketing campaigns to enhance the ROI.

Recent studies have found that 33% of companies segment their audiences for marketing campaigns and 20% send customer-specific emails. In fact, researchers at VerifiedEmail report a pronounced shift from email volume to email relevance that’s revealed the highest-performing campaigns send fewer emails to more precisely segmented (targeted) audiences and achieve 30% higher open rates and 50% higher click-through rates. These findings suggest that email marketers create customer personae and use data from those profiles to segment audiences and more effectively target the campaign content they will receive. Hyper -personalized marketing content has been shown to produce as much as a six-fold increase in transaction rate. In addition to producing increased sales revenue, the data further suggests that segmentation can boost recipient engagement as well. An industry study by MailChimp found that segmented campaigns lead to an average of 14% greater open rates and 100% greater clickthrough rates. Keep in mind that this happens when fewer, hyper-personalized emails are sent—I’m sure you’ll agree that limiting your marketing emails increases the value of those you do send and works to limit your unsubscribe rate.

Listen up—email marketing experts know that CTR matters more than the email open rate. VerifiedEmail spills the tea and points out that in our privacy-restricted era, CTR represents the most reliable engagement signal—it requires deliberate action rather than passive preview. Top-quartile email campaigns achieve 6%–10% CTR with diligent segmentation and AI- augmented personalization.

Get started by choosing the right email marketing eervice

Many marketers face the same challenge—they want to send marketing emails, grow their customer list and audience, plus automate and segment email campaigns without spending hours on design or technical setup. Furthermore, you may get stuck with the grunt work of performing manual data transfers risk to add list names and profile info if the software you use doesn’t integrate with the software used by your customer relations management service. You might also be limited in the number of marketing emails you can send. Or maybe you’ll eventually become dissatisfied with the generic designs that do not enhance your brand.

In other words, it will be worth your time to investigate and compare ESP software plans to identify the right platform for your needs. The right platform will save time and aggravation. It will simplify your workflow, encourage customer engagement, increase your campaign conversion rate and make your brand memorable in the best ways.

The price range of ESP plans varies significantly, depending on the level of service you’d like to have. There are even free plans that most likely will limit your number of email campaigns per day or month, a low-cost plan that could cost perhaps $5 to $10 per month, with limited campaign sends and size of the contact list, could be a good way for a Freelance professional to get started and access the benefits of email marketing. The average cost of email marketing platforms for up to 500 contacts is around $20 per month. Choosing the best platform won’t be complicated if you focus on the features that matter most. A list of typical services that marketers use is below. Next, you can start your ESP research here with this credible list of recommended email platforms Forbes Magazine in January 2026

1. Send volume. Pick a platform with send limits and pricing that match your current and future email marketing plans. Don’t overpay for features you won’t use or hit limits too soon.

2. Easy platform migration. Make sure it’s easy to migrate your customer data from your old system. The less time you spend moving contacts, the sooner you can get back to marketing.

3. Seamless integrations. Look for software that works with your CRM, online store, and even social media. This makes it easier to retarget leads and keep your marketing efforts connected.

4. User-friendly design tools. Choose a platform with drag-and-drop editors and customizable templates. You shouldn’t need a designer or coder to build beautiful emails.

5. Automation & AI. Advanced platforms let you automate email workflows, like sending follow-ups based on opens or clicks. AI can help predict the best times to send emails, write subject lines, or even suggest content.

6. Customization & branding. Free or cheap plans often include the platform’s logo on your emails. Invest in a plan that lets you add your branding, so your business looks professional.

7. Analytics. Basic reports should track open rates, click-through rates, and conversions. A/B testing tools can show you what’s working and where to improve.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © Getty Images. Burning Blue Email

Back to Basics: Best Bets for a Robust Year End

When B2B marketing decision-makers were asked to name their most effective B2B marketing best practices, it was discovered that those who followed best practices recommended by their industry peers produced revenue and profit results for their organizations that showcased them and the companies for whom they work as leaders. By contrast, B2B marketers who did not consistently adhere to those highly recommended best practices finished the study period as laggards, who did not achieve desirable revenue and profit targets. B2B marketers who apparently had little faith in the power of those highly recommended marketing best practices produced lackluster revenue and profit results for their companies. B2B marketers whose organizations emerged as revenue and profit leaders not only produced higher revenue and profit growth but also achieved better client retention and growth of the company’s client roster.

Forrester, the global research and advisory company headquartered next door to Boston in Cambridge, MA, revealed in a 2025 marketing survey a sharp divide between B2B leaders and laggards based on responses from 1,060 marketing decision-makers. Forrester researchers compared a cohort of leading marketers, who consistently applied recommended marketing best practices, which ranged from cross-functional in-house collaborations to client-based personalized marketing strategies. Forrester researchers also identified a cohort of lagging marketers, who fell short where leading marketers and their companies excelled. The business outcomes were clear—leading marketers, who closely followed recognized marketing best practices, rewarded their organizations with significantly stronger revenue and profit metrics, plus a robust client list that was augmented by improved client retention.

As marketers and all business leaders and owners struggle to adapt to seismic changes that have rocked the global economy for 20+ years, and especially since the 2020-2022 pandemic era, the necessity of future-proofing their business entities has become obvious. The Forrester survey indicates that applying well-known marketing best practices requires is an essential component of a resilient business entity. Additional marketing best practices that nurture high-growth companies include the use of AI-powered tech solutions that among other key functions can be used to design personalized marketing campaigns and tactics and also facilitate alignment between marketing, sales and operations.

Maximize marketing

Marketing teams will do well to reacquaint themselves with marketing fundamentals to navigate this era of lengthened B2B sales cycles, economic instability marked by cautious spending habits, lay-offs at leading multinationals (e.g. Amazon and Starbucks) and rising B2B buyer expectations. Develop marketing campaigns that emphasize the unique sales proposition of your service or product. Provide opportunities for buyer engagement that answer questions, educate, build community and inspire brand loyalty. Furthermore, synchronize strategic and operational alignment with your sales and marketing activities—not an easy task since prospects are quite comfortable conducting digital research of your services or products (and also your competitors’) before seeking info from your team. The change in power dynamics has caused a disruption in the usual alignment between marketing and sales functions—and for 61% of B2B prospects, that’s how they like it, according to a 2024 survey conducted by Gartner Research.

  • Develop a buyer’s journey that provides appealing responses to the typical prospect’s initial curiosity and questions about your products and services by building a marketing/ sales funnel that anticipates needs. The number of touchpoints in a B2B buyer’s journey that results in a sale varies according to industry; as you build your company’s sales/marketing funnel, information generated by AI-powered client research is your best way to learn the information that prospects desire most, end-to-end.
  • Use AI-powered customer relations management to identify client groups that have a preference for certain of your services and/or products and use the intel to devise marketing campaigns and strategies to purposed to increase your market share.
  • Keep it simple by creating marketing messages that focus on user outcomes; include AI-identified personalization data at every client touchpoint to enhance the customer experience and encourage purchases.

Productivity over market expansion

Discovering a niche market that’s worth a gamble—that is, worth the resources you’d invest to develop it—is no doubt high on the wish-list of nearly all Freelance consultants and business owners. However, Forrester survey marketing leaders did not necessarily think the “grass is greener” and chose not to chase what might be a mirage.

Marketing leaders kept their feet firmly planted on the ground and instead maximized resources and advantages already in hand to deliver their revenue and profit targets. A big plus was that leaders worked for companies that invested in AI-powered tools and applied that resource to strategies they could expect to maximize productivity and drive business growth. Marketing leaders incorporated client insights, never lost sight of brand promises and used those benchmarks to strengthen their marketing messages. Those messages described and emphasized product and service solution outcomes, and went beyond merely listing product or service features, to help prospects envision precisely how the products or services would achieve important objectives (and make purchasing committee members look good).

This strategy can be depended on to encourage buyer engagement and trust, which boosts the likelihood of a purchase and, post-purchase, promotes client retention that grows revenue, profit and client lists. In fact, Forrester data showed that revenue generated by leading companies consisted mostly of existing, rather than new, clients. Market penetration means how well your product or service sells; increasing sales within the existing marketplace is much easier for Freelancers and small business owners than either creating new services or products or entering new markets.

  • Agile business strategies are a competitive advantage that help you adapt to changing business circumstances and maintain, or even grow, your client base, revenue and profit
  • Accurately identify your strongest competitors to learn how to more advantageously position your service or product in the marketplace—confirm your best customers and also refine your messages to obtain more selling opportunities and close gaps that inhibit sales
  • Muti-channel marketing optimizes communication with prospects. Create a presence on platforms that clients and prospects visit and trust to maximize engagement activities, broadcast marketing messages, build brand loyalty and create more purchasing opportunities
  • Collect and utilize first-party data to enhance personalization, engagement, loyalty and sales

AI-powered tech tools to enhance efficiency and outcomes

Employing AI-powered marketing automation can provide numerous operational efficiencies that enable deep-dive research that supports insightful data-driven decision-making that delivers the results you need. AI-powered software is the ticket to obtaining client insights that are timely and trustworthy.

  • AI-powered predictive analysis gives reliable feedback re: client behavior, helping you to devise personalized and effective marketing strategies and campaigns
  • Marketing campaign personalization is maximized and might include, e.g., dynamic email marketing that auto-adjusts in response to real-time client engagement metrics
  • Client segmentation supported by AI marketing allows you to consider an array of client characteristics—demographics, purchase history, industry, or content preferences, for example—to better understand purchase patterns and motivations
  • Chatbots, virtual assistants and/or autonomous AI agents that manage end-to-end client interactions, including problem resolution, order processing and appointment scheduling, can be made available to ensure that your company reliably provides 24/7 customer service that enhances the customer experience and boosts your brand reputation
  • Integrate AI marketing automation with customer relations management to synchronize marketing, sales and customer service functions

Maintain a client-centric focus

You’ve heard this before and apologies for repeating myself! It’s just that basic marketing best practices have demonstrated conclusively that they reliably produce the results B2B marketers need. The vast majority of best practices marketing strategies and tactics, while reconfigured to resonate with current technology and client priorities, concerns and habits, have not been made obsolete. Inbound marketing, outbound marketing, content marketing, guerilla marketing and social media marketing remain effective today, although integrating them with current advanced technology and maintaining a focus that keeps client goals, priorities and pain points at top of mind will yield the best outcomes.

  • Invite client feedback by inviting or initiating personal conversations, consistent and relevant social media posts created to encourage replies and/or creating a short survey that’s sent to clients you’ve worked with over the past four or five years, to learn what they perceive as your company’s strengths and weaknesses. It is instructive to obtain insight into how client needs and expectations evolve over time, so that you can use the info to improve your product-market fit, or also hear their thoughts on what competitors offer, or get the heads-up on shifting concerns or priorities
  • Identify your typical prospect’s most important goals, business drivers and pain points that trigger a need for your category of business solutions
  • Develop a client buyer persona, a profile that represents your ideal buyer. If you have more than one significant target client group, you are encouraged to develop a buyer persona for each. A detailed buyer persona helps you to objectively envision how to personalize your strategies and campaigns by developing timely, relevant and engaging content for each client segment.
  • Provide excellent end-to-end customer service, from onboading to after-sale support

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © Omar/Salaam Times. Afghan women weave a carpet in Injil District, Herat Province, Afghanistan on September 28, 2022.

First-Person Data: Collect and Protect

Compliance takes a leading role in marketing strategy

The accelerating use of Generative AI that’s occurring in business entities large and small has sparked privacy concerns in data management and IT security teams, marketing C-Suites and the offices of corporate governance/compliance attorneys. Whether the leadership at your organization calls itself progressive or conservative, it’s absolutely necessary to develop data implementation and risk management protocols, and create a crisis management public relations strategy while you’re at it, when integrating artificial intelligence backed software tools into your business operations.

Protecting client relationships and brand reputation has persuaded many organizations to bake compliance regulations into their marketing strategies, in particular those supported by GenAI. International Data Corporation (IDC), a global market intelligence and data provider for the IT, telecommunications and consumer technology markets headquartered near Boston, MA, cautions that stringent data compliance protocols are no longer merely optional, but are necessary, to avoid financial and reputational harm.

We’re all personally impacted by the increasingly pervasive use of AI and you are well aware that data privacy is high-priority to your client (and you). Regular reports of cyberattacks and data breaches intensify concern. While the the expansion of AI-powered software systems result in a more efficient, responsive and personalized experience that clients value and now expect, it’s usage simultaneously makes clients wonder about the security of their data. Research by Publishers Clearing House found that 86% of Americans are more concerned about their privacy and data security than the state of the US economy. However, 62% either don’t know or are misinformed about how their data is being used.

Sigh. There is an upside, however. Advanced risk monitoring tools, automated reporting and responsible AI frameworks can act as gatekeepers and companies achieve regulatory requirements. Businesses that integrate transparency and ethical AI practices into their governance policies and procedures can reduce the possibility of data breaches and other AI-related risks and simultaneously enhance client trust and strengthen the company’s brand reputation.

There is also legislation designed to reassure consumers that protecting their personal data is serious business and is, in some municipalities, the law. Protective measures meant to safeguard the processing of personal data is demonstrated by the change of privacy features at Google, the implementation of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), whose purpose is to protect the privacy and personal data of individuals in the European Union and European Common Market and the adoption of the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA).

What is first-party data?

First-party data is information your company has collected directly from clients and prospects, site visitors, or social media followers. First-party data comes directly to you and the more touchpoints you provide, the more opportunities you will have to collect this information. It is an extremely valuable type of data for businesses. In comparison, second-party data is shared by a trusted source, while third-party data is data aggregated from other sources, which can include social media platforms and public records.

Marketers recognize that personalization is the cornerstone of a pleasing and potentially memorable customer experience and that collecting, implementing and storing client data —first-party data—is integral to personalization. Marketers enter first-party data into customer relations management (CRM) systems to enhance personalization, use CRM predictive analytics to get insight into client behaviors and preferences, recognize client segments and then target marketing campaigns accordingly. Sources of first-party data include:

  • Client demographic info
  • Client buying history
  • Leadgen campaigns
  • Client or prospect interactions with your website or app
  • Surveys and other online feedback that clients may participate in
  • Client, prospect or other visitors user-generated content or social media conversation transcripts
  • Blog, email and newsletter subscribers
  • Program registration lists, e.g. webinar, workshop, or meeting sign-ups

Why do you want first-party data?

First-party data helps you to paint a picture of your client and develop a reliable buyer persona. It is enormously useful because it delivers accurate client and prospect information—user info from all the touchpoints—that enables you to target the right buyers for your services or products. You’ll also be able to make better informed decisions when figuring out what personalization looks like to your clients.

First-party data enables marketers to build a customer experience that reflects user purchase history, if applicable, or other known preferences and behaviors that enrich and enhance the customer experience. Personalization is like the bartender who knows your drink or the waiter who shows you to your favorite table. Now you’ll have an accurate blueprint to follow when figuring out how to nurture a brand community of long-term clients who are happy to buy your products or services, make personal referrals and generate good word-of-mouth on social media.

Transcribe first-party data into your Customer Relationship Management (CRM) platform to create a database of everyone who’s visited your website and social media platforms. But before you start using your first-party data, think about what you want to achieve, to ensure that you’ll maximize its many benefits. You may want to do one or more of the following:

  • Building brand awareness 
  • Expanding leadgen activities
  • Encouraging repeat business and discouraging client churn 
  • Re-engaging lapsed clients and non-converting prospects
  • Growing your thought leadership content audience—blog, newsletter, podcast, webinars, speaking engagements

When you get enough first-person data to have confidence in the size of your sample, begin to implement your strategy—segment your audience and use your first-party data insights to maximize conversions on your website by optimizing user experience, targeted marketing messages, the buyer personas to understand your customers and create customized emails or (email) newsletters that will be relevant to the primary sectors (e.g., hospitals, schools, for-profit, not-for-profit, small business, global enterprise).

As well, Freelance consulting specialists and other B2B entities can follow the highly aligned and targeted account-based marketing format to produce relevant and personalized content to your market segments across the digital channels you occupy— posting tailored content in a various formats (e.g. blogs, videos, e-books, case studies) that resonate with those audience segments.

The ability to personalize marketing outreach activities cannot be overestimated—96% of shoppers say they’re “likely to purchase when brands send personalized messages.” Meanwhile, a 2025 consumer trends report generated by Businesswire found that “three out of four surveyed shoppers have already abandoned brands they once loved in favor of those offering more personalized experiences, while 81% say they routinely ignore marketing messages that don’t feel relevant”. When you throw in the harsh realities that client acquisition costs are increasing, client lifetime value is decreasing and the competitive landscape is intensifying, making the most of first-party client data becomes imperative. But the catch-22 is that possession of client personal data, which often includes contact info and credit card numbers, is a risky proposition.

Collect data, protect data

The widespread restrictions on third-party cookies by leading web browsers presents real challenges to the collection of first-party data, even when enabled by data collection by sites you control (e.g., your website). With Google putting the brakes on third-party cookies, plus Edge, Firefox and Safari shutting off cookies, first-party data is more valuable than ever.

How can businesses safely collect this essential marketing/ sales resource and simultaneously navigate obstacles around data security and client privacy expectations? The implementation of advanced security measures to protect against fraud and data breaches is a must-do. Ensuring compliance throughout the transition is also crucial, especially with evolving data privacy regulations.

In addition to conducting regular security audits to ensure data is secure, businesses should go beyond standard encryption practices and adopt advanced security measures such as tokenization for sensitive data fields, which minimizes the risk of exposing real data should a breach occur. It is recommended that companies should leverage automated tools for continuous security monitoring and compliance checks that can provide real-time alerts on suspicious activities that help to preempt potential security incidents. 

Maintain client trust

In Freelance consulting, trust and expertise are foundational. Clients entrust their sensitive data, strategic plans and proprietary work flow processes to you and expect their information to be kept private and secure. That is an ingredient in your recipe to win confidence, build strong, lasting relationships and establish and maintain your image as a reliable partner. You, Freelance friend, must institute all reasonable measures to protect client sensitive information, but as you know, the growing cybersecurity security threats can make that task feel like an ongoing battle. Here are effective defensive, low or no-cost, tactics you can take:

  • Read up on cybersecurity best practices that have SMBs and Freelance consultants in mind on the Small Business Association SCORE website.
  • Multi-Factor Authentication adds a layer of security by requiring users to verify their identity with both a password and a confirmation phone call or email.
  • Secure file permissions ensure that only authorized individuals can create, edit, or share sensitive documents. Encrypt sensitive documents and store them in the cloud to add another layer of security by instituting more stringently controlled access.
  • Hard-copy documents that contain sensitive information should be stored securely in a locked cabinet or safe when not in use.  
  • When possible, conduct meetings during which confidential topics will be discussed in person rather than on videoconference calls.
  • Devise an incident response/crisis communication PR strategy that provides explicit instructions, defines responsibilities and details your data recovery strategy in the event of a security incident. Your organization must respond quickly and in a calm and professional manner that demonstrates your control over matters and ability to resolve the incident and inform and reassure clients as you do.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: AI-generated image courtesy of StockCake

 

Summer Reading 2025

Professional development is like getting regular exercise and maintaining a balanced diet—a gift you give to yourself as you strive to become a successful business owner. When thinking of professional development, conferences sponsored by professional associations or skills building courses held at a college may come to mind but think again—professional development is available in a variety formats. Among the most accessible and affordable methods to obtain professional development can be found in books.

Reading has traditionally played an important role in the development of successful business owners and leaders. When you open a book, a world of ideas, information and insights will be there to enlighten you. You’ll find lessons and experiences that can be critical to your growth as a business owner and leader, shared by authors who give first-person accounts of how they overcame challenges and found success. The books you read can teach you how to sharpen your business acumen and use your newfound proficiency to propel your business forward. The practical knowledge contained in a typical business-themed book can result in your discovery of actionable insights that can become competitive advantages, from refining your decision-making prowess to bolstering your effectiveness when working with teams.

In today’s fast-paced and endlessly-evolving business landscape, continuous education is not only beneficial, it’s essential; but in the age of information overload, it may be difficult to find time to read when you devote the majority of your time to operating your business. Furthermore, you may feel too overwhelmed by the process of researching and identifying topics that will be most useful or interesting to you—the business books genre is a wide field. With those realities in mind, I am happy to share with you a selection of books curated to appeal to Freelance consulting professionals and also business owners or leaders. I hope that one or more titles will interest you. First, here are suggestions that may help you find time to read this summer (and beyond!).

  • Schedule. Like scheduling time for any important task, specifying your reading time will help you choose a convenient time and make it easier to honor your commitment to professional development. Consider reading after dinner, to lend a “relax and unwind” vibe to your reading. You may find the 8:00 – 11:00 PM time slot, three or four nights a week, a great way to wrap up your day.
  • Formats. Especially if your commute is 45 minutes or longer, or your fitness routine is self-directed and not in a class format, consider listening to audio books and/or podcasts as your method to obtain professional development. When in transit or working out, insert your headphones and tune in to an interesting book or program that expands your knowledge, builds skills and enhances your performance as a business owner or leader.
  • Topics. There are many business-themed titles published each year, but it is inevitable that only a select few will appeal to you. Reading book reviews of titles that grab your attention—in the business section of your local newspaper, in the Wall Street Journal or other nationally known newspaper, in Kirkus Reviews , or Goodreads—to winnow potential reading choices as you discover and evaluate titles and authors that may appeal to you and maintain your motivation to read and learn. Below are 10 books to cue up on your Summer 2025 reading playlist.

Company of One: Why Staying Small Is the Next Big Thing for Business (2019) Paul Jarvis

Online-tech veteran Paul Jarvis, whose A-list clients include Microsoft and Mercedes Benz, describes the advantages of running a “company of one,” whether as an independent Freelance professional or as an autonomous, corporate employee. Jarvis has most emphatically not bought into the “grow or die” ethos and prefers instead to operate as a “lean and agile” entity. Jarvis explains how running your one-person shop enables you to both achieve a work-life balance that works for you and, just as importantly, enables you to avoid the need to navigate a potentially suffocating corporate hierarchy and sometimes poisonous office politics. In your little empire, you can work efficiently. Jarvis has learned that smart entrepreneurship isn’t about size—it’s about building a better business that works for you.

 Company of One details a refreshingly original business strategy that’s focused on a commitment to being better instead of bigger. Jarvis has discovered that staying small results in maintaining the freedom to pursue more meaningful pleasures in life as you avoid the headaches and complications that are inherent in traditional growth-oriented business. With this groundbreaking guide, you’ll learn how to set up your shop, determine your desired revenues, manage unexpected crises, keep your key clients happy and find self-fulfillment as you do.

Competing in the Age of AI (2020) Marco Iansiti and Karim R. Lakhani

Here’s a book that is an excellent resource for business owners and leaders whose organizations currently use, or are considering, Artificial Intelligence powered tools in their operations. The authors have produced a useful guide to the realities of doing business in today’s digital landscape and present actionable insights into how introducing AI-driven operating models can enable businesses to achieve scale and scope at an unprecedented rate.

Iansiti and Lakhani show how reinventing a business entity around data, analytics and AI removes centuries-old constraints on scale, scope and machine learning advantages that have traditionally restricted business growth. Recent examples of companies such as Amazon and Google demonstrate how AI-driven processes vastly improve the ability to scale, when compared to traditional data analytical processes, and allow massive scope increase, enabling companies to straddle industry boundaries and create powerful opportunities for machine learning—to drive ever more accurate, complex and sophisticated predictions that make business strategy becomes a new game.

The authors also outline the inherent risks associated with AI and offer recommendations for rethinking current operating models; they also examine the responsibilities that the introduction of AI requires of its users. Finally, Iansiti and Lakhani are transparent about the potential societal impact of AI and point out the potential for algorithmic bias, privacy concerns and cybersecurity threats, along with the need for responsible AI development and governance.

How To Talk To Anyone About Anything (2021) James W. Williams

James W. Williams has written a refreshingly honest, easy-to-follow guide to meeting and greeting and initiating conversations that’s tailor-made for an era when many meetings and even networking opportunities are regularly held in virtual format. As a result, the only avenue to connect with colleagues and attempt to parlay fleeting interactions into deeper connections is hobbled by a computer monitor. Engaging communication skills are increasingly recognized as a powerful and influential competency. 

While some are born with a silver-tongued gift of gab for many, communication aptitude must be developed and nurtured. Williams’ advice is likely to bolster the social acumen of even the most shy and introverted among us, the wallflowers who feel overwhelmed or uncomfortable when attempting to navigate business-slash-social gatherings. If you’ve ever felt awkward in the midst of a meet & greet, or unsure of what to say after an introduction has taken place, this book will show you how to access your communication potential and learn to become a confident conversationalist.

How to Talk to Anyone About Anything provides a user-friendly roadmap that will enable you to practice, grow and eventually shine in social and professional situations. Active listening, small talk and storytelling are situations that the author discusses, as is how to develop the fine art of appearing approachable to your fellow guests when you’re standing alone and wondering if you’ll talk with anyone. Readers will appreciate the many good examples that provide teachable moments and make this book ideal for professionals and social learners alike. Williams’ book is a great soft-skills business resource, that will be a great help to those who struggle with small talk, pitching to clients, or relationship-building within your team. The insights are perfect for occasions where first impressions and informal conversations can open the door to business-enhancing or career-building opportunities.

10X Is Easier Than 2X (2023) Dan Sullivan with Dr. Benjamin Hardy

Call this book a must-read for ambitious business leaders. When the mission is to level up business growth, here are insights that give an eye-opening perspective on how to achieve exponential, rather than incremental, growth. This no-nonsense read can give business leaders and owners actionable insights into scaling their businesses rapidly, leveraging technology and resources more effectively and positioning their entity to stay ahead—of the competition and customer tastes—in a rapidly evolving marketplace.

Businesses leaders often aim to achieve progress, for example, and may focus on doubling their results year over year. However, Sullivan and Hardy argue convincingly that aiming for tenfold growth is not only feasible but also more practical and rewarding. As they see it, going for 10x requires letting go of 80% of your current life and going all-in on the crucial 20% that’s relevant and high-impact.

Readers will find practical strategies and mindset shifts that inspire you to break through limitations and achieve exponential growth. The authors emphasize the power of thinking bigger, setting audacious goals and taking massive action. For business owners and leaders, this approach is invaluable as it encourages innovation, pushes boundaries and fosters a culture of continuous improvement.

Acting Up: Winning in Business and Life Using Down-Home Wisdom (2019) Janice Bryant Howroyd

“Never compromise who you are personally to become who you wish to be professionally” is the core message offered by author Janice Bryant Howroyd, who grew up in a family of 11 children. Here she discusses the principles and techniques that she used to build a multinational staffing agency. The author guides readers through questions of leadership, risk-taking, developing confidence and networking, among other topics.

Howroyd also emphasizes the significance of data-driven and strategic business decisions as she simultaneously encourages readers to take a holistic approach to making the most of both their professional and personal lives. The author addresses as well the topic of diversity from the perspective of a black female entrepreneur and urges readers not to define her by demographics. In sum, Howroyd shares in her book the values she lives by and continues to represent: that of a leader who works for good, for growth and for innovation, for her family values and for the same ideals upon which she founded her company—that success is transferrable.

The 1-Page Marketing Plan (2018) by Allan Dib

“The most common way small business owners decide on this (marketing and advertising) is by looking at large, successful competitors in their industry and mimicking what they’re doing. In reality, this is the fastest way to fail and I’m certain it’s responsible for the bulk of small business failures.” Now you know why this book is included in the reading list!

In The 1-Page Marketing Plan, serial entrepreneur and marketer Allan Dib reveals a marketing implementation revolution that makes creating a marketing plan uncomplicated and fast—it’s literally just a single page! By creating and implementing that one-page wonder, you’ll have an effective marketing plan that you can put into motion. Dib understands that small business owners (and Freelance professionals as well) trying to jumpstart their marketing often don’t have adequate resources—money, time, or expertise—provided by employees or Freelance consultants—that big businesses do. The author has devised a credible alternate path that shows how you can create a basic marketing plan to help steer your business in the right direction and, as Dib himself says, puts you on “the fastest path to money”.

Reset: How to Change What’s Not Working (2025) Dan Heath

Reset offers a guide to fixing what’s not working in your business operations—in systems and processes, organizations and companies and even in our daily lives. Author Dan Heath provides real-world stories and actionable insights that can empower you to create lasting change in your organization—and maybe in your life, as well.

What if you could somehow learn to unlock forward movement and achieve the progress that matters most to you, without the need for more resources—like money and connections? Heath shows how, with the same relationships you have and the same financial resources you can access, it is possible to reconfigure the circumstances and bring dramatically better outcomes to your life. Yesterday, you were stuck. Today, you can reset.

The author explores a framework for getting unstuck and making beneficial changes that matter. Heath says that the secret of success is to find the leverage points—places where a bit of effort can yield a disproportionate return. Do that and you can rearrange your resources and activate those pivotal points. Heath also points out that to even experience the feeling of progress can be a leverage point that can accelerate the arrival of the positive change you desire.

The 48 Hour Start-Up: From Idea to Launch in One Weekend (2016) Fraser Doherty

This can’t be done, you say? Well, author and serial entrepreneur and Scottish citizen Fraser Doherty MBE (who was awarded the honorific title Member of the Order of the British Empire for his achievements) begs to differ. In his book, Doherty provides actionable advice on how to identify and shape a viable business idea that is ready to launch in only two days. Doherty’s reasoning behind the 48-hour deadline is simple—he argues that prospective entrepreneurs (aka wantrepreneurs) spend too much time and energy obsessing over the “perfect idea”. The time they waste waiting for the “perfect idea” to appear is time that could be used refining and adapting that business idea for customers who could actually use it.

The book is helpful with the initial decisions that aspiring entrepreneurs must consider when starting a business. In his considerable experience, Doherty has found that launching a business does not have to involve complicated financial projections, elaborate presentations, or extraordinary innovation. A simple, well-executed idea is what it takes to launch and sustain a successful enterprise and Doherty has done it more than once—the first time while still in his teens. 

Doherty also emphasizes that before you invest significant time and resources, quickly reality-test your idea with potential customers and conduct basic market research. The process will help you gauge market demand for your product or service, assess your main competitors, identify and address potential problems early on and, in general, refine your product or service based on the uncensored feedback received from potential customers.

Good Strategy Bad Strategy (2011) Richard Rumelt

It is a given that developing and implementing strategy is the primary task of a leader—whether military leader, business leader, baseball manager, or tennis coach. The definition of a good strategy could be expressed as a specific and coherent response to—and approach for—overcoming the obstacles to progress. A good strategy works by harnessing and applying power where it will have the greatest effect. Yet, author Richard Rumelt asserts that there has been a growing and unfortunate tendency to equate Mom-and-apple-pie values, fluffy buzzwords, motivational slogans and financial goals with “strategy.”

Rumelt displays an astonishing grasp and integration of economics, finance, technology and history to expose and clarify the often-muddled thinking that is the foundation of too many so-called strategies and his book details a clear way to create and implement a powerful action-oriented strategies that will be effective in the real world.

The book helps readers to recognize and avoid the trap of bad strategy and guides them to adopt good, credible, action-oriented strategy that honestly acknowledges and responds to the challenges that businesses encounter. Rumelt cautions readers that strategy should not be equated with ambition, leadership, vision, or planning; rather, strategy is a coherent, action-backed plan supported by a rational argument.

Rumelt emphasizes that strategies are often confused with goals and visions and points out that a plan is what sets strategies apart from goals and gives you a clear idea of what is necessary to succeed. To evaluate and decide which strategies are suitable for your organization, the author says it is necessary to confirm whether you have the resources to implement your strategy and, in addition, ensure that your strategy fits with your current situation. The actions need to fit with your present circumstances and work together to give you the best possible advantage. After this, you’re well on your way to a faultless strategy implementation.

The Courage To Be Disliked (2018) Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga

Strictly speaking, this book is not a business book. One might consider it as an accelerator that gives the determination to push forward with a desire to launch a business entity or achieve other important goals. Kishimi and Koga present their book as a dialogue between an older philosopher and a young man. Over the course of five enlightening and thought-provoking conversations the philosopher, who happens to draw from the theories of Alfred Adler, a late 19th- and early 20th- century psychologist and thought leader in that discipline (along with Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung and B. Fred Skinner), explains to his pupil how each of us is able to determine our own life, free from the shackles of past experiences, doubts and the expectations of others. The wisdom that the philosopher reveals is deeply liberating and enables his pupil to develop the courage to change and to ignore the limitations that others, or even the pupil himself, may use to control him.

The result is a book that is both highly accessible and profound in its importance, yet it is not without controversy; certain of authors’ premises you may find shocking or, at least, unrealistic. Still, the book is, at its core, about reclaiming your power and using it to shape the life that is meaningful to you.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: ©Beli_photos

Let’s Optimize Your Website Chatbot

Over the past several years, you’ve most likely noticed that chatbots have become a standard feature, particularly on corporate websites. Whether the user is a prospect on a buyer’s journey, searching for basic product info, or a customer looking to resolve a (hopefully!) quick service request, maybe an exchange or return, experimenting with the generative AI powered resource known as chatbot seems reasonable to many. After all, if it appears that you’ll be able to transact your business more quickly and easily, why not give it a try?

But unfortunately, many users have been disappointed by what they expected would be a good experience with a time-saving new technology. A survey conducted in 2023 found that while 68% of business website visitors have interacted with a chatbot just 35% agree that most of the time, the chatbot helped them achieve their mission. Meanwhile, 77% of users felt their chatbot experience was frustrating.

Duly noted but nevertheless, the corporate bosses are determined to making GenAI adoption a success. They’ve decided that chatbots are the future and the future is now; they envision chatbot as the portal where customers and prospects will access product information, register complaints and obtain refunds or exchanges—all without the assistance of the company’s (paid) employees, BTW.

The bosses are fully aware that these often mundane interactions are critical to customer satisfaction and loyalty, brand image and sales but as of now, users are reporting that their chatbot interactions are lacking. The 2023 survey referenced above also showed that 88% of business website visitors would rather speak with a human customer service agent via telephone when seeking information or resolving a problem, clearly indicating that today’s chatbot is in need of refinement. The current fixes don’t always work, according to users, resulting in what could be a great resource to come up short because the solutions that users want aren’t programmed into the thing. If the corporate champions of generative AI chatbots would like to realize its full value—and I suspect that even disappointed users would agree that the potential value of generative AI chatbot is considerable—the customer experience must be prioritized when programming and implementing the technology.

Customer service and IT teams are on notice to fix chatbot problems and fortunately, they are beginning to realize that the chatbot challenge isn’t primarily technological—it’s psychological. It seems obvious that chatbot developers would be greatly assisted by researching and verifying the solutions that users want and their expectations regarding the overall chatbot experience. In a 2024 survey, 85% of customer service leaders reported that they are currently exploring more user-friendly chatbot solutions.

So, Freelancer friend—does your website have a chatbot or have you, like me, hesitated to adopt a resource that ought to be a good thing, but your own user experience with the technology hasn’t lived up to your expectations? Or maybe those of you who have installed a website or social media chatbot might like to improve the experience? If you’d like to refine the responses, visit the Frequently Asked Questions document, which is the knowledge base for the chatbot. You’ll be able to make edits there and the chatbot will integrate the new information in its responses. Below are enhancements you may want to incorporate as you work to optimize your company’s chatbot experience and facilitate user satisfaction, enhance the perception of your brand and drive sales.

Conversational tone preferred

Research has shown that up to 35%  of customers behave differently when interacting with chatbots, as compared to a human agent, because interacting with a machine feels less personal. Make your chatbot communications more personal and welcoming by programming the system to respond like a friendly and efficient human customer service agent. A conversational yet professional tone, appropriate expressions of empathy (“I’m sorry to hear that”) and giving other common responses that (“How does that sound?”) can encourage users to feel comfortable and trust their chatbot interaction, behaviors that contribute to a positive customer experience. Also, creating a human-like avatar and giving it a name makes users feel that your chatbot is more relatable and trustworthy.

Your chatbot can even “learn” to give understated compliments that can discreetly recommend purchases. In fact, many customers respond favorably to gentle endorsement of their choices (“Yes, this tie will look both fashionable and professional”) and up to 12.5% are inclined to accept chatbot purchasing recommendations. Still, be aware that attempting to make your chatbot too chummy by programming in what can be perceived as false flattery and a turn-off. Overly personal language triggers suspicion and makes customers feel manipulated. Keep the compliments fact-based, professional and aligned with the professional tone that customers expect from a chatbot.

Customers in a hurry want just the facts

Customers who are in a hurry, or those who are upset and feeling that expectations have not been met, just want to fix their problem, quickly and satisfactorily. Feelings of disappointment and frustration override the preference toward human-like chatbot responses. Research has found that dissatisfied customers were 23% less satisfied when met with conversational chatbot “empathy” when there is a problem to fix. At those times, customers prefer a straightforward, all-business chatbot interaction that is fast and efficient.

Furthermore, conversational responses can raise expectations and inadvertently heighten frustration if chatbot responses do not quickly and accurately produce problem resolution. It will be useful to program your chatbot to shift into all-business mode and respond quickly and clearly when frustration or urgency are detected. In high-stress situations, it’s better to not seem “human” at all.

Advertise accuracy

Advertising the potential benefits of using your chatbot is a good thing! Let visitors to your website or social media sites know that your chatbot is able to quickly and correctly answer questions and solve problems, save time and make accessing information easy. Broadcasting the likelihood of success generates the expectation of a positive experience, promotes trust in the chatbot and encourages customers and prospects to take a chance with your chatbot. Inviting website visitors to “try it, you’ll like it” can potentially increase chatbot engagement by up to 22%, according to a 2021 study.

This point was reinforced in another 2023 study of chatbot interactions that revealed when users engaged in identical conversations with human customer service agents and the chatbot, 8.5% reported they were less satisfied after using the chatbot. But when chatbot benefits were highlighted, for example, announcing 24/7 service availability, 37% of that same subject group reported they were more satisfied with the chatbot than with the slower, and less-available, human agents. Give your chatbot an enthusiastic endorsement and you’ll encourage its use.

Getting better all the time

The best way to improve the performance and acceptance of your chatbot is to help it get “smarter”. Research shows that users were up to 17% more likely to accept the chatbot’s suggestions when told that the chatbot is on a continuous learning curve and is not limited by a static algorithm that’s upgraded only intermittently. It seems a chatbot that’s “enrolled” in ongoing continuing education is favored over a presumably knowledgeable human customer service agent.

In other words, tell the world that your chatbot is always being improved with the ongoing addition of new information and user feedback. It’s like working with an enthusiastic young intern—users may be inclined to forgive occasional small errors and appreciate that each interaction will be better than the last. Without this explanation, some users might have limited confidence in this resource (perhaps a result of underwhelming, if not disappointing, chatbot experiences on other sites). Make the effort to optimize how your chatbot communicates by training the technology to deliver customer service that meets, or exceeds, user expectations. Finally, know that it is also important that human interaction should be available to your customers and prospects when they request it.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © Dzmitry Auramchik

How Do Freelancers Get Ready to Use AI?

Artificial Intelligence continues to expand its presence in the business operations of companies large and small as it delivers to users numerous advantages. That said, business owners and leaders are advised to be mindful that integrating AI into their operations is more complex than installing Software as a Service products; both SaaS and AI require prospective users to determine where and why certain capabilities are desired. For example, there should be a clear understanding of which business function(s) could enhance productivity, perhaps, or save significant time, if it/they operated more efficiently. However, ramping up for the introduction of AI requires a deeper dive than what is required for introducing an SaaS application. A good place to begin your AI decision-making is to answer these questions:

  • What problems do you think AI will solve?
  • Which business functions do you think AI will improve?
  • Which key performance indicator metrics will be chosen to evaluate the impact of AI on your organization?

Business functions that often benefit from AI

Artificial Intelligence is a powerful tool that, when used strategically, can significantly improve the operational efficiency of business processes and in particular, can enhance the ability to make data-driven decisions that can guide your response to critical business questions or opportunities. AI also has many other useful capabilities, from automating repetitive tasks such as inventory management, by calculating optimal inventory levels, to enhancing the customer experience by way of a website chat bot that quickly and accurately answers questions posed by prospective customers and also deliver personalized messages to customers that encourage engagement and loyalty.

Begin your company’s assessment of AI by examining the role AI might have in your business operations—where and how do you envision it can potentially benefit your company? Addressing the above questions should be helpful. Furthermore, studying AI use cases across major industries will provide insight into where your organization might focus. Starting with small and easily measured processes will allow you to gauge both the effectiveness of AI in your operations and your (or your team’s) ability to work with the technology. AI has produced good results in these business functions:

• In marketing, AI will support market research, including data analysis, marketing content creation, generating marketing campaign visuals and marketing campaign support, such as personalized content creation and automating lead generation tasks. More than 90% of companies begin their AI journey with marketing.

• In sales, AI supports competitive analysis, predicts trends and may possibly lead you discover a potentially lucrative niche market.

• In technology, AI will assist in software development and system architecture design, speeds-up innovation and improves outcomes.

• Freelancers will find AI tools useful for project management, budgeting, invoicing and automating customer emails.

• In manufacturing, AI monitors machinery conditions, predicts failures and analyzes real-time data, enabling preventive measures that reduce costly downtime.

Advance planning helps AI implementation

Once you decide which business function will benefit from AI and would also be a good place to start, create an AI onboarding plan to support the success of your roll-out. Furthermore, if you have employees, factor in the attitude your staff may have regarding AI, which is an important consideration that can help or hinder your plan to introduce AI. Transparency is a must as you consider, and then decide, which business function(s) you’d like to see become AI-powered.

  1. Ensure that AI will seamlessly integrate into business processes

AI is considered a disruptive technology, but integrating AI should not disrupt how your business operates. Implementing AI is meant to improve your existing business processes. A well-planned AI data integration strategy will ensure that the technology will work efficiently within your business operations. In other words, AI must work with current systems, not against them. Before introducing AI, you are advised to confirm:

  • Does AI work with your current software and tools?
  • How much upskilling will you and your employees need to use AI correctly?
  • How will AI affect your existing business processes?

2. AI-ready data

Once you’ve decided to implement AI, it’s important to understand that this technology requires access to high-quality, structured (accessible) and accurate data in order to function effectively, especially in the B2B sector.  When the intention is to incorporate AI, it will be necessary to first focus on data integration. The AI system “learns” from your data bases and formulates data-driven decisions and predictions accordingly. Data accuracy (or inaccuracy) directly impacts AI performance—so, if the input data is incomplete or incorrect, the system may generate flawed results, leading to errors.

Garbage in, garbage out. It is imperative that you review your company’s data quality, consistency and accessibility. AI works best with structured data, that is, data stored in a way that AI tools can easily access and utilize it. You can improve your data integration as follows:

  • Check data accuracy to eliminate AI prediction errors
  • Remove duplicate data to prevent AI from repeated mistakes
  • Use cloud storage to give AI optimum access to real-time data
  • Set data rules to ensure that your data is stored in the cloud in an accessible and useful way

3. AI training for employees (and you)

AI adoption is successful when businesses train their teams to use AI correctly. AI does not exist to replace employees, but to support them. Because AI has acquired a degree of controversy, which might cause employees to feel suspicious, if not fearful, regarding their future prospects for employment, investing in AI training, along with transparent communications about how AI will be used in the organization are crucial. By training employees (and yourself), you will improve the results of your AI integration. Training will also ensure that your employees can appropriately manage the technology, which will make them feel confident and help you to win their support and trust.

An ongoing conversation with employees that includes listening and empathy, presented with the spirit of collaboration, will be crucial to AI’s success in your organization. Once you implement AI, invite employee feedback by asking them how AI affects their work. Your goal is to foster acceptance and that entails helping employees understand the the technology and spark enthusiasm for their opportunity to work with it.

  • Teach AI basics so that employees will understand how AI supports decision-making, for example, and encourage them to learn and test other AI features you’ll introduce in a judgment-free setting
  • Ensure that employees have the opportunity to learn to use AI in their daily tasks, as a way to show them that AI is a helpful tool and not a threat

4. AI security and privacy issues

A major challenge in AI integration for is ensuring that AI does not create security risks. Introducing security measures from the start helps businesses avoid the embarrassment (and possible legal trouble) that result from data breaches. AI works with data, including customer information, financial records and internal business information. Establish rules for AI security, including:

  1. Data protection – Store data securely to prevent breaches or hacking.
  2. Access – Limit who can see and use AI-powered systems.
  3. Quality control – Regularly check AI decisions to ensure they are accurate and ethical.
  4. Compliance – Follow data protection laws like GDPR and CCPA.

5. Start small, monitor and measure

Although AI is without question the Next Big Thing, tech experts recommend approaching AI integration cautiously. Adoption can be risky if not done without both clear objectives regarding what you hope to achieve and an understanding of the technology’s capabilities and limitations. It’s possible for businesses to fail with AI because they overreach with implementation, deciding to use it everywhere at once. AI is complex and mistakes can be costly.

Starting small with AI and testing AI tools in limited areas of your operations, so that you might gauge what works and evaluate where and how AI adds value in your organization, is the prudent way to introduce AI. You want to avoid committing too heavily to a new technology that may not be fully aligned with your business needs. A small project will allow you to test AI in a controlled way, identify challenges and measure results before making AI a bigger part of operations.

Finally, be advised that AI tools are not a one-time setup. AI will require updates, maintenance and adjustments over time, to ensure that your AI tools continue to perform as expected. It’s important to remember that AI “learns” over time and must be updated to remain accurate; without appropriate maintenance, AI can become outdated and unreliable— subsequent technological advances will cause older AI tools to be replaced by updated ones, for example. Companies should set a schedule for reviewing and updating AI. Where staffing allows, they should also assign a team to handle AI improvements. Solopreneurs and SMBs are recommended to speak with an AI systems technology professional to monitor their AI tools.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © 2025 University of Cincinnati Online

Crisis Communications: Monitor and Defend Your Online Presence

Managing the online presence and reputation of a brand, whether personal or company, is no longer considered mere vanity or over-reaching micromanagement. Regular tracking and review of all content that pertains to your organization and shows up in searches—its services and products, the company itself and its leaders—including AI-powered searches, is now recognized as a necessity. Vigilant and consistent monitoring of information that appears online about your company and you, as the principal of your Freelance consulting practice or fractional executive, owner/leader of a traditional business, small or large, or not-for-profit organization executive, can be viewed as an aspect of risk management strategy.

It is imperative for all business owners and leaders to carefully shape and defend their brand’s online image and ensure that all information presented is accurate and leaves viewers of your content with a positive impression, meaning, a portrayal that encourages credibility and trust.

Unflattering or outright negative content associated with your brand, as well as inaccurate info, has the potential to undermine or damage your organization’s credibility. It is therefore highly recommended that Freelancers and other business owners and leaders regularly assess all AI-generated and online mentions of their company and personal brand and verify the accuracy of the information found.

Take control of your online presence

Integral to a comprehensive marketing campaign is building a digital presence that illustrates the competence and credibility of the organization. Online reputation management is essential to defending that carefully curated image, whether you maintain a solopreneur consulting practice, operate a small company, or lead a national or multi–national conglomerate. Failing to take defensive action and waiting until negative content has become an embarrassing crisis may cause an unfortunate outcome that stains your own or your company’s reputation.

Inspection tours are the how you’ll discover inaccurate information and/or negative content. Inspecting the search engines is Step One of your mission to defend and, if necessary, correct online information pertaining to you and your organization. Learning where and how to locate, edit, or suppress content that is untrue or unflattering is the most important step of restorative crisis communications activity. Proactive monitoring and strategic content creation will be central to maintaining control of your online image. The presence of negative content, which may include customer reviews and other user-generated content, can have a direct effect on company reputation and sales revenue: Approximately 94% of customers report that a negative merchant review on a review site persuaded them to avoid doing business with that merchant.

Step Two of your brand defense is the actual defensive action, where you may simply update information to correct what appears sites like Yelp or Google. More thought and time will be necessary if you discover content that is inaccurate and perhaps also misleading; in these cases, you may decide that a substantive reset of your brand narrative is in order. Your best defensive action will be to create and publish relevant, high-quality content that is capable of enhancing your online authority and burying the harmful content by pushing it further down in search rankings.

Google search operators

Re: your search engine inspection tours in most cases, a Google or Bing search of the brand will surface a comprehensive list of brand mentions. However, a more thorough search might locate additional content that you can review and if you discover incorrect information or harmful material on less popular search engines or on online communities, you can explore how to make corrections and/or counteract negative content with a post or two that displays your authority and integrity.

To take a deeper dive and search for potentially harmful content that might otherwise go unnoticed., you’ll be pleased to find that Google’s search capabilities extend far beyond entering a name into the search bar to see what appears. Dipping into advanced search operators will broaden your scope and, if it exists, may help you to locate negative content that does not appear in a traditional search.

To find what may be hiding in the shadows, launch an exact match search by placing your name in quotation marks (e.g., “John Smith” or “The Best Company”) to specify search results to that unique name and eliminate unwanted mentions. To further refine search results, you can exclude irrelevant pages using the minus sign. for example, searching for “The Best Company” -Instagram removes Instagram results and help your mission to dig up potentially damaging content pertaining to your brand that may be posted on less visible sites.

Furthermore, a site-specific search can help when you suspect that a particular domain features negative information about your brand. Typing the site domain address, followed by a colon and your company name will produce only results from that chosen site. It is also useful to search variations of your name, for example, “J. Smith” or “Best Company;” — subtle changes could possibly bring up mentions that do not appear in the traditional searches.

Set-up Google Alerts for ongoing monitoring

It is wise to be vigilant and regularly monitor your name online, to prevent damage before it spreads. Google Alerts is a free tool that notifies you whenever new content is indexed and includes your name. To get started, visit Google Alerts and enter your full name and company name along with relevant variations (e.g. “Jane Smith” or “Jane K. Smith”). Use quotation marks to ensure your alert captures the exact phrase. Then click “show options” to select how frequently you’d like to receive alerts —the “as-it-happens” option is best for reputation management. Set alerts to receive notification of name mentions and be sure to correct inaccuracies and gratuitously negative content. Counteract what is negative with relevant and compelling content that can potentially suppress unflattering narratives.

You can also filter alerts by geographic location and type of content, such as blogs, news articles, or discussions. Finally, enter your email address to start receiving updates. These alerts act as a digital early warning system. You’ll know immediately if a new piece of content starts gaining traction — giving you time to prepare a response or counter-strategy. Staying visible online requires more than awareness — it demands consistency and strategy.

  • Monitoring social mentions and online discussions

Negative content is known to more frequently begin on nontraditional search engines. Social media platforms, forums and blog comments can amplify by way of the metaverse effect and damage to your brand image can spread quickly—even as it never appears in traditional search results.

To really scrutinize your online presence, investing in the services of a social listening site such as EmbedSocial or AgoraPulse will detect online conversations that mention your name and your company name across blogs, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, media outlets and more. Social listening platforms also provide sentiment analysis, an excellent feature that distinguishes between harmless chatter and attacks on your brand reputation. Most social listening platforms are a paid service but if a free solution will be more appropriate for you at this time, consider Talkwalker Alerts (by HootSuite). Incidentally, Talkwalker provides more extensive web and social listening coverage than Google Alerts and is easy to integrate into your workflow.

Finally, make a point to investigate online communities like Reddit and Quora. These platforms typically feature informal discussions and some have been known to quickly go viral. Get your investigation started with a targeted search— reddit.com:The Best Company to uncover mentions that might not appear on Bing or Google. Knowing what’s being said about you when you’re not in the room lets you know who your friends are and also gives you the opportunity to respond with a brand image defensive strategy.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © Behnaz Farahi. Gaze to the Stars, an installation created by Behnaz Farahi, Assistant Professor at the MIT Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, MA. Gaze to the Stars was displayed on the MIT Great Dome December 2024-March 2025.

Future-Proof Your Business NOW

Freelancer friend, when did you last update—upgrade—your office technology? If it’s been more than five years since you’ve purchased hardware or software to modernize and optimize your company technology, let the warning bell ring and signal that it’s time to re-think your tech capabilities. While you’re at it, you can also research security solutions to defend your company against cyberattack. It is time to put on your strategic planning hat and future-proof your IT systems.

Think about it—if positioning yourself as a thought leader is an element of your marketing strategy, you cannot fully inhabit that role when the organization you lead is limping along on a seriously outdated, inadequate, IT infrastructure. Cyberthreats have become increasingly brazen and persistent, from high-profile data breaches to incursions into everyday life, such as a recent email that was sent to me by an alleged employee of an organization that has a name and email address similar to a company with whom I do business. The email message requested that I sign and return the attached “vendor contract and forms.” That message was the inspiration for this post (and it’s been deleted).

Updating and upgrading the technology that runs the business is an element of your risk management strategy and intended to protect your business by eliminating vulnerabilities. An updated IT system will bring many benefits to how you do business, including support of agile business practices, enabling operational efficiencies and facilitating a seamless and pleasing experience that not only keeps your customers coming back, but also inspires them to refer your company to their friends. Using the right technology is an affirmation of your brand promise.

So, whether it’s to strengthen IT security measures, or streamline business operations and enhance customer service and customer experience protocols, it will benefit you to rethink how you can optimize your use of technology, a reimagining that will likely cause you to consider Artificial Intelligence tools, cloud-based solutions marketing automation (which is now AI-powered) and customer relations management software.

Surrendering to avoidance behavior that makes you shy away from investing time and thought to considering goals you might pursue over the next 12-36 months or so, as well as researching potential tech solutions that are capable of supporting those goals, is costing you more than you think. The longer you plod along with outdated IT systems that no longer adequately serve your business, no matter that they’ve become familiar and comfortable, represents a risk—to the security of your data and to your ability to operate in an agile and efficient manner, for starters. Keeping up with Microsoft or Apple updates can only help so much—they are band-aids, a helpful short-term fix but not a comprehensive IT solution. Modernizing the technology that enables your business to function is not to be confused with buying the coolest and newest mobile phone. Your IT system is not a vanity project.

What technology does a Freelance consultant need?

Freelancers and other small business owners need hardware and software that serves both front-end (user facing) and back end functions (data management, processing, storage). A well thought-out IT strategy will function as a roadmap that outlines your technology needs and how to achieve them, including the budget and timeline. At top-of-mind must be that Freelancers are often in the B2B sector and work remotely; Work From Home demands a tech set-up that facilitates teamwork when team members are in different locations, maybe in different time zones, maybe on different continents.

Collaboration and communication tools that facilitate productivity and team cohesion are paramount for Freelancers and will include videoconferencing, team chat and project management. Also expected to be high on your IT shopping list will be AI tools and the hardware required to accommodate them and cloud-based solutions that will likely include CRM software, data protection and data retention.

A 2022 survey found that 61% of respondents whose companies upgraded their communication technology in the previous year primarily focused on streamlining processes, reducing costs, saving time and improving productivity to support the overall goal of making business operations more efficient. Those priorities will surely figure prominently in your IT upgrading decisions as well. Still, investing in customer experience tools has the potential to deliver tangible returns.

Let’s end with reassuring news—your IT upgrade needn’t be done all at once. The project can be structured to make it more affordable and manageable than you might expect in terms of time, money and decision-making stress. Your company’s IT infrastructure can be updated and upgraded step-by-step to replace obsolete equipment with modern solutions that align with your current strategies and will likely support your plans for future growth. Every wise and courageous action you take to move your company forward will deliver immediate benefits and also lay the groundwork for further progress.

Just remember that avoidance behavior will do you no favors and, in the end, will be more costly and stressful. Do yourself a favor and commit to starting the process within 30 days; if you’re in the midst of a big project, get started on your IT makeover within 30 days of wrapping things up. You will receive great satisfaction, among other rewards, by avoiding the drama of a hacking or other crises. The longer you put this off, the less control you’ll have over your time, money and satisfaction derived from your role as a company leader.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: Courtesy Wikimedia Commons (1994)