Tuesday 31 December 2019

10 AI Tools For Social Media You Need To Use In 2020

10 AI Tools For Social Media You Need To Use In 2020

DisPRuptive
Dec 30, 2019 · 6 min read

With the internet reaching every home globally, businesses have found new ways to market their products and services. There are about 3.48 billion social media users worldwide and the number is only going to increase in 2020.

Since the market is getting tougher, as a business owner or a social media marketer if you want to make the most out of your marketing campaigns while managing them with finesse, you need to get over your usual social media marketing tools and tactics and start approaching the AI-based ones.

There are a plethora of AI-driven social media marketing tools available that can significantly improve how you use social media for marketing in 2020.

How artificial intelligence is improving social media marketing effectiveness?

As said, there are plenty of AI tools for social media marketing and in this post, we will discuss the top AI tools all social media marketers should know about if you want to gain traction in 2020.

#1 WordStream

#2 Pattern89

#3 Phrasee

#4 Linkfluence

#5 Cortex

#6 Socialbakers

#7 HubSpot

#8 Sprout Social

#9 Lately

#10 Persado

The Bottom Line


Let’s do some noise?

With offices in London and New York, DisPRuptive has already overseen and deployed successfully marketing and PR campaigns for dozens of ICOs, STOs and IEOs all over the globe. What do we guarantee?

● Fast, fluid & flexible AI-based Marketing & PR services

● Digitally-integrated PR — for search engine visibility

● Connecting innovators and game-changers with their key audiences

● Comprehensive marketing campaigns, across multiple channels

● Business acumen — commercial KPIs matter

● Always on-call — we don’t have a ‘9-to-5’ mindset

Let’s get in touch!

Write us at hello@disPRuptive.com or contact us on Telegram

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The EVA System to Build a Writer’s Brand on Your Personal Values

The EVA System to Build a Writer’s Brand on Your Personal Values

Let people know who you actually are

Katrina Loos
Dec 31, 2019 · 8 min read
Photo by Dmitry Ratushny from Unsplash

Why Writers Need a Personal Brand

Putting together an experience for your target audience is overwhelming. If you make it that way. Photo by Jeff Sheldon from Unsplash

Elements of a Successful Writer’s Brand

Photo by Nick Morrison from Unsplash

Easy Ways To Get Started On Your Writer’s Brand

The most important thing to worry about when creating a writer’s brand is focusing on the “writing” part of it. GIF from Giphy.

Before doing anything, you need to ask yourself these three things:

  1. What are my personal values?
  2. What is my vision with my writing? Where do I want my writing to take me?
  3. What makes me stand out from all of the other writers out there?

“You can’t hit a target you don’t even have.” — Zig Ziglar

Let me tell you my answers to these questions to give you some ideas for how to create your personal brand.

1. What are my personal values?

Authenticity, happiness, and love. In that exact order.

2. What is my vision with my writing? Where do I want my writing to take me?

My vision is eternal growth.

3. What makes me stand out from all of the other writers out there?

I stand out from all the other writers out there because I’m not trying too hard.



After Asking Yourself Those Three Main Questions, It’s Time for You to Create Your Mission Statement

Your mission statement defines every facet of who you are and what you want your brand to stand for.

  1. Ask yourself how you’re going to get there. You need a game plan for how you’re going to get to where you want to go with your writing. Brushing up on your grammar and vocabulary, reading more books and articles in the niche(s) you want to write in, and creating content calendars are great ways to get started on improving your craft and coming up with your mission statement.
  2. Who do you want to write for? This can be anybody you want to write to. There are no limitations to what you can do. It’s your personal writer’s brand, after all. If you’re somebody like me who likes to write about a lot of different topics, you have an infinite number of possibilities with your audience. if you want to narrow your writing down to something more specific, such as B2C business owners, you can do that as well. You just need a content strategy that will entertain, educate, and inspire your target audience.
  3. Mush all of your goals into one big goal. Doing this keeps you a bit more organized and not as overwhelmed. Unless you’re a wizard of organization. If you are, please teach me your ways.
  4. Finally, make sure you see it every single day. That’s your baby right there! Your completed mission statement. Your future, your vision, your everything.

You’ve Asked Yourself the Three Golden Questions and Created Your Mission Statement. What Else Is There to Do?

This is where the hard work comes in, but it will pay off.


There’s Another Secret Ingredient I Didn’t Mention

You now know why you need a writer’s brand. You also know how to get started on one before jumping into the nitty-gritty details making up your brand. And you know what the details consist of. Where the real hard work comes in.

“Building an audience takes time. There’s no magic formula. Put in the hard work, improve your writing, and over time people will show up.” — Justin Cox

Nothing is instant. Especially when it comes to your writing.

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Katrina Loos

WRITTEN BY

Blogger. Social media writer. Introverted cat lady. Add more value to your blog content and social media here → https://katrinaloos.com/

Better Marketing

Advice & case studies

How To Build a Personal Brand Without Any Money

Better Marketing



How To Build a Personal Brand Without Any Money

Every step I took to go from college graduate to writer and agency founder





Nicolas Cole Instagram

  1. I needed to build myself as a writer publicly. I needed to start branding myself.





1. Instead of Trying to Generate Press and Media Attention for Myself, I Used My Writing to Build Credibility Through My Work

Unlike most other writers who either receive advances for their first book or make their money elsewhere and then decide to start building themselves as an author/writer after the fact, I didn’t have the means to hire other people to make me look talented.

I started writing on Quora near the end of 2014

Knowing that I didn’t have any of these other “buyable” options on the table, I committed fully to the process of writing on a daily basis. I told myself I was going to write one Quora answer per day, every day, for a year straight. Worst case scenario, it would be a year of extreme practice. Best case scenario, Quora would be my launchpad.





2. Instead of Spending Money on Hiring a Photographer, I Reached Out to Photography Students Studying at Columbia College Chicago

I’ve always been a huge rap and hip-hop fan.

As a 23-year-old with zero resources and determined to build myself into a successful, fully independent writer, I saw this as a massive opportunity

Not having any other writer to use as a model, I basically decided to take the branding playbook of an up-and-coming rap artist and apply it to myself. If rappers hired photographers to take on tour with them and capture candid photos of them behind the scenes, then I was going to do the same thing in my everyday life. If rappers made their Instagram pages give the impression that they were this massive superstar, then I was going to do the same thing. If rappers had creative directors, then I was going to be my own creative director.

I emailed 20 different students I found on the site

A few got back to me. And I just started meeting up with them, walking to different parts of the city, pretending like I had any idea what I was doing. “Look at me like you’re thinking about something,” this girl said, pointing her camera lens at my face. I thought I was doing what she had asked, until she said, “No, like, actually move your face. Make a different expression.” I didn’t know how to do that. I tried again. She said, “No, OK so like, umm. You know what, nevermind,” and I followed her to a different street where we tried again. And again.

Nicolas Cole Instagram





3. Instead of Spending Money on Advertising, I Started Building a Massive Library (a “Web”) of Content to Advertise for Me Long Into the Future

One of my first big lessons in the world of digital advertising happened when I was working as a copywriter at this ad agency right out of college.

Once I started executing this strategy for myself, I started to see the secret weapon I had unlocked for myself

Every article I wrote was another asset that I owned. The more assets I owned, the more organic viewership I started to attract. The bigger the library got, the wider my reach, the more “sticky” my web of content got, and the higher my average monthly views went.





4. I Sacrificed Short-Term Opportunities to Make Money for Longer-Term Opportunities That Had Exponentially Higher Ceilings

The last thing I did, and this is a choice I continue to make for myself today, is I always questioned whether or not it was time to start monetizing.

From that day forward, I wrote one Quora answer per day and one Inc. Magazine column per day, five to seven days per week, every week, every month, for months on end

In my first month writing for Inc. Magazine, I had my first small viral hit, and I made something like $1,000. The next month, another article caught fire. And then again, and again. Until eventually, what I was earning from Inc. Magazine alone wasn’t too far from what I was making working eight or more hours per day at the ad agency.
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WRITTEN BY

Writer | Founder of Digital Press | 4x Top Writer on Quora | 50M+ Views | https://www.nicolascole.com


Advice & case studies



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