The young women at {r}evolution apparel did something.
Watching their computer screens, transfixed, as a sort of movie-magic-that-you-only-read-in-novels scenario unfolded before their very eyes, they saw their start-up venture dreams became a reality.
In less than 5 hours their Kickstarter campaign for the sustainable fashion line they had been working on for over 2 years nearly doubled to $30K, well above the $20K threshold necessary to secure their funding. They accomplished all this barely fifteen days into their thirty-day campaign.
Very kindly they noted that they believed part of the traffic coming to their website and campaign was from an article I had written about them on my blog on Forbes, which had been picked up by Yahoo! News. (I personally think it was being featured as one of the five campaigns to check out in Kickstarter’s weekly newsletter, but that’s just my opinion!)
Regardless, people were convinced, as evidenced by the seven emails I received in my inbox within an hour of their post.
Today I am sitting on twenty-four messages and requests from various creative entrepreneurs.
Now, I am obviously a huge proponent of asking for what you want, otherwise you are already getting a “no”.
Yet, as I read through the cookie-cutter cut-and-pasted I’m-a-big-motherfuckin’-deal releases, I was struck by how little I cared for most of the projects.
Which is unfortunate and sad. These are peoples’ passions and dreams.
But these messages I was receiving, they did not instill in me a sense of excitement and desire to get involved with their campaigns.
I was not hooked in to their story.
When I applied to the Tropical MBA, aside from thinking it was absolutely positively the most ridiculously stupid thing I had ever done in my life, I also didn’t believe I had a chance in the deepest darkest caverns of hell at getting it. I was working with Dan on a project a month or so later, and I asked him about it. His response was simple:
What set you apart was…that you were genuinely interested in what we were doing. Many applicants applied for purely selfish reasons. Giving a shit counts.
As a contributor at Forbes, I get between 10-20 inquiry requests weekly. I’m at the low end of the spectrum (regular staff writers receive triple or more). For my own sites, I have roughly 50-100 various project announcements, product launches and affiliate offers any given Sunday.
It is easy to throw a press release out at 500 outlets like spaghetti at a wall to see which ones stick.
You might get a backlink or a mention in a few and you might even pique the attention of a writer or journalist somewhere that has a secret passion. Or you might spend a lot of time writing and creating and working, only to scream your story into the void and hear nothing but echoes.
Here are the things that {r}evolution apparel did that, in my mind, set them apart as a creative venture that I was willing to put my brand behind:
I am deeply invested in the {r}evolution apparel (now Seamly.co) story, because they vested me in it.
If you don’t understand what that sentence means, then you are not writing a tale for the ages.
Tell me your story. Absolutely. I love hearing about other people’s passions.
But you better make it a good one.
Elisa Doucette is a writer and editor who works with professional writers, entrepreneurs, and brands that want to make their own words even better. She is the Founder of Craft Your Content, and oversees Client Strategy and Writing Coaching. Her own writing has been featured in places like Forbes, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Yahoo! Small Business, and The Huffington Post, among others. She also hosts the Writers' Rough Drafts podcast here on CYC. When she isn't writing, editing, or reading words, she can usually be found at a local pub quiz, deep in a sun salutation, or binging TV shows for concept ideas and laughs.