How I Learned to Command Authority in a Niche WITH ZERO Experience


đŸ”„BONUS: If you enjoy today’s entry, there is a free content prompt template packed with 32 different prompts to get you started using the framework we’re discussing today. 🙂

 

This dude walked up to me in the gym the other day and said these forbidden words


“You’re doing that wrong.”

“Thanks for the unsolicited advice you a$$hole.” I thought to myself


Instead, I reply, “Oh yeah? How so?”.

He immediately jumps into this monologue (while I’m still finishing my set) about how I need to pinch my shoulder blades more. Blah blah blah
 and then tries to sell me on a personal training program with him.

First off, he wasn’t entirely wrong in that my form wasn’t picture-perfect - but I damn well knew what I was doing
 I used to be a very complimented personal trainer and competed in men’s physique shows.

There are a lot of lessons to extract from this, but as a new personal trainer, this dude could potentially be selling way more training packages if he did one thing differently


The Problem: New one-person businesses often struggle to be taken seriously due to a lack of social proof or backlog of work to validate their expertise in the eyes of their target audience. And with an increasing number of posers on the internet, we as people have become incredibly selective about who we follow and buy from online.

A Solution: Consider making content yourself from a stance of “How I” more than “How to”.

Here’s what I mean and why this will garner immediate interest from your target audience


‘Faking it’ Won’t Help You ‘Make it’

I’ve faked it so many times in my life, that it was second nature for me when I chose to freelance my way into a marketing career instead of going the formal education route.

I sent a couple emails out of mailchimp for a buddy that had a small online retail business - boom.

Naturally
. I am now an email marketer! đŸ€Ž

I had lots of ambition, but very little skill in this arena. So what did I do?

Created an Upwork profile and put my email marketing services up for sale at $40/hr.

And believe it or not
 I got a few gigs!

I slowly began to develop my skillset.

Little did I realize that even though I thought I knew a lot, the people on the internet weren’t so convinced


Newsflash: It takes years of experience to become an authority on a subject matter. And ‘faking this’ online won’t work.

There are just too many phonies on the internet claiming to have the secrets you need.

We’ve all seen it. And so we’ve all become really good at spotting the BS early.

 

📌 Lesson: With a client, you can learn on the fly and apply brand-new skills to the task at hand. But in the world of social media content marketing, if you try to fake it, you’ll face-plant
 publicly.

 

You see


In a 1:1 environment with a client you can build rapport, clarify their needs, and sell them on your ability to provide a solution. Then you learn what you need to on the fly to make it happen.

But in a 1-to-many environment like on social media, it’s very hard to claim and be seen as an expert if you haven’t yet demonstrated this enough to validate your claims.

This is hard if you’re trying to make a living through your new one-person business in an industry that you’re also new to - especially if you have no audience yet, which is often the case.

The cards are not stacked in your favor


Let’s look at a very simple tweak to the positioning of your content to build trust and rapport with your target audience, even when you’re not yet an expert.

Using ‘How I’ Verbiage to Grow Your Following

Instead of telling people ‘how to’ do something


Show them ‘how you’ did something, and what the result was.

People don’t usually like being told what to do.

And they definitely don’t want to hear advice from someone that isn’t either a millionaire or has less than 50k followers


They may read your post or watch your video, but they’re probably sizing you up the whole time - sniffing out whether you’re full of BS or not. In most cases, they’ll write you off cause there’s just no proof that your opinions or advice are valid.

BUT!


If you instead rework that same content into a ‘how I’ framework all of those hurdles vanish completely.

For instance:

No one can argue or refute your story on ‘how I learned piano in 1 hour’.

But they might write you off if you said ‘how to learn piano in 1 hour’.

People can’t argue with your experiences and what you learned from it.

People can’t call you a phony when you’re working in public.

People will pay attention to what you’re doing to see if it works, and then they might try it too.

People are quick to acknowledge and support your journey, yet slow to take your advice.

Position your content accordingly so that you can build your following and grow your business.

The Benefits of Using the ‘How I’ Content Framework

Beyond not looking like a poser, reframing your content away from the ‘How to’ language and instead using the ‘How I’ approach has a handful of benefits.

  1. You’ll have more content: When you document your journey, sharing what you’re doing and how
 It becomes much easier to generate more content due to the nature of documentation as opposed to education. Yes, they can often weave together nonetheless

  2. Respect Leads to Trust: People respect honesty. When you share ‘How I’ content, you’re not spewing advice
 You’re sharing your process of creating your future self. In a world riddled with anxiety, fear, and every self-limiting belief you can think of, documenting and sharing your journey breeds a lot of respect - which leads to trust and support.

  3. It’s Entertaining: As humans, we love a good story. Especially when it’s one that compliments our own interests and aspirations. Sharing your stories makes for a popcorn-worthy moment with every piece of content you put out. The trick is to get good at story-based writing
 You’ll probably outpace me on this one
 🙃

When you’re starting out, you can’t promise the world that you have the secrets to success. You haven’t done it! Period.

But with this adjusted approach, you haven’t made a promise of success
 “How to”.

You’re sharing an experience that may lead to success though
 “How I”.

Don’t tell ppl what to do.

Show people what you are doing, and what you are learning.

It’s way more magnetic and genuine.

People will connect with it and relate to it.

đŸ”„Steal These Prompts to Begin

  • How I did _____ to succeed

  • I did _____ and learned that it doesn’t work

  • I’m currently doing ______ bc of ______. I’ll share what I learn

  • My goal is _____, so I’m doing _______

  • I tried _____ but not sure how to make it work. Thoughts?

  • My current routine for ______

  • I quit doing _______ because _______

 

đŸ”„Grab the “How I” content prompts cheatsheet here packed with 32 prompts that use this framework.

 

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