"How To Write a Company Profile: Keys to Succeed"
A great company profile can engage and attract the right customers or supporters for a business, or it can bore them to sleep driving them to your competitors which are easily googled in seconds.
For media attention, a business needs an intriguing profile to entice editors or reporters to gain an understanding of the company's mission, products, services, personnel and uniqueness.
To acquire financing, a comprehensive company profile should be submitted with a business plan to feature unique qualifications of the company or personnel, that aren't generally outlined in a business plan.
Without a well-crafted company profile, a company may not be attracting the best candidates when posting job descriptions, or even suppliers and vendors to help them grow.
THREE STEPS TO FOLLOW
These 3 steps will help
any company craft a commendable company profile that is true
to your vision, perception and even beliefs. Visit our site
if you just want our tool
that writes your profile for you.
- Provide useful information
in lay person's terminology.
A profile should include key personnel, descriptions of
the company's products or services in a manner that laypersons,
as well as industry personnel, can comprehend. Why?
Because, a reporter might be looking for relevant
businesses for a story they are preparing. Naturally,
including your company could possibly bring great 'free
exposure' to your intended market (if it's a positive story,
of course). But if the reporter -- or anyone else who is
googling the product/service you provide -- cannot figure
out what you offer, your profile won't help sell your products,
nor entice media to interview your company personnel.
This does not mean you cannot include high level industry
information, just be sure to also include some easy-to-comprehend
lay terminology in your description.
- Infuse some personality
A great company profile should be filled not only with descriptions
of products (or services), but also some sense or personality
of the business' culture. Adding information about the company's
purpose, community support or mission (not one of those
trite mission statements, though) can add human personality
to a profile, thus adding interest to the reader.
People relate to people. So, add something
from a human perspective.
Your business could explain how profits benefit local animal
shelters or homeless populations or you might even employ
a humorous style in the description if it's appropriate
to the company's products.
My own profile talks about my belief that
'marketing is a spiritual practice' because in my experience
a company thrives the closer it matches it's values and
purpose that is at the 'soul' of that company. No, it's
got nothing to do with religion. But it has everything to
do with marketing not being hype, but being a deeply felt
expression of a company's core competency, attracting clients
who are right for one's company--that's the reason to infuse
personality.
I've always enjoyed the clever and silly product
descriptions of Benefit Cosmetics--and I don't
even wear makeup. The company's co-founders are twins who
feel they 'benefit' by learning from each other. They share
this love by, yes, 'benefitting' the Big Brothers and Big
Sisters of America. Hype or personality? You be the judge.
Either way, it grabs a readers attention.
- Claim your unique assets. By
explaining a founder's uniquely circuitous route
to the company's development, or stating the special awards
and honors a company has garnered, the donations or volunteering
it's employees provide the community, it gives the reader
some grasp of how the company is unique, special or different
from others in it's same category.
Elaborating a bit on the education, training, credentials
or experience of personnel excites customers and helps them
identify the company that fits their own beliefs and criteria.
Being generic and obtuse in your company description makes
it really hard for any readers to understand
why they would want to do business with a company or buy
products/services that sound like any others.
Above all else, be honest and interesting,
since plenty of bland, boring and hype-filled profiles already
abound.
Allison Bliss Consulting
is one of the top full service marketing & communications
firms in the San Francisco Bay Area. Their website
has a tool
for businesses that writes your company profile for
you. Instead of paying a writer $500+ for a profile,
this tool
($24.99) asks a series of questions and assembles answers
into a complete, professional company profile.
Allison Bliss Consulting, rebels against misleading, pushy,
spam-filled marketing offering Fortune 500 companies and entrepreneurs
customized business and marketing services
which clients say brings "incredible, measurable
results". With an award-winning background in
film & television, the company brings talented teams of
designers, web experts, commercial creatives, writers and
publicists creating marketing strategy, web optimizing, promotional
materials, and one-on-one consulting services. Allison's "Knowledge
is Bliss" differentiates businesses with clear positioning
to stand apart from the crowd. 510-864-8500.
EMAIL: abliss@allisonbliss.com.
We give you permission to publish this article as long as
you credit Allison as author and include a link to our website.
We hope these free marketing tips and strategies are useful
to you.
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