Summary:

This article emphasizes the significance of crafting compelling sound bites for small businesses to effectively convey their messages. It underscores the power of succinct and captivating storytelling, drawing insights from a coaching session with women entrepreneurs and an interview with sound bite expert Susan Harrow. The piece provides examples and tips for creating impactful sound bites, covering various elements such as storytelling, statistics, facts, vignettes, anecdotes, analogies, aphorisms, and acronyms. It highlights the practical applications of sound bites in engaging with potential clients, media, and other stakeholders across different platforms.

Sound Bites | Sterling Marketing Group

If you think sound bites are just for movie stars, politicians and the pundits on TV, think again. In today’s get-to-the-point-centric world, your small business spin has power.

I was reminded of the importance of this during a coaching session I had last week with a group of women entrepreneurs.

As each business owner was going around the table telling us what their companies did, I noticed that some of the stories just went “clunk” — in a good way. I got an instant idea of the business these people were in and how it might help me or someone else. Others, however, were more vague and rambling in their descriptions — or just plain boring and run of the mill.

Being able to distill who you are and what your business offers down to a single scintillating sentence (or two) — in other words, a sound bite — has practical applications, not just at a cocktail party but in the online universe.

For more enlightenment on this topic, I interviewed sound bite expert and media coach Susan Harrow. “The problem that most small businesses have isn’t that they don’t have enough to say about what they do,” says Harrow. “It’s that they have too much to say.”

Harrow says that well-crafted small business sound bites are nothing like normal conversation and are in fact a whole different kind of speaking process. She likens them to the way language is used in novels and film.

“What makes great dialogue in movies and books is that it’s a highly condensed version of conversation that resonates. In just a few words, the language has more meaning than simply what is being said. There are layers beneath that show a bigger story,” says Harrow.

Harrow suggests creating small business sound bites that connect with your ideal audience by crafting a variety that cover the following areas:

Story: Kristen Scheurlein left a multi-million-dollar business as a graphic designer to become what she calls The Blanket Lady.

“I didn’t want to become an entrepreneur, but it’s in my blood. My grandfather was a shoemaker. In the Depression, he saw that many people couldn’t afford shoes. He traded chickens for shoes to make sure that none of the children in the village went shoeless. I didn’t realize that I was following in his footsteps when I began my business, which will become a complete non-profit in five years, but I am. We give away blankets to churches, charities, homeless. In essence, I’m trading chickens for shoes.”

Statistic: In 1999, the Institute of Medicine estimated that between 44,000 and 98,000 Americans die each year as a result of medical errors.

Fact: “I did not have three thousand pairs of shoes; I had one thousand and sixty.” Imelda Marcos

Vignette: Laura Bell Bundy, who is starring in the musical “Legally Blonde,” said in an interview, “There’s some really hilarious things that happen on stage with the cast. I lost my shoe once in the middle of a number. It flew out into the audience, and I kicked the other one off and ended the show in bare feet. I love when things like that happen. I love when things go wrong.”

Anecdote: “When a man says ‘no,’ it is the end of a conversation. When a woman says ‘no,’ it is the beginning of a negotiation.” Gavin De Becker

Analogy: Speaking in sound bite is like taking the novel “War and Peace” and turning it into haiku poetry.

Aphorism: “In the business world, the rearview mirror is always clearer than the windshield.” Warren Buffett

Acronym: F.A.S.T. equals Fix American Schools Today

The trick is to pepper these into the conversations you have with potential clients, media or anyone else you want to have a powerful experience of your business. This can happen at meetings, conferences, interviews, lunches, online and just about anywhere you talk about what you do.

“I have one client who was standing in line waiting to buy an iPad 2 when she spoke about her small business in sound bites to the person in front of her in line,” says Harrow. “As a result, she sold over 200 books and closed a speaking engagement.”

What is your small business sound bite? We would love to hear your comments.

This post was originally published at Karen Leland’s Featured Small Business column on The Huffington Post.


15 thoughts on “How to Craft a Small Business Sound Bite

  1. My business has transititioned to using an acronym as a name, and I’ve found it works wonders and sounds cool and dynamic.

  2. My business has transititioned to using an acronym as a name, and I’ve found it works wonders and sounds cool and dynamic.

  3. So I need to collect a series of folksy aphorisms and slick analogies? Can I just mine IMDB and bastardize movie quotes?

  4. I think effiicency of communication is going to become more and more important, especially also the information age evolves and people’s attention spans shrink, you have to be able to grab attention quickly and hit the high points effectively.

  5. I think effiicency of communication is going to become more and more important, especially also the information age evolves and people’s attention spans shrink, you have to be able to grab attention quickly and hit the high points effectively.

  6. I’ve had mixed success with this kind of stuff, sometimes people just think your talking in buzzwords and talking around issues so you don’t actually have a depth of understanding.

  7. I’ve had mixed success with this kind of stuff, sometimes people just think your talking in buzzwords and talking around issues so you don’t actually have a depth of understanding.

  8. Exhibit A for success with this: FOX News, great insight on this post, this stuff really works.

  9. Exhibit A for success with this: FOX News, great insight on this post, this stuff really works.

  10. “They’re going to eat your lunch” is analogy I like to use in sales meetings.

  11. “They’re going to eat your lunch” is analogy I like to use in sales meetings.

  12. This is why I spend so much time on crafting the language for delivarables, because it has to pop.

  13. This is why I spend so much time on crafting the language for delivarables, because it has to pop.

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