Do’s and Don’ts of Being an Entrepreneur

Do’s and don’ts of being an entrepreneur

do's and don'ts of being an entrepreneur

 

“An entrepreneur is someone who jumps off a cliff and builds a plane on the way down.” 

– Reid Hoffman

Yes. Absolutely. There are many reasons to become an entrepreneur, but there are also do’s and don’ts that will help you on your journey.

What are they?

Today, we are sharing some do’s and don’ts of being an entrepreneur, given by members of the No BS with Bree and Stephen Facebook group. The No BS group is a creative space for entrepreneurs to discuss projects, wins, and goals. It is hosted by Bree and Stephen, adventurous business owners living in San Diego, California. 

Without further ado.

Do’s and dont’s of being an entrepreneur

Matt Besenyodi
DO hustle.
DON’T just wait for things to fall into your lap.
www.mattbesphoto.com

do's and don'ts of being an entrepreneur

 

Valeri Grace
DON’Tsacrifice ethics for money.
www.Littleblueworldphoto.com

 

Tyler Champ Summers
DO read as much as you can and get a mentor! Make friends with people you want to be like. Change the way you think, and things around you will start to change. Build a strong foundation.

Lauren Casino 
DO work hard.
DON’T make yourself constantly busy to the point you burn out and hate what you do.
www.laurencasinophotography.com

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Stephen Kim
DO drink coffee!
DON’T drink coffee after 4 pm! 3:59 pm is good, though. 🙃
www.breeandstephen.com

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Darren Hendry 
DO work hard.
DON’T undervalue yourself and give stuff away for free.
www.thehendrys.co

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Ashley DeWeerdt 
DO provide an amazing client experience.
DON’T bend over backward and break yourself in ways that aren’t beneficial.
www.ashd-photography.com

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Kristen Adam 
DON’T lean on Pinterest Boards and “Boss Babe” quotes for your motivation. It has to come from, and thrive off of, hard work; it’s not always fun or rewarding, but it’ll get you to the big picture authentically.
www.facebook.com/coastalcapturesllc/

Garret Ward
DO everything within your power to legally reduce your tax burden.
DON’T illegally avoid paying all applicable taxes.
www.garretwardphotography.com 

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Crystal A VanAntwerpen
DO examine your true costs before setting pricing. Your time is valuable, and you should be factoring in an hourly wage, not just the cost of gear, goods, etc.
DON’T forget to set business hours and factor in time for a personal life, or you will burn out.

Daniel Venter 
If you fail, don’t stop, get up, and try something else. Edison had 1000 failed attempts before creating the light bulb that finally worked.
https://shootcreatecaptivate.com/

Kayla Dolce 
DO work hard and give yourself a weekend that’s all for yourself.
DON’T work at half capacity every day of the week with barely any dedicated time off until you burn out.
Learning my lesson 🙃
www.together-theory.com

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Traci Edwards
DO invest in your business. Time and money pay off.
DON’T ever give up. Keep working towards your goal!
www.traciedwardsphoto.com

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Nick Gardner 
DO follow your passion but make sure you have a plan, business plan, budget plan, marketing plan, and projection of income plan. Did I say make sure you plan?
DON’T try to do it all on your own. Hire other professionals to help: CPAs, attorneys, marketing teams, bankers, and financial planners.
www.thefinancialteam.com

Zack Hawkins
DO get up early.
DON’T go to bed early.
www.hawkinsfilmco.com

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Emily Dukat of EMDukat Photography

DO find yourself a group of like-minded people to support you. #Legit
DON’T be afraid to stick to your gut instinct. More often than not, it’s right!”

www.emdukatphotography.com 

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Cynthia Davis 
DO your best, and continue learning.
DON’T compare yourself to other entrepreneurs. Only compare yourself to who you were yesterday.
www.cyndavisphotography.com

Kate Hammell 
DO give yourself breaks and your time! The work will be there when you get back.
DON’T burn yourself out and end up hating your job.
www.katemccarthyphotography.com

Do's and dont's of being an entrepreneur

Karina Dopp 
DO be creative 😂😂  and come up with your own business plan and model.
DON’T copy someone else’s business model.
https://karinadoppdesigns.com/

 

Alvin Acosta
DO support those that support you.
www.facebook.com/113MediaSD

Samantha Burke 
DO be personable and real on social media, but DON’T be a negative nancy!! #positivevibesonly
www.sburkephotography.com

Mindy Vassalle 
DO be yourself!
DON’T be like everyone else!
www.brandmegorgeous.com

Meghann Grah
DO decide for yourself what success means to you and let that definition change as you see fit.
DON’T let society, your family, friends, or partner define what success in your business looks like.
www.mlainephotography.com

Rebecca E. A. Pettis 
DO make vendor friends and network. Work hard, come up, and build others.
DON’T use vendor friends and network to mirror, steal, copy, or only for your benefit under the guise of “real friendship.”
www.famofbandb.com

Final words

Being an entrepreneur is a journey. These photographers shared their do’s and dont’s of being an entrepreneur so you are ready for your own adventure.
Join the No BS with Bree and Stephen group to learn more about marketing, business, and entrepreneurship.

You’ll thank us later.

_________________

Utility Avenue‘s Spotlight focuses on promoting inspiring businesses every week. For a chance to be featured, contact us at support@utilityavenue.com with the subject Spotlight.

Spotlight: Sub Dog Designs

Times might be uncertain. It is a risk, but there also are many reasons to become an entrepreneur. In Utility Avenue’s weekly Spotlight, we are sharing the journey of Sub Dog Designs, a small business that just launched in Hawaii specializing in dye sublimation

Adrienne Suarez, mompreneur and CEO, tells us all about the beginning of her adventure.

Spotlight: Sub Dog Designs

Sub Dog Designs

Who is Sub Dog Designs?

Sub Dog Designs is a one-person shop located in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.  We personalize gifts using the dye sublimation process:  vibrant, specialized inks are heat-pressed directly into the fibers of our products.  The first product we’re offering is non-medical grade face masks.  Each mask is hand-pressed.  Because we are such a small operation, we focus on quality over quantity. We’re very receptive to our customers’ ideas for fresh face mask designs.

How long ago did you start your business?

Sub Dog Designs was born on July 15, 2020.

How does it feel to open a business in the middle of a pandemic?

It actually feels exciting. There’s so much that is beyond our control during this pandemic.  It felt like a welcome distraction to research then outfit the business with equipment and supplies.  Being creative with mask designs also positively channeled energy.  It also feels great to offer a product that helps people stay safe and healthy during a pandemic — and with their own individual style!

Sub Dog Designs

What are the main challenges right now?

The main challenge right now is shipping, as it always is in Hawaii, even during normal times.  It just costs more and takes longer.  It seems the rest of the country is experiencing this same challenge too.  The other challenge is time.  Running a small business is all-consuming but in a good way.

Who was the most supportive of your idea?

My 7-year old son is my perpetual “employee of the month.” He has tons of ideas and is always willing to help.  My other big supporter is my husband, who says it makes him happy to see me happy.  I also have a friend in Brooklyn who was my first customer, my biggest fan, and who continues to order lots of masks for her family and friends.

employee of the month

What’s the most popular Sub Dog Designs item?

We had a friend order ocean-themed face masks.  Those have really taken off.  In Hawaii, even when we went on lockdown, the ocean was never off-limits.  The sandy area was, but the water was not.  People could still surf and swim.  Maybe the image of the ocean is comforting or freeing, amid wave after wave of COVID-19 cases.

Utility Avenue Spotlight Sub Dog

What message would you send to others who are thinking about opening a business during times of coronavirus?

I say, why not?  The pandemic has created a need for products and services we didn’t even think about before.  Opportunities to build a small business are out there.  For example, Sub Dog Designs purchased all of its equipment and initial supplies using an unexpected $1200 individual stimulus check received in May.  We prioritized buying equipment and supplies from black-, minority-, and women-owned businesses.  Our current sales have allowed us to sustain our business in a boutique fashion.

Utility Avenue Spotlight Sub Dog

If you were to define Sub Dog Designs in one sentence, how would you do it?

Helping you smile behind your mask.

Utility Avenue Spotlight Sub Dog

Facebook: Sub Dog Design

Email: subdogdesigns@gmail.com

_______________________________________
Utility Avenue’s Spotlight focuses on promoting inspiring businesses every week. For a chance to be interviewed, contact us at support@utilityavenue.com with the subject Spotlight.

LinkedIn profiles: How Small Businesses Can Stand Out

Michelle Eshkeri is a London-based freelance copywriter who provides done-for-you copywriting services in the finance, health and creative niches. She also runs a writing academy, teaching small business owners how to write better copy.

For Utility Avenue‘s weekly Spotlight, she shares her knowledge on how to maximize your LinkedIn profile.

Without further ado:

LinkedIn profiles: How Small Businesses Can Stand Out

LinkedIn is the world’s most powerful business networking platform. With c.704 million users, you’ll never be short of someone to talk to. Yet, many small business owners are not leveraging the benefits to help them connect to their ideal clients and grow authority in their field. It can be a bit daunting to set up and optimize your LinkedIn profile. This article will walk you through the most important aspects that a new user must be aware of.

Photograph

The photograph you use on LinkedIn is incredibly essential to enable you to give that crucial first impression when potential customers see you and your brand for the first time. Headshots should be a clear close-up on your face and should be updated no less than every three years to maintain your integrity. With the increased use of video conferencing tools such as Zoom and Teams, your LinkedIn profile picture should be representative of your current image not to confuse clients or create mistrust. LinkedIn profiles with no photographs do not present a professional image. They may cause potential clients to wonder if you have something to hide.

Banner

Michelle-Eshkeri-Let-Me-Write-Freelance-Creative-Copywriter-Copywriting-Business-Communications-Blog-Writing-Services-Writing-Coach-UK-scaled

After the photograph, the viewers’ eye may be drawn to the background, also known as the banner. This is an excellent opportunity to put a variety of information across in a non-salesy way. At the very minimum, you can use this area to present your company name, strapline, contact details, and brand identity. It’s surprising how many small business owners are missing a trick here. Besides, the banner can be used to promote a current offer, a competition, or any other marketing promotion that you are currently running. It is a free, highly visible marketing space that you should be using. It’s not clickable, though, so remember that when adding URLs.

LinkedIn headline

Your LinkedIn headline is a vital part of your profile – it’s a powerful little window into your world that shows up all over the platform every time you comment on a post or article or send a direct message. Many business owners do not optimize these 220 characters in a way that attracts their ideal clients.
Merely putting your role title is missing a huge opportunity to speak in your client’s language.

Try to include:
1. Specifics about who you work with
2. What you can do for them
3. How you will achieve their desired outcome
4. Any current packages or offers you have

With succinct copywriting, you can make this couple of lines work hard for your business. Do remember that only the first 5-6 words will show up when people view your profile on a mobile phone. You must make them count.

linkedin profile description

Providing services

Within the tool, there is a drop-down list of services that you can tag your profile with. You can add a maximum of 10 services. This is another simple way to show your potential clients what you can do for them. Fill it in!

LinkedIn About section

This is the most crucial section of your profile. With a limit of 2000 characters (which is about 350 words, unless you are using overly complicated language), this is where you can set yourself apart from your competition on the platform. The about section is where you can go all out to impress your ideal client and should include the same information as your headline but in more detail.

A simple structure for your About section is:

1. Start with something that grabs your readers’ attention – an unusual fact, startling statistic, or perhaps a couple of questions to get them thinking – try to get inside your ideal client’s head and make it relevant to what they might be currently concerned about.
2. Once you have their attention, you need to hold onto it, so you must drill into the pain points that your ideal client has – create empathy, showing that you understand their issues or desires.
3. Introduce yourself as the perfect provider of the solution to their problems and explain why you are best placed to help them. Include your USP – why should they choose you.
4. Clearly state how they can work with you
5. Don’t forget your CTA (call-to-action). How do they get in touch with you? I would recommend that they direct message you because then you immediately know where the lead came from. If you send them off to your website or email, you may lose data about where your leads are coming from.

Featured

The featured section is all about showcasing your products, services, and your brand. There is no limit to the number of featured items you can display. It’s a chance to highlight your most important work. You can add media, such as documents, photos and presentations, LinkedIn posts/articles, and links to this section.

michelle eshkeri Featured Linkedin

To include video, you will need to link out to another site where the video is stored, such as YouTube or Vimeo. You could add a company brochure, a lead magnet, a short video explaining who you are, an FAQ document, testimonials, a thought leadership article, or any other content you want to bring to the attention of your customers.

LinkedIn posts

As of the time of writing (August 2020), there has been an explosion of great content on LinkedIn. Many more small business owners are using the platform in a much more social and engaging way than ever before.

Content is generally much more professional and business-oriented than Facebook. Users are creating a community and nurturing their audience in a much more holistic and human way. It is now much more acceptable to post funny pictures, memes, and personal content on LinkedIn than it was even a year ago. So, be yourself on LinkedIn, but be professional. Remember, you are always representing your brand.

Posts have a character limit of 1300, which is around 200 words. You need to be focused in your writing to get your message across. Don’t forget to tag your post with three hashtags, which helps LinkedIn to categorize your post. Other users can follow a hashtag, so it’s a good idea to create a brand hashtag and use it consistently in your posts.
Posts will “float” around LinkedIn in feeds for around 2-7 days, depending on the amount of engagement (reactions and comments). So if you want to remain visible, it’s a good idea to post at least once a day. Weekends are a great time to post because fewer people are posting, so you are more likely to reach more potential customers.

LinkedIn articles

LinkedIn articles are essentially blogs. These stay visible on your profile forever or until you delete them. Articles are longer-form content and do not have a character limit. If you have a blog on your website, you can upload it into the content management system on LinkedIn, which is called Pulse, but it’s a good idea to change the title or first paragraph a little, so it does not get flagged as plagiarism by Google.
LinkedIn curate thought leadership articles on Pulse and push them out to a broader audience each day, so this can be an excellent way to grow your authority.

LinkedIn connections

Your network is incredibly important on LinkedIn. Take time to connect with your ideal client – searching for people on LinkedIn is incredibly powerful – but that’s a topic for another time. The number of connections you have on LinkedIn is not as important as the quality of those connections. There’s little point having 10,000 connections if none of them ever engage with your
content. Focus on growing relevant connections – people who are interested in what you offer and those who produce excellent quality content that interests you. If your feed is not inspiring you, you need to sort your network out.
Every so often, it’s a good idea to do a little housekeeping and remove connections that are dormant or not relevant – that way, you are more likely to be talking to your ideal client, and your feed remains uplifting and useful.

Recommendations

Social proof or word-of-mouth-marketing is one of the most powerful ways to attract new clients, and it’s FREE! Whenever you work with someone, make sure you give them a recommendation on LinkedIn. It grows their authority as a respected provider, it increases trust, and it helps people to get to know what they do.
Use your recommendations in your LinkedIn posts regularly so your potential clients can see what your previous clients think of you.

Maximize your LinkedIn profile

There are so many other elements to LinkedIn, but these are the main ones to focus on. If you are a new user, it is easy to get overwhelmed and to switch off from this influential platform. So, work through each area of your profile to optimize them.
If you are in business, no matter what you do, you should have an optimized LinkedIn profile. If not, you are missing out on opportunities for more sales, strategic alliances, and joint ventures, not to mention good quality business discussions.

So, what are you waiting for?

Get your profile working hard for your business now.

Michelle Eshkeri’s Contact Info

Email: michelle@eshkeri.co.uk

If you would like to know more about her £149 LinkedIn user review and profile writing service, please connect with her here and send her a direct message.
The review will look at all the above areas of your LinkedIn usage and suggest improvements. She will also ask a series of questions to enable her to draft your About section and your Headline.

_______________________________________
Utility Avenue’s Spotlight focuses on promoting inspiring businesses every week. For a chance to be interviewed, contact us at support@utilityavenue.com with the subject Spotlight.

Podcasts for Entrepreneurs and Business Owners

Podcasts for Entrepreneurs and Small Business Owners

Podcasts are a very easy way to consume knowledge on the go. If you are working out, or commuting, or driving, it’s easy to get your daily source of inspiration. These are our suggestions.

Podcasts for Entrepreneurs and Business Owners

Hyper Conscious Podcast, with Alan Lazaros and Kevin Palmieri

Podcasts for Entrepreneurs and Business Owners
Photo by: Odette Photo+Art

Alan Lazaros and Kevin Palmieri genuinely want to help us become the best version of ourselves. They interview top entrepreneurs and thought leaders and share their life stories. The best lesson is that, when we change the way we think, we change the way we act and the way we live.

Episodes:

#372. Creating your System of Success – LIVE Mastermind.

#380. Dean Graziosi – The Underdog Mentality.

#392. Selling with Integrity – LIVE Mastermind.

#369. Revisiting your 5 Favorite Episodes.

#402. Overcoming Overwhelm – Breath Work Mastermind with Samantha Skelly.

If you want to live a life by design and be the best version of yourself, this podcast is for you.

Building a StoryBrand, with Donald Miller

Donald Miller
Source: Internet

Donald Miller has carved a name for himself with his marketing approach. In his podcast, he teaches how to clarify our message to improve our business. Right now, we are following his Storybrand framework to update our website (www.utilityavenue.com), and I use his actionable content to update our marketing strategy. The most valuable lesson is that unclear marketing costs because a confused mind says ‘No.

Episodes:

#197. Joel Peterson – How to Rebuild your Business After a Crisis.

#187. How to Create a Magical Brand.

#181. The Best of 2019 – Our Biggest Takeaways for Business Leaders.

#130. Aaron James – How to Define What Your Customer Really Wants.

#65. The Framework that Makes Marketing Easy.

If you are a business owner and you want your marketing message to be clear, this podcast is for you.

 

Chris Ducker
Source: Internet

Youpreneur FM is a weekly podcast that introduces top online business leaders and personal branding entrepreneurs. Topics include how to build a personal brand, how you can market yourself as an industry expert, and how to launch online products and services.

Episodes:

Rank #1: How One Youpreneur Made $100K in 30-Days, with AJ Jomah

Rank #2: How to Create Your First Online Course, with Amy Porterfield

Rank #3: 8 Ways to Finally Start Monetizing Your Personal Brand!

Rank #4: The Quick-Start Guide to FINALLY Getting Started with Your First Virtual Assistant

Rank #5: How to Use Instagram Stories to Build Your Brand & Business

If you are a solopreneur, consultant, blogger, or freelancer, you will love this podcast.

Mark Metry
Source: internet

Once upon a time, Mark Metry couldn’t make direct eye contact with anyone and suffered from social anxiety from health issues & not living the life he was designed to live. Today, he interviews the world’s most successful renowned experts, athletes, CEO’s and talks about mental health, self-improvement, and entrepreneurship. His podcast ranks #96 in the entire world.

Episodes:

289. Gary John Bishop | End Self-Sabotage and do the Work

282. Ishveen Anand | Journey to  Inc 100 Top Female Founders

Live Q&A #3 – Mental Health, Side Hustle, and Food.

266. Nir Eyal | Becoming Indistractable in the Age of Distraction

257. Patrick Bet David | Changing the World with Entrepreneurship

If you are shy, or ever suffered from social anxiety, and you want to change that, and take the world by storm, you will love this podcast.

Final words

This is our list of podcasts for entrepreneurs and business owners, but what’s YOUR favorite podcast?

What should we listen to next?

5 Lessons to Become a Confident and Profitable Entrepreneur

Khadejah is a devoted wife, mom of two girls, and owner of Thrive Virtually, a virtual assistant agency. After Khadejah recognized she had a gift in administration and wanted to spend more time with her kids, she decided to start a virtual assistant business. In Utility Avenue’s weekly spotlight, she shares five valuable lessons to become a confident and profitable entrepreneur.

a confident and profitable entrepreneur
Photo credit: @marybethwoodphotography

 

Lessons to become a confident and profitable entrepreneur

Confidence is a word that we often hear today. We’ve been taught that confidence can help you stand out and land a job. This is all true, but no one ever shows you the process of becoming confident. The truth is, confidence comes with experience. Some people magically have the gift, and others work towards it. I started a virtual assistant business in 2018, and after almost three years, I have recently become a confident business owner. 

Let’s talk more about the virtual assistant industry.

A virtual assistant is an independent contractor who provides administrative, creative, or technical support services for online business entrepreneurs. A virtual assistant can work from anywhere as long as there is access to wifi. However, some virtual assistants have clients who own brick and mortar companies but work virtually. Since starting, I’ve created an ebook to help other women start their virtual assistant business, scaled into an agency, and secured multiple bi-annual contracts. 

Now that you have more of an idea of what I do, I want to share with you five lessons to become a confident and profitable entrepreneur in my industry.

  • Become confident in your WHY

You need to know your why when starting a business. Your why will keep you in business even when things get tough and lonely. When you know WHY you started your business, you can operate in confidence even when you feel like giving up. My WHY was because I wanted to make an income from home and still spend quality time with my kids. 

  • Become confident in your offering

When you’re deciding what you want to offer, it’s essential to provide a service that you enjoy rather than just because it makes a lot of money. I’m pretty good at making websites, but I don’t offer it to my clients because creating sites for other people stresses me out. However, I provide website updates, and I enjoy that. Once you master the service you choose to offer, you become confident in your skillset. When you become confident in your skillset, you’re able to sell yourself and the results you can deliver. You’re ready to articulate how you can solve someone’s problem during a sales call. Speaking of sales calls, let’s talk about that next.

  • Become confident in your sales calls

Once you niche down to a service you enjoy doing, you’re able to sound excited and confident during sales calls. Let the client explain their pain point and communicate what you’ve done for other clients and how you can help them. When you are passionate about what you offer, your calls will naturally flow. Before getting off the call with the client, be sure to let them know what they can expect after the phone call.

  • Become confident in your onboarding process

Before I end a call, the leads know precisely what to expect. I communicate that they will receive an email with a proposal from me within 24 hours. I let them know the next start date I have available, and I even tell them when I’ll be following up. When you set structure upfront, it gives the client an idea of what it looks like to work with you. I have my process documented of what happens from whenever someone books a sales call to when they sign. This came with experience and trial/error. I’ve done it so much that I’m very confident in my onboarding process.

  • Become confident in your prices

Last but not least, it’s imperative to become confident in your prices. Don’t worry if someone else is charging less or more than you. You have to become confident in what you charge and know the value of the results you provide to clients. It took me forever to become confident in my prices and sometimes. I still question myself, lol. What keeps me confident in my prices is hearing fantastic feedback from my clients on how I have transformed and helped their business. They are happy to invest in me monthly.

Final words

I hope these tips will help you become more confident as a business owner.
Whether you’re a virtual assistant, photographer, or a service provider in a different industry, this can apply to you.


If you’re looking for a community to help you become a more confident virtual assistant, join her free FB group, “The Confident Virtual Assistant.”

Thrive Virtually’s Contact Info

Website: https://www.thrivevirtually.co
Email: khadejah@thrivevirtually.co
Instagram: @thrivevirtually
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thrivevirtually

_______________________________________
Utility Avenue’s Spotlight focuses on promoting inspiring businesses every week. For a chance to be interviewed, contact us at support@utilityavenue.com with the subject Spotlight.

Spotlight: Brand your Business with Odette Photo+Art

Odette Photo+Art is a Miami family and branding photographer. In Utility Avenue’s weekly spotlight, she shares her journey.

Odette Photo+Art
Odette Photo+Art, by Sven Malojlo

Who is Odette Photo+Art?

Odette Photo+Art is a Miami based business, specializing in family and brand photography. My photography is known for documenting real connections and emotions. 

How was Odette Photo+Art born?

In 2007, I got my first point-and-shoot camera and started documenting the lives of those around me.
In 2017, I started photographing my friend’s children on the weekends, and then, one day, it was not a hobby anymore.
That’s how Odette Photo + Art was born.
Today, I am a photographer, an artist, a storyteller, an entrepreneur, a dreamer, and a doer.

What were the main challenges?

Taking a photograph is just a beginning.
At first, I didn’t know anything about running a profitable business. When you are a solopreneur, you wear way too many hats. Becoming an entrepreneur and artist has been a journey. As a result, I have spent countless nights studying business, marketing, and sales. 
Learning is a never-ending process. My grandfather used to say that knowledge takes no space, and that’s my mantra. 
Now I want to help others.

Who is the most supportive of your business?

I have the most supportive family and friends.
My sister, my niece, and my mom are my muses, and my friends cheer up for me. They believe in me.
Without their unwavering support, I wouldn’t have been able to build two businesses from the ground up.
Family pictures
My family. My everything.

How did you become a brand photographer?

I started with family photography, and I love it! There is something extraordinary about being invited into a family to document who they are. But there is also a need for businesses everywhere to create a brand that clearly communicates why they do what they do.

What makes you different from the business across the street who does the same kind of business, but cheaper?

YOU.

You make the whole difference. Simon Sinek said it: “People don’t buy what you do. They buy why you do it. And what you do simply proves what you believe.
I can help you create a compelling brand that sells while you sleep.

My mission is to document life and to help entrepreneurs have a thriving business.

 

branding

What’s branding photography?

 Branding photography is the visual representation of you and your business. It establishes and enhances your brand through professional images that show your character, what it’s like to work with you, and what makes you and your business unique.
Odette Photo+Art Branding Photography
Collage HairStudio @collagehairstudiomiami

Why is it essential for a business?

Branding photography makes it a breeze for customers and future clients to know you and your brand.
You can use your on-brand photographs to enhance your online presence.
– Website
– Social media (LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest)
– Email campaigns, newsletters, and email signatures
Or in traditional marketing materials:
– Print collateral (business cards, brochures, direct mail, sales sheet, flyers, magazines, newspapers)
– Sales pitches or presentations
– Press releases
The options are limitless.
Cut specialist @lopez_cut_

What future projects does Odette Photo+Art have?

I have teamed up with brilliant minds. We are creating a virtual assistance agency to add marketing services to my branding photography packages. Additionally, we are creating a magazine to promote the work of local entrepreneurs.
I also want to create a magazine to promote female entrepreneurs.
Odette Photo+Art Branding
Evan Carmichael, Youtuber, thought leader and serial entrepreneur from #BelieveNation @evancarmichael

What would you advice to other entrepreneurs?

Coronavirus has changed the way we face the world. We have had to pivot and find new ways to keep our businesses afloat.
Use this downtime wisely:
  • Read.
  • Learn something new every day.
  • Work on your website, on your client experience, on your offers.
Never stop honing your craft. Become so great at what you do that people think of you as the only choice to hire in your area of expertise.
Also, stay healthy. Wash your hands and practice social distancing. It might be painful now, but it won’t last forever. It will get better.
Odette Photo+Art
Helen Licea @helenlicea_ @helenliceaphotos

If you were to define Odette Photo+Art in one sentence, how would you do it?

Odette Photo+Art documents who you are.
branding

How would you describe your experience with Utility Avenue?

My business was waiting for a platform like Utility Avenue to thrive. It makes advertising and creating real connections with my clients a breeze. Utility Avenue is the beginning of a new era. It will make a difference in your business as it did with mine.

Odette Photo+Art’s Contact Info

Website: https://www.odettephotoart.com/
Phone: 239-600-9019
Email: contact@odettephotoart.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/odettephotoart/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/odettephotoart/
Other: https://www.linkedin.com/in/odettephotoart/

Branding Photography Packages available.

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Utility Avenue’s Spotlight focuses on promoting inspiring businesses every week. For a chance to be interviewed, contact us at support@utilityavenue.com with the subject Spotlight.