33 Examples of Facebook Posts You Can Use To Become Omnipresent To Your Dream Customers

“I need to reach more people.”

“I want to share my love of yoga … fitness … healthy eating … massage … chiropractic care … wellness … healing … intuition … feeling good … with more people.”

“I started this business to help people ______.”

The businesses that I’ve worked with all have these same goals, and I’m sure you do too.

You want to help people.

And, I want to help you share your gift with more people — more of your dream customers.

But first, you need to be able to find and reach those people.

You need to become Omnipresent to your dream customers.

Omnipresent means that the people you want to help know who you are.

You are familiar to them — a familiar friend.

They see you, your business, and how you help people all the time.

They know what you’re offering, and when they’re ready to be helped by you, they know how much it costs and how to purchase.

How do you do all this?

I use a system called Omnipresence Content Marketing where you create consistent, valuable, straightforward content on your business Facebook page.

Then, you use the data that Facebook gives you on the posts to strategically boost the posts that do the best for $1 per day.

I’ve outlined this method in the post, “How To Get Your Wellness Business In Front of 100 Of Your Dream Customers For $1 Per Day.”

In that post, I recommend creating three kinds of content to post on your Facebook (and/or Instagram) page:

  1. Edu-tainment Content: Educational, yet entertaining content. Valuable info for your audience. Lists, pictures, links to blog posts are all great.
  2. Customer Stories Content: Successes your customers have had. Before and after pictures. Client testimonials.
  3. Offer Content: State what you’re selling and how much it costs.

But, after reading that post, you may be asking yourself, how do I really write this content?

What kind of posts should I be writing?

What’s wrong with what I already post — can’t I just use that?

I’ve spent the last several days scouring Facebook for really good examples of the three kinds of posts I’ve recommended, and, let me tell you, there aren’t a lot of health and wellness businesses doing this!

Here’s what I see instead:

  • Daily schedule (for a yoga/fitness studio)
  • Sharing memes/text images with motivational/inspirational quotes
  • Pictures of stuff going on in the studio/business
  • Upcoming events
  • Limited time deals/promotions

These are all good things to post on your Facebook page, but if your goal is to reach more of those dream customers, you need more than this.

You need evergreen content that you can write once and then share, boost, and promote all year round.

You can’t promote a Labor Day or Back To School sale all year long.

You can’t keep sharing an upcoming event all year.

You can’t boost today’s daily schedule all year round.

So, to really show you what I mean by the kind of content I’m talking about creating to help your business become Omnipresent with your dream customers, I’ve pulled 33 examples of Facebook posts that could do just this.

Table of contents for quick reference later:

  1. Edu-tainment Content Examples
  2. Customer Stories Content Examples
  3. Offer Content Examples

11 Edu-tainment Content Examples

Edu-tainment Content should be educational, valuable, informative, but also entertaining content that your dream customers will enjoy.

But, make it timeless.

Make it something that could be seen any time of year, so that it can continue to provide value to your dream customers again and again (through $1/day Facebook post boosting).

Good examples of this kind of content includes lists, tips, recipes, links to blog posts that have more of this kind of information, infographics, videos.

This content should NOT be selling something.

JUST provide the information to your customers, so they can start to learn more about you and how you can help them.

And now, 11 examples of real life Edu-tainment Content, pulled straight from Facebook.

1. DailyOm

This post includes good information, recommendations for their audience.

There’s a nice picture with a quote (these kind of images are easy to make on your own with programs like Canva).

And, they link to a full article about foot cleansing rituals that has more of the information.

To make this post even better, they could break up the text.

Give quick, simple tips that are easily digestible for Facebook users, then link to the full post for more info.

2. InstaPhysique

Asking a question is a great way to engage your audience on social media. This is a link to a blog post — great for Edu-tainment Content, and includes a picture that their audience can relate to.

To make this post even better, they could make it timeless.

Why not have the $10 credit for each friend someone brings in all year round? Then you could boost this post all the time to help you bring in more students.

3. Farm Fresh To You

I love the emojis they included in this post! This includes a great brief summary of the video, an interesting tidbit of knowledge about kiwi, and the video is awesome!

Lots of cool educational info, tips, fun facts, and a recipe. They’re not selling anything in this video, or in the link that the Learn More button goes to.

They’re just providing amazing info to their audience, teaching them more about the products they offer, and reminding them how awesome they are.

4. Caring Nature Wellness

Posting a video of what you do, showing how you can help people, is great to post as Edu-tainment Content, like Caring Nature Wellness does in this video post showing their sound healing session.

Give a description in the copy of what they’re watching. There is no sales message to be seen here — just information, education, and beautiful sounds.

5. Caring Nature Hypnosis

A checklist of actionable items is great to share (checklist emojis are a fun bonus!).

This is good advice that their dream clients would take to heart and use.

I also love the picture — it shows feeling, emotion. It shows how their dream clients will feel when they take this advice or use their services (without selling!).

6. Kids Cook Real Food

This is such a great post!

It’s long, and that’s okay! Facebook posts can be long.

But, look at all the amazing content that is shared in this post!

A short list of great tips for packing lunches. And then a long list of recipes this company has shared in this amazing video.

I love the combination of the really useful video with lots of great content on it’s own, but then also including so many resources that people can go back to, save, and really use!

This company’s dream customers will get SO much value out of this post, and you can see that from all of those reactions, comments, shares, and views this post has received!

7. Mighty Nest

What a great infographic!

If you have the resources to create graphics like this, you definitely should! (You can also try to do it yourself with apps like Canva.)

They could also have just listed these 7 reasons out in the copy of the post, if they didn’t have a way to create this graphic.

Take note that many of these posts that use a list have an odd number (5, 7, or 33 in this blog post you’re reading now!).

For some psychological/marketing mumbo-jumbo reason (that’s a technical term), odd numbers in headlines tend to do better for social media or blog posts, so try to use odd numbers in your lists.

This post also links to a blog article with more information about switching from plastic containers. Blog posts do well as Edu-tainment Content — make sure you’re providing value, and not just selling.

8. Flourish Fit and Well

This is a great list of valuable information for their dream clients, directly in the copy of the Facebook post.

Your posts don’t always have to link to a blog post or video. You can just include the copy directly in the Facebook post, and it’s okay if it’s long!

I also like the “Send Message” call to action button here, especially if they were using this as a $1 per day boosted post.

They’re not selling anything, but they’re still giving a call to action to send a message if they want to know more about what they have to offer.

9. Yoga Six

This is a good blog post piece of Edu-tainment content for this yoga studio.

It’s listing out their different types of classes, but not in a salesy way.

Rather, they’re saying, here’s our classes that would be good to bring a friend who’s new to yoga.

They could have also just listed out (and numbered!) the different class types in the Facebook post directly.

10. XO-Erica Hoese

This is another great list of tips that is timeless.

Erica could boost this post for $1 per day all year round, and continue to provide value and become Omnipresent to her dream customers.

If they see this post again and again, they’ll remember her, and know what she stands for and how she can help them.

I love the picture here too. And, this is another one with a link to a blog post, but I like that she summarized the post and actually put the 5 top tips here in the Facebook post copy.

11. Noom

This one is a very simple link to a blog post, but it’s timeless, could be shared again and again, and it’s eye-catching.

They could have included some of the content of the post, a few tips or highlights in the copy of the Facebook post, but this is also good as it is.

Edu-tainment Content Tips

  1. Provide value first. Show them what you have to offer.
  2. Avoid selling. Save that for the Offer Content.
  3. Use numbered lists (an odd number is good!).
  4. Link to blog posts, but provide a summary of the post, or some highlights in the Facebook post copy.
  5. Nice images or videos are always great!

Jump to another section:

  1. Edu-tainment Content Examples
  2. Customer Stories Content Examples
  3. Offer Content Examples

11 Customer Stories Content Examples

Customer Stories Content, like the name implies, should be all about your customers.

What successes have they had because of your business?

How has their life improved?

These include testimonials from clients — either written or video.

But, the content doesn’t actually have to be a quote from a client. You could write the story for them (with their approval, of course).

Be on the lookout for great customer stories all the time, and share these as much as you can.

Here are 11 examples of good Customer Stories Content Facebook posts.

1. Yoga on Gaia

This is a video compilation of testimonials from clients, along with music, and words from the testimonials overlaid on the video.

One of the quotes is, “For me, a home practice is the most sacred kind of practice.”

With these quotes, they’re giving proof that they can do what they say they can do — because they’ve done it for others.

They’re also offering a free trial of their service with this particular post (which is more combining the Customer Story and Offer Content into one post), which is okay.

But, you also want to have content that is only telling stories about customers using your service or product.

2. InstaPhysique

This is a great video testimonial from a client of this fitness studio.

The video is less than two minutes long, it shows someone using the machine that you use in this studio, and they wrote out a quote from the testimonial in the copy of the Facebook post.

The video is not highly edited, and looks like it was taken with a phone camera.

These don’t have to be difficult to do, or take a lot of special equipment.

3. Caring Nature Wellness

This is a great testimonial of the kind of work Caring Nature Wellness can do for its clients, and a good example of someone using Canva to make the quote more graphically appealing.

I also like that they added information in the copy of the post about how they provide these kind of results to their clients, and offered a free consultation (again, an offer, which could be a separate post, but is okay here too, especially because it’s free).

4. Plan To Eat

This is an entire blog post customer story that shows a customer saving money and losing weight from a meal planning app.

If you have a good customer story, a blog post may be in order so you have a chance to really share all the details.

I love that they included the customer’s picture in the post and wrote out a quote from the blog post in the copy of the Facebook post (rather than just: “New blog post up,” like many businesses do).

5. Infinity Yoga Mats

If a blogger or review site writes about your business or product, you should definitely be sharing that!

Outside reviews are great proof for your business.

This is an example of someone else writing a review on their blog about this yoga mat company and then they shared the review on their Facebook page.

But I love that they included a quote from the review, and didn’t just stop at the first line of “Wonderful review from Ariel Kiley,” which many businesses do.

Not everyone is going to click the link and read the post, so try to give them a piece of the full blog post on the Facebook post, so they still see the glowing review.

6. Pilates X Studio

This is a long testimonial, but I love what they did with it.

They included the full quote in the copy of the Facebook post, but then also highlighted a portion of the quote with an image (most likely created with a program like Canva).

This is eye-catching and gets the message across even if someone’s just scrolling through, but also provides great proof if they take the time to read the whole thing.

7. Ashley Maltz, MD, MPH/Neshama Health and Wellness

This is very simple, but still effective.

If you have great reviews, you should be sharing them.

Of course, an image to go along with this post would be even better, but if this is all you can do, then do it!

8. Pure Barre

I love this post! It’s not actually a direct testimonial or quote from the client — it’s a Happy Birthday message to her!

But, it’s still proof of what they offer.

A 91-year-old lady can do this, so you can too!

But, I love that it is also recognizing an amazing student for all her hard work.

I’m sure she’s a great advocate for Pure Barre!

9. XO-Erica Hoese

I love the graphical touch to this quote, and the call out in the copy as “Real Results” (emojis are always fun too!).

I also love that Erica is saying how proud she is of her clients — the recognition builds loyal client advocates!

If she wanted to be able to run this post as a $1 per day boost year round, she would need to remove the mention of the Academy opening again in August and just include a link to sign up for the waiting list, or to be notified when the next round launched.

10. Gymnasia

This is not a direct quote or testimonial from a client, but it is showing the success and the progress that clients of Gymnasia make while they’re there.

Pictures of clients making progress and doing things they haven’t done before because they come to your studio are great stories to share!

11. The 21-Day Sugar Detox

Before and after pictures in Customer Stories Content are perfect!

Show that success.

I love that this post includes before and after pictures, but also includes a graphical quote from the customer.

This post links to a blog post with a full customer story about her success.

Customer Stories Content Tips

  1. Show the success of your customers! Be on the lookout for new customer stories all the time.
  2. Ask for testimonials from clients regularly, and then share them!
  3. Pictures of the client or video testimonials from them directly are awesome.
  4. Use Canva to make your quotes look pretty if you don’t have a picture to include.
  5. If it’s a really good story, maybe write a longer blog post and then share that (with a quote too!) in the Facebook post.

Jump to another section:

  1. Edu-tainment Content Examples
  2. Customer Stories Content Examples
  3. Offer Content Examples

11 Offer Content Examples

The final type of content to use with the Omnipresence Content Marketing method is Offer Content.

Offer content is simple (although while looking for examples, I noticed many businesses are NOT doing it).

State your offer, including the price.

Tell them what you are selling, and how much it costs.

If you’re following the Omnipresence Content Marketing method, then these offers will be combined with other pieces of content (Edu-tainment and Customer Stories) that will be providing a lot of value to your customers and showing proof that you do what you say you do.

So, when they see an offer post, it won’t be surprising.

It won’t feel like you’re selling to them, or that the selling you are doing is out of place or spammy.

You’ve shown them what you can do, and now you’re telling them how they can work with you.

If they’re interested, they’ll know how to buy because of these Offer Content posts.

Here are 11 examples of Offer Content Facebook posts.

1. MoreYoga

I love how simple this post is.

20 days of yoga for £15.

These posts should be simple. Just state your offer, and tell them how to get it.

I love the “Get Offer” button too, which goes straight to their pricing/buy now page.

2. Yoga on Gaia

This is a video of testimonials, combined with an offer of 11th month is 99¢.

It could be more simple and direct, but this is also a good Offer Content post.

3. Farm Fresh To You

Promo codes are great!

Bonus: if you use a specific promo code for different Facebook posts (especially ones you’re paying to boost), you’ll have another indicator of how effective your posts are based on how many people use that promo code!

I love that this offer is timeless too. They can run this all year round without any issues.

4. Yoga International

I like that this includes a small image of a customer testimonial along with the offer.

One way to make this post even better for the Omnipresence method is to make it timeless.

Offer an intro offer for new customers that could be used any time of the year and you’ll be able to continue to boost the same piece of content all the time.

5. Body Yoga

I like the simplicity of this image with the offer stated very clearly in the image.

Again, to make this even better, make it timeless.

State your intro offer that’s good all year round, so you can boost the same post for $1 per day again and again.

6. Warrior of Light

This is very simple, but clear.

Offers don’t necessarily have to be paid.

A free introductory session is great too, and I love that they include a link to book a session directly on their calendar.

A picture or graphical text would make this post more eye-catching, and they could even include a “Book Now” button on the post to make that call to action even more clear.

7. Claudia le Fuevre Nutritional Therapist

Claudia has very clearly stated the benefit of her offer, the price, and how to take the next action.

I like the Send Message CTA button too.

She could also have a Book Now link that goes directly to a page to book a session online (including paying up front).

Adding overlaid text on the image with the offer and the price would make it even more clear what she is offering.

8. Joanna Barrett Yoga

I love the list of the four packages that Joanna Barrett has included in this post — very clear about what she’s offering, and a link is included if you want more information.

The picture is also great. It shows who she is, the feeling of calm that you’re going to get working with her.

One thing I would add to this post is the price for these different packages right on the post.

There is no reason to hide your prices. Just tell people what they need to do to work with you, and that includes stating the price.

9. CorePower Yoga

I really love the visual with this post — it’s very clear that they’re offering yoga classes online.

The offer is stated clearly.

A free week of unlimited online classes.

But, I think it would also be great to state the price after the free week right up front. People would rather know up front, rather than be surprised about the price later.

10. Simple Green Smoothies

This is another free 7-day offer — this is great way to introduce people to your service or product.

I like the text overlaid on the beautiful image, and very clear call to action.

11. Innerstellar Pilates & Yoga Studio

I love the simplicity of this post!

To be honest, it was hard to find a post like this — many businesses aren’t doing this.

State your price up front. This is their introductory offer that’s good for new students all year round.

It isn’t a limited time promotion only good for a month.

This post links to their home page, where they have a button to click to go to their pricing page.

Even better would be to remove the extra click, and go straight to the booking/price page.

You also don’t have to feel like you only have to do Offer posts for new students or clients.

Feel free to also create Offer posts with your offers for existing clients — the cost of a 10-class punch card or for your standard monthly membership fee, after the intro offer.

Offer Content Tips

  1. State your offer — including the price! — up front, right in the post.
  2. Tell them what they get from that offer. Show them the benefits, the problem you’re solving, from your offer.
  3. Link directly to a page where they can book, schedule, and pay now.
  4. Free offers, or introductory offers are good, but feel free to also create posts that include your standard offers.
  5. Pictures are always good! Overlaid text with the offer stated on the image as well is a good way to give the offer information quickly when people are scrolling through Facebook.

Jump to another section:

  1. Edu-tainment Content Examples
  2. Customer Stories Content Examples
  3. Offer Content Examples

What To Do With All This Content?

If you want your health and wellness business to become Omnipresent to your dream customers, you should start creating as many of these three types of content as you can, and posting them on your social media sites (Facebook and/or Instagram) consistently.

Ideally, you would create 10 to 20 pieces of this content per month, with a mix of the three types — Edu-tainment, Customer Stories, and Offer Content — and post them every one to two days.

Then, you use the data that Facebook gives you to determine which posts are most successful — which ones have the highest organic reach?

Boost the most successful posts for $1 per day, and those posts will become your $1 per day sales people for your business.

If you do this, you will become Omnipresent to your dream customers.

Your dream customers will see you everywhere, all the time.

You will be their easiest option to solve their problem, because they’ve seen you everywhere.

You’ll be their familiar friend, and they’ll want to work with you.

I’ve outlined the Omnipresence Content Marketing process more in this post.

And, if you’d like help implementing this process for your business — and writing all that content! — I’d love to talk to you.

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month using Omnipresence Content Marketing.

If you would like your health or wellness business to become Omnipresent to your dream customers, let’s schedule a call today.

Schedule a Free Discovery Session With Me

5 Steps To Getting More Clients From A Personal Trainer Who Was Broke, Then Built A Fitness Empire

If you’re the owner of a fitness, yoga, or Pilates business, or run another kind of health or wellness business, you’re hopefully not broke.

But, you might still be on a shoestring budget and wondering what you should be doing to bring in new clients more consistently.

Bedros Keuilian actually was broke.

Bedros Keuilian (Source: http://ptpower.com)
Bedros Keuilian (Source: http://ptpower.com)

Now he makes a lot of money.

He created a fitness empire as the founder and CEO of Fit Body Boot Camp, named one of Entrepreneur Magazine’s Top 15 Franchises.

He is also “a fanatical reader and student of marketing, selling, personal development, and delivering world class client service.”

He also coaches and teaches fitness professionals how to get more clients.

In his “Fitness Marketing 101” video he shares his process for creating a funnel that helps fitness businesses turn leads into long-term clients.

Fitness Marketing 101Bedros calls this Fitness Marketing 101, but says in the video, “This isn’t ground level stuff that you should ignore.”

Instead, he says it’s “foundational stuff” that all fitness businesses should be doing to bring in new clients.

All health, wellness, and fitness businesses can learn from this model and implement these tactics to start bringing in new clients right away.

80% of Your Clients Come From the Internet

8020 RuleBedros first explains the 80/20 rule, which states that 80% of the causes come from 20% of the effects, or 80% of the sales come from 20% of the clients.

In this case, Bedros says that 80% of your clients come from the Internet, meaning Facebook or Google searches.

Which is why, even if you’re a local business, you still need to put a lot of effort into your online presence.

People find and research businesses online before they’ll ever go there in person.

And, before you tell me that Facebook is dead and no one uses it anymore, you should know that even as of early 2018, the Pew Research Center’s social media use study stated that 68 percent of U.S. adults report that they are Facebook users, and about three-quarters of those users access Facebook daily.

(Source: http://www.pewinternet.org)

There are other platforms, of course.

Instagram is a notable one, especially with the younger demographic, and especially in the health and wellness world.

But, the point is that your business needs to be online because that’s where you’re going to get the majority of your customers.

Because so much of your business will come from the Internet, that’s where you should focus most of your efforts.

Bedros talks through five steps to create a funnel on the Internet that converts leads into long-term clients.

Let’s break down those five steps.

Step 1: Get Some Leads

Step 1 LeadsAt the top of the funnel is Leads.

You have to create a place online that people can show some initial interest in your business.

Leads will progress through the funnel to become Prospects, then Short-Term Clients, then Long-Term Clients, if you follow this method.

To start getting these leads, Bedros recommends setting up a Facebook Business Page, which most businesses have already, but if you don’t, they’re easy to set up.

Once you have your Facebook Page set up for your business, you will start posting what Bedros calls “positive reinforcement messages” to your page, along with pictures of people working out (or using your services) in your facility regularly.

He recommends posting to your page at least three times a day.

Bedros also suggests tagging the clients who are in your pictures so their friends can see them working out, and you can start to build your audience on your Facebook page.

If you have just created a Facebook Page for your business, I would also recommend asking all of your existing customers to like your page.

You can do this through your email newsletters, a sign in your studio or office, as well as posting it on your website.

Tell your existing customers or clients that you have a new Facebook Page, you’re going to start sharing valuable content there, and you’d appreciate if they followed you.

Then, you need to make sure you are actually posting valuable content on your page.

I like to share three different kinds of content:

  1. Edu-tainment Content
  2. Customer Stories Content
  3. Offer Content

I explain each of those in more detail in this post about Omnipresence Content Marketing.

Step 1 Recap:

  1. Create your Facebook Business Page.
  2. Invite existing customers to like your page.
  3. Start posting valuable content to your page, tag your clients, and ask them to share.

Step 2: Turn Leads Into Prospects

Step 2 ProspectsOnce you’ve had your Facebook Business Page up and running for a while and have been posting good content, then it’s time to start turning those leads into prospects.

Bedros says that once your page has at least 200 likes, it’s time to start using Facebook to advertise to those fans.

But, you’re not advertising your services.

Instead, you’re using the ads to lead people from your Facebook page to what Bedros calls a “squeeze page,” but others call a landing page.

This is a web page that offers a free report, nutrition guide, maybe a free video training with three yoga poses that help with back pain, or some kind of free information piece that your audience will find helpful to download.

You give this report to people for free after they give you their email address.

Squeeze page
Leads come from your Facebook Business Page. Then, you drive those leads to a “squeeze page” to turn them into prospects.

Once someone has given you their email address, they have now turned from a lead to a prospect and moved down the funnel.

One note about Facebook ads — I would not just advertise to the people that like your page, because they may already be mostly existing clients of yours.

They’re already down at the bottom of the funnel.

Instead, with Facebook ads you can choose to advertise to the people that like your page and their friends.

This is why you want all of your existing customers to like your page.

You want to start spreading the message to the friends of your customers about who you are and the services you offer.

You want to turn your clients’ friends from leads to prospects and, eventually into customers also.

You can also create audiences within Facebook ads to advertise to people local to your area, if you need to reach beyond the people who already like your page, or if you’re still working to build the audience of your page.

Step 2 Recap:

  1. Create a landing page that offers something for free, in exchange for their email address.
  2. Start using Facebook ads to advertise this free offer to the people who like your page, plus their friends.
  3. Consider creating a local audience within Facebook to advertise this landing page to also.

Step 3: Turn Prospects Into Short-Term Clients

Step 3 Short Term clientsOnce you’ve collected some email addresses from your landing page, you now have prospects.

These people are more than just leads.

They’ve liked your Facebook page.

They saw your ad.

They liked what you were offering.

And now they’ve given you their email address.

They’re telling you that they’re interested in what you’re offering.

Now, it’s time to convert these prospects into short-term clients.

Once you have an email list, you should be sending emails on a consistent basis, at least once a month with updates on what you’re doing, offer some valuable information that will help them progress on their health and wellness journey, and offer specials, deals, tell about upcoming classes, etc.

It’s important to remember when you’re sharing content with your audience to serve first, and sell later.

Always offer value first before you try to sell.

But, for people that have just joined your list, you’ll want to send them a series of automatic emails.

An email newsletter tool like MailChimp or Constant Contact can send out autoresponder emails that you set up ahead of time.

The first email can go out right after someone signs up for your list welcoming them, giving them information about your business, and the benefits they can get from your services.

A series of three to five emails spread out over one to two weeks is a good way to introduce your prospects to your business, provide value in those emails, and then eventually offer them a short-term program.

In the video, for fitness businesses specifically, Bedros recommends offering a short-term program, or a “low-barrier offer.”

He gives examples like:

  • 14-Day Fat Furnace Program
  • 21-Day Rapid Fat Loss Program
  • 28-Day Fat Belly Program
  • 16-Day Sexy Slim Down

Bedros recommends that your short-term program is under 30 days, and is under $100.

You offer this short-term program to your prospects, who now “know, like, and trust you,” because:

  • They’ve seen your Facebook content, and maybe they’ve seen that their friends go to your studio or business.
  • They gave you their email address in exchange for that training or content you offered.
  • They’ve received your autoresponder email series that provided additional value and told them about who you are and what you can do for them.

So then, when you offer them this low-barrier offer that is under 30 days and under $100, it’s easy for them to say yes, and try you out for a low commitment.

Step 3 Recap:

  1. Send a series of autoresponder emails to prospects as they join your email list that introduces you and your services.
  2. Add all emails to your main monthly (or even more frequently) email newsletter list as well — always remember to serve first, and sell later.
  3. After providing value to the prospects on your email list, offer a short-term program — something that’s easy to say yes to.

Step 4: Turn Short-Term Clients Into Long-Term Clients

Step 4 Long Term ClientsYou now have new clients who are committed for 30 days or less.

That means you have 30 days (or less) to WOW them!

“Give them the best results, the best experience you can,” Bedros says.

He then recommends that you schedule a nutrition consultation with each of these short-term clients before the 30 days is up.

Nutrition Consult
Provide your short-term clients with a nutrition consultation before their short-term program is up, and offer them a long-term program.

During this consultation, make sure to provide value first — talk to your clients about their health goals, give them recommendations on how to achieve those goals, including nutrition advice, as well as an exercise program.

But, during that consultation you are also going to offer them a long-term package to your facility — a 3-month, 6-month, or 12-month package.

Show them the different kinds of classes or services you offer, explain the benefits, and how signing up for the long term will help them meet their goals.

Depending on the kind of business that you have, this consultation or meeting may take different forms.

You could meet with them in person at your studio, it could be a check-in phone call, or you could even have a new series of autoresponder emails that go out to your short-term clients offering them a discount on long-term packages if they sign up before their initial program is over.

The personal touch of an in-person meeting or phone call with the owner, or an instructor or trainer is nice, if you can do that.

Once you get someone to sign up for a long-term program with you, you have successfully taken them all the way through your client-getting funnel.

Step 4 Recap:

  1. WOW your clients during their short-term program — give them the great results you promised them.
  2. Have a “nutrition consultation” (or something similar) with each short-term client before their initial program is over.
  3. During the consultation, offer a long-term program and show them the benefits they’ll get from signing up.

Step 5: Keep Using That Funnel

Step 5 FunnelOnce you have all the pieces of your funnel in place, and you are starting to move people through the different phases, you’ll want to start driving even more traffic into your funnel.

You can do this in a number of different ways. Bedros lists off a couple in the video, including:

  • Try out additional Facebook (and Instagram) ads to different audiences (especially local audiences) to your “squeeze” page.
  • Create and share YouTube videos with information about the kind of services you provide (or examples of exercises, showing a training session, showing your special equipment, etc.). Include the link to your landing page in the description of the video, so that when people find your video they’ll go to your landing page, see your free report/guide/training, and sign up for your email list.

Other ideas include:

  • Write blog posts with valuable content that help your audience and then use the call to action at the end of the post to lead them to your landing page.
  • Turn the blog posts into social media posts and ads, as well, to build your social media following, and continue to grow your audience (thereby filling in the top of the funnel with those leads).
  • Use the Omnipresence Content Marketing method to test out a lot of different kinds of content on your Facebook page and then boost that content for $1 per day, to help you gain a wider following on your Facebook page, as well as promote your landing page offering.
  • Email your current clients about a referral promotion. Ask them to share a link to your landing page to their friends, and offer a prize or a bonus to everyone who does that.

Speaking of referrals…

Remember at the beginning of the video, I said that Bedros says that 80% of your clients will come from the Internet, so that’s why he focused there?

The other 20% is from referrals (or other offline methods).

So, don’t forget that once you have long-term clients, treat them like gold.

They are also helping you as sales people.

If they think you’re amazing, they’ll tell people.

They’ll write reviews and recommendations, they’ll provide awesome customer testimonials or case studies, and they’ll help you get more customers.

Step 5 Recap:

  1. Keep using that funnel you’ve created.
  2. Keep directing traffic into your funnel. Try out different methods and find out what works best for you.
  3. Treat your existing customers like gold and let them help you fill up your funnel too.

Five-Step Client-Getting ReviewClosing

Bedros Keuilian is the master when it comes to fitness marketing. He’s been doing it for a long time, and this video is only one of MANY videos he’s made to help fitness professionals grow their business.

These strategies he’s proposed for your business work.

Here’s a quick review:

    • Step 1: Get Some Leads. Start your Facebook Business Page, if you haven’t already, and start posting helpful, valuable content regularly. Share with your existing customers and get them to like your page too.
    • Step 2: Turn Leads Into Prospects. Create a “squeeze page” that provides something of value to your leads in exchange for their email address. Use Facebook ads to start driving the leads from your Facebook page to that squeeze page.
    • Step 3: Turn Prospects Into Short-Term Clients. Use autoresponder emails to continue providing value to the prospects on your email list, and then offer them a short-term program. This is a low-barrier offer: less than 30 days and less than $100.
    • Step 4: Turn Short-Term Clients Into Long-Term Clients. Wow these short-term clients — show them everything you’ve got. Before the short-term program is up, provide a nutritional consultation (or some other kind of meeting/phone call) to provide additional value, and also offer a long-term program.
    • Step 5: Keep Using That Funnel. Rinse and repeat. Try new ways of getting more leads and getting people to that squeeze page. And, don’t forget to continue to provide amazing service to your long-term clients — they’ll help you fill up the other 20% of your client-getting.

Watch The Full Video

Need More Help?

If you would like help creating and implementing this system, or any piece of the system, for your fitness, health, or wellness business, I would love to talk to you!

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month with strategic content marketing that includes blog posts that turn prospects into customers and data-driven Facebook post boosts that help you reach more of your dream customers.

Let’s schedule a call to talk about your business.

Schedule a Free Discovery Session With Me

How To Get Your Wellness Business In Front of 100 Of Your Dream Customers For $1 Per Day

“We’re trying to identify and reach the right clients.”

The owner of a wellness business said this to me during a call recently, but it’s not the first time I’ve heard this goal.

I’m sure this is your goal too as a health and wellness business that is trying to grow — bring in new clients on a consistent basis.

But, you’re not just trying to bring in anyone. You need to reach the RIGHT clients.

The people that are exactly right for your business.

Your dream customers.

And you can reach these customers using a simple strategy of creating data-driven content plus Facebook’s targeted reach for only $1 per day.

It’s a method I call Omnipresence Content Marketing.

Omnipresence is being everywhere, all the time; the easiest option; a familiar friend.

Omnipresence is being everywhere, all the time. Your dream customers see you wherever they go.

You become the easiest option to your dream customers.

You’re a familiar friend because your potential customers come to know you through your content that they see all the time.

You’ll be at the top of their mind the next time they’re thinking about the kind of services that you offer because they’ve seen you and the kind of helpful content you provide consistently.

You can achieve Omnipresence to the people that matter to you for just $1 per day, thanks to the Internet and Facebook advertising.

This system doesn’t mean blasting everyone. It doesn’t mean you have to do Super Bowl commercials to everyone in the whole world.

You’re just identifying the core people that matter to you and building loyalty, trust, and passion for your business.

Read on to find out how you can achieve Omnipresence for your business and start reaching up to 100 of your dream customers for only $1 per day.

How to get results:

  1. Create 10-20 pieces of content that people will enjoy
  2. Post the content to your Facebook business page
  3. Analyze the winners (expect 1 out of 10)
  4. Boost the winners for $1 per day to the right audiences
  5. Rinse & repeat until satisfied adding new content as you see fit

Now, let’s go into each of these steps in more detail.

Step 1: Create 10-20 pieces of content (per month) that people will enjoy

When I talk about content, I’m talking about information that you share on your business Facebook (or Instagram) page.

It could be blog posts, if you are blogging regularly and have valuable information to share from your blog.

But, it could also be information that is shared directly on your Facebook page.

The content that we’re creating for this method is timeless.

It shouldn’t be an event or a promotion that’s for a specific time of year (although you should definitely keep sharing that kind of information too!).

Content for Omnipresence is information that could be shared year-round, over and over again.

But, with this method you don’t have to worry about if you’re writing the right kind of content.

You’re just going to try things and see how it goes. You write it, post it, and see which ones do the best.

That’s data-driven content. You’re looking at the actual data to see which pieces of content do the best.

Then you also use Facebook’s targeted reach to create Omnipresence. With this, you can get an increase in sales, loyalty, and trust.

The key to success is the content, so let’s talk more about that first.

Edu-tainment Content

The first kind of content you should start creating is “Edu-tainment” — educational, yet also entertaining for your audience, your dream customers.

Think about the kind of content you see on Buzzfeed. But, make sure it’s something that your audience would appreciate.

Numbered lists are great.

Pictures or graphics are also great to include. And, if you haven’t already tried out Canva to make infographics, you should! (The graphics I have in this post were made with Canva.)

These posts don’t have to be very long, although this is also where you may include a link to a blog post if your blog has this kind of information as well.

Some examples of headlines that would be great for Edu-tainment Content:

  • Seven lies that keep you from getting better sleep
  • How to get big calves without doing calf raises
  • Hey, if you ever experience migraines, here’s what to do if they last more than three days
  • Seven reasons you aren’t getting rid of your belly fat
  • What no one tells you about relieving stress

A couple examples of Edu-tainment content on Facebook:

Example 1 of Edu-tainment Facebook post.
This post is both entertaining – “snaccident” (and relatable!), but also educational. She includes a link to her Fit Mom’s Snack List (which is also an email sign up link).
Example 2 of Edu-tainment Facebook post.
This one is a link to a blog post, and the actual Facebook post is very short. Note the number in the headline — numbered lists work well with this kind of content.

Customer Stories Content

What successes have your clients had because of the services you offer? Do you have some great before and after stories from your customers?

You should always be on the lookout for new customer success stories to write about and share.

Including pictures or even a video testimonial from a client would be great for this type of content too.

Humans are social creatures.

They like seeing their friends or others who are like them that have had success with your service.

And people love a good story too!

A couple examples:

Example 1 of Customer Success Facebook post.
Before and after pictures are great! This post also includes a testimonial from the client (if you clicked See More).
Example 2 of Customer Success Facebook post.
A quote from a customer, a link, and some pictures. Customer success story posts can be very simple!

This kind of content is not aggressive at all. You’re not convincing them to buy, but you’re becoming a trusted friend.

If you were sharing content that was trying to sell people all the time on your Facebook page, then it would probably become annoying, but if it’s something that people are interested in reading and hearing about, then they’ll want to see it.

You don’t need to come in hard. You don’t need to be really salesy with this kind of content.

You just need to be fun, be soft, and remember that it’s social media, so be social.

Offer Content

The last kind of content is very simple — just tell them your offer. What are you offering to new clients of your business?

This is just a pitch. People who want what you’re offering will take advantage of it.

With offer content ideas, there’s no secret. You’re just making the offer.

Maybe you’re saying your first session for new clients is free or the first month at your yoga studio is only $30.

Canva could be great for this kind of content too — create a nice little info graphic stating your offer to post.

Whatever your offer is for your business, just tell them.

Some examples:

Example 1 of Offer Success Facebook post.
2 weeks of dinners for $40. All you have to do is state the offer. They also have a video, which is nice, but not a necessity.
Example 2 of Offer Success Facebook post.
The offer in this post: Buy One, Donate One.

Your Turn:

Write down some ideas for all three types of content for your business.

Try to list 10 to 20 ideas and include a good mix of all three types of content. Include ideas for pictures, graphics, or videos you might be able to include.

Now pick one. Which one do you think would be the easiest to write first? Start writing!

(And, if you need even more examples of these three kinds of content, check out this post too.)

Step 2: Post the content to your Facebook business page

Once you have some content written, start posting it to your Facebook business page.

Just post it for now, don’t boost it, or pay for advertising at all.

At first, you are just trying to see which pieces of content perform the best with organic reach (meaning not paid).

Step 2: Post the content to your Facebook business page
Use Business Manager for your business Facebook page. Write your content and hit Publish (don’t hit Boost Post yet).

Start creating content and start posting.

In the first month that you’re starting this method, try to create about 10 to 20 pieces of content and post them every other day and start to see what happens.

You start collecting data on what is and isn’t working before you start paying even $1 per day.

Let the organic reach work first.

Quick tip: If you haven’t set up Facebook Business Manager yet, I would recommend doing that now!

Your Turn:

Post your first piece of content on your Facebook page. Try to make a graphic with Canva to add to your post, and post it!

Step 3: Analyze the winners

After you’ve been posting your 10 to 20 pieces of content in a month, next you need to analyze your organic reach.

Do this after at least a couple weeks, maybe a month, of consistently posting your pieces of content to your Facebook page every other day.

See which posts are doing the best.

To do this, go to your Facebook Business Manager and click Insights in the top bar, then click Posts in the sidebar on the left.

You’ll be able to see a list of all of your posts and the light orange bars will show you the organic reach.

Step 3: Analyze the winners
Look at the Reach column. The light orange bar shows your Organic Reach. If you have any paid posts, the dark orange bar will show the Paid Reach.

Look at them and see which ones are the highest.

If most of your posts got a reach of 40 or 50, but then one or two of them got a reach of 100 or more, those are the ones that are doing the best.

Find the ones that are at the top of the list and that have the highest organic reach — maybe one or two out of the 10 to 20 posts you’ve made.

Important note: Only about 10 percent of your original 10 to 20 posts will end up having the highest reach. So, expect one or two very best posts out of your original 10 to 20 posts.

Your Turn:

Following the instructions above, go look at the organic reach of your past posts. Start to get an idea of what the normal reach of your posts are right now, so that you’ll know how to spot a winner when you have one.

Step 4: Boost the winners for $1 per day to the right audiences

Once you’ve found the one or two winning posts that have the highest organic reach, now you’re ready to boost.

Go back to the Insights → Posts page on your Business Manager and click the blue Boost Post button on the post with the highest organic reach.

Once you do you that, the Boost Post window will open up and you’ll need to change a few settings.

  1. Change the audience to “People who like your Page and their friends.”By doing this, you’re using the power of social connection. When your post
    Choose your audience
    Choose “People who like your Page and their friends” for your audience. Select the “Edit” button on the right if you’d like to change the location of your audience to just your local area.

    shows up in someone’s feed, it’s going to show that their friend likes your page.

    People do things because they know that other people are doing it too. You’re using that power of social connection to reach the friends of people who already like your page.

    It gives you that word-of-mouth marketing without you having to actually rely on your customers sharing your information with their friends. Facebook will do it for you.

  2. If you have a local business and you’d like to limit the location of the people who are seeing your boosted post, click the Edit link to the right and select the locations you’d like to include.
  3. Uncheck the boxes for “Run promotion on Messenger” and “Run promotion on Instagram,” unless you’d also like to run this boosted post on those platforms too.
  4. Set your total budget to $14. Set your duration to 14 days.

    Set your budget and duration
    Set your budget to either $14 (or $7) and your duration to 14 days (or 7 days) in order to spend only $1 per day on your boosted post.

    This sets your budget to spend $1 per day on this boosted post for 14 days.

    You can also test it out for a shorter time by setting the budget to $7 and the duration to 7 days, but the longer you can test it out, the better your data will be.

And then, hit the big blue Boost button and you’re done!

Let it run for 7 or 14 days for $1 per day and see what happens.

After you’ve let it run for your set duration, go back to Insights and look at which ones performed the best out of the posts you’ve boosted.

Stop boosting the ones that are the lowest performing. Only keep the ones that are performing the absolute best.

For the highest performing posts, set them to boost for another 30 days, or even 60, 90, or 365 days!

Keep them running, but keep monitoring them too. See how they do, in comparison to the new posts you’re also writing and boosting.

Just keep boosting the highest performing posts for $1 per day per post.

Your Turn:

Go check out what it looks like when you hit the Boost Post button and see if you can follow along with these instructions to get all the settings right.

If you’d like to try it out, boost a post you’ve done in the past, just to see what it’s like.

Step 5: Rinse & Repeat until satisfied, adding new content as you see fit

Once you’ve got the system up and running, keep it going!

Keep writing 10 to 20 pieces of new content every month (or as many as you can).

Boost the best performing ones for 7 or 14 days, and see which ones do the best.

Keep boosting the best posts.

You’ll be stacking up really awesome posts that build upon one another.

You end up with several posts that are your absolute best performing posts and those will serve as your $1 per day sales people.

After several months of doing this process, you’ll end up with 10 to 20 best pieces of content.

This content will now serve as your 10 to 20 sales people, that only costs you $10 to $20 per day to keep going.

Each one of these $1 per day sales people could be reaching 100 potential new customers for you.

But, not just any customer.

Customers that have read your content, know who you are, and what you do to help your customers, and what your offer is.

Dream customers.

Your Turn:

Think about those dream customers. Who are you trying to attract to your business? Write down some attributes. Write down what they need to know before they can spend money at your business. Now think about what it would be like if you could reach 100 of them EVERY DAY for only $1.

Recap

  • Create your content: 10-20 pieces of timeless content per month. Adding pictures and videos makes it even better!
  • 3 types of content:
      • Edu-tainment
      • Customer Stories
      • Offers
    • Post your content organically: Use Business Manager to post your content every other day on your business Facebook page. Don’t boost yet. Just post it and watch your organic reach.
    • Measure your most successful posts: Which posts had the highest organic reach after a couple weeks, or up to a month? Find the one or two top posts out of the 10-20 you did.
    • Boost for 14 (or 7) days for $1 per day: Within Facebook Business Manager, click that big blue Boost Post button and boost the top one or two posts for $1 per day. Test them out for 7 or 14 days, whatever you (and your budget) can handle.
    • Measure your most successful boosts: Look at which of the boosted posts do the best. Find the very best of the best! Expect about 10 percent of your posts to be the best.
    • Extend to 30, 60, 90, 365-day windows: For the very best boosted posts, keep them running. Let them serve as $1 per day sales people for your business.
    • Rinse & Repeat, stacking your winning content: Keep doing it!

Benefits of Omnipresence:

  • Be seen everywhere, all the time, by your dream customers
  • Become the easiest option for people who are looking for your service
  • Become a familiar friend to your potential customers because they see your content all the time
  • Create $1 per day sales people that can reach as many as 100 people per day, that never complain, need vacations, breaks, or pay raises
  • Share great content with your existing customers too
  • Create that word-of-mouth marketing and use the power of social connection to reach the friends of your existing audience

If you would like to get the benefits of Omnipresence, but would like to do it with no effort on your part, then I’d love to help you out!

You can hire me to create and manage the entire Omnipresence Content Marketing system for your business today, and you can get all the benefits without any of the effort.

Start reaching your dream customers today.

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month using Omnipresence Content Marketing.

If you would like Omnipresence for your wellness business, let’s schedule a call today.

Schedule a Free Discovery Session With Me

 

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