One of the key techniques I’ve taught Blog Mastermind members since I made the first version of the course in 2007 (and the 2.0 current version) is the value of a ‘Life Story’ post or series.

In simple terms, a Life Story post is your background story as it relates to the topic of your blog or business.

If you blog about collecting colonial stamps, your background story is how you grew up and discovered this passion, and then how you grew your collection and what you do today.

If you blog about how to cure chronic back pain, you talk about how your life led to this skill, possibly explaining your own back pain recovery process, and how you spend time helping people today.

If you blog about how to travel first-class on a coach-class budget, then your story reveals how you first discovered a love of travel, then your desire to fly first class, how you managed to book your first flight in lie-flat seats, and then developed your current methods for ‘travel hacking’.

Tell Your Story

The Life Story post is a story. It’s very important you write it as a narrative in chronological order, explaining the key highlights of your journey leading to today.

You’ve possibly watched one of those TV shows where they get someone famous and then go back in time and look at their life, bringing old friends on to the show to reminisce about the past. There’s a reason this kind of storytelling works.

There’s something powerful about going back in time and reliving key moments in your life. You may find yourself enjoying writing this post more than most, because it triggers memories about events you had not thought about in a long time.

Use Your Story To Demonstrate Subject Matter Authority

From a marketing perspective, your Life Story post is a powerful tool for establishing your authority.

Even if you don’t see yourself as an ‘expert’ or ‘qualified’ to call yourself an authority, simply sharing your story will create this impression (even if you are still very much a work in progress).

The Life Story post is especially powerful because your authority is implied.

You’re not simply telling everyone you’re great at what you do, you’re sharing your background story using a narrative that engages people like a biographical book or movie.

Given your audience also cares about the subject (or they wouldn’t be there reading your blog), they are going to be extra-engaged when reading how you became the person you are today.

You will also find that people who read your life story from start to finish will see you as a trusted friend, rather than just a random internet person. They will respect your opinion and value your advice because they know what you have been through and where you have come from.

Teach Through Your Story

Your Life Story post also functions as a powerful tool for teaching.

Many of your life lessons no doubt led to incredible insights and breakthroughs that you want to share with your audience.

Your Life Story is the foundation, the source of these insights because you explain what you went through to discover them.

By sharing your journey, you demonstrate your own ‘before and after’ case study.

Of course your Life Story is not long enough to truly teach how to do something completely — that is what the rest of your Blog Sales Funnel is for — but you can certainly introduce and give an overview of your foundation principles and ideas.

A Life Story Is Not An About Page

It’s important to understand that your Life Story is not just an About page.

Your About page has a few simple purposes:

  1. To explain the benefits of your blog for the reader
  2. To briefly introduce yourself
  3. To provide press bio and photos

Your About page also should contain a prominent email optin box, links to your social profiles and possibly your contact details as well if you do not have a separate contact page.

Your About page is not long. It’s not a story, it’s a soundbite. It’s an important page, but it’s not designed to do the same thing as your Life Story post is.

Where To Link To Your Life Story

Your life story post should appear linked from your About page as a way to ‘learn more’ about you — the long version of your story. You can also share your life story post in other ways…

  • If your blog has a sidebar where you include a picture of yourself, that’s a logical place to link to your Life Story (under the photo link and make the photo itself click through to it).
  • I included my Life Story post in the welcome email of my free email courses, and also in the footer area of emails.
  • During the early days of my blog before I had much content, I linked to my Life Story on my homepage header/navigation bar

The goal is to make sure your Life Story becomes what I call ‘first impression’ content.

First impression content is exactly what it sounds like – the content a new reader experiences the first time they discover you.

In most cases a person will first discover you via a blog post of yours they found in a search engine or shared via social media. It will be about something specific that appealed to them (one of your Pillar Posts no doubt).

After reading that initial blog post, ideally the next thing they will do is join your email list, however they may not be ready for that commitment yet. In which case, you want them to head to your Life Story page next.

By reading your life story their trust in you increases, which means they are more likely to then join your email list if they have not already. If they do join your email list, it’s smart to include a link to your life story in that first welcome email after they subscribe, again to introduce yourself in case they have not read your life story yet.

The Life Story post is a key tool in the process that leads a potential customer to make a purchase. By establishing rapport, demonstrating authority and teaching through your own story, people will choose to buy from you when the time comes.

Not everyone will read your life story, but for some who do, it will be the beginning of forming a relationship with you that could lead them to become a customer one day. That one day might be next week or next year, you won’t know, but what matters is you focus on building that relationship.

How To Write Your Life Story

I go into detail about how to write and use a Life Story, in particular in a two week Blog Sales Funnel to sell any product or service, inside the Blog Mastermind 2.0 program.

What I can leave you with now are some important points to consider when writing your life story…

  1. Your Life Story should be in chronological order. Start at the beginning of your life or the beginning of what makes sense based on your topic and start moving forward, highlighting each key milestone or event or breakthrough you experienced.
  2. Cover your own frustrations and fears, what you felt about the changes or passions you wanted to explore but had yet to experience.
  3. When you hit the big breakthroughs, talk about what you did, what worked, and how it changed your life. Compare what worked to what previously did not.
  4. Write about influential people or events that shaped you as it relates to the topic of your blog.
  5. Then bring everything up to today, what you currently do, how you help other people and what your current big goals are.

Make sure your Life Story is not just about random events in your life. It MUST be the story about your history with the subject your blog is about. That’s the subject your audience cares about, which is why they will read your life story (otherwise it’s just a random story about a random person to them).

In terms of length, your Life Story should be several thousand words, and may even stretch into the 5,000 to 10,000 word range if you have lived a big life!

You can break it down into chapters of individual articles all linked together if you find one article is just getting too big.

You could also consider explaining your life story via podcast audio or a video if you don’t want to write it out. I use a talk I did at a networking event about my business life story and provide it in video and audio along with the text version (you can see them here).

I recommend you write your Life Story post as one of the first blog posts for a new blog. It’s an important piece of content, and a great place to start blogging.

Yaro

P.S. When I first started writing my life story I was very new to blogging and had no idea it would become such an important part of my blog during those early years.

Over time I continued to add to it, eventually creating a series of posts that cover the first 30 years of my life. For a trip down memory lane, you can read over my original life story series starting here.