You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

Businesses Die in Obscurity. Do All You Can to Gain Attention. If you want to succeed and grow your business, your sales revenue and your brand, you must build awareness.

By Grant Cardone

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Entrepreneurs must know that businesses fail because they don't get attention. If you want to succeed and grow your business, your sales revenue and your brand, you must get attention.

What do I mean by attention? I am talking about generating enough awareness that you and your company own the market. Obscurity kills businesses. There are plenty of solid ideas and great products out there. Most don't know how to get attention and so they disappear. There are also some weaker products and services being sold. When you look closely, those people, products and services are committed to getting attention. Money follows attention.

Related: 2 Rules for Engineering Exceptional Upsides

To be successful in creating attention you need to be able to answer these two questions:

1. How far will you go to get attention?
2. How frequent will you be in your attempts?

Over the last five years, I have worked hard to get the right kind of attention. I have used radio, TV, advertising and social media. I've posted over 1,000 videos on YouTube and written thousands of blogs, strategies and posts on other social mediums. I also recently launched Whatever It Takes Network, a digital platform with video programming intended to help people with their businesses and life. It takes work and the willingness to try new things, learn what works and what doesn't, make improvements and move forward.

I have found that "creativity follows commitment" so make sure you commit first, then worry about content. To me, quantity is more important than quality in the beginning because you aren't going to figure out the quality without the quantity. The quality will not matter if you don't push content frequently enough to get results.

If you're out there all the time, you're going to get more and more eyes. When you have something to offer, offer it. Repeat it over and over.

Related: Grow Your Business a Thousandfold in One Year With Content Marketing

In every communication, my goal is to create an effect with the recipient of that message. It is very important to vary the content and be informative, but most importantly, I must entertain. Think about what catches your eye. What makes you read or watch one thing over another? Communicate to others with that in mind. What will make them stop what they are doing and pay attention to you?

Understand that your customer is oblivious to you and overwhelmed with content. To cut through the clutter you must entertain. My friend, Gary Vaynerchuk, says in his book, Jab Jab Jab Right Hook, "if you are going to interrupt people's entertainment, you better be entertaining."

You must get sold and have total belief in your business. Think of it as your ethical duty to tell as many people as possible about what you do so you can help them.

Most entrepreneurs struggle with getting attention because they are afraid of how they may be perceived by others. The marketplace doesn't reward those who play it safe and coast under the radar.

Get attention for who you are, what you know and what your business has to offer. Someone who isn't afraid to get attention will push past you and leave you in the dust. Get known, your business' survival depends on it.

Related: Reaching Customers and Boosting Sales: The Anatomy of Content Marketing (Infographic)

Grant Cardone

International Sales Expert & $1.78B Real Estate Fund Manager

Grant Cardone is an internationally-renowned speaker on sales, leadership, real-estate investing, entrepreneurship and finance whose five privately held companies have annual revenues exceeding $300 million.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

James Clear Explains Why the 'Two Minute Rule' Is the Key to Long-Term Habit Building

The hardest step is usually the first one, he says. So make it short.

Business News

Microsoft's New AI Can Make Photographs Sing and Talk — and It Already Has the Mona Lisa Lip-Syncing

The VASA-1 AI model was not trained on the Mona Lisa but could animate it anyway.

Living

Get Your Business a One-Year Sam's Club Membership for Just $14

Shop for office essentials, lunch for the team, appliances, electronics, and more.

Side Hustle

He Took His Side Hustle Full-Time After Being Laid Off From Meta in 2023 — Now He Earns About $200,000 a Year: 'Sweet, Sweet Irony'

When Scott Goodfriend moved from Los Angeles to New York City, he became "obsessed" with the city's culinary offerings — and saw a business opportunity.