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The Manifesto: Why Your Business Needs One and How to Write It

write your manifesto

The Prosperity’s Kitchen Manifesto

One of the exercises I always encourage my branding clients to do is to write a manifesto for their business.

And no, I don’t want you to write something creepy a la The Unibomber. This isn’t about blowing people up. (Just their minds.)

What I’m talking about here is clarity.

Clarity for you. Clarity for your potential customers.

And since we all know “Clarity is Power,” there’s no way this can’t be good for you.

If you look it up, the word “manifesto” has its roots in the Latin “manifestum,” which means clear or conspicuous. See?

A manifesto is simply a declaration of your beliefs, opinions, motives, and intentions.

Not so scary, right?

Start on the Inside

This one will take you a little bit of time (and it should). But spend a good chunk of time (at least an hour) away from computer with this question:

What do I care about most?

Think about how you run your business. How you run your life. What is it that you value above all else? What couldn’t you live without?

Write all that down.

It might just be words and phrases. Nothing fully formed just yet. That’s okay.

Let it sit there on the back burner for awhile and simmer. About two or three days should do just fine.

Get on Your Soapbox

Imagine for a moment that you had to give a speech to your family and friends about the state of the world, the state of business and what needs to change. What would you say?

Which of your values (those words and phrases you wrote down the first time) would you expand on?

How would you change the world?

Bring your passion here. We want folks to say, “Yes!” and be ready to join you on your “revolutionary” journey.

Take a stand, use active verbs — don’t be wishy-washy. Channel your inner Visionary Hero for this one.

Put Your Signature on It

an entrepreneur's manifesto be a chefYou’ve got a brand, right? Of course, you do. There’s a theme there somewhere. Bring it.

Take that theme and apply it to your manifesto. Edit and expand as necessary until the voice is totally and unmistakably yours.

That’s what I did with my own manifesto. I used the theme of cooking and used it as a filter for my core values.

And then? I expanded on it again and again via various blog posts.

Before I knew it, I had enough material for an entire book.

Let it Evolve

Look, nothing stays the same forever. If it does, it dies.

Your values grow deeper, richer and more meaningful with time. Embrace that.

Come back to your manifesto at least twice a year and make sure nothing’s missing.

There might be a nuance you need to expand on, or a phrase or two that needs tweaking.

Get Inspired to Inspire Others

If you feel like you’re just not there yet, that you don’t have anything to say, you might need to spend more time on the self-inventory part.

And if you’re just curious about how others have done it, I’ve pulled together a few high profile examples you might find helpful.

Frank Lloyd Wright’s 10-Point Manifesto

Everybody’s Free (To Wear Sunscreen)

The lululemon Manifesto

The Expert Enough Manifesto

The Holstee Manifesto

Naked Marketing Manifesto

And here are a few, lesser-known manifestos from some of my friends and colleagues:

Kim Doyal’s Manifesto

Choose Love Manifesto

Whee the People

Prosperity’s Kitchen Manifesto << newly minted!

Remember, whatever you write is for you and your brand.

AND it should read as if it could be adopted by anyone with like-minded ideas and passions.

Once you’ve written it, post it on your website. Create a video, slideshow or infographic. Share it.

It will help your philosophy spread and inspire others.

Have you already written your manifesto? Share a link in the comments below. Or, if you’ve got a favorite manifesto not listed here, share that instead.

Let’s change the world together!

About Tea (the Chef) Silvestre

As a marketing coach and consultant, Tea excels at helping her clients find and share their Secret Sauce with the world. She's also the founder of the ground breaking new reality web series, "Prosperity's Kitchen" and the author of "Attract and Feed a Hungry Crowd." Connect and chat with her on Twitter: @TeaSilvestre.

  • Michael Adams

    Good stuff. I’m in the process of writing mine. If I want to either give it away or sell it for $2 or $3 as an Amazon Single, is there an length that is right?

    • http://www.thewordchef.com/ Tea Silvestre, aka Word Chef

      I would keep it at around 50 pages.

  • http://www.facebook.com/frenchseams Angel Quintana

    love your advice (here and on the phone the other day). this is an excellent article. thanks!

    Angel Quintana
    Holistic Business Coach
    http://www.angelquintana.com

  • http://twitter.com/SkypeReadTutor Joanne Kaminski

    I love that you have included examples for us to take a look at. It was really powerful for me to read what you had to say about a manifesto, but it was a whole new experience to look at others examples. Great article. I am off to create my manifesto.

  • Ellen Kramer

    Hi Tea, I’m visiting from List A Palooza. I absolutely love this idea. I am going to start writing my manifesto right away. I think it will help a lot with clarity and bringing my message together.

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  • aidan

    I’m looking to create a manifesto for my new company and this article has helped me enormously. Thx for sharing your obvious expertise

    • http://www.thewordchef.com/ Tea Silvestre, aka Word Chef

      So glad you found it helpful, Aidan! When you get your manifesto finished, be sure to stop back by and leave a link so we can learn more about you!