Case studies

You know from your customer feedback and repeat business that you are doing a great job. And yet you struggle to get your clients to commit their praise in writing. Or, when you do, their case study is very complimentary about how great it is to work with you, yet it doesn’t quite say anything meaningful…

Case studies with impact 

It’s really very simple:

  • Purpose: we decide the ‘theme’ – i.e. the unique selling point (your style of working) or the type of service you want to focus on
  • Investigate: we research your client to learn more about their business and their unique challenges
  • Capture: by posing relevant questions we’re able to capture intelligence fully focused on impact and customer ROI
  • Promote: raising the profile of both you and your client

For more advice on case studies, read our blog How to create case studies with impact.

 

Two people discussing case studies

Request a call back from Yellow Bird

GDPR Opt-in

12 + 3 =

Services

Improving your marketing & communications

Articles & Web Content

Case Studies

Events

Ghostwriting

Newsletters

PR

Promotional Copy

Proposals

Strategy

Training

Blog

More from the Yellow Bird’s blog

 

How to create case studies with impact

How to create case studies with impact

How do you create case studies with maximum impact? Yellow Bird’s blog outlines the best approach to: get client buy-in; avoid duplication; create focus; and show impact. The result? A case study that is meaningful and demonstrates to potential customers how working with you achieves results.

read more
Choosing the right funding opportunity for your project

Choosing the right funding opportunity for your project

Confident you have a well-honed project idea and that your organisation is ‘funding ready’? (See also Yellow Bird’s earlier article Looking for funding: it all starts with your project idea.) You can now start the process of identifying the right support.  There are...

read more
8 principles to transform your writing

8 principles to transform your writing

"I notice that you use plain, simple language, short words and brief sentences. That is the way to write English―it is the modern way and the best way. Stick to it; don't let fluff and flowers and verbosity creep in.” Wise words indeed from Mark Twain but when time is...

read more

Pin It on Pinterest