There's a great deal of talk these days about authentic. You might think that by its very nature marketing isn't authentic, but in the digital age where people are increasingly savvy, being authentic means being transparent. In business, being authentic means that you are upfront with your customers, offering what you say you offer; it costs what you say it costs. In business, you also want to capture and grow an authentic audience. BlackEnterprise.com tapped by members of Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC), an invite-only organization comprised of the world's most promising young entrepreneurs. In partnership with Citi, YEC recently launched BusinessCollective, a free virtual mentorship program that helps millions of entrepreneurs start and grow businesses. BE asked YEC  for one tip to help small business owners  grow an authentic audience? The following are their answers: [Related: 5 Marketing Ideas for the Budget-Friendly Small Business] 1. Be Authentic With Your Community Your audience is a community of extended relationships. So the classic relationship advice still holds: Be yourself. Communicate as a person with personal experiences, goals and personality. Relate to this audience as with your own friends. Express connection with them; be it through humor, support, sharing stories, solving problems, cheerleading and, most importantly, asking questions. — Alan Carniol, Interview Success Formula 2. Build Relationships on Their Turf Start with who the audience is, where they hang out, and what they lack first before you think about what you want and where you want people to go. Then create content specifically for the places where that audience exists. Figure out how to get them to your website after you build a relationship on the audience's turf. — Shane Snow, Contently 3. Show Appreciation to Your Followers Growing an authentic audience begins with a single follower and builds one person at a time. The challenge comes when flaky or disrespectful followers make criticisms or demands of you and your brand that aren't in line with your values. Will you allow them to shape your content and company, cause you to give up, or change the way you present yourself to the world? Or will you stick to your guns? — Joshua Dorkin, BiggerPockets 4. Don't Buy Traffic Having an internal goal of only  growing through organic function serves as a forcing function for authenticity. You can create video content, post on social media, and write great content on your site -- but you cannot fool yourself into growth if you don't have a marketing budget. You'll see that the more real you are with your audience, the more you'll grow. — Aaron Schwartz, Modify Merch (Continued on next page) 5. Don't Offer Discount and Freebies As a small business, do not offer discounts and freebies to win an audience. A great audience will come for quality, custom solutions and customer service, not for discounts. Customers walking in for freebies are not organic and may not stay for long. As a small business, charge the right price but provide more value. Word-of-mouth will bring you organic customers and profitability. — Piyush Jain, SIMpalm 6. Focus on Your Craft An authentic audience is one that cares about what you're doing and how it's done. My business involves a craft, so most of our authentic audience is people who are interested in the quality and style of our work. Strategy-wise, attracting them means a lot of detailed pictures, outreach that respects their experience and intelligence, and technical details they'll appreciate. — Matt Doyle, Excel Builders 7. Walk the Walk If you want to grow an authentic audience, then be authentic. Building a CEO brand for yourself by sharing your candid insights allows people to get to know you better and connect with you at a deeper level. Many entrepreneurs say they want an authentic audience but are unwilling to be transparent and candid. The input you put out will determine the output you receive. — Raoul Davis, Ascendant Group 8. Focus on Consistency My audience grew exponentially after I committed to consistent weekly content and followed through by delivering weekly value. The people who subscribe to 'She Takes on the World' know when they will hear from me, and what they can look forward to. Consistency builds trust and loyalty, and it shows you really care. — Natalie MacNeil, She Takes on the World 9. Inject Yourself Into Your Messaging Few owners can project themselves through their craft. Designers, illustrators and other content-creators are lucky. Their creative works represent who they are. If you're not in a creative industry, however, you're going to have difficulty developing your business's personality. Injecting yourself into your messaging can give your company a genuine voice, and with that comes a genuine following. — Blair Thomas, EMerchantBroker 10. Tell Your Story Your customers are interested in connecting with you and your business, as well as your products. Tell your story about how you got started, where you've failed, what your brand stands for, and where you are headed. People are looking to be a part of something greater than themselves. And in today's culture, an entrepreneur building a company is a sexy thing your customer will want to support. — Faraz Khan, Go Direct Lead Generation 11. Find and Share Your Voice Business owners will find no shortage of advice about how to build an audience online, but an authentic audience requires an authentic and personal voice. Of course you write for your audience, but unless you write and share content with an authentic personality, the audience won't be interested. Don't be afraid to be unique and individual, and to foreground your passions and personality. — Vik Patel, Future Hosting 12. Stay True to Yourself Authenticity starts with you. Many people will tell you that if you're going to start a business, make sure it's something you're passionate about, as this will permeate through your messaging, your branding, and eventually touch your customers. It's a very important end goal. If you want your consumers to feel as passionate, it starts with you. — Mark Samuel, Fitmark 13. Use Video You can't fake it on video. You can hire an editor and production crew, but people can tell what your vibe is right away. This is the fastest way to create an evangelical tribe because it's the closest way to connect outside of in-person meetings. In fact, often the simple webcam videos to YouTube work best for this kind of branding. — Carter Thomas, Bluecloud Solutions https://blackenterprise.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=499473&action=edit&message=1