9 new marketing tools you need

Posted by editor on November 29, 2009 with 0 Comments

Early this month, Doug Schumacher, writer for iMedia wrote a great article on 9 new marketing tools that you need. Here is the short list of the marketing tools discussed in the article.

9 New Marketing Tools

Filed Under: Tools

Women’s Peace Collection Launches Exclusive Gifts of Peace from Around the World

Posted by editor on November 25, 2009 with 0 Comments

Client Press Release – Women’s Peace Collection

header-img1

We are pleased to report a new press release titled, Women’s Peace Collection Launches Exclusive Gifts of Peace from Around the World, is now available online at:

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/11/prweb3250484.htm

Filed Under: Press Release

Client Featured in ForbesWoman

Posted by editor on November 24, 2009 with 0 Comments

ForbesWoman-170X92

One of our clients – Women’s Peace Collection – was recently featured in the ForbesWoman Gift Guide. Amber Chand, Founder of the Women’s Peace Collection relies on an internet marketing strategy that includes, email campaigns, social media and word of mouth. The resulting mention on Forbes.com is a result of Women’s Peace Collection being well positioned in the blog directories and RSS directories and throughout various social media networks. The item featured in the Forbes Gift Guide is a hand carved salad server and apron set (see below). Response has been so good the item is on back order (I guess a good problem to have…).

Artisan Cooperatives
A hand-carved salad server and apron set supports a unique cross-border initiative supporting families in both Rwanda and Kenya. From the Rwandan Virunga Artisan Cooperative, a community of refugees who’ve devoted their livelihood to gorilla conservation programs, comes the salad servers (embellished with the group’s gorilla insignia). The block-printed apron is the work of the Bombolu Workshop in Kenya, where adults disabled by the recent violence in Kenya are helping support their local economy through handicrafts. This gift, sure to be appreciated by mothers and cooks of every age, supports the two efforts and the strides they’ve made by working together. $38; womenspeacecollection.com.

Does your blog or website need better visibility? Contact Us – We Can Help!

Filed Under: Featured Clients

Client Overload

Posted by editor on November 19, 2009 with 0 Comments

Michael Lazerow of iMedia offers up some good advice for agencies and technology vendors as they welcome new clients.

Article Highlights:

  • Ask a client for a list of likes and dislikes so you can learn its aesthetic quickly
  • Eliminate unnecessary internal meetings, but never client meetings
  • Launch projects with the basics first, then add additional features, if you even need to

Read the full story: 4 Ways to Deal with Client Overload

Filed Under: Best Practices

SEO Wars: Facebook vs. Google

Posted by editor on August 29, 2009 with 0 Comments

Great post on searchengineland.com yesterday … 10 SEO Tips for Maximizing Facebook Visibility by Marty Weintraub. I’ll be honest – I haven’t gotten to the tips yet. I’m still mesmerized by Marty’s excellent forward-looking analysis of how Facebook is going to be a true competitor to Google for SEO attention (and ultimately ad dollars) on a go forward basis.

Check this single excerpt from the post out and you’ll see why I say the article is worth the read: “According to its publicly released statistics, Facebook claims 120 million of its registered members log in at least once each day. Every month friends share 1 billion photographs and 10 million videos. In any given week users post over a billion content blocks, news stories, links and blog posts. There are over 45 million active user groups. Little-to-none of Facebook’s is activity is indexed by Google and other mainstream engines. It’s easy to see why Facebook’s members-only organic search results deserve attention!”

Every one of those >1 billion posts per week is search-able by Facebook only. Every opportunity where someone says to a friend or network of friends, “Gee, just had dinner at the Water Street Grill, boy is their food yummy!” or “Just came back from a cruise on Norwegian … what a great time we had!” It is an automated referral network on a global scale. The secret will be figuring out how to reward the referrers so they do it more often.

Filed Under: SEO

Create once, use many

Posted by editor on August 28, 2009 with 0 Comments

Anytime you are creating content in any form, you need to ask yourself, “How many different places will this be used?”

When you are writing copy for your website, you are “keyword conscious”, right? Well, if the press release you are writing is going to be distributed electronically, shouldn’t you be keyword conscious there, too? Ditto for blog postings, Tweet’s, etc. Even emails. If a potential client is searching his email database and he doesn’t remember your name, if he searches for , , or in his saved emails, are you going to turn up?

I can remember a situation where a staffer in the marketing department at a client of mine bought some stock photos to put up on their corporate website. Some of the pix were gorgeous. The company’s owner fell in love with three of the shots and wanted to use them in fairly large format print campaign. The staffer had purchased low-res images only for the website, so they had to go back and purchase the high-res versions. Was it a ton of money? No, but it was a waste of time … the pix needed to be color corrected again, etc. Edit a picture once. Save it in as high-res, easily editable format as you can. Tweak the size and resolution and use it over and over with “Save For Web & Devices” or similar “export” functions. (Note: Be sure not to violate any copyright laws or use licenses for images you don’t own.)

When we talk to potential clients about website design, we talk to them about content creation and management solutions, and when we say, “content management” we don’t just mean a CMS system or WordPress back-end … we’re talking to them about outsourced content creation and re-purposing on an ongoing basis. Writing blogs and Tweets. Publishing newsletters. Making press releases. Creating email marketing content. Creating videos. Writing white papers (with customer’s input and assistance). Tweaking RSS feeds to improve relevance and quality. Manually creating prominent links to articles/news items of substantial relevance and import. This is integrated with a social media effort – tagging, following, recommending, etc. Creating fresh polls and putting them up each period. Small to mid-sized businesses typically don’t have the marketing resources required to pull this off. If they have someone who is going to be their “webmaster” he or she is typically wearing 10 other hats and is as likely to be a “techie” as a marketer.

After all, building an online marketing presence isn’t just about putting up your site. Certainly, the day your site launches or the day you add new capabilities are mileposts. But, they are mileposts that are quite near the start of the race … and the race has no finish line. Making sure you aren’t wasting time having to create multiple versions of the same content means you will more time to re-purpose content, to cast your net as broadly as possible.

Filed Under: Marketing

Do instincts and marketing mix anymore?

Posted by editor on August 25, 2009 with 0 Comments

The line between art and science frequently blurs. I can explain the science of the curve ball to you, but I can’t throw it with the artistry of a Jon Lester or Tim Lincecum. There is art in the instinctive application of the science.

Modern marketing is no different. You artfully design several different offerings for a product or service and then you scientifically decide which one works best. Maybe as a group your collective instincts can help you eliminate 2 of the 5 offerings and focus your ads on the remaining three, picking only the best for the major advertising campaign based upon actual results and not upon which offering was your favorite.

In helps the validity of your testing if the underlying process is without bias or deviation. If not, the bias or deviation needs to be considered/accounted for somehow. For instance, if your best call center staff works Monday-Friday from 8A-4P, then you better make sure that all of the different ads run during that time frame. You don’t want to pick the ad that converts the best because it was worked only by the best salespeople. Or, if your salespeople HATE internet leads but love phone leads, it is tough to compare the success of internet campaigns with a TV campaign or a newspaper campaign that results in phone calls and not web leads. (We’ll cover the difference between web leads and phone leads in a future blog.)

The bottom line is this: trust your instincts, but trust your data more.

Filed Under: Marketing

While waiting for the barber

Posted by editor on August 24, 2009 with 0 Comments

I was sitting waiting in St. Pierre’s Barber Shop on Spring Street in Williamstown waiting to have my heretofore magnificent mane reduced substantially. Now that my band’s big gig is past, the whole, “I’m a musician, I need long hair,” is lost on my wife. BTW, she laughed at me when I got home from the barber yesterday. Laughed. Out loud. She even pointed. She said my mom will be pleased. Lovely.

Anyhow, there I sat reading ESPN: The Magazine and Sports Illustrated which I never do anymore. I have zero zip zilch nada magazine subscriptions at home and at work. The internet, television, and radio are my information sources in that order. We haven’t gotten a daily newspaper at home since we moved away from Minnesota in 1999. Just don’t need it anymore. 24 hour news on TV, instant access on the web … and there is literally a laptop with wireless at arm’s reach at home ALL OF THE TIME. How did we ever live without this stuff? As I sat there, I was struck by how effectively I could avoid the advertising as I read the magazine. I’m guessing most of us have conditioned ourselves to do the same. The only ad that I saw was the ad for the DVD of the photoshoot from SI’s annual Swimsuit Issue – for obvious reasons. Since when did paint applied directly to the skin constitute a swimsuit?

Let’s see here … fewer and fewer people are buying print media and those who do have become experts at filtering out the ads. So, why are people still buying magazine and newspaper advertising? Good question.

If you still are, it better be because you have measured its effectiveness and have determined that it is creating prospects, leads, and sales in a cost-effective manner. If not, you need to start measuring today.

Filed Under: Marketing

Musings on the chicken or the egg …

Posted by editor on August 23, 2009 with 0 Comments

Sitting here on a Sunday at 6:50AM working away on getting this business started. I’ve got Nate James cranking away on the PC with the subwoofer. Caffeine is bad for you. Disco is so much better. Maybe even get up and dance for a minute here … nah.

As I’m trolling around the internet, I’m struck by how many people there are who claim to know how to do that thing we do when we do what we do … competition will be stiff. How to differentiate?

Like most start-up businesses, I need to hoard my working capital. That means I can’t simply buy my way into prominence with a Google PPC campaign (tempting though that may be).

What to do? Well, the way to get a business like this off the ground is to focus on networking and using personal relationships, barter, etc. to get your initial stable of clients. Provide amazing customer service and value for their dollar. Under promise and over deliver. Make it happen. Turn them into testimonials … no, too weak of a word … turn them into veritable evangelists for the power of your knowledge, capabilities, and integrity.

Use the experience gained and the insights learned to razor-hone your presentation … what makes business owners tick? What to say? And (maybe more importantly), what not to say? Also, what are our true strengths and weaknesses. Frank assessments matter here. You need to be candid with yourself. I love doing web design, but if I can find someone who does it better and cheaper than I do, then I need to be out drumming up and delivering rock solid billable hours in our consulting business not sitting here trying to solve another JavaScript mystery at 330AM. Yawn – more FUNK!

So, if I know that I have to go the word-of-mouth route to be successful in the early stages, why am I expending the energy to build a kick-ass website and underlying marketing automation for our business? Because, if my own site and its foundation in a well thought out sales cycle doesn’t reflect the POWER OF THE PROCESS that I am preaching to our customers, then why should I expect my potential customers to listen to me? Right? Isn’t this obvious?

I think my enthusiasm will help. I am flat-out excited to deliver the combination of the technical majesty that is the web/crm/email in all its wonder along with the beauty of well designed graphics and well written copy. It is simply created, instantly delivered, and capable to be PERFORMANCE TESTED like never before. The fact is the web and all of its accompanying tools (email, texting, Twitter, blogs, Google analytics, cookies, etc.) give business owners, executives, and marketing professionals an opportunity like never before to understand where there customers are in their buying process. You don’t have to wait for them to pickup the phone. You don’t have to wait for them to walk into the store. You don’t have to wonder if any of them read the flier in the paper this weekend. You KNOW how much activity there is and where everyone is in the process. You KNOW how many people might respond to a coupon or special offer and you’re able to deliver that offer CHEAPLY via email or social media to a targeted list.

The hard work is up front … building the right process from, picking the right foundational tools, etc. That’s where we come in.

Maybe some Jamiroquai now …

Go get’em!

Filed Under: Marketing

Practice what we preach

Posted by editor on August 22, 2009 with 0 Comments

It is fascinating to work on starting this business up – trying to create a web site and a sales cycle for a business whose specialty is designing websites, designing sales cycles, etc. We need to nail this because it is kind of tough to be credible as an “expert” if your own efforts in the area are substandard, know what I mean?

The secret is to focus on the process first, the content second, and the “bells and whistles” last – the same as we would do for any client. At the front end, our basic process is to use SEO/SEM and social media marketing to generate traffic to our landing pages where we will offer free content (like white papers and short educational videos) to entice conversions (aka “prospects). We are then going to use auto-responders, html email templates, and additional interactivity like webinars to nurture prospects into qualified leads. At that point, the direct sales effort takes over and we start to interact with those qualified leads on a one-on-one basis.

After we run for a bit, we will be able to look at key performance metrics and then start to adjust our marketing appropriately. We’ll start to get a feel for how much traffic it takes to generate a prospect, how many prospects it takes to generate a qualified lead, and how many qualified leads it takes to generate a client. Understanding those factors will allow us to start adjusting our advertising budgets and to modify the offerings on our landing pages. We’ll test various approaches to see which work best.

That’s the beauty of implementing a process … it allows you to adjust individual variables to test and measure the results.

Filed Under: Marketing