Entries Tagged 'marketing' ↓
June 24th, 2011 — facebook, marketing, social media, social media marketing
More and more businesses are arriving on Facebook everyday.
They set up their page and sit back and wait for hoards of people to drop by and ‘Like’ them. As they watch their numbers increase (hopefully) they start to feel pretty pleased with themselves.
But there’s a problem. All the ‘Likes’ are from employees, friends and family. What happens when those sources run dry? Where do you get your new ‘Likers’ from?
Facebook marketing – ‘Likes’ aren’t enough
Although the ‘Like’ button is there for people to show they use/enjoy your brand (and it probably makes you feel all warm and fuzzy), its buying customers you want to attract.
Having a Facebook business page takes a bit of effort – just like all your other marketing streams. If you want people to ‘Like’ you, hang around and bring along their friends, you’re going to have to do some work.
1. Newsy
Just like your newsletters and marketing materials, the content on your Facebook page has to be kept up dated.
So whenever you publish a new blog, have an event to promote or a new product/service to shout about, post it on your Facebook page.
Your fans want to be the first to know what’s happening so don’t disappoint them.
2. Be real
Even though your Facebook page is for your company, your fans want to engage with a real person. Don’t hide behind your brand. Stand up and voice your opinion and speak on behalf of your brand.
3. Talk don’t shout
The wall of your Facebook page isn’t just there for you to shout from. You want to encourage two way conversations with your customers so make sure you listen to them and reply to their comments (good and bad).
4. Chat
Closely aligned to number 3, encourage your fans to contribute to your page. Ask for their opinions, stories – even run competitions to boost engagement.
You want to cultivate a sense of community so make them feel welcome, listen to what they have to say and talk to them.
5. Tell them what to do
As I mentioned earlier, ‘Likes’ are all well and good but you’ll also want to encourage your fans to buy from you. Therefore it’s vital to have a call to action on your Facebook page.
You could ask them to sign up to your newsletter or for a report. Perhaps you could write a short piece about one of your products/services and insert a link to take them to the relevant page on your website.
Whatever you do, make sure you interact with them, build trust and then help them spend money with you.
6. Have a plan
It’s very easy to think you must get a Facebook page (because everyone else has got one) and just dive in without thinking.
That’s a recipe for disaster. Before you begin make sure you have a plan in place. Understand how you’re going to use the page, how and when you’ll update it and draw up a policy on how to interact with your fans.
Facebook is a great way to interact and build trust. You can use it as a forum to provide information or even as a customer service tool to help your customers get in touch with you.
But before you start make sure you have a plan so you understand what you’re doing and why.
Do you use Facebook in your business? If so why not leave a comment and tell us how you’re using it and your experiences.
June 15th, 2011 — facebook, marketing, online marketing, social media, social media marketing, social networking, twitter
Does that sound familiar?
Come on, be honest, I bet at some point you’ve muttered those 4 words.
You’re not alone; it is the most frequently proffered excuse for someone not to do social media (closely followed by “I don’t understand all that stuff”).
Blogging, Facebook and Twitter (amongst others) can and will do wonders for your online marketing. They are the tools to use to build your credibility, offer advice, become an expert in your field and get to know other business owners and your customers.
Most people understand they need to do it but, at the same time, they say they don’t have the time.
Marketing time
If you have avoided social media marketing let me ask you a few questions:
- Do you go out networking?
- Do you spend time writing and submitting small adverts?
- Do you do call/warm calling?
- Do you send out mailings to attract business?
I’m sure you do at least one of those activities regularly. So if you can build those into your working day, why can’t you slot in some social media time?
At the end of the day social media is just another tool in your marketing armoury. But it is a tool that can carry your voice a lot further than an advert or phone call. Blogging, Facebook and Twitter help you reach your audience directly. You can start conversations with them and interact with them.
One thing a week
Get yourself started by doing one task per week.
It could be writing and scheduling a few blog posts, write an article, submit your website to an online directory, post to Facebook or getting to grips with Twitter.
By breaking down your marketing into manageable chunks, you’ll find it easier to cope.
Before you know it, you won’t have to pay a small fortune for a tiny little ad that’s surrounded by your competitors in a magazine with only a small circulation. You won’t have to make those cold calls anymore and you can say good bye to those tedious and unfruitful mailings.
You will only get something out of social media if you’re prepared to put something in – your time. We’re not talking hours – just a few minutes a day will make a difference.
Come on, make your time work harder for you and get cracking on your social media marketing strategy.
If you’re already ‘working it’ leave a comment and share your experiences with us. Tell us what worked for you and what didn’t. Have you had any successes? If so tell us.
Plus, stop by and say hi on Twitter and Facebook.
June 10th, 2011 — copywriting tips, marketing, Press releases
As a business owner I’m guessing you spend a fair amount of your marketing budget on your online marketing (and off line).
You have website copy to keep up to date, email marketing to do, blogs and articles to write not to mention the brochure you need to revamp.
All of that takes money but there is something out there that can generate a shed load of free publicity.
Don’t forget your PR
Most marketers have lost faith in print marketing and advertising. But you shouldn’t ignore the power of great press coverage.
Whether it’s in the form of an interview, quote, feature or editorial, being seen in the ‘right’ magazines and papers can pay dividends.
And here’s why…
1. Cheap
Getting a press release professionally written is an awful lot cheaper than paying for advertising space. Once it’s submitted and accepted you could end up with a page in a magazine or on a blog/website that’s all about you – pretty powerful stuff.
2. Credible
The public are fairly sceptical about marketing and can be resistant to anything that is obviously trying to sell to them. But good press coverage (such as a success story about your company or customer case study) is far more believable.
3. Connect
Adverts are impersonal. A good news story will personalise your company in your readers’ eyes and so make a connection with them.
4. SEO
Submitting press releases to online sites and blogs will help generate back links to your website and help your SEO.
5. Recycle
You can get a lot of mileage out of a press release. The content can be reused and turned into blogs and articles. It could be picked up by other publications and lead to other features and articles. The possibilities are endless.
So whatever you do, don’t forget to make sure your marketing strategy includes PR.
Have you had any PR successes you can share with us? If so leave a comment and let us know what happened and how it helped your business.
June 1st, 2011 — copywriter, copywriting, copywriting tips, marketing, social media, website copywriter, website copywriting, website design
As a business owner you want and need customers.
Ideally those customers will be of the happy variety that come back time and time again and bring all their friends along too.
But how do you make sure your website and customer service can generate that level of customer satisfaction?
When shopping online, people want speed, simplicity and a warm and fuzzy feeling once they’ve completed their purchase.
Other than tracking them all down and giving them a hug, how can you achieve this through your website?
Here are a few ideas.
Speeding it up
Your customers want to reach your site, find their product, and add it to their shopping basket and pay. So making that process as slick and fast as possible is essential.
Let’s start at the beginning.
1. Loading your site
Your website must load as quickly as possible because your customers aren’t going to hang around waiting for you. By reviewing all the images on your site and compressing them you’ll shorten the load time.
2. Payment
Jumping to the final stage of the buying process, you’ll need to offer a range of payment choices. Paypal is a must as it’s fast, safe and very convenient.
Simplicity
A mistake made by many companies is that their website is full of images, graphics, text and adverts making it impossible for the reader to navigate because there’s so much going on they don’t know which way to turn.
Keeping your site simple eases navigation and understanding.
3. Review your text
How readable is your text? By slightly increasing your font size you’ll make your site more readable.
4. White space
There’s nothing worse than a website that contains masses of solid text. You might think it conveys to the reader everything they need to know but that’s rather counterproductive because they won’t read it.
If you want someone to look at your site, its content has to be attractive. You can achieve this by:
- Shortening your paragraphs (5 lines or less)
- Add bulleted lists to highlight benefits
- Use sub headings
- Use images
But make sure you mix all these elements up to add variety and interest to your page.
Warm and fuzzy
This is probably the hardest one to achieve. How do you give them that warm and fuzzy feeling?
5. Social media
I’m assuming you’re using social media within your marketing strategy (if not why not?) so make sure you monitor your Twitter stream and Facebook page so when customers ask questions about your products you respond to them quickly.
The other site of this is you’ll also be aware of compliments that come through your social media accounts (because you’ll be monitoring them) so make sure you say thank you.
There’s also a possibility that you’ll also get the off negative comment but because you’re monitoring your social media accounts you’ll be able to instantly make contact with the customer and put the situation right.
6. Get personal and obvious
Many companies get so wrapped up in looking professional they end up projecting a cold and impersonal image.
Customers want to buy from someone they like so by creating a website that shows your personality rather than a stale corporate image will get you noticed.
Being obvious doesn’t mean plastering your website with “buy now” in big red letters. Obvious means making your navigation simple to use so anyone can find their way to the page they want. There’s nothing worse than finding a website that sells the product you want but being unable to fathom out how to buy it.
7. Be chatty
When creating the copy on your website please don’t ‘we’ all over it.
Now sure what I mean? Well it’s quite simple. Take a look at your website and count how many times the word ‘we’ appears. In an ideal world there won’t be any.
Your customer couldn’t give two hoots about you; they want to know what you are going to do for them. So review your content and change the focus. If you’re not sure how to do that, find a professional copywriter who can do it for you. You’d be amazed at the difference it will make. You will instantly become:
- Approachable
- Customer-orientated
- Trustworthy
So there you go, 7 simple but effective ways you can change your website’s effectiveness overnight.
Try them out and come back and tell us how you got on. Do you have any other ideas? If so leave a comment below.
May 25th, 2011 — copywriting tips, email copywriting, email marketing, marketing, proofreading
We all like to think we’re perfect – but at the end of the day we’re only human which means things go wrong now and then.
Everyone at one time or another has made a mistake.
After spending hours on your latest marketing email, you hit send only to notice at the last minute a blaring typo, you’ve sent it to the wrong list, or you got the offer details wrong.
I can see you’re nodding. But don’t feel bad because you’re not alone – everyone’s been there at some point but its how you deal with it that matters.
How to deal with mistakes
When things go wrong people tend to fall into one of three camps. They either:
- Hide and hope no one notices
- Realise their mistake, correct it and hastily send out the email again to the same list without an apology or explanation
- Hold their hands up to their mistake, apologise and make it up to their customers
Which are you?
By being the honest guy in the third scenario, you’ll gain more respect and happy customers. You’ll probably still get a rap over the knuckles by the boss but at least you owned up and put things right.
Often it’s how companies deal with their mistakes that wins or loses them customers. A company that refuses to acknowledge their short comings will lose customers in spades. But one that admits it’s not always perfect and does get things wrong and is willing to go that extra mile to put it right will retain customers.
How to avoid mistakes
In an ideal world mistakes wouldn’t happen.
Whilst being human tends to mean things will go wrong now and then there are a few simple techniques you can follow to try and keep these cock-ups to a minimum.
1. Validation list
Before you send your email to your customer list, set up a validation list comprising of colleagues or friends (if you’re a one-man/woman band) who will proofread and test out your links for you. This should help flag up any errors before its broadcast.
2. Preview
If you have the ability to preview how your email will look in different browser windows, it will help you ensure your email looks good and that the layout isn’t compromised.
3. Slow down
Don’t leave it to the last minute.
Plan your email marketing carefully to make sure you have plenty of time to compose it and check it before sending it. Writing in haste is asking for trouble.
Email marketing is a very powerful tool when used properly. Whether you create your own content or use a professional copywriter to create it for you, always make sure you check and double check the text, offers and links before sending.