Archive for the ‘ Marketing Thoughts ’ Category

Blogs, Vlogs and Podcasts – Oh My!

Thursday, March 4th, 2010
Not sure were to go?

I have been going to a few “live networking” meetings lately and I have discovered something – many business folks still have no idea what a blog, vlog or podcast is – can you believe that? They are much like the deer in the picture – stuck with no where to go.

Because I am so caught up in this online world it has become second nature to me – I made the fatal mistake of assuming that everyone knew what they were and how to use them. Well, they don’t.

So over the next few posts I am going to talk basic’s about how you might join in on the fun.

Read, learn, enjoy. Here is what we will be covering…

  1. Introduction
  2. What are they?
  3. How are they used?
  4. Should you use them?
  5. What you need to know before you start
  6. How to promote

Six Tested Rules for Communication: Online or Offline

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Carol Burnett once said, “Words, once they are printed, have a life of their own.” Nowhere is that more true than in writing a marketing piece. A marketing piece not only has to engage the reader, it must propel them into action. It sounds like a difficult task, but if you follow six simple rules, you’ll be on your way to creating a killer marketing piece.

  1. Headline Is Everything
    Imagine, while standing in line at your local movie theater, you see a film poster with this tag line, “Movie created by Universal Studios has many special effects.” If you saw this poster, would you even bother finding out more about the film, let alone actually seeing it?

    However, if you saw this same poster with the tagline, “17 year old Marty McFly got home early last night. 30 years early.” your interest would be piqued and you’d probably find yourself attempting to find out more about the film and eventually seeing it.

    Your headline is no different. First impressions are the key and your headline is your first impression. Make it snappy, compelling, and interesting. Grab the reader with your headline and your foot is in the door.

  2. Focus on Your Target Market
    In order to know how to market, you must understand to whom you are marketing. If your target market is the dog grooming industry, you cannot suddenly take a left turn in the middle of your piece and begin chatting about how your product or service will help those in the medical field.

    Remember who your audience is and address their needs and concerns specifically.

  3. Make an Emotional Connection; Keep Them Interested
    Now that you’ve got their attention, you have to keep it. The thing you need to remember when writing is that you’re not writing about or for yourself.

    You’re writing for your audience. Microsoft is famous for saying, “Your Potential, Our Passion.” In order to grip your reader and make a true connection with them, you have to understand their basic needs and desires.

    The most common mistake marketers make when writing a marketing piece is thinking about their product, their needs and themselves. After all, shouldn’t a marketing piece showcase your product and you? You are marketing your service with the piece, right? So, why shouldn’t the piece be all about you?

    As you begin along this train of thought, remember back to the last time your most distant family member sent you a letter detailing their present day life. You may recall how they went on about your seventh cousin’s new baby or how that twelfth cousin by marriage, whom you’ve never heard of, just got a promotion. You may also recall how you could have cared less.

    When you send your clients, potential or existing, the equivalent of your distant family member’s letter detailing the boring details of your company, you’ve already lost the battle.  Instead of telling your audience how your company is number one and how fantastic you are, use your marketing piece to answer the burning question that is on their mind…

  4. Answer the Question, “What’s In It For Me?”
    How can you help this person who is reading your piece? Can you make their life easier? Save them time and money? Can you help them expand their business or better automate their services? What’s keeping your clients and potential clients up at night?

    Once you answer these questions yourself, you will be better able to answer their questions and your marketing piece will more likely avoid their trash bin.

  5. Fully Explain the Benefits of What You Have to Offer
    Now that you’ve answered the questions in tip number five, it’s time to explain how you can make their life easier by explaining the benefits of your offering. Make it easy for them to understand.

    Don’t make your potential or existing clients think. Do the thinking for them. Avoid using long sentences and paragraphs as you lay out the benefits. Break up your paragraphs. Use bullets and lists where appropriate. Do everything you can to keep your reader from giving up and moving on.

  6. Call To Action
    Once you’ve established a connection with your target and have explained the benefits of your offering, it’s time to call them to action. Fully explain the next step they should take in accepting your offer. If you fail to suggest a next step, your target will do nothing.

    Make sure to determine what action you desire from your marketing piece and fully instruct your reader on how to do so. Again, don’t make your target think. Do the thinking for them and spell out how to take action. Make doing so easy enough that it requires little to no thought on their part.

    Words are the most powerful weapon we have as inhabitants of the earth and when you’re marketing, they’re THE weapon. With a well-written marketing piece, you can grow your business by earning new clients and keeping existing ones.

Modern Marketing Companies: Strictly SEO vs. Comprehensive Services

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Though it would have been considered a moot point even just a little over a decade ago, today it’s a burning question whether to go for a strictly SEO company or hire a more comprehensive marketing firm’s services.  Plenty a CEO must find him/herself in the hot seat when this topic comes up, and due to a lot of speculative rumors that float about regarding the “best marketing practices” today, it can be hard to acquire the right knowledge to make the wiser choice.

Ultimately, there are cases where the former will be the best option, and other cases where it will be the latter option: it all comes down to the particular circumstances of the company at hand.

For example, a company that has a solid and long-standing in-house marketing staff—with more than sufficient resources to make convincing press releases, handle customers’ queries, and so forth—will probably choose to hire an exclusively SEO company.  That’s because they probably don’t have the in-house expertise to launch and manage an effective search engine optimization campaign, but have got pretty much every other aspect of marketing down to a T.

Surely a company that neither has a good marketing staff (in the traditional sense) nor any qualified SEO staff will be inclined to go the route of the full-service marketing firm.  Such a company has nothing to lose and everything to gain from following this path.

Some companies simply have no need for many traditional marketing techniques, and prefer to practically exclusively focus on online marketing initiatives.  This is the case for specific companies with even more specific target audiences: for example, a company specializing in hi-tech gadgetry aimed at computer experts is likely to get their message across more than effectively enough with e-advertising, as the intended customers are highly connected by default.  To reiterate, only companies in a very few niches can afford to make this call, and only if they are ready to pour lots of effort into the SEO side of things.

For most run of the mill companies, there really is no substitute for a comprehensive marketing firm that can tackle all their needs and produce one consolidated bill.  The more impressive such specimens can house an incredibly diverse set of skills under one roof, and that is a major asset for any company in need of marketing assistance.  Such firms will not only be able to tackle your SEO work, but they will tackle the copywriting work that complements and fills out said work.  Furthermore, as most companies cannot afford to abandon traditional avenues of marketing, such firms can help in the drafting of press releases and reaching strategic decisions on message content.

Furthermore, these kinds of broad, inclusive marketing firms can help you land new online revenue opportunities such as pay per click advertisements.  The money garnered from these channels, though on a minor scale at least to begin with, can end up subsidizing a good portion of online marketing initiatives in the future, and is one thing that you won’t find any exclusively-SEO company offering to do for you.