The Best Marketing Advice You're Forgetting to Follow
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We've
asked a coterie of marketing experts to join Entrepreneur's Team
Digital to provide answers to your common questions about building an
online presence. Got a question? Ask it in our comment section below or
on Twitter using the hashtag #TeamDigital. Each week, we'll spotlight a different topic, and twice a month we'll host Google Hangouts
where Team Digital members will chat about best strategies for managing
an online reputation, marketing through social media and using mobile
techniques to attract customers.
In this week's column, our Team Digital answers: What's one marketing tip that even savvy businesses overlook?
Remember to listen. Proactive
listening is by far the most underused online marketing tactic. Too many
companies have lulled themselves into believing that social-media
monitoring is just waiting for someone to say something bad or ask a
customer-service question. But strong social listening involves
proactively listening for marketing and sales opportunities, stepping in
front of demand, not just following it. Search for people mentioning
the need for what you do, not just your brand name, and step in front of
consumers looking to purchase.
Jason Falls, CafePress
Jason Falls, CafePress
Build out your company story and team pages.
These days, consumers want to connect and support not just a product,
but the company and mission behind it. Too often companies throw
together "About Us" sections that are sterile and less than compelling.
Businesses need to spend time and resources putting up pictures that
reflect their team and culture, and shaping the "why" behind the company
for everyone to consume in a beautiful way.
Joanna Lord, BigDoor
Joanna Lord, BigDoor
Invest in phenomenal content. Brands
tend to put all their focus on the "top of the funnel" where brand
awareness happens—and the "bottom of the funnel" where people respond
directly to offers and promotions. You'll often see brands put a ton of
the effort into designing a beautiful homepage and optimizing
conversions, but then half-ass it when it comes to the content in
between. The thing is, the middle of the funnel is wheresellinghappens. Your content can inspire, inform, persuade and motivate—but only if it's good. Make it extraordinary.
Adam Kleinberg, Traction
Adam Kleinberg, Traction
Arrange for face time. Relationships
are more powerful offline.There are countless online marketing
strategies but business comes down to relationships and there's no
better way to strengthen a relationship by taking it offline as often as
possible. Use LinkedIn or Facebook to get a new connection? Great! Call
them, meet them in person and get to know them on a personal level. It
will do wonders for your business.
Lewis Howes, LewisHowes.com
Lewis Howes, LewisHowes.com
Measure your online marketing efforts.Too
many businesses spin their wheels with their social-media efforts and
have no idea whether what they're doing is impacting their revenue and
growing their business. Start by determining your objective and a
timeframe for which you want to achieve it. Next, what social platforms
could you use that align with your objective and target audience? Put
metrics in place that allow you to know whether you're getting closer to
your goal. Then, in what ways can you measure those metrics? It doesn't
have to be complicated, but always have a way to measure the success of
what you're doing.
Rick Mulready, RickMulready.com
Rick Mulready, RickMulready.com
Don't forget to be human! I think as
marketers we sometimes forget that (most) of our content is being read
by other other humans. If you want your message to stand out, ditch the
Franken-speak and talk to your audience the way that other humans speak.
Add some humor. Keep it light. Don't take yourself too seriously.
DJ Waldow, Founder & CEO of Waldow Social
DJ Waldow, Founder & CEO of Waldow Social
Guest blog as part of your content strategy.Online
marketing is about producing amazing content that benefits your target
audience. These days, most companies understand the importance of this,
but they fail to take their content strategy off their own website
domain. Guest blogging builds your brand awareness, authority and
credibility, driving high-quality traffic to your website that persists
over time (i.e., doesn't stop when you turn off the budget).
Furthermore, it builds inbound links to your website, which boosts your
organic search rankings, further building equity in your online
marketing initiative that'll stand the test of time.
Jayson DeMers, AudienceBloom
Jayson DeMers, AudienceBloom
Use data to drive decisions. So much
of what online marketers do still today is make campaign and product
decisions based on gut or outdated notions when it's never been easier
to let markets, splits test and conversion funnels make the most
profitable decisions for you.
John Jantsch, Duct Tape Marketing
John Jantsch, Duct Tape Marketing
Offer a free information product, that has value in your customer's mind.One
of the major online marketing mistakes that people make is not
cultivating an opt-in email list. One way to create an engaged group of
fans and followers is to offer a free download of an ebook, podcast or
other short-and-sweet information product, in exchange for the visitor's
first name and email, with signup to your list. The key is to offer a
product that speaks to a major question, pain or concern your audience
has.
Karen Leland, Sterling Marketing Group
Karen Leland, Sterling Marketing Group
Craft a powerful title for Your LinkedIn profile.
That tiny one-liner under your name is the most important element in
your LinkedIn profile. Why? Because unless someone clicks on your full
profile, your name and title are the only things visible on LinkedIn
lists, such as the list of "People Also Viewed" and “People You May
Know,” as well as when you accept someone’s invite to connect. So your
title had better do a good job of communicating your positioning and
brand. Plus, professionals are using LinkedIn as a search engine when
they need services, so your title must stand out by saying what you do
and for whom, as it does for this designer: “Helping Law Firms &
Financial Services Companies Elevate Their Brand & Bottom Line”
(instead of the more generic, and much more common, “Graphic Designer”).
Ilise Benun, Marketing-Mentor.com
Ilise Benun, Marketing-Mentor.com
Stop arguing and test.Often times,
you'll find people who engage in arguments about whose idea is superior
to the other. A heated debate will ensue and might even lead to people
resenting each other. More often than not, this is due to too much 'gut
feeling' and to please the ego more than anything. Instead of arguing
over which idea is better, take the time to test your theories. You'll
be wrong most of the time, but when you're right, you're moving the
needle on your business. And when you have the data to back up your
theory, no one can argue with you. Test, test, test. Then test more.
Eric Siu, EricOSiu.com
Eric Siu, EricOSiu.com
Don't use generic emails. How often do you use a "do-not-reply@whatever.com"
email? Unfortunately, you're losing clients by the truckload. Want to
try something new? Put an actual address to the email -- of an actual
employee. Let that employee know he might get slammed when the email
goes out, and offer help. But then, reply to every person who replies.
The sales and engagement will increase by mind-blowing factors.
Customers want to feel like you know them -- like they can talk to you.
Give them the ability to.
Peter Shankman, Shankman|Honig
Peter Shankman, Shankman|Honig
Target your marketing to different audiences.
Many companies blast their customers with ads and messages that aren't
relevant to them, which makes their efforts useless.It's important to
segment your audience on each channel whether it's email, Facebook or
banner ads to understand what message your business should send to what
group. If the content your business is sending to your audience matches
their interests or buying habits, the more likely it will be engaging
and result in a purchase of your product or service.
Brian Honigman, Marc Ecko Enterprises
Brian Honigman, Marc Ecko Enterprises
Guide the digital experience and contextual click path from a stimulus all the way through a desired outcome.
Customers discover brands across a variety of screens whether it's via
TV, smart phone, tablet, PC, etc. Most brands, however, consider a
limited journey from discovery to either Google Search or ultimately to
the company's web site. Consider each screen to guide a natural,
frictionless journey through a variety of scenarios. Create a series of
likely outcomes that take advantage of the screen and make it efficient
and engaging to travel from point A to point B,C or D.
Brian Solis, Altimeter Group
Remember that there's a person on the other side, who has a life full of commitments, stresses, activities and deadlines.They
are not thinking about your brand 24/7, despite the fact that we'd love
them to. So we have to insert ourselves into the conversation and add
value to their lives...their complete lives not just the part that
affects the brand. Jim Joseph, Cohn & Wolfe
Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/226812#ixzz2W0jARfXz
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