What’s your Fascination Score?

This is a great quiz based on Sally Hogshead’s work. Sally wrote a book about Fascination and its Seven Triggers.
I am really suspicious of the vast majority of these types of assessments, but this one actually gave me great professional insights.

Posted via web from cyfree’s posterous

No Comments

“tWe can’t all be Apple or Cirque du Soleil or Basement Systems Inc. But we can damn well die trying” – Tom Peters

We can’t all be Apple or Cirque du Soleil or Basement Systems Inc.
But we can damn well die trying.

I began my career working as evangelist for an Apple dealer, and now I work for Basement Systems. Things like that make my day.
And no, I have no intention of joining the circus…

Posted via web from cyfree’s posterous

No Comments

5 Social Media Lessons For Paid Search Landing Pages

Can you apply the spirit of social media to other marketing channels?

At this year’s SMX East, after my presentation on Landing Page Usefulness—emphasizing a “usefulness” mission over “usability” tactics—it struck me: great landing pages can bring many of the ideals of social media to paid search marketing campaigns.

Here are five principles of social media marketing that can energize your landing page program:

1. Engage in specific conversations, not generic one-size-fits-all talk.

When a company engages in social media, the worst thing it can do is echo canned, cut-and-paste responses to every incoming comment. It’s painful just to imagine! Yet many paid search marketing campaigns commit that very faux pas: a user clicks on a keyword/ad combination with a specific promise, and then they are unceremoniously tossed to a general-purpose page. Such “message mismatch” between keywords/ads and their associated landing pages damages brands and hobbles conversion rates.

The reason I advocate deploying dozens—or even hundreds—of landing pages is because doing so lets you deliver focused and well-matched introductory dialogues with respondents, framed in their terms. As I said in my presentation, the goal is have respondents exclaim, “thank you, that was exactly what I was looking for!”

It’s not about optimizing one page to rule them all—an illusory, marketer-centric fantasy—but deploying many separate pages that each speak authentically to their niche. That’s the kind of respect that honest social media marketing shows to people reaching out to you, and a good landing page strategy can live up to the spirit of that goal.

2. Embrace “constant content,” continually releasing new ideas out into the world.

From blogging to tweeting, the engine of social media is the frequent generation of content. Hopefully it doesn’t take a committee or half a dozen pairs of hands to put up a new blog post or to update your Facebook fan page. The incentives in social media are to be fast, prolific, experimental, relevant and real.

The same tenets should apply to landing pages.

Sometimes, when I suggest that people should publish dozens or hundreds of landing pages, I get a look of incredulity: how could we ever create so many landing pages? Yet organizations who embrace social media marketing produce 10-times as much content without breaking a sweat. The resistance to such agile production of landing pages is often a hang-up from the bygone days of long-cycle web development. Today, deploying new landing pages should be as easy as—maybe even easier than—posting to your blog.

If you have a good content management system (CMS), a nice collection of page design templates, a shared library of images, maybe a few reusable Flash components, and a standardized mechanism for data collection and analytics tracking, then you’re ready to crank out landing pages on demand. And if you don’t have all of those pieces yet, none of them are particularly difficult to put in place.

3. Harness fast feedback to learn about your audience.

Arguably the best feature of social media is that it lets you tap into candid and immediate feedback from your market, albeit in an unstructured manner. It’s a wonderful environment to put ideas out into the community and quickly gauge reaction.

However, you can also solicit a different kind of feedback—more quantifiable and more directly connected to sales—through rapid experimentation with landing pages and keyword buys. Participation is more predictable with such PPC experiments, and the results can be easily benchmarked against your e-commerce or lead funnel metrics. It’s a small, low-risk investment that can help you discover big wins.

Struck with a novel theory about an unaddressed customer segment over your morning coffee? Don’t just hypothesize about it or file it for the next quarterly planning meeting. Launch a targeted search ad and tightly matched landing page for it before lunch and have real-world feedback by the next day. It doesn’t have to be perfect. You can test and tweak as you go along—an ongoing feedback loop.

Ads and landing pages also lend themselves to A/B tests, in a more controlled fashion than variations in social media tactics. If you structure your tests with good hypotheses, you can learn a lot about audience preferences and personas.

4. Open up a dialogue by asking relevant questions—and respecting the answers.

Social media is a conversation, not a soliloquy. People can ask questions, usually quite informally, to help identify the content or information that’s most relevant to their interests. This allows a single discussion to adapt itself to many different participants.

A similar dynamic can be achieved with landing pages. Sometimes, you have to field clicks from keywords/ads that appeal to several different segments of respondents. Instead of reducing the specificity of your content to a bland common denominator—the ill-fated, one-page-to-rule-them-all approach—start by offering them a few meaningful choices. Are you more interested in A, B, or C? Based on their one-click selection, you then deliver more detailed content that’s tailored to their needs.

This technique is known as multi-step landing pages or conversion paths. It can be a tremendous source of feedback, especially when you test different types of choices. However, it’s crucial that the choices genuinely help respondents find what is most useful to them—you want segmentation that benefits users, not just marketers. Remember, we’re striving for that “thank you, that was exactly what I was looking for” effect.

5. Champion transparency and authenticity over cleverness and technology.

The essence of social media is its authenticity, plain and simple. You can try to manipulate it with gimmicks and complicated machinery, but such machinations tend to fall flat. People love what’s real in social media, not what’s artificially crafted to appear real. Human trust is more important than plastic perfection.

Certainly this holds true with landing pages as well. There’s no shortage of sophisticated software you can use to dynamically alter your pages to users based on their IP address or behavioral profile. You can layer rules upon rules to calculate the optimal offer for each respondent. But inevitably, such overly processed experiences lose their authenticity.

Similarly, you can play UI tricks to try to force people to engage with your page (e.g., you must fill out this form before continuing!), but it’s almost always more of a turn-off than a successful hard-sell tactic. If you’re going to remove your regular navigation choices from a landing page, do so because it helps eliminate clutter for a respondent in that context—but still always give them an option to easily jump to your main site.

Be genuine, creative, open, and enthusiastic in your landing pages, and you will win more converts.

Landing pages, like social media, are something that you get better at by doing. So release your inhibitions and make more landing pages.

Opinions expressed in the article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land.

Interesting article on how to apply social media concepts to landing pages.

Posted via web from cyfree’s posterous

No Comments

These are your customers.

Remember these people when making your Internet Marketing decisions. Understand that they are not supposed to know the “lingo”. It is up to you to market it well, promote it clearly, educate your customer accordingly. No matter how much money you made, or how successful you are. This is the new media age. You want them to buy from you, you better understand that YOU serve THEM.

Posted via web from cyfree’s posterous

No Comments

New Media Haven #2 – Social Media – Technology- Eventbrite

Excellent networking opportunity. Get to know and exchange ideas with area professionals and enthusiasts.

Posted via web from cyfree’s posterous

No Comments

5 Reasons Why I DON’T Follow You on Twitter

Nagging your followers = bad.

This post is translated (poorly and with a few impertinent edits) from a great post I read at a friend’s blog. (Thanks for allowing me to translate it, Han!)
Han Badalamenti, the guy who wrote this, is not a Social Media marketer. He is a Social Media user. He is one among the millions of social media savvy users you are trying to market to, one of the guys who you are planning to target with your Social Media strategy. He is writing to other users but what he says applies to Social Media Marketing as well
He, like many others in this environment,  knows what he wants and he knows that, when it comes to Social Media, he has a choice. He can pick who he wants to listen to. He knows what every Social Media user knows and so many Social Media Marketers seem to ignore.
Let’s hear what he has to say, shall we?

5 Reasons Why I DON’T Follow you on Twitter
This is a text for you that logs on to Twitter everyday only to see that the number of people following you is dwindling. If you are asking yourself: “what did I do wrong”, here are your answers.
My friend, here are the 5 mains reasons why the idea of following you on Twitter gives me the creeps:

Read more…

No Comments

SMM and SEO: Setting the Record Straight

Let me say this once and for all:  Social Media Marketing is not Search Engine Optimization, period.

No, SMM is not a part of  SEO either, and calling it SMO (Social Media Optimization) doesn’t make it any different. A top-notch SEO expert is not necessarily a Social Media Wiz, and vice-versa. They are different specialties with a different focus.

Allow me a “girlie ” analogy to better illustrate my point:

A hair dresser and a pedicure specialist work in the same field, yet we would be better off not trusting the first with our toes and the second with our “dos” just because they work in the same salon.

What happens in Internet Marketing is about the same that happens in the beauty parlor: different professionals with different skills collaborate towards a great result.

Read more…

3 Comments

Keep it Human

I have this conversation quite often:

Small businesses asking me if they should open Social Media profiles in their names or the company’s.

Here’s my take on this: in most cases, people buy from people. Social Media is about people,  so Social Media Marketing should be too.

The Social Media crowd is not very fond of companies without a “face” and “faces” without a little bit of humanity. Understandably so. Spammers are out there creating mass profiles and flooding social gathering sites like Twitter with sales pitches, phishing scams, phony links, mass “follow” apps, and spam bots and taking the fun out of Social Media just like they almost ruined email, before email clients developed smarter filters.

Read more…

No Comments

Social Media Starter Package

So, you really want to get started with Social Media. You’ve decided that you can no longer afford to not be there. Yet, you don’t have a lot of time to devote to exploring the vast landscape of Social Media platforms and sites and you definitely can’t afford to hire a specialist or a good Virtual Assistant to do the job, or you don’t have the time and means to train anybody on the peculiarities of your business so that they can effectively represent your company over the Internet.

You are thinking maybe of something you can do and administer yourself in your spare time, or have your secretary or someone in marketing do, just so you will not be completely absent. Is it possible?

Read more…

No Comments