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If Someone Says ‘Buy’ A List One More Time

August 27th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Email Marketing

Time to update the list of “Killer Bs” I first wrote about here in 2007. We’ll save the upcoming “ban the blast” initiative for another time, so the next “B” word I would like to excise from the email marketing lexicon is “buy,” as in “Where can I buy a list of a million dentists/Democrats/dog owners?”

Sorry if I sound like an email snob, but I cringe when I hear someone, usually (but not always) an email newbie, talking about buying lists.

Why? Because it indicates a fundamental misunderstanding about how email marketing works. Worse, it perpetuates the false expectation that all you have to do to have success via email is to “buy” a list and then start sending messages to it.

When people use the “buy” word, to me it means one of two things:

1) They really mean “rent.” They are either careless, don’t understand the differences between “buy” and “rent” in the list world, or are not a snob like me who cares about the subtleties and advancement of the industry.

2) They truly don’t know or care. They think that purchasing a list is the quickest way to email nirvana.

Don’t Think ‘Buy’ — Think ‘Rent’

Maybe the best way to put “buy” out of business is to persuade people not to buy lists anymore. After all, “buy” is just a word, a symptom of a bigger problem.

The best way to stop people from trying to buy lists is to show them why it doesn’t work, the harm it can do and how it wastes money.

After all, marketers who ask about buying lists could just be asking, “How can I build my list quickly, and where can I acquire email addresses?” Unfortunately, there is no easy way to build a good list quickly. If there were, presumably we’d all be doing it.

Here’s the truth: In the email world, you can’t buy legitimate email addresses. You know those $399 CDs with 50 million email addresses? Most of the addresses are probably harvested or gathered in some less-than-stellar manner. Many are probably either out of date, converted to “honeypots” by ISPs looking to trap some spammers, or otherwise undeliverable. The owners of those addresses certainly haven’t given you permission to email them.

Is “buying” a list illegal? Not according to the CAN-SPAM Act, as long as you provide a means to opt out among other requirements. But let’s be serious. Do you really want to risk your brand and sender reputation to send unsolicited email to millions of people?

A house list you build yourself through double, single or confirmed opt-in will still deliver the best results, but I can understand that sometimes you can’t wait that long.

List Rental: A Viable Option

Legitimate email list rental is a viable method to help build up your house list. But here’s what some folks new to list rental don’t understand:

First, you don’t receive the email addresses that you’ve rented. The list manager sends your message for you and provides you with the performance reports.

Second, suppose you rent a list of, say, 50,000. The only addresses you will see are those that convert and opt in to your list from the call-to-action in your rental campaign. Apply click-through and conversion rates and you end up with a small percentage of what you rented, but a list of quality subscribers who want what you have to offer.

Join me in battling the use of yet another “killer B” word. Let’s eradicate the word “buy” from the email marketing lexicon — and, even more importantly, from actual practice.

Until next time, take it up a notch!

by Loren McDonald
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8 Common Small Business Marketing Mistakes

August 19th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in General Marketing

Advertising can be one of the fastest ways to market and grow your business or it can be one of the quickest ways to go out of business. With the right ad you can attract clients to your business and increase your profits. With the wrong ad you can spend your way into bankruptcy.

To grow your business you need to attract the attention of your prospects, advertising can help you do so if used correctly. Unfortunately, many small businesses owners waste thousands of dollars on advertising efforts that only achieve minimal results.

If you want to get the most from the money you spend to promote your products and services, make sure to avoid these common mistakes.

Focusing on Your Products and Services
If you want to get the attention of your prospects, speak to their needs and wants. Your prospects’ primary concern isn’t that you’ve been in business for 25 years; it is do you know the problem they want to solve. Use your ad to identify at least one common problem of your prospects and the benefit of using your product or service.

Having a Weak Small Business Marketing Message
All to often you hear ads and it takes some thought to figure out what they are even promoting. Make sure your advertisement includes a 7-10 word description of whom you serve and the problems you solve so people who read or hear your ad know how you can help them.

Discover how to find the right words to explain exactly how you
help prospects
. With a brilliant marketing message you’ll attract more clients right away. Use the ’15 Second Marketing’ guide to create more business opportunities.

Using the Wrong Words
A word here, a phrase there can change your response rate by hundreds of percent. When you spend money on advertising, first test a number of versions of your copy to identify the one that works best. Just by revising her ad copy so it was client and problem centered, I helped one small business owner achieve her best month in sales ever.

Missing Motivation
Most ads miss the mark in moving prospects to action. If you want to prompt prospects to visit your web site or your store or to contact you, include an offer that motivates them to do so.

Lacking in Frequency
Some people make spur of the moment buying decisions, but most need to become familiar with your services and products, and this takes time. If you want your advertising to work, you need to ensure that your prospects see or hear it regularly.

Web Sites that Don’t Move Prospects to Action
Many small business owners direct prospects to a web site where they have more extensive content covering available services and products. I constantly get calls from people who have been successful at attracting prospects to their web site, but generate few sales.

Once prospects get to your web site make sure the content and visual organization moves them to take the action you want them to. Whether it is providing them with ample opportunities to fill in your service inquiry form, or including a subset of your product catalog in your web page navigation bars, help prospects move to client and customer status.

Lack of Follow Up

Sometimes making a sale requires sending a note or picking up the phone and calling your prospects. If you have an effective lead generation strategy, prospects will provide you with their contact information and the problem they want solved. Use the web, email, and the phone to follow up and close the sale.

Use your articles to establish yourself as an expert and increase credibility.

Lack of Tracking
If you are making more from your advertising than you are spending, you’re ahead. Frequently small business owners can’t tell you which of their efforts helped bring in the business. Track each of your ad campaigns and you’ll know where to spend your money in the future, what to modify and what to eliminate.

- Do you know how many sales and how much money you made as a result of each of your advertising campaigns?

- Are you making any of the above common small business marketing mistakes?

- What elements of your small business marketing should you change?

Put your marketing house in order. Fix your strategy and your materials. If you don’t know what to change or how to change it, use experts to help you with strategy, copyrighting, design, PR, and media placement.

Avoid these common marketing mistakes and you’ll find more people contacting you about your products and services and that your making more than your spending on your advertising.

Discover how to find the right words to explain exactly how you help prospects. With a brilliant elevator speech you’ll attract more clients right away.

By: Charlie Cook
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Self Esteem Comic

August 19th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Distractions

blaugh

20 Funny Google Keyword Searches

August 19th, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in Digital Advertising

A couple of weeks ago, I lost my keys and must have searched my entire house and car at least three times trying to find them. After that last round of searching, I plopped down in a chair in front of my computer, exasperated.  With an open search box in my peripheral vision, I continued to ponder where they might have possibly gone.   At that moment, I could have used something like a Google Key Finder.   Imagine an RFID setup for the keychain, combined with a more detailed version of Google Latitude (complete with a home floor plan), and then I’d type in “where did I put my keys” and be on my way.

Then I wondered, had anyone actually ever entered “where did I put my keys” into a search box?  I went to the Google Keyword Tool to find out.  Sure enough, there was a search for “where did I put my keys” with an average of 72 searches per month.  Another variation was “have you seen my keys” with an average of 22 searches per month.  No keys, but perhaps they felt a little better venting into the search box.

As I continued perusing the Google Keyword Tool, there were a number of other dead-end and clueless searches to be found.  Among the other lost items people rely on the Google search gods to find:

  • “Where did I put my glasses” with an average of 320 searches per month.
  • “Have you seen my stapler” with an average of 390 searches per month.

Realizing that there may be more of these to be found, I went seeking other terms, and scored big time:

  • “Who is buried in Grant’s tomb” was entered 1,000 times per month on average. The joke is over before the results even hit the screen.
  • “What is the number for 911? averaged 36 searches per month. For their own safety’s sake, let’s hope they figured this out.

But wait – there’s even more.  A search for “what is” yielded the following gems:

  • “What is my name?” was searched 40,500 times per month. Is it a song, perhaps?  Maybe they woke up after a rough night out on the town that landed them in front a Google search box?  Or maybe there is an epidemic of amnesia?
  • “What is my religion” got 320 searches per month.  I don’t even know what to say about this, other than it strikes me completely strange that someone would legitimately type this into a search box.

“Why am I” also turned up a nice list of stemmed oddities.  These two were my favorites:

  • “Why am I hot” netted 9,900 searches per month.  This phrase is one of two things: A use of the search box as the new “mirror on the wall” for those puzzled by their own hotness, or a question posed by people unaware of the methods of cool air circulation.
  • ”Why am I always so hot” was searched 36 times per month on average.  These people are not just hot, they’re always so hot, and they don’t know why.  Maybe they should go to the front page of  Google Hot Trends, and keep hitting refresh until their name appears, and then they will know.

(No, refreshing the page will not make a name come up in Google Hot Trends).

Other “why am I” searches often turn up information that might actually satisfy the searcher, but are still interesting nonetheless.  These include:

  • “Why I am so tired” -  5,400 searches per month.
  • “Why am I sneezing so much” – 16 searches per month.
  • “Why am I so broke” – 16 searches per month.

On the existential side of things, the following searches stemmed from (and included) “I am”:

  • “I am” - 7,480,000 searches per month.
  • “I am here” – 550,000 searches per month.
  • “I am me” – 201,000 searches per month.

Along the more intellectual side, “what is the meaning of life” has an average of 22,200 monthly searches. Of course when I think about the meaning of life, I think Monty Python, and also found the stemmed phrase, “what is the air speed velocity of an unladen swallow?” with 1,590 searches per month.  But did they mean African, or European?

Many people who lost their mojo rely on Google to get it back. “Who stole my mojo?” yields 91 searches per month.And for others, Google is also the trusted source for finding stolen dogs (“Who stole my dog?” averaged 12 searches per month).

It’s possible that some of these folks may be hitting the wrong box, presumably mistaking search for a chat, or IM client.  But for the others, it’s much more interesting to leave it to the imagination to decide.

One Trillion Dollars Visualized

August 19th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Distractions

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Source URL here

How big is the internet?

August 19th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Distractions

howbig

  • Web addresses dwarf global population
  • Over 31,000 years to read them all
  • Technology: 40 years of the internet

THE internet has permeated everything from buying to banking to bonking.

But just how big is it?

Microsoft’s Bing team puts the amount of web pages at “over one trillion”.

And Google has already indexed more than one trillion discrete web addresses.

There are more addresses than there are people on Earth. The current global population stands at more than 6.7 billion.

That means there are about 150 web addresses per person in the world.

Translated: If you spent just one minute reading every website in existence, you’d be kept busy for 31,000 years. Without any sleep.

Bing was more generous with its estimate for those who take more time to read.

“An average person would need six hundred thousand decades of nonstop reading to read through the information,” it said.

Mark Higginson, director of analytics for Nielsen Online, said the global online population had jumped 16 per cent since last year.

“Approximately 1.46 billion people worldwide now use the internet which represents a solid 16 per cent increase from the previous year’s estimate (1.26 billion in 2007),” he told news.com.au.

The largest internet population belongs to China, which claimed this week to have more users online – 338 million - than there were people in the US.

However InternetWorldStats.com (IWS), a website that combines multiple data sources, claims China’s online population is more like 298 million, just a few million shy of overtaking the US population.

“With the rates of India and China still quite low, there is ample room for growth in the coming decade,” Mr Higginson said.

Measuring the online population can be tricky. There are servers, users, per capita numbers, and penetration percentages to evaluate. It’s an epic-scale guessing game using a series of sources to get just one number.

IWS combines data from the UN’s International Telecommunications Union, Nielsen Online, GfK and US Census Bureau.

Its latest global figures puts the number of internet users in the world at 1,596,270,108.

That’s just 23.8 per cent of the estimated 6,0706,993,152 people in the world.

But it changes every day.

“In terms of the future, we anticipate mobile to contribute significantly to internet usage,” Mr Higginson said.

“In the US, the number of people accessing the internet through mobile devices grew 74 per cent between February 2007 and February 2009.”

How we size up

According to IWS, the top 5 countries with the most internet users are:

1 - China (298,000,000 users, or 22.4% of their population)
2 – US (227,190,989, or 74.7%)
3 – Japan (94,000,000, or 73.8%)
4 – India (81,000,000, or 7.1%)
5 – Brazil (67,510,400, or 34.4%)

Australia comes in at 25th, with 16,926,015 internet users.

But we zoom all the way up to 7th place if we measure what percentage of the population uses the internet – a whopping 80.6 per cent, according to IWS.

“The Australian online population has now reached maturity in terms of the number of people online and their experience using the internet,” Mr Higginson said.

“Despite this fact, the rate of internet participation, Australia-wide, increased notably for the first time in several years ,” he said, adding that the latest Nielsen statistics showed it had jumped 6 percentage points to 86 per cent.

However, even experts aren’t keen to guess when every person in the world will be online.

“It’s too hard to tell,” Mr Higginson said.

Source URL Here

4 Lessons for Social Media Marketers

August 19th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Social Media

Too many marketers these days confuse what social media is. They don’t understand the difference between the evolution of marketing and what simply works right now. Social media is not just Facebook, Twitter, or even blogging. Instead of thinking about the platform, you have to think about the foundation that makes it effective.

The disconnect occurs when deciding on a social media plan. Telling someone to create a “Facebook strategy” or that they should “leverage Twitter” doesn’t always make sense. Instead of creating a plan around the goals of the campaign some marketers allow the platforms available to dictate the strategy.

So what are fundamentals? There are a number of lessons to be learned, and many come from experience, but here are four that I keep top of mind.

1. Always listen

Far too many brands get so excited about social media that they just jump right in. They don’t take the time to see what’s going on before engaging.

These brands are similar to the guy at a party that yells about his awesome TV while everyone else is talking about cars.

Comcast does an amazing job of listening. Their team monitors Twitter for any mentions of the brand and quickly responds to the consumer. Micro-blogging allows them to continually keep track of what is occurring in their space and offers them a platform to respond.

comcastSocial media takes time, patience, and vigilance to see and understand what your consumers are talking about. If you do it right, your consumers will embrace you instead of ignoring you.

2. The brand is public

Whether you like it or not, your brand is in the social sphere, but are you? No longer do you have full control over your marketing message, or what people see.

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Consider the latest Dominoes fiasco. Two employees and a video camera damaged a multi-million dollar brand. Consumers don’t differentiate between, employees, customer service, and the brand.

Recognizing that fact and being prepared to act can save you from a potentially embarrassing turn of events.

3. Don’t forget a personality

Ever had a friend with no personality? What makes you think a consumer will interact with a corporate brand with no personality?

Find a way to humanize your company, empower enthusiastic employees to speak for you. Let your consumers get to know what makes your brand special.

My favorite brand personality is Tony Hsieh, the CEO of Zappos. His humor and style of writing builds the Zappos community, one friend at a time. However, the Zappos personality doesn’t end there. Each employee of the company, as well as their policies, convey how important every customer is and how dedicated they are to building a real relationship.

zapposInvite your customers to join in the company culture, and show off your personality. The average person is so tired of marketers that having an honest ‘friend’ is a breath of fresh air. Use that trust to build a relationship, loyalty, and a connection.

4. Creativity wins

A marketer with an understanding of social media and the need for engagement online tends to think outside the box. They don’t see Facebook or blogging, instead they see vessels for a conversation. Because of that mindset they’re poised to be creative with their social strategy.

One of the best examples of creativity is the Burger King “Sacrifice a Friend” application. The campaign encouraged users to delete 10 Facebook friends and get a free Whopper. It was fun, controversial, and a great idea. Consumers were excited about it, and it generated a huge amount of buzz. In the end, over 233,906 friends were sacrificed.

whopper-sacrifice

As more people fight for a shortening attention span, being creative and thinking of new ways to connect online is a necessity for social media marketing. Being fun and exciting motivates consumers to talk and interact, and although being first does not always guarantee success, it sure helps.

The more prevalent social media grows, the more likely a brand is to copy what someone else has already done. In social media, past successes don’t guarantee future results. That’s why it’s so important to understand the fundamentals, so you can take a strategy and evolve it for your specific brand.

By: Samir Balwani
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