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Posts Tagged ‘Digg’


Survey Says: Inbound Marketing, Social Media, and Blogs Are Surpassing Traditional Channels

April 9th, 2012 ::

Inbound Marketing

In January, HubSpot surveyed almost 1,000 professionals about their businesses’ marketing strategies. Below are some of the findings, which drive home the fact that inbound marketing, social media, and blogs are the way to go.

Focus on Inbound Marketing

Businesses are tweaking their marketing strategies to focus more on inbound marketing, which involves pulling relevant prospects and customers towards a company and its products using blogging, content publishing, SEO and social media. These channels have the advantage of providing a low-cost alternative to pricier tactics like direct mail and purchased advertising. In fact, companies that focus on inbound marketing experience a cost per lead that is 61% lower than those of outbound-focused companies. Businesses are leveraging this advantage; of the companies surveyed, 89 percent are either maintaining or increasing their inbound marketing efforts.

Traditional Channels Slip

More traditional marketing channels – such as trade shows, direct mail, and telemarketing – are decreasing in value to businesses. HubSpot’s survey showed that 30 percentof respondents judged these channels as less important than newer ones. Not only are these channels becoming less influential in marketing strategies, but they also tend to be more costly than Internet-based forms of marketing.

The Rise of Social

Businesses are becoming more social – they are increasingly using blogs, YouTube, Facebook and Twitter to get their message out and to engage with customers. Both the 2012 and the 2009 HubSpot surveys showed increased importance for these social platforms. Company blogs were most cited as the social channel that is “critical” or “important” in both 2012 and 2009. Facebook gained importance by a margin of 15 percent since 2009, and Twitter gained 15 percent. However, other social media channels have decreased in importance, including StumbleUpon and Digg.

The Importance of Blogs

As I mentioned, blogs are holding steady as the most important social media channel. In fact, 25 percent of survey respondents said their blog was “critical” to their business. Blogs offer tremendous SEO value, as fresh content and links are supplied through a steady stream of blogging. Blogs also allow companies to feature new products in detail, highlight upcoming events, and show a more personal side of the company to customers and prospects.

How about you? Has your businesses shifted its marketing efforts to more social channels such as Facebook and Twitter? Are you giving your blog the time and attention it deserves?

Image courtesy of creative design agency Arrae

Social Media Analysis: Which Sites are Best for Customer Engagement, Branding, CTR, and SEO

April 27th, 2011 ::

With all the social media sites out there, should you be using any of them besides Facebook and Twitter for marketing your small business?

This is an excellent question, and one that I think about fairly regularly.  Luckily, at some point last year I downloaded a fun data sheet, The CMO Guide to the Social Landscape, that was distributed by CMO.com.

The data sheet breaks down all the major social media sites, from Twitter to YouTube, to provide an overview of how each performs in four key categories: customer communication, brand exposure, click-through rates (CTS) and SEO.

social media logos

Because Twitter and Facebook are discussed ad nauseum everywhere, I will skip those and focus on other social media sites.  (But in case you are wondering—big surprise—both Twitter and Facebook received high marks for customer engagement and branding.)

Flickr

In terms of customer engagement and branding, Flickr can really only help you put faces to names and “humanize” your company a bit.  Click-through rates are also very low; however, Flickr is great for SEO, which surprised me.  According to the guide, Flickr is

heavily indexed in search engines, passing links and page ranks. Also helps images rank higher in Google Images and in building inbound links.

LinkedIn

When it comes to customer communication, LinkedIn can be used to answer industry-related questions, but not for much else.  Click-through rates are not that great, though the few people who do visit your site could be potential customers, and unless someone is searching for your company by name, it won’t really help with SEO either.  Instead, LinkedIn is great for personal and company branding and establishing your industry knowledge and expertise.

YouTube

YouTube is a great way to engage your customers with funny and/or informative videos, and if you really build and promote your YouTube channel, it is one of the most powerful branding tools available.  Because videos tend to rank high in search engines, it is great for SEO.  However, YouTube is not the best way to drive traffic to your website, since traffic is directed right to the videos.  If you want to drive click-through rates, add a hyperlink in the video description.

Digg

Because Digg is a social news sharing site, it is not the best way to communicate directly with customers.  However, it gets high marks in the other three categories.  There are lots of branding opportunities, especially to promote objective press and blog coverage of your company. If you post something that becomes popular, you will see a huge spike in website traffic and links from bloggers, both of which will help with SEO.  Even if your posts aren’t super popular, SEO will still be goosed, thanks to indexing.

StumbleUpon

Another social news community, which means the chances of reaching your customers are not that great.  You can buy targeted ads on StumbleUpon, which is good for brand exposure, but it can get expensive.  Instead, StumbleUpon excels at driving traffic to websites and SEO, because it

enables a diverse range of people to discover your content and share links via the su.pr link shortener on Twitter.

If your story makes it to the top StumbleUpon page for its tag, SEO will be helped considerably, especially since the site’s large use baser makes it easy for people to find and link to your content.

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What other social media sites have you found helpful for marketing online?  Leave a comment below!

Image by Flickr user webtreats (Creative Commons)

Starting a Business as a Milennial (or Generation Y or Generation O)

June 9th, 2009 ::

The Newest Entrepreneurs: Credit All American Blogger

The Newest Entrepreneurs (Credit: All American Blogger)

As you may know, on of our new contributing bloggers is Jessie Newburn, a generational marketing expert who just published her framework on “What is Generational Marketing?” and “Generational Communication Styles”.

Recently, the newest generation of entrepreneurs have been taking on the roughest economy. This generation, according to Jessie is called “Millennials” but have been called Generation Y and, with the election of Barack Obama, have been dubbed “Generation O. This generation is born from 1980 to 2000, they are as different from as my generation (Generation X) and their parents (Boomers) in how they view starting a business as well as the economy in general.

When I started my first business 10 years ago, I was 29 years old and the Interent boom was roaring upward (soon to crash) and things were fantastic. With Mark Andresen and Mark Cuban becoming billionaires overnight, everyone my age with a little risk taking tolerance and some savings were going to start the next great dot-com and retire by 35. Sounded sweet but as we all know, it wouldn’t last.

According to Jessie, my generation are a bunch of nomadic people caught in between a generation that won’t get out of the way (boomers) and one that wants to save the world (Gen-Y). Generation X was about “Doing it Differently” because we had the Internet and we could raise a few million and get the business to IPO in 18 months while knocking out the established businesses who had been doing things solidly for decades. Because our boomer or silent generation parents were either stuck in their way of doing things differently or won’t allow us to sit at the table. We built our own shiny table with new toys for the world to play with – Re: Yahoo, Google, Netscape, Broadcast.com, etc. While it is true that my generation created some truly spectacular flops – re: Pets.com, Kozmo, every dotcom that failed, we did break new ground and put in place the systems and services that run most of the worlds businesses today.

According to Inc. Magazine, Millennials look at starting a business in a different way. In their article “The Gen-Y Spin on Startups” they see Gen-Y as the entrepreneurial generation that at its core believes it is about “Doing it Better”. When I look at this new generation of entrepreneurs I see improvements to our initial innovations. We eventually got Quicken Online but they went and created Mint.com, we got the newspapers online and they created Digg, we got people searching the web and they enabled everyone to connect through Facebook.

To quote All American Blog, technology has transformed how they interact with each other and the world. Not only are they computer literate, but the Internet has allowed them to have friends from around the world who are available at the touch of a keystroke. Think about – 15 years ago there were very few cell phones, just dial up per-hour Internet, no Twitter, no Facebook so this generation is naturally tuned to using these systems and seeing how to improve on them faster than anyone else.

While they ironically face an economic challenge similar to what their great-grandparents faced in the 1930′s and 1940′s. The also have the advantage of lower startup costs than ever before and a strong desire to make change happen on their own without any one telling them they should or they can’t.

Luckily, my generation as survivors and ones who adapt will be innovating to keep up with this generation and will be awesome to see what businesses they start over the next decade. More on this in future post and if you are a milenial starting a business or have a perspective on this topic please leave a comment, we would love to hear from you.