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Posts Tagged ‘visual content’


The Online Marketing Project: How to Improve Your Online Presence One Step at a Time – Part 3

April 4th, 2013 ::
This entry is part 3 of 3 in the series Online Marketing Project

In this four-part series on online marketing, I have taken inspiration from The Happiness Project. Instead of improving your life one month at a time, I am breaking down the essential pieces of marketing so you can stay organized and focused as you tackle each element.

You can read my first blog post on updating your website, putting together a mobile site, and listening to what people are saying online and my second, on putting together an editorial calendar, improving social media engagement, and blogging. Let’s move on to steps 7 – 9.

Step 7: Share Images and Videos

When you look at the rapid growth and success of YouTube, Pinterest, and Instagram, there is no doubt that people respond to and connect with images and videos.

  • Become a shutterbug – Get in the habit of taking photos during the day-to-day and of new products, employees, customers, and events. Share them on social media.
  • Have a goal for videos – Before you spend time on making a video, decide whether you’re making it to build awareness around your business, increase sales, or strengthen your brand. Once you have a goal in mind, your video will be more focused and relevant for your audience.
  • Hold contests – If you really want to engage your audience, hold a photo or video contest. Choose a theme and prize, and consider making the contest open to community voting to really up the social sharing quotient.
  • Use YouTube, Pinterest, and Instagram – You can create your own channel on YouTube for videos, and, if you’re not using them yet, share your photos on Pinterest and Instagram to reach new audiences.

Step 8: Start a Monthly Newsletter

Because newsletters arrive via email and require the recipient to at least read the subject line, newsletters are a great way to reach your audience and stay top-of-mind with them.

  • Keep it focused – Skip the introduction, focus on one to three short and relevant articles, and put your best information at the very top.
  • Make it worthwhile –Include something special in each issue to reward your audience for reading it, whether it’s a coupon or early access to a new product or service.
  • Get creative with the subject line – As I mentioned above, your subject line can make or break how many people read your newsletter. Get creative to pull people in, whether it’s through humor or irreverence.
  • Include images – People are drawn to photos in newsletters, especially ones that include people, so try to include relevant images in each newsletter.

Step 9: Put Together an Ebook or SlideShare Presentation

Bundling blog posts on one topic into an ebook or SlideShare presentation is a smart strategy to employ, as it lets you reuse content you’ve already created. While your ebook is great to share with your audience, SlideShare comes with a built-in audience: It is the world’s largest content-sharing community for professionals, with 60 million visitors a month who view 3 billion slides.

  • Think like a children’s book author – Make it fun, visual, and interactive with videos, games, or surveys.
  • Use stories – Stories are highly engaging, and the more success stories you can weave in, the more you will position yourself as a go-to expert and problem solver.
  • Teach your readers – Add tips, tricks, helpful hints, or other actionable information to make your content more usable.
  • Focus each page/slide – Stick to one point per page to keep the layout clean and uncluttered.
  • Include a strong call-to-action – Tie it back to the subject of your ebook or SlideShare, and explain the benefit of working with you.
  • Add contact info – And not just a phone number! Include your website address, email address, and social media follow buttons.

Stay tuned for the fourth and final blog post in this series, where I’ll cover advertising, hosting an event, and content centers.

Of the above marketing steps, which do you find easy to do – and which do you find hardest?

Image by Flickr user Capt’ Gorgeous (Creative Commons)

The Do’s and Don’ts of a Social Media Strategy

December 11th, 2012 ::

yes and noTo make sure you’re avoiding common mistakes when using social media for marketing, follow these simple rules:

Do: Have goals

Before you get started, decide how social media marketing fits into your overall marketing strategy. Do you want to find better quality leads, engage with and retain current customers, generate word of mouth?  How do your goals complement the other pieces of your marketing strategy, like your blog, SEO, content creation and online advertising?

Don’t: Dive in without a plan

An editorial calendar will keep you organized. Decide what you are going to post when and on what network.  Take timing into consideration, as well: What times are your fans and followers more likely to see your activity?

Do: Use social media consistently

Randomly using Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Google+ and any other social network is a waste of time. Inconsistent use of social media sends a signal that you don’t care about and are probably not that interested in your customers.

Don’t: Ignore SEO

Search engine optimization is important for any online activity, whether it’s your blog or a how-to guide on your website. Sharing content on social media is great, but to snag a wider audience, make sure all that content on your website is optimized with keywords so search engines redirect people to you.

Do: Use visual content wisely

People engage with images, so when you use them, think about how to make your brand fun and accessible. You can showcase products and services, fans and customers, user-generated photos, your logo, employees, events – get creative!

Don’t: Make it all about you

Social media is not a one-way bullhorn. People love to talk about themselves, so be sure to focus your social media activity on your fans and followers. What do they like? What do they care about? How can you help them?

Do: Engage

This is a corollary to the above: social media is a conversation. Respond to direct messages and mentions on Twitter, comments on Facebook, messages on LinkedIn, etc. Ignoring people is no way to build a community.

Don’t: Assume anything

Don’t assume you know what social networks your customers and potential customers use or what sort of information they find most valuable. You have to do your research first, or you will be wasting your time (hint: ask them).

Do: Measure the right metrics

Likes and retweets are not marketing metrics – they’re popularity metrics – and the two are not the same thing. Instead, measure how much traffic Twitter and Facebook are sending to your website, how many downloads your content and shares your blog posts are getting, and how many leads from social media are converting into customers.

Did I miss any do’s or don’ts?

Image courtesy of wellhappypeaceful.com

Visual Content Today and Tomorrow: What the Experts Have to Say

November 5th, 2012 ::

Gazing into a crystal ballMarketo recenty published a blog post that included a video with the insights of 8 thought leaders on visual content – along with where they think it’s going.  Here’s what they had to say:

Tim Ash, CEO at SiteTuners

Visual content is like what synthesizer music was in the early 1970s – everyone does it.  Don’t autoplay videos or put sliders on your page with rotating ads that distract from your calls-to-action. If you do, our reptilian brains will take over and we will flee from information overload.

Matt Heinz, President at Heinz Marketing

Right now, you’ve got memes and great infographics. We’ll continue to evolve and visuals will get richer in content. We are lazy – we want something short. Infographics work well for that reason – they’re short and easy to digest. I think infographics will get shorter and even become series.

Jason Keath, CEO at SocialFresh

Memes are based on images, Facebook timeline is based on images, Pinterest is huge, and so is Instagram.  Words are less important, so search is harder and monitoring who is talking about you is harder.

Nichole Kelly, President at Social Media Explorer

It is engaging, people like it, they share it. But does visual content drive revenue? That is what we’re trying to figure out.

Marcus Nelson, CEO and Founder of Addvocate

Content is king; it always has been.  You need to decide where it is going to live and then direct everyone to one place so you have a central depository of content. Good content creates thought leadership and positive first impressions, and you can control it.

Jeremiah Owyang, Partner and Industry Analyst at Altimeter Group

Visual content is a response to the amount of data out there. Visual is an easy way to share information, but it doesn’t tell the whole story – so don’t take everything at face value.

Craig Rosenberg, Funnelholic

Visual content is going to be huge. Right now, in B2B, it’s terrible. We are still just getting used to writing thought leadership content. Most videos are awful and boring right now. What is interesting is taking those same core content marketing ideas and putting them in a new medium. Using video for demos or product training has done great.

Jeff Widman, Cofounder at PageLever

Visual content tells a story better than static text. Facebook uses an algorithm that promotes photos, so photos perform much better in the news feed. MTV found that their photo posts reached 6x more fans than text and generated 13x more clicks.

I don’t know about you, but I’m going to start adding as many photos as I can to my Facebook posts! What is your favorite takeaway from these thought leaders?

Image courtesy of fightitoutlblog.com

5 Visual Content Ideas for Instagram

November 1st, 2012 ::

Autumn in Reston, VAIf you’re not used to snapping photos while at work, try it. In this final post of this 3-part series on sharing visual content on social media, we’ll look at some fun ideas that are easy to implement on Instagram.  The inspiration for this series came from a Hubspot ebook, but most of the actual ideas are my own.

1. Share your logo

Snap photos of your logo used in unusual ways while at work or when out and about – someone using your branded notepad during a meeting, wearing your baseball cap running errands, carrying your tote at a farmer’s market.

2. Employees are part of your brand…

Sharing photos of your employees doing what they do – whether it’s installing landscaping, meeting to discuss specials before dinner restaurant service begins, or hand-stitching a wedding dress – is not only interesting, but also humanizes your company and makes you seem more accessible.

3. …and so are events

Any event that you host or sponsor is fair game – especially if you can get behind-the-scenes, pre- or post-event photos, or photos of you or an employee with a celebrity.

4. Don’t forget your products

If you create or sell a product, go crazy with photos, but get creative.  Don’t just plop it on a white table and snap a photo.  Let’s say you make pillow covers. Hang them up in a row by color and snap a photo. Take one with you when you travel and snap a photo of it at the airport, on a plane, in your hotel room, in the back of the rental car, etc.

5. Take photos when you travel

Even if you don’t travel far for work, take photos of the places you go. By doing so, you are letting people get a sneak peek at your life, and that creates a level of intimacy and trust you don’t get with an automated email marketing message. I took the above photo a few days ago while out on my daily walk. Simple, easy, beautiful!

What other ideas do you have?

8 Ideas for Visual Content on Pinterest

October 30th, 2012 ::
This entry is part 1 of 2 in the series Sharing Visual Social Media Content

Pinterest boardsUnless you have a company that is hyper-creative and visual by nature, finding things to pin on Pinterest that are relevant to your business can be hard. In the second post of this three-part series on sharing visual content on social media, we’ll look at some fun ideas that are easy to implement.  The inspiration for this series came from a Hubspot ebook, but most of the actual ideas are my own.

1. Think beyond your brand

Make a list of everything related to your brand and create a board for each category. For instance, since I am a copywriter, I could create boards on home office design, pens and pencils, couches (since I work from my living room couch), and cool logos.

2. Include fans and customers

If your fans and customers share photos of your product or service, add them to a board either specific to Customers or to one of your existing boards.

3. Use related content as a promotional tool

Hubspot used a really great example: Oreck, the vacuum cleaner company, has a board devoted to beautiful floors.

4. Create boards based on your blog’s categories and topics

By tying your boards and blog together, you can link one to the other. This also means coming up with content for your boards will be much easier.  You could probably also blog about your boards – if they are interesting enough.

5. Weddings, anyone?

Pinterest first became popular with women planning weddings – and brides are still the largest demographic on the site – so if there is a way you can tie your product or service to weddings, do it.

6. Cute is big

Drake University’s mascot is a bulldog – and they have an entire board dedicated to bulldogs.  If you can create a “cute” board that is relevant to your company, have fun with it!

7. Food is big too

People love “food porn!” Create a board of the meals you have during business meetings, travel and events.

8. Create hyper-niche boards

Target the niches within your client base with boards just for them. If you work with nonprofits, create a board specific to environmentally-focused nonprofits.

What other Pinterest pinning ideas do you have?
 
Image courtesy of 2wired2tired.com

10 Ideas for Visual Content on Facebook

October 29th, 2012 ::
This entry is part 2 of 2 in the series Sharing Visual Social Media Content

Facebook cover imageDuring your busy day-to-day, it’s easy to forget about sharing photos on social media unless you are in the habit of doing so. In this 3-part series on sharing visual content on social media, we’ll look at some fun ideas that are easy to implement.  The inspiration for this series came from a Hubspot ebook, but most of the actual ideas are my own.

1. Think seasonal

Add photos that are specific to the season or upcoming holidays.  You could take it one step further and highlight “national days of” – if it’s related to your brand! I am writing this on October 19, which is National Seafood Bisque Day.  Find the holiday calendar here.

2. Showcase your products or service

…obviously! But get creative. If you run a daycare center, take photos of all the stuffed animals sitting on the floor waiting for “circle time” or paint jars neatly stacked in a pyramid.

3. Get an artist involved

Ask an artist friend to put his or her creativity to work and render your products, service, or business in a painting, drawing or cartoon – great exposure for him or her!

4. Be creative if your business is “boring”

If you provide HVAC services, make a smiley face or stick figure person out of the tools you carry around in your truck. If you are an accountant, share photos of different currencies.

5. Highlight locations on a map

Add a big map to your page’s cover photo. Show off your company’s various locations, or, if you travel on business a lot, all the places you have visited. If your employees are from all over the world, you could highlight their home countries.

6. Use an infographic

Ask a graphic design company that specializes in infographics to create one for you in which you share industry facts or the results you deliver to your clients.  Use it as your cover photo.

7. Try lifestyle photos

People respond to lifestyle photos – think of  the Tommy Hilfiger or Ralph Lauren print ads with their emphasis on the WASP-y, horsey life.  If you can tie a certain lifestyle to your brand, people will associate that lifestyle with you.

8. Showcase a fan or customer…

Social media should be about your fans, not just you. You can highlight a fan or customer of the week or month in your cover illustration or image.

9. …or a photo they submit

Likewise, you could ask your fans/customers to send you photos using your product or service – and highlight those.

10. Keep photos simple but powerful

If you’re a travel agent, use a single photo of a city skyline, famous landmark or monument, or exotic destination as your cover photo.  Rotate often!

What ideas would you add to this list?

Facebook cover image courtesy of coverjunction.com