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Posts Tagged ‘website content’


Inbound Marketing Should Be Your New Best Friend

April 16th, 2010 ::

Our Grow Smart Business theme this month is inbound marketing.  For you non-marketing folks, that just means pulling business in online via your website, social networking, and blogs, rather pushing marketing messages out to your audience via advertising, direct mail, PR, etc.  Inbound marketing should be your new best friend, as it is the present—and future—of an effective marketing program.

Ken Fischer

Ken Fischer, Click for Help

The two person monologue (bilogue?) that appears below started out as an interview with Ken Fischer, President of ClickForHelp, a web 2.0 application development company.  In plain English, that means one of the things his company puts together and executes is an SEO program that is fully integrated with your marketing and branding efforts, which most SEO companies do not do.  It’s a very robust approach that generates unbelievable results.

Amanda Fischer

Amanda Fischer, Infinite Technologies

To make this interview more interesting, we decided to make it a case study using one of his clients, Amanda Fischer, Director of Marketing at Infinite Technologies, which makes orthotics, prosthetics, and helmets for babies with flat, flattening, or misshapen heads.  They just launched a new, totally rebranded website with Ken’s help called HelmetTherapy.  Ken and Amanda worked together to position HelmetTherapy.com as the go-to educational website for parents of children who need helmet therapy.  The re-launched website has been wildly successful thanks to a strategic online marketing plan.

I told them what I wanted to write about, and then just sat back and listened to their back and forth, scribbling notes furiously.  (Oh, and they are not related despite having the exact same last name.  They usually point that out to people, so I figured I would, too.)

Excerpts from the “bilogue”:

Ken: Our philosophy around online marketing is simple: understand your audiences’ needs and meet them.  You want to build trust and retain your audience.

Amanda: And education is a huge part of that.  We put together great content that would fulfill the expectations of what our audience was looking for online.

Ken: Exactly.  You want to educate people on issues they want to know about.  So we always start out by doing a lot of analysis.  We analyze audience data (who they are, what they’re looking for online, etc.), look at what the competitors’ are doing, and conduct an in-depth market analysis….Our strategy with HelmetTherapy.com became building an educational resource for prospective helmet therapy patients….All of this information does you no good, of course, if no one can find you.  The website needed to be searchable and findable around terms parents regularly search for.

Amanda:  Our goal with the website was to be top-ranked.

Ken: So, once you put an SEO strategy into place, you have to ask yourself: was the effort worth it?  You must have A+ analytics in place so you know exactly what is and what is not working.  We measure every path that customers can follow to your website.

Amanda: And the effort was worth it.  We had been attracting 1-2 patients per week via our website; now we’re getting 5-10 patients per week.  Our sales increased by 500% and we’re top-ranked on almost 300 sites!

Ken: HelmetTherapy.com is searchable for over 2,000 terms, and they have been found with 500.

Amanda: This huge project has also really helped with our brand awareness.  It’s been 5 months since the site launched, and at 3 months, people were referring to our helmets, which did not have a name, as “KidCap”.

And that, folks, is the formula for a successful inbound marketing program: valuable information + technology  + analytics.  Deceptively simple, and very doable.

When Bad Websites Happen to Good People: Six Common Mistakes to Avoid

February 15th, 2010 ::

From Jurveston on Flickr

One of my favorite projects is writing and editing website content. I love putting together messaging that clearly introduces a company, explains what they do, and successfully states why they’re better than the competition.  For me, it’s a really fun challenge.  Plus, I get to meet a lot of interesting people and learn about new industries.

Lately I’ve been working on several websites.   Whether the company is big or small, new or well-established, selling a product or a service, I have been running into the same simple mistakes over and over and over again.  These mistakes can turn out to be costly in a major way.  After all, the purpose of your website is to be informational, yes, but more importantly, it should be a lead generator. If people cannot quickly and easily find the information they are looking for on your website, not only will visits to your site be short, but they will not result in new customers.  As I am so fond of saying, not good.

Here is my list of the top six most common website mistakes and how to fix them.

So…what do you do again? Ever been to a company’s website and couldn’t figure out what they did?  Not clearly stating your company’s mission statement front and center on your home page is the number one mistake I run into.  If I don’t see it, I am not going to search for it.  Instead, I am going to go back to my search engine results page and click on the next company that is listed.  If your mission statement is on your About Us or Company Profile page, move it to the home page pronto.

Watch your language! If your company is of a more technical nature and has its own language, make sure your website is written in plain English so that both industry insiders and outsiders can easily understand what it is you do.

Less is more. I am begging you, dear readers, please remember that less is more.  I am known for editing entire pages down to two paragraphs, as I firmly believe there is no reason to continually repeat the same information using ever larger SAT words.  No one is going to read it!  Also—and this is worth repeating—be sure to have someone edit the content before it is posted.  It must be free from grammatical mistakes, run-on sentences, spelling mistakes, and punctuation errors.

Bread crumbs. It should be really easy to move around on your website.  If you have multiple sections with multiple sub-pages, make sure it is easy to get back to that section’s main page and to jump from one page to another within that section.  Keep a navigation bar for the section, as well as for the entire website, clearly visible at all times.  (By entire website, I also mean the home page.)

Graphics. Use graphics that are of high-quality, professional, and relevant to your industry and your company.  This should be obvious, but, well, to some people it is not.

News should be new. If you have a News page, and you should, keep it updated.  Even if you don’t, be sure all the information on your website is current.  You should not be referencing the holiday 2009 season, upcoming fall specials, or have a press release from August 2009 prominently featured.  Visit your website at least once a month to update it.  If your content management system is difficult to use, find someone within or outside the company who is comfortable with it.