Entries Tagged 'internet marketing' ↓
February 16th, 2011 — blog, blogging, blogging for business, copywriting tips, internet marketing, marketing, online marketing
Blogging has long been known as an effective promotional tool for businesses.
Not only do they allow you to add numerous pages of great content to attract readers, they are also an excellent source of links and potential link bait.
Through your articles you can offer advice, build your repuation as an expert in your field and develop online relationships with your readers who, potentially, may become customers of the future.
On this blog I have looked at the art of blogging from many different angles including articles on:
Get Your Blogging Noticed
Can You Be a Great Blogger?
How To Become a Blogging Expert
The Holy Grail of Blogging
Better Blogging
I was interested to come across a really useful pots in socialmediaexaminer.com called 26 Ways to Enhance Your Blog Content.
The article runs through their 26 top tips related to the craft of blog writing and a number of critical factors that will help to ensure the production of high-quality posts. After all it’s only through the constant generation of interesting, well-written articles that you’ll attract a regular audience for your blog.
Grab a coffee and have a read and see how you can improve your blog content.
February 11th, 2011 — become an expert, copywriting, freelance copywriter, internet marketing, marketing, social media, social media marketing, social networking
Social media can be useful for every part of your business.
It’s not and should not be used solely as a tool for self-promotion. If you do that you’ll be about as popular as a skunk in a broken lift.
In the good old days the only way customers could get in touch with you was by phone or letter. If they were disgruntled they would moan to their friends about your service and products and you’d probably be none the wiser.
But now, they won’t just talk to their friends. Social media has given them an incredibly loud voice so if they’re unhappy about something, it won’t be long before the whole world knows about it.
How to use social media to your advantage
Monitoring social media channels can help practically every part of your business.
People love to talk and if you listen carefully you can learn a lot about their habits, their likes, their dislikes and their needs.
1. Sales
So let’s take a look at how social media can help your sales department.
The ideal time to sell to someone is when they’re ready to buy. But that’s not easy. Say you were a local electrical retailer and were looking to push a new line of washing machines. Monitoring social media channels will help you identify people who are asking advice about which washing machine to buy or those who are moaning because theirs has just broken etc.
By responding, making contact and offering advice puts you in the right place at the right time – when they’re ready to buy.
2. Marketing
Can it help with marketing?
Oh yes. Listening to your target market will give you an idea of whether what you’re saying and what they think are aligned. Do your marketing materials answer the questions they raise? Are you speaking the same language as them?
Many companies have the odd idea that they have to speak in a language all of their own. Their words have to sound impressive and convoluted – they think that’s what their customers will be impressed by.
Wrong. Customers want straight talking. If you’re a window cleaner call yourself that rather than a vision technician.
3. Customer service
As for customer service, that one speaks for itself. I’ve already mentioned how useful social media is for disgruntled customers so make sure you’re listening. If someone has received bad service, make contact straight away and put it right.
This rapid response shows you as a company that cares about its customers. So you could turn a bad situation to your advantage.
4. Development
You’ve probably got your R&D boffins locked away somewhere trying to come up with ways to improve your products.
But surely it’s your customers you should be listening to?
Social media channels will let you eaves drop on their conversations about what they would really like your products to do. You can even ask them directly to do a bit of customer research.
5. Human resources
Yes, social media can even help your HR department.
How?
Well social media users have profiles showing their skills and experience. You can search for specific talent that your company needs. You can even see what connections they have. Head hunting has never been so easy.
So as you can see, social media can help practically every aspect of your business. These online channels are a direct link between you and your customers so use them.
Sally Ormond – freelance copywriter, blogger and social media addict.
February 9th, 2011 — become an expert, copywriting tips, freelance copywriter, internet marketing, marketing, online marketing, social media, social media marketing
One of the most vital aspects for any individual or company looking to boost their profile is getting involved with social media. Since starting out as a freelance copywriter I’ve embraced social media channels to ‘get my name out there’, offer advice and drive business my way.
But if you’re a newbie, where so you start?
There is a social media language that many find impenetrable – what do you do? Should you Tweet, Facebook, go with LinkedIn? Once you have set your profiles and accounts up, what then?
Well to help you get started I found this great post on socialmediaexaminer.com on How to Create Your Personal Social Media Brand which features a video interview with Mari Smith, author of Facebook Marketing: An Hour a Day. Mari talks how to create yourself as a brand and how to monetize your personality on social media.
By watching the video you’ll learn how to build your own brand equity with social media plus some amazing tips for both the self-employed and people who work for large companies.
Here are some of the things you’ll learn in this video:
- Why you need to carve out your position and brand equity
- How to start branding yourself on social media if you don’t have any brand equity online
- Why you need to use your name on social media
- How to brand yourself on your Facebook business page
- How Mari brands herself and what she does to craft the brand she represents
So grab a coffee and take a look – it’s only takes about 6 minutes.
February 7th, 2011 — b2b copywriter, copywriter, copywriting tips, freelance copywriter, internet marketing, marketing, seo website copywriter, website copywriter, website copywriting
Whether you’re starting out and setting up an online presence or looking to create some new marketing materials, your success will be determined by their content.
Is your message engaging? Does it really give the reader what they want? Does is make them say “Wow, I really need that. How do I buy?”
Because that’s what it comes down to – the words you use have to attract, convince and convert.
I can do that…can’t I?
As well as working with individuals and companies directly, I also work with a number of graphic and web designers. When talking to them we always end up having the same conversation—they often find it hard trying to convince clients of the need for professional copywriting.
Why?
Well their thought process follows this pattern:
I have a limited budget…
I don’t know who to do HTML so I need a web designer…
Design is not in my skill set so I need a graphic designer…
I have no idea where to source great images from so I’ll pay someone else to do that…
Writing? Hey I can write I’ll do that myself.
Big mistake
So what happens next?
Someone in your company gets lumbered with the task of writing your sales copy. Here’s the problem:
- It is unlikely they have experience in writing sales copy
- They take ages to write it because they don’t have the time which holds up the whole project
- The finished copy tends to fall into the category of ‘it’ll do copy’
It is very difficult to write about your own company because you’re too close to it. To write effectively you have to distance yourself from your business and write it from your customers’ point of view. Your readers want to know how your product or service is going to benefit them. So your copy must be written for your customer.
What a copywriter will do for you
When you hire a professional copywriter they will get to know you, your business and your product/service.
They’ll put themselves in your customers’ shoes and create structured copy that addresses their needs, sells the benefits and talks to them directly.
Your website copy will be optimised for the search engines so it will attract targeted traffic. The content will convert those visitors into buying customers. And the copy will tell them what action they need to take to buy your product.
Your brochures will sell not just inform. They will convince the reader your company is the one they should deal with. No longer will they be used as a mat for their coffee cup.
Your case studies will entertain, inform and sell. Your press releases will engage and attract new business. Your email marketing will be opened, read and acted upon.
Does that really sound like a waste of money to you?
Yes we can all write, but creating eye-catching, compelling and powerful sales copy is a difficult skill to master.
So next time you are looking to create a new website or piece of sales copy, don’t try and go it alone. That piece of writing, whatever form it may take, will be the first impression the reader gets of your company – hire a professional and make sure it’s the right impression.
Don’t gamble with your company’s image.
January 24th, 2011 — copywriter, copywriting tips, internet marketing, marketing, online marketing
I have often written about the importance of internet marketing.
Today, if you want to find new customers, expand your business or grow your reputation, the internet is the place to be.
By utilising the power of online copywriting, blogs, article marketing and social media, you can drastically improve your company’s exposure within the marketplace.
Still not convinced?
Well the lovely people over at Pingdom have generated a list of mind-blowing internet numbers for 2010.
Below are just a few of the stats, for a more detailed analysis take a look at their site.
Email
- 107 trillion – The number of emails sent on the Internet in 2010.
- 294 billion – Average number of email messages per day.
- 1.88 billion – The number of email users worldwide.
- 480 million – New email users since the year before.
- 89.1% – The share of emails that were spam.
- 262 billion – The number of spam emails per day (assuming 89% are spam).
- 2.9 billion – The number of email accounts worldwide.
- 25% – Share of email accounts that are corporate.
Websites
- 255 million – The number of websites as of December 2010.
- 21.4 million – Added websites in 2010.
Internet users
- 1.97 billion – Internet users worldwide (June 2010).
- 14% – Increase in Internet users since the previous year.
- 825.1 million – Internet users in Asia.
- 475.1 million – Internet users in Europe.
- 266.2 million – Internet users in North America.
- 204.7 million – Internet users in Latin America / Caribbean.
- 110.9 million – Internet users in Africa.
- 63.2 million – Internet users in the Middle East.
- 21.3 million – Internet users in Oceania / Australia.
Social media
- 152 million – The number of blogs on the Internet (as tracked by BlogPulse).
- 25 billion – Number of sent tweets on Twitter in 2010
- 100 million – New accounts added on Twitter in 2010
- 175 million – People on Twitter as of September 2010
- 7.7 million – People following @ladygaga (Lady Gaga, Twitter’s most followed user).
- 600 million – People on Facebook at the end of 2010.
- 250 million – New people on Facebook in 2010.
- 30 billion – Pieces of content (links, notes, photos, etc.) shared on Facebook per month.
- 70% – Share of Facebook’s user base located outside the United States.
- 20 million – The number of Facebook apps installed each day.
Videos
- 2 billion – The number of videos watched per day on YouTube.
- 35 – Hours of video uploaded to YouTube every minute.
- 186 – The number of online videos the average Internet user watches in a month (USA).
- 84% – Share of Internet users that view videos online (USA).
- 14% – Share of Internet users that have uploaded videos online (USA).
- 2+ billion – The number of videos watched per month on Facebook.
- 20 million – Videos uploaded to Facebook per month.
Still think there’s no need to get your company online?