Showing posts with label Online marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Online marketing. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2014

REPOST: The Best Laid Plans Of Online Marketing


Are you facing an online marketing melt down? Read this Forbes.com article.


online-marketing
Image Source: forbes.com


Winston Churchill famously said about the former German Empire, “They are constantly snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.” This is a good phrase for marketing mavens and PR princes to remember. Even the best-laid plans of advertising agencies and online marketers gang aft agley, (often go wrong) as Scots put it.

While there is no fool-proof way to guarantee a stunning success for every single marketing campaign, there are ways and means of ensuring that, no matter what the initial outcome may be — you can confidently haul your butt out of the bear trap before it springs shut and you and your company/brand are left without a leg to stand on or a tuchas to sit on for that matter.

We’ll use the analogy of a computer virus, or bug that begins to destroy the health of your cherished PC. What do you do when such a cyber creature gets into your hard drive?

According to Ahmit Mehta at PC Health Boost, “when a bad bug hits your PC you’ll want an expert to come in and fix registry errors, file association and font entries, among other things.”

Since many people are actually emotionally tied to their PCs, it’s not a good idea for them to work on fixing it themselves, unless they’ve been technically trained to do so. I say that from experience as one who tried to fix his own beloved PC.

And just as an infected PC needs professional care, so too can your dead-in-the-water advertising and/or marketing campaign can benefit from the disinterested perspective of a third party review.

If your company/brand has spent tens of thousands of dollars on an online advertising campaign , and the results have not resulted in much traffic or the conversion of traffic into paying customers, you are in deep trouble, my friend, and you will soon know it, either by the statistics you are forced to look at, or by the ferocious baying for blood of your boss.

Not often I get to use gang aft agley, tuchas and baying in the same article.

But I digress.

No matter how you discover the disaster, your next step as a marketing, advertising and publicity professional is to stop the hemorrhaging and find a way to salvage the company’s investment. As in the eradication of a computer virus, don’t play the blame game; at this point, with the money swirling around the toilet bowl ready to sink and be lost forever, it isn’t important to point fingers; what is important is to calmly and quickly make lemonade out of the sour citrus that you’ve been handed.

Go back and look at your strategy for this particular campaign — assuming you had one of course.

In their article from this past November 7 Reasons Why Your Online Marketing Is Failing, SEO firm Dejan SEO lays out some of the reasons your online campaign is not performing up to expectations. Among the 7 reasons they list include:

  • You Let SEO Overshadow Quality Content
  • “Don’t forgo your creativity entirely for the sake of your obsession with keywords.”
  • Your Marketing Teams Do Not Collaborate
  • “Online marketing demands that there is constant interaction between different teams and departments, such as SEO, PR and Marketing.” You are not alone

Many of the best and brightest in the PR/Marketing game have had to face disasters, and have been able to land on their feet, like a cat. For example Mervyn LeRoy, a famous Hollywood publicity director, was tasked with the seemingly impossible job of turning Jane Russell’s first big-budget movie “The Outlaw” into a family-friendly film because the studio was going bankrupt trying to sell it as a sexy western, which is what it was (and still is).

But this was back in 1943, when moral standards were a little higher than they are today.

Movie theaters were pulling the film and sending it back to the studio, saying “thanks, but no thanks – send us something the whole family can watch, not this smut.” LeRoy pruned some of the most egregious scenes from the film and then repackaged it as a morality play, where the bad girl (Russell) gets her just desserts and the good girl (Mimi Aguglia) is rewarded for her virtue. Marketed THAT way, the film became a blockbuster and saved the studio’s hide.

So the next time you’re faced with a marketing melt-down, just remember your PC and/or Jane Russell, and the servicing it takes to pull the rabbit of success out of the hat of disaster.

John Bohan is currently the general manager of SocialTyze, an Internet firm that helps brands empower their consumers by providing in-depth information. To know more about his expertise, visit this Facebook page.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

REPOST: New Google Tool Helps Businesses Deliver Better Online Ads


How will "The Customer Journey to Online Purchase" - a new tool launched by Google - help online businesses? Read about it from this Entrepreneur.com article.

When customers visit your website with the intention of making a purchase, do you always know how they arrived there? Were they directed to your site from a display advertisement on another site? Did they click on a link emailed to them by a friend? Did they find your product or service through an online search? And which is most effective for driving sales online?

These are questions Google is trying to answer with a new tool called "The Customer Journey to Online Purchase," which allows users to explore typical online buying behavior and see how different marketing interactions impact online sales -- from the first time customers interact with your marketing to the moment they buy something. Released today, the tool draws on data collected from more than 36,000 Google Analytics business clients.

Image Source: Entrepreneur.com

For instance, customers typically click on display ads early in the online purchasing process, but in industries such as travel and auto, customers tend to click on display ads closer to their purchasing decision, according to Google. "The data shows that every industry is different," Google said in an announcement. "The path to purchase for hotel rooms in Japan is not necessarily the same as the path for an online supermarket in Canada."

The idea, Google says, is to help marketers design advertising campaigns that deliver the right message at the right moment. Business owners can use The Customer Journey to Online Purchase tool to look at typical purchasing trends in their industry, and then reference their own Google Analytics data to determine how and where different marketing channels influence customers to make purchases so they can adjust their budgets and programs accordingly.

The Customer Journey to Online Purchase tool is free to use and is available starting today.

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Are you interested to learn more about search engine marketing? Visit this John Bohan blog site for more related articles.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Facebook's latest redesign: Will it be better for brands?

True to Mark Zuckerberg’s entry in 2006 about how Facebook listened to feedback from its users and contributors, the company’s decision to revamp its news feed seems to be fueled by user complaints of boredom on the site and by pressure from advertisers that want more value for their money.


Image source: score.org
The social networking site has gone far from being “brand new and still evolving” to something that is almost ubiquitous to people in the modern age. As the site attempts to change the way people find information on the Internet, it seems inevitable for its users to ask for more.

Previously, it launched its Graph Search feature, which allows people to “find more of what they’re looking for through their friends and connections.” The news feed redesign move, meanwhile, is aimed at making the site akin to “the best personalized newspaper in the world.”

Image source: postfever.com

The customizable feed now allows users to see only the types of content that they want to see. They can focus on video feeds, music feeds, or photo feeds and expect to get the type of content that they favor from their friends. Meanwhile, advertisers can be happier with the following feed, which is dedicated to the posts of brands and people users are following, arranged chronologically. Facebook maintains that through this feed, people won’t be missing any posts now.

Image source: higheredlive.com

With these changes, the social networking site has effectively responded to advertiser complaints that people aren’t seeing their important posts enough. In time when competitors are at the heels of Facebook, perhaps the change is enough to prevent advertisers from seeking another platform.

John Bohan is an Internet advertising expert who specializes in social marketing solutions. Find more material on effective social media use on Socialtyze.com.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Social media tips for the new year



As more and more people are getting into the social media craze, social media gurus, like John Bohan and Jonathan Porter, believe that it is important for marketers and companies to realize that social media is not just a fad—it is here to stay. Thus, integration of social media into companies’ marketing strategies is very important for them to stay relevant throughout this year.

Image Source: fastcompany.com

However, direct marketing and promotion will no longer work, as people are now tech savvy, which means that they can smell an ad from miles away. Online marketing should take a different approach. Here are some tips that companies can use:

• Social media marketing is all about connections. People are more likely to respond to peer reviews and recommendations from friends than to social media ads. A “like” or a “repost” from friends has more selling power than a banner ad.

• Social media is not only Facebook. A lot of companies think that being on Facebook is enough. It is not. In fact, more people scour review videos on YouTube before purchasing a product than read about them on Facebook.


Image Source: khaledsulaiman.com

• Companies should not stick to a one-device policy. People are accessing the Internet and socializing not just on computers but also on their mobile devices. This study shows that people use a variety of devices to stay online.

• Photographs pull in audiences. People would rather look at pictures than read text. This is why Pinterest is a very effective social marketing tool.


Image Source: forbes.com

The social media marketing landscape is changing at a fast rate, and companies have to make the most of it or risk being irrelevant.

For more on social media and how it can help you, visit this website.