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Posts mit dem Label Small werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

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Storytelling: The Original Social Media has been around since the first words were uttered. Even with the advent of great technologies, that person-to-person connection is still the best form of social interaction. There is no better media than a good story that is well told. Listener or storyteller, show your love for this time-tested art form with our special edition Tshirt.


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Storytelling: The Original Social Media - Female Small - Royal Blue

Small Business Social Media - John "ColderICE" Lawson Live - 2 DVD Set

Speaker Profile: John Lawson (ColderICE.com)


Every day, thousands of small businesses and entrepreneurs miss out on millions of dollars in revenue simply because they don’t know how to utilize the Internet for marketing and selling. John Lawson does NOT bring the same old ABC stuff, John outlines actual practices for Multichannel and Social Media Marketing that will yield bottom line results and amp up your business.

American Express Open Forum

Platinum eBay Powerseller

Top Rated Amazon Seller

Amex Commercial TV Personality

John is the CEO of 3rd Power Outlet and the founder of the award-winning ecommerce industry blog at ColderICE.com. John is an Platinum eBay Power Seller, Top-Rated Amazon Seller, Social Media Personality and ecommerce analyst for Wal-Street firms. John specializes in ecommerce, social rich-media marketing and mobile commerce.


John is a very dynamic and entertaining speaker. His presentations are packed with usable, actionable information and his delivery is simply unforgettable. When the response sheets come in, you can bet John will lead the pack for satisfaction scores. Make the event memorable because John is simply unforgettable on stage.


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Small Business Social Media - John "ColderICE" Lawson Live - 2 DVD Set

Add Me | Facebook - Female Small - Royal Blue

A shirt about Facebook designed by a fan of Facebook. I am in no way claiming to own rights to Facebook or the appearance of their logo. All rights are property of Facebook, Inc. 2015


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Add Me | Facebook - Female Small - Royal Blue

Tapping the Marketing Power of Small Business Email



Related Articles




Small business owners spend a lot of time and money marketing their products and services to prospective customers. Those small business marketing efforts span a range of tactics and platforms including, for example, social media sites, Google Adwords pay-per-click campaigns, and SEO optimization to drive website traffic.


But you may be missing out on your largest media channel for growing both your customer base and your bottom line: everyday business email. How many business emails do you and your employees send every day and over the course of a year? Every one of them is a missed marketing opportunity according to Nick Lissette, CEO and founder of Black Pearl Mail, a New Zealand-based email branding-management company.


Email as a Media Channel


Consider this finding from the Radicati Group’s Email Statistics Report (PDF):



Advertisement



Email remains the predominant form of communication in the business space. This trend is expected to continue, and business email will account for over 132 billion emails sent and received per day by the end of 2017.


Black Pearl Mail (BPM) claims that business employees each send, on average, more than 10,250 email per year. Lissette maintains that although business email is “owned media” (a channel over which business owners maintain control), it remains an underutilized, untapped marketing opportunity.


“Small businesses communicate primarily by email, and yet it goes unbranded or poorly branded,” says Lissette. “You’re most effective communication channel should be your most-branded,” he contends.


Black Pearl Mail signature on the iPhone


A Black Pearl Mail signature remains a consistent look across devices. Seen here on the iPhone.


Branding Business Email


A plug-in for your existing email platform, BPM supports Gmail, Google Apps for Work, Office 365, Exchange, IMAP, POP, and Lotus. BPM “provides a consistent look to your email to anyone who opens it,” said Lissette. “It doesn’t matter which email platform they’re on or what device they use to view it.”


The service consists of three main components: email signatures, central management, and analytics.


Email signature builder


The email signature builder lets you create consistent email signatures and branding for your business. You can upload your company logo, add banners and footers, and include promotional links to drive traffic to your website or social media pages.


“You can add anything to the top of an email: a promotion, a YouTube video—any content relating to your website.” said Lissette. For example, the email signature of one BPM customer, a bank in this case, contained the logo in the left-hand corner and a banner listing the latest interest rate.


“Once you start branding your email, it does amazing things for your business,” said Lissette. Another customer, a glazier by trade, sent 100 emails that included a promotional banner. “Out of those 100 emails, 48 people clicked on the promotion,” Lissette claimed.


Black Pearl Mail signature on a tablet


A Black Pearl Mail signature as seen on a tablet.


Central management


The BPM central management console operates primarily in the cloud, although Lissette said it’s also available as an on-premises version for companies that require it. The console lets you create and assign email signatures to your employees, which helps to keep your company’s branding consistent. You can assign individual signatures, create signatures for specific groups within your organization, or simply assign one signature company-wide if you desire.


Lissette said that small business owners can make changes to any or all signatures from the Web-based console. This, he added, keeps company messaging consistent, relevant, and up-to-date.


Email analytics


You have direct control over your email until you click “send.” BPM’s analytics capability changes that by letting you gauge email effectiveness. “You can see when a recipient opens an email without requiring a “read receipt,” said Lissette, a capability he calls mission critical.


The analytics capability also generates reports on which links recipients click, which lets small business owners and marketers see which promotions or content resonate with potential customers and make adjustments accordingly.


Small Business Benefits


Not surprisingly, Lissette claims that any company that uses email can benefit from Black Pearl Mail. It turns everyday business email into a lead-gen opportunity. “Traditional email marketing campaigns [think VerticalResponse or MailChimp] have relatively low click-through rates,” said Lissette. “People filter for them, and they become optional reading.”


The company’s website claims that, “With good content customers can expect a click-through rate of higher than 5 percent with external emails.” If click-through is as high as BPM claims [Editorial note: it’s a big if, and we have not yet tested this claim], a small business owner might reasonably expect more traffic to his or her website and social media pages.


Black Pearl Mail Pricing


Black Pearl Mail costs a minimum of $15 per month (that includes up to 15 people). The company charges an additional 1$ per month per person after that.


Lauren Simonds is the managing editor of SmallBusinessComputing.com. Follow her on Twitter.



Do you have a comment or question about this article or other small business topics in general? Speak out in the SmallBusinessComputing.com Forums. Join the discussion today!

Tapping the Marketing Power of Small Business Email

Internet Marketing Tips and Tools To Help Small Businesses Grow Now

Although there are many ways to market your business to help you grow quickly, nothing is more effective than internet marketing. The reason is that it allows you to automate many of your marketing processes by using online tools and scripts. Marketing materials like emails, articles, and even videos can be scheduled to post when you need them to so that you are free to do other things. Borderless ecommerce techniques allow you to connect with your customers worldwide.


Before marketing your business on the internet, it is important to have a plan and create the assets you need to market. Assets are online properties where your business may be found. According to Priya Shah at Business2Community, the first, and a must have asset, is your website. A website is the home for your business online and the foundation for your internet marketing plan. The URL, or the domain name, is the “street address” for your business online.


Once your website is in place, there are certain internet marketing strategies that are an important part of your internet marketing plan. These strategies include search engine optimization of your website, creating business pages, and using specific industry portals for your business. Google, Facebook, and Twitter allow you to create a social marketing strategy to distribute your content and connect with your audience.


Google allows you to use several different internet marketing strategies to market your business. They include indexing your site in the search engines, building a business page to showcase your business, and advertising to help you drive traffic to your business quickly.


Facebook provides many of the same internet marketing opportunities since it offers fan pages and ads, and it is the top social marketing website online. Twitter allows for microblogging, which are short messages approximately 140 characters long, that allow you to communicate with and connect to your audience. Twitter also offers paid advertising opportunities for those who want to drive traffic quickly.


Internet marketing tools help automate many of your internet marketing strategies and complete marketing tasks quickly. According to Greg Nunan at Tech.co, there are many free tools that are essential to internet marketing success. These include tools to create digital documents, find ideas for content, make presentations and infographics, and spy on your competitors. Tools like autoresponders, although not generally free, allow small businesses to automate their email marketing campaigns and save time with menial tasks like subscribes and unsubscribes.


What are your favorite free internet marketing tools? Which internet marketing techniques do you use to market your business?


[Photo Credit 1 Stop Marketing Solutions]




Internet Marketing Tips and Tools To Help Small Businesses Grow Now

New PM boss learns lessons: start small and market hard


A rookie principal has established a strong Facebook following and also focused on building his new agency’s rent roll to offset a soft sales market.


Celebrating his company’s first anniversary, Raine & Horne Muswellbrook director Grant Jupe said he’s fulfilling a dream by running his own business despite tough market conditions.


“We’ve had to learn to hit the ground running, market hard and come into a difficult market and get our market share during tough times,” Mr Jupe told RPM.


He said the slow sales market was caused by reduced mining activity near Muswellbrook, which is 180 kilometres north of Sydney.


“We’ve worked on building our rent roll, which has gotten very strong over the past 12 months, so we’ve really put our focus on that while sales have been a bit quieter.”


According to Mr Jupe, the company has run several marketing campaigns at a local level to help establish the brand, particularly within the digital space.


“We actually have the most highly followed and interacted Facebook page of all the agents in town,” he said.


“We’re also using the original method of print media and letterbox dropping, so we try to cover all bases.”


In setting up his own company, Mr Jupe has emphasised the importance of doing adequate research and setting realistic goals.


“We’ve exceeded our goals and expectations in the early months, as it’s always better to aim for a smaller scale when starting a new business,” he said.


“You can then reach those goals and even use those achievements in your marketing, like we did.”


Mr Jupe said setting up a franchise business was the right way for him, since it offered instant brand recognition in the local area.


“I always had my heart set on going with a franchise rather than going independent, because of the support, training and network that comes with a franchise,” he said.


One key thing that helped Mr Jupe in establishing his business is familiarity with the area and the market.


“I’d already been working in real estate in this area, so I had ongoing knowledge as an active agent and I was fairly familiar with the market and the other agents in town.”


[Related: Starting a rent roll from scratch]





New PM boss learns lessons: start small and market hard

Facebook Marketing for Small Business: Easy Strategies to Engage Your Facebook Community


Advertise Your Business Today with Tomorrow’s Strategies 


If you run a small business, then Facebook is your new best friend. Facebook can help you find new customers, promote brand loyalty, and turn awareness into sales. But the internet changes quickly. To take advantage of everything Facebook has to offer, you’ll need the newest tools and the most reliable techniques. That’s why Arnel Leyva and Natalie Law created Facebook Marketing for Small Business.


Facebook Marketing for Small Business is your concise guide to the Facebook marketing strategies that are working for today’s biggest and most successful companies. Leyva and Law will show you how to apply sophisticated marketing techniques to your own small business—and how to profit from them. With:


  • Step-by-step instructions and full-color screenshots

  • Handy guide to optimize your Facebook business page

  • Tools for creating Facebook ads and tracking your results

  • Real-life examples of Facebook marketing success stories

  • Pro tips for using Instagram, Twitter, promotions, sweepstakes, and e-commerce

 Facebook Marketing for Small Business gives you everything you need to improve your online marketing today.


Click Here For More Information



Facebook Marketing for Small Business: Easy Strategies to Engage Your Facebook Community

BLOG: Quick tips for small business marketing

AKRON — We all know that I love social media and think it’s a great tool for small business marketing. While it is an important piece to any small business’ marketing puzzle, I do encourage everyone to take a look at what else is out there as well. Going on social media may help you hit some target demographics, but how can you reach the rest?


Here are five quick tips for social media marketing:


  • Personalized email: According to Entrepreneur magazine’s website, the Direct Marketing Association said for every dollar invested, email marketing generates a $40 return on investment (ROI).

“The problem is, while we used to get excited for the ‘You’ve got mail!’ chime, e-mail inboxes have become increasingly crowded. It’s it difficult to capture a customer’s attention.”


  • Pay attention: A Business 2 Community article gave some simple, but great advice about small business marketing: Business owners should make it a routine to monitor what consumers are saying about them across the web, whether it’s a review, rating or social post.

Being active with any conversation online can only help you, as long as you respond in a positive manner. Additionally, part of the charm of a small business is that you can be more personable than bigger companies. Business owners responding can really resonate with your audience. You are showing that you are taking care of them.


  • In-person networking: Small Business Trends advises business owners to get out there and see the people! Visit local events — and of course take photos so you can share them on social media later. Use your place in the community to your advantage to get your name out there. Sponsoring local events is also a great way to get the community acquainted with your business.

  • Realize marketing IS important: This seems simple, but to some small business owners it’s not. As stated in The Huffington Post: “There’s a perception that marketing is nice, but unnecessary for a business. As long as you’re producing something of value (a product or a service), every other strategy your company uses must be superfluous.”

  • Pens: I know this sounds a little off, but I firmly believe pens are a great way of getting your company name out there. Although the world is getting more technically advanced, there are still reasons why people need writing instruments. Pens are also the things people often forget to carry. The more “techy” alternative of this is a jump drive. Giving away simple things that everyone needs that has your company name, phone number and address can be a great way to promote your business. The best part is, since everyone needs pens and jump drives, you can use them at your business too. Employees need pens to write with at the shop. Why wouldn’t you use ones that promote your business?

It’s a constant reminder too. I’ll be honest, as a journalist, I always have a pen on me because you never know when you will come across a story. As an overachiever in preparation, I have at least five pens in my purse at any given time, just in case I lose one — or three — or one runs out of ink. I end up using a lot of hotel pens. Every time I stay somewhere, I end up using the pen in the room and take it with me. For months after I travel somewhere, I have those hotel pens. This can work for you as well as a service provider.


 


Here are some additional resources:


  1. Personalizing Ads Can Boost Marketing for Small Businesses

  2. 5 Digital Marketing Rules Every Small Business Needs to Know

  3. Your Massive Guide to Small Business Marketing on a Budget 

  4. What Small Businesses Must Know About Next-Generation Marketing

  5. The Small Business Owner: A One-Man Band [Infographic]

  6. Top Tech Tools To Help Your Small Business Grow


BLOG: Quick tips for small business marketing

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Small Business Seminar Set for Thursday

The Arkansas Small Business and Technology Development Center will present “Free and Local: Small Business Marketing” 1-4 p.m. Thursday at the Fort Smith Public Library, 3201 Rogers Ave.


“In the presentation, the speaker shares marketing approaches that are not only practical and low-cost, but are effective for any size business,” a news release states.


Among the topics to be covered are marketing fundamentals, image development, customer service, online marketing, public relations, and other low-cost marketing methods. This fast-paced workshop provides ideas that any business can use right away. There is no cost to attend thanks to Arvest Business Resource Center, but seating is limited and registration required by Wednesday at (479) 356-2067 or asbtdc.org/training/russellville-events.



Small Business Seminar Set for Thursday

Facebook Brings Live Events to Small Business



There are now more than 40 million active small business Pages on Facebook. As the number continues to grow, the social media giant has been launching several initiatives to better support these companies.


Facebook has announced two new resources to help small businesses grow on the social network: the 2015 Boost Your Business Program and live support on the Facebook for Business website.


Here’s what the new programs have to offer and how they can help your business. [Facebook for Business: Everything You Need to Know]


Earlier this year, Facebook launched the Ads Manager iOS app, the Creative Shop and the Blueprint marketing training program to help advertisers better create, manage and strategize their marketing efforts.


The new 2015 Boost Your Business program takes this to the next level by holding events throughout the nation, while the new live support makes it easier to reach an Ad Specialist to personally help small businesses with their campaigns.


Boost Your Business program


The 2015 Boost Your Business program is designed to help small businesses improve their marketing and reach more customers on the platform through live events in four U.S. cities: San Diego, Minneapolis, Nashville and Boston.


It consists of half-day and two-hour pop-up events where Facebook and its partners will be speaking to small businesses about social media marketing best practices and how they can grow their businesses on Facebook. The representatives will also be discussing new marketing strategies and tools that are now available to small businesses.


The Boost Your Business program is launched in partnership with Visa, email marketing provider MailChimp, e-commerce solution Shopify, human resources service provider Zenefits and Facebook marketing expert Mari Smith.


To attend these events, you can either register for the main program or find a two-hour event near you.


Facebook for Business live support


Users of Facebook for Business now have an easier way to get the help they need when they need it. Just click on the Get Help button to instantly connect to an Ad Specialist using the new live-chat feature.


Live chat will be rolled out in several countries, starting with the United States, United Kingdom and Ireland. Facebook says it also plans to launch live mobile chat and phone support.



Facebook Brings Live Events to Small Business

The Facebook Guide To Small Business Marketing

Helps small-business owners leverage the power of Facebook to market to a large base of potential customers. Original.
Title The Facebook Guide to Small Business Marketing
Author Ramon Ray
Publisher John Wiley & Sons Inc
Publication Date 2013/02/04
Number of Pages 260
Binding Type PAPERBACK
Library of Congress


Click Here For More Information



The Facebook Guide To Small Business Marketing

Now With 2 Million Advertisers, Facebook Gains a Foothold With Small Businesses

Facebook now has 2 million advertisers, a milestone CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced today in a video post on the social network. Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg thanked small-and-medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and entrepreneurs for jumping on board with the platform, helping it attract 500,000 new advertisers in the last year.


“Millions of businesses like yours are using Facebook to connect with their customers and reach the world,” Sandberg remarked in the clip.


Just a few years ago, Facebook was an unknown quantity when it came to local advertising for SMBs—the platform was perceived to be more for direct e-commerce players and big brands. That small-business challenge appears to have been met.


“What does stand out here is that Facebook is making it easier to advertise, particularly for small- and medium-sized businesses,” said Rebecca Lieb, a Facebook analyst. “Much like search engines developed tools 10 years ago to serve targeted ads, Facebook is doing the same and removing a lot of friction for these businesses.”


Reaching 2 million advertisers is yet another indication of Facebook’s growing dominance in digital, getting more businesses to market to its 1.4 billion users. The social network is changing the face of digital advertising much the way search redefined the marketplace more than 10 years ago, according to Lieb and other industry watchers.


Today, Facebook also launched a mobile app to help businesses manage marketing campaigns. And it’s these types of “turn-key” products for small businesses, which are often less socially savvy, that are making it possible to advertise on Facebook, Lieb said.


“Targeting, segmenting, day-parting—this is not their core competency,” she said, referring to the thousands of small businesses that have to learn a whole new marketing language for the social network. “Facebook has to go into local markets and show them this is how you as local advertisers leverage the platform.”


The fact is that to reach fans on Facebook, big brands and small businesses have to pay for promoted posts. There is no such thing as free reach, according to Jordan Kretchmer, CEO of social marketing software firm Livefyre.


“Facebook has become one of the best paid media channels out there,” Kretchmer said. The social network is developing the ads, the networks, the tools and data collection capabilities that hold promise for marketers to reach consumers in the most targeted way possible, online and via mobile devices.


However, its total control also creates the risk that businesses will become overly reliant on Facebook to reach audiences.


Big brands have already reacted to Facebook’s dominance by investing in their own data and audiences, like Taco Bell building an app last year to own access to its user base, Kretchmer said. “If Facebook changes something tomorrow, these brands can jump away from it and not miss a beat,” he said. “Small businesses are at a disadvantage. They are beholden to pay Facebook to drive traffic.”


Last quarter, Facebook ad revenue was $3.6 billion, an increase of almost 60 percent year over year. It is the No. 2 digital ad business, still far behind Google, but comfortably ahead of companies like Twitter and Yahoo.


Of course, it also has rivals like Snapchat, coming up today much like Facebook was 10 years ago. That’s why Facebook bought Instagram and WhatsApp, which have more than a billion users combined.


“Marketers flock to media that collects the most users, that’s just how it is,” said Nate Elliott, a Forrester researcher. So Facebook’s size is drawing the biggest brands, which are having the most success at the moment marketing there, he said.


The large companies have the advantage because they have their own data, and Facebook can be stingy when it comes to sharing its data.


“It’s perverse. Facebook knows more about customers than anyone ever, yet marketers are forced to bring their own data to the party,” Elliott said.


Marketing experts said the data question is the next one Facebook has to address with small businesses. Kretchmer said companies like his Livefyre are developing ad-targeting and data tools that have only been accessible to large brands so far.


“Getting to relevancy is more difficult for smaller businesses than larger ones,” said Debra Aho Williamson, eMarketer’s principal analyst. “For one thing, they don’t tend to come into Facebook with their own large data sets, as do many of the larger companies that advertise on Facebook. This presents an opportunity for Facebook to educate small businesses about the best way to create and target ads to achieve relevancy.”



Now With 2 Million Advertisers, Facebook Gains a Foothold With Small Businesses

The Small Win Email: A New Way To Think About Conversions

I’ve been hearing a lot about conversion optimization lately. It’s mostly good stuff – writing clear copy, focusing on clean designs, creating a strong value proposition, etc.


Those are all conversion best practices but the truth is that most businesses are powered by small wins. It’s all the things that happen between the top of the funnel and the bottom that ultimately result in conversions.


The reason this is frustrating is because it’s hard to keep track of (and create) small wins. Imagine someone discovers your product or service through your content or social media. That often serendipitously – these people are nowhere near ready to buy from you. Once they are aware, however, small wins make them like you, trust you and, ultimately, need you.


vero conversion optimization


There are lots of ways to create small wins, with email chief among them. In this post, I’ll show you some email examples from companies who are blocking and tackling in hopes of one day scoring a touchdown.



Recommended for YouWebcast: How to Build a Passionate Culture of Team Engagement and Growth



These emails could be considered onboarding emails, lifecycle emails, behavioral emails or promotional emails. It doesn’t matter what you call them – they are being sent to people somewhere between the “initial interest” stage and the actual conversion. They are designed to net small wins like:


  • Introduce people to features or products

  • Build trusting relationships with content

  • Start a real, genuine conversation

  • Build momentum towards a bigger goal

Here are a few great examples of Small Win Emails from some really smart companies and people. Let’s get to it.


Backlinko: The Conversation Starter Email


There are a number of ways you can subscribe to Brian Dean’s Backlinko email list. You can signup right on the homepage or you can opt-in via one of the many content upgrades in his posts.


Regardless of how you do it, you’ll immediately receive an email like the one below.



Reply to this email right now and tell me one thing that you’re struggling with.


Even if it’s teeny tiny…I want to hear about it.



The conversion isn’t signing up for his paid SEO course or even clicking a link. It’s simply replying.


This accomplishes two key goals. First, it cements Brian as a real human being in the eyes of the recipient. This is not some corporate blog – Brian actually wants to hear and learn from you. Second, it builds trust. People that respond are making themselves vulnerable by sharing their challenges, struggles and failures. And when Brian responds, he becomes a friend, not just a blogger.


Brian Dean Backlinko


Dropbox: The “Just Because We Like You” Email


How many of your users are one small win away from becoming a great customer?


Well, no one really knows which is why it’s so important to keep people informed about updates to your product. Say, for example, you’re a Dropbox user that travels a lot. This feature – Microsoft Office integration – is huge. It could easily be the difference in using Dropbox instead of a competitor like Google Docs.


This email works because it’s so matter-of-fact. There’s no flashy headline or overstated subject line. The information is important enough that it’s not necessary. The copy is straightforward and leads the reader to a practical call to action.


dropbox new feature email-1


Shopify: The “Over the Hump” Email


This is a perfect example of a Small Win Email.


There’s an onboarding problem that a lot of SaaS businesses face: their free trial users feel overwhelmed, so they do nothing.


Shopify is tackling this issue.


This email looks and feels a lot like a newsletter but it’s actually a very smart retention email. I signed up for a free trial but let it lapse without setting up my store. Instead of encouraging me to create a store or add a product, they are starting very small. Just create a logo. See how it feels. Dip your toes back in the water.


It could be just the thing users need to get back in the game.


shopify email marketing-1


Evernote: The “Did You Know?” Email


We’ve talked a lot about “Did you know” emails on the blog before but this one from Evernote really nails it.


It’s as practical as it could possibly be. Notice that it doesn’t ask users to upgrade to a paid account and it avoids the flashy subject lines that have jaded most email users. It’s simple, clear, personalized and actionable … the perfect Small Win Email.


evernote email marketing small win-1


Automotive Specialists: The Replenishment Email


This email isn’t pretty, but it sure is smart.


We talk a lot about startups, e-commerce, and SaaS business, but here’s a great example of Small Win Email from a locally owned, family business. It’s behavioral in nature – the same type of email I might expect from a SaaS service if I’ve been inactive or a while or from an e-commerce store if I purchased something that needs to be replenished.


It works because it makes my life easier. Of course I know I should change the oil regularly, but I always forget to look at the windshield sticker. Even if I do, I have to set a reminder on my phone and call when I have time. This is so much easier. It’s personalized with my name, my car, the mileage and it lets me book an appointment right away.


It’s exactly this kind of email that is often overlooked by tech companies. Keep it simple – your customers will appreciate it.


automotive specialists-1


Do you send Small Win Emails? If you’d like to share an idea or ask a question, just drop a note in the comments.




The Small Win Email: A New Way To Think About Conversions

How small business owners can get started with online marketing

How small business owners can get started with online marketing

Digital engagement can be more cost-effective than romantic engagement.



Research by Deloitte Access Economics suggests highly digitally engaged businesses earn $350,000 more per year than their counterparts.


Since we are talking about small businesses, this is a significant increase in sales. Small businesses making full use of the internet enjoy 20 per cent higher annual revenues.


The research also shows that only 16 per cent of Australian small and medium-sized enterprises are making the most of it. This means the remaining 84 per cent – a staggering 1.7 million businesses – are missing out on sales.


So why are most businesses failing to become more digitally engaged? What’s stopping them from making better use of the internet?


From my experience with NetStripes, there are several reasons for this.


1. The family trap


Entrepreneurs are often unaware of what needs to be done and lack the time or skills to focus on effective online marketing. They often use family members or friends to help out but, unless the friend or family member is an expert in the field, generally this is a bad idea.


Take Roz Davis as an example. Davis runs a small but successful legal practice, Absolute Legal Services, from the Central Coast of NSW. She used a family member to design her website, but the site was busy and distracting to the user and didn’t meet the professional image she wanted to portray. Although Davis was lucky to get a functional website, the strategy to position herself and her services in the marketplace needed a lot more focus. Davis has subsequently produced a truly professional site with a firm focused on small-business owners being digitally engaged.


2. The money myth


Business owners often believe they have insufficient funds or that online marketing activities are too expensive to have a significant effect on sales. The research by Deloitte suggests the type of return on investment you can expect.


Gordon Burke, the owner of serviced apartments provider Executive Oasis, says working with a good Australian search engine optimisation (SEO) provider helped his firm to be listed on the first page of Google for the most desired set of keywords in a very short period of time. He couldn’t believe his eyes when, in just three to four months, his apartments took out the No. 1 rank, beating big players such as Wotif.com, TripAdvisor and even Tourism Armidale.


3. Cowboy operators


Many small businesses have been burnt by cowboy operators who have done poor quality work for the promise of a low price. It usually happens with small offshore companies which are incredibly tough to handle.


A senior partner at accountancy practice SM Rosen & Co says he had such a bad experience that he finally had to move to another firm and start from scratch, losing a lot of time, money and sleep on a new venture, Party Affairs, that he was helping his daughter with.


4. Burnt by the big guys


Other small businesses have been burnt by larger digital agencies which have cost them an arm and a leg while delivering only mediocre results. These agencies focus on large corporations, so small businesses with much lower budgets are often overlooked.


How to get from zero to digital hero


If you run a small business, you will have a tight schedule and you might even be too busy to tell people how busy you are. Fair enough. However, the truth is that digital engagement doesn’t require all of your time and it is one of the most cost-effective ways to market your products or services.


The trick is to find the right service provider who has a track record of delivering results and understands both the small-business owner’s psyche as well as the tough demands placed on them.


But to take a full advantage of the internet, first you have to understand what makes companies highly digitally engaged. It’s definitely not enough just to have a website or to use a business email address.


I’d describe high digital engagement as using online strategies and techniques to market your business and engage customers in achieving set goals. So what are the major elements behind that description? Let’s break it down.


1. Search engine optimisation


Commonly known as SEO, this is the process of affecting the visibility of a website in a search engine’s unpaid or “organic” search results. The higher ranked on the search engine results page your website is, the more visitors it will receive from the search engine’s users. It’s vital to get to the first page on Google as it garners more than 90 per cent of all traffic from the average search.


2. Search engine marketing


Search engine marketing (SEM) is a wider discipline that incorporates SEO. It involves the promotion of websites by increasing their visibility in search engine results pages through optimisation and paid advertising.


SEM may use SEO or pay-per-click listings, and is widely considered one of the most effective customer acquisition tactics. More than 3.5 billion daily searches on Google offer a few clues as to why.


3. Perfectly engineered, mobile-ready websites


Online means competing on a global stage, so your website must provide a world-class customer experience. Users are impatient and will not persevere if the experience of navigating your site is not pleasant.


For example, 40 per cent of people will abandon a website if it takes more than three seconds to load. In addition, more than 50 per cent of all searches are now done via mobile phones, so if your site is not mobile-enabled you can lose a half of your potential customers.


4. Strong social media engagement


Social media is word-of-mouth marketing in its purest form. Almost 1.3 billion Facebook users, more than 600 million Twitter users and 200 million LinkedIn users make it an excellent channel for business exposure.


I don’t have to tell you how important it is to retain clients, and social media sites are the perfect channel to keep them engaged. Almost three out of four social media users read online reviews before making a purchase, so a strategic and customer-oriented approach is vital to win more business.


5. Strategic email marketing


Email is still the king. Regular daily, weekly, fortnightly or monthly content-rich newsletters will engage your customers like nothing else. Plus, they are easily forwarded. Like social media, email marketing means you can track the results and get a great insight into your customers. Finally, being able to tailor your emails and designs to suit your target groups is a big advantage when promoting your business.


Dinesh De Silva is CEO of NetStripes, an Australian tech start-up working with small-business owners aiming to increase their sales using smart digital solutions.



How small business owners can get started with online marketing

Small businesses don't 'like' the new Facebook

Feb. 13, 2015 | by Ed Zimmerman


Facebook, which changed the way the world shares memories and keeps in touch with friends and family, wasn’t originally a marketing tool for businesses. However, businesses quickly figured out that they could also promote their sales events and publish PR news to “engage” with customers and increase sales. The key was to attract as many “likes” as possible to build a network of followers to market to on Facebook.


These free promotional announcements via social media were often the best advertising tool available to small businesses, but Facebook recently changed the game. In January, Facebook began filtering out unpaid sales and promotional posts on business news feeds. 


As a result, the only way for a business to reach its network of likes is to buy ads on the social network. Facebook said the change is based on customer feedback, as surveys indicated users were tired of seeing their news feeds splattered with posts pushing a product or service, an app or contest. Now, the news feeds will include only the relevant posts they desire, interrupted by just a few ads that are geo- and behavioral-targeted.


This is a huge blow to businesses, which have spent years building their followers on Facebook; it’s as if the social network deleted their database … whoosh, out with the recycle bin. Facebook finally adopted the publishing model of the old school media: If you want to publicize your business, you have to pay.


Now to be fair, Facebook’s advertising features have some advantages offering effective options for businesses to reach potential customers. But that dream of going viral with a cool post, is just a dream now, as a business will have to pay to promote the announcement or boost it.


Now What?


Small business owners and restaurateurs will have to quickly re-evaluate their marketing plans for 2015. It’s important to continue posting news on Facebook, using it as a customer service tool to communicate directly with customers and upload a menu (a new feature). 


The most important marketing investment should be on the company website, ensuring it’s optimized for search engines. Managing customer reviews is also critical to make sure customers are sharing their positive experiences, while minimizing damage from negative feedback.


Buying keywords on Google, Yahoo and Bing should also be a priority to capture potential customers who are in the market for a product or service. As far online advertising, the click-through rate for Facebook posts aren’t that much better than a targeted banner ad campaign. Don’t just throw around ad dollars; be strategic: measure, evaluate and constantly re-evaluate every ad you buy to maximize the return.  


 



Topics: Marketing , Marketing / Branding / Promotion



View Ed Zimmerman

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Small businesses don"t "like" the new Facebook

75% Of Small & Medium-Sized Businesses (SMBs) Say Internet Marketing Is Effective


local-small-business-ss-1920


In October-November 2014, we (BrightLocal) conducted our annual SMB Internet Marketing Survey.


This is an online survey of businesses with 1-50 employees in which we ask them about their attitudes and use of internet marketing, mobile marketing and marketing services. We ran the survey in conjunction with ChamberofCommerce.com, and we received 736 complete survey responses.


Ninety-five (95%) of respondents are located in North America (92% U.S.; 3% Canada), primarily because this is where our marketing of the survey was focused.


The following charts represent some of the key findings of the survey. The full survey results and charts can be viewed on BrightLocal.


Q: How Much Money Do You Allocate To Marketing Your Business Each Month?


SMb Marketing Budget


Key Findings:


  • 70% are spending less than $500 on marketing per month (vs. 73% in 2013)

  • 83% are spending less than $1,000 on marketing per month (vs. 85% in 2013)

  • Just 16% are spending more than $1,000 on marketing per month (vs. 21% in 2013)

There has been little change in the distribution of marketing spend since 2013.  The majority of SMBs continue to spend less than $500/month on all their marketing activities, with only a fraction of this allocated to “internet and mobile” (more on this later).


The levels spent vary between industries and also business sizes. We will release some further data/charts comparing industries, but we have analyzed Company Size vs. Marketing Budget, and there is a clear, if unsurprising, correlation here:


Company Size vs Marketing Budget


Q: What % Of Your Marketing Budget Is Spent On Internet Or Mobile Marketing?


spend on internet marketing


Key Findings:


  • 34% allocate less than 10% of their marketing budget to online channels (vs. 33% in 2013)

  • 50% allocate less than 30% of their marketing budget to online channels (vs. 49% in 2013)

  • 29% allocate more than 70% of their marketing budget to online channels (vs. 28% in 2013)

It’s clear that some SMBs don’t (or barely) engage in online marketing – one third allot less than 10% of their marketing budget to internet or mobile. Others have thoroughly embraced it as their preferred means for growing their business.


It’s likely that different industries and business sizes invest more in online than others, and we’ll be following up with this analysis shortly. (We haven’t crunched the numbers yet.)


For search agencies/consultants, this demonstrates the importance of targeting and pre-qualifying potential customers before you go after them. By understanding their budget levels and commitment to digital marketing, you can ensure you focus on the highest value leads and niches.


Q: In Next 12 Months, Do You Plan To Increase The Money You Spend On Internet Marketing?


next 12 months


Key Findings:


  • 37% plan to increase their internet marketing spend over the next 12 months (vs. 21% in 2014)

  • 47% are unsure (vs. 47% in 2013)

  • 16% have no plans to increase their internet marketing spend in the next 12 months (vs. 32% in 2013)

Great news for the industry! Confidence is up, and SMBs are looking to increase their spend. Nearly 40% of SMBs are looking to spend more on Internet marketing in 2015 than they did in 2014, and many more are still undecided, so this number will rise.


Q: How Effective Is Internet Marketing At Attracting Customers To Your Business?


how effective is internet marketing


Key Findings:


  • 32% find internet marketing to be “very effective” at attracting new customers (vs. 27% in 2013)

  • 75% believe that internet marketing is ‘effective’ or ‘very effective’ at attracting new customers (vs. 68% in 2013)

  • 4% don’t do any internet marketing (vs. 8% in 2013)

More good news for the search industry: SMBs increasingly believe that Internet marketing delivers good returns for them.


This lines up with the findings in the previous chart: great confidence = greater spend


Q: Which Of These Success Metrics (KPIs) Are You Most Concerned With?*


success metrics


Key Findings:


  1. Phone Calls are the most valued success metric — 31%

  2. Website Traffic came in second — 20%

  3. Search Rankings came in third — 20%

For those who work with SMBs, it’s not surprising to hear that phone calls are such a valuable success metric — the phone ringing means business!


It’s surprising to see that “Walk-in Customers” and “Website Enquiries” are lower down the priority list than Site Traffic and Search Rankings. Some of those surveyed won’t deal in walk-in customers, so this may skew the data point, but I would have expected enough businesses to have this type of customer to put it above phone calls.


We should also consider that this survey is about Internet Marketing,  and tracking walk-in customers back to online marketing activities is tricky, so some SMBs may downplay or dismiss the role that online has in driving physical business.


It’s interesting to see that Search Rankings continue to be regarded so highly (they’re almost becoming a taboo subject in the search world these days). But SMBs still regard them as having significant value and equate high rankings to more sales. So, it appears that Search Ranking reports will be with us for a little while yet!


*Note: We didn’t ask this question in 2013, so we don’t have Y-on-Y comparison data.


Comparing Business Size & Type


As we delve further into the data, we will publish insights comparing Company Size and Company Type. These will be published in due course so please look for the follow up post.


Some opinions expressed in this article may be those of a guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.



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About The Author





Myles Anderson is Founder & CEO of BrightLocal.com. BrightLocal provide a unique and specialised set of local SEO tools for SEO Agencies, Freelances and & local business owners. See their Local SEO Research Section for the latest research & survey findings about the local search market.




(Some images used under license from Shutterstock.com.)



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75% Of Small & Medium-Sized Businesses (SMBs) Say Internet Marketing Is Effective