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5 ways to improve your content marketing on Facebook

The “Boost Your Business” event presented by Facebook is a nirvana for small business owners and those with entrepreneurial aspirations. With Facebook director of small business Jonathan Czaja as the lead guest speaker this year, the event provided advice on how to advertise and find your target audience using the popular social media platform.


According to Czaja, 40 million businesses have an active Facebook page, while 2 million businesses actively advertise on Facebook. The world is going mobile, and Czaja said Facebook accounts for 20 percent of time people spend on mobile devices. Let’s face it; your customers will be one their smartphone’s Facebook app at some point during the day.


Click here to read the September 2015 edition of Business Review USA!


Below, Czaja provided five ways to improve your content while marketing your business on Facebook.


Lesson 1: Tell your authentic story


Understand that people want to do business with those they can trust. You want to be able to build trust with your community. Czaja believes content is the hardest part of marketing, but his golden rule is being original. “Owners should have their own authentic voice and consistently use that voice to communication with your customers,” Czaja said. “Authenticity is what works well on Facebook. Your post will be showing up in between a picture of my son and a picture of my wife. It’s a private space, so you really want to treat that with respect.”


RELATED TOPIC: The 5 principles of engagement marketing: engage people as individuals


Lesson 2: Boost your posts


After you’ve created some authentic content, now is the time to start reaching people on Facebook. The easiest way to start that is by boosting your posts. Here, you can select the audience you want to send your posts to, as well as create a budget. What creating a budget does, is indicate the number of people who will see that post. This can create tremendous success.


Lesson 3: Reach the people that matter to you


The beauty of Facebook is not only can you reach a large number of people, but more importantly, you can reach exactly the people you want to reach. The key is not wasting your money advertising on Facebook to people who don’t care about the products and services you provide. It’s like watching a commercial on TV that you care absolutely nothing about. Part of this is also targeting people in certain geographical areas. It’s a very powerful way to reach people who live down the street from your store.


RELATED TOPIC: Tips to replatform your business website


Lesson 4: Used advanced targeting


This means bringing your website data to Facebook in order to further advance your targeting capability. This allows you to upload your email lists or website visitors to Facebook and, in a privacy protected way of course, find those people on Facebook and target them in your advertising. “This is a very productive way to re-market to your existing customers,” Czaja said. “You can reach your existing customers on Facebook.”


Lesson 5: Measure your results


This is crucial. There are several ways to measure your performance on Facebook, and one good way is tracking the number of purchases made on your e-commerce website that are attributable to your ad on Facebook. With a conversion pixel, which can be installed on your website, it enables you to measure the actual sales generated by your investment in Facebook. It’s very important, because after that, you’ll know if your marketing tactics are working.


This article was originally published by our sister brand,  Business Review Australia, and can be found here


Let’s connect!  



5 ways to improve your content marketing on Facebook

3 Ways to Integrate Video Into Your Marketing Strategy

This story first appeared in the October issue of Entrepreneur. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

There has never been a better time to think about how you can make video a bigger part of your online marketing strategy.


Facebook is advancing aggressively into video (giving YouTube a run for its money as the top platform). Newer live-streaming platforms like Periscope (owned by Twitter) and Meerkat are finding traction, allowing users to effortlessly integrate video into social media. And the video tools and apps on your smartphone allow you to tote what’s practically a full production studio right in your purse or pocket.


So how do you make video a regular part of your marketing program, in a seamless way that feels like it’s not just bolted on but an integral part of your online presence?


1. Use video to promote other content you’ve created.


Say you’ve produced a “pot roast” piece of content—a weighty, meaty asset like an e-book or white paper that you’d like users to download, perhaps in exchange for their email address.


Create a short video to embed on the landing page of Facebook or LinkedIn—or wherever it is that you’re promoting it. The key here is to make the video not just promotional but educational: Feature the author or a subject-matter expert sharing an insight or two; don’t simply implore people to download the content.


It’s hard not to love video-hosting company Vidyard’s cheeky video that promotes its video marketing handbook. (Yes, that’s meta!) Kitchener, Ontario-based Vidyard gets points for making a video that carries off a hat trick: It’s funny; it’s creative, marrying old-school ’80s workout gear with Rocky-style training; and—most important—it’s useful as a tool for those looking to up their video marketing game.


2. Live-stream comments and discussion.


Video live streaming is beginning to gain momentum, with Periscope and Meerkat emerging as the frontrunners. These platforms allow you to broadcast video to anyone in the world. Early adopters are still testing it, and a few have amassed significant followings. (Amanda Oleander, a Los Angeles artist, has been called Periscope’s “breakout star.”)


The options are limitless. You could stream live events or openings or record a podcast live. Even better: Consider using live streaming to share thoughts you have about developments in your industry and to get immediate feedback from your social audience.


For example, entrepreneur and marketing consultant Marcus Sheridan wrote a thoughtful piece on his blog (thesaleslion.com) about the implications of live-streaming video—in particular, how transparency will transform business. Then he took to Periscope to discuss the findings with his followers, sharing the same content with a new audience in a new format, fielding questions and comments and extending the life and reach of his blog post.


3. Use video as the source for other content assets.


Video interviews or web series are fairly commonplace—you might interview an expert or thought leader, then publish the video on YouTube or Vimeo or your own site via a marketing platform like Vidyard or Wistia (to name two). Or you might create a regular series in which people from your company answer questions. Sheridan regularly makes videos answering common questions like “What’s the formula for writing a perfect meta description?” His answers are short (around two minutes) and specific—which makes them useful and easy to consume.


An even better approach is to use that video as source material to create even more content—reimagining it in various ways to reach new audiences. For example, you could syndicate the audio portion on iTunes and transcribe the video (using Rev or CastingWords) and edit it into a Q&A text interview for your blog. That way, your single video will have a bigger footprint that reaches more people in multiple formats.


San Francisco entrepreneur Mitchell Levy publishes a series of interviews with successful business leaders on a microsite called Thought Leader Life. He records each half-hour interview as a live-streamed Google Hangout (which is archived on YouTube). Then, he adapts the interview in four different formats, published on up to 10 platforms. So from a single conversation he can create a video published on YouTube and SlideShare; a blog post; a podcast (published on iTunes); a syndicated podcast (published on a PR network); social messages (posted on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and LinkedIn); a series of tweets (Twitter); and a collection of key points or messages in the form of a curated e-book.


Now, take these tips and apply them to your own business, considering how you might utilize video geared toward your specific market. Perhaps you can use Instagram video to give a sneak peek of a new release or to film answers for your FAQs. (ExpertBail does this.) You may want to use video to breathe life into your products, like gift site The Grommet.


Try something new. Have fun. Explore. Because as marketing strategist and writer Barry Feldman says, “If you’re not experimenting with video, you’re simply sitting on the sidelines watching the big game unfold.”



3 Ways to Integrate Video Into Your Marketing Strategy

4 Ways to Cater to Your Email Marketing Audience

By Jessa Barron, NextAdvisor.com


Email marketing is an essential part of any and all marketing strategies now. It allows you to build relationships, communicate new ideas, generate feedback and also helps you gather important data that could translate into sales and relationships with future prospects. While the benefits of email marketing are obvious, what isn’t so obvious is how to create successful campaigns. To avoid losing subscribers or having your subscribers delete your email campaigns, there are some things you want to pay attention to and certain things you want to steer clear of. Here’s how you can cater your newsletter to your marketing audience:


1. Make it personal


Instead of sending out emails with only company updates, encourage dialogue from your recipients. Ask for feedback on things, and provide social media share buttons so you can get a better idea of what they like to share with friends and peers. Many services, such as MailChimp and GetResponse, let your customize your greeting and subject line to include individual names. For example, an email that begins with, “Hi John!” is a lot less likely to end up in the spam folder than one that begins with, “Dear user.” Also be sure to use simple, easy-to-understand language so your recipients feel like they are hearing from a real human being, not an automated computer service.


2. Know your audience


Many email marketing services, such as the two listed above, have features that allow you to segment groups, so you can test different campaigns on different groups based on proven preferences. This is an important tool to utilize, because not only can it help you get to know your demographic and how it varies, but it also improves your click rate by creating customized content for different interests. Test out different delivery dates, subject lines, content, surveys, images and layouts to see what keeps your audience the most engaged. For example, depending on the type of business or service you are offering, you may have more consumers engaged on weekends than weekdays or vice versa.


3. Create share-worthy content


One of the most useful things that email marketing services offer is tracking and analytics tools. Most services will send you detailed reports of each campaign you schedule, numbering how many recipients opened the email, how many shared to social media, how many clicked on links within the email and where on your website they landed on. These reports also note how many deleted the newsletter without opening and how many marked it as spam. This is especially helpful because it shows you what type of content your audience likes, ignores or deletes. In addition to these tools, doing your own research can help tremendously. Want to create more of a following on social media? Pay attention to what your consumers like and share the most and duplicate that type of content on your newsletter. In addition to creating share buttons in your newsletter campaigns, your newsletter itself should also always include the option to “Like” or “Follow” your company’s social media networks.


4. Avoid overkill


This point cannot be stressed enough. Most of us have unsubscribed from emails due to receiving too many in a single day. Our inboxes are constantly filled with work emails, personal emails, coupons, offers and spam, so when you send out multiple emails daily, your subscribers may get annoyed and opt out of receiving anything from you in the future. Try to limit your campaigns to once a week, or offer an option on your newsletter sign up that allows subscribers to choose how frequently they’d like to receive your campaigns.


To learn more about what all email marketing services can do, check out our email marketing blog. And if you’d like to get more information on selecting a service to use for your campaigns, visit our reviews of the top services for businesses of all sizes.


This blog post originally appeared on NextAdvisor.com.



4 Ways to Cater to Your Email Marketing Audience

5 Ways to Integrate Twitter Into Your Cross-Channel Marketing Campaigns

twitter cross channel marketing

Your customers aren’t only on Twitter. They’re on Facebook in the evenings, watching TV while they get ready for work, reading the news on the subway and browsing forums in bed. In short: they can be anywhere, at any time. Is your message reaching them?


Twitter can be a powerful tool on its own to drive brand awareness, create a stellar reputation and even generate leads. However, it is also a powerful tool when used in combination with other channels, to reach your audience on their terms.


Here are 5 ideas for integrating Twitter into a cross-channel marketing campaign:


1. Learn about your audience


One aspect of Twitter that many marketers overlook is its ability to provide deep audience insights, that can fuel not only Twitter-based campaigns, but all aspects of a marketing strategy.


Because Twitter is an open, real-time network, you can tap into the behaviors, demographics, interests and more of your audience (or any audience you want to focus in on). Using third-party tools to gather and analyze this social data, you can develop a more targeted marketing campaign, from the landing pages you create to the magazine ad copy you write.


2. Connect with their favorite TV shows


Many TV watchers – especially those who just can’t get enough live and reality TV – will use their “second screen” (typically a tablet, their smartphone or a laptop) while watching their favorite shows. So why not use this knowledge to your advantage, and run a Twitter campaign?


If you know what TV shows or sports games your audience loves, try searching for their hashtags on Twitter. Then, while the show is broadcasting, you can tweet alongside your audience. You have the opportunity to tweet a related contest, show that you share the same interests as your audience, or just monitor how they engage with this TV show to inform future campaigns.


3. Run a contest


A Twitter contest is one thing, but a “social media contest” is a different beast altogether. Running a contest that spans Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and other networks isn’t necessarily easy, but the results are often worth it.


Your audience probably has multiple touchpoints with your brand, in addition to Twitter. So if you are running a contest of any type, promote it across all of your marketing channels – social media as well as your blog, website and wherever else it makes sense. This will ensure that your audience sees the contest wherever they are online.


And if you’re able to collect responses from your audience across multiple channels, you’re likely to see better participation and positive word-of-mouth.


4. Promote a live event


Whether you’re hosting a live event or just attending, using Twitter while it’s happening is a great way to engage with your audience. However, you can also bake Twitter into a multi-channel live event strategy – tweeting behind-the-scenes images while you blog about key takeaways and post Instagram pictures of visitors to your booth, for instance.


5. Target better search and display ads


If part of your marketing strategy involves using ads to reach your audience, Twitter can help with that, too. You can learn about the type of content that resonates with your audience on Twitter by examining your past tweets on Twitter Analytics. From there, it’s simply a matter of mirroring the tone of voice, images and content in your search and display ads.


(Marketing team image via Shutterstock)



5 Ways to Integrate Twitter Into Your Cross-Channel Marketing Campaigns

FaceBook: The Top 100 Best Ways To Use Facebook For Business, Marketing, & Making Money (Facebook Marketing, Business Marketing, Social Media Marketing)


Discover How To Easily Market & Make Money With Facebook!


Don’t Waste Your Time Trying To Figure Out The Secrets of Facebook On Your Own! Do What The Pro’s Do In Order To Dominate!


In this book you will discover an incredible variety of strategies, programs and techniques that you can utilize in order to be wildly successful with Facebook! Facebook is a social media power house and has the potential to put your ideas and products in front of millions of people with nearly limitless possibilities! Be prepared to learn just how easy it is to master Facebook, build your fan base and automate the entire process. Life is so much better when you are using one of the most powerful social media tools in the world to your advantage! Whether you need just a few tips or want a full-fledged plan of action, this is the book that will help you greatly increase your overall success with Facebook!


Here Is A Preview Of What You’ll Discover…


  • Just How Unbelievably Powerful Facebook Is And How To Use It To Your Advantage

  • How To Optimize Your Account To Be Appealing And Informative

  • How To Create The Perfectly Structured Post To Grab Attention And Create A Buzz

  • The Best Ways To Engage Your Audience And Keep Them Hungry For More

  • How To Use The Powerful Tools Of Facebook To Drive Traffic And Boost Sales

  • The Best Third Party Programs To Use That Really Make The Most Out Of Facebook

  • How To Market And Make Money With Facebook

  • Much, much more!

What are you waiting for? If you are still reading this you are obviously motivated to get all the benefits this book has to offer. Stop thinking and take ACTION.  


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FaceBook: The Top 100 Best Ways To Use Facebook For Business, Marketing, & Making Money (Facebook Marketing, Business Marketing, Social Media Marketing)

3 Ways Online Press Release Distribution Creates Marketing Impact for Business

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Dallas, Tx, 09/12/2015 /SubmitPressRelease123/


Small business owners typically have to wear multiple hats in working for the success of their business, especially when first starting out. According to statistics presented in an Inc. magazine report, in doing so a significant percentage of business owners work twice as much as employees, putting in over 60 hours per week.


Source: Inc.com Report “Business Owners Work Twice as Much as Employees, Survey Finds”


“Thirty-three percent of small-business owners reported working more than 50 hours per week, while an additional 25% said they work more than 60 hours a week, according to a poll of readers of the New York Enterprise Report. The poll, conducted throughout January and February, found that 70% of respondents also worked at least one weekend on a regular basis.”


To read more visit http://www.inc.com/news/articles/200604/overworked.html.


The daily grind of a small business owner can include an array of tasks that may range from project management to keeping track of financial records to marketing. Because there is so much that small business owners attempt to get accomplished day-to-day, many constantly seek ways to make tasks like marketing their products or services easier. Particularly when it comes to small business marketing, the challenges of effectively promoting a business can be hard to overcome without the right support.


Three Key Benefits Afforded to Small Businesses That Submit Press Releases Online


According to Qamar Zaman, CEO of online press release distribution company Submit 123 PR, although online marketing & search marketing is essential to the success of small businesses, many owners and operators become so overwhelmed with other tasks required to run their enterprise that they put promotional activities on the backburner, and miss important opportunities that could elevate their success.


Zaman says that one highly effective solution for those in this predicament is to utilize a press release distribution service, especially one that allows for targeted promotions. Says the digital marketing expert “By issuing a press release online, small business not only have the ability to reach select markets to drive traffic to their websites and, ultimately their door steps, they also can garner the attention of local media that may spotlight their business in a story.”


In addition Zaman says there are three key benefits the best online press releases services afford small businesses today. These include:



  1. Cost savings for widespread promotion – According to Zaman, online press release distribution services like Submit 123 PR fit into the marketing budgets of a significant percentage of small businesses. Says the CEO “many small businesses are not aware that there is tremendous marketing potential of an investment of under $100 in this type of service.” see affordable press release price plan by Submit123PR




  2. Improved social media connectivity – Press release distribution can help small businesses market messages about their products and services and also promote their social media accounts. Zaman states “services like Submit 123 PR give businesses an opportunity to kill two birds with one stone, broadening their recognition online and promoting their presence on multiple social media platforms.”




  3. Specific targeting options – With online press release distribution services like Submit 123 PR, businesses can also target audiences based on specific criteria like region or search intent focus.



Submit 123 PR is regarded in the industry as one of the most highly effective press release distributors that cater to the marketing needs of small businesses. For more information about the service, or Qamar Zaman, please visit http://www.submitpressrelease123.com/.


Media Contact:


Submit Press Release 123


Salma Zaman


972-646-2788


Connect with Submit on Facebook, Twitter, or Google+.


News Provided By: Submit Press Release 123 


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The post 3 Ways Online Press Release Distribution Creates Marketing Impact for Business appeared first on Business Press Release Service Distribution | Submit123PR.



3 Ways Online Press Release Distribution Creates Marketing Impact for Business

5 Ways to Deal with Facebook's New Algorithm Change

In case you somehow haven’t heard, there’s a new Facebook algorithm change.


Yes, the company has decided to make a few changes to its News Feed.


Right off the bat, the Facebook algorithm change gives priority to content that is directly posted by friends. According to Facebook’s blog, “content posted directly by the friends you care about, such as photos, videos, status updates or links, will be higher up in News Feed so you are less likely to miss it.”


Beyond that, Facebook users also get fewer updates about whether or not a friend has liked something or commented on a post.


Well, that’s it. Game over for organic traffic, right?


Come on, you can’t be serious. For starters, the Agorapulse Barometer determined that the average amount of organic reach that a page has per post on Facebook is 18 percent.


Sure, you’re not going to be able to spam your audience’s News Feeds anymore. But guess what? Spamming was never the most effective way of reaching your audience anyway. If you’ve been relying on that, your social media marketing strategy has been flawed from the start.


Ditch the Hard Sell


Alright, let’s all just take a step back and think about this Facebook algorithm change. Instead of approaching this from a ‘Why is Facebook doing this to us?’ stance, try to understand the logic behind this decision.


Now, Facebook may just feel like another advertising platform to you. But remember, at its core, it’s a social network. Social networks (especially the good ones) are built on the concept of stacking positive emotions. Interacting with your friends and learning interesting things are primary examples of this.


So how does the average person feel seeing your “buy our product today” post? At best, indifference. At worst? Annoyance.


Here’s the deal: you need to forget about traditional marketing. You’re on Facebook to connect. Save the converting for your website or blog.


Interact With Your Audience


Speaking of connecting, it’s amazing how few businesses actually do this. Part of engaging your audience is, well, actually talking to them. No one is saying you need to address every comment on every post, but you do want to develop a rapport with your audience.


Forget about the benefits of getting free feedback from the people you’re trying to sell to. By being accessible to your audience, you stop being a faceless entity that’s after their money and become the business that cares about providing value to their customers.


Provide Value, Not Email List Bait


Even though this tip is a bit more general, the Facebook algorithm change makes it all the more necessary. In fact, it may be the most useful piece of advice on this list for struggling business owners.


If you’re trying to trick your audience into signing up for your email list, you’re wasting your time (and a perfectly good opportunity).


Instead of focusing on getting people’s emails, think about creating a resource so useful that your audience can’t believe you just want their email address. Not only does this make you look like an authority on the subject, but it also increases the odds of that person actually staying subscribed to your emails.


Provide News, Not Self Praise


If you’re writing a post on Facebook, make sure it’s informative. Notice how we didn’t say ‘promotional’.


Pushing your own products might seem perfectly acceptable by traditional marketing standards, but Facebook isn’t about being traditional. Facebook is about connecting with your audience, plain and simple.


Give them the truth and they’ll respect you. Ignore that advice and you’re going to have a hard time getting people to take you seriously.


Never Settle


Now, building your brand is an important first step. In fact, it’s usually the main reason people picked your business over the competition.


Unfortunately, once a brand has been successfully built, most businesses get complacent. They don’t want to rock the boat.


Need an example? Take a look at AOL. Back in the late 90s, AOL wasn’t just a part of the Internet business industry, they were the leading Internet service provider of the time.


Those infamous AOL CD’s? They may seem laughable now, but they were actually a brilliant marketing technique that propelled the company into the mainstream.


Sadly, after struggling with the death of dial-up Internet and trying to compete with companies that embraced the future, AOL failed to bring anything new or exciting to the table and became a shell of its former self.


Moral of the story? Get with the times or get left behind. Innovation and expansion aren’t optional if you expect to run a successful business.


If you want to continue to succeed (especially on a site like Facebook, where novelty is king), you’ll need to constantly innovate and bring more and more to the table.


After all, when it comes to Facebook, you’re only as good as your last post.


Facebook Mobile Photo via Shutterstock


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5 Ways to Deal with Facebook"s New Algorithm Change

3 Smart Ways to Maximize Marketing with Social Data


Social media provides marketers with more data than ever before, and it’s all delivered in real time. I recently teamed up with B2B marketing speaker and author, Paul Dunay, on a RingLead webinar to discuss the topic of using social data as a B2B marketer, as well as how to avoid certain pitfalls.


1. Ensure quality data before measuring


Speaking of pitfalls, we’ve all run into the typical bad data story where you send an email and it reaches the wrong person, or the right person with the wrong name. Bad data ultimately impacts your marketing credibility, and in today’s B2B SaaS market, it’s all about relationships and credibility.


Whether it’s poor targeting, poor segmenting, or poor use of data, bad data will always impact your marketing efforts. While it’s tough to be 100% rid of bad data, you must start somewhere. Sit down as an organization and understand that cleaning your data is not something you do once a year; it’s a constant process. Consider all of your different data points and how they’re connected. Automate your data quality processes with technology. This will ensure data integrity, which is at the core of your marketing.


Set a budget for data quality now, and make it an ongoing program. Don’t wait until you make a fatal marketing mistake that ruins the credibility you worked so hard to establish. Paul Dunay’s tip is to remember that the belly of marketing is typically in the summer months, so use that time to start cleaning your data.



Recommended for YouWebcast: Relationship Marketing: How to Build a Relationship that Converts to Sales




“The growth of data within companies is around 40% a year, and the cost of bad data is in the trillions of dollars. That is twice the amount of the federal deficit. Try to stay ahead of it.” — Paul Dunay



Bad data exists in your database now, so you need to do some course correction.


2. Set your metrics, goals and expectations upfront


When you’re looking at social media, there’s a big difference between data and insights. While social insights are in the eye of the beholder, you can set goals upfront, and work to meet those expectations. This approach will give you real insights.


Paul Dunay recommends that getting started with social insights requires knowing your sources. For instance, are you getting the full Twitter fire hose or are you getting 10% of it? Although that may seem like a small data point, these details can have a major impact on the data. In the example of the Twitter fire hose, there’s a big difference between real ­time data and data delayed by a few minutes or more.


Go beyond the basics


Choosing your social metrics requires going beyond likes and clicks. Social engagement is one part of the story, and the other part is about the people. When analyzing campaigns, don’t just look at engagement metrics such as likes and clicks, but look at who is engaging. A ton of clicks or likes could be a false positive if you’re not reaching the right audience.


Try to formulate a hypothesis on what is, or what could be on social media, and then see if the results match up. This helps you set expectations, because although you want your content to kill it, you need an actual and realistic starting point.


3. Merge social data with other marketing data


As Paul shares, “The devil is in the details, and the combination of social data and customer data can be very powerful.” Your marketing automation system can pull your website and email data, so now it’s about combining social profiles in the process. Start doing this with progressive profiling and asking for more information, such as Twitter handles or LinkedIn profiles in your web form fields.


Request the social data that makes the most sense to your brand. Test the process of authenticating web forms with social profiles. Get your operational ducks in a row in order to leverage the necessary data, such as UTM tags, referral source, lead source, etc. Get the data you need to connect those dots because ultimately, you want to authenticate the lead to ensure it’s the right lead. These insights help you confirm that you reached this person through social, and through a specific campaign. Then, you can further dissect the social channels to obtain more data about your prospects and customers. All of this will ultimately allow you to better target, nurture, and find more of the right contacts.


Accurately set up your social efforts, data and tracking from the start to make sure that you’re able to get that data to tell the accurate story. Without all of the pieces, you might be telling the wrong story.


Utilize personal emails


As a B2B marketer, you work hard to promote lead generation through social media, only to get frustrated by form completes using personal addresses like Gmail. However, I encourage you to look at those email addresses in a new way. Personal email addresses are associated with your prospects’ social profiles, so they are actually great tools for targeting on social networks. Those addresses give you a key piece of information about how to reach them directly on Facebook or Twitter. In a recent campaign, I realized that 65% of the email addresses were Gmail. Instead of discarding them, I checked to see how many of those Gmail addresses synced up to my prospects’ social profiles, and amazingly enough, about 80% synced up. I suddenly hit a gold mine and found a better way to target those prospects.


No matter how you you think about combining social media with data, always consider how you can use that data to get smart about how you target.


Get more marketing lessons for lead generation in the free ebook below.


b2b-lead-gen-ebook




3 Smart Ways to Maximize Marketing with Social Data

8 ways you can better integrate social into your marketing mix

Social media keyboard


As anyone who’s spent some time on the conference circuit will tell, social media is (somehow) still being treated as an exciting new trend, even though its obvious to anyone with hands-on experience social media is something that needs to be integrated into your digital marketing efforts rather than being allowed to exist within its own silo.


In fact, it seems pretty likely that the term “social media marketing” will disappear in the not-too-distant future and people will once again refer only to “marketing” as a whole. Measuring the true return of social media can be quite daunting, but integrating social media with your other marketing campaigns is the easiest method if you want to measure the ROI of your campaigns.
Here’s a couple of tips on how you can use social media with your current marketing and business strategies.


1. Content marketing


Use Twitter with your traditional content marketing strategies. This includes your website and blog as well. Share your content on your favourite social media channels. If the content is interesting, the content can be shared and seen by more people. This is a great method to make sure your content is seen by more people and also the search engines.


2. Customer service


Servicing clients on the social web is a great way on establishing your business as a social business and build your community online. Let your current customers know that you have a service desk on the social web.


3. Brochures


On any business brochures you might have, add information to your social media profiles on the brochure so that interested people can connect with you.


4. Invitations


Invite people to connect with you on the social web to receive more information, coupons, discounts, access to additional services, etc. See how you can make a campaign out of this.


5. Recruitment


Social media is a great way you can use for recruitment purposes. Let users apply via social media or you can scan the applicants online by looking at their social media profiles. This can help you find the right person suitable for the right position. Do you really want to hire someone who’s only posting nude drunk photos online?


6. Trade shows


If you are running any trade shows, create a specific #hashtag relevant to the trade show to connect personally with attendees and to market the trade show.


7. Lead generation


Do some research online to find information on new clients and to find out who the key decision makers are. Connect with them via social media and start engaging with them. This is a great way to connect with industry leaders that can help you with lead generation.


8. Stay in contact with your customers


Social media is a great way you can stay connected with your customers. Use this to your advantage by connecting with your customers on their favourite social media channel to keep the relationship going.


Social media should never be seen as a standalone strategy because it should be an integral part of your business. At the end of the day it really comes down to how you are integrating social media within your business.



8 ways you can better integrate social into your marketing mix

4 ways to take advantage of the new age of marketing

Maximise your company’s potential with these strategies


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TV, print and billboard ads were once the gold standard for marketing. Basically, companies pushed their name in front of the masses in an attempt to build brand awareness.


But now customers want personalised, one-on-one interactions with brands, and marketers are beginning to see how a targetted approach can stretch their marketing dollars further and generate leads faster. This changes everything.


Print, radio and Super Bowl commercials — there’s only one reason companies spend money on these marketing methods: bragging rights. They have little to do with actual branding and lead generation.


Also Read: 5 ways to know if someone is your perfect co-founder


But you probably knew that. What you may not realise is that many startups still use techniques that seem hyper-personal and new, but actually don’t move the needle for their companies. Here are some conventional methods that are missing the mark


  • Cold calls: Although the B2C world has long rejected this method, B2B companies are discovering the faults in this strategy too. Buyers want to establish their own solutions and work out their issues online. Marketers need to offer as much information as possible online, or potential clients will find a competitor that does.

  • Blast emails: Many people still swear by email marketing. But a mass-delivered message just doesn’t work for most companies — even if it’s delivered by email. One message can never resonate with a general audience.

Join the new marketing era
Every successful marketing trend these days stems from knowing your customers, where they congregate, and how they form trust. Marketers no longer “think” of campaigns; they build them around buyer needs. Personalisation has become the key to generating RoI for your marketing efforts.


Knowing your buyer is the most effective marketing tool you can have. Start with customer profiles and dig deep into who your customers are to figure out how to reach them.


Once you understand your customers, consider these marketing tips to make your strategy work harder.


Also Read: 6 questions to ask during a startup job interview


Start with content marketing: Customer-driven content marketing can help your company address potential concerns and convert customers with more precision. Too often, companies blindly produce content, throw it out into the world, and hope it brings in leads. The content often centers on what the marketer thinks is important rather than what’s useful or relevant to customers. With few metrics to accurately measure content’s success, many marketers have difficulty gauging its effectiveness. Still, when done well, content marketing costs 62 per cent less than traditional marketing and generates three times as many leads.


Use marketing automation to help you scale: Marketing automation software helps companies market across multiple platforms. These services do everything from organise leads to create hubs that launch digital campaigns across many networks. This trend is still new though, and few companies have adopted it. But jumping on early will give your company a competitive edge in the next wave of marketing.


Use social media to extend the conversation: If content marketing starts the conversation and marketing automation scales it, then social media perpetuates it. Find out where your potential customers hang out, then speak their language. Don’t offer ebooks on Twitter, for example. Join the conversation on their terms.


Don’t forget the old ways: Personalisation doesn’t mean you should completely reject older methods. Instead, personalisation can transform those old techniques into efficient marketing tools.


Also Read: How to make high-quality SEO work for you


Direct mail is one example: Mailboxes were constantly stuffed with junk a few years ago, so no one noticed a good campaign. But many companies have stopped sending mail, and buyers are becoming much more receptive to good mail campaigns. This presents the perfect opportunity to create a targeted direct-mail message that potential customers will find refreshing.


Traditional marketing campaigns bring a single company message to a large pool of potential buyers, but that just isn’t cutting it anymore. Consumer trends are shifting toward personalisation and marketers need to take note. Buyers want results. When you tell a compelling story that directly relates to them, they’ll believe your company can deliver.


Content marketing, marketing automation, social media and even personalised traditional outlets can all reach potential customers effectively. But make sure your campaigns hone in on buyer personas and address their specific needs. Then you’ll have customers for life.


Justin Gray is the CEO and chief marketing evangelist of LeadMD. He founded the company in 2009 with the vision of transforming traditional grassroots marketing efforts through the use of cloud-based marketing solutions.


The Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC) is an invite-only organisation comprising the world’s most promising young entrepreneurs. In partnership with Citi, YEC recently launched StartupCollective, a free virtual mentorship programme that helps millions of entrepreneurs start and grow businesses.


Echelon Asia Summit is now open for the Top 100 applications! Submit your startup now.



4 ways to take advantage of the new age of marketing

Five Ways Pinterest Is Beating Facebook

This article is by Troy Ireland, managing partner at Digital Current, a conversion-based digital-marketing agency specializing in content marketing and SEO.


Pinterest has always seemed like Facebook’s cozy little sister. Instead of sharing news articles and memes, Pinterest users (mostly women) curate pages of living room furniture and Halloween party recipes.


But underestimating Pinterest would be a huge mistake. “As social networks go, Pinterest doesn’t get a whole lot of respect,” wrote Kevin Roose in a New York magazine article. “Which will make it even more surprising when Pinterest eats its competitors alive.”


That May 2014 prediction appears to be coming true. Just after the holidays, IBM Digital Analytics released a report showing that overall holiday online sales were up 13.9% for the 2014 season. They looked specifically at Facebook and Pinterest sales and reported on a very interesting statistic: “Facebook referrals drove an average of $101.38 per order, while Pinterest referrals averaged $105.75 per order.”


Since its launch in 2010, the scrapbooking, image-pinning site has been steadily growing and picking up pace. It is estimated to have approximately 70 million active users and is worth about $5 billion. That’s a drop in the bucket compared to Facebook’s 1.2 billion daily users and $210 billion market cap. But Pinterest is growing quickly and, unlike Facebook, the whole setup of Pinterest is designed to move products.


“Pinterest’s power is the volume of referral traffic it generates,” explains Jason Miles, author of the book “Pinterest Power.” “When it comes to that metric, it is already in very rarefied air. The top four sources of referral traffic are organic search, direct typing of a URL, Facebook and then Pinterest.” And if Pinterest can get to 280 million users, it could easily surpass Facebook in terms of driving Internet traffic (and purchases), according to Miles.


To help marketers take advantage of all of this user-generated enthusiasm, Pinterest has started selling Promoted Pins, which are ads that look like Pinterest images and content shared between users. “[They are] sounding the call that Pinterest is open for business and that it wants to compete for ad dollars with the likes of Google, Twitter and Facebook,” according to CNBC.


In many ways, Pinterest is actually already ahead of Facebook. “Pinterest Expert” Anna Cadiz Bennett talked to one of my colleagues about why you might be better off funneling your social media marketing funds to Pinterest:


  1. Visual content marketing: The visuals on Pinterest are clear, clean and engaging. There are lots of reasons why visual content is important for a marketing campaign, but probably the most important is that it grabs instant attention and is quickly processed by the human brain.

  2. Shelf life: Pins last and are easily available forever. On Facebook, they are around for only a few hours (if you’re lucky). “On Pinterest, everything you create and pin lives forever,” Bennett says. “I have blogs from two years ago that are still being shared. No other socials are doing that. In terms of ROI, that’s phenomenal.”

  3. Intent to buy: If you’re lurking around on Pinterest, you are probably looking to purchase something. According to Shopify, “The average order coming from Pinterest is $80, higher than any other site including Google, Amazon and Facebook, which has an average of $40.” On Facebook (or Twitter) you tend to be there for a conversation.

  4. Promoted Pins: Maybe the best tool out there for marketers. They hardly look like ads, they are heavily shared and they are now open to all advertisers.According to Pinterest, “Brand advertisers achieved about a 30% bump in earned media (free impressions!) from their campaigns.” Pinterest now even has an analytics panel as part of its Pinterest for Business tools.

  5. Large female audience on Pinterest: Approximately 85% of Pinterest users are women — and women have $7 trillion in buying power. “Women on Pinterest are 30% more likely to shop or buy online than the average woman, and Pinterest users spend nearly two times the norm,” according to Comscore 2014.

This year, especially as Promoted Pins open up to everyone, will be telling as to how our companies and brands are affected by this relatively new stream of marketing. As marketers adjust their brand plans and start figuring out how to be successful on this powerful social media site, there may be a few growing pains. I would love to hear about any concerns or major problems you have had marketing on Pinterest for a potential future article. If you have your own conclusions about Pinterest’s marketing evolution please share them in the comments below.



Five Ways Pinterest Is Beating Facebook

7 Ways to Score with Content Marketing

Like the NFC Championship team the Seattle Seahawks, content marketing can be underestimated in the business world. With over 40 percent of top brands utilizing blogs today, according to Forbes.com, larger organizations have the winning advantage. If you are a small business owner, don’t throw in the towel just yet. Take notes on these top plays in content marketing as you prepare to watch the NFL Super Bowl XLIX game.


1. Join the Crowd

Before you kick off your next set of blogs and articles make sure that you have done your research. Analyze your competitors and current trends. Consider key differentiators and assert your unique value proposition. Although timely and daunting, you must always be aware of trends, popular hashtags and current events. Don’t just aim for the nose bleed view, get down on the 50 yard line.


2. Play the Field

Writer David Dubois of INSTEAD says, “While having great content is a key step in the design of a good content strategy, perhaps more important is to ensure that this content will be shared and distributed.”


Don’t just limit your content to your own business site or blog. Make your content available through different social media outlets like Twitter, LinkedIN, Google + and Facebook. Consider guest posting on a site relevant to your industry. Review related blogs and leave conversational comments filled with insight.


3. Get to Know Your Referees

Efficient content marketing means knowing the rules. Take time to understand how major search engines index your site. Don’t limit yourself to one search engine. Research Google, Yahoo and Bing. Make your content keyword rich, but don’t break the rules by “stuffing.”


4. Play the Entire Game

Winning means not waiting until the final quarter to run the ball. With content marketing you should always plan ahead. Align your posts with national holidays and events. Create a media calendar to run parallel. Just as a flower shop prepares for Valentine’s Day well in advance, you’ll want to prepare your content to coincide with important dates in your industry.


5. Prepare Your Defense
Assume the role of a customer. Be a resource for potential customers by anticipating their needs. Write your own list of questions and answers. Use this to gauge your potential topics. Quora is a question-and-answer website where questions are created, answered, edited and organized by its community of users, according to their site. This is a good place to find new ideas and understand what information inquisitive minds are seeking.


6. Don’t Miss That Field Goal

Once you have established a following, there is still a way to score extra points. Be consistent. Brafton.com suggests consistent content to fuel long term results. In their case study, they report weekly content updates by 60 percent of brands. Keep your audience well-fed with relevant and useful information. There is nothing worse than letting the crowd down with sporadic updates. Once you have their attention, closing the deal is an easy feat.


7. Don’t Forget Your Cheerleaders

Use customer reviews to enhance your marketing tactics. Don’t simply blast content. Engage and converse. You’ll be surprised at how a few happy customers can build rapport with a large audience.


Whether your business is a small start-up or a home-based business, you can make a touchdown with winning content. Maybe you won’t get the championship ring, but you can get the phone ringing.


(And the crowd roars…)



7 Ways to Score with Content Marketing

Great Ways to Use Marketing Automation to Help You Start Your Own Business

header Great Ways to use marketing automation to help you start your own business


When you start your own business there aren’t enough hours in the day to get it all done. Making your life a little easier by using the awesome marketing software we have available to us makes perfect sense. Read on for some innovative ideas that businesses have used to ramp up their marketing efforts and lets learn from what they have done to become the successes they are today…



B2B Marketing Automation Platform from Pardot


Our friends at Pardot marketing automation shared some great insights into how their customers have used their software to great effect:


Using Pardot’s intuitive, efficient, and consistent email functionality, Jet Reports successfully rolled out two new product launches. Web traffic increased by 107%, unique visitors to the site increased by 115%, and the average time spent on the website per visit increased by 35% in Jet Report’s first year using Pardot.


With Pardot, Demand Metric was able to launch online campaigns and begin qualifying leads so the sales team could better allocate their time. Using forms and special offers, Demand Metric began converting visitors to leads, reducing the average number of calls to make a sale from 328 to 70. Now, 1 in 3 demos results in a sale, as opposed to 1 in 12.


pardot screenshot



Nurturing leads and building your network is crucial, but also time-consuming. By using marketing automation software, whether it is the full marketing suite, or one aspect of it such as email marketing, you can get the ball rolling and let the technology do the hard work for you. You can’t possibly be in all places at once so scheduling and multiple network marketing, all from one great platform is definitely the way to go.



Sales and Marketing Software for Small Business - Hatchbuck


Users of Hatchbuck, the sales and marketing software platform, had this to say about using this tool:


“As a non-profit, our greatest problem was getting the word out. We had so many great ways to allow companies and the greater community to get involved and I felt like we were missing a huge opportunity because we didn’t have the right sales and marketing tools in place. Using Hatchbuck has been a lifesaver. It has really helped us to centralize everything into one place and enabled us to increase our awareness and stay out in front of people.”


Craig Jung, Executive Director of St Louis Green.


hatchbuck screenshot



Email Marketing Service for Business Communications


Pinpointe email marketing software, shared one of their customer’s success stories with us:


TROY Group had already started using an email marketing program, but wasn’t satisfied with the features, delivery rates or customer feedback. With the help of Pinpointe, TROY Group can now create, send and track their email campaigns and have a guaranteed delivery rate.”


pinpointe screenshot



We would love to hear how you have used to marketing and email marketing software to start your own business, tell us your stories! You can also take a look at more great marketing apps on our GetApp marketplace and read about Marketing Automation Software to Rock your World on our GetApp blog for more fabulous alternatives.





Great Ways to Use Marketing Automation to Help You Start Your Own Business

Strategies of Affiliate: Discover new ways to attract targets

No one can deny the importance of affiliate marketing while going to start an e-business. This mode of marketing is one of the latest trends through which one can advertise their products to the customer through some people and can make money. Get all the info you need here.


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Strategies of Affiliate: Discover new ways to attract targets

7 Ways Docs Can Attract Patients on Facebook

Any good healthcare professional understands that pain precedes healing. So we’ll start with a small incision:


If you’re like most healthcare businesses, you’re wasting tons of money on marketing — and your strategy needs to go to rehab.


How many times did you use Google to search for information and local businesses this week?


Okay … now how many times did you go flipping through the pages in your Yellow Pages phonebook, listen to the radio, or read your direct mail for the same information?


Hand me sutures.


Today you must match the way you market your business with the way people look for healthcare services. Multiple studies now confirm that patients report using the Internet first (85% of the time) when they need a healthcare service, and printed Yellow Pages only about 25% of the time.


In our online marketing work for clients, my healthcare marketing agency has found that SEO (Search Engine Optimization) and targeted Facebook marketing have been enormously successful in attracting new local patients.


The hardest part of my job is simply convincing physicians to drop the tactics that don’t work anymore. My dad (a podiatrist in Virginia) was my very first client, and he’s a tough sell!


Another physician, Brian Mowll, MD, hired my agency to handle his SEO and social media efforts in February 2014. The results: Page likes increased from 5,222 to 10,117 from February 14th to May 9th. Monthly website visits increased from 515 to 1,500 per month. Just in the last 90 days, we’ve generated 1,032 new patient leads for his business.


These results came largely because we follow the following 7 Facebook advertising steps.


Digital marketing healing


If you’re one of the few, the proud, the healthcare professionals who “get” social media and understand its power, you know Facebook advertising can be very profitable. But it can also be very complex.


So here are 7 simplified steps to Facebook Ad Success:


1. Get hyper-specific with your ad targeting


Facebook’s own guidelines tout the incredible accuracy your ads can achieve by using their targeting options: “Find the right customers with better targeting. Target by demographic, age, income gender, social interests, likes, city, state, zip, education level, profession, relationship status.”


Facebook offers an incredible amount of user-data to advertisers. Put this enormous gold mine of data to use. And don’t waste money on eyeballs that don’t need your services or can’t afford them. Know your ideal patient inside and out, their socioeconomic status, who sets appointments for the family, their interests, and then show your ads only to them. It’s better to have a couple thousand very targeted people than tens of thousands of disinterested folks.


2. Establish specific goals before starting


Before you create a Facebook Ad, choose from several advertising goals and Facebook will display the actions you care about more prominently in your campaign summary page. Do you want more page likes, website visits, or new patient appointments?


A leading diabetes educator hired my agency to get more local patients to register for his workshop in Philadelphia. We created one targeted Facebook ad two weeks before the event, and received way more registrations — 136 — than he could fit in the room.


But it only worked because we really knew his audience (step 1), and structured our goals to get event signups (step 2), and not page likes or something irrelevant to his business goals. Have your end-goal in mind, and work from that foundation. Anything else will be a waste of time and money.


3. Include eye-catching images (but with only 20% text)


Posts and Facebook ads with images get much higher engagement than those without, as they help your ad or post stand out from a flooded news feed. However, Facebook only allows photos that include less than 20% text on the image, so make sure you have 80% image and only 20% text on the image — like so.


A picture is worth 1,000 words, so find one that encapsulates your desired message, grabs attention quickly, and encourages action. For our clients, we find that uploading an image that is 1200 x 627 pixels for your ads works best for formatting.


4. Get right to the point


Facebook Ads that generate the highest click through rate at the lowest cost include ad text that cuts through the noise and gets to the point. It doesn’t leave the audience guessing at the meaning and it doesn’t beat around the bush.


Text in your advertisement must be right on target and straight to the point. If you want them to Like your page, simply ask. If you want them to make an appointment, get right to it.


Case Study: “Three clinically proven steps to lower blood pressure – diet, exercise, arginine.” This was the copy used in an advertisement that performed at $0.07 per click and had a 9.73% click through rate — substantially higher than Facebook’s 1.8% desktop news feed average.


5. Pay attention to the potential audience meter.


As you put targeting conditions in place and zero in on your specific audience, Facebook will generate an estimated number of people you’ll reach with the ad. This is only an approximate number, but it can assist you in making sure you’re not targeting too many people (or too few). Ads perform best when they’re targeted to at least a few thousand people, so consider removing some restrictions if your audience is dropping below this. This nifty AdStage graphic captures this idea well.


6. Use low-friction conversion pages


If you are driving traffic to your website appointments, downloads, or any other actions, you need to make sure the page you’re sending them to is conversion-friendly. What this means is: make it as easy as possible for them to take the desired action.


If you want them to make an appointment, put an appointment form front-and-center. If you want them to call in, make sure your phone number is on the page, and clickable.


This landing page is for our client’s allograft product, TheraSkin. We want visitors to download the product guide, so we can communicate with them by email. To facilitate this goal, we made an easy-to-use form to collect information in exchange for the product guide.


7. Analyze and adjust


HubSpot, the leading provider of online marketing software, says: “As with every element of Inbound Marketing, a key element to optimizing our marketing efforts is constant, ongoing analysis.”


What makes the Facebook advertising platform so powerful is that everything you invest in is easily analyzed and measured. You know how many people are clicking on your ad, taking action on your post, and viewing the ad.


If you’re getting a good number of clicks, but no actions on the following page, it might mean you are targeting the wrong people who aren’t interested in your offer. If your ad is successful, you can consider putting more money into the daily budget to keep driving people towards your desired goal for them.


Using the Facebook advertising platform is a skill that takes time to learn. You will learn the most about what works by just jumping in and doing some test posts. If you have an office manager that’s savvy with social media, you can print this article to help them get started on Facebook ads.


On the other hand, some healthcare businesses decide to outsource these digital efforts to agencies like mine, which specialize in digital marketing. Whatever method you use, it helps to do a lot of testing and analytics to determine what works best for your target market.


Ready for more? Check out this free guide: Healthcare Business Facebook Advertising 101


Adam McConnell is the Founder and CEO of Pulse Digital Marketing, a digital agency helping healthcare and medical businesses get found online with web design, search engine optimization (SEO), social media, and content marketing. Clients include leading biotech and medical device companies, hospitals, and healthcare professionals in private practice.



7 Ways Docs Can Attract Patients on Facebook

Different ways of Affiliate in business: Learn the art of attracting the right clients

E marketers find it difficult to reach the people who can advertise their product to the customer. The latest in this emerging trend of internet-based advertising and ecommerce is the booming and still growing affiliate or associate programs which you are certain to have heard about in one form or another. Get all the info you need here.


visit the website



Different ways of Affiliate in business: Learn the art of attracting the right clients

Basic ways to learn Affiliate Marketing: Why reaching out is a must for business

Don’t ignore the importance of affiliate marketing while going to start an online business. The latest in this emerging trend of internet-based advertising and ecommerce is the booming and still growing affiliate or associate programs which you are certain to have heard about in one form or another. Get all the info you need here.


visit the website



Basic ways to learn Affiliate Marketing: Why reaching out is a must for business