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

Thursday, 9 February 2017

How to Get the Most out of a Company Blog



Regularly updating a company blog can be an effective tool in your marketing strategy. Blogs have the potential to reach a wide audience, can encourage traffic to your company’s website, improve your SEO and promote your brand. It is a low-cost way to build and maintain loyal relationships with customers, and help potential clients find you.

A blog is fast becoming the standard for businesses of all kind, and readers are increasingly expecting frequent posts of interesting content. It’s crucial to get these aspects right to build your brand’s reputation as trustworthy, dependable and generous.

Looks are Key

Blogs reflect directly on the business and the quality of the product or service you are offering. First impressions count, so it is important to invest enough time and creative energy to make your blog look professional to new online clients. A poor blog can endanger your business, making it look disorganised, irrelevant and self-promoting.

The appearance and style of your blog should closely match that of your site, since you want the blog to strengthen branding, not detract from it, or pull it in a different direction.

Focus on creating a simple design, with plenty of visuals to break up the text. Make sure the latest content is accessible and that the site is mobile-friendly. It should be straightforward for a reader to see how they can engage with the posts, in the comment sections or by a messaging tool.

You may wish to use templates, or consider outsourcing design, as this is fundamental to the success of the blog.   

SEO (Search Engine Optimisation)

Bear in mind that Google and other search engines favour active sites that are updated regularly with fresh, unique, quality content.

The SEO game has evolved somewhat from the days of keyword stuffing. Now, Google punishes sites that repeat key words and phrases to the extreme, in an effort to place higher in search results of that topic.

Furthermore, it’s not good blogging practice to mislead readers, thinking you can ‘trick’ them into clicking on your site. You can be confident that this will drive away visitors.

It is far better to be upfront about the content you are offering, and to focus on consistently publishing quality posts.  

Having said that, there are a couple of things you can do for your SEO. Use synonyms of keywords and phrases, especially in the first and last paragraphs of a post. Variety of language is a good writing tip anyway, but Google does favour this over straight repetition of terms, and often scans openings and closings of posts.

Choose your headings smartly, too. Try to think about what someone might be typing into the search bar – the last thing you want to do is to make it harder for a searcher to find you.

Fresh content is essential, as Google looks unfavourably on material recycled from your website. If you lack the time, it is a better idea to outsource writers than take shortcuts.

On a practical note, link your blog to your company website. This sounds obvious, but creating a separate Wordpress account won’t increase visibility or traffic to your business site if the search engine can’t tell they are related. Host the blog on your main domain to avoid this problem, and make sure blog activity is improving the standing of the company site.

Stay Active

Posting frequently is one of the major actions you can take to push your blog’s success. We’ve all stumbled upon company blogs that look great, until we notice the latest post is dated 7 years ago. I almost always leave the site immediately. This negatively affects business: it is better to have no blog at all than a sad, empty one.

Some businesses prefer to write lots of content and queue it to be published gradually by their CMS. This can work, but risks posts being out of touch and irrelevant.

BloggingPro recommends two to five posts a week for a new blog that is looking to build a readership base. You need to adjust this to suit you, but, whatever number you choose, be consistent. Readers want to know what to expect in terms of frequency, so they know when to check back, and can feel confident that there will be new material when they do.

Engaging your reader will promote your blog, as readers are attracted to sites that are buzzing with discussion and life. They will be more likely to check back later if your blog is provoking interesting, new debates.

While you can’t force readers to comment, you can tailor your content to encourage response. Bloggers have had success growing their site’s interactive content through a few methods, which you could trial. Often mentioning the names of commenters directly in posts and responding to their points in detail can urge your comment section on. The chance to be recognised and communicated with in this way appeals to some. If you’re struggling to get things started, ask friends to start the conversation, since often people don’t want to be the first to comment.

This is basic: always reply to comments. And be quick at manually deleting the off-putting spam comments that slip through your filter. Many bloggers recommend setting the blog as your home screen, so that you always deal with comments swiftly, and take the time to check on the blog every day, first thing.

Planning Content and Blog Vision

Allocate plenty of time to think through your blog’s strategy. Haphazard posts are less effective at promoting a business than a clearly structured approach to content.

Setting goals and working out how you are going to reach them is vital. How is your blog content going to drive and relate to your product over a long period of time? How can you relate issues that matter to your target audience back to your business? How will you maximise the reachof  the blog?

An editorial calendar is an excellent way of staying on top of content. Get all of your themes down on paper, schedule progression by writing specific titles and topics, and plan around important dates, like blog milestones and industry events. Adding structure to your posting will increase the impact of your blog long term. In the short term, you could try writing weekly ‘How-to’ articles, or a regular light-hearted, fun post to give yourself a framework.

Consider what expertise you have to offer. Brainstorm: make lists, spider diagrams, vision boards, collages, inspiring sculptures – do whatever harnesses your creative energy and cultivate new ideas. Social networks sites and forums like Quora can be sources of inspiration, helping you pinpoint specific questions people are asking. You could fill that need and contribute answers.

Effective marketing strategies stress the importance of knowing your target audience. Clearly define the demographic you want to reach: their age, location, career, but also interests, hobbies, and network of values. Understanding who you’re speaking to and what is important to your audience will help you generate relevant content and pitch the tone right.

This should go without saying, but so many companies make this mistake. Separate company news - press releases, promos, updates - from the blog.  A blog is not the place to be showy and self-promoting all the time. Your focus should be creating a reliable space of good value content that will bring readers in, and keeping them coming back to the site. Keep the bulletins in a separate News section, far away from the blog.


Voice

Don’t try too hard. At first, especially if you are not in the habit of writing, you might feel uncomfortable and exposed, but try to write as you would have a casual conversation.

Don’t agonise over grammar or fancy vocabulary, it’s more important to get your ideas out there – this is what people really care about in a blog. Spelling is important, and clear expression is a must if you want anyone to read past the first sentence, but checking over the words a couple of times for errors is enough. Just get posting!

Include different perspectives. Blogs thrive when they are fed by multiple points of view, and different voices are thrown into the mix. Writing blog posts is not just for marketers, get everyone involved with the production of content. This will make for a far more nuanced and engaging presentation of your company.

Guest bloggers are a great way to build your network and make friends in the blogging community.   There is a wealth of knowledge to tap into, and you can offer your own contributions in return. Give-and-take relationships enable your blog to be shared more widely, as the guest contributor will likely share the post across their networks.

A starting point could be targeting authors and speakers in your industry, who may well be happy to share their thoughts in a short piece. Remember there are mutual benefits, as they too will gain from the exposure.

Keep Going and be Patient

Great blogs take time to grow. Keep writing and posting, even if the view count is discouragingly low. It’s a gradual process but, if you stick with it, readers will appreciate that you are consistently producing good content, and will start sharing your posts on social media or relevant platforms.


Maybe it would be kinder to yourself not to look too far into analytics at the very beginning, just get your head down and create some fabulous blog posts!



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Wednesday, 8 February 2017

5 Essential Twitter Chrome Extensions for Marketers




If you're a marketer, Twitter is one of the key tools in your arsenal for engaging with your audience. Maintaining a pristine, vibrant feed, and dealing with all the administrative tasks can be a bit of a drag. Thankfully there are a few browser extensions you can use to make the whole thing slightly less laborious and focus on what matters: interacting with your network!

Here are five of the best ones that we use daily.


1) Silver Bird

The Big Bird of Twitter extensions, Silver Bird holds a raft of features for better Twitter management. For a start, you can see your feed, profile, DMs, and custom filtered lists all from a button on your toolbar.


The fun doesn't stop with this genuine quality of life addition though, with Silver Bird boasting a wealth of other features. Small buttons on each tweet allow you to easily reply, retweet or like the tweet from within the extension. You can also create tweets, including shortening URLs, in-extension, and the app automatically caches to avoid hitting Twitter's API rate limit. All of the lists and notification settings can be customised to best fit your Twitter usage, making Silver Bird an absolute no-brainer.


2) Chromnitweet

To further streamline the ease-of-use Silver Bird started to provide, in steps Chromnitweet. This extension turns your very own address bar into a Twitter post box. Simply type into the address bar (Ctrl + L for a quickfire shortcut) "tw" followed by your tweet. This extension also automatically shortens links so you don't have to worry about it. The only restriction is that it's text-only, but it certainly lets you tweet in a hurry if necessary.


3) Riffle

So you've got your tweading and twiting methods down. But how to decide what exactly to write? Well, one way is to know your audience. Enter Riffle. Riffle acts as an in-browser analytics engine. You can see all the stats and analytics you could need about your own page to fine tune your Twitter game:

Riffle

The analytic enlightenment doesn't stop there, though, as you can turn your attention to other users, whether your audience, the accounts you follow, or even your competitors. Stats include their influence, the platforms they use to publish and more. On top of that, Riffle integrates with 16 Twitter platforms including Hootsuite and TweetDeck, ensuring it will slot seamlessly into your posting procedure.


4) Buffer

Armed with all this knowledge and ready to tweet, what do you do if you come across something that you think would be absolutely perfect to post, or just a random flash of inspiration crosses your mind? Well, you could quickly post it with Chromnitweet or Silver Bird, but if you want to schedule it for later, you could use Buffer. Buffer allows you to queue your posts and space them out to a custom schedule. The extension will then give you analytics on the post, so you can track results and see what time of the day may be best to post.


You can post content you create yourself, or easily share web content you stumble across. Buffer makes it easy to do either.


5) Twitter Follower

Now you have all this perfectly scheduled and targeted posts, you just need some more followers. The best way to gain more followers is, of course, to follow some users yourself. The Twitter Follower extension makes this process much easier, automating bulk follows.



It can also perform bulk unfollows, if you should somehow find yourself following a bunch of people you don't want to.


Finally, here are some honourable mentions for the ones who nearly made it:

Now, get out there and extend both your browser and your Twitter following. Your audience isn't going to engage itself!


Thursday, 3 November 2016

10 Truths Nobody Told You About Being A Social Media Marketer


social media marketing career truths in a nutshell

It is clear social media marketing is delivering real and measurable business value for companies large and small today. Marketers of all specialties from digital, content, strategy and even operations know they must not only learn, but also deeply embrace social media as a way to connect, inspire and serve their new online audiences as well as current, prospective and future customers.
With this incredible opportunity created for businesses using social media there is obviously solid opportunity for smart and savvy marketers to specialize and build a career in social media marketing.
However, as I discussed in detail in episode 218 of the Social Zoom Factor podcast, social marketers must also have a solid understanding of business and marketing.  Smart social media marketers also know how to align social media to business goals.
Building a career as a social marketer is not as easy as jumping on Twitter or Snapchat and firing off some 140 character tweets and selfie snaps. Being able to rock your personal brand as a new college graduate doesn’t necessarily translate over to knowing how to use social media for business. Big difference.
Unfortunately many new social media marketers jump into the fields of social networks, tweets, snaps, and Facebook live video to find themselves overwhelmed. They are often thrown to the wild pack of tweeting craziness as their management teams and leadership know less than they do in understanding how to drive business value using these new social tools and methodologies.
Many new social marketers start out excited only to find their hopes of a career in social media completely deflated. Not only do they feel overwhelmed but they find it hard to show and prove their value. They lack the necessary training to understand data and measurement, conversion funnels, content marketing, foundational digital and visual marketing skills and the list goes on. It’s even more challenging for recent graduates who lack solid business or marketing experience in the real world.
These same new social marketers may be working 24/7 yet making little progress. They’re tweeting through the hamster wheel and making little to any forward progress in learning. They often lack real mentorship, business experience and because of this they wind up stunted in their career.
They think…. “nobody told me it would be this hard.” I’ve had many new college graduates working in social media marketing come to me and proclaim they had no idea they would need to know so much about marketing or business to be successful running social media for a company.
The truth is that social media is not a band-aid for a broken business. Hiring a cheap intern who knows how to tweet, snap and stream a live video is not going to fix your brand perception problems, inspire your customers to engage in a relationship with you. The intern or person new to social media is not going to help you solve the customer services problems you have by setting up some auto Twitter auto direct messages (DMs) to anyone who asks for help.
Embracing social media for business is a journey, not a destination. We are all learning and the only guarantee we have is change.CLICK TO TWEET
The truth is that all of us working in the field of social media and digital marketing today are change agents. We must understand mindsets of our stakeholders, management and team members. We must know how to push change when needed and integrate social media technologies and best practices into the business, not force it.
Take a listen to episode 222 of the Social Zoom Factor podcast to learn 10 truths nobody ever told you about being a social media marketer. 
This podcast episode is helpful for the following people: 
  • New or experienced marketers considering jumping into a new role as a social media marketer
  • Current social media marketers struggling to grow in their career
  • Managers of people working in social media marketing
  • Business owners and leaders who are hiring or leading teams and want to understand the truth about working as a social media marketing
Be sure to subscribe to our entire digital and social marketing series on iTunesStitcher or SoundCloud!
In this 25 minute podcast you will learn: 
  • 10 Truths nobody ever told you about being a social media marketer
  • Why social media for personal branding is not the same as social media for business
  • Tips to grow in your career as a social media marketer
  • Why social marketers must understand the foundation of business and marketing
  • The importance of having a mentor to help you learn and grow as a social marketer
  • Why even social media newbies must learn to be a data and analytics junkie
  • How to navigate working for a manager who doesn’t understand marketing, business or social media
  • Giving up the drive for perfection and importance of embracing imperfect perfection
  • Why business leaders must be careful who they hire to manage their social media programs
Supporting Resources:
Free webinars: We are also launching a series of webinars and training opportunities to dig even deeper. Sign up here-> You are the Media – Building Your Media Foundation

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