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September 19, 2007

Top 5 Tips to Creating an Effective Blog

Filed under: Web Design

Blogs have made a grand entrance into the marketing realm. Why? They can be a successful marketing tool if done rights.
Blogs have core components that increase their success such as content, distribution, and frequency, but you need more than that to get people to read it.

Popular blogs have one thing in common; an individual voice. A voice will not only gain readers, but it keeps them. Learn how to create your voice using these 5 blogging tips:

1. Create a Blog Personality
Don’t formulate your posts. Let your voice shine through. Give your blog a personality.
2. Be Consistent in Your Posts
Be consistent, when starting out try to post at least 3 times a week. Preferably every other day.
3. Keep It Simple
Don’t get caught up in length of your posts. Your posts don’t have to be long. They can be random thoughts or tidbits of news regarding your industry. The key is make them interesting.
4. Allow Comments
Allow comments. You can moderate comments, but comments create the viral effect by allowing your readers to interact with you. You will also want to research and comment on relevant industry related blogs.
5. Focus on Your Title
Titles draw traffic. Be creative. Not only do they capture the attention of potential readers, but those search engines love blog titles. A rule of thumb is to keep your title under ten words.

From Laura Lake

How to Create Your Marketing Funnel Online

Filed under: Internet Marketing

Written by Donna Gunter
  
I’ve been working with several clients recently on the notion of creating a marketing funnel, also called a sales funnel, sales pipeline, or marketing platform, depending on what business you’re in. If you imagine a funnel, wide end at the bottom, and gradually narrowing as you go to the top, this is the sales pipeline through which potential, current and former clients travel in their business relationship with you. The idea is to get prospective clients in your target market to enter the funnel and become repeat customers by purchasing various goods and services from you at increasing price points.

What I see quite often (a marketing blunder for which I am also guilty) is that most service professionals have one item in their marketing funnel — their 1:1 service, whether that’s coaching, virtual assistance, web design, copy editing/writing, pest control, landscaping, professional organizing, financial planning, etc. They offer absolutely no other way for someone in their target market to sample or benefit from their expertise.
My clients typically get stuck in one of the following marketing scenarios:

1. They’ve hit the 1:1 service ceiling in some way. They either have a full schedule and can’t take on additional clients without expanding hours or hiring help, or they don’t want to work as many hours in providing individual client assistance (i.e. they’re tired of trading time for money)

2. No one is buying the pricey 1:1 service.

So, then, what’s an independent service professional to do? Map out your marketing funnel.

Your marketing funnel should have 9 layers, as outlined below. Please note that these price points aren’t fixed but are merely established as a guideline for you to establish your own price points with your target market based on what your target market can afford to pay or will pay for your type of service. The price points refer to your total customer purchase. For example, if you sell an ebook/audio package for $399, the total purchase price is $399. If you have a monthly subscription service, like for a monthly consulting retainer that runs $700/month and your client has agreed to pay for one year, your total customer purchase is $8400.

1. Target market layer: As much as I had to disappoint you, your target market isn’t "everyone", even though I’m sure you provide a wonderful service of which "everyone" should take advantage. Going for this shotgun approach rather than a laser marketing approach will make your marketing very difficult and permit the wrong people to enter your marketing funnel. So, you need to put a screen on your marketing funnel and ensure that only your target market enters.

 

2. Entry layer (free):

This is your free offering that you provide on your web site in exchange for a prospect’s contact information — a free newsletter, ebook, special report, ecourse. etc. This freebie serves as your introduction to prospective clients so that they can begin to get to know, like and respect you, which are the progressive steps necessary before they’ll decide to buy something from you.

3. Introductory layer ($5 - $150): 4. "Not Quite Newbie" layer ($150 - $450): This is a higher level price point at which you can sell more in-depth versions of the types of information products listed above that showcase your expertise. You may provide some of your time in your offerings at this point, but only in a group setting, like a teleseminar series, discussion forum of a membership subscription web site, or group coaching/consulting.

5. "Experienced Newbie" layer ($450-$1000): At this level you may be providing a bit more of your time in group settings, or offer items like home study courses or special packages that bundle several of your products together.

6. New Expert layer ($1000 - $3000): You’ll begin to offer your 1:1 time again at this level. whether it’s to offer some open office consulting hours each month as an addition to some type of action group you’re leading, or to create a short-term service retainer.

7. Expert layer ($3000 - $5000): Clients at this level will buy exclusive group time with you not readily available to the public, like a bootcamp conference on a particular topic or a year-long service retainer.

8. Master Expert layer ($5000 and greater): This is the level at which a client is paying handsomely for some type of 1:1 time with you, whether that’s a year-long commitment of coaching, consulting, mentoring, advising, etc. Only a few clients going through your marketing funnel will buy at this level.

9. Well-educated client outcome layer: After traveling through your marketing funnel, you should now have a bevy of loyal, dedicated customers who return again and again and make referrals to you because of the value and results they received from participating in your marketing funnel. You’ll need to continue to add and update your product offerings, as this well-educated client may travel up and down the funnel again as his needs change.

What do you offer in your business at each of these layers? Take out a piece of paper and jot down these price points and fill in the blanks from your current offerings. Where are the holes? How can you plug the holes? Creating a marketing funnel in which members of your target market can buy your expertise at several different price points will increase your exposure to larger numbers of your target market, ultimately bringing you more clients willing to go through the marketing funnel experience.

 

Is Nature a Marketing Guru?

Filed under: Internet Marketing

By Sean D’Souza

Technology rules. Yeah, for about five minutes–then natural instincts take over. Are you stupid enough to fight Mamma Nature? Well go ahead and rewrite the rules if you can, cause the Big Mamma knows one thing. She’s tried and tested it all. And if you want to play by her kooky rules, she is willing to teach you a thing or two.

The question is, are you willing to learn?

Do You Pay in Advance?
Have you noticed how big a brand Red Bull is today? Or how insignificant their advertising is? Red Bull shuns print advertising and has never done a triple back flip on a web campaign. Yet, it has found roots in over 50 countries. And has cemented its loyalty in the fickle land of teenagers.

So what’s Red Bull’s big secret?

It’s called GIVING.

Their marketing strategy was simple. They enticed students with free cases of Red Bull, if they threw a party. Guess how many students need an excuse to have a party? With a simple act of giving away free cases to the right target audience in the right universities, Red Bull became a very rich Red Bull.

Yet Where Are Most Marketing Plans Aimed?
Too often marketing is aimed solely at GETTING. Look at all those marketing plans, those many advertisements blaring away on the radio and TV. It’s get, get — all the time!

Yet, nature pooh poohs the stuff. Putting a carrot (not cart) before the horse, nature works on the giving part first. In its own little marketing and advertising way, a flower works contrary to most marketers. Using the bait of colour and nectar, it draws the bees, knowing full well that its very existence depends on giving bees what they want first, so the bees will carry their pollen.

Wander down the supermarket aisle and you’ll see what I mean. Fifty thousand brands stare at you, screaming at you to buy them. Then a little ol’ lady offers you a sample of a product. Fifteen seconds into your tasting session, she gives you another sample. Then, for no apparent reason, a bottle or two of the product finds itself in your cart. Were you sold? You betcha!

Giving works for a simple reason. Nature hates imbalance. If the deer get faster, so do the cheetahs. It’s a classic system to keep things in balance. Which effectively means that to create an imbalance in marketing in your favor, you’ve got to give first.

Are You Ready To Do the 1-2-3 and Cha-Cha-Cha?
Do you play the dating game? Or do you rush in to conquer most of the time? Mamma Nature knows that haste makes waste. Yet marketers think nothing of blowing squillions of dollars on various hare-brained, get-rich-quick schemes that achieve far less than their potential.

Here’s an example. Harley Davidson has been to hog hell and back. Just in time to save its bacon, it decided to work on the cha-cha-cha instead of the wham, bam method. The reward has manifested itself in thousands of die-hard Harley fans that would go all the way on their Harleys. Even today, despite being in an enviable position, Harley still finds time to wine and dine its customers while thumbing its nose at traditional media.

Another good example of cha-cha-cha marketing is how the British operated in the 19th century. Instead of slamming their way into conquering new lands, they went as traders. Whether history likes it or not, they maximized their potential in a systematic and natural marketing manner.

What Happens When Nature Goofs Up
Even nature loses out when it fails to obey its own rules. As long as it sticks to its spring, summer, autumn, winter routine, we go along with the "relationship." Yet every time it does the 60-second prime time TV spot on us, we absolutely hate it. Oh sure, there’s great colour, drama and pizzazz in a whirling tornado, but there’s zero empathy and a whole lot of defiance.

Turn on the music, move those feet. This isn’t some behemoth CRM program we’re talking about. Diamonds are a girl’s best friend, but flowers arouse less suspicion. Do the cha-cha-cha and the getting to know your customer. It’s cheaper, it follows steps, and it works.

Is Your Target Audience "Everyone?"
Nature would laugh at you and laugh heartily. Are you setting yourself up for disaster or what? Even a pimple-ridden 13 year old knows exactly who her knight in shining armor is. While the concept of being in the company of 20 gorgeous men would set her eyes alight, her brain knows better.

Yet most businesses horrify the heck out of Nature. In an apparent suicidal move, they go after a general audience in order to maximize their returns. Some of the biggest brands today are built on single-minded focus. Mercedes, Volvo, Rolex, McDonalds, Red Bull and Playboy all have a clearly defined target audience.

If you doubt it, take a look at a wild dog attack on a National Geographic broadcast. Have you noticed the focus and strategy of their attack? They single out the prey and go after it in a pre-defined relay system. It gets results, and isn’t that what you want?

Gotta Keep on Dancing
When was the last time your heart stopped beating? And isn’t that good, because if it did, you’d be taking harp lessons in a big hurry. Nature doesn’t stop its marketing campaign and neither should you. The first thing businesses do when the economy takes a downturn is pull the plug on marketing. Fat good that’s going to do you! That’s like telling your heart to work at half the heart beats when things aren’t good.

The planet doesn’t stop rotating, the trees don’t stop growing and the fish don’t stop swimming. Yet in an absolute violation of the most basic law of nature, we stop and start like some trainee driver.

There Ain’t No One Like Me!
Nature doesn’t brand-extend. It creates something and then it throws away the mould. When it creates a product, it makes sure that product thrives, grows and multiplies. It adds colour, shape and size for a bountiful variety, but brand extension is a no-no.

Yet look at some of the biggies out there. They put out their brands and then put their names on everything from computers to soap. Dove still stands for soap with 1/4th moisturising cream. Yet, in the supermarket, Dove tries to take on the full force of nature by brand-extending.

Does it work? Yes and no. People have too much clutter in their heads already. To add to that clutter is asking for trouble. Our brains identify with one object when we are given a name.

From Nokia to Chimpanzee
When I say Nokia, you say mobile phone. Yet Nokia sold everything from gumboots to computers — even TV sets. Then one day it dawned on them that they could conquer the world with a brand name that stood for one thing and one thing alone.

Sure a chimpanzee and a baboon are both monkeys, but they’re essentially different products. You won’t find a chimpanzee light or a chimpanzee diet in the species. They’re either chimps or they’re baboons! Besides, their unique brand name allows you to identify them with zero confusion every time! Uniqueness is your brand’s birthright. Use it well.

Here are some "Au Naturel" guidelines to business and marketing strategy:

1) Pay in Advance: First you shall sow, and then you shall reap. And you must sow in fertile ground not on rocky soil. Give, and you shall receive. Does this all sound familiar? Are you giving away anything worthwhile on your website, through your advertising, in your brochures?

2) Do the dance one step at a time: You’ll just make a fool of yourself if you don’t build up your reputation with your customers. Give them the best you possibly can. When nature puts on a beautiful butterfly, it starts with a worm.

3) Put on the glasses: Get focus in your life because Nature will make sure you pay big time if you don’t. Sure you can get business, but think of what’s possible if you focus. A little focus right now reaps long-term rewards. It’s your choice.

4) She’s only happy when she’s dancing: Is that a Bryan Adams song? Or is Nature telling us what we should be doing? She’s on the floor. Go on and boogie.

5) And then there was one: Is your fingerprint different? Is your iris different? Do you have a clone? Nature doesn’t think it works in real life. Why do you think differently?

6) And finally: Take off your headphones and look at what nature is saying.

It’s showing you the colour of money!

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