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

Wednesday, 3 June 2015

Encouraging Word of Mouth With Your Email Marketing

Nowadays, despite there being more marketing channels than ever, a lot of business promotion still lies in the hands of the customers. Even in this technological age, something as simple as word of mouth is still hugely effective in driving new customers to a business. Yet, many companies are reluctant to implement their own word of mouth marketing campaigns.
Why Word of Mouth?
People can be naturally distrustful of businesses. Generally, they need to see evidence of a positive track record before they will part with their hard earned cash. They are more likely to trust recommendations from people they trust, i.e. their friends and family. This is what makes word of mouth so powerful. It also specifically targets the kind of people who are interested in the products or services that you offer.
In the past, businesses have shied away spending money on word of mouth campaigns because of how difficult is it to monitor their success and ROI. However, people communicate in very different ways these days. Word of mouth can theoretically take place on social media, message boards and via email, making it much easier to track results.
Email provides a great medium to encourage word of mouth amongst your customers. Messages can be forwarded to an almost infinite number of people, and conversations that start in an email can continue on social media, or even offline. Here are just some of the ways email can be used to generate word of mouth:
Start a Conversation
Rather than just using your email marketing campaigns as a product showcase, you can use the medium to encourage conversations between people both online and offline. You can ask them to share stories, experiences, reviews or even photographs. Recently, one of the ways businesses have been encouraging conversations between their customers is by including hashtags in their marketing emails. With a hashtag, conversations can move seamlessly between email and social media, and businesses can easily monitor what people are saying about their company.
Mobile phone network Three created a hashtag to promote their customers being able to use their phone abroad at no extra cost:
image: http://cdn.business2community.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/three-hashtag-300x241.jpg
three-hashtag
Lingerie company Bravissimo took the hashtag trend one step further by offering a prize to people who shared their stories:
image: http://cdn2.business2community.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Bravissimo-300x161.jpg
Bravissimo
As well as encouraging a discussion, this campaign had the potential to introduce Bravissimo to both the person mentioned in the post and all their Facebook friends, with very little effort on the part of the company.
As well as starting your own conversations, you can also take advantage of other popular social media ‘trends’, basing an email marketing campaign around them. The most notable example of this recently was the photograph of the dress that found its way onto social media (was it blue and black or white and gold?). When discussion about the dress took off all over the Internet, fashion retailer Roman Originals (who produced the dress in question) ‘hijacked’ the hashtag and used it in an email marketing campaign:
image: http://cdn.business2community.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/The-Dress-405x600.jpg
#The-Dress
Reward Referrals
Not everyone is inclined to share stories about businesses on social media. Perhaps they haven’t experienced anything exceptional enough for them to talk about with their friends and family (even though they’re perfectly happy with your business). Some people need a little extra push to encourage word of mouth. A referral campaign, where you reward customers for introducing their friends to your business, is the perfect way to do this.
Many companies run campaigns like this. In this example, DW Fitness Clubs offered their members a £20 gift card if a friend of theirs joined the gym:
image: http://cdn.business2community.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/DW-Fitness-300x243.jpg
DW-Fitness
Certain people can be reluctant to spend money on a new product purely on a friend’s recommendation. They may want to try the product for themselves first. Beauty company L’Occitane used this as the motivation for their referral campaign. They emailed their customers a code that three of their friends could use to claim a free gift box:
i
LOccitane
This is a great way to both increase mailing list subscribers and to get more people using their products.
Word of mouth campaigns offer a simple and affordable way to open your business up to a whole new audience. By using email to encourage word of mouth among your customers, you also have the added benefit of making your messages feel more personal and engaging.

http://www.business2community.com/email-marketing/encouraging-word-mouth-email-marketing-01235861

Monday, 16 March 2015

Three great examples of high-performing visual content marketing


Danny Ashton shares examples of high performing visual content-marketing:


CookSmarts.com

C:\Users\Stephanie\Documents\Great examples of visual content marketing\salad-infographic.png
This infographic caught the team’s eye from day one. ‘50 Simple Salads For Every Season’ was featured by Lifehacker – a great placement for any campaign!
But what captured my attention the most was how CookSmarts created a powerful, real resource page to accompany the piece.
The infographic was simply an added benefit – it included further details about the dressings, with tips and a video explaining how to make a vinaigrette.  
The infographics were also broken down by season – winter, fall, spring and summer - which not only provides additional assets for publishers to use, but also offers another potential opt-in for their list – which appeared to be the key aim of this campaign.
The team at CookSmarts proved this multi-infographic concept worked with the ‘Ultimate Guide to Spices’.
Back in 2014, the piece achieved 44 referring domains and was shared widely across the web, with three unique infographics plus supporting content.
Not happy with just one home run, the brand pushed to build upon what had already been produced,, and applied it to other pain points for its audience.
One other thing that I personally loved about CookSmarts’ approach is that it provided an A4 printable version of the infographic in exchange for a user’s email address - genius!
It would be great to know what kind of numbers were achieved through such a simple process.
How is it affecting search?
I really like the way CookSmarts is simply marketing its site through content – it’s a relatively new domain with only 605 total linking domains, so it gives us great insight into how content marketing efforts are affecting search results.
Using SEMRush we see a gradual increase in search visibility – something every SEO team member wants to see.

Movoto.com

Movoto was producing visual content marketing way before it became cool.
Working within what most would call an unsexy industry – real estate – Movoto has produced some amazingly creative campaigns, but more importantly it has been doing so regularly for the past two years.
The top performing piece of content with regards to placements is ‘These are the 10 most stressed out states in America’. Movoto calls this study its ‘kind of a big deal’ list.
Firstly, the company gives details on how the data is pulled together for these type of lists here - something I have never seen before outside the publishing world.
For this particular infographic, a number of data sources were collected, which are defined as supporting ‘stress’, such as unemployment figures, commute times, percentage of income spent on housing, etc... and from this Movoto provided an average for each state for the final list.
Following on, visuals were created for each, together with a table of data to show the full breakdown. All of this provides total clarity as to how it produced the research.
Finally, Movoto visualise all of this data in a very simple interactive infographic, which is also available as a static image.
movoto-interactive.png
For most content marketers out there, this is serious ‘next level’ stuff. No tricks, just thorough, time-intensive research to create something meaningful based on a concept that people truly care about, and then shared using easy-to-understand visuals.
How did it do?
372 domains – a serious home win.
But even greater when you see this strategy has been used over and over by Movoto to create similar content about ‘caring small cities’ (318 domains) and ‘exciting cities’ (291 domains).
How is it affecting search?
Someone forgot to tell Movoto that it’s getting harder to get search coverage in 2015. They are currently killing it with 600,000+ worth of monthly estimated search traffic.
A true case study to share with clients who think sending out a hamper to bloggers will fix the ‘link building’ problem! 

Bellroy Wallets

When you have an awesome product aimed at solving a known issue facing a wide community, then you simply need to tell everyone.
Bellroy is one of the best examples of a company doing this through visual content marketing.
Each specific product has its own landing page with a dedicated video and accompanying imagery.
The site includes an awesome interactive tool to see how big your wallet is compared to a Bellroy.
There is even a basic HTML interactive infographic about how to travel light, which then provides two of the brand's products as potential solutions.  
Anyone in the ecommerce game should take note of Bellroy’s approach. The whole site is targeted at combating its audience’s problem (big wallet syndrome), and based on the number of times I’ve emailed hints to my girlfriend I expect the site converts incredibly well.
I really like the fact that Bellroy doesn’t hide its products – in fact each piece of content brings the user back to those amazing looking landing pages.
The core goal I’m sure was sales, but just out of interest let’s see how Bellroy did for links and search.
Nearly 2,000 domains for a product that was released in January 2013 is impressive, but what’s even more impressive is that it’s the product pages themselves that drive the majority of the links.
Yes - those boring ‘money’ pages that SEOs had to buy/cajole/beg for links to are the biggest driver of inbound links for Bellroy.
How about search visibility?
Another huge upward curve with number one rankings for key terms like ‘slim wallet’ and ‘travel wallet’ - a great example of how awesome content, combined with laser targeting to a clear audience, is also key to search success.

Some honourable mentions:

Made.com is another one to watch in the ecommerce arena – its product pages include videos of professional photo shoots, images of the products in real homes via its ‘unboxed’ platform, and pro shots from every angle.
Having these content-heavy landing pages helps to explain how Made.com achieves so many editorial mentions for its products.
Blog.uber.com has been producing some interesting visuals in its uberdata category.
As with Movoto’s ‘kind of a big deal list’, it takes problems like everyone taking taxis during New York Fashion week and extracts data focusing on how the company's product could make a difference, and then displays the information through videos and imagery.  

Some takeaways:

When you get a home run, don’t just pat yourself on the back... see how you can apply the same process across other concerns of your target audience like Movoto did, such as the nerdiestbest to raise a family or worst dressed, or how CookSmarts did with its resource infographics for saladsherbs and spices.
Make the most of your landing page - try out the concept in different formats such as videos, articles, printable pdfs, and even simple interactives to create an immersive experience like Bellroy.
Understand who your audience is and make sure your content is targeted at them.
Your product should make sense and shouldn’t be hidden away from the user - in all of the three examples above the companies are open about who they are and why they are creating the content.
Publishers want to know these things, don’t make it hard for them. Work with them to help them understand the value you can offer to their audience.

Monday, 9 March 2015

Five Ways to Create Content That Reigns [Infographic]


How can marketers better create content that achieves optimal results? Here are five suggestions from a Captora infographic.
Drive pipeline growth with data: "Research-driven campaigns get results and set your marketing efforts apart from the Internet noise," states Captora.
Some two-thirds of marketers say data drives their digital marketing, and 71% say it enables the delivery of more relevant messaging to more finely segmented audience, according to data cited by Captora.
Another suggestion for creating content that rules: play on those heartstrings. Consumers' emotions often determine their brand choices.
The "most viral" emotions are amusement, interest, surprise, happiness, delight, pleasure, affection, and excitement.


To find out more about what emotions create the least engagement and other tips for creating content that rules, check out the infographic:


Monday, 15 December 2014

Aweber vs Getresponse - comparison of the two leading autoresponders in the market.


I think that an auto responder tool is essential for every marketer or business online, the 2 leading tools in the market are Aweber  and  GetResponse.

When you need to decide between the two there is much more than the price to compare, yet if you are just starting to build a list and have less than 1000 subscribers and a tight budget it’s a question you would probably ask yourself.

As I have tried both tools in my lists I can tell you about my experience using the products and in addition to add a general view of the product from other reviews I read about the subject.



LETS START WITH WHAT THE HECK IS AN AUTO RESPONDER

Aweber and Getresponse are both auto-responders  that are used by any business online and email marketers to:

- Hosting and maintain your list of subscribers

- Create newsletters and broadcast to your lists of subscribers in the schedule you define up to one year in advance.

- They give you an option of dividing the email marketing campaigns for different niches, for new subscribers and for subscribers already listed for a while.

- convert blog post to email

- split test

- track subscribers activity , how many subscribers opened the email how many clicked the link and how many purchase the product.

- good support and large knowledge base - you can get in touch by phone chat or email in case you need help.

- integration - good integration with 3rd party tools as this is the leading product in the market for a reason.


 http://aweber.com/?446640

PRICE COMPARISON

GetResponse is cheaper than Aweber  if you are a newbie and your list of subscribers include less than 1000 people GetResponse lets you start your marketing journey from $15.

Aweber will charge you $19 for a 500 list of subscribers but  $29: for 25,000 people.

For experience marketers with a large list of subscribers the differences are small. As with both systems you get a discount if you sign-up for a year

GetResponse  will usually be cheeper at least until you have 25k subscribers

  • Aweber will also charge you for anybody who unsubscribes while GetResponse won’t.



TEMPLATES

Aweber’s templates look a bit better than Getresponse  but as I don’t use the templates It’s very hard for me to be objective

Getresponse’s templates look fine and are easily to amend.

Aweber’s templates are slightly more visually appealing but overall there is not much of a difference in the complexity and the design.




KEY FEATURES

Getresponse and Aweber offer a similar feature set, the key features being:

•Ability to capture data and host mailing lists (you get a little bit of HTML code that you can insert on your site or social media profiles to capture email addresses)

• A wide range of predesigned e-newsletter templates

• Autoresponder functionality which allows you to send automated e-newsletters at pre-defined intervals to subscribers after they sign up

• Statistics on the percentage of subscribers that are opening your emails, clicking links or unsubscribing

• RSS to e-newsletter functionality (useful for automatically sending your blog posts to subscribers on your mailing list)

• Easy-to-use message builders that allow you to create and edit e-newsletters without coding

• Integration with various third-party sites/tools (for example, online shopping services such as Amazon Payments, Paypal  and Google Checkout or CRM tools like Capsule and Salesforce) - this allows you to add customers to mailing lists at the point of sale, for example, or use Aweber and Getresponse to send e-newsletters to customers on your CRM system.

• Responsive email templates.

http://www.getresponse.com/index/edlatter1


IMPORTING DATA

Both GetResponse  and Aweber allow this feature and I couldn’t fault any of them for not doing the job properly.


INTEGRATION WITH OTHER SYSTEMS

Aweber  still does better job than Getresponse is in its integration with third party sites and tools, they  both tools offer  good  integrations with other sites and tools such as Paypal, Amazon Payments , leadpages but  many  Getresponse integrations involve setting up an additional adapter to complete the functions.


LANDING PAGE CREATION- Optin Pages.

Landing pages or 'squeeze pages' or sometimes called “optin pages” are web pages designed to capture your name and email address.

They typically contain a form, some decent images and a small amount of text spelling out the benefit of submitting your email address - it's generally better to use landing pages for online ad campaigns over a form that sits on your website, simply because they are optimized for capturing data (as they contain less content to distract users).


Getresponse gives you  a landing page creator out of the box, that allows you to make use of 100+ templates and a drag and drop editor to create a great landing pages. To do similar things with Aweber, you would need third party tools, or to hire a designer to code your landing page – this is a tedious task.

.Free trials

The closest you get to a free trial in Aweber, is a $1 trial ,Getresponse, on the other hand, give you a 30 day free trial and  no  credit card details are required.


WHAT IS THE CONCLUSION?

Both Aweber and Getresponse  are great for marketing email campaigns and maintenance of your lists in some areas one is better than the other but both came along way from the early days of email marketing and indeed it is difficult to say which one is better. If you are a new I would recommend to start with get response as you get 30 days trial and the price is more competitive up to 1000 subscribers. If you are looking for better integration I would go for Aweber as it is currently the leading tool and therefore 3rd party integration is at a click of a button.