Friday, 12 August 2016

Taking a break

I got a sudden surge of people visiting this blog which brought it back to my attention. I haven't posted in a while because I'm focusing on comics rather than marketing! Probably won't be posting what I learn because I am too much comic book work happening right now. Have to pick your priorities!

Wednesday, 18 May 2016

How To Use Buffer to Schedule Social Media Posts







Interesting tool to save you time when posting

When and How to Update Your Social Media


When and How to Update Your Social Media 


Source 

Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Internet Video Statistics - Why Video Marketing is for Everyone







This is a little old, but has some interesting information about marketing through videos.

Tuesday, 3 May 2016

I have been away for a while. Still here is my latest learning

7 Facebook Marketing Tips to Help Increase Engagement




By Dara Fontein

If you ask anybody when their most awkward life stage was, there’s a good chance that they’ll respond with the preteen years. The time from ages nine to twelve-years-old can be awkward and emotionally turbulent for many as we try to establish our place in the world (spoiler alert: this isn’t done through those frosted tips you might have sported during this time). One of the most popular preteens in the world seems to have skipped this phase, however, because after being founded in 2004, Facebook has more than proven itself as one of the smartest 12-year-olds in the game. 

7 Facebook marketing tips

As a business tool, Facebook is continuously dominating the popularity contest as a key component of most content marketing strategies. However, because of it’s longevity, you may find yourself struggling to constantly come up with new content and fresh ideas for your company or brand’s Facebook page.
Although it’s tempting to just write up some content, find a cute image, and post away, approaching Facebook with some strategy will improve your chances of actually engaging in valuable conversations with your audience and customers. The following Facebook marketing tips will help you increase engagement with your Facebook marketing efforts, no poking required.

1. Timing is everything

While of course it depends on your audience, your content, and your overall goal, the timing of your Facebook post is something to seriously consider. Take a look at your audience, and note the personas you aim to reach. For example, if your targeted customer is a busy stay at home mom, the best time to reach her will probably be different from that of a single bachelor.
While a great way to figure out what times work best is through good, old-fashioned trial and error, a solid starting point is through this guide provided by Adweek. As shown, the best days to post to Facebook are Thursday and Friday, with engagement rates dropping 3.5 percent below average from Monday to Wednesday. The same infographic declares 1 PM the best time to post for shares and 3 PM the best time to post for clicks.
However, it must be clarified that these are not the most popular times to post, but rather the timing of the posts which showed increases in engagement. Obviously, it wouldn’t be great advice to tell you to post at a time when every other company is vying for audience eyeballs, so these times are ones that have actual results in mind.

2. Include social media images

You’ve probably heard it time and time again, but the benefits of adding images to your Facebook posts cannot be emphasized enough. As Angie Pascale of Clickz explains, “Photos receive 53 percent more likes on Facebook than the average post and 84 percent more link clicks.” In the same post, Pascale offers the following seven very helpful tips for your Facebook images:
  • Share images of real people
  • Focus on faces
  • Use lifestyle imagery, rather than product imagery
  • Be brief
  • Encourage short responses
  • Create image galleries
  • Use nostalgia to your advantage

3. Host Facebook contests

If there’s anything people love, it’s free stuff. I’ve definitely found myself liking and engaging with branded Facebook pages I previously would have ignored or not been aware of, simply for the chance to win something. The thrill of potentially getting something for free is a great incentive, and would most likely have little actual cost for your business when compared with the social media and brand awareness payoff.
As Wishpond explains, “The top reasons people “Like” a brand on Facebook are promotions/discounts (34 percent of respondents) and free giveaways (21 percent of respondents), respectively.” While the idea of ‘increasing engagement’ is all well and good, Wishpond provides seven actual returns on investments that can be seen with the implementation of Facebook contests for their brand as the following:
  • Increase fan base (through methods such as like-gating)
  • Boost in traffic (The candle brand used as an example saw 30,000 new fans in 6 weeks thanks to a contest)
  • Produce user-generated content
  • Generate target market opinions (through asking your target market for their opinions through voting contests)
  • Increase shares and virality
  • Generate conversations
  • Grow your email list (through collecting participant emails during a contest)

4. Crowdsource answers

As mentioned above as one of the benefits of hosting a Facebook contest, crowdsourcing customer and audience feedback is a key way of boosting Facebook engagement. Crowdsourcing acts as a kind of social listening, which we know is an important component of any social media strategy. Everybody’s favorite topic of conversation is, of course, themselves, so in turning to your Facebook fans to get their opinions or ideas on something is a surefire way to see increases in engagement.
Pose a simple question to your fans, or use polls to get them to vote on different questions, and you have an easy way of seeing exactly what your audience, and your customer, wants. Post Planner has some great suggestions for garnering crowdsourced content that will help you painlessly get the most of your audience, such as:
  • Collect testimonials via questions
  • Harvest your post comments
  • Ask fans to send photos using your product
  • Run a photo contest to collect images
  • Run a contest

5. Boost your posts

While some debate this practice, boosting your company’s Facebook post is still an effective way of improving your reach and engagement potential. Once you have identified your target audience, you can hone in even more on those you want to reach through a boosted post. If you require a little bit of clarification regarding what a boosted post actually is, our guide to Facebook boosted posts explains that “aboosted post is a post from your business Page that, for a fee, can appear higher up on your audience’s News Feeds.
The fee depends on how many people you want the post to reach—the payment depends on the number of impressions the post gets with time.” As you probably don’t want to boost every single thing you post on Facebook, our previous piece provides the following guidelines for knowing whether your post should be boosted or not:
  • It helps promote a product or service offered by your business
  • It encourages visits to your business’s website
  • It spreads awareness of a limited-time campaign your business is running

6. Seek audience insights

This tip goes hand in hand with crowdsourcing answers, and for good reason. The activities, posts, comments, and any other type of engagement you encounter on your brand’s Facebook page, offer valuable data for you to consider. You can see what kind of content your audience responds to, what kind of content they ignore, and therefore what content you should concentrate on and put your efforts into.
Furthermore, you’re able to narrow in on exactly who your audience is, and focus on this demographic. Facebook makes this really easy for you through their own “Audience Insights,” where you are able to see exactly what your audience engages with. As Social Media Examiner explains, with this “data-led understanding, you’ll know whether to post more photos, if that contest really worked, and the right kinds of topics to post about.”

7. Provide unique and valuable content

This may seem like a no-brainer, but the number of companies and brands who rely on obviously recycled or stale content shows the degree of missed opportunities on Facebook. By now you’ve hopefully recognized who your audience and customer is, so carefully consider what content they would find most valuable. Will a suburban teenaged girl care about “4 ways to can tomatoes?” Your common sense will always help you with questions such as this, so taking that extra moment to pause and think about your audience will go a long way.   
Remember–your brand or product is unique! Whether there are direct competitors or not, there are things that your product or service does that nobody else can claim, so take advantage of these features and highlight them accordingly through your Facebook strategy. Are there things your customer can do that they couldn’t before, thanks to your product? Feature crowdsourced photos of them doing just that, or provide your own interesting images making these points.
Are you an expert in your field? Offer advice and solutions to your customers and audience members through your organization’s Facebook page. The possibilities are endless, so make the time to sit down and truly think about how your brand stands out in the marketplace, and how this can be translated to your Facebook marketing strategy.

Wednesday, 10 February 2016

Branding Yourself Vs Your Small Business

Expert Author Aric J Jackson
Think you're clear regarding the difference of branding yourself vs. branding your business? Branding is a crucial aspect in developing a successful business. Whether you brand only your small business or you brand yourself (or both) depends exactly on what type of business you have and who your target audience is. But, you will find several serious downsides to being focused on branding yourself rather than the business unless all the company is you.
Branding Yourself
If YOU are the business, meaning much of your income source has been because of being a public figure of some sort or other -- such as a speaker, an actor, an author, a life coach, or any position that has to have your voice and face to be in the picture and the business will end if you die or quit, then you do want to brand yourself. Aside from that small niche, you really want to brand your business instead of yourself.
Take some time to decide if your business might be sold if you die, or decide to sell and retire. In any other case, then you want to be branding yourself together with your business. If you can sell or pass on your small business to others, then concentrate on branding the company only as a separate entity from yourself. Granted, a lot of people do both especially those who have both a business that they could sell, and also engage in public speaking, writing, teaching and coaching. So, sometimes it isn't an either or proposition but it is imperative that you look at your business to be sure that you are not neglecting an important possibility to brand your business outside of yourself. This ensures longevity past your lifetime or career.
Branding Your Small Business
Different than just branding yourself, branding your small business properly offers the message you intend to deliver, provides credibility, motivates the suitable buyers, and creates loyalty among customers.
But it also creates value outside the current state of your products and offerings. It can also create value when you're gone. Maybe you are gone through death or simply because you arrange to sell the business and move on to other opportunities. Among the most wealthy people today they launched a business, then sold in the height of its popularity to earn millions. These folks were able to do that because the business had a brand separate from themselves which enabled them to sell to someone else who could continue the company without them.
Therefore if you now have a product or service based business that someone else could easily run without you, brand the business. For those who have a product that IS you, branding yourself is probably the route to take. But, the greatest thing to do is find a way to do both. Find a way to separate the parts of the business that happen to be just you, and the parts of the business that someone else could do should you sell it directly to them or hire them to do it.
It may be a difficult decision for many of us. We treat our businesses like extensions of ourselves and surely they can be, but when you are looking at the future value of your business, branding the company separate from branding yourself is essential for longevity.

Thursday, 4 February 2016

10 Disastrous Marketing Campaigns





Basic lesson is to make sure you test all your campaigns before rolling them out en masse. Failing to do so can be VERY costly!


Thursday, 21 January 2016


Top 10 Marketing Books of All Time
Essential books for entrepreneurs who really want to understand how and why their customers buy.

By Geoffrey James 









In previous posts, I've identified the best motivational books of all time and the best sales books of all time. Today, I've selected 10 books about marketing that I believe should be in every business library.
Some of these books explain how technology has changed the strategy and tactics of marketing, while others are timeless observations about human nature and group behavior.  Enjoy!


10. Crossing the Chasm






By identifying the differences between "innovators" and "laggards" and everything in between, Geoffrey Moore creates a roadmap for how new markets develop.  While his book focuses on high tech, the lessons that he draws and the example he gives are applicable to every industry and business situation.
 Best quote: "'Why me?' cries out the unsuccessful entrepreneur.  Or rather 'Why not me?' 'Why not us?' chorus his equally unsuccessful investors. 'Look at our product. Is it not as good--nay, better-than the product that beat us out?'... In fact, feature for feature, the less successful product is often arguably superior."

Get the book: Crossing the Chasm, 3rd Edition: Marketing and Selling Disruptive Products to Mainstream Customers (Collins Business Essentials)


9. The Life of PT Barnum

You may think that "personal branding" is all the rage, but the true expert of self promotion was the great PT Barnum, who managed to enhance, build, change and strengthen his public image over half a century, forcing the world to take him on his own terms.  Fascinating stuff.
Best quote: "I have been a farmer's boy and a merchant, a clerk and a manager, a showman and a bank-president. I have been in jails and in palaces; have known poverty and abundance; have travelled over a large portion of two Continents; have encountered all varieties of men, have seen every phase of human character."


Get the book: The Life of P. T. Barnum, Written by Himself
8. Selling the Invisible

The most significant economic transformation of the past 50 years has been the change, in the United States and Europe, from a manufacturing economy to a service-based one.  According to author Harry Beckwith, the key to making the transition successfully is your unseen ability to build strong relationships with the people with whom you work.
Best quote: "The new marketing is more than a way of doing; it is a way of thinking.  It begins with an understanding of the distinctive characteristics of services--their invisibility and intangibility--and of the unique nature of service prospects and users--their fear, their limited time, their sometimes illogical ways of making decision, and their most important drives and needs."

Get the book: Selling the Invisible: A Field Guide to Modern Marketing

7. Influence



As useful to salespeople as it is to marketers, Bob Cialdini's book is all about how people say "Yes!" and what you can do bring them to that point.  In a series of intensely practical observations, Cialdini reveals how your actions and words can profoundly effect the desires and needs of your customers, colleagues and even your competitors.  Essential stuff.
Best quote: "There is a group of people who know very well where the weapons of automatic influence lie and employ them regularly and expertly to get what they want.  They go from social encounter to social encounter requestin others to comply with their wishes; their frequency of success is dazzling."


Get the book: Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion, Revised Edition

6. Positioning



As true today as it was when published 20 years ago, this classic by Al Ries and Jack Trout lays out the basics of finding where your product fits in larger picture of what other people want and what other companies are doing.  Some of the case studies are showing a little age, but this remains a seminal, essential text.
Best quote: "Positioning is now what you do to a product.  Positioning is what you do to the mind of the prospect."


By injecting neuroscience into the art of marketing, Martin Lindstrom explains how everything we think and do is influenced by mental forces of which we are only vaguely aware (if at all). More importantly, Lindstrom shows how these impulses might be scientifically measured and then used to hone marketing campaigns.  Scary, maybe, but sci-fi no longer.
Best quote: "If marketers could uncover what is going on in our brains that makes us choose one brand over another--what information passes through our brain's filter and what information doesn't--well, that would be key to truly building brands of the future.

Get the book:  Buyology: Truth and Lies About Why We Buy
4. Permission Marketing

For decades marketing pundits thought about marketing in terms of cramming your brand messages down people's throats. Seth Godin turned this concept upside down by pointing people have so many choices today that they're going to pick and choose what messages they want to hear.
Best quote: "Marketers want to get their messages in front of you.  They must get their messages in front of you, just to survive.  The only problem is--do you really wantmore marketing messages?


Get the book: Marketing: Turning Strangers into Friends and Friends into Customers 



3. Guerilla Marketing
Thirty years ago, Jay Conrad Levinson took marketing out of the world of Mad Men and huge corporations into the hands of entrepreneurs and small businesses. The book explains why it's no longer necessary to spend a great deal of money to gain visibility, as long as you're willing to get creative.  Amazingly, the book got it "spot on" way before anybody was talking about "going viral."
Best quote: "Guerilla marketing requires you to comprehend every facet of marketing, experiment with many of them, winnow out the losers, double up on the winners, and then use the marketing tactics that prove themselves to you in the battleground of real life."

Get the book: Guerilla Marketing: Easy and Inexpensive Strategies for Making Big Profits from Your Small Business

2. The Long Tail


While the 20th century was dominated by hit products, the 21st century will be dominated by niche products, according to Chris Anderson's groundbreaking explanation of web-based purchasing habits.  As useful as this book is, you can get the gist of it from his original article in Wired.
Best quote: "As demand shifts towards the niches, the economics of providing them improve further, and so on, creating a positive feedback loop that will transform entire industries-and the culture-for decades to come."

Get the book: The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More 
1. Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds

Ultimately, marketing means understanding groups of people and how they think. While technology has changed over the decades, people haven't, so it shouldn't be all THAT surprising that in 1841, Charles Mackay captured the essence of bonehead group-think.  Read this, and you'll never be surprised by events like the Great Recession or the popularity of the Kardashians.
Best quote: "We find that whole communities suddenly fix their minds upon one object, and go mad in its pursuit; that millions of people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion, and run after it, till their attention is caught by some new folly more captivating than the first."


Get the book: Extraordinary Popular Delusions and The Madness of Crowds


Readers: Did I miss any? Leave a comment if you've got a different favorite.