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ROI of Inbound Marketing in 2013

    Posted in Featured, HubSpot, Inbound Marketing    |    1 Comments

Inbound marketing continues to show remarkable growth across multiple industries.  For 2013, inbound has continued to grow budget share of marketing spend.  There are a number of reasons for this, not the least of which is… ROI.  Following are several quick facts about the ROI of inbound marketing from HubSpot’s 2013 State of Inbound Marketing report.

  • In 2013, marketers are allocating 34% of their overall budgets to inbound marketing — more than banners, direct mail and other outbound strategies
  • Twice as many marketers say inbound marketing delivers below average cost per leads versus outbound strategies
  • 34% of all lead generation in 2013 comes from inbound marketing sources
  • Inbound delivers 54% more leads into the marketing funnel than traditional outbound leads
  • 41% of marketers surveyed for the report say inbound produces measurable ROI
  • Marketers spending more than $25K per year save an average of 13% in overall cost per lead for every new customer acquired versus those relying on outbound strategies

 Even more information can be found at http://www.stateofinboundmarketing.com/

82% of marketers who blog see positive ROI for their inbound marketing

 

Just 6% of leads will be generated from traditional advertising and PPC this year!  The world of marketing is changing incredibly quickly.

Inbound marketing is a holistic approach to connect with an increasingly fragmented audience who no longer respond to what has “always worked in the past”.  If you aren’t already using inbound marketing, contact a inbound marketing expert now to explore how inbound can work for you.









5 Steps to Identify Effective Keywords

    Posted in Content Marketing, Featured, Inbound Marketing, Online Tools    |    2 Comments

Identify effective keywords to drive traffic to your website.  Effective search engine optimization (SEO) is a key to inbound marketing success.  The goal of SEO is to make your site easy to find by search engines, Google, Bing, Yahoo, etc.  A search engine’s job is to provide the most relevant results when users search specific terms.  To help them identify your site as relavent, the terms that users enter to search for the information you have on your site must be included in the copy and description for your page.

Step 1 – Access Google’s Keyword Tool

Identify Effective Keywords with Google's Keyword Tool

Google’s Keyword Tool is free to use and relatively intuitive.  If you already have a Google AdWords account (to manage PPC or Pay-Per-Click advertising), you can find a link to the tool in the main navigation menu at the top of the page.  Click “Tools and Analysis”, then “Keyword Tool”.

If you do not already have an AdWords account, you can still access this tool here: https://adwords.google.com/o/KeywordTool

Step 2 – Find Potential Keywords

Find other possible keywords

In the block at the top of the page, based on your knowledge of your business enter logical potential words and phrases that a prospect may use to find your service or products.  I have used a Ford dealership in Atlanta as the example, entering common phrases that someone looking for a Ford dealer might enter.  The keyword tool will provide other options along with an indication of how difficult it would be to rank on the first page for the each search term (competition) and the number of global and local monthly searches for each keyword or phrase.

Step 3 – Identifying Opportunities to Rank

Identifying Keyword OpportunitiesTo identify potential keywords and phrases, scan the results list for options that have “medium” or “low” competition with relatively high local monthly searches.   In this example, “ford atlanta ga” and “atlanta ga ford” have medium competitiveness and more than 8,000 searches per month.  This combination makes these two phrases excellent targets that have a better chance of success than some of the more highly competitive keywords.

Step 4 – Analyze Keywords in Google Trends

Analyze keywords in Google TrendsAfter identifying keywords with strong search volume and relatively lower competition, use Google Trends (formerly known as Google Insights for Search) to see if specific phrases are trending up or down in search volume and if certain search terms are more prevalent in your target market.  Sometimes a search phrase is used more prevalently in one area (even down to neighborhoods and suburbs) than in others.

To access Google Trends, click the drop down menu beside one of the keywords you would like to analyze.  Then choose “Google Insights for Search” from the menu.  (Eventually, this will change to “Google Trends”.  Google is still using their old term right now.)

Keyword comparison in Google Trends

The Google Trends page will plot the keyword from which it was launched automatically. To compare the search trends of other keywords, enter the others you identified above into the “Search terms” box on the left side of the page.

In the “Limit to” section on the lower left side of the page, restrict your analysis to your target market.  In our case, we have chosen “Atlanta”.

In this example, you can see that “Ford dealership” and “Ford dealers” have a similar number of searches…but that the search volume for “Ford dealers” has declined over time while “Ford dealership” has increased in popularity.

Step 5 – Identify Effective Keywords for your Target Market

Other_Options_and_Geographic_InterestInterestingly, although the search term “Ford dealers” has declined in popularity in metro Atlanta, it still may be an excellent keyword choice if your target market is within the city limits or in the suburbs of Alpharetta or Smyrna.  Residents of the suburbs of “North Metro” (due north of the Perimeter) search using that term much less frequently.  The Trends tool will also give you related terms that should also be considered.

There are many paid keyword tools with very robust features helpful to pros (we use SEOprofilerSEOmoz is another popular choice).  However, insights to identify effective keywords can be found directly from Google for free.

If you need help with search engine optimization or your search engine marketing campaign, request a consultation with one of our inbound marketing experts.  We’ll be glad to explain our process and get your search engine marketing campaign off to a roaring success.





Reducing Your Site’s Bounce Rate

    Posted in Articles, Featured, Inbound Marketing, Technology    |    No Comments

A high bounce rate is an indication that your site’s content does not match what is expected from the visitor.  Following are our recommendations from a strategic, design and backend/technical perspective for reducing your bounce rate.

Strategy

  • Make data-informed decisions
  • A/B test designs, CTAs, forms, headlines…everything
  • Compare better performing pages to underperformer using heat maps CrazyEgg is an excellent tool.
  • Profile and segment on geography, language, browser, operating system, traffic source
  • Compare keyword bounce performance and maintain keyword focus on each page
  • Ensure headlines accurately represent the actual content
  • Consider points of entry and perspective of landing as first page
  • Link to the most appropriate page rather than home page
  • Provide internal links to related content
  • Address the user’s REAL need
  • Incorporate video of people within the organization to allow visitors the opportunity to “get to know” us

Design

reduce_website_bounce_rate

  • Make sure the message is immediately obvious
  • Don’t overwhelm with content
  • Communicate who we are and what we do in 3 to 5 seconds
  • Ensure proper color contrast for readability
  • Design clean, accessible, intuitive navigation
  • Eliminate distractions such as animation, fly-outs, surveys,
  • Do not use auto-play video with audio
  • Incorporate a search function and analyze searches for insight
  • Avoid Flash
  • Do not use “welcome/splash screens”
  • Don’t get TOO hung up about staying above the fold.

Backend

  • Improve loading times
  • Lazy-load (AJAX) third-party content
  • Use responsive screen design for desktop, tablet, and mobile
  • Open all external links in a new window
  • Check various browser performance




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How to Measure your Blog’s Performance

    Posted in Content Marketing, Featured, Helpful Insight, HubSpot, Inbound Marketing, Marketing, Social Media    |    No Comments

Business blogging without measuring results is a waste of time.

Business blogging without measuring results is a waste of time. That said, there are so many metrics that you COULD track, you could end up overwhelming yourself with data and leaving yourself time to actually blog.  So… we recommend focusing on the major metrics that can help save you time and hone your blogging to generate more leads.

 Measuring Visitors

Start by measuring the most fundamental (and important) of metrics…visitor count.  Google Analytics will quickly supply the information you need for any timeframe.

While tracking your blog visitor count like the stock market is fun, it takes a little digging in to the data to get some actionable insight.  Look at your five most successful blog posts. What do they have in common?  Is there a common topic?  Were your images better?  Did a Twitter follower tweet a link to the posts?  How many Facebook friends “liked” the post on your wall?  Now use this insight to refine and improve your future posts.

 Measuring Leads

We’re sure (most of) you are not investing the time to blog for your health.  The success of a business blog should be measured by its results.  And the results you want are leads.  “Sometimes a post may not get a ton of visits but still generate lots of leads. Without looking at the leads metric, a marketer might easily dismiss the less viewed post as a failure when that shouldn’t necessarily be the case.  Look at the leads you generate from blog posts. Also examine at what rate those leads convert into customers compared to other marketing channels.” (Business Blogging, Hubspot)

 Subscriber Counts

It takes more than reading one blog article for a person to develop an understanding of your expertise and credibility within your industry. Giving readers the opportunity to subscribe to your blog either via RSS (Really Simple Syndication) or via email is a common characteristic of a well-planned blog.  Tracking the number of people subscribing to your blog provides a solid indicator of the quality and consistency of your content.  Your subscribers act as the base readership of your content and can help spread it to others.

Inbound Links

An “inbound link” is a  link that originates from another website or blog and links to a page or post on your site.  Search engines use inbound links as an indication of authority and content quality which in turn influences how pages appear and rank in search engine results.  As blog posts are normally educational rather than product-centric, they are great at generating inbound links and, subsequently, search traffic.

Track how many inbound links each of your blog posts attracts. Different types of blog posts and topics will be more successful than others.  That is… some will drive more inbound links than others.  Looking at these metrics for each post will guide you as you determine which topics and types of posts should be included in your content strategy for your blog.

Social Media Shares

Tweet, pin, like.  Social media can drive traffic to your site and bring new eyes to your blog.  Remember to keep titles within Tweet size limits (less than 140 characters) and be sure to include photos and images that will help attract interest on Facebook and be pinned on Pinterest.  Then track the activity around each post to decide which topics and types of posts seem to be most interesting to your followers.  Use Facebook Insights and third-party twitter analysis tools to make life easier.

This article is an excerpt from our eBook: An Introduction to Blogging for Businesses.  The entire eBook is available as free PDF download.




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How to Promote your Blog

    Posted in Content Marketing, Featured, Helpful Insight, Inbound Marketing, Marketing, Social Media    |    No Comments

Social Media Sharing

Social media works, y’all.  We’re talking Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Google+, Pinterest, Tumblr, Instagram, YouTube… all of those and the thousand of others.  We recommend blogging using the WordPress blog platform (www.WordPress.org or www.WordPress.com).  If you do, there are plug-ins that can automatically post a link to all of those social media sites that will direct traffic to your blog post.  You can do it manually too… but that can get tedious.  Regardless, you need to do it.  If social media is totally new to you, you probably should call us for some help.  We also have tons of resources on our site that may help: http://turnyourbrandon.com/resources/

Other Bloggers

Believe it or not, other bloggers are often happy to help spread the word about your blog… assuming you are writing intelligent, value-added posts. Start by following their blog’s RSS feed, commenting on their posts, and linking to their blog in articles and/or a blogroll that has links to your favorite sites.  The other blogger may very well return the favor.

Another avenue is to join blog networks like BlogGlue or NetworkedBlogs.  BlogGlue also has an excellent SEO tool that will automagically check blog post drafts for SEO best practices and offer suggestions to improve your post in the eyes of search engines.

Email Signatures

As soon as you have a blog, everyone in your organization should add a link in their automated email signature to it (and to your Twitter feed and Facebook page).

Events and Presentations

If, like us, you occasionally give presentations to Chamber events, networking groups, business associations, or what have you, be sure to promote your blog by saying that all of the material you covered today along with the slides you presented are available on your blog at…. Several of the attendees will look up your site right there from their smartphone.  Which brings up an entirely separate point…be sure your website and blog are mobile-friendly.  Call us if you don’t what that means.

This article is an excerpt from our eBook: An Introduction to Blogging for Businesses.  The entire eBook is available as free PDF download.




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How to Optimize Your Blog Posts

    Posted in Content Marketing, Featured, Helpful Insight, Inbound Marketing, Marketing    |    No Comments

So how do do I get the biggest bang for all of my work when I start blogging?

Attention-Grabbing Headlines

blog rss iconTake a lesson from the newspaper… grab readers’ attention with a great headline.  Headlines can be controversial, funny, shocking, or clever…but a good one is something that prompts the reader to investigate further.  Here are some tips:

  • Start with “How to….”
  • Start with “Top 10….”
  • Be a little irreverent with something like “5 Ways to Not Suck at…”
  • Start with “11 Essential…”
  • Make a statement, then follow up with “Here’s how to” deal with it.
  • Provide your “Top 10 Tips for…”

We’ve found that headlines like “How to Use Business Blogs to Market Your Business” work well.  ;-)

Compelling Images

People are visual.  If you’ve ever doubted it, look at the recent meteoric rise of Pinterest.  If that’s the first time you’ve heard of Pinterest, download our eBook “How to Use Pinterest for Business” to learn more: http://info.turnyourbrandon.com/how-to-use-pinterest-for-business.  But we digress.   Using a compelling image that catches attention in much the same way a great headline can will make your article much more popular.  There are free image sites like http://www.iconfinder.com/ that can help.  Keep in mind that images that are not specifically offered under common creative license are, almost certainly, copyrighted images.  Don’t use those without permission.  Bad karma.

Formatting

Break the article into sections so it’s not a sea of endless text that makes a reader’s eyes glaze over.  Use bullets for lists when appropriate.  Insert relevant graphics that help tell the story.  Don’t use funky colors, animations, or fonts that MIGHT “look pretty” but more than likely make the article difficult to read.  Remember the power of white space.  Designers call it “negative space”.  If you’re not sure what we mean, check out any Apple package or their website.  They’re masters in simplicity and formatting.

 Calls-to-Action

In sales, a good salesman knows they have to ask for the business.  Calls-to-action are where you ask for the business.  For every page on your blog, your website, and every article, there should be a clear call-to-action that invites the reader to download something, attend a webinar, schedule a consultation or SOMETHING that is relevant to the post.  Your objective is to engage the reader with as much content as possible…and then turn them into leads and then customers.   Calls-to-action are the bridge to Moneyland.  Build them!

If you’re not a graphic whiz, try using PowerPoint or Keynote to layout a nice “download now” button and then save it as an image that you can use on your blog.  Or hire someone to help by sending an email to HelpME@TurnYourBrandON.com or calling us at 404-955-9447 or contact us by completing the short form at this URL: http://info.turnyourbrandon.com/request-a-marketing-consultation.  That was a call-to-action, by the way.  ;-)

This article is an excerpt from our eBook: An Introduction to Blogging for Businesses.  The entire eBook is available as free PDF download.




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How to Generate Content for your Blog

    Posted in Content Marketing, Featured, Helpful Insight, Inbound Marketing, Marketing    |    No Comments

Ok.  So I understand WHY I should blog… but what am I going to write about?

Repackage Existing Content

blog rss iconWe hear you!  It can be tough to come up with valuable “deliverables”…but we bet that you have more content already than you think.  Try reviewing the resources you provide to clients.  Are there “how-to’s” or guides or assessments that you could use as a value-add to the folks with whom you do not already have a relationship?  Think through your existing brochures, pamphlets, presentations, speeches, industry snap shots…  Something in all of that can be repackaged into a perfectly valuable download that a visitor would be wiling to share their email address to get.  Be creative!

Vendors and Suppliers

Beyond developing your own original content, look to vendors or suppliers for informational pieces that you could share outright… or rewrite, incorporating the data they have provided and citing them as a source.  You’ll be creating goodwill in two places at once.

RSS and Twitter

Beyond being a platform to connect with potential prospects, Twitter and RSS feeds from other blogs are constant fountains of information and great topic ideas for your blog.  By following  the feeds of experts in your industry, you will be provided with tons of the latest data and all of the hot topics that are current and top of mind.  If you need help getting started with Twitter, look to our Resources page on our blog (TurnYourBrandON.com/blog) for guides on the best tools to make tweeting easy.

Curation

The Huffington Post became a huge, influential media outlet by sifting through all the news and commentary being published by everyone else… and then aggregating the best articles into a one-stop place to find information.  Curation is about doing the legwork (or having your tools do the legwork for you) needed to identify the best of what is already offered.  Here’s a caveat though… Google and the other search engines don’t take kindly to wholesale copying other folks’ content.  You’ll need to put in some time to summarize and offer your own opinions about the posts that you find.  Keep in mind too, blog posts aren’t supposed to be novels.  Shorts posts are best… so don’t get overwhelmed with the thought of having to author another term paper like you did in school.

Guest Bloggers

Guest bloggers come in two forms.  The first type are bloggers you come to know and respect that are willing to write either a new blog post specifically for your blog or repurpose a prior article from their blog with a few edits for your site.  See “Repackage” above!

The second “guest blogger” is someone you pay to do it for you.  While it’s generally best practice to author articles yourself — you do know more about your business than any one else — there are times when writing just isn’t someone’s forte OR you truly don’t have time to do it yourself.  In that case, having someone else author the posts for you is better than not blogging.  That some one could be a firm like BrandON! that is handling your overall marketing campaign, a copywriter who’s job is to write professional articles, or even an intern from the local university that would like to be published and has the time to do enough research to write an intelligent article.  Interns, by the way, typically are cheap… like free.

If you have several people in your organization, there is actually a third “guest” blogger option.  Best practice would be to have multiple members of your staff write blogs on the subjects for which they are particularly knowledgeable.  If that were the case, these contributors would be more like regular contributors than “guests”… but no matter what we call them, you have additional resources to tap.

This article is an excerpt from our eBook: An Introduction to Blogging for Businesses.  The entire eBook is available as free PDF download.




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Why You Should Have a Blog

    Posted in Content Marketing, Featured, Helpful Insight, Inbound Marketing, Marketing, Social Media    |    No Comments

I don’t have time for blogging.  Who would want to read it any way?

Forty percent of companies blog for marketing purposesYes.  Blogging is a commitment of precious time.  We know how hard it is to spare even 15 minutes some times…but blogging pays serious returns on that investment.  We also know that authoring a good blog post will take longer than 15 minutes…particularly at first.  But practice really does improve the time it takes.  Read on!

SEO – Blog Posts Are Chock Full of Keywords

Blog posts should be about a specific topic that a potential client would find interesting.  Topics like:

  • The latest news from your industry
  • “How to” guides that provide helpful hints on common problems
  • Opinion pieces or product reviews about the types of products or services your clients would use.

All of these topics provide a way for your prospects to find you in the vast sea of the Internet.

On top of that, phrases (aka long-tail keywords) help rocket your article to the top of search engine results… and that’s where the action is!  PLUS… the additional keywords in your blog will help the search bots understand what your website is all about.  Once you have several articles on a particular topic, search engines are much more likely to associate your site with that topic… and voila…more traffic.  More traffic equals more leads.  More leads equals more new customers.  There’s money involved.  You get it, right?

More SEO – Search Engines LOVE Fresh Content

Search engines love fresh, relevant content that garners clicks.  That’s their entire purpose in life… to serve up the exact content that the user is seeking.  It’s a tough task given the vast amount of information that is  on the Internet.  Plus… search engines live in the same world as the 24-hour news cycle where the information is constantly changing and the information people are seeking changes by the second based on what is happening in the world.  So… fresh new content helps to reinforce that your site is a reliable place to refer their customers for the kind of information they are seeking.

Build Trust and Credibility

Offering advice and opinions on topics related to your business and industry demonstrates to a potential lead that you “know your stuff.”  Discussing technical aspects of a problem they may need solved helps establish your firm as a resource.  Just providing a tip that helps someone with an issue certainly creates goodwill… and it may result in a lead if the problem turns out to be bigger than they can handle.

Blog Readers are Self-Qualified Leads

Visitors to your blog are self-qualified leads…and that‘ a big deal!  They either found you blog post by searching a topic about which you have written, or they are being referred to your blog from another platform…your Twitter feed or Facebook page…and therefore they are willingly deepening their relationship with your company.  It may seem like a lot of work at first, but think about how much you would be willing to pay for just one additional “average” client per month.  It’s worth the effort for many reasons!

This article is an excerpt from our eBook: An Introduction to Blogging for Businesses.  The entire eBook is available as free PDF download.




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Five Questions to Determine Effective SEO Keywords

    Posted in Articles, Content Marketing, Featured, Helpful Insight, Inbound Marketing    |    No Comments

  1. Who is your customer?
  2. What does your customer want?
  3. What questions do your customers ask about your product/service?
  4. When you read your blog/website/inbound campaign copy as a customer, what draws you in?
  5. What keywords do your competitors use and which ones are most successful for them?

After asking yourself these questions…use the following tools to develop your initial set of keywords.  Track the performance of each keyword and adjust and tweak over time to improve.

Search Tools:

Trend/Buzz Determination Tools:

Organic and paid search typically represents the fourth and fifth most effective methods of generating website traffic.  Now…go forward, be optimized, drive traffic to your site and convert those leads into customers!

Infographics Inspiration | 125 Creative Examples

    Posted in Featured, Helpful Insight    |    No Comments

The following presentation from Mark Fidelman is an excellent roundup of inspiration for creating your own infographics.  Infographics are charts, graphs and other visual depictions of data that make understanding the information presented much more digestible.  Infographics are proven to drive click-through rates on blogs, Twitter, Facebook, and other social media posts.

Social Media Overview Presentation [with VIDEO]

    Posted in Facebook, Featured, Helpful Insight, LinkedIn, Social Media, Twitter    |    No Comments

The following slide deck is from the social media overview presentation given by Ritch Brandon this morning to the Sandy Springs Chamber of Commerce.  We appreciate the opportunity to lead this discussion about social media with the leaders of the Sandy Springs business community.  If you attended the presentation and need additional information, help, or a PDF or PowerPoint version of the slide deck, please leave a comment at the bottom of this post…or on our Contact Us page.

 

  
 

 

 

 

 

How to Encourage Social Media Check-ins [VIDEO]

    Posted in Facebook, Featured, Mobile, Social Media    |    No Comments

Atlanta-based restaurant chain Doc Chey’s (@DocCheys and @DocCheysGrantPk) is doing an excellent job encouraging check-ins at its locations by holding a raffle.  This would have been an excellent opportunity to incorporate QR Codes to give a quick and easy link to FourSquare and Facebook.  Watch the video to find out more!

Hubspot Round Up | Consistently Outstanding Inbound Marketing Content

    Posted in Featured, Helpful Insight, HubSpot, Inbound Marketing, Marketing, Social Media, Strategy    |    No Comments

We at BrandON! mktg.tech think Hubspot has some of the very best content regarding inbound marketing available. This is a roundup of their latest tweets which typically include links to excellent information.

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