Archive for the ‘Social Networking & Bookmarking’ Category

Web Promotion - Should You Have a Picture of Yourself and an Address on Your Website?

Friday, March 28th, 2008

The other day I was networking with a fellow marketing consultant and he asked me the following question:

“Do you think a business website should have a physical address and pictures of the owners? In other words, should you provide personal touches? Or could people care less and are only concerned with quick and valuable service?

We get bombarded on a daily basis with hundreds up to several thousand marketing messages. Because of the pounding people take from these messages, I believe it takes a more intimate approach to break through the clutter and command attention.

A photo is a great start in establishing trust and what’s called marketing intimacy. A photo associates a real person with the your web site and tells the world that you are confident about your product or service. This bumps up credibility and trust.

For even more effect, add an audio clip below your picture and benefit from the marketing synergy of your picture and voice together.

Here’s an example:

“A Special Welcome From Our Founder”…

This can really help establish marketing intimacy, credibility and trust with web site users. Even in a world of give-it-to-me-now instant gratification, the personal touches add real value if not on a conscious level, a sub-conscious one.

What else can you do you create marketing intimacy with your visitors/prospects?

Well according to marketing genius Alex Mandossian, you engage your prospects and customers on as many sensory levels as you can (tactile, audio, visual) in order to build trust, credibility and a positive, enduring business relationship.

Alex opines the most important dynamic e at work for establishing marketing intimacy is the power of your own voice. I agree with him completely.

When you use personal photos of yourself, vocal audio clips and web videos in your site, you are engaging your prospects in a way a regular sites do not.

After all, text is text and having to read volumes on the Web can get very tiringt. Audio and video are fun, easy ways to learn information. This is a big opportunity for smart businesses who can provide information, products and services to people in the exact forms they desire.

Other media and methods you can use to establish marketing intimacy (without having to physically be there) include:

teleseminars, webinars, web casts, video conferencing, social networking sites …

As for having an address on your site, I firmly believe you should. It will help with trust and credibility. I know that when I cannot find an address on a site, especially one trying to sell me something, it’s a concern. I feel like the owner wants to hide behind an email address.

By having your physical address on your web site you help prospects eliminate some of the uncertainty and objections about you and what you’re offering. It certainly can’t hurt.

Posted by Bob T.

Internet Marketing Made Simple — The ONLY 3 Steps You Need Need To Know To Promote Anything To Anyone Online

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

In this article…

==> The only 3 steps you need to know
==> What web 2.0 REALLY is about
==> The dumbing down of the Internet
==> Should you hire out article writing to 3rd world countries?
==> What happened to all the ezines?
==> Is web 2.0 a barrier to entry?
==> What’s the future of Internet marketing?
==> Do you have an advantage over big companies?
==> How do you know which products to buy and which to skip?
==> What’s social bookmarking about? Do you need it?
==> Is user generated content an opportunity for you?
==> What’s all this talk about interactive web sites?
==> Whatever happened to viral ebooks?
==> How big companies are trying to put the squeeze play on

This is a long article. I have a lot to say. But there is
a big payoff if you take your time to read it. You may wanna
print it out.

Let’s see if I have this straight.

You wanna make a few bucks online. You got retirement staring
at you. Or a stack of medical bills to pay off. Or a job that
any mindless idiot could do.

Most of all, you wanna call your own shots. You want freedom.
You want independence. And you hope online marketing is your
ticket to that new world.

And you have your choice among:

* Butterfly marketing
* Web 2.0
* Social bookmarking
* Bogging
* Bum marketing
* Article writing and promotion
* Organic seo
* Google cash
* Google ppc
* Video marketing
* Link exchanging
* afffiliate programs
* plr
* Creating your own product
* Mass site control
* Adsense
* Reprint rights
* The list goes on and on
* Flipping web sites
* Flipping Squidoo lenses
* Hub pages, Propeller, and Connotea
* Click flipping
* Domain name portfolios

Whew! That’s a LOT of things to do to make money. I thought
the idea was to work LESS, not more!

All of the above things are good. They all work if you work
them right. Which IS the fly in the ointment, isn’t it?

When do you have to even figure out all the above, not to
mention DO some or all of ‘em.

I mean, I don’t have a job. I read a good chunk of most
days. And I STILL can’t keep up with all the new developments
in all the areas.

Let me put the above in the context of a very simple formula
anyone can understand and follow. Then, it’ll help you
zoom in a little more on which of the above you wanna spend
time on and which you don’t.

There are three basic steps in this game, in spite of all the
hoopla over different methods.

Here is the short form:

1. Get traffic

2. Get emails

3. Send emails

Here is the same formula in a more elongated method.

Step one: Get people to your web site or name squeeze page

Step two: Collect email addresses

Step three: Send out emails

In case that looks a little familiar, it IS the same exact
formula I presented in the Amazing Formula years ago. The
same thing STILL works, which is more than I can say for a LOT
of methods that people have sunk money on over the years.

I could add a fourth step onto there called the KSL. In other
words, when you send out those emails, you’re usually sending
people BACK to a web page that has a sales letter on it.

Or, if you’re following trendier models, you parse out your
sales letter over time on your blog. It’s STILL a sales letter.
It’s just delivered in CHUNKS.

Back when I got in this game years ago, you only had THREE
steps to make money online:

Step 1: Click button one on Net Contact — that was the one
that stripped email addresses.

Step 2: Write your email

Step 3: Click send.

Well, a lot of thing have changed since those days. But the
main difference is simply in step one. Instead of stripping
email addresses off of web sites, you have to collect them
by enticing people with free offers.

Oh, and now, you don’t just send out offers. You send out
content too. That’s why I’m taking my time to write you this
ezine each week. So you have an reason to stay on my list and
read my offers.

Now, most of the methods in the list above are different ways
to get people to your web site. Social bookmarking, Squidoo
lenses, inbound links, link exchanges, bum marketing, blogging,
article marketing — all those are ways to accomplish step
one via organic traffic.

Organic traffic is the LEFT SIDE of the search results. The
non-paid results. The lure of free organic traffic is great.
And the methods that it takes to get it are a lot of work and
never stop!

Here are my guidelines to help you get on a path that actually
works for you and gets you somewhere:

1. Pick one method of getting traffic to your site and develop
expertise at it.

Buy all the reports and ebooks on THAT method, instead of buying
a little about a lot of methods.

If you wanna do article marketing, then FOCUS just on that until
you get great at it.

Ditto for organic seo or affiliate marketing or whatever you choose.

My friend Kirt Christensen is a great example of this. He is an
expert at pay-per-click marketing and puts all his effort into
that.

2. Evaluate the high end product launches in terms of your chosen
model.

So if your method is ppc marketing and the next big product launch
everyone promotes is about article marketing, you might wanna think
twice about dropping your grand on it.

On the other hand, if your chosen method is PPC, I think your
investments in the latest products on that topic that are within
your budget are very wise expenditures.

3. Remember that organic traffic is a fast moving game. If you
play the game, Google keeps changing the rules.

But Google does the same on ppc marketing (pay-per-click). Just not
as quickly.

4. Affiliate marketing is built on relationships, and thus is less
high tech. It’s great if you’re a networker. Not so good if you have
no people skills or charm.

5. Like it or not, the game is STILL an email game.

Yes, I do know of people who make more money by going for the immediate
sale than the email address. But for the most part, email still rules.

When CanSpam came along, everyone moved to doing Google Adsense. It
seemed less risky. The idea was to monetize clicks and sell them to
Google. Which was OK as long as Google let you build thousands of
crappy pages disguised as content and would spider them.

But Matt Cutts ain’t that dumb. Anyone who thinks they’re smarter
than Google over the long haul needs a serious dose of brain
enhancing vitamins.

In any event, things have settled now. Adsense still works if you
play the Game at a higher level. And email is still the killer app
– in spite of the hassles of email deliverability and
such.

I’m shocked to see the move away from ezines. In the old days, there
were tons of them. A lot of them crappy, just like “made for adsense”
web sites. I don’t really miss the crappy ezines.

I miss some of the good ones.

It seems to me that the long shadow of CanSpam still scares people
away from email.

What I HATE about Internet marketing is that at the end of the day
it gets boiled down to what the least talented, laziest people in
the entire world wanna do.

So instead of quality ezines, we had people sending out crap.
I mean, brainless articles and tons of ads.

Nothing morally wrong with it. I’m just talking marketing here.
What are the odds that something like that is gonna be evergreen?

OK, so you’ll make some coin in 6 months before Google zaps it
again for the umpteenth thousand time. Now where are you?

Now, we have people churning out articles in 20 seconds using
software and flooding article directories with ‘em. (Is there
really longevity in that model?)

Where is the art in it? Where is the craftsmanship? Where is
the love for the topic and the customer? Where is the soul?
The passion?

In the viral ebook heydays, we had people writing the worst
possible content in an ebook, giving it away for free then bitching
and moaning on the forums that it didn’t go viral.

Your brightest, most talented or hardest working people offered
catchy viral ebooks that contained true value. And oddly enough,
the ebooks did well.

Others tried to remove their brain from the equation, offered pure
junk then were shocked at the lack of results.

There is NO LIMIT to which people won’t go to take a great method
and dilute it down to the lowest common denominator then dilute it
even more into pure JUNK.

It’s the dumbing down of the Internet.

Thus, big companies try to look for any edge and a way to rise
above the noise.

Which leads me to a discussion of web 2.0.

6. Web 2.0 is about interactive web sites that make it easy
for people to create and upload user generated content.

Web 2.0 is the answer of big business to the dumbing down of the
Internet by people who wanna make the quick buck without regard
the eco-system they’re participating in.

Listen — creating, building and managing interactive web sites is
not a piece of cake. The people who do it effectively have FULL TIME
programmers on staff.

I laugh when I see web 2.0 programs that in the end teach social
bookmarking and putting a forum on your web site. It’s a joke.

Make no mistake — web 2.0 is about BIG companies trying to create
high end interactive solutions that become a “barrier to entry” for
the smaller guy and gal.

Having said that, I’m sure that over the next year or two people
will create software that makes creating interactive web sites
easier.

I think the DREAM of user generated content sites is amazing.
Maybe it’ll come into fruition where smaller entrepreneurs can
pull it off.

Still, I believe the stuff that really kills it will involve
custom programming and a team of programmers.

I know from personal experience it’s a heck a lot harder to get
people to create and submit user generated content than you’d
think.

And even then, someone has to review the user generated content,
police it, etc. But user generated content is a cool idea.
if the killer app comes along and it helps you build your list,
foster relationships and, in the end, sell stuff, I’m all for
it.

Where does this leave YOU?

1. Don’t be part of the dumbing down of the Internet

Yes, you can make money by having articles of no value to
anyone written by someone in a country most people never heard
of for $1.00 each.

The lure of easy money beckons all of us. Even the smartest
and most talented, who coincidentally, are usually the only
ones swift enough to make these strategies pay out.

Are you building something that lasts? Or building on quicksand?
I hope you’re going evergreen. Or as I’m fond of saying EverRed.

2. Take pride in your content and craft

If you hire out articles, see if you can get articles created
that actually offer VALUE.

3. THINK about the model you’re following.

I say that Internet marketing is STILL about getting traffic,
building your list, and sending out email.

Hopefully, done with more skill than in the past. Hopefully
those emails aren’t just pure, unadulterated JUNK purchased
from the lowest cost PLR site a human being can find with
articles written by people in third world countries with
no passion or interest in the topic.

Now, you have the new web 2.0 interactive web sites. Where
it can be argued that people participating in the communities
will take the place of outbound email.

Still, the FIRST thing those communities do is try to GRAB
your entire freaking address book from hotmail, yahoo or gmail
and send out what?

EMAIL trying to suck your buddies into the community.

So tell me that email doesn’t still rule.

Oh, and if you think it’s gonna be cheap and easy to build a
community people love and participate in without a programmer,
I wonder what you’re smoking.

People who think that REALLY and TRULY don’t get it.

Web 2.0 is about BIG COMPANIES trying to squeeze out the little
guy by creating complex interactive web sites that are a barrier
to entry for anyone who can’t afford pricey programmers.

4. There is STILL one edge. One advantage.

Creativity.

Craft.

Love of people.

Love of work and information.

Meaningful work.

There’s no big business that can replace the SOUL of the
Internet with interactive programmers.

That SOUL is people who LOVE a TOPIC. Who LOVE the people
involved.

And who CREATE value that is highly desired by those participating
in that community.

Web 2.0 is about creating a platform for users to generate and
contribute content. Cool stuff. But high end programming. And
the monetization for entreprenuers who aren’t “going public” is
up in the air in my mind.

I think the verdict is still out on whether or not small,
undercapitalized entreprenuers can play that game.

In my mind, if you play a Game, you gotta have an ADVANTAGE to
win. Does the smaller guy or gal have an advantage over the big
guns in the web 2.0 world?

I’m not so sure. But I’m NOT against it. If someone comes out
with the killer app that faciliates user generated content –
and if there is a way to MONETIZE that model for a 1 to 10 person
business, then I’ll jump on the bandwagon.

To me, web 2.0 is like insurance against the collapse of email.
If stupidity reigns and email dies (highly doubtful) as a medium,
interactive web sites would still provide a PULL to gather an
audience.

Where the mom and pop infopreneur has an advantage is in CREATING
know how that fills the wants and needs of a tightly defined
audience or audience.

And in building a relationship with ‘em via email.

Let’s talk about relationships.

There, you have an advantage over the big, impersonal company
where employees come and go with rapidity.

You have an edge. An advantage. That’s the Red Factor.

Now, to bring this article full circle, how is it you’re gonna
turn that coin online so you can make what you wanna make, have
the freedom you want, sock away a little dough for retirement
or pay off those nasty bills?

Step one: Find that market and get those eyeballs to your
web site or blog or interactive community.

Step two: Get their name and email by offering something
enticing.

Step three: Follow up with emails that offer value and
build trust and relationships. Somewhere in there you need
to sell something in the process of that conversation.

When that new email with the new magical product hits your
email box, you can ask where it fits in these 3 steps.

And you can choose one traffic method in step one to start
with and become an expert in. After you master that, you can
layer on another.

Start with one.

OK. For a long email, in the end, it’s still simple.
Find that group of people. Find out what they want and desire.
Where they hurt.

Give ‘em a reason to get on your email list.

Send ‘em emails that create value and sell stuff.

Everybody stands for something.

I stand against:

– Brain dead junk
– The dumbing down of the Internet
– Marketing models that aren’t evergreen
– Taking the easy buck regardless of the eco-impact
– Methods that spread brainless junk all over the Internet to turn
some coin

I stand for:

– Soul and spirit in marketing
– Creating value
– Building relationships
– Selling stuff in the context of creating value
– Simple models you can understand and actually succeed with
– Email marketing

It’s a revolution.

I call it the value revolution.

If you wanna join the revolution, if this article helped you,
would you please help by spreading it around? Post it on that
Squidoo lens or blog.

Stick it on that web site of yours. Send it to a few friends.

===========================================

If you benefited from this article and would like to join the
value revolution, visit Marlon’s blog at: http://www.marlonsnews.com

You can visit Marlon’s Squidoo lens here:
http://www.squidoo.com/salesletter

Marlon Sanders Most Recent Marketing Article: My Comments

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

Marlon,

I just read your most recent article…

Internet Marketing Made Simple — The ONLY 3 Steps You Need To Know To Promote Anything To Anyone Online.

I hope you’ll forgive me for posting my comment here, but I could not find your new article on your blog or Squidoo lense…and I am fired up and wanted to comment.

All I can say is you hit the nail right on the head — once again!

This “tell it like is” article details exactly how I feel about today’s Internet marketing landscape. I’m sure it is also represents what a lot of honest marketers out there are feeling:

  • the squeeze of big companies and
  • the market dilution by crap-pushing, me-too, anything-to-make-a-buck Internet “mock”-eters.

Yep…That’s what I call ‘em. Because they make a mockery out of Internet marketing. They are making it tougher for honest vendors to make a living.

And as for the larger companies, they are absolutely trying to squeeze us Mom and Pop operators. Here is one example I have been dealing with myself:

I have been posting a lot of simple survey questions lately to social networking sites and to my list. What I am finding is that “experienced “corporate marketing consulting types” seem to take enjoyment in trying to trip you up with technical “analytics” questions they think you can’t answer as a “Mom and Pop” marketer.

For example, my most recent survey question was: “What is your single most important question about Internet marketing even if you’re just starting out?”

I was basically targeting newbies and intermediates…but to my surprise, I had all these expert marketers throwing “curve ball” questions at me…questions they think a small non-corporatist can’t answer.

I was expecting questions like…”What’s the most cost effective way to get website traffic?” and such.

And I did get some of those questions.

But I also received a lot questions from people who are in corporate marketing, people who know a lot more about marketing “analytics” than I do.

These folks seem like they are trying to intimidate me by asking questions like:

“For 2008 what are the functional KPI’s Fortune 500 companies should be keying on?”… and endless blather questions about this metric and that metric.

I’m convinced these people with advanced degrees and corporate experience know the answers to these questions. Why would they post such technical, jargon-laden questions to someone who is obviously a small business operator? Unfortunately, I think I know the answer to this question.

I think some are engaging in a form of marketing intimidation. I won’t broad-brush all corporate marketing types with this, that would be totally unfair. But I think there are plenty of them out there who want to make us small operators look foolish.

And the reason is probably due to the fact that they think ALL small marketers are crap-pushers with no value-added contributions to make. In some way, I can’t blame them. There are a lot of those types out there.

In closing, I want to leave you with one more example. It relates directly to what Marlon was saying in this most recent article.

I was looking at a question posted at LinkedIn the other day. The question was:

What is the synergy between search marketing and email marketing and can you give examples?

Most of the “answers” posted to this question were laden in technical language, jargon and the latest marketing-speak.

Most answers were written in a way that seemed to say: Hey look at me, I’m a really smart corporate marketer, and I know a lot more technical stuff than you…”

The big thing that is missing in almost every blog post, social networking post I see from these types, is that Internet marketing is about PEOPLE..it’s about humanity, society… I rarely hear these marketing know-it-alls talk about “people”.

Sure they talk about “targets”, “prospects”, “buyers”…but the language is almost always cold and technical.

In response, I wrote and posted an answer (that resonates with much of what Marlon is saying in his newest article) that Online marketing is more about getting traffic and building relationships through value-driven email marketing and that is what is really important in terms of “synergy”. You can see more of my answer below if you’re interested.

My Answer

My answer probably made some of the corporate types think: “Who the hell is this guy?? That’s his answer?? What a simpleton”…

I don’t care what they think. Simple works. People are simple creatures after all. Simple sells.

Listen, many corporate marketers are very good at what they do, I’m not taking that away from them. Most are very smart people. All I’m saying is that many seem like elitist surgeons with no bedside manor or concern about the “people” who are ultimately responsible for their paychecks. And some of them seem to enjoy trying to belittle the “little guy”.

Ok, I’ve had my say here.. Sorry for the ranting post Marlon, but you really touched off a nerve with your article. Keep up the good fight!

- Bob

Online Marketing Strategies 2008: The Top 7 Things You Should Be Doing - Part II

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

#4 Marketing Strategy for 2008: Establish “Marketing Intimacy” with Clients and Prospects

As the Internet evolves, so do its users. The rich multimedia explosion we’re experiencing on the Web is definitely here to stay. Experts now believe that in 2 years time, 80% of web users in the U.S. will be surfing videos. Youtube… Googlevideo… AOL Video… all the “me too” clone sites… There’s no putting the genies back in the bottle.

And users, well they absolutely love the content. The success and allure of audio, video and rich Flash media presentations on the Web resembles the phenomenon of reality TV. They engage you on a lot of levels. Add to that we’re all voyeurs to some degree. We love to watch other people.

As a result, visitors are less engaged and motivated by text-and-graphics-only websites and sales offers. They want more from a potential vendor than a boring, occasionally-updated website and bland text email follow-ups. If you want to earn their trust - and their business - in 2008 and beyond, then you need to establish marketing intimacy.

So, how do you establish marketing intimacy with your prospects and clients?

Well according to marketing guru Alex Mandossian, you engage your prospects and customers on as many sensory levels as possible in order to create dynamic rapport, build trust and credibility and ultimately a positive, lasting business relationship.

Alex believes the core principle at work when establishing marketing intimacy is the power of the human voice. I agree.

By using audio and video presentations in your website, you are reaching out to your prospects in a way a regular websites can’t. Let’s face it, text is text. Reading volumes on the Internet can get real boring fast. Audio and video are an easy and fun to way to consume information. This spells opportunity for savvy web operators who can provide information to consumers in the exact way they want it.

Other media you can use to establish marketing intimacy are teleseminars, web casts, video conferences, webinars and if appropriate, good old-fashioned phone calls.

#5 Marketing Strategy for 2008: Do Something Viral

Make a commitment this year to produce something viral: an ebook, a viral video, a widget, a cool software application. Whatever it is, make it interesting and or useful. That’s what will get your giveaway to spread like wildfire.

Produce a clever or interesting, practically-zero cost video. Make sure you brand the bottom of your video with your web address or company name and use relevant keywords for tagging when you post it to video sites. All of this is key if you want it to go viral.

You could also find inexpensive contractors at guru.com (or the likes) to find a software developer to build a neat software tool, gadget or widget. For example, you could create a desktop widget or gadget that does something useful for a user, maybe a to-do list keeper or something. You get the idea.

#6 Marketing Strategy for 2008: Article Marketing

At last count, Ezinearticles.com had over 85,000 authors. They are one of many successful article directories on the Web. To say that article marketing is now a staple of Online marketing success is an understatement. It has become a cornerstone.

If you haven’t already written articles for the Web, make 2008 your breakout year as a web author.  You can setup free accounts at article directory sites like Ezinearticles and others to get the ball rolling.

#7 Marketing Strategy for 2008: Don’t Be Bashful, Be Social

With all the media obsession, technology and great features provided by social networking and bookmarking sites, it’s easy to be overwhelmed, to freeze up and not take any action.

Here’s a simple way to jump in and get started:

Pick one social networking site to start with, such as MySpace, FaceBook or LinkedIn. If you’re all about business, than LinkedIn is the place to be because it’s all business people, no kiddies.

Also, set up some accounts on Digg and StumbleUpon, two of the best social bookmarking sites. Don’t be bashful about tooting your own horn and submitting your own web articles & content pages as recommended reading to the communities. Everybody does it.

Well, that’s it for now. I may come back and tighten up this article tomorrow.

- Bob