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  • Digg it UP - Effective Online Marketing Campaigns

    Top 10 Retention Strategies: Save Money on Personnel Turnover
    It costs too much to recruit, hire, train, and develop new personnel. Retaining your best and brightest is worth your time and resources. Great retention strategies can also demonstrate your organization's care and concenrn for your loyal people and can add to their productivity.We gathered this Top 10 list from interviews with top level executives and successful Human Resource managers. I hope that you can find some strategies that would be worth trying in your organization.Tip #1 Treat your employees like you treat your most valuable clients. It is cheaper to keep your good employees than it is to hire and train new ones. Your top 20-25% should be courted as you would court and then service your top customers.Tip #2 Get your employees to "Fall in Love" with your organization. Communicate your vision in a compelling way. Show everyone the
    Publish your own online newsletter and use it to up-sell current clients and interest your prospects. The feature article should have a blurb and a “read more” button that actually takes readers to your Web site.

    • Email press releases to your entire mailing list (with your Web link included).

    • Get a trade association whose members are your potential prospects to sponsor free workshops and get permission to email everyone in the association to invite them to register online for your free informational workshop. Of course, the online registration form is ON YOUR WEB SITE.

    • If you do still use some form of traditional advertising, make sure you always include your Web address in the ad. This may sound obvious, but I see examples all the time of companies that fail to plug their Web sites on billboards, newspaper ads, etc.

    • Reciprocal linking is how the most popular search engine (Google) determines your Web site ranking, so cross link with clients, partners, affiliates, professional associations, and, most, importantly, firms that offer complimentary products/services.

    • Be creative.

    Still No Traffic?
    • If your Web site is getting little or no traffic after you have spent a considerable amount of t

    Increasing Scope of Hindi Language
    In the market place, demand for those who can use Hindi language for better communication is much more. Nowadays most advertisements are made in Hindi. Hungry kyaa, Ye Dil Maange More, Yehi hai Right Choice baby! and many similar phrases have become the choice of the multinational companies like Coke and Pepsi for advertising their products.The language of media is becoming more inclusive of Hindi words. Several FM radio channels have opened new avenues for Hindi presentation. In fact, there is big demand for those who can creatively use Hindi language for communications.Tips for Self Improvement in Hindi Language1. Have self confidence in your Hindi language creative abilities and keep on improving it.2. Make maximum use of common usage Hindi words which are popular and regularly in use.3. Link Hindi literature with political,
    Popular Gripes
    The most frequent complaint I hear when speaking on the topic of online marketing is, “I just spent a ton of money on my Web site and it gets no traffic”. I always explain to the disenchanted Web site owner that putting up a Web site and not actively marketing it is akin to spending money on some slick marketing material, then just filing it away in a drawer and wondering why it doesn’t grow legs and go sell things for you. Your Web site, like your print material, is an inanimate object, and you are its master.

    As the Internet becomes ever more crowded and competitive, you can’t expect your would-be prospects to come looking for you. It’s YOUR responsibility (not your Web site’s) to go find them. The good news is, once you understand how the game works and make the commitment to do what it takes to find your prospects and pull them in, there is no reason why you can’t have an extremely popular Web site.

    The EASIEST part of owning a Web site is building one (which is not to imply that it is easy to build a compelling Web site). The most labor-intensive and frustrating part of having a successful Web presence begins AFTER your Web site is launched, however. If you’re not willing to “work” your site, then it probably won’t do you much good to spend the money needed to build it.

    The second most frequently asked question, “I already have to spend money marketing my products/services, now I have to spend money marketing my Web site too?? Why shouldn’t I just save my money and use it on traditional forms of marketing that have worked for me in the past?” A Web site is an amazingly cost-effective marketing tool if you consider that every person that you tell about your Web site or who takes your business card or marketing brochure, can go online 24/7 and read all about your firm. What would it cost to put an ad like this in the paper? On TV? On the radio? On a billboard? A well-planned Web site is the most cost-effective marketing tool ever created – IF it’s promoted properly.

    If you’re an educated consumer, a nice, interactive Web site is comparatively inexpensive these days. Depending on the size of the site and the features needed, a custom-designed site can cost as little as a few thousand dollars - generally between 3.5K-15K for a small to mid-sized business, and in the 40-60K range for larger businesses, depending on the industry and the features needed. If a Web site is designed well, it should have a shelf life (with some minor upgrades) of about three years.

    Entertain or Educate
    People will visit your Web site for two reasons only--to be entertained or educated. The most popular Web sites find a way to do both. Here is where you have to “think out of the box.” Identify a unique feature or service that you could put on your Web site that your competitors don’t have. Use your imagination. Have a contest among your employees at work to come up with a unique, interactive feature or two. Ask your friends, clients, and partners for advice. Chances are that whatever you dream up can be done in a relatively cost-effective fashion with existing technology.

    Site Launch Frenzy
    Always make a big deal out of your Web site launch. Throw a party. Issue a press release. Call your local paper. Send out postcards. Have a contest. Give something away via your Web site with an online entry form, then announce the winner on your Web at a certain time and watch your Web traffic peak on that day. Mass email all your clients, partners, prospects, friends, and family members with a link to your new Web site, along with an online survey (located on your new site) that asks them to rate your new site. Everyone likes to play the critic and this will motivate a lot more people to go check out your new site. If you do end up getting any negative feedback, and you probably will, take it with a grain of salt. You’ll find that some complaints are valid and some are not, so take an objective look at the feedback. Make the survey anonymous so they will have no reason not to go to your site. If you try to get their email addresses too early you will scare them away.

    Tricks of the Trade
    • Publish “informational” articles online by submitting them to paid article submission services. Always include a link to your Web site in every article (online or offline) that you write. These services allow you to submit your articles through an online form, then they blast them out to their constantly updated list of publishers. They send your articles only to the category of publisher for which your articles are appropriate. Two of these services are http://www.ezinetrendz.com and http://www.submityourarticle.com If you submit an article through either of the above services, you’ll get emails from publishers and Webmasters telling you that they have/will publish your article or post it to their Web sites (if it’s a good article). If it’s a bad article you’ll know quickly because no one will pick it up.

    • Publish your own online newsletter and use it to up-sell current clients and interest your prospects. The feature article should have a blurb and a “read more” button that actually takes readers to your Web site.

    • Email press releases to your entire mailing list (with your Web link included).

    • Get a trade association whose members are your potential prospects to sponsor free workshops and get permission to email everyone in the association to invite them to register online for your free informational workshop. Of course, the online registration form is ON YOUR WEB SITE.

    • If you do still use some form of traditional advertising, make sure you always include your Web address in the ad. This may sound obvious, but I see examples all the time of companies that fail to plug their Web sites on billboards, newspaper ads, etc.

    • Reciprocal linking is how the most popular search engine (Google) determines your Web site ranking, so cross link with clients, partners, affiliates, professional associations, and, most, importantly, firms that offer complimentary products/services.

    • Be creative.

    Still No Traffic?
    • If your Web site is getting little or no traffic after you have spent a considerable amount of ti

    Used Cubicles
    Cubicles provide a professional touch, independence and uniqueness in offices. People could carry out their job peacefully without losing concentration. The basic purpose of cubicles is to reduce noise by checking the chatting behavior of the employees. The employees cannot get separate offices because it will not only be costly, but also occupy a big area. The cubicle, invented in the 1960s, is the right solution for these problems. Used cubicles can be bought at lower prices than their new counterparts; seek and ye shall find.In the beginning cubicles were accepted with mixed reactions. These surely give a decent look to the offices and make it possible to arrange the whole office in an interesting manner. With the advent of hi-tech offices, cubicles have become very popular not only in America but throughout the world. According to one estimate about forty mi
    probably won’t do you much good to spend the money needed to build it.

    The second most frequently asked question, “I already have to spend money marketing my products/services, now I have to spend money marketing my Web site too?? Why shouldn’t I just save my money and use it on traditional forms of marketing that have worked for me in the past?” A Web site is an amazingly cost-effective marketing tool if you consider that every person that you tell about your Web site or who takes your business card or marketing brochure, can go online 24/7 and read all about your firm. What would it cost to put an ad like this in the paper? On TV? On the radio? On a billboard? A well-planned Web site is the most cost-effective marketing tool ever created – IF it’s promoted properly.

    If you’re an educated consumer, a nice, interactive Web site is comparatively inexpensive these days. Depending on the size of the site and the features needed, a custom-designed site can cost as little as a few thousand dollars - generally between 3.5K-15K for a small to mid-sized business, and in the 40-60K range for larger businesses, depending on the industry and the features needed. If a Web site is designed well, it should have a shelf life (with some minor upgrades) of about three years.

    Entertain or Educate
    People will visit your Web site for two reasons only--to be entertained or educated. The most popular Web sites find a way to do both. Here is where you have to “think out of the box.” Identify a unique feature or service that you could put on your Web site that your competitors don’t have. Use your imagination. Have a contest among your employees at work to come up with a unique, interactive feature or two. Ask your friends, clients, and partners for advice. Chances are that whatever you dream up can be done in a relatively cost-effective fashion with existing technology.

    Site Launch Frenzy
    Always make a big deal out of your Web site launch. Throw a party. Issue a press release. Call your local paper. Send out postcards. Have a contest. Give something away via your Web site with an online entry form, then announce the winner on your Web at a certain time and watch your Web traffic peak on that day. Mass email all your clients, partners, prospects, friends, and family members with a link to your new Web site, along with an online survey (located on your new site) that asks them to rate your new site. Everyone likes to play the critic and this will motivate a lot more people to go check out your new site. If you do end up getting any negative feedback, and you probably will, take it with a grain of salt. You’ll find that some complaints are valid and some are not, so take an objective look at the feedback. Make the survey anonymous so they will have no reason not to go to your site. If you try to get their email addresses too early you will scare them away.

    Tricks of the Trade
    • Publish “informational” articles online by submitting them to paid article submission services. Always include a link to your Web site in every article (online or offline) that you write. These services allow you to submit your articles through an online form, then they blast them out to their constantly updated list of publishers. They send your articles only to the category of publisher for which your articles are appropriate. Two of these services are http://www.ezinetrendz.com and http://www.submityourarticle.com If you submit an article through either of the above services, you’ll get emails from publishers and Webmasters telling you that they have/will publish your article or post it to their Web sites (if it’s a good article). If it’s a bad article you’ll know quickly because no one will pick it up.

    • Publish your own online newsletter and use it to up-sell current clients and interest your prospects. The feature article should have a blurb and a “read more” button that actually takes readers to your Web site.

    • Email press releases to your entire mailing list (with your Web link included).

    • Get a trade association whose members are your potential prospects to sponsor free workshops and get permission to email everyone in the association to invite them to register online for your free informational workshop. Of course, the online registration form is ON YOUR WEB SITE.

    • If you do still use some form of traditional advertising, make sure you always include your Web address in the ad. This may sound obvious, but I see examples all the time of companies that fail to plug their Web sites on billboards, newspaper ads, etc.

    • Reciprocal linking is how the most popular search engine (Google) determines your Web site ranking, so cross link with clients, partners, affiliates, professional associations, and, most, importantly, firms that offer complimentary products/services.

    • Be creative.

    Still No Traffic?
    • If your Web site is getting little or no traffic after you have spent a considerable amount of t

    Leadership and Thinking
    I am reading a book which depicts the years preceding and following the overthrow of the Shah of Iran in the 1970s. The book tells the story of the girl's family, who were Jewish, as their living environment changed dramatically around them.It is not a remarkable book, but one thing did stick with me. The family are taught, cajoled, convinced, encouraged to think. Almost as if thinking in itself is a solution to problems.The reason that it resonates loudly with me, of course, is that I happen to agree with the sentiment. That is not to say that I am any great thinker just that I feel more relaxed, more rational and more in control when I think something through. Thinking makes me feel good.Thinking requires data and information. Obtaining and evaluating data leads me to then think about where the data comes from. Is the "data" fact or opinion? Does i
    upgrades) of about three years.

    Entertain or Educate
    People will visit your Web site for two reasons only--to be entertained or educated. The most popular Web sites find a way to do both. Here is where you have to “think out of the box.” Identify a unique feature or service that you could put on your Web site that your competitors don’t have. Use your imagination. Have a contest among your employees at work to come up with a unique, interactive feature or two. Ask your friends, clients, and partners for advice. Chances are that whatever you dream up can be done in a relatively cost-effective fashion with existing technology.

    Site Launch Frenzy
    Always make a big deal out of your Web site launch. Throw a party. Issue a press release. Call your local paper. Send out postcards. Have a contest. Give something away via your Web site with an online entry form, then announce the winner on your Web at a certain time and watch your Web traffic peak on that day. Mass email all your clients, partners, prospects, friends, and family members with a link to your new Web site, along with an online survey (located on your new site) that asks them to rate your new site. Everyone likes to play the critic and this will motivate a lot more people to go check out your new site. If you do end up getting any negative feedback, and you probably will, take it with a grain of salt. You’ll find that some complaints are valid and some are not, so take an objective look at the feedback. Make the survey anonymous so they will have no reason not to go to your site. If you try to get their email addresses too early you will scare them away.

    Tricks of the Trade
    • Publish “informational” articles online by submitting them to paid article submission services. Always include a link to your Web site in every article (online or offline) that you write. These services allow you to submit your articles through an online form, then they blast them out to their constantly updated list of publishers. They send your articles only to the category of publisher for which your articles are appropriate. Two of these services are http://www.ezinetrendz.com and http://www.submityourarticle.com If you submit an article through either of the above services, you’ll get emails from publishers and Webmasters telling you that they have/will publish your article or post it to their Web sites (if it’s a good article). If it’s a bad article you’ll know quickly because no one will pick it up.

    • Publish your own online newsletter and use it to up-sell current clients and interest your prospects. The feature article should have a blurb and a “read more” button that actually takes readers to your Web site.

    • Email press releases to your entire mailing list (with your Web link included).

    • Get a trade association whose members are your potential prospects to sponsor free workshops and get permission to email everyone in the association to invite them to register online for your free informational workshop. Of course, the online registration form is ON YOUR WEB SITE.

    • If you do still use some form of traditional advertising, make sure you always include your Web address in the ad. This may sound obvious, but I see examples all the time of companies that fail to plug their Web sites on billboards, newspaper ads, etc.

    • Reciprocal linking is how the most popular search engine (Google) determines your Web site ranking, so cross link with clients, partners, affiliates, professional associations, and, most, importantly, firms that offer complimentary products/services.

    • Be creative.

    Still No Traffic?
    • If your Web site is getting little or no traffic after you have spent a considerable amount of t

    10 Tips For Increasing Your Sales
    1. Up-sell to your customers. For starters, they already know and trust you, plus they have demonstrated a willingness to buy. So if they are given the option of a volume discount, for example, they just might jump at the opportunity to buy more.2. Cross-sell to your customers. People appreciate convenience and choice. Be sure to provide both by making additional products or services available that complement and enhance your customers’ buying experience. For example, if a customer buys a product from you that requires batteries, be sure to offer him batteries at the time of purchase. Otherwise he’s likely to be frustrated when he gets home and discovers that he needs to head back out to get some batteries… possibly from someone else’s business.3. Ask your customers for referrals. The best place to find new customers is through your existing customer
    re people to go check out your new site. If you do end up getting any negative feedback, and you probably will, take it with a grain of salt. You’ll find that some complaints are valid and some are not, so take an objective look at the feedback. Make the survey anonymous so they will have no reason not to go to your site. If you try to get their email addresses too early you will scare them away.

    Tricks of the Trade
    • Publish “informational” articles online by submitting them to paid article submission services. Always include a link to your Web site in every article (online or offline) that you write. These services allow you to submit your articles through an online form, then they blast them out to their constantly updated list of publishers. They send your articles only to the category of publisher for which your articles are appropriate. Two of these services are http://www.ezinetrendz.com and http://www.submityourarticle.com If you submit an article through either of the above services, you’ll get emails from publishers and Webmasters telling you that they have/will publish your article or post it to their Web sites (if it’s a good article). If it’s a bad article you’ll know quickly because no one will pick it up.

    • Publish your own online newsletter and use it to up-sell current clients and interest your prospects. The feature article should have a blurb and a “read more” button that actually takes readers to your Web site.

    • Email press releases to your entire mailing list (with your Web link included).

    • Get a trade association whose members are your potential prospects to sponsor free workshops and get permission to email everyone in the association to invite them to register online for your free informational workshop. Of course, the online registration form is ON YOUR WEB SITE.

    • If you do still use some form of traditional advertising, make sure you always include your Web address in the ad. This may sound obvious, but I see examples all the time of companies that fail to plug their Web sites on billboards, newspaper ads, etc.

    • Reciprocal linking is how the most popular search engine (Google) determines your Web site ranking, so cross link with clients, partners, affiliates, professional associations, and, most, importantly, firms that offer complimentary products/services.

    • Be creative.

    Still No Traffic?
    • If your Web site is getting little or no traffic after you have spent a considerable amount of t

    Ten Steps to Build Your Business
    There are many people who have become millionaires, because they knew what steps to take to build their business. They developed a system that would increase their customers and sales. Business building has to be systematic, and you must be able to duplicate the process. The following are ten steps that have proven successful:Step 1: Write down your goals. Every successful business person will tell you that you have to write down your goals and review them regularly. This is part of the “see it, and you can be it” process that is also called visualization. You must see where you want to go in order to get there.Step 2: Know your purpose—Know why you are doing what you do and what you expect to achieve.Step 3: Be sure that what you are doing gives you a sense of satisfaction and accomplishment.Step 4: Know what
    Publish your own online newsletter and use it to up-sell current clients and interest your prospects. The feature article should have a blurb and a “read more” button that actually takes readers to your Web site.

    • Email press releases to your entire mailing list (with your Web link included).

    • Get a trade association whose members are your potential prospects to sponsor free workshops and get permission to email everyone in the association to invite them to register online for your free informational workshop. Of course, the online registration form is ON YOUR WEB SITE.

    • If you do still use some form of traditional advertising, make sure you always include your Web address in the ad. This may sound obvious, but I see examples all the time of companies that fail to plug their Web sites on billboards, newspaper ads, etc.

    • Reciprocal linking is how the most popular search engine (Google) determines your Web site ranking, so cross link with clients, partners, affiliates, professional associations, and, most, importantly, firms that offer complimentary products/services.

    • Be creative.

    Still No Traffic?
    • If your Web site is getting little or no traffic after you have spent a considerable amount of time and money building AND MARKETING it, you must consider three possible causes:
    • You have an unprofessional looking Web site that may not be up to date (you must give visitors a compelling reason to visit and return).
    • How well is your “offline” marketing strategy working? If it’s not going well, you may need to rethink your overall marketing plan.
    • Are your products/services selling once you are able to contact your target market? If not, you have big problems and you may need to change anything from your vertical focus to your whole business model.

    For more information about effective online marketing campaigns or to request a complimentary Web site assessment, visit www.nurelm.com.

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