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Digg it UP - 3 Strategies to Profit When Click Prices Increase (Part 2 of 3 Series)
Creative Ideas for Small and Medium Business Public Relations By satisfying your customer’s needs first; you will correspondingly satisfy your own. In the book, “The Psychology of Persuasion” author Kevin Hogan describes the Law of Reciprocity which states, “When someone gives you something of perceived value, you immediately respond with the desire to give something back.”Many Small and Medium businesses (SMB's) struggle for a piece of the action in very competitive markets. They find it difficult to spend great amounts of money on advertising, yet fear being left behind if they don't. Public Relations can be a cheap or even free alternative to regular marketing and advertising efforts, sometimes producing even better results (since news items are considered more trustworthy than advertising).Below I list some ideas to help you run creative Public Relations campaigns. Better get those phone lines ready - your business is about to get some attention!Clearly the following ideas must be adapted to your type of business, your strategy, your clients, and the available media and journalists, but they should provide you with a general direction you may follow:Turn a part of your business into a unique community meeting place: Getting people to come to your business is o Although effective website conversion is not always as clear-cut as the Law of Reciprocity suggests, the principle applies – if you give your website visitor what they require such as confidence, comfort, convenience and fair value then they will reciprocate by completing your call-to-action. Whether you are a B2B or a B2C enterprise, website conversion strategies concentrate on connecting a visitor to what they want in a convenient, clear and consistent manner. Here are some quick website conversion strategies to keep in mind for your website or custom landing pages… 1. Always add your phone number (preferably a 1-800 number) in a prime location on each page of your website - preferably in the header or another prominent position like the upper-right margin of How Newcomers Can Overcome Advertising Agency Reality What are Website Conversion Strategies?Hopefully you have a pretty good idea that ad agency reality tells you that agencies are NOT waiting patiently for your arrival. As wonderful a writer as your family and your friends have convinced you that you are, agencies will somehow survive without you.This is hardly professional sports where athletes are groomed to 'come up' at a certain point to pay back his or her investment the teams has made in them.Noooooooo.This is you swimming, largely by yourself, under your own power, trying to get to the shore. And no one really caring if you drown or you don't.That's ad agency reality.But as long as you know this going in, it won't throw you. Think for a second...you're about to invest yourself into getting a memorable portfolio tegether to get the job you know you're going to love. Here's the thing...That's YOUR reality. No one from our side cares how long it took or how many computers you literally threw across rooms or Website conversion strategies are marketing and technology efforts focused on increasing your website’s efficiency with turning visitors into prospects or customers. The majority of website conversion strategies involve redesigning your current website and re-writing your website’s copy. However, to build an effective paid search campaign, conversion efforts must also be allocated outside your website and on selecting keywords, re-writing paid ad copy and considering the paid search engines’ user demographic and psychographic profiles. The process of converting visitors into prospects or customers through a paid search channel starts the moment a person sparks a thought, launches a browser to search and selects a keyword. At that moment, the potential visitor has developed a preconceived expectation to what they are looking for and what they are planning to find. As a marketer, by choosing the right keywords, you begin the process of pulling a qualified search user to your product or service. After the search user enters their selected keyword, they scan the search engine results page for relevant listings that match their preconceived expectation. By knowing your customers and therefore understanding what potential customers want, your ad copy targets the search user’s expectations and pulls them into a click-through. The click-through transitions a search user to a website visitor. Your website visitor has followed a “path of consistency” from the keyword they selected to the relevant ad copy they clicked-through. They expect to continue to find equal consistency and relevancy as they land on your website. For example, let’s imagine a visitor entered the keyword, “silver apple ipod.” They found your “Sponsor Results” ad on Google which stated, “Silver Apple iPod; 32mg, free shipping; $439” and clicked through to your website. At this point, the visitor’s expectations have been met with the keyword they selected and the keyword ad copy you displayed in the search results. As they land on your website they expect to find the same consistency and relevancy that led them through the click-through. Let’s assume you understood the “path of consistency” concept and the visitor landed on your website with a headline stating, “Apple iPod” with clear product specifications including the $439 price, a “silver” color choice option (clearly visible), a free shipping statement (including shipping policy) and other essential e-commerce policies and shopping cart components. The consistency immediately identifiable by the visitor increases their confidence, comfort and commitment to completing their intended action. Unfortunately, many marketers view paid search as a way to generate traffic versus a way to increase website performance that generates positive financial results. By sending the pay-per-click traffic to a website’s home page, a marketer mistakenly creates a disconnect in the “path of consistency” process. Using the same example, if a visitor clicks-through an ad stating, “Silver Apple iPod; 32mg, free shipping; $439” and lands on the home page which promotes hundreds of technology products, the visitor will momentarily feel lost. They expected to find an Apple iPod but now are confronted with the task of searching again for an Apple iPod using the website’s navigational and on-site search architecture. A momentary break in the path of consistency forces the visitor to think, reassess and decide whether to move forward or back-track in search for greater consistency and relevancy from a competing website. By completing the “path of consistency” from keyword to ad to website the visitor has a greater probability of converting to a customer. As Leonardo Da Vinci stated, “It is easier to resist at the beginning than at the end.” This is very similar to the traditional salesmanship strategy of getting the prospect to say “yes” multiple times before asking for the sales close. Your job as a marketer is to get the search user to say, “Yes, that’s what I want” from keyword, to ad copy to website. Then your website’s specific call-to-action asks for the close. Website conversion occurs when you satisfy a visitor’s preconceived expectation. The primary strategy for increasing your website conversion is getting to know your customer. By satisfying your customer’s needs first; you will correspondingly satisfy your own. In the book, “The Psychology of Persuasion” author Kevin Hogan describes the Law of Reciprocity which states, “When someone gives you something of perceived value, you immediately respond with the desire to give something back.” Although effective website conversion is not always as clear-cut as the Law of Reciprocity suggests, the principle applies – if you give your website visitor what they require such as confidence, comfort, convenience and fair value then they will reciprocate by completing your call-to-action. Whether you are a B2B or a B2C enterprise, website conversion strategies concentrate on connecting a visitor to what they want in a convenient, clear and consistent manner. Here are some quick website conversion strategies to keep in mind for your website or custom landing pages… 1. Always add your phone number (preferably a 1-800 number) in a prime location on each page of your website - preferably in the header or another prominent position like the upper-right margin of y How Do You Know You Are Getting Better? Use Data to Drive Improvement ected keyword, they scan the search engine results page for relevant listings that match their preconceived expectation. By knowing your customers and therefore understanding what potential customers want, your ad copy targets the search user’s expectations and pulls them into a click-through. The click-through transitions a search user to a website visitor.The best quality improvement initiatives are driven by data! Why? How are you going to know how much you have improved if you don’t measure something?All of you have been exposed to measures in many situations. Most of them were important. In school, you were graded. Perhaps you own shares of stock; how do you measure the success of the stock—its increase in value, a measurement. How do you know if your team wins? By its score, a measurement. The fact is that many daily activities in life have accompanying measures to judge their success.You might argue that you know if things are getting better; you can just tell. I am sure that you can. This is not enough, though. In the healthcare field it is important to measure improvement. One reason to do so is to prove to others that things are improving. For instance, suppose you are in charge of implementing electronic health records in a hospital setting. You meet resistance Your website visitor has followed a “path of consistency” from the keyword they selected to the relevant ad copy they clicked-through. They expect to continue to find equal consistency and relevancy as they land on your website. For example, let’s imagine a visitor entered the keyword, “silver apple ipod.” They found your “Sponsor Results” ad on Google which stated, “Silver Apple iPod; 32mg, free shipping; $439” and clicked through to your website. At this point, the visitor’s expectations have been met with the keyword they selected and the keyword ad copy you displayed in the search results. As they land on your website they expect to find the same consistency and relevancy that led them through the click-through. Let’s assume you understood the “path of consistency” concept and the visitor landed on your website with a headline stating, “Apple iPod” with clear product specifications including the $439 price, a “silver” color choice option (clearly visible), a free shipping statement (including shipping policy) and other essential e-commerce policies and shopping cart components. The consistency immediately identifiable by the visitor increases their confidence, comfort and commitment to completing their intended action. Unfortunately, many marketers view paid search as a way to generate traffic versus a way to increase website performance that generates positive financial results. By sending the pay-per-click traffic to a website’s home page, a marketer mistakenly creates a disconnect in the “path of consistency” process. Using the same example, if a visitor clicks-through an ad stating, “Silver Apple iPod; 32mg, free shipping; $439” and lands on the home page which promotes hundreds of technology products, the visitor will momentarily feel lost. They expected to find an Apple iPod but now are confronted with the task of searching again for an Apple iPod using the website’s navigational and on-site search architecture. A momentary break in the path of consistency forces the visitor to think, reassess and decide whether to move forward or back-track in search for greater consistency and relevancy from a competing website. By completing the “path of consistency” from keyword to ad to website the visitor has a greater probability of converting to a customer. As Leonardo Da Vinci stated, “It is easier to resist at the beginning than at the end.” This is very similar to the traditional salesmanship strategy of getting the prospect to say “yes” multiple times before asking for the sales close. Your job as a marketer is to get the search user to say, “Yes, that’s what I want” from keyword, to ad copy to website. Then your website’s specific call-to-action asks for the close. Website conversion occurs when you satisfy a visitor’s preconceived expectation. The primary strategy for increasing your website conversion is getting to know your customer. By satisfying your customer’s needs first; you will correspondingly satisfy your own. In the book, “The Psychology of Persuasion” author Kevin Hogan describes the Law of Reciprocity which states, “When someone gives you something of perceived value, you immediately respond with the desire to give something back.” Although effective website conversion is not always as clear-cut as the Law of Reciprocity suggests, the principle applies – if you give your website visitor what they require such as confidence, comfort, convenience and fair value then they will reciprocate by completing your call-to-action. Whether you are a B2B or a B2C enterprise, website conversion strategies concentrate on connecting a visitor to what they want in a convenient, clear and consistent manner. Here are some quick website conversion strategies to keep in mind for your website or custom landing pages… 1. Always add your phone number (preferably a 1-800 number) in a prime location on each page of your website - preferably in the header or another prominent position like the upper-right margin of Tactis to Deal with All Audience Types /p>In my years of speaking, I have dealt with many unique and challenging situations. I have listed tactics to work with each audience and how to turn your challenge into a success. The Hostile Audience This audience group openly disagrees with you and may even actively work against you. For a hostile audience, use these techniques: Find common beliefs and values. Find something to agree on.Use appropriate humor to break the ice.Don't start the presentation with an attack on their position.Keep in mind that you are only trying to persuade on one point; don't talk about anything else that could be considered hostile, offensive or condescending.Because of your differences, a hostile audience will question your credibility. Increase your credibility with expert studies or any source that will support your claim.A hostile Let’s assume you understood the “path of consistency” concept and the visitor landed on your website with a headline stating, “Apple iPod” with clear product specifications including the $439 price, a “silver” color choice option (clearly visible), a free shipping statement (including shipping policy) and other essential e-commerce policies and shopping cart components. The consistency immediately identifiable by the visitor increases their confidence, comfort and commitment to completing their intended action. Unfortunately, many marketers view paid search as a way to generate traffic versus a way to increase website performance that generates positive financial results. By sending the pay-per-click traffic to a website’s home page, a marketer mistakenly creates a disconnect in the “path of consistency” process. Using the same example, if a visitor clicks-through an ad stating, “Silver Apple iPod; 32mg, free shipping; $439” and lands on the home page which promotes hundreds of technology products, the visitor will momentarily feel lost. They expected to find an Apple iPod but now are confronted with the task of searching again for an Apple iPod using the website’s navigational and on-site search architecture. A momentary break in the path of consistency forces the visitor to think, reassess and decide whether to move forward or back-track in search for greater consistency and relevancy from a competing website. By completing the “path of consistency” from keyword to ad to website the visitor has a greater probability of converting to a customer. As Leonardo Da Vinci stated, “It is easier to resist at the beginning than at the end.” This is very similar to the traditional salesmanship strategy of getting the prospect to say “yes” multiple times before asking for the sales close. Your job as a marketer is to get the search user to say, “Yes, that’s what I want” from keyword, to ad copy to website. Then your website’s specific call-to-action asks for the close. Website conversion occurs when you satisfy a visitor’s preconceived expectation. The primary strategy for increasing your website conversion is getting to know your customer. By satisfying your customer’s needs first; you will correspondingly satisfy your own. In the book, “The Psychology of Persuasion” author Kevin Hogan describes the Law of Reciprocity which states, “When someone gives you something of perceived value, you immediately respond with the desire to give something back.” Although effective website conversion is not always as clear-cut as the Law of Reciprocity suggests, the principle applies – if you give your website visitor what they require such as confidence, comfort, convenience and fair value then they will reciprocate by completing your call-to-action. Whether you are a B2B or a B2C enterprise, website conversion strategies concentrate on connecting a visitor to what they want in a convenient, clear and consistent manner. Here are some quick website conversion strategies to keep in mind for your website or custom landing pages… 1. Always add your phone number (preferably a 1-800 number) in a prime location on each page of your website - preferably in the header or another prominent position like the upper-right margin of Three Ways To Differentiate Your Service Business d but now are confronted with the task of searching again for an Apple iPod using the website’s navigational and on-site search architecture. A momentary break in the path of consistency forces the visitor to think, reassess and decide whether to move forward or back-track in search for greater consistency and relevancy from a competing website.True differentiation continues to elude many service businesses today. The competition, given enough motivation, can duplicate or worse, beat the price, terms or features you offer. The bottom line is that your products and services seldom create lasting distinction in the marketplace.The one factor your competition can’t easily duplicate is your employees. Referred to as “Cultural Capital” by leading management experts, a service firm’s employees represent vast untapped potential and the strongest variable to achieving impressive financial performance long term. Here are three key trends:Trend #1: Focus On Employee Fulfillment – Corporate performance and financial success is strongly correlated to employee fulfillment. Research conducted by The Wilson Learning Corporation involving 25,000 employees, documented that up to 39% of the variability in corporate performance is attributable to the personal fulfillment of employees. There are many asp By completing the “path of consistency” from keyword to ad to website the visitor has a greater probability of converting to a customer. As Leonardo Da Vinci stated, “It is easier to resist at the beginning than at the end.” This is very similar to the traditional salesmanship strategy of getting the prospect to say “yes” multiple times before asking for the sales close. Your job as a marketer is to get the search user to say, “Yes, that’s what I want” from keyword, to ad copy to website. Then your website’s specific call-to-action asks for the close. Website conversion occurs when you satisfy a visitor’s preconceived expectation. The primary strategy for increasing your website conversion is getting to know your customer. By satisfying your customer’s needs first; you will correspondingly satisfy your own. In the book, “The Psychology of Persuasion” author Kevin Hogan describes the Law of Reciprocity which states, “When someone gives you something of perceived value, you immediately respond with the desire to give something back.” Although effective website conversion is not always as clear-cut as the Law of Reciprocity suggests, the principle applies – if you give your website visitor what they require such as confidence, comfort, convenience and fair value then they will reciprocate by completing your call-to-action. Whether you are a B2B or a B2C enterprise, website conversion strategies concentrate on connecting a visitor to what they want in a convenient, clear and consistent manner. Here are some quick website conversion strategies to keep in mind for your website or custom landing pages… 1. Always add your phone number (preferably a 1-800 number) in a prime location on each page of your website - preferably in the header or another prominent position like the upper-right margin of Technology in the Workplace - Boon or Curse? By satisfying your customer’s needs first; you will correspondingly satisfy your own. In the book, “The Psychology of Persuasion” author Kevin Hogan describes the Law of Reciprocity which states, “When someone gives you something of perceived value, you immediately respond with the desire to give something back.”Like all new innovations, technology in the work environment can either work for you or against you. What is good for the employer or is not always the same for the employee.Is Technology Working FOR You or AGAINST YouWhen cellphones became available it seemed that they would fill a need for instant communication - any time, any place - that would help people be more efficient and thus save time.Then email became a mainstream method of business communication. Marvelous - now telephones wouldn't ring off the hook, messages would not have to be stored and retrieved as verbal communications, which took time. Instead, information would be clear and concise and could be retrieved and answered any time, any where - again the promise of more freedom.With email, internet and cellphones, was it really necessary for workers to be restrained to the office? Maybe shorter work days would ensue. Perhaps parents could collect their children from schoo Although effective website conversion is not always as clear-cut as the Law of Reciprocity suggests, the principle applies – if you give your website visitor what they require such as confidence, comfort, convenience and fair value then they will reciprocate by completing your call-to-action. Whether you are a B2B or a B2C enterprise, website conversion strategies concentrate on connecting a visitor to what they want in a convenient, clear and consistent manner. Here are some quick website conversion strategies to keep in mind for your website or custom landing pages… 1. Always add your phone number (preferably a 1-800 number) in a prime location on each page of your website - preferably in the header or another prominent position like the upper-right margin of your web page. A phone number not only adds credibility but also provides a convenient communication channel for visitors to contact you if they need assistance. 2. Use customer-benefit copy meaning more “you” and “yours” than “us” and “we.” The principle here is to focus on serving the needs of your visitors. Answer their question, “what’s in it for me?” 3. Offer multiple order or relationship-building contact points. For example, B2C enterprises should provide the means to order products via mail, fax, phone, and online using all major credit cards and even PayPal. For B2B, offer a white paper download, a webinar registration, online brochure or product demonstration in exchange for the visitor’s primary contact information, as well as a phone number and a contact us form. Make it easy for your visitor to start a relationship with your enterprise. 4. Test various calls-to-action, headlines, positioning messages, testimonials, layouts, graphics and other website components under an A/B split-testing format. One of the greatest benefits of paid search and the Internet in general is your ability to quickly test and track results from different website conversion strategies. 5. Implement keyword-specific landing pages for your paid search campaign. Consistency and relevancy are essential and a custom landing page offers the most effective opportunity for completing the “path of consistency.” Coupled with A/B split-testing, custom landing pages have helped increase many of our clients’ results by 60% and greater. Website conversion is a process and not a destination. By continually identifying and learning new conversion strategies for fulfilling your visitor’s desires, you will increase your website’s performance and generate greater positive financial results in return. The next and final article of this series will focus on lifetime value of a customer and how it enables you to turn more visitors into prospects and customers regardless of rising paid search costs. Until next time, get to know your customer and test new website conversion strategies to more effectively satisfy your customer’s needs. Remember the “path of consistency” and implement landing pages for your paid search campaign.
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