Monthly Archive for November, 2010

5 Call-To-Action Lessons From Craigslist Advertiser

We’ve all done it. We forget to buy tickets for an important game or concert when they first go on sale. Because of this mistake, we then spend hours on Craigslist looking for tickets, ending up clicking on all types of sketchy ads.

Why? Because some Craigslist scalpers are great call-to-action (CTA) writers. While looking at spreadsheets and attending workshops are important educational opportunities, I would argue that a few minutes of looking at ticket scalpers’ ads on Craigslist can also provide ammunition to bolster your lead generation activities.

Don’t believe me? I took just 5 minutes on Craigslist, and here is what I learned.

craigslist

1. Context Matters – When we use Craigslist to look for tickets or anything else for that matter, most of the time we have a clear idea of what we are looking for. For example, if you are looking for Boston Red Sox tickets and you see a random ad for “Boston Tickets,” you’re likely not going to click on it. The same is true if you are a B2B company that is working to generate leads to sell medical supplies. CTAs work best when they are in the right context. To make your CTAs work better, it is important that you segment your content. For example, if you are putting CTAs with blog posts, make sure that the CTA relates to the content of the post as closely as possible.

image 3 resized 600

2. You Have to Get Noticed, Even When People Are Looking
— When people are on a web page, many visual elements can distract them. On Craigslist, people visit the site with the intention to buy, but they don’t go through and click all the ads. One of the things I love about looking at Craigslist ads is that every seller is working with the same text ad, yet some can make ads grab your attention by using tactics like all CAPS. Design matters.  It isn’t good enough that somebody has decided to come to your site; it is your job to create a CTA that has the visual appeal to convert them into a lead.

3. Pricing Too Soon Can Be a Deal Breaker
— How many of you have avoided a Craigslist advertisement simply based of the price listed in the headline? Be honest; we all have done it. The lesson to learn here is to avoid mentioning pricing in your CTA whenever possible. Focus on creating non-monetary value for the prospect to help ensure they will convert without being influenced prematurely by price.

blog call to actions

4. Building Trust Only Takes a Split Second — When looking for tickets, one of the most comforting phrases you can see is “face value.” It makes you think that the person is a fan and not a scalper after your hard-earned cash. What is the “face value” of your CTAs? What is a word or phrase that you can put in your CTAs today that can help build trust with prospective customers? Find the answer. It is normally some type of phrase that creates a middle ground between you and the customer.

5. Urgency Sells – Timing is a key factor that drives people to action. Does your CTA have a timing element? Think back to our friends, the Craigslist scalpers. How do they use timing? They use phrases like “won’t last long.” When creating CTAs, remember to include some type of element of urgency. Some examples: “offer ends tomorrow” or “only for the first 100 visitors.” Sure, these phrases need to work with the overall theme of the CTA, but urgency can mean the difference in hitting your leads goal this month or not.

You can learn from anyone at anytime. People who sell tickets through one-line text ads everyday get very good at writing them. Take a few minutes and see what you can learn from Craigslist scalpers that could apply to your business.

What other non-traditional sources do you look to for marketing inspiration?

Source: HubSpot

How to promote your Facebook Business Page

The new edition of The Facebook Marketing Bible by Justin Smith is an excellent place to begin. The sheer volume of information in its 279 pages – complete with strategic tips and how-to tutorials – could add up to the best investment you’ve made in your business NEXT year.

How to promote your Page
According to Smith, Facebook is now home to over 250 million users who are actively engaged with the brands they support.
In The Facebook Marketing Bible he explains what you can do to grow your “fan base” within Facebook once you’ve created a Facebook Page.

Introducing Northwest Center for Change Blog Website

Northwest Center for Change offers comprehensive outpatient services to individuals and their families who are struggling with chemical dependency.  Their long-term approach, along with family participation, are unique and proven to increase the chances of recovery.

Introducing Pallas Indonesia New Website

Seowon Pallas is a professional company that produces kitchen utensils since 1989. The company has been developing new technique and product’s design to produce high-quality kitchen utensils. The products are available in Indonesia through its new website now – Pallas Indonesia.

The Future for Mobile Websites

According to John Tysoe, the founder of Mobile World (June 2007), “It took over 20 years to connect the first billion subscribers [to the fixed Internet], but only 40 months to connect the second billion.

With other experts, such as Google CEO Eric Schmidt, recently predicting a “huge revolution” in the Mobile Web space, a bright future looks certain. Statistical predictions for the Mobile Web also indicate fast growth, with the demographic of Mobile Web users being much more that a teen phenomenon.

Continue reading ‘The Future for Mobile Websites’

Indeed.com officially became the largest jobs site in the US

Job search engine Indeed.com officially became the largest jobs site in the U.S. by passing longtime leader Monster.com in October, according to the latest data from comScore.

A total of 12.3 million users visited Indeed in October, a monthly increase of 19.6 percent. Monster had 12.1 million visitors while CareerBuilder was third with 11.3 million. The numbers, however, reflect the sites’ main jobs sites only and not their entire networks – in which case larger properties Monster and CareerBuilder would still have the edge.

But Indeed has steadily built Web traffic by adding nearly one million new jobs to its index each week, and it could very well become the consistently popular choice for U.S. job-seekers. Indeed actually attracts more monthly pageviews devoted strictly to job searches than Monster, CareerBuilder and HotJobs combined, but the other sites offer additional content such as resume-building tips and career advice.

Monthly traffic to HotJobs, which was purchased by Monster from Yahoo! in early 2010, has fallen 67 percent in the past year.

Evolving Development of Mobile Web Usage Worldwide

The Internet is now more than a PC-based phenomenon; with close to 3 billion mobile phones worldwide, the reality is that many people’s first Internet experience will soon occur on a mobile device.

The Business Opportunity

This new media represents an excellent business opportunity and an obvious focus for many companies is to ascertain the optimal strategy to engage when utilizing this third screen medium.

By establishing a Mobile Web presence, businesses are opening up a new window of opportunity and are providing a richer user experience to their mobile customers. One example is ESPN; this leading U.S. sports Channel has a well-designed mobile website and is seeing a 200% year-on-year increase in their mobile website visitor statistics.

However, if standard practices are not adhered to, potential pitfalls can occur. A poor mobile website portrays a bad impression of any company, potentially turning away customers. Companies must recognize that the needs of mobile browsers are different from PC Internet users. Based on knowledge of their customers, each company should focus their message, so that it is contextual to the mobile arena and targets their mobile browsers’ needs. This must be achieved while also keeping their brand identity and marketing message consistent with their other communication media.

Monitor and Measure Your Social Media Efforts

Need help measuring the effectiveness of your social media work? Sites offer free tools to assist you with tracking your social media progress.

Facebook Insights Function

facebook.com/help/search.php?hq=insights

This feature tracks the number of visitors to your company’s Facebook page and provides statistics, such as the number of new fans, unique visitors and demographic information.

Google Analytics

google.com/analytics. With Google Analytics, you can analyze blog traffic, subscriber count and keyword optimization. You can also use it to see how visitors found your blog, what keywords they searched on, where they originated and how long they remained on your site.

Technorati

technorati.com

Technorati™ provides an index of the most popular individuals and topics in the blogosphere. When you create a free account, Technorati includes your blog in its index along with an authority ranking based on the number of blogs that link to your blog.

Twitter Analyzer and TwitterGrader.com

twitteranalyzer.com
twitter.grader.com

These sites score your Twitter account based on criteria, including the number of followers and the quantity of your tweets being shared or “retweeted.”

Repost: Google Cooks Up a New Recipe for Local Search

The engineers at Google have recently been throwing a lot of new ingredients into local search, working to improve both user experience and merchant visibility. This week’s announcement of a new local recommendation engine called Hotpot is the latest culmination of those efforts.

Hotpot is an extension of Google Places, the local search database of more than 50 million locations in which merchants can claim their businesses, provide their addresses and other information, and engage with customers. Hotpot adds two important new features into the mix: user ratings and recommendations from friends.

The ratings are done on a five-star system, and a user can share a business’ ratings to get further recommendations from friends. One example of this would be if a user is visiting a town for the first time and has an online friend that has also visited that town or is a local resident. That friend’s recommendations for restaurants and hotels will provide an added, trusted element to the ratings the user discovered during the original search.

Google’s new feature is not exactly new in that it essentially provides the same service as Yelp and other local-recommendations services, but it confirms Google’s growing interest in local search – not to mention some poorly named new features lately. The mere fact that Google Places provides Hotpot with a database of 50 million businesses out of the gates means that it may very well catch on – and local businesses that aren’t already in that database should change that right away.

Source: Website Magazine Blog

Beware of Keyword Stuffing – is your website using it?

Keyword stuffing refers to the practice of loading a webpage with keywords in an attempt to manipulate a site’s ranking in Google’s search results. Filling pages with keywords results in a negative user experience, and can harm your site’s ranking.

Keyword stuffing is considered to be an unethical search engine optimization (SEO) technique. Keyword stuffing occurs when a web page is loaded with keywords in the meta tags or in content. The repetition of words in meta tags may explain why many search engines no longer use these tags.

Keyword stuffing had been used in the past to obtain maximum search engine ranking and visibility for particular phrases. This method is completely outdated and adds no value to rankings today. In particular, Google no longer gives good rankings to pages employing this technique.

Below is a keyword stuffing example:

If you’re looking for tennis shoes, you’ve come to the right place. Our website is the best place to buy tennis shoes. You won’t find better tennis shoes or cheaper tennis shoes anywhere else. We invite you to check out our great selection of tennis shoes.

Clearly, in this example, the website is trying to rank for the word tennis shoes. But in attempting to rank for this keyword, they may actually be doing more harm than good. Google and other search engines assign a keyword stuffing penalty to sites that over-optimize. If they didn’t, every website would simply try to include their keyword as much possible – much to the dismay of their readership!

The content on each of your Web pages should be written naturally, with just a few variations of your main keyword sprinkled throughout. Write for your readers first – and then take care of the SEO. Oftentimes, you can’t even tell that some of the most well-written Web pages have been optimized for SEO.

So remember, when it comes to keywords, it is not necessarily the more the merrier.