Archive for May, 2009

Multiply Your Marketing Like a Virus

Multiply Your Marketing Like a Virus
By Michel Fortin (c) 2009

In today's Internet, conversations are cropping up all over
the place. People are talking. They are talking about
products. They are talking about businesses. And they are
certainly talking about their experiences.

When you look at how blogs, forums and social networking
sites have exploded in the last few years, you can see how
powerful word-of-mouth is. But the question is, is it all
really important? Can it really help your business?

Yes.

And I'm not talking about traffic. And you don't need to be
controversial, either. I'm talking creating systems to
leverage, manage and profit from the "buzz."

Word-of-mouth is one of the most powerful lead and business
generation processes there is. Online, some people call it
"word-of-mouse." But we know it more as viral marketing.

Viral marketing is the process of implementing means or
tools through which the knowledge of your existence self-
propagates. Like a virus, your visibility spreads throughout
a network of people who refer you to each other.

Notwithstanding the power of backlinking, traffic and SEO,
viral marketing is key for a number of reasons. Success in
the offline world is "location, location, location." The
Internet is no different. Your success depends highly on the
number of locations you appear online - places on which your
site, link, company or product name exist.

In essence, to expand your reach, you need to be in as many
places as possible, talked about by as many people as
possible and be in front of as many eyeballs as possible.

With viral marketing, there are three ways of doing it:

Create content
Create applications
Create systems

The first is self-explanatory. Your content may be
controversial or buzzworthy. It may create raging fans - or
enraged enemies.

The second is simple: you create an application - whether
it's a video, audio, file, software, document, etc - that
people can pass around, and thus proliferates the knowledge
of your existence on the web through other people's efforts.

I might write about these two at a later time. But for now,
the one on which I want to focus is the third: creating a
system.

Before I give you some examples, let me explain why word-of-
mouth works wonders. Those who get to know you or to know
about you through a third party grant you a higher level of
confidence, credibility and loyalty. According to Dr. Robert
Cialdini in his amazing book, "Influence: The Psychology of
Persuasion," this is social proof in action.

Remember a dictum a mentor of mine once told me, which is:
"Implication is far more powerful than specification." In
other words, if you tell people you're the best, that you're
the leader in your field, or that your product is the best
solution to their needs, your self-serving promotional bias
makes it all suspect.

However, if someone other than you - whether it's on a blog,
in an email, on a social networking site or in person - says
to another that you are indeed the best or that you do have
the best solution to their problems, how much more
believable will that person's statement be? How much more
credible and trustworthy?

The answer is "definitely more."

Accordingly, word-of-mouth is not only important because it
creates an awareness of your business (let alone traffic),
but also it is important to the degree to which third party
marketing indirectly communicates greater credibility,
superiority and value of the products or services you offer.

In his book "The 22 Immutable Laws of Branding," Al Ries
stresses the importance of leadership and how that
leadership is communicated.

According to Ries, people never buy the best - they only
think they do. They usually buy the leader (or what they
perceive as being the best). And that perception is often
molded by what they are told and by what others do, not by
what is fact or by what is being advertised.

Coke, for example, outsells Pepsi. But according to Ries,
taste tests reveal that Pepsi is the better tasting brand.
So, why does Coke still beat Pepsi in sales? It is not
because it is the leader in the marketplace or promoted
itself as such but because it is known as the leader. And
the reason it is known as the leader is because Coke was the
first cola "in the mind" of the marketplace.

It is the one most talked about, even to this day. When a
person is introduced to cola for the first time, they are
often told to try Coke. Restaurant patrons still ask for
"coke," even when Pepsi is the only cola served. Why is
that? While other colas are bombarding them with marketing
messages, people have heard of Coke first, and most likely
from other people.

Consequently, if people hear about you from other people,
and not some advertisement or pitch, this social proof will
create not only a certain buzzworthiness about you but also
an almost instant trustworthiness.

How do you do that? The most significant method is to be the
first. If your business or website is unique, focuses on a
niche or is the first in some category, the knowledge of
your existence will spread quite naturally, almost like
wildfire. It becomes viral in and of itself, in other words.

Now, I'm not saying you need to be new. I'm only saying you
need to be unique. Or better yet, you need to be the first.
Whether it's catering an existing product to a new niche, or
adding a new twist to an existing product, you become the
first.

I said it before: don't be the best, be the first. But more
important, as Ries pointed out, "Don't be the first in the
marketplace, be the first in the MIND of the marketplace."

That said, there are ways to use systems that will leverage
the spreading of that message, on the other hand, which
helps to multiply your marketing punch. Such systems both
simulate and stimulate word-of-mouth advertising.

Networking systems, for example, include strategic marketing
alliances, joint ventures, and affiliate programs. And
unlike the more traditional traffic generators such as ads
and search engines, these specific tools are much more
effective since they are used by third parties and not by
the original advertiser.

===

In these cases, people don't find you. They are told where
you are because someone told them about you - especially if
that "someone" is a person whose opinion they value.

If you received a call, letter or email from someone you
know (and especially trust) referring you to a particular
company, how much more credible will that referral be when
compared to a blatant advertisement coming from the company
itself?

You got it. A lot more.

When we think of viruses, we remember when "Melissa" and "I
Love You" hit the scene in the late 90s and early 2000s. No,
they weren't some kind of adult-oriented websites, but
computer viruses (or is that virii?).

But here's why they were so effective: the devious (or
perhaps even brilliant) way these viruses worked was that,
after opening the email attachment, it sent more virus-
infected emails to the first fifty people in your address
book without your knowledge.

While we are bombarded with spam and phishing attempts, and
anti-virus warnings telling us to never open an attachment
from an unknown person, how can we resist doing so when the
email apparently comes from someone we actually do know
(since the virus uses address books to multiply itself and
even personalizes the email with that person's name)?

We can certainly learn the way viruses work - and, in the
same way, apply that process to online marketing.

How? Remember that good ol' fashion process called
"networking"? According to Jill Griffin's wonderful book
"Customer Loyalty: How to Earn it, How to Keep it," we are
more open, trusting and loyal when doing business with or
being marketed by people we know - and we certainly refer
them to others more often as well.

Networking grants you the ability to reach corners untapped
- areas that would have been unreachable otherwise. I
personally don't advocate traditional networking (the
simple, "I'm open for business" kind) because, in my
experience, it hasn't brought me anything substantial in
return. While it can be a fantastic marketing tool, the way
in which networking is conducted is often the reason why it
does not produce any favorable results.

When you're only networking, more often than not people will
want something in return - otherwise, they will lose
interest or stop sending referrals if you don't take the
time to recognize their efforts. A way to consistently
reward others is to turn your networking efforts into
systems - in other words, to develop strategic marketing
alliances.

There are many ways to accomplish this. But the most
effective forms of networking are those that are
systematized.

A traditional network is one in which qualified leads that
you can both share, or information about each other that is
promoted to each other's market, clientele or subscribers.
This way, you can effectively cross-promote or share markets
with each other. As long as your alliance logically shares a
same target market but without directly competing with you,
it could be potentially rewarding.

On the Internet, this technique is one in which a
systematized method of cross-promotion between you and your
alliance through a unique, joint marketing effort is
created. It is also often referred to as a "joint venture."

For example, this includes the coupling of complementary
products or services in a single offer that's exclusively
marketed to each other's market. While different, these
offers are combined and marketed under the banner of a
single promotion.

Whose product or offer can you bundle with yours to create
an entirely new and distinct package?

In its simplest form, if your alliance sells a product to a
market that matches yours, they can add to their offer
additional products, services or bonuses from you, which may
include an exclusive special offer for one of your products
as an upsell.

But the best method I've found is when you create an
entirely distinct product with those from two or more
strategic alliances, amalgamating existing products from all
companies into a single offer that's sold simultaneously
from your partners' sites.

For example, you sell cookware online. You can easily team
up with a publisher specializing in cookbooks and throw a
book in the mix. While you raise the price and split the
profits with the publisher, you instantly raise the
perceived value of the cookware through a co-branded
approach or a combined package of non-competing products or
services.

Best of all, each of you market the "new" product separately
while sharing in each other's traffic, market, lead-base and
referral-sources (i.e., your own respective networks,
including affiliates, "fans" and even suppliers) - thus
doubling the reach with the same marketing effort.

If they have their own distinct affiliate program, network
of affiliates and fan base, including their own blogs for
instance, they can leverage the knowledge of your existence
quite rapidly. And vice versa.

Ultimately, by leveraging the efforts of others you not only
propagate the knowledge of your existence on the web, but
also you create trust and credibility. And if you cater to a
new market, or offer a new product by taking an existing
product and giving it a new twist, you also give yourself an
extra dose of buzzworthiness, too.
===========================================================
Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, marketing
strategy consultant, and instrumental in some of the most
lucrative online businesses and wildly successful marketing
campaigns to ever hit the web. For more articles like this
one, please visit his blog at http://www.michelfortin.com/
and subscribe to his RSS feed.
===========================================================
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Using Social Media to Boost Search Engine Results
By Lauren Hobson (c) 2009

Most of us are well aware that the search engines frequently
change their algorithms to improve search results for users (and
foil spammers), which can make it challenging for small
businesses just to keep up. But as web technology continues to
evolve, it also creates new opportunities for small businesses
to improve their SEO strategies and boost their rankings as
well. Social media (sites like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn,
Technorati, Digg, etc.) provide an excellent opportunity for
small businesses to not only promote their products and services
online, but also to gain significant ground in the search engine
results.

One of the most critical components to getting top search engine
rankings is the number of inbound links and link popularity a
web site is able to build. Although there are several existing
link building strategies available to small businesses (e.g.,
press releases, directory submissions, article syndication,
etc.), social media can help create additional high-value,
on-target inbound links that are essential to achieving top
placements in the search engines.

For example, each time you use Twitter to publish a link to new
content on your web site, that link gets "planted" on the
Twitter page of each person following you, and has the potential
to spread even further as your followers share that information
with their own network of contacts.

Integrated Social Marketing (ISM)TM

If you have properly integrated your social networking profiles
together, that same Twitter "tweet" could then be fed via RSS to
your Facebook business profile, your corporate blog, your
LinkedIn account, and any number of other social sites that you
have set up for your business. It's not a far stretch to imagine
the link you broadcast on Twitter could reach dozens, hundreds,
or even thousands of other places on the web, all pointing back
to your web site! By integrating your social networking
profiles with each other, with your web site, and with your
existing marketing initiatives, you can easily make one single
marketing action (such as a tweet) show up in multiple places
online, each containing a new, relevant inbound link to your
site.

Quantity AND Quality

In addition to the sheer number of inbound links that are
created through social marketing, the value of the links that
are created is another important criterion that search engines
consider. To be valued by the search engines, inbound links must
be from relevant, "quality" web sites, and search engines today
give social sites like Facebook and Twitter great value. These
sites are highly visible to the search engines, and are
constantly taking updates from users. Links tend to be shared
according to subject matter, which means the search engines will
see them as being relevant and on-target. All of these factors
combine to create high-quality inbound links in the eyes of the
search engines.

Online Visibility and Branding

Creating visibility for your business and your "brand" is really
key when using social media for building links. The power of
social media is realized when other users see your links or
content, then share that information with their own network of
contacts. Simply adding a bunch of links to your social profiles
is not enough; you need to have a strong reputation and a brand
that users trust so they will feel comfortable sharing your
content with others. Brand recognition typically leads to
natural link building anyway, which means your inbound links
will end up coming from bloggers, colleagues, customers, and
other people who are exposed to your links and find them useful
enough to share with their own contacts.

The Proof is in the Rankings

A recent example from Website Magazine explained somewhat
surprising results when they searched for their publication's
name in Google. As expected, their web site came up as the
number one listing on the results page. But what was not
expected was the number three listing on the results page was
the magazine's Twitter page. They then performed a number of
Google searches for the terms "Chicago Tribune," "Chicago Public
Golf," and "Daily Career Tips," all with similar results in
Google - the Twitter page for each of these terms came up near
the top of the search engine results every time.

The conclusion was that given these results, Google must be
giving serious weight to Twitter content, and I happen to agree.
The search engines of course keep their ranking algorithms
top-secret, so there's no way to know how much weight (if any)
is really given to Twitter or other social media sites. But
results like those in the example above are hard to ignore!

A Great Opportunity

Social media is here to stay, and small businesses are beginning
to use it to effectively promote their businesses, reach their
customers, find new leads, keep customer mindshare, and
instantly communicate with customers. But maybe one of the
biggest benefits of adding social media to your marketing mix is
the creation of high-value, on-target inbound links that can
help improve visibility in the search engines and boost your
business to the top of the search engine rankings.
================================================================
Lauren Hobson, President of Five Sparrows, LLC
(http://www.fivesparrows.com/), has more than 16 years of
experience in small business technology writing, marketing, and
web site design and development. Five Sparrows provides
professional web site and marketing services to small businesses
and non-profit organizations, giving them access to high-quality
services at affordable prices. To read articles or subscribe to
Biz Talk, please visit http://www.FiveSparrows.com/biztalk.htm.
================================================================
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Why You Should Use Article Directories to Promote Your Website
By Jay Gaulard © 2009

If you are online and are not already using article
directories to promote your website, you are missing out
on a free and highly effective marketing option. Article
directories are great ways to draw traffic to your site
without paying for advertising. However, to get real
traffic to your site using an article directory, you must
know how to use them correctly.

What Are Article Directories?

Before you can use an article directory, you have to know
what one is. Article directories are websites where
thousands upon thousands of articles on just about any
subject are posted. They are generally categorized to make
it easier for readers to find information they want. They
are also linked together, so a reader reading about "Hawaii
travel" will naturally go from article to article on that
topic. People can use the articles they find in the
directories on their own websites, either for free or for a
small fee. Authors pay nothing to submit to article
directories.

How Article Directories Benefit Online Businesses

You are probably thinking, "Sure, that's great. But how
does an article directory help me promote my business?
Doesn't giving away free content defeat my purpose as an
online business?"

These are great questions. When you submit an article to an
article directory, it will contain a bio with a link to
your website. Since you are the author of the article, you
are allowed to include this information.

This means that anyone who is searching online and comes
across the article directory will see a link to your site.
Not only that, but the people who use the content on their
own websites are required to keep it exactly as it appears
in the directory. This means that your link could show up
on hundreds of websites.

Article directories are generally large websites. This
means that the web spiders are attracted to them. Having
your link in these articles is a crucial part of an online
linking campaign.

How to Make Your Submissions Effective

If you are going to submit to article directories, you need
to do two things. First, you need to learn about proper
keyword usage. You need the right percentage of keywords in
your article, and they need to appear naturally within the
content. This will draw the search engine spiders to the
article, thus exposing people to your link at the bottom.

You also need to make your content unique and helpful. If
your article is the same as thousands that are already
online, other website owners will not want to use it. Also,
if the information is not helpful, people will not read the
entire article. Your goal is to have them read the entire
article so that they will click at the link on the bottom.

Having helpful information in the article also helps the
reader view you as an "expert" in the field. This is
important, because you want them to have a reason to click
on the link. If they are reading useless information, they
will have no desire to visit your site. Also, proving that
you are knowledgeable about a particular topic will show
that whatever product or service you are marketing is worth
buying.

What to Do if You Can't Write

At this point you are probably wondering what you can do
because you can't write. You are an entrepreneur and
business owner, not a writer. The good news is that you
have options.

You can hire a freelance writer to "ghostwrite" the article
for you. Ghostwriting means writing the article in your
name. Instead of placing his or her name on the article,
the freelancer uses your name and your business link. You
will need to pay for this service, but the amount you will
pay for a quality article is far less than the amount you
would pay for an advertising campaign, and a well-written
article placed in the right article directories will draw
more traffic to your site than just about any other form of
advertising.

Where can you find ghostwriters? There are a variety of
online classifieds where you can post your job requirements
or search for available writers. You can ask for quotes to
help you learn what the going rate for a writer is. Keep in
mind that you will pay more if you have detailed
information that needs to be researched or if you are
working on a tight deadline. You can also hire a content
creation company to help you if you require numerous
articles that would be too much for one individual writer.

If you do use a ghostwriter, be sure that you proofread the
article before submitting it. You may find that the writer
did not approach a particular topic as you would have
wanted. You can ask the writer to rewrite the material, but
posting something that is inaccurate or does not sound well
written will detract from your goal of drawing traffic to
your site.

Risks of Using an Article Directory

There is only one main risk to using an article directory,
and that is that someone will download your content and use
it on their site without including the link. You can do
some work on your own to check for this, but it is hard to
police. However, the occasional unscrupulous website owner
who uses your content incorrectly is a risk worth taking
for the many users who will give you a link on their site.

Post Much and Often

Once you get the hang of using an article directory, post
many articles, and post them often. The more fresh,
relevant content that links to your page, the more traffic
you will receive. Be sure to continually research your
keywords, because the keywords that people search for
constantly change.

Also, submit your articles to a variety of sites. The most
popular article directories may not draw a certain
demographic of people. The more places that have your
article and your link, the better your traffic results will
be. Since these sites are free to use, you might as well
submit to as many as you can.

Editor's Note: You can find the Top 50 Article directories
ranked by Alexa rating and Google Pagerank at:

http://www.vretoolbar.com/articles/directories.php
http://www.jackhumphrey.com/fridaytrafficreport/
website-promotion/top-21-the-best-article-directory-list/
===========================================================
Jay Gaulard writes for a wide selection of websites on
various topics. He is a veteran of the internet and has
come to be respected in his many areas of expertise. This
article was written on behalf of http://www.articleleeg.com/,
a popular article directory website.
===========================================================
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