Posts Tagged ‘marketing’

Use Twitter to Test Headlines


Twitter is a great way to test your headlines and short copy effectiveness. Hundreds of followers and a 140 characters maximum makes for a powerful marketing test environment. Twitter is a quick and efficient way to see if your headlines convert into clicks.

Article Library

Start with a good repository of articles. You should create a significant number of articles in a variety of topics. Good article diversity and quantity will ensure you have a ready-made test bed for a variety of projects.

This article library can be an article directory (eZineArticles), one or more blogs, or your website copy portfolio. Using your own blog or website gives you the added benefit of driving prospective business traffic too.

Since Twitter users, like most social networkers, don’t like constant self-promotion I suggest you routinely test using others websites, blogs, or articles as well as your own. The other authors will love the traffic, may link back to you, preserves your credibility, and it still achieves your conversion testing. 

Tracking Conversions

Don’t forget the primary objective–tracking conversions. If you are using your own website or blog this is pretty simple–look at your blog stats or Google analytics. However, what about Tweets that you point at websites you don’t own?

In the past there was little opportunity to collect measurable results from these tests. You could use Summize to track keyword discussion and possibly track re-tweets. Unfortunately, this only measures buzz and typically has more to do with the destination content, not the headline. It doesn’t give you the core metric–do people click because of my copy?

Enter bit.ly and TweetBurner, a new tiny URL technology that lets you track source and traffic through your shortened URL. So, now simply shorten and attach a unique bit.ly or TweetBurner URL to each of your headline or short copy tests. Then you can track sources and volume of click-throughs.

Respect Your Audience

The quickest way to damage this excellent focus group is to abuse it. So, here are a few cautionary etiquette suggestions to keep yourself from poisoning the water:

 

  • Promote others, as well as yourself, with your headline tests
  • Stagger test headlines over various days
  • Make sure the destination content is interesting
  • Do not link your headline tests to sales letters or landing pages
  • Participate in the community too (ask questions and participate)

 

Happy Testing!

Bill Rice helps companies convert web traffic to buyers. He is a recognized expert, adviser, writer, speaker, and entrepreneur in online lead generation.

Bill Rice is passionate about the social web (social media), online community building, and creating online consumer experiences. Bill Rice regularly applies those passions to design and write money making lead generation projects for his clients. Tell me about your project at It’s About Conversion! or Urgent Leads

Post a comment below...

Twitter and Marketing – The Bigger Picture


While browsing my Twitter feed recently I came upon a link by an author known as much for her expertise in online marketing than for her actual books. The article in question discussed social media as a tool for book marketing, and whether or not employing social media fads (Twitter, in particular) works in the long run when you’re trying to sell books. The point brought up concerned the limited audience of a Twitter user: why expend so much energy in this one place where you may have less than a hundred followers, when there are other ways to market and reach a potentially larger audience?

There is validity to that question, of course. Speaking as a writer and editor, I use all sorts of social devices to promote work. There are the profiles on MySpace and Facebook, the lens on Squidoo, the accounts at del.icio.us and Digg and…you get the idea. With the time spent pushing works on these sites, one might think I could write another book free and clear. Marketing is time-consuming, yet beneficial, and of course if sales are going to come from these efforts it is important to make sure you market wisely. To put so much energy into a campaign few will see may not yield the results you want, and you can’t get that time back.

These ideas are easily applicable to promoting websites. Is it wise to spend the entire day on Twitter talking about how people should visit your site, when in truth you may have only fifty followers on your profile, and few if any are “re-tweeting” your posts to their accounts so more eyeballs can see them? Who will see your efforts, and how can your business grow if you limit yourself this way, is the argument.

Does this mean sites like Twitter and Digg are useless in promotion? Not necessarily. Due to the growth of Twitter, for example, it now boasts its own search engine which allows anybody to find relevant topics among the thousands of Twitter users. The one advantage to social bookmarking sites and micro-blogging sites is that new information comes as quickly as it is posted on the wires. Somebody may not need to follow a thousand Twitter users for breaking news, when he can search for it. Whether you are selling goods or promoting services, if you use the right combination of keywords the likelihood somebody will find you via Twitter will increase.

Take, for example, a recent event on the Twitter site that captured the attention of bloggers in the publishing industry. A literary agent established a topic called #queryfail which covered the do’s and don’ts of submitting manuscript queries to literary agents. For one day, editors and agents submitted their input via Twitter and using this particular keyword to connect the posts. People using Twitter’s search function could plug in the keyword to see the expanded group conversation. Such an exercise allowed for better exposure for these accounts…one editor reported later on her Twitter account that she gained over 100 followers in one day thanks to this!

Of course, there is no guarantee participation in a group micro-blogging conversation will reap hundreds of followers to your account in a short time, but use of the tool increases your exposure. It’s only a matter of hitting the right keywords at the time your target audience is searching for those same words. Social media tools like Twitter may not wholly replace the blog, the pay per click model, and link building as the be-all and end-all of SEO, but it is a good complement to your efforts provided it is used smartly.

Kathryn Lively is a freelance writer specializing in articles on search engine optimization and Virginia Beach website design.

I'm eager to hear your comments below...

Twitter Marketing – Using Twitter to Promote Your Business


Twitter is a micro-blogging platform. It lets you post up to 140 characters at a time. Some people post their status every 5 minutes (”Waiting for the bus”, “On the bus”, “Walking home”) and companies use Twitter to get the word out about new products, blog posts, and other random stuff.

Companies from all over the world have Twitter accounts and thousands of people following them. Some of these companies are Apple, Intel, H&R Block, and Zappos. Barack Obama has over 38k followers!

To leverage the Twitter potential you need to have people following you. That is, people that want to be updated on what you are up to.

Step 1: Importing Contacts

When you sign up for Twitter you will have a chance to import contacts from Gmail, Hotmail, and your own address book. Do it.

Step 2: Complete Your Profile

Make sure all your profile is complete and include a link to your website. Add “http” at the beginning of it to make it clickable. Personalize the colors and the sidebar on your profile page. Use keywords in your profile so others can find you.

Step 3: Understand the Dynamics of Twitter

Twitter is not a marketing tool; it’s a social tool. That means:

  • Don’t spam
  • Follow other users
  • Be active in the community (comment and post frequently)
  • Post useful information
  • Don’t post every 10 minutes
  • Engage in conversations. Retweet (reply to other tweets) often
  • Don’t promote yourself. Share cool stuff. To give your company exposure, do it the smart way. Direct your followers to a blog post with useful information and have that post invite users to take action. Don’t try to take people from Twitter to your checkout page directly.

Step 4: Build Your Audience

There are several things that you can do to build your audience:

  • Put a link to “Follow Me on Twitter” in your email signature, forums signature, website, and maybe even your business cards
  • Invite people to follow you on Twitter at the end of each blog post you create
  • Find Twitter users that you really look up to and see who is following them. Follow these people. Once they see you are following them, they will follow you.
  • See who is following your friends and follow them. They will follow you too.
  • Use Twitter directories to find members who are likely to follow you. My favorites are Just Tweet It and Twellow.
  • Use the search feature to find profiles that you want to follow. You can use Twitter’s RSS feed to be notified every time a tweet is made containing a certain keyword.

Step 5: Watch Your Following/Followers Ratio

Try to have a balance between people you follow and people that follow you. If 1,000 people follow you and you only follow 10 folks, you will be seen as selfish and snob. If 10 people follow you and you follow 1,000, you will be seen as a spammer.

Some tips that will help you keep both numbers balanced:

  • Grow slow. Instead of adding 500 new friends in one day, add maybe 50 and wait for them to follow you. Then do another 50.
  • Use a tool like Friend or Follow to see who is following you that you are not following and who you are following that is not following you. This tool is very useful to balance the number of following/followers.
  • Avoid the “follow/no follow” tactic. Some people follow others so they follow them and then they stop following those folks. Avoid this practice if you don’t want to look like a spammer.

Step 6: Post Useful Tweets

Make it worthwhile to follow you. If you’ve found something that your audience might find useful, tweet it. You can use Twitter tools to automatically tweet your blog posts.

Share what you do but avoid “selling”. For example, if you are a web developer you can tweet “we just finished designing the website for ABC Widgets” but avoid something like “Custom Web Design from $899″. 

Step 7: Learn from the Experts

Find 10-20 users with over 300 followers and see what they are doing right. Get ideas and implement them.

Zeke CamusioThe Outsourcing Company – Creative Web Design Agency 

http://www.TheOutsourcingCompany.com

info@TheOutsourcingCompany.com

(1)877-581-3921 (Available 24/7)

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Zeke_Camusio

 

Post a comment below...

Subscribe to Podcast
WP Membership Websites
Learn how to create your own WordPress membership website
Just click below

Subscribe to RSS Feed

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Business Resource
  • A New Way To Look At F.A.C.E.B.O.O.K.
    The creation of an acronym for the word F.A.C.E.B.O.O.K. was developed to help you look at it through new eyes as a good way to be transparent and successful on Facebook. Share in this article are a few tips to help you in your journey of learning how to use Facebook to grow your business. [...] […]
  • 5 Tips To Add Facebook Connectivity To Your Website
    Growing your business online using Facebook is an important step for business owners. With the growth and changes of the Facebook environment, it can be confusing at times. Well, I want to provide you with a few tips to help you navigate the waters of Facebook. These tips can help you grow your website traffic [...] […]
  • Tips About WordPress 3.0: Creating A Network
    With the release of the early Beta version of WordPress 3.0, there are a few new things that will help you continue to take advantage of the functionality that WordPress gives its users. One of the new things that you will be able to do is Create a Network. When you create a network, it [...] […]
  • Are You Participating in the Business Scavenger Hunt?
    Being able to connect to potential clients and to business associates is one of the goals for business owners. A strategic plan that has been put in place by Jerrilynn Thomas is a “business scavenger hunt” via Facebook. This hunt will allow me and other business owners to connect with website visitors who are participating [...] […]
  • Easy Guide To Choosing Your WordPress Theme
    Business Owners who want to use WordPress as their content management system for their websites have sometimes found it hard to determine which WordPress theme to use. There are thousands of themes for you to choose from, so picking one can be a daunting task. When selecting a WordPress Theme for your blog, there are [...] […]