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Using Content Curation To Find New Customers.
Being an Internet marketer for many years I’ve seen the landscape change many times but one thing has stayed the same “Content is King”, when it comes to driving traffic to a website.
As a business owner we all want to get new customers to our websites. Many have tried blogging to drive traffic to their website and due to a shortage of hours in a day they end up dropping the blog or hiring ghost writers to develop content for the site. We now have a new player on the net and it comes in the form of Content Curation. No it will not completely eliminate business owners creating content for their website but adds a whole new area of content development for a website.
Over the past two years I’ve tested different content curation sites and tools and have found Scoop.it to be the leader in both innovation and traffic building potential.
Below are examples on how Scoop.it can drive traffic and help to show the world, yes the world that your business knows your market.
In this article are 3 areas that when done correctly can drive new traffic to your business or brand?.
*** If you would like help setting up a Scoop.it traffic generator for your company. Contact Brian at 1-888-535-9139 or Email Me ideas@marketinghits.com ***
Most company executives apparently understand how important mobile is for their business, but few of those companies actually provide proper mobile experiences, an IBM report has found.
Understanding (or not) Customer Behavior Only 4% of 500 business professionals surveyed said they provide an excellent customer experience across channels, an IBM and Econsultancy report found. Kudos for being honest, but the fact so many companies know they aren't providing great mobile experiences shows just how disruptive smartphones and tablets have become for most organizations. IBM seems to think it has the tools to help businesses with their customer experience strategy, and it is laid out in the Reducing Customer Struggle 2013 report. Those surveyed said about 20% of their online traffic came from mobile devices, but most are still shoveling content from their websites onto a smaller screen for mobile visitors
If there's one thing you can be certain of in social media , it's that things will change. And change again. And again. Fortunately, there's almost always an infographic to help you deal with that ...
Vine has seen impressive growth since its January launch.
The app was released for Android users earlier this month, and has since surpassed Instagram in both downloads and social shares.
With more than 13 million users, and counting, it’s now fair to say that Vine is here to stay.
It is also clear that Vine means business.
We saw brands jump on the Vine-wagon fast and fearless. However, a few early adopters have since become social dropouts.
Take Oreo, for example. After their Superbowl social stunt, there was a lot of positive buzz surrounding the brand. They started off strong on Vine (and gained some “brownie points” when they showed me how to make Oreo sprinkles), but soon lost their way. After two A+ Vine posts, they went on to post 10 videos over the span of just one day, then dropped off completely over the past month.
Back to basics: consistency is key. Tisk tisk, you delicious cookies you.
An infographic detailing which states have the most identity fraud complaints, the most popular strategies used, and some ways to protect yourself.
Influence Marketing Is…
Although a potentially “hot topic” in content marketing, Influence marketing has been around since the days of Greek curators and royal or celebrity endorsements of soaps and beverages in the late 1800′s. Today, we define Influence Marketing as the act of engaging with current and potential leaders in your industry in order to gain ranks as a leader yourself, to increase meaningful activity on social media platforms, as well as to build your digital (and face-to-face) community of brand advocates.
Like all marketing efforts, influence marketing is as an investment in your brand’s future. As social media progresses and the use of mobile devices rise, companies need to focus on their overall digital selves. Much like face-to-face networking, building a strong online presence and attempting to engage your industry’s influencers is an important part of a company’s digital identity.
Is it possible for B2B companies and Advisory Businesses to use influence marketing in order to gain social reach and establish themselves as industry leaders? It’s imperative; but like any other marketing effort, it requires strategic planning to meet your specific goals.
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Yamini Sharma
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Search Engine Optimization, due to its constantly changing nature can be difficult to fully understand. Combine this with the different viewpoints many marketers hold about the components of SEO and you get a field of marketing that’s rife with speculation and a smattering of not-so-good practices.
Here’s a fun comparison from Optimal, a social advertising and analytics startup: If you look at big brands on social networks, their following seems to be growing more quickly on Twitter than on Facebook.
Optimal says it looked at the data from 4,330 brands, representing a total of 3.49 billion Facebook Likes and 595 million Twitter followers. Last week, those brands added 18.5 million new Likes and 4.5 million new followers — so on a percentage basis, their following grew 55 percent more quickly on Twitter than it did on Facebook.
Now, you might quibble about whether pitting Facebook Likes against Twitter followers is a bit of an apples-and-oranges comparison, but those are, ultimately, the main ways that businesses can count their following on each service. You could also point out the Twitter audience is still smaller than it is on Facebook — so even though Optimal said Twitter grew more quickly, the brands in question actually got more Facebook Likes than new Twitter followers.
Did your Facebook Page fare well during May? Did you achieve the number of fans and likes you set for last month? Is your Facebook Page performing above the average?
Honoré de Balzac is said to have consumed the equivalent of fifty cups of coffee a day at his peak. He did not drink coffee, though—he pulverized coffee beans into a fine dust and ingested the dry powder on an empty stomach. He described the approach as “horrible, rather brutal,” to be tried only by men of “excessive vigor.” He documented the effects of the process in his 1839 essay “Traité des Excitants Modernes” (“Treatise on Modern Stimulants”): “Sparks shoot all the way up to the brain” while “ideas quick-march into motion like battalions of a grand army to its legendary fighting ground, and the battle rages.”
Balzac’s novels and plays endure, but modern science is challenging his view of caffeine causing ideas to “quick-march into motion.” While caffeine has numerous benefits, it appears that the drug may undermine creativity more than it stimulates it.
Some brokerage firms are using touchscreen technology in their storefronts to allow passersby on the street to easily flip through listings. NY1's Real Estate reporter Jill Urban filed the following report.
New technology has made it easier than ever to shop for real estate. Thanks to websites and apps, the tools to look for a home are right at one's fingertips.
Now, some brokerage firms have found a new window of opportunity to help draw clients in — the touchscreen.
"In a world of instant gratification, we now have the opportunity of having our client just touch our storefronts and interact with us instantaneously," says Matthew Leone, the director of Web marketing for Halstead Property.
The long-term impact of spending one’s life in the real world while constantly connected to the virtual one is not yet fully understood.
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Know your influencers from your advocates. And engage them. Here's why and how....... Knowing the value of advocates versus influencers is key to making the right decisions when it comes to your marketing strategy. But most importantly, you need to be honest with yourself about the true purpose behind your marketing efforts. “Do I invest my limited budget into a one-time burst and get a lot of short-term buzz? Or do I build a bespoke network of advocates and engage, direct, and activate them long-term, which may require commitment beyond a three-month campaign?” We see our customers struggle with this question every day. You need to be clear from the outset what your goals are before deciding whether to harness the passion of your existing fans or to turn to the broader--but arguably less committed--reach of an influencer. Both can be a hugely important part of a marketing campaign, but only if their capacities are used effectively.My advice?Build movements, not campaigns!Don’t just stimulate buzz, ignite passions through engaging the true believers who “get” who you are and are fanatical about your brand. Identify them, listen to them, engage them. It is worth the effort.
Via Jeff Domansky
The biggest news on social media marketing this week was the introduction of hashtags by Facebook. What does this development mean and how does it affect your marketing efforts? Most importantly, h...
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Get Your Free CopyGet the free white paper tolearn even more!“Using Psychology toIncrease Conversions.”
Did you know: Companies that blog have 55% more traffic to their websites? Content marketing is fast becoming a regular marketing tool (marketers now spend 25% of their marketing budget on content marketing).
In a recent post for The Atlantic, Derek Thompson investigates what drives people to read content online. As a writer for a popular news site, it’s of interest to Thompson to find out what people are clicking on and why when navigating through the endless amount of web content available. Though it sounds like a boring study of analytics at first, his findings and references are actually super interesting.
Readers want to be told what to read/listen to/download first. There’s too much information out there to take it all in at once, and The Atlantic – along with most other sites – tries to provide its audience with the freshest content in the (supposedly) most accessible places. That said, Thompson and his analytics team found that the majority of readers aren’t clicking on that content; they’re clicking on the content that’s hidden all the way at the bottom of the page, but under a very specific headline: Most Popular.
An interesting study conducted by two sociologists showed that people chose to download and listen to songs that were classified as “Most Popular,” even if they weren’t actually the most popular downloads of the time. Thompson triggered a realization for me: people want to consume content that others are consuming. This might not be the best content, but they trust that it will be worthwhile because it’s popular. We trust the opinions of our peers over the opinion of the site hosting the content.
I don’t always trust sites to give me what they believe is their top content; of course they think it’s great — they wrote it. Of course an artist thinks his music downloads are the best — he created them. Most Popular lists are the most community-based way to organize the content on the Internet, and that’s why people flock towards them. Most Popular lists do have a flaw, though. According to Thompson, these lists can be fixed effortlessly. The consequence of this is that readers are tricked into consuming and “liking” things that they might not have liked or found useful if not for a number 1 or 2 next to the title.
The solution: Human curation. We need to provide readers with lists and collections of content that are popular within a certain field because they are genuinely popular to those who know about or are interested in that field. Most Popular lists on websites are generated by algorithms, making them extremely easy to game (by clicking the same content repeatedly, for instance) which in turn leads readers to believe they’ve found good content when they oftentimes haven’t. It’s the job of the curator, as a human, to let other humans know what they (the curator) are finding to be the best pieces of content on a topic — as someone who knows about a specific subject or interest.
If news sites and other content providers paired up with expert curators to create lists of content that would be popular among those with the authority to judge, then the most valuable content would naturally become the most popular content. Combining the power of fellow readers’ and curators’ opinions with the positive impact which rankings of popularity have on content consumption is the key to create an environment where the most popular content is also the best content. In that place, everyone wins!
Google autocomplete is that function where you begin typing a search term and Google fills out the rest, or gives you a list of phrases that you may be searching for. The autocomplete function can return search terms that are sometimes poignant, sometimes poetic, sometimes hilarious, and – hopefully – useful.
One of the biggest challenges facing marketers is achieving engagement with email marketing. Obtaining someone’s email address is an awesome privilege, but getting that person to open an email can be an impossible task.
In this post, we’ll be discussing three steps for achieving more engagement through email, from start to finish. Each step will need to be completed successfully in order to get engagement. For example, if you have a bad subject line, people won’t open the email, and then you’ll have zero engagement. So I’ll provide examples of good subject lines and messages and hope you will be inspired by them. Let’s begin.
Sure there is. While the content that you post on Twitter will vary depending on your business, paying close attention to how you tweet can dramatically improve your engagement rates. Having a clear call to action, being mindful to use proper punctuation and shortening URLs (with Bitly) are simple steps everyone can take to optimise the quality of their Twitter output, maximising reader interest and significantly improving ROI.
Vine has seen impressive growth since its January launch. The app was released for Android users earlier this month, and has since surpassed Instagram in both downloads and social shares. With more than 13 million users, and counting, it’s now fair to say that Vine is here to stay.
It is also clear that Vine means business. We saw brands jump on the Vine-wagon fast and fearless. However, a few early adopters have since become social dropouts.
"Sure, you get 70 percent of your clicks in the first two days," Pinquora CEO Shara Verma told me last week. "But there's a huge long tail. Clicks kept coming all the way for 30 days, and even beyo...
Via Kelly Lieberman
With speculation that Facebook might be launching an RSS reader at its press event next week, it’s important to think about why users loved the Google Reader experience. Hint: it wasn’t because Google Reader was social.
Via gdecugis
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