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Contests Are KING - Web Design For Contests Example Inspires via @HomesDotCom

Contests Are KING - Web Design For Contests Example Inspires via @HomesDotCom | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Designing For Contests
I love home Homes.com doesn't kid around. They create CONTESTS not CONTENT. Why? Because contests have the added value of helping to create community too.

Erica Campbell Byrum How To Create Contests Video (start at 1:41)
http://sco.lt/6myquH VIDEO

Contest and games are FAVORITE engagement tactics because:

* They work (more new people come to play and share their playing).
* They are inexpensive WINNING is the main thing not the prizes.
* Contests have a LONG shelf life.
* Contests help unearth power Contributors and Social Supporters.


That last bullet speaks to the Gladwellian "Mavens, Salespeople and Connectors" tribes within your visitors. When you create a contest you will be visited by "contest trolls" and Ms. Byrum discusses how to deal with them in her video (link above).

This link is to Homes.com's Contest Page. This is a "Contest Splash" Page that shares the many simultaneous contests they run. I would add an ask for their "Blogger Ambassadors Program" too. They use contests to unearth their bloggers, but why not cut out the middle man and ask for those Ambassadors straight out?

Doesn't hurt to do both and I like have a page that explains the elite nature of our "buzz team". Don't think I'm saying Homes.com is missing it. They clearly GET the value of contests and you should STEAL the "ditch digging" design they do to "Splash Page" their contests.

Highly recommend watching Ms. Byrum too as her video is nothing if not comprehensive http://sco.lt/6myquH



Via Martin (Marty) Smith
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Rethinking Redux Posts Thanks To Bill & Stephan

Rethinking Redux Posts Thanks To Bill & Stephan | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Redux Posts, or posts about posts, has been a great way to get a "second act" out of viral content. Thanks to a Bill Gassett post and excellent comments espeically from Stephan Hovanian the HOW TO do a redux post is changing.

 

Instead of creating a new post curate content from reactions, comments and ideas created by the orginal post back into the first post and then re-share on social media. Be sure to use @notify so people who's content you use know you revised the first post with their ideas to give content you've already created a new life without having to write a new post.

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5 Content Marketing Mistakes You’re Making Right Now (and How to Fix Them!)

5 Content Marketing Mistakes You’re Making Right Now (and How to Fix Them!) | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

By: Dawn Papandrea, NewsCred Contributor
If you’re reading this blog, you may already believe that content marketing will benefit your business. What you might not know is that there is a right way and a wrong way for getting it done.


Via Kaye Blum, Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com
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Rescooped by Thomas Faltin from Social Marketing Revolution
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Want To Be A Great Tweeter? Create 3 Kinds of Tweets

Want To Be A Great Tweeter? Create 3 Kinds of Tweets | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Working with great cancer research centers on our new crowdfunding cancer research website (http://www.CureCancerStarter.org) is helping me slow down long enough to think about what works on social media. Nothing like having to explain things you do in automatic-mode to help examine marketing process.

After creating more than 20,000 Tweets I've noticed the kinds of tweets that are more likely to be shared and they fall into three groups:

* What's Happening NOW.
* Action verb tweets.

* Q&A Tweets.

NOW
The web only has one TIME and it is always NOW. Twitter is like the radio of the web. If something cool is happening NOW such as a Google Hangout or a revolution in Egypt Tweet it.

Action Verbs
See, Watch, Share, Learn and Listen are action verbs. Action verbs at the beginning of a Tweet are like an alert. Sometimes I use all CAPS for emphasis (but that can wear thin fast). You can also make a word that isn't typically an "action" verb have action-like qualities. AND Then He Tweeted This... makes AND an "action verb" because something seems to have just happened.

Q&A
Questions are my favorite ways to tweet. Sometimes I use Q: What Is The Question of the Day A: Answer (asking and answer my own question). Answering my questions is helpful but not a conversation. I use this tactic to make specific points that benefit from sounding like a question and answer when they really aren't. This format makes lecturing sound less like lecturing (lol).

This morning I Tweeted:

gel electrophoresis? @RoswellPark Dr. Fenstermaker Explains [VIDEO]

Love this kind of question where an ACTION (visiting the link) provides the answer especially when the answer can be attained by watching a video. I also like being VERY clear about visual support so put [VIDEO} in all caps and off by itself. Do the same treatment with Infographics, Study and Report.

Questions are great ways to encourage engagement and feedback too. I ask TWITTER questions about vendors, software and ideas all the time. By "asking Twitter" I mean that I pose the question with a hashtag and see who responds.


Via Martin (Marty) Smith
AslamB's comment, October 25, 2013 3:27 AM
You're welcome Martin! :)
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5 Ecommerce Checkout Tips - How To DESIGN For More Conversions Next Year

5 Ecommerce Checkout Tips - How To DESIGN For More Conversions Next Year | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Via Martin (Marty) Smith, Seth Storey
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, October 22, 2013 12:40 PM

CureCancerStarter.org Lessons In Checkout Mechanics
We did a lot of things right with our initial design of http://www.curecancerstarter.org our crowdfunding cancer research website, but there are some "checkout mechanics" that need tuning including:

* 1,2,3 Graphic.

* Trust Marks.

* Ability To SEE what is happening. 

* Too many Steps (superfluous information requested). 

* Doesn't FEEL Secure.

 

Your ecommerce or charity donations page should be in lockdown until next year. While checkout process changes can often bring the biggest ROI, they are to be avoided this close to a major deadline like 12.25.

1,2,3 Graphic
Always MAP your checkout process and then use a different color to indicate YOU ARE HERE. This repeatable graphic is a great TRUST creator and costs NOTHING other than the design time to create it.

Trust Marks
When I use the Authorize.net Trust Mark I DON'T use their widget. Widgets allow visitors to click on the Authorize.net logo and hear all about how great they are. NO ONE clicks on that link and the overhead for carrying the JavaScript is too high. I take a picture of the logo and use that (no link). If you must link to something link to your privacy policy, but be sure to include the same graphic at the top and begin with an explanation of the Trust Mark in your copy.

SEEING What Is Happening
Our current CureCancerStarter.org checkout has a popup to save a credit card. PopUps are horrible as they destroy confidence. Confidence is lost when customers can't SEE what they've done and how it relates to the end goal. "Relates to the end goal" is why the graphical map of your checkout process is so crucial.

Too Many STEPS
We have a profile creation page in our current checkout and we aren't doing anything with that data so a BIG NO NO. Don't PROFILE your customers during checkout since you will lose half of them. Profiling should be done via incentives and email marketing WHEN you have a curators need for the data (and not before). Once I can actually USE a picture of a CureCancerStarter.org donor THEN and ONLY THEN should that information be requested.

Must FEEL Secure
Trust Marks are so common no one sees them, but boy you sure see their ABSCENCE. Why make me wonder if you are secure. Slap a logo on your checkout and write the words TRUSTED and SECURE under them. Research shows the presence of the words is valuable as it provides context to the logos AND increases trust.

When we redesign CureCancerStarter.org's checkout I will be sure to share it so we can do a BEFORE and AFTER comparison (and a real graphic designer will polish my rough drafts).

 

Seth Storey's curator insight, October 23, 2013 12:15 PM

Great tips on good checkout design

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5 Ecommerce Checkout Tips - How To DESIGN For More Conversions Next Year

5 Ecommerce Checkout Tips - How To DESIGN For More Conversions Next Year | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, October 22, 2013 12:40 PM

CureCancerStarter.org Lessons In Checkout Mechanics
We did a lot of things right with our initial design of http://www.curecancerstarter.org our crowdfunding cancer research website, but there are some "checkout mechanics" that need tuning including:

* 1,2,3 Graphic.

* Trust Marks.

* Ability To SEE what is happening. 

* Too many Steps (superfluous information requested). 

* Doesn't FEEL Secure.

 

Your ecommerce or charity donations page should be in lockdown until next year. While checkout process changes can often bring the biggest ROI, they are to be avoided this close to a major deadline like 12.25.

1,2,3 Graphic
Always MAP your checkout process and then use a different color to indicate YOU ARE HERE. This repeatable graphic is a great TRUST creator and costs NOTHING other than the design time to create it.

Trust Marks
When I use the Authorize.net Trust Mark I DON'T use their widget. Widgets allow visitors to click on the Authorize.net logo and hear all about how great they are. NO ONE clicks on that link and the overhead for carrying the JavaScript is too high. I take a picture of the logo and use that (no link). If you must link to something link to your privacy policy, but be sure to include the same graphic at the top and begin with an explanation of the Trust Mark in your copy.

SEEING What Is Happening
Our current CureCancerStarter.org checkout has a popup to save a credit card. PopUps are horrible as they destroy confidence. Confidence is lost when customers can't SEE what they've done and how it relates to the end goal. "Relates to the end goal" is why the graphical map of your checkout process is so crucial.

Too Many STEPS
We have a profile creation page in our current checkout and we aren't doing anything with that data so a BIG NO NO. Don't PROFILE your customers during checkout since you will lose half of them. Profiling should be done via incentives and email marketing WHEN you have a curators need for the data (and not before). Once I can actually USE a picture of a CureCancerStarter.org donor THEN and ONLY THEN should that information be requested.

Must FEEL Secure
Trust Marks are so common no one sees them, but boy you sure see their ABSCENCE. Why make me wonder if you are secure. Slap a logo on your checkout and write the words TRUSTED and SECURE under them. Research shows the presence of the words is valuable as it provides context to the logos AND increases trust.

When we redesign CureCancerStarter.org's checkout I will be sure to share it so we can do a BEFORE and AFTER comparison (and a real graphic designer will polish my rough drafts).

 

Seth Storey's curator insight, October 23, 2013 12:15 PM

Great tips on good checkout design

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Secrets For Revolutionaries via ScentTrail Marketing

Secrets For Revolutionaries via ScentTrail Marketing | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Creating A Revoltion is HARD
May be hard, but MOVEMENTS are powerful ideas. Campaigns are not movements. Campaigns are more about YOU than THEM. My advice is learn secrets for revolutionaries and remove US vs. THEM makreting in favor of Save The World Marketing.


Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Rescooped by Thomas Faltin from Curation, Social Business and Beyond
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How to Create Content that is Meaningful, Provocative and Keeps them Coming Back

How to Create Content that is Meaningful, Provocative and Keeps them Coming Back | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
The Internet is full of people sharing interesting things all day. From liking pictures on Facebook to retweeting cool articles, sharing is something everyone enjoys doing in one way or another. Yet receiving likes and retweets can seem impossible.

Via janlgordon
janlgordon's comment, June 18, 2013 3:01 PM
Anastasia M. Ashman Great to see you, so sorry I'm late in responding, sooooooo busy, hope you're doing well!!
Pushpa Kunasegaran's curator insight, June 18, 2013 6:24 PM

So true!

María Dolores Díaz Noguera's curator insight, November 14, 2013 6:23 AM

Amazing

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Make Awesome Infographics In 10 Easy Steps

Make Awesome Infographics In 10 Easy Steps | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
Infographic on Making Awesome & Creative infographics with 10 best ways & tools to make infographic for best marketing guide online to convert emails into sales

Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, March 11, 2013 6:23 PM

Great advice here for ALL Internet marketing.

Rescooped by Thomas Faltin from Ecom Revolution
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The Psychology of Storytelling: Why Better Stories Sell Better [How To]

The Psychology of Storytelling: Why Better Stories Sell Better [How To] | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Lifted this great piece on storytelling from Brian Yanish @Marketing Hit and strongly suggest following Brian as his Scoops and Tweets ROCK.

http://www.marketinghits.com/

http://www.twitter.com/marketinghits

http://www.scoop.it/u/brian-yanish



Via Martin (Marty) Smith
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5 Web Design Ideas From A Non-Designer

5 Web Design Ideas From A Non-Designer | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Graphic Designers ROCK
I have more than tremendous respect and admiration for graphic designers. The ability to use tools like Photoshop and Illustrator to create MAGIC is something I will always envy. I know enough to know just how magical those skills truly are, so thank you.

I would LOVE to convince gifted visual marketers of the need to fix five mistakes I see over and over, mistakes that can HARM a websites bottom line and ability to scale.

I confess to making some of these mistakes myself. Easy to do when caught up in the NEW chase. I got so I printed out this list and keep it in view so it smacks me as a reminder while creating ideas for a new design.

Despite the list being omnipresent I forgot a subscription option on CrowdFunde.com two months ago, so EASY to forget these ideas:

** Email Subscription
Any websites lifeline is the LIST of supporters and subscribers they OWN. If Google changes their algorithm and PPC goes bankrupt you can always may your own list, so making sure the ability to opt in to that list is omnipresent is a CSF (Critical Success Factor).

** Keywords In Category Names
Think, "Do we want to win that keyword," when reviewing your navigation. You may select to have your URLs rewritten to be more keyword specific, but those internal links play an important role with Google's spider and SEO so KEYWORDS are a must.

** Research Keywords
My CrowdFunde co-founder Phil Buckley asked me if I thought attorneys or lawyers would be the most searched term. "Lawyers," I answered confidently knowing I was wrong (you never win these who will win questions lol). Attorneys is the winner and by a large margin. Don't write copy to what you THINK when it is so easy to do a little research and KNOW.

** The Tricky Part To Web Analytics
Here's the rub to web metrics. They operate in a constant seesaw dance with one another. Attorneys may be the most searched, but maybe that is because the Mass Tort guys have crushed the deck in some way (have no knowledge of that only using it as an example so please don't sue me lol). When you DESIGN with numbers you design better, but be sure to ask your SEO contact where the rubs are in the numbers. Rubs are numbers that LOOK one way but actually ARE another. Trust me you NEVER want to spend the kind of time in Google Analytics knowing where the rubs are requires, so ask.

** 80/20 Rule
One Internet marketing FRACTAL we discovered is 20% of the links, traffic, pages always get 80% or more of the value. Your job is to build a flexible framework so when your managing team SEES the emerging 80/20 rule you can easily shift the presentation to favor the 20 over the 80.

Now please take these practical, money making ideas and make them beautiful and THANK YOU for your dedication to BEAUTY in design and life :). Marty


Via Martin (Marty) Smith
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Agnostic Wins - How A Rebel Army Can Still Win Despite New Google

Agnostic Wins - How A Rebel Army Can Still Win Despite New Google | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

This Haiku Deck and ScentTrail Marketing blog post captures ideas percolating from launching one of the first crowdfunding cancer research platforms (http://www.curecancerstarter.org) l last week.

One of the big Should of Had A V8 moments last week was the realization that the way the new Google set the table does not favor a rebel Rat-Tag army.

Since climbing the latter to AUTHORITY and TRUSTED status now can take years and you will have a giant pissing our your head every step of the way, better to create conversations not website and then inject your conversation into their castles via widgets, apps and white label embedding.

Can a rebel army survive when the new Google swings the machine gun so deliberately and giants are trying to knock rebels to the ground? Yes IF they THINK WEB FIRST and this post should help with that.

What about you? Do you think web first already? How did you get there? What have you changed?

 


Via Martin (Marty) Smith
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Gamify with Gamification by Design

Gamify with Gamification by Design | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
Gamification is the use of game thinking and mechanics to solve problems and engage audiences. While it can be applied to anything, I’m interested in gamifying non-game web applications, in order t...

Via Martin (Marty) Smith
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Want To Be A Great Tweeter? Create 3 Kinds of Tweets

Want To Be A Great Tweeter? Create 3 Kinds of Tweets | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it

Working with great cancer research centers on our new crowdfunding cancer research website (http://www.CureCancerStarter.org) is helping me slow down long enough to think about what works on social media. Nothing like having to explain things you do in automatic-mode to help examine marketing process.

After creating more than 20,000 Tweets I've noticed the kinds of tweets that are more likely to be shared and they fall into three groups:

* What's Happening NOW.
* Action verb tweets.

* Q&A Tweets.

NOW
The web only has one TIME and it is always NOW. Twitter is like the radio of the web. If something cool is happening NOW such as a Google Hangout or a revolution in Egypt Tweet it.

Action Verbs
See, Watch, Share, Learn and Listen are action verbs. Action verbs at the beginning of a Tweet are like an alert. Sometimes I use all CAPS for emphasis (but that can wear thin fast). You can also make a word that isn't typically an "action" verb have action-like qualities. AND Then He Tweeted This... makes AND an "action verb" because something seems to have just happened.

Q&A
Questions are my favorite ways to tweet. Sometimes I use Q: What Is The Question of the Day A: Answer (asking and answer my own question). Answering my questions is helpful but not a conversation. I use this tactic to make specific points that benefit from sounding like a question and answer when they really aren't. This format makes lecturing sound less like lecturing (lol).

This morning I Tweeted:

gel electrophoresis? @RoswellPark Dr. Fenstermaker Explains [VIDEO]

Love this kind of question where an ACTION (visiting the link) provides the answer especially when the answer can be attained by watching a video. I also like being VERY clear about visual support so put [VIDEO} in all caps and off by itself. Do the same treatment with Infographics, Study and Report.

Questions are great ways to encourage engagement and feedback too. I ask TWITTER questions about vendors, software and ideas all the time. By "asking Twitter" I mean that I pose the question with a hashtag and see who responds.


Via Martin (Marty) Smith
AslamB's comment, October 25, 2013 3:27 AM
You're welcome Martin! :)
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Community Management Around The World via Gladys Pintado (@gtpintado)

Community Management  Around The World via Gladys Pintado (@gtpintado) | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
Community - Management - Human Resources - Leadership

 

Marty - Love this Scoop.it magazine from my friend Gladys Pintado showing different ways community managers around the world approach the task of building community, one of the hardest things to do well on God's green earth :). 

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Go Beyond Blogging: How to Become a Great Storyteller

Go Beyond Blogging: How to Become a Great Storyteller | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
Learn how to become a storyteller -- not just a blogger, marketer, or generic content creator.
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Build Great SEO Friendly Mobile Websites

Build Great SEO Friendly Mobile Websites | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
15% of internet usage is done on a mobile device, and that's expected to climb to 20% by the end of 2013. Review the facts to build the best mobile site you can, whether it's a separate mobile site, a responsive site, or a combination of the two.

Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, October 6, 2013 2:58 PM

Great SEO Moz tips here about a tricky subject - how to build SEO friendly mobile websites.

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Gamification Is Dead, Long Live Gamification

Gamification Is Dead, Long Live Gamification | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
This article is about User experience and Gamification and aims to define common touch points and scenarios.

Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, March 11, 2013 9:22 PM

Great article on what to gamify in your website's User Interface (everything) and how (carefully). 

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Pinterest Marketing Strategies [graphic]

Pinterest Marketing Strategies [graphic] | Digital-News on Scoop.it today | Scoop.it
The hottest social network on the scene is Pinterest, which offers visually dynamic and interactive boards for people and businesses to bond over shared passions. Hey...even Spark & Hustle has a Pinterest board.

Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, March 9, 2013 9:29 AM

Helpful graphic defining how to use Pinterest to support your Internet marketing efforts.