How Much Does It REALLY Cost to Build a Website?
By Sarah York | | Tagged Website Resources
So, you want to build or update your website? That’s a great decision.
So, you want to build or update your website? That’s a great decision.
While having your presence felt on the web is an absolute must in the digital era, the catch lies in – the costs involved. We often get tons of queries that are along the lines of – how much does a website cost or how much does it cost to build a website?
Depending on where you look, you will get different answers which can make the process more challenging and confusing. Without further ado, let's dive in.
Hiring a website developer is one of the most common ways to build a website. However, you can always opt to use a website builder or create one directly in WordPress, the world's most popular Content Management Systems, where you can create a basic site with basic features for a low cost.
It's not always necessary to hire a web developer, but then again, going for a free alternative may not align with your business objectives either. A lot of things come into play when trying to figure out how much it costs to build a website such as:
- Domain Name
Your domain name is what people type into their browser such as https://www.google.com. Not only does it represent your brand, it is your address in the online world."
What you will be paying for:
To register a domain name for your website, you have to shell out anywhere between $9 - $14.99 per year. This earns you the rights to use the domain for one year and then must be renewed once expired. Otherwise, anyone else can purchase and use your website domain instead.
- Website Builder
A website builder is a must, regardless of whether you are a rookie or a seasoned developer. It lets you create a website just the way you want while giving you some essential website features such as Plugins, SEO tags, and so on.
WordPress is often the platform of choice for new website owners due to the endless features and possibilities it offers. If you want to get complete control over your website, using an effective website builder and CMS is the only way forward.
Alternatively, you can use other website builders like Webware’s All-in-One Solution, which takes care of all your website needs and helps you get up and running quickly.
- Web Hosting
Web hosting refers to where all of your website content is stored to make it accessible to people online. Usually, this is handled by an external firm that allows you to 'rent space' on their servers to make sure that your site is available to users 24/7.
What are the different types of web hosting services?
Here are a lot of different web hosting services you can opt for depending on your overall business needs.
Shared Hosting
$2.49 – $15 per month
VPS Hosting
$20 – $80 per month
Dedicated Hosting
$80 – $300 per month
Cloud Hosting
$4.50 – $240 per month
WordPress Hosting
$4.99 – $830 per month
Blog Hosting
$2 to $20 per month
How much web hosting will cost for you depends on several factors such as the size of your website, the number of custom features it contains, the average number of monthly visitors you expect, and more.
- SSL Certificates
SSL or Secure Sockets Layer is a security protocol that provides privacy, authentication, and integrity to your internet communications.
SSL certificates are an important part of websites as they secure data transfers, logins, personal information, and credit card transactions. With an SSL certificate on your website, a visitor's experience is more secure and will encourage them to stay on your website longer, making them more likely to convert.
If you've ever noticed the little green lock in the URL bar for certain domains, that is an SSL certificate. This is a tell-tale sign of building user trust and is an absolute must when handling financial transactions or requesting personal information.
Last, but certainly not least, Google considers SSL certificates as an important ranking factor. On top of that, search engines are cracking down on websites that are 'not secure' so it is definitely something to consider.
What does all this tell you?
Without an SSL certificate, your potential customers may have a difficult time finding or even accessing your website. This will affect the traffic you receive and therefore, profitability.
How much does an SSL certificate cost?
SSL Certificates can come free of cost and can go up to $450 per year. The average price range can be somewhere around $50.
All Things Considered, Here's How Much a Website Costs:
Depending on your needs, basic web development can cost you anywhere from $100 to $500 to $3000 and if you're looking to add more premium features, this price can easily increase by a few thousand dollars. However, if you just need something simple then you will be able to keep this cost down.
The next set of costs to consider are for your domain name, web hosting, and SSL certificate which costs about $150 per year on average. If you decide to go with a website builder, these will generally have the cost of web hosting and SSL certificates included so you will just need to purchase your domain name separately.
As your website and business expand, so will your online presence which can lead to some additional enhancements to improve functionality. It is important to assess your long-term goals and future needs so you can budget accordingly.
Webware Recommends:
- Set a realistic budget for your website before you decide to spend on various premium themes or plugins.
- Keep the costs low when you are just starting out and settle for a website builder for quick and easy content management.
- Create a checklist to determine whether you need a web developer for something custom or a website builder for something more simple.
- Think about potential features you might need in the future to make sure your website can handle them.
- Handling everything yourself may not be the best option for you so it might be worthwhile to consider an easy-to-use website builder that will give you the flexibility and peace of mind you need.
Need assistance in building your website? Get expert guidance at 1-844-WEBWARE.
How to Respond to Negative Reviews [And Turn Tides In Your Favor]
By Sarah York | | Tagged blogpopup, Website Resources
The other day, our team was discussing the best shows ever made. We all unanimously voted for Breaking Bad. And why not? It has an IMDB rating of 9.5 for crying out loud. On Google, it is rated 4.9 with 14361 ratings. Yet, some people have given it a lower rating.
The other day, our team was discussing the best shows ever made. We all unanimously voted for Breaking Bad. And why not? It has an IMDB rating of 9.5 for crying out loud. On Google, it is rated 4.9 with 14361 ratings. Yet, some people have given it a lower rating.
“I would rather eat my toes than watch this again,” wrote a viewer. You bet, we were equally shocked.
Moral of the story - not everyone is easy to please.
Second moral of the story – online reviews are gaining traction.
In a 2016 report from Pew Research Center, 82 percent of American adults said that they sometimes or always read online reviews when making new purchases. Over two-thirds of the regular review readers also believed these to be “generally accurate.”
We have additional data to prove the importance of reviews – both negative and positive.
- 93% of customers will read reviews of local businesses to determine its quality.
- Reviews account for about 15% of the method Google uses to rank local businesses.
- 67% of B2B buyers want to see a mix of both positive and negative reviews when checking out a business.
- Seven out of 10 consumers changed their opinion about a brand after the company replied to a review.
- 82% of customers actively seek out negative reviews.
While there are more positive reviews than negative, why do people focus on the latter?
The answer is simple. Five-star reviews can easily be faked ...and force people to look at reviews with fewer stars to get a more genuine response.
The bad news - even one negative review can impact your business for the worse and drive potential customers away. It can undo all the benefits you received from your positive reviews.
The good news – a Harvard Business Review study found that ratings increased when businesses responded to customer reviews.
This is why, apart from setting a goal to get more positive reviews, you need to know how to respond to negative reviews.
Here’s the secret sauce to help you get it right every single time.
- Think Of The People Who Will Read It
The negative reviews are often out there to be read by your potential customers. They will scrutinize each line and you will never know which line or word will influence their buying decision.
Reply in such a way that all the readers form the opinion that your firm or business is dedicated to serving customers in the best manner. Their satisfaction is your prime focus. Show that you are committed to improving their experience.
Pro tip: Before responding publicly, respond to your customers privately over an email or a call, or invite them to solve the matter in person. This increases the chance of them changing their review and rating.
- Constantly Monitor Your Reviews
Thinking of how to respond to negative reviews on Google? Do you struggle with responding to all of your negative reviews on other platforms as well? This is where Online Reputation Management tools (ORM tools) can help you.
You can use them to monitor various online platforms and respond to negative reviews quickly. This is important because customers whose complaints get handled in less than 5 minutes are likely to make a future purchase from your business. If you don't say anything or wait too long to respond, this will only annoy your customers and get them to turn away from you forever. A timely response means you care for your customers. Period.
- Keep Calm and Handle It
Regardless of the outcome, always acknowledge the problem at hand. Without this, the customer may feel like their concerns are not being recognized which can escalate the situation. The rule of the thumb is to stay positive.
Start by thanking them for bringing this issue to your attention and proceed to offer them a resolution with a sincere apology. Anyone who sees the complaint will take into account how positively you handled the situation which will go a long way to improving your company's online reputation.
Pro Tip: Make sure you have a game plan ready before responding. Keep a database of positive responses on hand for anyone to respond with on behalf of your team.
- Be Genuine to a Fault
The first step to addressing a negative review is to understand your customers' point of view by putting yourself in their shoes. Ask them the details of what went wrong and what steps you can take to avoid a similar situation in the future.
Even if the matter is trivial or it is just a misunderstanding, showing customers that you genuinely care, will help your cause in winning their confidence. Be empathetic, and find out what bothered them with clear and succinct communication. And most importantly, be professional, helpful and objective.
Pro Tip: You can also sign the reply with a name to show customers that they are talking to a real person from your company.
- Offer A Solution
This has already been covered in previous points but we are mentioning it again because it's very important. Offering customers an immediate remedy or quick solution can improve their happiness in no time at all and can help end the review thread on a positive note from the customer.
There are many ways to offer a solution based on the situation at hand. If they are unhappy with a specific person from your business, let them know you will look into the matter. If they had an issue with your product, offer them a refund or a discount on their next purchase. If they received poor customer service, offer them a sincere apology with a gift card. At the end of the day, winning back a disgruntled customer is worth more than a few dollars in the long run!
The Wrap
Trying to pretend that a negative review does not exist will do nothing but make a bad situation worse. By making sure you respond to them personally in a timely manner, there is a good chance you can save yourself from losing a valuable customer while displaying your outstanding customer service. Show people that you are a business who cares.
TLDR:
- Negative reviews are not always bad for your business.
- Responding to each negative review is important
- Keep a list of responses handy
- Be prompt, professional, and positive while responding.
- Show that you are authentic
HOW TO BE A GOOD WEB DESIGN CUSTOMER
By Gary Bury | | Tagged Website Resources
If you’ve been approaching web design agencies or freelancers with a view to getting your first website or a revamp of your current one, you might be worried about going with the wrong company.
If you’ve been approaching web design agencies or freelancers with a view to getting your first website or a revamp of your current one, you might be worried about going with the wrong company. Will they create your vision properly? Will they abandon you halfway through the job and leave you with an unfinished, non-working website? Or will they be a nightmare to work with?
These are all valid fears, but being a nightmare to work with works both ways. You want a great website that hits all the sweet spots and brings in lots of new business. Well, it helps if you’re a good web design customer, too. You might think it’s down to the web designer to do what you tell them – that the customer’s always right, etc., but this won’t do you any favors and it certainly won’t get the best out of your partnership.
So, how can you be a good web design customer and not a nightmare? Here are a few tips.
Don’t Let Your First Question Be: “How Much Does a Website Cost?”
Yes, of course you want to know how much a website’s going to cost. But until the designer knows the scope and extent of the work, they can’t give you an accurate estimate. Have a look through their portfolio to see who their clients are and if their sites are similar to what you need. This way, you’ll not only see if they can undertake a site on the scale you’re after. If their portfolio is full of fashion brands and you’re an accountant, you might not be the best fit for each other.
Once you’ve found a few designers you like the look of, let them know the kind of site you’re looking for along with your budget. They’ll let you know if that’s something they can work with. You wouldn’t expect a decorator to know how much they should charge to decorate your house until they’ve seen exactly what it is you want done, would you? It’s the same with web design.
Have a Good Idea of What You’re Looking For
Web designers aren’t mind readers. Although you might not know exactly what you want, it’ll be helpful to have some idea of sites you like or dislike. Also include info on why you like or dislike them.
There’s a good chance you’ll be sent a questionnaire to fill in and there’s also a good chance it will be long and daunting. But fill it in as completely and with as much detail as you can. It’s a key document that will help your designer know the type of site you’re after, design- and functionality-wise.
Make a List
Most small businesses need a small site. You can go a long way to becoming a good web design customer by listing the pages you need, for example: a home page, an about page, a contact form, a services page, a features page, and your terms and conditions. Just list the pages you think you’ll need, and you’re well on your way to a proper spec.
Write Some Copy
The number one thing on any website is the words. Cast your fancy graphics and transitions aside, because people will not glean anything from your website without reading the words. Heed this advice: copy comes before design. So, draft some words, start at your homepage and write down what you want to say. If that’s too hard (because copywriting is hard) then try the about page – write about yourself, what do you want to say?
If you’re stuck, then start with the easy stuff and write down what you want to say on your contact form – what do the field labels say? Every little nugget of copy helps the designer get a better understanding of what you want.
Give the Web Designer What They’ve Requested
For you to be a good web design customer and your web designer to do their job properly, you need to give them exactly what they’ve asked for and how they’ve asked for it. For example, if you’ve been asked to provide large hi-res images in a Dropbox link, don’t send a Word document embedded with small compressed images.
Also, don’t just dump everything on them and disappear. Answer their queries promptly and let them have anything else they need, such as copy and images as and when they ask.
Don’t Ask for Free Major Changes After It’s Complete
Your site’s finished and you decide you don’t like blue after all and you want it to be more pink. A few tweaks to get your site exactly how you want it is fine, but with a nod to the decorating analogy above, you wouldn’t expect your decorator to repaint your house pink for free, after you’d asked them to paint it blue, would you?
Don’t Expect to be Number One on Google the Next Day
If you’ve chosen a decent web designer (which you will have done if you’ve read this post covering questions to ask your web designer), they’ll have built you a user-friendly, accessible site with fast-loading images, etc., which are all things that make Google happy.
There’s a lot involved with SEO (Search Engine Optimization) that might be out of their scope (optimized content, for example), but you can ask at the beginning how they can help with this and what you can expect. Just don’t expect miracles.
These are just a few ways you can make your web designer’s job easier and make you a good web design customer. A good working relationship makes things easier for everyone and leaves everyone happy.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Gary Bury
Gary Bury is co-founder and CEO of Timetastic, an independent and profitable web app for managing time off work, used by thousands of companies around the world.
Article Source: www.smallbusinessbonfire.com
Originally Posted on: Jan 10, 2021
5 Email Marketing Mistakes Small Businesses Make and How to Fix Them
By Chuks Chukwuemeka | | Tagged Website Resources
Email marketing is one of the digital marketing strategies used by small businesses to generate leads and drive more sales.
Email marketing is one of the digital marketing strategies used by small businesses to generate leads and drive more sales. 73% of millennials prefer communications from businesses to come via email.
While some record a lot of success with it, others don’t. Businesses that don’t have digital marketing experts to help them with email marketing may struggle.
If your business isn’t having success with email marketing, this article should help. Here are five email marketing mistakes small businesses make and how to fix them.
Let’s first look at the basics.
How does email marketing help small businesses with their marketing? Email marketing:
- Builds trust and strong relationships with customers through frequent helpful emails
- Cuts down on advertising costs with a large email list
- Offers solutions to problems because it understands the pain points of the target audience
Let’s go to the common mistakes.
#1. Not analyzing email campaigns using A/B Testing
You may have launched different email campaigns and never bothered to analyze your results to evaluate if you met your goals. In email marketing, the only way to improve your results is to analyze the success of your campaigns.
Assessing how your audience reacts to your emails when they land in their inbox is key.
How to fix it
Use an A/B Testing feature to analyze various campaigns you launched, and the results related to your marketing goals. Email marketing software like SendX has a feature that allows you to test how your subscribers react to your subject line, content, call to action button, etc.
#2. Lack of personalization in emails
How does it feel to receive an email with the sender not addressing you by your name?
Sometimes you might see it as spam. And that’s how some of your audience may react when you send them emails without personalizing them. Occasionally, they may immediately trash it (or even block you) – even though they willingly signed up to receive your emails.
That means they haven’t given you the chance to convert them into buyers.
How to fix it
For a small business that has a blog and acquires subscribers through sign-up forms, ensure you create a field for first name. That way, your audience will enter their first name when signing up.
Also, be sure to check that your message is inserting the first name correctly by sending yourself a test email. Don’t skip this!
#3. Sending emails without segmentation
If you don’t segment your email list, you’re likely to send emails to a person who didn’t subscribe to a particular list. That’s annoying and will turn some people off.
How to fix it
Email marketing software like HubSpot Marketing Hub has the segmentation feature. Use it to categorize your subscribers according to the list they signed up for.
#4. Adding a broken link
When you launch email campaigns, you may add a link that will send your subscribers to another page. Sometimes those links are broken and a customer will get a 404 error (page not found).
How to fix it
Check any link you add to your email campaign to be sure it is working.
#5. Forgetting a call to action button
Call to action buttons are important for your subscribers to convert to sales. If it’s missing, your subscribers may find it difficult to understand what you want them to do.
How to fix it
Use a bold, clear, and simple call to action button telling your subscribers what you want them to do. An example could be “Learn more here” or “Claim your discount now.”
Also, be sure to place it in an obvious location where it will be visible.
Email marketing can help you grow your small business – but only if you do it right.
The mistakes discussed here stop small businesses from seeing results. Implement the solutions offered the next time you launch an email campaign to improve your email marketing.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Chuks Chukwuemeka
Chuks Chukwuemeka is a Content Creator, Blogger and Digital Marketer. He’s the founder of Depreneurdigest, a blog that focuses on helping online businesses succeed. He specializes on providing consultancy services to small businesses on how to grow their online presence through blogging.
Article Source: www.carolroth.com
HOW SOCIAL MEDIA AND BLOGS HELP IN BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT?
By Rachel Summers | | Tagged Website Resources
You may have thought of social media as a passing fad, but it’s clear that it’s now going nowhere. Businesses everywhere are now looking to social media to help spread the word about what they do.
You may have thought of social media as a passing fad, but it's clear that it is not. Businesses everywhere are now looking to social media to help spread the word about what they do. Can social media and blogs help with business development? Here’s how you can use them.
Develop a relationship with your audience
The communications you put out on social media don’t happen in a vacuum. Whenever you make a post, you’re starting a conversation with your audience. It’s the easiest way to get talking to your customers and really find out what they want. Customers also appreciate when companies respond to their queries online too, so you can build up goodwill this way.
Business development is cost effective with social media
Any business can get started on social media, as it’s totally free to create an account. It won’t cost you a thing to keep posting and interacting with your followers. When it comes to getting the word out there, there’s pretty much no cheaper option. There’s a reason why start ups love using social media.
Even if you do want to advertise, most social media advertising packages are particularly low cost options. You really can get the word out there, without breaking the bank.
There are online tools to help you
Even if social media looks easier, getting the balance right can be difficult. Luckily, there are lots of tools online that will help you get the most out of your online presence. Here are some good services to get you started:
- Blogs and Resources: These blogs offer all kinds of helpful advice on social media, including how to deal with negative feedback and how to use certain social networks for business.
- Wordstream: This cost effective service helps you get the most out of your advertising, and helps you generate more leads through social media and blogging.
Social media has a huge reach
There’s no bigger audience than that on social media. On Facebook alone, it’s estimated that 65% of US adults are using it. When you think of it like that, it’s almost compulsory for you to create and maintain an account. You’ll never have a bigger audience, so be sure to take advantage of it.
Share more about what you do
Want to reduce some of the mystery about your business? give your customers a glimpse behind the curtain? Then social media lets you do that. You can share as much as you’d like with your audience, encouraging them to trust you and buy from you. Getting your brand known to the world by social media and blogs are an easy way to see business development.
Social media posts are indexed by Google, so you can get more information out there about what you’re doing.
Social media is everywhere! Almost no one would be caught dead without their smartphone these days. That means that they’re constantly connected to their social media accounts, 24/7. You can take advantage of this by making sure you’re posting regularly. That way, whenever they open up the Twitter app when waiting for the bus, they’re more likely to be exposed to your work potentially leading to increased business development.
As you can see, social media is vital to a modern online presence. Maintain accounts correctly, and you can reach out to more people than ever before. Give it a try for yourself, and you’ll see how much your audience grows.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Rachel Summers
Author at Exodus Digital Marketing.
Article Source: http://www.exodus-digital-marketing.co.uk/
THREE WAYS TO USE INSTAGRAM STORY HIGHLIGHTS TO GROW YOUR BUSINESS
By Melinda Viegas | | Tagged Website Resources
Ever since Instagram launched in 2010, it has steadily scaled from a photo-sharing app to a marketing platform.
Ever since Instagram launched in 2010, it has steadily scaled from a photo-sharing app to a marketing platform. With the introduction of Instagram Stories, IGTV, Q & A Instagram Live, new profile view, video calling, shoppable posts, push notifications, and insights along with several other new features, it is clear that Instagram is turning into the most powerful marketing tool for businesses. In 2020, Instagram released nineteen innovative features to improve user experience and engage more customers.
One feature that was introduced in 2016 and has gained a significant amount of momentum has been Insta-stories with over five-hundred million daily active users. While the idea of Instagram stories was picked up from Snapchat, Instagram has added augmented filters, question poll, GIF stickers, hashtags, music, emoji slider, and a lot of other improvements to increase interactivity and bring in more sales. You even have the option to add multiple photos or videos from your camera roll to your Insta-story. Stories disappear after twenty-four hours, but they can live permanently on your profile through Instagram Story Highlights.
What are Instagram Story Highlights?
Instagram Highlights are archived photos or stories that you can pin to your profile. In other words, once your story vanishes after twenty-four hours, they become a part of your archived gallery. You can either create a Highlight by adding stories from your archived gallery or save it directly as a Highlight after you upload a story. Note that they will remain for your followers to see until you choose to remove them.
Instagram Story Highlights gives clarity to your profile by allowing users or consumers to identify the personality of your brand or business. Brands use story highlights to feature their events and promotions, showcase their products or services, and so on. This long-story format has helped many brands draw in more consumers and build a stronger connection with followers. However, if you want to take full advantage of Instagram stories and integrate them into your digital marketing strategies, you need to be aware of all that Instagram Story Highlights has to offer.
Here are a few ways you can effectively use Instagram Story Highlights to represent your brand in the best possible manner.
Tip #1: Categorize your highlights.
When a new user visits your profile, they will likely view your Instagram Story Highlights after reading your bio. To make a great first impression on them and potential customers, it is advisable to organize your content into distinct categories by creating multiple story highlights. For instance, if you have a catering business, you can create separate highlights for your recipes, recent events, client reviews. By utilizing Highlights to categorize your stories, it allows you to display your most valuable content to your followers and gives you the freedom to set the tone for your brand image.
Tip #2: Keep a short name for your story highlights.
By naming each story highlight, you are summarizing exactly what you do or offer in a few letters. Ideally, the entire name or title of your highlight should fit within the area. However, as it is a small space, there is a limit on the number of characters your highlight can have. Ideally, it should be up to fifteen characters long, but if you want it to be fully displayed, keep your highlight name around ten characters.
Tip #3: Use a custom cover image for each highlight.
If you want to come across as a professional brand and set yourself apart from the competition, consider uploading a custom highlight cover to give your profile a cohesive look. Make sure your cover image is not only eye-catching but also in line with your brand identity. You can either design a cover on Instagram or use more resourceful editing apps or software. To establish uniformity, try to create similar covers for your highlights; it could be adding a standard color or background, typography, image, etc.
While Instagram is continually rolling out new features and updates to help business owners boost their brand, there are other digital marketing strategies such as SEO, email marketing, content management, social media promotion that can raise brand awareness and fuel business growth.
As a leading provider of digital marketing services in North America, Webware.io has helped hundreds of small businesses successfully navigate the digital landscape and create a powerful online presence. By providing all the tools, services, and support in one place, your business gets everything it needs to grow.
To learn more about our services, check out our website, or book a growth session to learn more about how our team can help.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Melinda Viegas
Article Source: www.webware.io
9 SIGNS YOU NEED HELP WITH YOUR WEBSITE
By Sarah York | | Tagged blogpopup, Website Resources
If you’re a small business owner that cares about your success, then you probably already have a website. It’s important to understand that with so much competition online, merely having a website is not enough.
If you’re a small business owner that cares about your success, then you probably already have a website. It’s important to understand that with so much competition online, merely having a website is not enough. The key question is whether your website is actually working for your business. Furthermore, how much available time do you have to maintain your website without affecting your day-to-day operations?
If your website is not bringing in enough traffic or you spend too much time trying to figure out how you can be successful online, then you probably need some help. Here are 10 most common signs that you need help with your website:
- Your website is not mobile responsive. Even worse, you’re not sure what mobile responsiveness is. You want to make sure that your website is designed to fit all devices so you can provide a consistent user experience without sacrificing results.
80% of online users in 2019 used mobile devices when searching the internet. On top of that, if your website is not designed for mobile you will notice a big drop in your search engine rankings or might not even get ranked at all. If you’re interested in learning more about how your website’s responsiveness could be affecting your ability to be found on search engines, you should speak to an expert immediately. - You know SEO is important, but don’t know how to get it to work for you. If you don’t know how to utilize Search Engine Optimization tools, this is a sign that you need help. SEO is an essential component of a successful and effective online strategy. Search engines, like Google, run algorithms that measure a number of criteria on your website when deciding where to rank it in the search results. Some of the things that affect your SEO include keyword selection, website content, mobile-friendliness, internal & external links, search relevance, site structure, location, and the overall quality (load speed, duplicate pages, broken links, etc.).
If you can’t find your own website online, how do you expect your customers to find it? If you have trouble finding your website online, without typing in your business name, then that means there is plenty of room to optimize it. Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is an essential website practice that makes it easier for search engines, like Google, to find you. There are a number of online practices and strategies, which will affect your website’s SEO. Being able to implement and execute these practices effectively will drastically improve your ability to be found online.
- Your website has little to no traffic. If your website has very little or declining traffic, then that is a clear sign that you need to adjust your current website strategy. Even in heavily saturated industries, there are always opportunities to improve your rankings by trying out new keywords and increasing links. A little help from SEO experts can go a long way.
Sure, there are tons of places where you can go online to learn about setting up your website's SEO, but how much time do you really have to become an SEO expert? Developing a high-quality SEO strategy for your business is a complex process. You need to make sure that your content development, website design, and overall brand story work together to engage audiences. If you feel like ongoing SEO planning and maintenance is outside of your comfort, you will likely need some help. - Your website visitors are not moving past your home page. If your website has a high bounce rate, your visitors are either clicking the “back” button to leave your site, closing the tab, or going dormant. In any case, your website is not captivating them which could be due to a few things:
- The keywords your audience is searching for does not fit your content.
- Your content and messaging is confusing or difficult to understand.
- Your website is difficult to navigate.
- You do not have the right CTAs (Calls to Action)
- Your website is attracting the wrong traffic.
Whatever the reason, if your website visitors aren’t moving past the initial landing page, now is a good time for a general website review.
- Your website isn’t updated regularly. Regular updates help search engines understand that you have an active website with relevant content. If your website does not contain keyword rich content, a regularly updated blog, and consistent updates, you will likely see a decline in traffic which will affect your search engine rankings. If you’re unsure of the type of content that you need to add to your website, how to edit or add pages, or don’t even have time to manage a blog, you probably need to speak to an expert to get you on track.
- Your website has 404 error pages. You might have seen these messages in the past when you visit a link or a website page and see a message that the URL doesn’t exist anymore. This is either because the page was moved or deleted. This can be an annoying and frustrating experience for visitors who are navigating your website and searching for information. Search engines like Google do not like 404 errors either. This will be reflected in the search engine results page (SERP) with a low rank. A review for 404 error messages and broken links should be a regular part of your website maintenance plan.
- Your website was designed by you. This might have been an important first step in establishing your initial online presence, but successful companies understand how their website can be used as an effective tool to generate business. A well designed website will help you drive more traffic, improve the user experience, and deliver new leads for your business. If your website doesn't look professional, you could be turning away valuable customers.
Professional web designers don’t just create a beautiful website. They understand the psychology behind how a user behaves when they arrive on your website. The chances are that if you’re busy running the day to day operations of your business, you do not have the time nor the expertise to manage your website properly along with all the other optimization activities needed . - Your website doesn’t have an online marketing plan. Even if your online marketing strategy is not complex, this is still something that needs to be carefully considered. Start by asking yourself the following questions:
- What is the goal of your website?
- What do you want your customers and prospects to do when they get to your website?
- How is the user experience going to guide the customer to achieve that desired outcome?
- Why should they care?
- More importantly, how are you going to get them to your website?
If these questions are not keeping you up at night, maybe they should be. Website design, blogging, having a social media presence, email marketing, reputation management, as well as the initial and ongoing development of your SEO, are all things that need to be considered in your online marketing plan. Many of these marketing channels can be executed for free, but can be daunting if you’re trying to manage them all on your own. You also do not want to be engaging with multiple vendors in order to understand what’s working and what’s not working for you. Without a plan for finding new customers, continuing to keep customers, and converting online traffic, your website may not be as effective as you expected. - You don’t know exactly who your ideal customers are. If you don't have a good idea of who your best customers are, you probably should. Not only will this help you create better content to engage them, you will be able to add other elements such as promotions and videos to better communicate with them. This will help your website and business stay top-of-mind to keep people coming back.
At the end of the day, your website should be contributing to your business. If any of the 10 signs mentioned stand out for your, then it is likely that you could benefit from some help with your website. Making the decision to update your online presence could be one of the most valuable decisions you could ever make for your business.
Not sure where to start? Webware.io offers a complete tool-kit to help businesses navigate the internet. Your toolkit includes: a content website or an ecommerce website, blog plus all the digital services your website needs to thrive online.
5 Ways to Prep Your eStore for the Holiday Crush
By Mike Metz | | Tagged Website Resources
There are seemingly countless things to feel uncertain about right now, but we can be sure of one thing – online shopping will continue to be a big part of most Americans’ lives.
There are seemingly countless things to feel uncertain about right now, but we can be sure of one thing – online shopping will continue to be a big part of most Americans’ lives. We can also be sure that the holiday shopping this year will be unlike any we’ve seen before. Is your online store ready? Whether you’re peddling pet clothes, furniture, or even medical essentials, you’re going to see a surge in orders as the pandemic holiday crush arrives. Here’s some easy-to-digest advice on shoring up your online store before the winter rush.
Make It Easy, Make It Clean
Regardless of how long your ecommerce solution has been live, there is probably an opportunity to smooth some rough edges. Double check to ensure your order process is simple, quick, and seamless. Go through the process yourself to make sure the road to check out is less than four clicks. Make sure all the information your customer needs, like photos, specs, and reviews are skimmable on one page. Choose the product, add delivery or pickup address, billing information, and you should be at the end.
If you’re currently asking customers to sign up for an account or email list, or bouncing them in and out of their cart every time they add an item, you’re likely to lose a chunk of potential sales. Make setting up an account or opting in to emails a one-click situation at the end of the process.
After you have done a gut check, check the data. At what point are customers bouncing from your site or abandoning their cart? Give those bits a closer look, and if the issue isn’t obvious you may want a review by a user experience designer.
Reassure Your Customer at Checkout
There are some simple ways to reassure your customers that you’re legit even if you’re a new brand.. PayPal and Visa both offer checkout options which you can add to your website. These payments are processed and backed by huge companies, ones which most people recognize immediately. Additionally, computer security companies like Norton can provide digital seals for your checkout page, as can the Better Business Bureau. Small logos and confirmations of steps taken can lead to a trusted relationship between the user and the checkout process.
Consider a Subscription Service
Everything from household goods to whiskey flights have adopted the subscription-based model. Monster brands like Amazon rely heavily on committed monthly refills of goods like toilet paper and soap, while smaller companies like coffee and pet food providers are starting to see the benefits of subscribed customers. Not only can it lower the costs for both you and your customers, it can help predict future income and give your business valuable insight into your own inventory needs.
Upgrade Your Server Capacity
We’ve all been there. You go through all the steps to grab your favorite on-sale item, get to the check out, and are hit with an error message. It’s not uncommon these days for websites to collapse under increased demand. Some customers may try a second or third time, but many will give up after the first. Check with your website host and see if there’s other tiers you can upgrade your service to. Often you can pay more to accommodate increased data usage and processing power, and you can quickly cover that cost by creating a shopping experience your customers are happy to repeat.
Provide Support During the Holiday
Ok, so you’ve made sure your warehouse is stocked, upgraded your server, and provided a seamless checkout process for your customers. No matter how much work you put in, something will eventually go wrong. Be sure to provide access to customer service for your customers, whether that’s an easy-to-find phone number, a designated chat bot on the website, or contact information provided with the order confirmation email. Even if something goes wrong, a helpful and eager solution can actually enhance the customer’s perception of your business.
Who’s Doing It Right?
There are plenty of companies, both large and small, who are getting it right when it comes to e-commerce. Their websites look awesome, their checkout processes are seamless, and they have excellent customer support. If you’re looking for some inspiration, take a gander at websites like Casper, Chewy, Warby Parker, and our client, Accu-Chek. While some require a few more steps to customize the order (Warby needs your prescription, Chewy has a bespoke subscription service), they all offer amazing customer service, simple pathways to checkout, and easy-to-navigate websites.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Mike Metz
Mike Metz is the co-founder and CEO of FATFREE, a full-service digital marketing agency providing lean solutions for businesses of all sizes. Since founding the agency in 2005, Mike has developed a talented team of innovators that guide clients in deploying digital strategies that have a meaningful impact on business.
Article Source: www.smallbizdaily.com
Originally Posted on: November 12, 2020
Marketing During Uncertainty: What Strategies You Need to Make Your Business Succeed
By Heidi Cohen | | Tagged Website Resources
How do you market during uncertainty to keep your business going?
How do you market during uncertainty to keep your business going?
When your business faces unpredictable health and economic challenges how do you do handle
- Lost revenue, longer sales cycles, and delayed payments,
- Reduced budgets including employee layoffs, and
- Less resource and supply chain availability and/or obstacles.
But don’t worry-you’ve got this!
Because major corporations, competitors and substitute offerings face the same problems.
So let’s examine the strategies you can use to navigate this uncertainty. As a result, your business keeps going, maintains brand visibility, and builds the resilience and foundation for future growth.
Use Data To Inform Your Marketing During Uncertainty
Living in the most connected world to date, global events and trends have an impact on your business and marketing regardless of your focus or geographical footprint.
Macro Trends Create Uncertainty For Businesses And Individuals Globally
COVID-19 has created health and economic uncertainty so people face very real health concerns that can result in death. Further, we lack the data to predict this virus’s longevity or chance of recurrence. To slow its spread, non-essential businesses are closed.
At a macro-level regardless of business focus or location, you face 3 major trends:
- The longevity of COVID-19 and its spread across geographic locations remains unknown. On average, people believe that the impact of COVID-19 will last over 6 months globally. Businesses and schools are work remotely and/or cancel operations. As a result consumers, cancel, restrict and/or redirect spending. This accounts for roughly 70% of the US economy.
- The start of a US economic slowdown, the economy shrank by an annualized 4.8% in 1Q2020. Since the coronavirus creates rapid changes in demand, this decline could reach 40% on an annualized basis.
- The move to school and work-from-home, and to online buying and streaming entertainment accelerates digital transformation.
To keep your business going think scrappy, lean startup. Study the current playing field for your business, its product categories, and broader markets to find opportunities and problems.
Look for new ways to work in current unfilled needs and/or other ways to focus your business resources.
Also involve people from across your organization in this process to get insights based on their skillsets.
Actionable Marketing During Uncertainty Tips:
- Analyze global business markets for potential opportunities and risks.
- Examine major players across categories since their global reach yields greater internal information. Also assess different industries for insights and work approaches.
- Reassess your competitive field across channels to determine their approach.
Micro Consumer Trends Create Business And Marketing Uncertainty
COVID-19 has a complex and uneven impact on consumer behavior.
Because people:
- Moved to shelter-in-place with family or safer locations causing unusual buying demand.
- Stocked up on food and other goods. This created short-term shortages and distribution issues, not manufacturing or resource problems.
Consumer increased purchases of:
- Foods, prepared and made-from-scratch due to people only eating at home.
- Household essentials.
- Entertainment to replace live options.
- Exercise equipment supplement gyms and other outdoor activities.
The impact of COVID-19 on oil prices acts as a broad economic indicator. Since global oil prices dropped to the lowest levels since the 1970s.
Because when sheltering-in-place, people don’t:
- Commute to work and school.
- Drive to recreational activities and socializing.
- Do non-essential shopping.
- Travel for work or vacations. This also hurts related industries like airlines, hotels and business conferences.
Short-term behavior changes include:
- Increased school and work-from-home. While businesses changed to remote work quickly, they may re-think on-site jobs in the future.
- More healthy habits including family time, food preparation and exercise.
But these changes lack:
- Dedicated work spaces, technology and software, and work-grade internet connectivity when everyone is home 24/7.
- Support systems including schools, childcare and eldercare.
- Time and/or space to decompress increasing mental fatigue and/or anger.
Your marketing during uncertainty must answer:
How will my business meet new or unfilled needs from these changes?
Actionable Marketing During Uncertainty Tips:
- Plan for 3 distinct business phases:
- Active COVID-19 sheltering-in-place
- Slow emergence from COVID-19
- New “Normal”
RECOMMENDED READING:
Marketing During Uncertainty: 5 Tactics To Keep Your Business Going For The Long Term
When facing health and economic uncertainty, marketers have a responsibility to:
- Bring in sales to cover short-term costs to keep their businesses open,
- Take care employees, customers and community, and
- Keep their businesses and brands visible and viable for the long-term
During the current crisis and beyond allocate scarce resources to support your audience and improve and/or expand existing assets.
So you prove marketing’s ability to drive profitable revenues . In the process, you lay the foundation for future business growth and an expanded marketing role going forward.
- Assess Current Business Financials And Resources
With senior management and other departments, examine your business’s actual sales, costs and resources on hand NOW. Also track outstanding receivables and unpaid bills.
Revenue:
- Understand your cashflow. Examine the source of current revenues and percentage of sales closed and collected. Check the past 30 days and recent weeks to show true sales during this period.
- Analyze each product and/or service for on-going demand. Determine the resources needed to create, market and distribute them. Also, assess customers’ ability to pay.
- Identify products and/or services with reduced demand. Find the cause. Include lack of short-term need, limited internal resources, distribution problems, and/or ability to pay.
- Assess customers and leads. Start with your best customers. They account for most of your profitable sales. Examine them by different segments to see trends.
Expenses:
- Reduce unnecessary costs without hurting current and/or future growth.
- Keep employees working even with reduced hours or salary.
- Provide necessary support to communities where you do business, and
- Adjust marketing spend to meet audience needs and stay visible.
Supply chain for a global, national and/or local changes:
- Track inputs for products and/or services. What do you have in stock? Do suppliers still have resources? Do you have cash to buy them? Is geographic location an issue? Do you anticipate problems getting inputs?
- Check distribution for products and/or services. Are stores and/or other outlets closed or out-of-business? Do substitute distribution channels exist? Can sales move online?
Cashflow opportunities:
- Assess pricing changes. But measure fully-loaded costs before cutting prices.
- Add other forms of payments. Include online and limited touch options. Also, change terms for key customers.
- Renegotiate expenses including rent, resources and/or salaries.
- Assess co-marketing and/or barter opportunities.
RECOMMENDED READING:
- Help Leadership Show The Path Forward During Current Challenges
While more trusted than government leaders and officials, your CEO is less trusted than your technical experts and regular employees. (2020 Edelman Trust Barometer)
To build trust during the COVID-19 uncertainty, encourage your senior leaders to speak truthfully and transparently without sugar-coating or misrepresenting facts. Further, they should propose achievable solutions with realistic deadlines.
During COVID-19, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has shown this type of leadership by:
- Meeting with state and local officials and government employees, health providers, businesses, and others.
- Working with other governors and the federal government to redistribute resources to COVID-19 hotspots based on need.
- Staying visible and talking honestly about the virus and the economy.
Actionable Marketing During Uncertainty Tips:
- Work with senior executives to determine what your organization can and/or must do across locations. Also provide care for essential employees who must work.
- Redistribute work and customer interactions based on need.
- Create trustworthy, consistent messaging and communications with your c-suite and front-line managers.
- Coach senior executives and other public-facing managers on presentation skills and work-from-home technology. Beyond empathetic messaging, help them to present an in-touch image. This includes: appropriate clothes, lighting, background and practice.
RECOMMENDED READING:
- Support Your Business’s Broader Audience
Your business’s audience extends to your employees, customers, supply chain, and local community.
According to Tien Tzuo, Zuora CEO, a subscription software platform:
“[i]t’s time to double down on relationships. … If the Subscription Economy is about anything, it’s about a fundamental return to relationships, as opposed to transactions.”
During uncertain times your broad audience worries about their personal well being including health, home and financial means to take care of their family.
So skip advertising as if nothing has changed. People dislike it! (GlobalWebIndex)
Your business’ actions do matter, The crowdsourced, Did They Help, assesses brands reactions to COVID-19 in real time.
Actionable Marketing During Uncertainty Tips:
- Keep employees safe, especially essential frontline workers. Provide necessary protective work gear and instructions for proper use.
- Set up and communicate special processes for this uncertain period to support employees, customers and/or others. Distribute and post this information across channels.
- Reach out and offer to help your customers and local communities. Listen to what they say their challenges are and respond accordingly. When customers talked about the stress of child care and homeschooling, Degreed created an Activity Book for Kids.
- Support local communities with money and/or necessary supplies. For example, New York hotel, The Four Seasons, transformed 225 of their rooms with enhanced safety protocols for medical workers.
- Invest In Marketing To Grow Your Business The Long-Term
Research proves continued marketing helps businesses to survive economic downturns. So show your marketing value to avoid management’s urge to cut your staff and budget.
Bain & Co’s Great Recession analysis of 3,900 companies worldwide revealed 2 types of performance during and after the 2008 economic downturn.
- Winners grew at a 17% compound annual growth rate (or CAGR) during the downturn and increased growth to an average 13% CAGR after it!
- Losers remained flat during the downturn and barely increased post-downturn.
So align and optimize your marketing during this uncertainty!
Use a variety of tactics like small businesses during the Great Recession.
Also, continue advertising during a downturn since:
- Lower advertising rates due to reduced demand.
- Easier to break-through and get attention due to fewer advertisers.
- Improved brand image due to continued advertising stability.
Actionable Marketing During Uncertainty Tips:
- Take advantage of reduced advertising demand and prices to stay visible. P&G and Kellogg’s did this during the Great Depression.
- Audit, assess, improve and optimize existing marketing assets to increase traffic and conversions and improve search rankings. Transform content into other formats and create new distribution presentations.
- Review, create, and/or update customer acquisition, sales enablement, on-boarding and retention processes and communications.
- Reach out and build customer relationships. Document and use these conversations to create different products, services and/or payment terms to maintain inflow.
- Document internal processes. Where appropriate, adapt this information to create content.
- Test co-marketing with peers and/or frenemies to expand reach.
RECOMMENDED READING:
- Create The Foundation For Future Business Growth Post Uncertainty
Based on your financials (see Tactic 1):
- Diversify and/or increase revenue streams and clients. (Also, consider business acquisitions),
- Source new customers, suppliers and/or distributors to reduce risks, and
- Reduce costs and/or un-market unprofitable customers.
Your objective is to develop marketing resiliency so you can deal with environmental uncertainty.
Actionable Marketing During Uncertainty Tips:
Create new products, services and content to diversify revenues and/or take advantage of emerging trends and opportunities. Get ideas you can adapt to your specific strengths and resources from your competitive analysis.
Based on client conversations, Jimmy Daly and his Animalz team applied “Paired Programming software collaboration” to content marketing. They created a new “test” offering, “Feedback As A Service”.
It supports clients’ need for strategic content marketing guidance. Even better, it provides monthly recurring revenue.
Do “Someday” Projects. Work on projects that your organization never finds time to do. Include fixing and cleaning factories and machinery, auditing company files, and repairing existing data.
Prepare your teams for the “New Normal.” Use this time to upskill. Take free and/or low cost courses. Also attend virtual conferences. Employees seek highly transferable or flexible skills that help manage change.
RECOMMENDED READING:
Marketing During Uncertainty Conclusion
Marketing during uncertainty provides opportunities to create the basis for your business’s future growth.
While stress-inducing in the short-term, economic downturns change the business playing field to the advantage of astute marketers.
Start with your business’s actual sales, expenses and cashflows now to determine:
- Unnecessary costs you can eliminate (but take care to protect future growth),
- Products and services customers find attractive in this context to promote, and
- Customer collections worth renegotiating based on sales-to-date and payment history.
Then, use competitive analysis to find potential opportunities and/or unmet needs your business can fill. Where appropriate consider partnering to expand your reach..
Based on changing use and demand:
- Redistribute your paid promotion (including advertising) to keep your brand visible consistently over time.
- Change you messaging to be empathetic and relevant based on context to build your brand and trustworthiness.
Before you object about your lack of resources or experience:
Realize your peers face similar obstacles.
Further, the current uncertainty allows greater leeway to test new products and marketing.
So put on your big girl pants and find your path to future success for your business.
And if it doesn’t work out, then pivot to other more profitable options.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Heidi Cohen
Heidi Cohen is the President of Riverside Marketing Strategies.
Article Source: heidicohen.com
Originally Posted on: May 4, 2020
3 Tools to Measure Brand Awareness and Why You Should
By Aleh Barysevich | | Tagged Website Resources
Every brand wishes to become famous. Well, every entrepreneur, business owner, and marketer wishes for its brand to become famous.
Every brand wishes to become famous. Well, every entrepreneur, business owner, and marketer wishes for its brand to become famous.
But as you might guess, popularity doesn’t happen overnight. Not for brands. They don’t wake up famous; instead, slowly and steadily, they grow brand awareness.
What is brand awareness?
Brand awareness defines the extent to which consumers are familiar with the qualities or image of a particular brand of goods or services.
The goal of marketing, PR, and even customer service is to grow brand awareness – to make sure people know the brand, talk about it, and recall it when the brand’s industry is discussed. These are the primary perks of brand awareness, but there are others, too.
Brand awareness fosters trust – people rarely buy important products from unknown brands. It creates brand equity – people pay more due to higher perceived value.
Brand awareness also creates communities of loyal customers who keep buying the brand’s products not just because they like them, but also because they associate themselves with the brand and feel as a part of the community. Think about the Apple vs. Microsoft battle, Coke vs. Pepsi; recall people who stick to the same brand over decades, be it cars or cereal.
How do you measure brand awareness?
Growing anything doesn’t work well without regular measuring. Brand awareness is no exception: despite the obvious difficulties – it’s impossible to accurately calculate how many people know your brand – it’s the metric you can’t ignore. In fact, it’s a number of metrics. And here’s how to get some numbers.
- Surveys
Asking a random selection of people over the phone or email whether they’ve heard about your brand is the first step to getting a vague understanding of brand awareness. Ideally, of course, the selection should be representative of your target audience.
Asking existing customers how they heard about your brand is another approach which addresses a different issue. It gives you an understanding of how the word about your brand is spread and which channels are effective in growing brand awareness.
- Social listening
Social listening metrics are the metrics that get you as close to measuring brand awareness as possible. Social listening tools search for mentions of your brand (tagged and untagged) on social media networks, news sites, blogs, forums, and the web. They calculate the number of people talking about your brand, which must correlate with the number of people who know your brand.
Besides, social listening tools show the overall sentiment of brand mentions, allowing you to dig deeper into how people feel about your product or service. Social listening metrics also include the Reach metric. Reach shows the number of people that see mentions of your brand online multiplied by the number of times they see them. This reveals whether you have influential brand advocates (e.g., social media influencers) and/or popular sources (BBC, CNN, etc.) that have mentioned your brand.
- Website traffic
Measuring website traffic is another way in which you can assess brand awareness, not as a total number, but as an increasing or decreasing metric.
Unfortunately, Google Analytics doesn’t show the number of people who’ve arrived on your site by using branded keywords. All you can do in terms of assessing brand awareness is look at Direct traffic – these will be the people who’ve typed your URL into their address bar, along with the ones that arrived on your site through untracked links.
- Search volume
Search volume data adds to website traffic metrics. You can use Google Adwords Keyword Planner and Google Trends to check the volume of your brand searches over time. This, however, will only work if your brand name is unique.
Unlike with social listening, you can’t add “negative keywords” to specify your search, so if your brand name is “Apple”, the data you get will be meaningless.
Top 3 tools to measure brand awareness
- Survey Monkey
Creating surveys isn’t as easy as you might assume. Survey Monkey does most of the work for you. It’s one of the best – and definitely most popular – survey tools out there, and it’s great for creating in-depth online surveys.
Pricing: Free for Basic, $25/mo for Advantage, $75/mo for Premier, and Enterprise pricing is available upon request.
- Awario
Awario is a social listening tool. It crawls all major social media networks, news sites, blogs, forums, and the web for mentions of any given keyword (usually a brand). It analyzes mentions’ growth, reach, sentiment, as well as popular topics around the keywords and the authors’ gender, locations, and languages. It also finds brand advocates and industry influencers.
The tool has a Boolean search option which ensures that the results include relevant mentions only, even if your brand name is a common or ambiguous word.
Pricing: $29/mo for the Starter plan, $89/mo for Pro, and $299/mo for Enterprise. Save 2 months with a yearly plan and get a free 7-day trial.
- Brandwatch
Brandwatch is another social listening tool. It’s more sophisticated than Awario and fits enterprises and agencies better. Brandwatch covers all social networks, including niche and local ones, as well as review sites, news sites, comment sections, blogs, forums, and the web. The tool finds not only mentions of the brand’s name, but also images related to a brand, for example, its logo.
The tool analyzes mentions’ growth, reach, and sentiment, and the authors’ demographics, psychographics, locations, and languages. It also reveals trends most popular in your niche.
Pricing: Available upon request.
How do you grow brand awareness?
Now that you know how to keep an eye on your results, let’s talk about all (or some of) the ways you can grow brand awareness.
- Social media marketing
Social media is where communities are built. It’s where the word about a brand (or anything else) spreads far and wide.
Interestingly enough, it’s also a place where people want to hear about brands and to talk about brands. Although social media is often perceived as a place to chat with friends and take part in political discussions and nothing else, for many, it’s also a place to talk to brands, to follow their news, and to discover them.
66% of Facebook and 90% of Instagram users follow at least one brand. 80% of Twitter users have mentioned a brand in a tweet, and an average Twitter user follows five businesses.
Social media marketing has many aims. Here are some of them:
- Creating social communities around a brand;
- Spreading the word using promotional, entertaining, and educational content, both from brands and user generated;
- Attracting new people with your brand’s amazing personality that especially shines on social media.
- Influencer marketing
Influencer marketing is one of the most cost-effective forms of marketing, and it’s especially useful for growing brand awareness. Influencers are the people with a large following by definition and if they advertise, review, or even simply mention a product, they get the word out.
While offline influencers are usually extremely expensive, when it comes to online, there is a whole spectrum. You can find niche influencers with an average but dedicated following genuinely interested in products like yours. You can also find Internet celebrities with millions of followers. And, you can find anyone in between.
- Content marketing
Today, people turn to the Internet to find answers to all kinds of questions. And if your product or service might raise some, it’s time to answer them – for free.
Creating free content attracts people looking for content and not, necessarily, ready to buy a product right now. Content gets spread around quicker than anything promotional. It’s the easiest way to establish your brand as a source of information about your industry – the source people will turn to, tell their friends about, and share on social media and beyond.
Over to you
Brand awareness might seem too vague and complicated to mindfully measure and grow. However, it doesn’t mean you should neglect brand awareness, especially considering how vital it is for a brand’s success. Get out there and tell people about your brand!
Article Source Credits:
Author: Aleh Barysevich
Aleh Barysevich is Founder and Chief Marketing Officer at companies behind SEO PowerSuite, professional software for full-cycle SEO campaigns, and Awario, a social media monitoring app. Aleh is a seasoned SEO and social media expert and speaker at major industry conferences.
Article Source: www.jeffbullas.com
Originally Posted on: November 10, 2020
Tips for Crushing SEO in a Seasonal Business
By Jeshue Betts | | Tagged Website Resources
There’s search engine optimization, and then there’s seasonal SEO.
One is a constant companion that deserves consistent attention and focus to drive traffic to your pages and visitors to your profiles. The other – when done correctly – can give you a sweet little bump depending on the time of year.
There’s search engine optimization, and then there’s seasonal SEO.
One is a constant companion that deserves consistent attention and focus to drive traffic to your pages and visitors to your profiles. The other – when done correctly – can give you a sweet little bump depending on the time of year.
Search engine optimization is easy to grasp, but more difficult to master. It’s the art of getting your content to rank well in the Google search engine.
Our digital lives revolve around the search engine. Whenever we want to know, buy, or do, we head on over to Google (it’s responsible for 94% of organic traffic) or Bing. And ranking is important:
- Three-quarters of people never scroll past the first page of search engine results.
- Most people ignore the paid ads that appear on the front page.
- Leads that arrive via search have an average close rate of 14.6%, but it’s only 1.7% for those from outbound channels.
- 92% of organic clicks are captured on the first page.
- The result in the #1 spot gets 32.5% of clicks.
If you don’t appear on the first page, it’s like you don’t exist. Outside of the top three spots, the click-through rate or CTR drops very quickly even if you are on the first page.
That’s not to say you won’t see a lot of seasonal fluctuation throughout the year. And you can capitalize on that. “Seasonal” refers to more than just the uptick in spending and buying we see in the weeks leading up to Christmas. It includes Black Friday, Cyber Monday, back-to-school shopping in late summer, Mother’s Day, Valentine’s Day, the seasons themselves, and much more.
Whether you’re a small business looking to capitalize on the trends or a seasonal business only open in the summer or holidays, there are steps you can take to catch those waves of increasing demand. With a little planning, you can produce a consistent uptick in your organic traffic at the same time each year.
Meet the Customer’s Needs
Taking advantage of seasonal SEO is not a shady tactic. You’re going above and beyond to meet consumer needs. They want this, and they want it now. If they’re looking for Christmas decorations in November, it’s because they’re ready to buy. They’re happy. You’re happy. Satisfied customers increase traffic and profit.
Google Trends
Your first step is to identify the naturally-occurring highs and lows for a particular keyword or product. If you sell Christmas ornaments, then you know you’re going to see increased demand in the lead-up to Christmas.
Others may be a bit more difficult to pin down. Maybe it changes from year to year, or maybe there’s more than one uptick. There are simple SEO and keyword research tools to help with this part, including Google Trends, which is free.
It’ll show the relative search volume for any keyword. Choose a geographic region, time period, or type of search, and Trends will display a line graph. You can also compare several keywords on the same graph.
Down jackets experience a major spike in demand starting in the fall and peaking in the winter. Makes sense. But let’s say you sell raw honey. When’s your season? You might think spring or summer.
You’d be wrong.
The highest search volume for ‘raw honey’ occurs every year in early January. Why?
You’d have to do some research, but it may be because that’s the time of year when people set resolutions. Healthy eating is a common one, and raw honey is a healthier alternative to processed sugar.
So, as a raw honey vendor, you’d want to accelerate your SEO efforts starting in November, with content that pushes the health benefits of your product. Then, you’re perfectly situated for the rise in demand. When they go looking for it, they’ll find you.
Google Analytics
If you have a website, you can dig into your own data to find the highs and lows for your traffic. Using Google Analytics, you can get valuable insights into your traffic trends over the course of a year.
The Audience > Overview graph provides a convenient snapshot of the peaks and valleys over time.
Check out Acquisition to see where your visitors are coming from. This data provides a roadmap for the seasonal niche events you should be targeting.
Combine it with insight from the Google Search Console on specific keywords and how much traffic they generate, and you know exactly what’s bringing in traffic at any given time, and where customers are going on your site.
Keyword Research
What are the keywords that people are using to find your products or service? You might turn to a keyword research tool to find new opportunities. Make a list of those words bringing in the most traffic, and the relevant keywords you’d like to add to the mix.
Don’t forget about long-tail keywords. They may have a lower search volume, but they represent a much higher level of searcher intent. Long-tail is the difference between searching for ‘shoes’ versus ‘brown leather shoes for men’. Lower overall volume, but much more intent to purchase.
Put It All Together
Once you’ve analyzed everything, you should see some clear patterns on what (keywords) and when to use them. Create content to match – content that reflects the peak engagement period and the slow-down period.
Create seasonally-specific calls-to-action, pages, and navigation menus on your site. Highlight the seasonal niche events. Give yourself enough time to generate awareness and momentum. Start your efforts at least a month or two before the peak, and continue them for about a month after it.
Keep your SEO healthy at all times. Create and share high-quality and relevant content. Build and earn strong backlinks. Seasonal spikes can be very lucrative. Find them. And grab them.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Jeshue Betts
Jeshue Betts is the regional marketing representative of LawnStarter.com, an online and mobile platform that connects homeowners with lawn care professionals for care-free and efficient services.
Article Source: succeedasyourownboss.com
Originally Posted on: September 29, 2020
6 Steps to Build an Effective Social Media Marketing Strategy [Infographic]
By Tom Siani | | Tagged Website Resources
Do you know how to enhance your social media marketing performance using an ambitious yet achievable strategy? Actually, this is what the majority of marketers think they know.
Do you know how to enhance your social media marketing performance using an ambitious yet achievable strategy?
Actually, this is what the majority of marketers think they know. But the truth is many of them are not successful in marketing and usually get low ROI.
In fact, marketers and brands of all sizes and types don’t use social media to its full capacity.
They consider digital marketing to be posting several pics/clips and advertising their products.
This is what any common social media user can do. So what are the differences?
The greatest mistake they’re making is that they think social media is all about the number of followers.
They sometimes don’t care about the followers’ relevancy and the engagement rates they can bring to their accounts.
In other words, they ignore and avoid building a niche community to make their audience consider them as a leader in the community.
Many of them don’t know anything about “Brand Storytelling” on social media, and the only thing they want is to get more followers.
Many of them even try to acquire existing accounts to gain instant access to thousands of followers.
It is clear that building a niche community is not an easy task, and not all marketers can afford to do it.
A versatile and robust strategy is a must in this regard. Otherwise, you’ll repeat your previous mistakes without knowing the reason it isn’t working.
This is so important that many medium and large companies assign their marketing campaigns on social media to agencies.
Table of Contents
How to Build Efficient Social Media Marketing Strategies
The most important thing these agencies do is to build efficient social media marketing strategies.
That would be especially useful during the COVID-19 pandemic when the staff’s physical presence is limited, and the threat of the coronavirus is still with us.
The time of social media usage per capita has globally increased, and this is a unique opportunity to build a social media marketing strategy.
If you can strengthen your brand identity through informative content and targeting organic audiences, you’ll have a brighter future in the aftermath of COVID-19.
Here is a step-by-step guide through which you can build your own company’s marketing strategy on social media.
1. Analyze your social media performance
First, you have to analyze your current performance to know how well you’re generating leads.
One of the most beneficial aspects of using analytics tools is to recognize your strengths and weaknesses.
Google Analytics is also a great software in this regard.
You can also perform social media A/B testing to know if your ads are of interest to your audience.
2. Define S.M.A.R.T goals
After analyzing your previous performance and knowing what has performed well and what hasn’t, you can define your next objectives.
They need to be specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and time-bound so that you can be sure you reach them.
You also need to define certain metrics to measure these objectives and optimize your activities.
3. Know your target audience
Social media marketing is all about reaching out to the most probable customers and encouraging them to buy from you.
So you have to exactly recognize your potential customers to be able to speak with them like them.
Age, gender, location, job, and many other factors can significantly change people’s thinking and buying.
So you can’t have a single strategy for all social media users. Fortunately, there are several useful tools to find and reach out to a niche-relevant audience.
4. Choose the right channels
When you know your audience characteristics, you can target them on social media platforms.
The question is which social network is the best one for your business.
Of course, top social platforms are being used by billions of people, and you have to consider using them.
But you need to be more specific as any social app has its own audience demographic, and you can’t use a single content strategy for all of them.
For example, Pinterest’s users in the U.S. are mainly women. But on the other hand, LinkedIn is being used by CEOs, job seekers, professionals, etc.
So you need to prioritize your marketing strategies based on these differences.
5. Generate informative content and post them at the best time
Content is king! You must have heard this sentence thousands of times. But along with generating informative content, you need to put it in the eyes of as many niche audiences as possible.
Try to use social media scheduling tools to post your content at the best time to get maximum exposure.
6. Constantly survey your industry
Even a strong marketing strategy can fail you if you don’t know the competition well.
If you constantly check out your competitors, you can predict whether your strategy will be successful or not.
You have to track all their activities, including social channels they’re using, content style, followers, posting schedules, etc.
To understand these steps better, you can look at the infographic below.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Tom Siani
Tom Siani is the Content Manager at Blogwaves.com where he shares his years of experience related to social media marketing, brand marketing, blogging, and search visibility.
Article Source: growmap.com
Originally Posted on: October 4, 2020
Create An Online Marketing Plan For Your Small Business In 27 Days
By Arif Chowdhury | | Tagged Website Resources
Are you here, but not convinced you need an online marketing plan? Let me explain why you do. A small business owner has to be smarter than a corporate business; simply because they have limitations in resources. A corporate business can easily spend thousands of dollars for their marketing campaign, while a small business has a limited budget and needs to be cautious about the strategy they are going to use because they have no room for mistakes.
Are you here, but not convinced you need an online marketing plan? Let me explain why you do. A small business owner has to be smarter than a corporate business; simply because they have limitations in resources. A corporate business can easily spend thousands of dollars for their marketing campaign, while a small business has a limited budget and needs to be cautious about the strategy they are going to use because they have no room for mistakes.
Though in my experience, many small business owners give little value to online marketing; they think it would be a waste of time or simply they do not have any idea about it.
But the true fact is, by using online marketing to advertise their small business has the potential to increase sales without much effort. Unlike brick-and-mortar stores, a website has automation procedures thus increasing efficiency and reducing costs. On top of that, your small business can get thousands of new customers from other locations that would otherwise be impossible.
All big brands run their businesses in both brick-and-mortar stores as well as online shopping sites. In the last 6-7 years, online sales have been increasing every year. Since the COVID-19 outbreak, brick-and-mortar stores have been devastated because of social distancing while online stores achieved record-breaking sales. And experts believe that this is just the beginning, from now on online sales will continue to rise even more.
So it is imperative to leverage online marketing to increase your small business’s sales. However, without prior knowledge in online marketing, it would be very hard to make a stand in today’s competitive market. You need proper direction on how to do it from beginning to end. And that’s why I am writing this guide to give you a clear direction towards your goal.
Let me show you how you can take your small business into the next level with a simple yet powerful 27-day online marketing plan.
Days 1-7: Build Your Online Presence
Before we start your online marketing plan, you may already have some knowledge or even used Google Ads or Facebook Ads for your online business. Though they are very powerful platforms, but also very costly when compared with offline marketing.
For example, in Google Ads, every click in your advert may cost you from $0.20 to $2 depending on the competition level for that specific keyword you have chosen. Thus in order to receive 1,000 targeted visitors you have to spend $200 to $2,000. The same goes for Facebook Ads. Like I said before, for corporate business spending thousands of dollars is not an issue. However, for small businesses, every dollar counts.
Therefore, building a website for your small business is vital to increase your efficiency and reduce cost in marketing.
Many small business owners may think that spending money on building a website is a waste of time. But the true fact is, the website will get popular day by day and after a while, you will receive thousands of organic visitors from search engines like Google with $0 cost. Not just for a website, this will happen in every online platform like the Facebook page, Twitter profile, LinkedIn profile, Instagram, etc.
From day 1 to day 7, your task is to build a website for your small business along with a Facebook page and Twitter profile. If you have products to sell like leather goods or furniture then do not forget to build an Instagram page as well.
On your website try to showcase all of your products and services and also link up your Facebook page, Twitter profile, etc. Then share with your customers to gain exposure. For website help, read these articles:
- Three Options for Getting Your New Small Business Website Up and Running
- Do You Need a Custom Website or Can You Use a Site Builder?
- Shopify SEO: A Detailed 5-Step Guide to a Perfect Online Store
Days 8-14: Leverage Content Marketing to Increase SERP Rank
Content is the king of all online marketing. As I mentioned above, after a while when your website becomes popular you will receive thousands of free organic visitors from Google. But how will you become popular? By creating great content for your customers.
Google loves content and ranks websites in their SERP (Search Engine Result Page) based on that. A website with high-quality engaging articles has a greater chance to get ranked high than the website without any content. For example, you have a small business of leather products. On your website try to create high-quality articles that are related with leather products & make sure your customer would love to read it.
In case you do not have the necessary skill to write a quality article, you may use freelancer article writer service to create high-quality articles for your site. Depending on article size you may have to spend $100 per 1,000 words article.
Another great tool is the email marketing campaign. Your website visitors can subscribe to your email newsletter then you can send promotional offers directly to their inbox. A great way to increase your sales without any additional advertisements.
Web push notifications are a rather new invention in the online marketing platform. It is similar to email marketing however, instead of sending promotional offers to customers email, using push notification you can send messages directly to their device like PC, laptop, mobile, etc.
Try to create several high-quality contents from day 8 to day 14. And set up an email marketing campaign as well as a push notification. More on email marketing:
- A Guide to Launching Your First Email Marketing Campaign
- Beginner’s Guide on Starting with Email Marketing
Days 15-27: Search Engine Optimization
After you have done all of the previous tasks it is time to dive into the technical side of the online platform. Let me tell you in advance, if you do not have any problem with funds then this technical part will be in full automation. There are many website optimization services out there just do some Google search.
In case you do not have enough funds or want to do it by yourself, then read on I will explain how to do it all.
Let’s talk about onsite optimization. After building your website check whether you have used your focused keywords in blog, product page/service page and homepage. Remember, in title, slug, headlines, meta description & paragraphs focused keyword must have to include. When choosing a keyword always try to use low competitive and high volume search keywords. For doing your keyword research use Google Keyword Planner tool, it’s free.
For small business owners, local SEO (Search Engine Optimization) is essential. Do not forget to build a contact page with your business details like name, address, contact no, etc. To get more help you may use some tools specifically designed for local SEO optimization.
Finally, you have to use analytics to measure the performance of your website. Use Google Analytics tool, it is completely free.
For more on SEO:
- Five Ways To Boost Your SEO And Online Presence
- 12 Deadly On-Page SEO Mistakes In 2020 (And How To Avoid Them)
- Digital Marketing Services For Small Business
Summary
From day 1 to day 27 of your online marketing plan, all you have done is prepare for a great journey into online business. Like a brick-and-mortar store, you always learn from your surroundings and try to beat your competitors. The same goes in online business. You have to learn more and implement this knowledge in your online business. When your website and social media profiles and pages become popular you will enjoy increased sales with low expenditure.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Arif Chowdhury
Arif Chowdhury is the founder of Cliobra. An active digital marketer specialized in both search engine marketing and social media networks. His website Cliobra is all about modern technology in the Cyberworld. Arif contributed to several blogs and websites that specifically are technology-related.
Article Source: www.smallbusinessbonfire.com
Originally Posted on: Oct 2, 2020
6 Tips For Updating Your Website With Relevant Info During Covid-19
By Joseph Dyson | | Tagged Website Resources
Updating your website during COVID-19 highlights that your business is aware and concerned. It tells your customers that you are keeping an eye on the situation due to your concern for clients. Not only does doing so help consumers get a better idea of any new policies (such as shipping changes or rescheduling) and measures you’re taking, but it also shows you in a positive light. Updating your website also shows that you have taken the appropriate measures to protect customers in case of any interactions and that you care about them enough to change policies.
Updating your website during COVID-19 highlights that your business is aware and concerned. It tells your customers that you are keeping an eye on the situation due to your concern for clients. Not only does doing so help consumers get a better idea of any new policies (such as shipping changes or rescheduling) and measures you’re taking, but it also shows you in a positive light. Updating your website also shows that you have taken the appropriate measures to protect customers in case of any interactions and that you care about them enough to change policies.
Let’s look at some examples. We’re sure you’ve seen some variant of these pop up on a number of websites during the pandemic:
Here are three entirely different websites—a federal center for disease control, a news page, and an airline—but they all have something new on their website that wasn’t there before COVID-19. The CDC has a huge banner that’s exclusively dedicated to the virus; The Guardian has a separate page for news related to COVID-19; Emirates has a notification at the top of its homepage informing flyers of “new guidelines.”
They’ve all done what you ought to do as well: upgrade your website for the pandemic. Here are some tips to get you started.
1. Start with the Header, Not Just the Heading
There’s a reason the update on the CDC website catches the eye instantly: it’s because their website sports a large, attention-grabbing banner at the very top of their home page—with a big, menacing artistic interpretation of the virus. Considering current customer interest in the virus, you’ll have to do something similar. Give them visual cues before you give them textual, anecdotal consolations.
The header is a great place to start. But there’s a catch: this header shouldn’t just be a decorative piece that you use on your home page. While you probably get the most traffic re-routed to your home page, most users don’t land on this page when they come across your website. Use Google Analytics to find out which of your internal pages receives the most traffic. If we were to take a guess, we’d say that most traffic was landing on… landing pages.
After all, Google ranks pages—not websites. Here are a few tips on what to do with the header:
- Keep the text short and attention-grabbing. For instance, which of these is easier on the eyes: COVID-19 Update or SARS-CoV-2 Reparations.
- Action-oriented language works best in this case. If you’ve added too much text to your main notification, declutter and keep it simple. Something like “Follow our updates” or “Read our new shipping policy.” Don’t write a thesis.
- Create an ALERT bar—but make sure users have the option to collapse it, because it can get annoying.
- Use bold colors and block texts.
- Keep it easily customizable.
- Use high-quality, high-resolution images.
2. Make a Separate Landing Page
If your services and products have been particularly impacted—positively or negatively—just a header won’t be enough. Let’s say you sell masks and PPEs; in this case, it’s best to have a separate landing page for COVID-related products, because several visitors are bound to click through for those alone. Moreover, keep the URLs consistent for these pages.
This will help users bookmark the page, and search engine spiders will have an easier time crawling and indexing it.
3. Update the URL
If you do have a separate landing page for COVID-19 updates/products, you should really optimize its URL. Not only is this SEO-friendly, but it can also help you keep track of your content in the future. This also helps SERPs group all your blog posts together.
4. Updating Business Hours? Spread the News
Most businesses that are delivering products—and those that depend upon dispatching people working on-ground (such as plumbers)—have changed their business timings. If your business has also undergone a similar change, ensure that this is reflected not only on your website, but also on:
- All your social media pages
- All listings and local directories
Similarly, update all your logistical and scheduling details. It’s best to have a 24/7 customer service option on the side. This helps users know that you’re still here for them, 24 hours a day, despite the pandemic and all the problems it poses.
5. Keep the Content Relevant
We’re assuming that blogs and articles are a regular part of your SEO campaign. And perhaps you also do infographics and videos, which are great add-ons. We’d suggest keeping the content relevant to the times and uploading COVID-related blogs, articles, and interactive videos. Make sure your business is somehow related to what you’re putting out there—make a connection.
Use royalty free images to keep the content visually attractive. The goal is to ensure that your customers are hooked to your content. It’s even better to have a comment section below the blog posts, to encourage visitors to leave comments or start a discussion. This helps you interact with customers, relays useful information about your business, and is also useful for other onlookers who might be scrolling through.
6. Add Cashless Payment Options
If you haven’t already implemented it, having a cashless payment option on your website is imperative. E-commerce rules in the pandemic, and no matter how small a local area you operate in, it’s best to offer online orders and delivery options during this time. Ensure that your checkout process is simple, easy, and quick. Customers shouldn’t face long delays or glitches when they’re trying to order something. Send quick notifications.
And don’t forget to optimize for mobile. Most of your customers won’t just be shopping online—they’ll be doing it from their smartphones.
Article Source Credits:
Author: Joseph Dyson
Joseph Dyson is a website optimization services and SEO specialist from Search Berg. He’s been closely following the COVID-19 pandemic, especially how businesses have been impacted by it. Under his guidance, many businesses have updated their websites for the pandemic, and have seen a boost in organic traffic, CTR rates, and ROI.
Article Source: www.smallbusinessbonfire.com
Originally Posted on: Sep 24, 2020
What is Social Commerce and Why should you care?
By Prabhjot Jolly | | Tagged Website Resources
What is social commerce? It is a way for you to sell products and services directly to consumers through social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter. It is a powerful way to enhance your e-commerce strategy and maximize your selling potential. As a leading provider of e-commerce and other digital marketing solutions, we understand the value of social commerce for our clients.
What is social commerce? It is a way for you to sell products and services directly to consumers through social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter. It is a powerful way to enhance your e-commerce strategy and maximize your selling potential. As a leading provider of e-commerce and other digital marketing solutions, we understand the value of social commerce for our clients.
Yahoo! pioneered the term 'Social Commerce' back in 2005, revolutionizing the way we look at buying and selling goods online. Before this, social commerce was confined to setting up online shopping tools for your existing website. These tools included shared pick lists, ratings, user-generated content, sharing online product information, and more. They were focused on helping customers make more informed purchasing decisions on eBay, Amazon, etc.
Today, social commerce has evolved into a way for users to buy goods and services directly from the social media profiles of their favourite brands. Social commerce is much more interactive and engaging than before where previously the focus was on just being a facilitator.
How do social networks use Social Commerce to help marketers boost sales?
Facebook does this via Facebook shop. Marketers can connect their e-commerce platform to Facebook or upload their product category manually. E-commerce platforms like BigCommerce help marketers easily sync their product catalog with Facebook.
Instagram is also emerging as a very popular social commerce platform for marketers. Regardless of whether you are an e-commerce store or just a small business that sells online, Instagram's 'Checkout' will become your best friend. 'Checkout' lets people purchase directly from the app as they browse through pictures and videos without being redirected to another site.
Does Social Commerce offer anything else?
Technology is ever-changing, opening up new and exciting avenues for e-commerce that will translate to social commerce as well.
Technologies such as Artificial Intelligence and Augmented Reality have been integrated with social commerce, enhancing customization and personalization. They help shoppers create a personal connection with products, visualize them in their lives, and provide more relevant feedback through your social channel.
We could very well see a virtual revolution in the coming years where users can simulate browsing for physical products in a store from the comfort of their home. Going to a store could soon be a thing of the past with users being able to test products and get the information they need directly online. Once they are ready to make their purchase, the products are conveniently delivered right to their door.
Travel companies are also experimenting with virtual reality and social commerce to sell holiday packages. A virtual tour of someone's ideal destination along with exciting travel deals can influence purchase decisions like never before. By showing travelers exactly what they will experience, whether it be a tropical cruise or scuba diving, you make it easier for them to picture themselves there already. This helps give them a positive impression of your brand and their future holiday before it even takes place, increasing the likelihood that they share their whole experience with others.
The Bottom Line
When done right, social commerce can have a powerful effect on your business' engagement, conversions, and sales. To make the best use of social commerce for your business and get the most out of your social channels, you need a trusted digital marketing partner like Webware.io to help reach your goals.
We provide the services, support, and expertise you need to create a comprehensive digital marketing strategy that makes a great first impression. To learn more about our services and how we can help your small business grow online, please click here.
If you have any questions on how we can support your digital marketing needs, we'd love to hear from you. Please contact our experts here.
92% of US Small Businesses Have “Reinvented” Themselves During Pandemic
By Michael Guta | | Tagged Website Resources
The fact that 92% of U.S. small businesses have reinvented themselves during the pandemic says a whole lot about this bunch. Small business owners are scrappy go-getters with no quit in them. And the survey from GetApp proves that very point.
Bio: Michael Guta is a Staff Writer at Small Business Trends, focusing on technology and business systems. He has a B.S. in Information Communication Technology, with emphasis in Technology Management. He has used his degree to consult in the implementation of information and communications technology in developing regions. This included finding viable technologies where there is limited or no network and power infrastructures in place. He writes on tech-related subjects for publications, global companies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
The fact that 92% of U.S. small businesses have reinvented themselves during the pandemic says a whole lot about this bunch. Small business owners are scrappy go-getters with no quit in them. And the survey from GetApp proves that very point.
Small Business Reinventing During Pandemic
According to the survey, 92% pivoted their business in at least one way, but many have pivoted in multiple ways. This means only a small minority, or 8% didn’t pivot their business at all to adapt to the current environment.
When these businesses are pivoting, they are changing their business model on the fly. And when they do, they are hitting paydirt. One of the respondents in the survey highlights the need to quickly change a company’s business model.
Sally Matsumae, owner of Asahi Imports, a small Japanese grocery store and delicatessen in Austin, Texas, is such an entrepreneur. Matsumae goes on to say, “With shortened business hours and everyone’s fear of leaving their homes, we had to quickly figure out a way to offer online shopping and curbside services.”
Adding, “With the pandemic, we had to act fast. We had to scramble to get some sort of system that shoppers could use to tell us what items they wanted without having to step into the store.”
So, what are the five business model changes that are helping these companies survive?
The 5 Business Models
These business models are primarily being driven by digital technology. And as the survey reveals, you can use the technology no matter how small your business. The key is to adapt to the changing conditions and implement the solutions to better serve your customers.
Online Delivery Channel
Many small businesses have been thinking about launching online delivery. But before the pandemic, it wasn’t absolutely essential. This is what Matsumae also says regarding this very issue. “I’ve always wanted to have an online store, but unfortunately it was always one of those things on the to-do list.”
In the case of Matsumae, the business added an online inventory to its website along with an embedded Google Form.
According to GetApp, “Ultimately, what matters most is getting your business online—how you do it is less important.” So, look at all your options and find out the best solution for your business, customers and location. An online marketplace that lets your customers buy or order online is a must during the pandemic and beyond.
Virtual Service
Whether you are a music teacher, personal trainer, or chef, you can create virtual services to supplement your income.
In the survey two out of five small businesses are creating a new virtual service. This not only lets you keep your local customers, but you can also find new ones around the world.
Offline Delivery Channel
While an online delivery channel will keep your customers engaged, don’t forget about offline delivery. Curbside pickup and home delivery is another way to keep your business going.
If your business can’t afford its own delivery service at the moment, consider services such as Uber Eats. As the report points out, make sure to look into the cost of these services. With profit margins so low, the cost might not be worth the benefits.
On the other hand, even with razor-thin margins it can be a great way to build your customer base. And when social distancing is over, they will remember to come to your business in person.
Design a New Product
Designing a new product may not be possible for many businesses, but for those that can, it is another opportunity. Manufacturers can pivot their production to address a need in this market. Whether it is masks, sanitizers, or other PPEs, there is an opportunity.
By reconfiguring your resources to address a new need, you can keep your business going until things pick up.
Target New Customers
Targeting new customers is always a goal for any business. However, in this particular scenario finding new customers that want to buy your products is especially important. This is because businesses across the board are losing a percentage of their customer base.
While you are looking for new customers, don’t forget to try even harder to keep your existing customers. Cashflow is a big problem for small businesses, so keep that in mind as you try to find new customers.
Challenges of Pivoting
GetApp says businesses that are pivoting are three times more likely to report higher revenue. Fifty-one percent say they have increased against their forecast because of the pivots. It goes all the way down to 16% for businesses that didn’t pivot.
This, however, doesn’t mean there are not any challenges. The top challenges are lack of skills for the new approach (22%), shortage of funds (16%), and setting up new online delivery channels (14%).
When you see your business environment changing, taking action is key. Waiting for things to get better might work, but you are not in control. By pivoting to fully address the challenges head-on will keep your business going and point out new opportunities.
5 Reasons Why You Should Offer Live Chat Support for Your Website
By Sarah York | | Tagged Website Resources
Did you know that 83% of customers require some type of support before completing an online purchase? One way to offer customers a valuable and memorable customer service experience is by offering live chat support on your website. Installing a chat widget on your website allows your customers to open a chat box and instantly connect with your business without leaving the website. For both content and ecommerce websites, using chat to communicate with your customers in real time can be beneficial for your bottom line.
Did you know that 83% of customers require some type of support before completing an online purchase? One way to offer customers a valuable and memorable customer service experience is by offering live chat support on your website. Installing a chat widget on your website allows your customers to open a chat box and instantly connect with your business without leaving the website. For both content and ecommerce websites, using chat to communicate with your customers in real time can be beneficial for your bottom line.
Here are 5 reasons why you should consider offering chat on your website:
1. Boost sales.
With the ability to answers questions right away, assist a customer through a purchase, or offer an on-the-spot promotion, live chat can help improve sales numbers. One study showed 44% of respondents agreed being able to use to live chat to ask questions during the ecommerce purchase was one of the most valuable features a website can have. 52% of customers will abandon an online purchase if they can’t find quick answers! Live chat allows you to step in and save a sale that’s about to be abandoned or help a customer decide between you and your competitor. Online chat also provides a great opportunity to up-sell products and ensure repeat customers 63% of respondents who chatted said they were more likely to return to the site, and 62% reported being more likely to purchase from the site again.
2. Offer better customer service.
Chat is an amazing platform to connect with your customers. Chatting in real time can help you quickly identify pain points and understand issues that may be contributing negatively to your business. When it comes to quality service, customers are looking to have their questions answered ASAP. On average, customer queries on chat are answered within 42 seconds! That’s fast! Having an FAQ guide for your customer service reps can further improve response time. In addition to quick answers, the ability to chat in real time with a customer to offer technical assistance or provide a coupon code means you can diffuse negative experiences and retain customers.
3. Online chat is convenient.
Customers now prefer live chat support to phone support. Convenience is one of its most attractive qualities; customers don’t have to leave the website to ask questions about a product or service. They don’t have to open their email or find a phone, or look you up on social media. Customers appreciate a business that values their time and they are likely to show appreciation through word of mouth advertising or repeat sales. Providing convenient service with quality information through live chat support helps strengthen your customer relationships and your business.
4. Reduce customer service expenses.
Case studies show that live chat software can reduce phone and customer support expenses. One employee can handle one phone call at a time. With online chat, the same employee could manage 4-5 chats at the same time, reducing the amount of overall customer service agents needed. Whether your customer service is handled by you or a call centre, the addition of online chat will improve the efficiency of your support team.
5. Build credibility with your customers.
Being able to chat with an employee, or better, the owner of the business, improves credibility with your customers. Using a website can feel impersonal and adding live chat adds a friendly, small business experience that customers appreciate. Ensure your team is trained and equipped with the knowledge and skills to provide a valuable customer service experience. Maintain credibility by providing customers with quick answers that are relevant and easy to understand. Once you implement online chat as a customer service option, keep regular live chat hours and respond to any offline queries right away.
Conclusion
A live chat strategically located on your website can help your business build a strong rapport with customers. Most live chat services offer the ability to chat right from your mobile so it’s easy for small business owners to stay connected. Zopim, LiveChat Inc, Olark and Intercom all offer live chat platforms for websites. Get connected with your customers and start reaping the benefits of online chat for your business today.
Webware.io provides the services, support, and expertise to help you small business navigate the online channels. To learn more about our services and how we can help maximize your businesses' exposure online, please click here.
If you have any questions about how we can help with your digital marketing needs, we’d love to hear from you. Please contact our experts here
62% of Small Businesses Fail with Facebook Ads. Here’s How to Fix That
By Neil Patel | | Tagged Website Resources
Everyone is using Facebook these days. There are over 2.2 billion active daily users.
China, the largest country in the world, only contains 1.4 billion people.
The ‘population’ of Facebook is massive!
Bio: He is the co-founder of NP Digital and Subscribers. The Wall Street Journal calls him a top influencer on the web, Forbes says he is one of the top 10 marketers, and Entrepreneur Magazine says he created one of the 100 most brilliant companies. Neil is a New York Times bestselling author and was recognized as a top 100 entrepreneur under the age of 30 by President Obama and a top 100 entrepreneur under the age of 35 by the United Nations.
Everyone is using Facebook these days. There are over 2.2 billion active daily users.
China, the largest country in the world, only contains 1.4 billion people.
The ‘population’ of Facebook is massive!
No wonder businesses all want to use it to promote their products and services.
The problem is, 62% of small businesses feel like their paid Facebook Ads are failing.
No one wants to be throwing money at ads that don’t work! What good is such a massive pool of potential customers if you can’t successfully reach them?
Thankfully, there are ways to fix this problem. You don’t have to be part of that 62%!
I’m going to show you the most common reasons why small businesses fail with Facebook Ads and how to fix each issue.
But first, let’s look at the big picture to understand the problem better.
The Problem Isn’t Facebook Ads
96% of all B2C marketers use social media posts as a form of content marketing. That leaves only 4% that don’t!
Not only that, but out of all of the B2C companies using social media, 97% of them use Facebook!
This means nearly everyone is using Facebook for business marketing.
If everyone is doing it, it must work, right?
Overall, only 3% of companies who participated in the Content Marketing Institute survey felt that their content marketing approach was not successful.
Since I just showed you that over 97% of them were using Facebook, we have to assume they included that in these results.
And that means Facebook content marketing is successful for the majority of businesses, in general.
But small business owners seem to be struggling with success.
Manta surveyed 4,712 small business owners regarding their use of Facebook, and their results are similar to Weebly’s.
50% of small businesses feel they’re not getting a positive return on investment from Facebook.
This is important for two reasons:
- The pool of potential customers is so massive, that if you cannot do this right, you’re handing over a huge chunk of business to your competitors who succeed at it.
- You’re paying for ads that aren’t providing a return, which means you’re just throwing away time and money.
Why is it that small businesses are failing at Facebook Ads when larger companies are not?
What are small businesses doing wrong?
Problem #1 – A lack of understanding of content marketing
I just showed you that the problem is small businesses and not Facebook Ads.
So what do small businesses have in common, that big businesses do not when it comes to Facebook advertising?
Let’s look at small businesses.
About one-third of small businesses fail within the first two years, and half of all small businesses fail by year five.
Why is the failure rate so high?
There is a range of reasons, from lack of experience to lack of cash flow.
Of course, these reasons for failing in business can also be valid reasons for failing in marketing.
Let’s start with the lack of experience.
Too many small business owners try to wear too many hats.
Just because you are an expert in your field, your product, or your service, does not mean you know everything you need to know about running a business.
Facebook Ads are not like an ad you pay to have in the local newspaper.
A basic understanding of content marketing is necessary to see success unless you’re just insanely lucky.
Understanding social marketing and how it differs from traditional marketing can make all the difference.
A typical approach through the sales funnel is actually a long and winding road across different channels, devices, and messages.
Your first job, then, is to try to recreate this whole winding path within Facebook Ad campaigns.
You need to have multiple campaigns, each with different objectives, and target audiences with varying levels of intent.
That means we need to look at campaigns as a whole.
Then we need to find the bottlenecks and determine how steps right before or after them are contributing to the issue.
The good news is that Facebook helps you with this right out of the gate:
Depending on your selection, your objectives and ads should be completely different.
Is your problem low sales?
Start with conversion campaigns.
Make sure all the basics are covered.
Create a ‘tripwire’ to scale down complex or expensive areas.
Focusing on being simple and straightforward should do the trick.
Are you trying to create consideration-building campaigns?
You need to actively re-engage people who are familiar with your business.
That means recapturing past visitors.
You should be using Dynamic Product Ads to see who has viewed product pages.
Focus on getting people to download eBooks, white papers, and checklists or try getting them to attend webinars.
Make sure you use marketing automation for all of this stuff to make it seamless.
Is your priority simply increasing awareness of your brand?
Prioritize expanding your reach by optimizing ads for website visits and clicks.
Aim to promote content that will appeal to the widest possible target group.
And make sure you try carousel ads to test different messaging to see what’s most effective.
Problem #2 – No strategy, plan, or measurement system
Of course, I realize it’s not as cut and dry as ‘learn content marketing and you will be a success’!
I also realize how many hats a small business owner has to wear and how limited your time can be.
So I’ll take you through several specific areas where small businesses tend to fail with Facebook Ads and how to quickly fix them today.
First off, as with any part of your business, the biggest mistake is not having a strategy and plan.
There is massive potential to grow your business using Facebook, but if you don’t have a clear vision of how you want to use it or what you want the outcome to be, you will fail.
Facebook is just another business tool. It is used by different businesses in different ways.
Over 72% of small businesses said they want to use Facebook to raise awareness.
If this is your goal, then a low click-through rate doesn’t accurately measure whether you were successful or not.
Before you try anything else, figure out what is your goal of using Facebook.
The top goals for small business owners in the Mantra study were:
- Building awareness
- Attracting new customers
- Getting phone calls from new customers
- Increasing website traffic
- Improving customer retention
Once you know your goals, then figure out how you’re going to measure success.
To make sure you’re picking the right posts, you need to establish engagement benchmarks.
This will help you decide whether or not a paid promotion will be worth it.
Keep in mind that benchmarks will vary between companies based on their goals.
To set an engagement benchmark for your company, you’ll want to look at your current number of followers, past engagement rates, competitors’ engagement, and your overall Facebook goals.
You’ll also want to determine how much value a click and conversion hold to your company. This will allow you to view your campaign in terms of monetary value and compare it with other advertising expenses.
A monetary value will also help justify the time and resources you put into Facebook Ads.
The benefits of maintaining an active presence on social media will only increase as time goes on.
Especially if you are a small company with little social media presence, a little effort will go a long way.
The best way to start is to define your goals, whether that be brand awareness or strictly conversions.
Plan a content strategy around your goals and desired brand personality.
Then, you’ll want to know who you’re talking to. Consider your current customer base and the type of audience you want to attract on social media.
Developing a deep understanding of your audience will help you create more engaging content and, therefore, create more effective paid ads.
Once your content is flowing, you’ll want to start tracking your KPIs so you can prove that your social media is successful.
Keep in mind that the average conversion rate for Facebook Ads is only 9.21%
The report also showed that the average conversion rate is highest in the fitness industry, at 14.29%, and education, at 13.58%. It’s the lowest in the technology sector, at 2.31%.
If you’re expecting Facebook Ads to provide a 50% conversion rate, of course, you will feel like they’re failing!
That being said, Facebook does produce the best ROI of all social media platforms.
How do you know your plan is working?
Test it. Continuously.
You need to test different offers to understand what works and adjust your plan accordingly.
The problem with the standard recommended A/B tests is that most fail.
To make matters worse, they’re incredibly hard to get results from if you’re not already converting well.
You shouldn’t even bother with A/B tests if you don’t yet have at least 1,000 monthly conversions.
Any single test should have a minimum of 250 conversions before you can believe the sample size.
The companies with the highest conversions aren’t even testing variables (which is what most A/B tests do).
Instead, they’re testing different offers.
That could mean one e-book but on completely different topics.
Both topics should be top of the funnel topics that appeal to a variety of people.
Both can also apply to the same segment or target group such as startup founders.
The only way to know which one converts best is to roll the dice and see.
That’s why planning without checking the results can mean failure.
Problem #3 – You’re not investing enough time.
58% of small businesses are only spending an hour a week on their Facebook marketing efforts.
Why is this a problem?
Because 3.3 million items are shared on Facebook every minute!
If you’re only active on Facebook infrequently, then your ads will never be seen among all the other noise.
There is simply too much volume.
Social Media Examiner surveyed social media marketers and found out that on average, they post on a branded Facebook page 8 times per day.
Imagine how quickly your ads are getting lost in news feeds if you only post once per day.
According to Mantra, an hour a day is even more time than most small businesses are investing!
The same survey indicated that 58% of small business owners put less than an hour a week into Facebook marketing.
Social media can’t be an afterthought. You will fail if you think of it this way.
As of March 2017,almost two billion people are monthly active Facebook users. Chances are most of your target customers are among those billions of people.
39% of marketers have increased their posting frequency on Facebook over the last 12 months.
If you only post infrequently, your potential customers likely won’t even see your posts.
According to Post Planner’s research, 75% of the engagement you get on your posts happens within the first 5 hours.
After that, engagement pretty much dies off.
This means if you aren’t posting regularly, you’re basically history.
While there are roughly 60 million businesses using Facebook pages, only about 4 million of those are actively posting on their page.
A stale business page could actually hurt your business more than no business page!
Anyone who comes across your out-of-date page may wonder if you’re still open or even a real business.
Facebook is the kind of thing that needs to be done right or not done at all.
Be honest with yourself about the time and resources you are willing to commit to your company’s Facebook page.
I should also warn that it is possible to go too far in the other direction as well.
Posting too much will overwhelm people with your messages to the point where they start tuning you out.
What’s the right frequency? Aim for 3 to 8 ad appearances per person over the life of your ad.
This can help make sure that your ads don’t become white noise.
Avoid setups like this one:
A frequency of 38 won’t just make people tune you out. It could turn potential customers into haters!
Problem #4 – You’re not investing enough money
Going back to the Weebly survey of small business owners, 82% have spent less than $50 on a Facebook Ad campaign and more than half didn’t buy Facebook Ads at all.
Less than $50!
In comparison, most successful B2C marketers spent an average of 26% of their entire marketing budget on content marketing (including Facebook Ads).
I can guarantee you this was more than $50!
Not only that, but 37% of them plan on increasing that spend over the next year.
But most small business owners surveyed by Weebly don’t want to spend any money on a paid campaign.
I get it. It can be hard to throw money at ads when you don’t know if they’ll work.
The good news is that you can experiment with organic posts to understand what resonates best with your audience before spending any money.
Look at the engagement of your current social media posts. If you have a post that’s creating a lot of organic engagement, it may be a good post to turn into a paid ad.
It will have a much better chance of success.
All ads on Facebook are basically just regular posts. The only difference is that you’re paying Facebook to maximize your reach.
Only a tiny fraction of followers will see your regular posts.
The reach of organic posts has been steadily declining as Facebook updates their algorithm.
Regular posts also don’t give you the ability to target specific people who are more likely to click on them.
When using paid advertising, you can target the people who are likely to be interested in your brand based off interests that they have expressed in the past and other data that Facebook has collected.
Today, reliance on free, organic results on Facebook will doom you to failure.
Organic posts reach only about 2% of your fans!
This means that 98% of your Facebook page’s fans may not see your posts.
That’s a huge loss of traffic!
Not to mention that the 2% you’re reaching are people who are already your fans!
Good luck reaching new audiences organically.
The situation is slightly better for smaller brands, but it’s still only about 6% of your fans that you will reach with organic content.
Let’s face it, social media for businesses has changed. It’s now a pay to play arena.
If you are trying to reach a wider audience with your Facebook posts, you’ll need to use Promoted Posts and other advanced Facebook Ad strategies.
Problem #5 – You’re not targeting the right audience
It’s not that small businesses contacted by Weebly weren’t seeing any returns on their ads.
It’s the quality of the returns that seem to be in question.
According to the feedback, small business owners did get clicks and likes but struggled with sales conversions.
“Although I may get clicks or likes, it doesn’t always translate to more money coming through the door,” one owner says.
Putting it simply, another responds, “Lots of impressions but almost no conversion.”
“When businesses don’t see the results they hope for, it’s usually because they haven’t done enough testing of their ad copy, visuals, and the ideal combination to target the right audience,” says Vitruvian Digital Advertising founder Kristie McDonald.
The potential audience on Facebook is massive.
Only a small percentage of them will actually convert
Small businesses aren’t asking themselves the right questions to determine an effective target market for Facebook Ads.
Have you been guilty of only defining your audience by their gender, age, and income?
If you’re choosing the simplest of criteria to let Facebook know your target audience, you’re going to fail.
You need to use more powerful insights into the behaviors and unique interests of your ideal audience.
That way you can deliver your ads only to people most likely to want what you have to offer.
Make sure you don’t just combine your demographics with every interest and behavior you can think of.
You need to set the criteria for only one or two interests and behaviors at a time.
If you try to go too wide, you will just spend a lot of money on audiences that don’t convert well.
You need to get laser specific in telling Facebook who you want to show your ads.
Make sure you’re targeting custom interest and lookalike audiences.
Use a social listening tool to monitor updates and sentiment.
This will tell you if what customers mean matches what they are saying.
Sometimes what they tell you is most important to them isn’t actually the most important thing.
You can use social listening to divide the market by interests instead of the typical demographic data.
Listening also allows for better personalization of ad content.
This is really valuable since 71% of consumers prefer personalized ads.
Whether you are relying on organic and paid advertising, the personalization of your brand is what will set you apart in the long run.
Once you know who you’re trying to reach, you can work on the type of content that will resonate with each segment.
Make sure that you use your value proposition to set your product or offer apart from the competition.
Remember that the value proposition needs to be phrased and marketed differently for audiences in each stage of the funnel.
Use your ads to get the right message to the right audience instead of trying to blast everyone with one message.
How do you know you successfully hit the right audience with the right message?
Facebook has a Relevance Score that will tell you.
The better you are at targeting the right ad message to the right audience, the better your click-through rate will be and the lower your cost per click.
AdEspresso decided to test this measure. They discovered that when they ran the exact same ad, but with better targeting, it got a much better Relevance Score.
Not only that, it dropped their cost per click and gained them four times more clicks when compared with the poorly targeted ad.
You can find this metric by going to one of your ad campaigns, going down to a specific Ad Set, and then looking in the lower right-hand corner.
The scoring system is one to ten, with one being the worst and ten the best.
Problem #6 – Stop trying to go for the cold sale
This is some of the feedback from one of the survey respondents who told Weebly that Facebook Ads don’t work:
We very rarely have ever gotten sales through Facebook. We feel that ‘Friends’ on Facebook would rather interact than be sold to. Trying to sell via Facebook is like walking around at a party and passing out business cards trying to sell your products to friends who would rather be socializing than dealing with a sales attempt.
It sounds to me like this person was trying to hard sell on a cold audience.
Socializing is the new way of selling.
If you only plan on pushing cold sales on social media, you might as well forget Facebook. At least that’s what Emily Pope, a small business marketing expert from Fundera thinks.
A good Facebook page strategy consists of a healthy mix of feel-good content, information your customers need to know, and a small bit of advertising. If you’re not set up for that or want to focus only on hard selling numbers, you’ll be wasting your time on a Facebook page.
In other words, you want to focus on benefitting and giving content to your consumers before asking them for anything, especially a sale.
To get the most out of Facebook, engage with your online community in positive ways.
How can you fix this?
Remember the sales funnel.
You need to build the relationship from the beginning on the funnel.
My guess is that this business owner isn’t used to coaxing customers through the funnel.
If you’re only used to selling to people once they walk into your store, you’re used to the hard sell strategy that works on people ready to buy.
This means you’re missing out on huge sales opportunities, even outside of Facebook!
On social media, you need to build trust before you can push a sale.
This isn’t something you can do with the occasional monthly post (see problem #3).
One quick way around it is to build a working relationship with influencers in your market.
Facebook works extremely well for retargeting.
This is one of the best values of Facebook Ads.
Why?
This audience is four times more likely to convert!
One reason for this is that these customers are already familiar with your brand and your product.
It’s no longer a cold sell.
No one is hanging out on Facebook looking to make a purchase.
Refer back to problem #1. You’re going to need to build multiple ad campaigns, one for each stage of the sales funnel.
Otherwise, you’re not going to be able to compete with all of the reasons they logged into Facebook.
Stop trying to jump right into the sales pitch!
Problem #7 – Understand that Facebook is a business
Some of the small business owners surveyed said they don’t believe the promise that paid posts will reach a larger audience.
Small business owners seem to begin to distrust Facebook right at the very beginning of an Ad campaign before there’s even been time to see results.
When the ad order is placed, most small business owners reached by Weebly were left saying, “Show me people. Where are the people? There are no people!”
You need to remember that Facebook is a business.
While it may seem like just a free place to hang out and socialize, it’s not.
You need to treat your relationship with Facebook the same as you would any business partnership.
You will only get a return out of it if you invest in it.
For example, linking a Facebook Pixel to your e-commerce site can have huge benefits for you.
Facebook also loves this because it provides them with tons of audience data.
If you see Facebook as anything other than a business, I’m betting you’re too uncomfortable to link all of your site data to them.
But as a business, if you don’t provide profit to them in some way (either information or money), then they have no incentive to help you succeed.
Facebook has proven results. They’re old in the social marketing world.
This is not some new kid on the block who is still untested.
The list of brands who’ve been successful with Facebook Ads goes on and on.
Facebook has an entire database of successful case studies.
Those results aren’t just for big business either.
Check out this ad for Design Pickle, (a startup):
Design Pickle offers unlimited graphics requests.
This ad is directly responsible for almost $6,000 in monthly recurring revenue for Design Pickle.
How?
They used it to target highly qualified leads. Leads who they then sent this survey:
They chose so many questions on purpose.
They used it to weed out people who were just looking for a freebie.
That meant they only got leads which were more likely to convert.
Their campaign generated around 500 leads.
30 of those leads turned into subscribers of their $200 per month service.
They estimate that their customer lifetime value to be around $1,100.
This means the one Facebook Ad resulted in an amazing 633% ROI!
If you want Facebook to work like this for you, you will have to change your viewpoint.
Treat it like a business and be willing to invest time, money, and some of your company and customer data to get an amazing return.
Conclusion
Almost two-thirds of small businesses are failing with Facebook Ads. You don’t have to be one of them!
Remember that Facebook Ads work.
There are proven results that work for companies of all sizes, and the huge majority of businesses use them for content marketing.
The problem is not with Facebook.
It’s with how you’re approaching Facebook.
Treat it like a business partnership.
Make a strategy, determine what you want out of it and how you’re going to measure your return.
Be prepared to invest more time and money into it if you want results.
As long as you invest wisely, targeting the right audiences with the right messages, you will see a positive ROI.
Facebook wasn’t designed as a place to cold-sell customers.
It is social media. Be social. Build relationships. Connect with influencers and your audience.
Those relationships can still be profitable!
What has been your biggest challenge with Facebook Ads?
Five Ways to Boost Your SEO Strategy and Online Presence
By Rebecca Menezes | | Tagged Website Resources
As more businesses understand the necessity of being online, getting noticed has become the new challenge. If you’ve recently launched your website, you’ve probably experienced the same struggle. Besides the competition online, search engines like Google control what users see. Their algorithms ensure that only the most relevant pages are shown to users based on the search query and keywords used.
As more businesses understand the necessity of being online, getting noticed has become the new challenge. If you’ve recently launched your website, you’ve probably experienced the same struggle. Besides the competition online, search engines like Google control what users see. Their algorithms ensure that only the most relevant pages are shown to users based on the search query and keywords used.
To optimize your website for Google’s algorithms and boost your online visibility & presence, you may be familiar with search engine optimization (SEO). SEO involves a set of best practices that help search engines recognize your content and its relevance to specific search queries. The more relevant your content is to a search, and the more prominent your online presence is, the higher your ranking will be on Google.
Google and other search engines change their search algorithms regularly and improve search result quality. As a result, your SEO and content strategy must stay top of mind to make sure you match their ranking criteria.
Below are tips to boost your online visibility and help you stay up-to-date on the latest SEO best practices to improve search rankings.
1. Update website content.
The number one driver behind your Google ranking is quality content. In order to boost your search rankings to get on the first page, it’s essential to improve your content with targeted keywords. (A combination of words people use in their search queries.) It is important to take time to research the best keywords for your business before adding them to pages throughout your website. You can then analyze your website to see which keywords get you the most traffic. These keywords will be the ones you want to focus on and research different variations of them that can be added to new pages you create for your site. Pages that each target their own keyword will give you the best results.
While creating new content for your website, make sure to avoid using excessive keywords, known as keyword stuffing, as Google could penalize your site. Adding genuine content that’s helpful to visitors can improve your site’s authority and relevance. Regularly updated content is an indicator of relevancy and shows that your website is trying to improve the user experience.
2. Get listed in website directories.
Another way to improve your ranking is to leverage the popularity of online directories and review sites like Google My Business. Your business listings help people learn more about your business, it's location and other important information. The website directory does more than a basic listing by allowing people to review and rate companies based on their experience. Besides reviews, there are more details that the Google directory puts on display. For example, when searching for CPAs in Toronto, Ontario, the Google results display a list of CPAs registered with Google My Business. These listings include reviews, addresses, contact details, hours operation, and a link to each business website. This lets people find your business quickly, easily understand what you do, and communicate with you instantly.
Listing on other directories like Yelp, Angie’s List, and Whitepages works a bit differently. These directories can be listed in search results and, when clicked, can show people multiple businesses in your industry when they search for businesses like yours.
3. Blog about what matters.
Blogs are a great way to help your business stay relevant online and boost your search rankings. They let you share your thoughts on key topics related to your business while also giving you the flexibility to use strategic keywords that relate to each one.
The only challenge with blogging is selecting topics that provide content that is both informative and interesting. With the right topic, you can inspire your readers and become a go-to resource for your audience.
Most readers who are looking for content online are not just looking for content that is unique. They’re looking for content that will help them grow both professionally and personally. To make your content unique, your blogs should contain actionable information that your readers can put to use and will benefit them. The way you present your content matters too. Long-form content helps increase your search rankings more than short-form content as long as you share valuable, concise, and straightforward information. Creating long-form content that is not focused will negate any advantages and increase your bounce rate. At the end of the day, you want to create content that captivates your audience, keeps their interest, and encourages them to continue their journey with you.
4. Collect reviews from clients.
People need assurance that they are making the right choices when purchasing products and services. A company's online reputation and reviews play a significant part in this. Similarly, online reviews help search engines understand the authority and trustworthiness of a website to ensure they provide users with the best possible results. Client reviews help improve a business' credibility and give future customers more reasons to work with you.
5. Understand website reports.
Website reports help you understand everything that is happening on your website. These reports help you see which pages are getting the most traffic, which keywords are working best, which blog posts are most engaging, and how people are finding your website. All of these details are crucial in helping you see how you can improve your SEO strategy. They indicate what kind of content your audience enjoys, which topics they are most interested in, and what platforms your audience uses to learn more about you. This is powerful information that can help you test new content strategies, develop new Ad campaigns, and create other online promotions that help bring in more traffic to your website.
Setting up your SEO strategy
Now that you have a better understanding of how SEO works, it’s time to put these tools into practice and start driving more qualified leads to your website. However, to use SEO effectively and continue boosting your online visibility, you must stay up-to-date on the latest trends. Search engine optimization is a continuous process, irrespective of the methods you use. That means you must regularly dedicate time towards your SEO strategy. To learn more about how to drive success through your SEO campaigns, please read our previous blog by clicking here.
The only thing that will hamper your online presence is failing to dedicate time to nurturing your digital growth. Don't let this happen to you. Reach out to Webware.io for all of your SEO and digital marketing needs to continue growing your business and your online presence. We are dedicated to helping you achieve your digital goals. Our all-in-one digital marketing toolkit helps you efficiently manage your website, blog, SEO, online reviews, reputation, and more!
Our services, support, and expertise help small businesses like yours easily navigate the digital world so you can focus on what you do best.
To learn more about our services at Webware.io, please click here. If you have any questions about how we can help with your digital marketing needs, we’d love to hear from you. Please contact our experts here.
Small Business Marketing Essentials: Reach More Customers With a Strong Online Presence
By Sarah York | | Tagged Website Resources
Exposing your small business to the online community means more than just setting up a website with your business address and contact information. It means creating a virtual version of your business, with an attractive, informative website and a social media presence. In this digital era, people use online search engines for almost everything they need. For many, Google search is the first place they go when they have a question or want to know more about something. Given the reliance on the internet today, not maintaining an active online presence can be potentially fatal for small businesses. If you are wondering how to get online, or how to take your business online, this post will explain why and how to establish a strong online presence.
Why Your Small Business Needs a Strong Online Presence:
- Visibility & Accessibility - Customers are more likely to turn to the web for research when they need information. They may either be looking for specific information on your business, services/products your business offers, or general information about your industry. Going online will give you the upper hand over your competition. The easier it is for your potential customers to find you, the more likely they will invest in your products and services.
- Build trust & confidence - A quality website, active social media, and an updated blog immediately give your business credibility to potential customers. It reassures clients that your business is established and trust-worthy. Open communication and quality customer service, through your website or social media, can help increase customer confidence and brand loyalty.
- Marketing & Ecommerce - In this new online era, the internet allows you to market to anyone, anywhere in the world. There are a number of online marketing and advertising avenues which can help extend your reach and increase both online and offline sales. Whether you’re displaying testimonials from clients or photos of your newest products, it’s never been easier to show the world what your business offers. Displaying your products or services on your website allows customers to easily learn about what your business offers.
How to Establish a Strong Online Presence:
- Website - A website serves a primary source of information about your business. The importance of local search is growing as we evolve. Most customers access the Internet, and use search engines to research everything, from entertainment to professional services. Having a website is the first step to interacting with your existing customers and attracting new customers to your business. Building an attractive, easily navigable website is a great first step to securing your online presence.
- Blog - Blogging significantly increases SEO and lands your business higher in Google search results. The more quality content on your website and the more often that content is updated, the more Google will favour your website over others. This is easily achievable with consistent, quality blog posts, relevant to your industry and business. A blog can also help establish your business as knowledgable and a go-to source of information for customers.
- Social presence - Having your small business on recognized online platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest is essential in expanding your client base. Through these platforms, customers can learn more about you and your business. Webware offers its customers a Facebook Store, where a business can sell products directly from the business Facebook page. All your social platforms should display your expertise in your industry and maintain open communication with your customers.
- Webstore - If your business sells products, adding ecommerce to your website can increase your visibility online. Online shopping is a growing force in the retail market and can help you reach a new customer base, outside your local area.
- Reviews - People often check reviews to help them decide between products or services. People generally trust their peers so good online reviews can be a gold-mine for your business. Reviews also help increase your business’s ranking on the Google Search Results page. Again, the more quality content that links back to your website, the more Google will favour it. Install a Review widget (like Yotpo) on your website and encourage customers to write reviews about your products and their experience with your business.
The Bottom Line
In today’s Internet-focused world, a business that doesn’t maintain an active online presence will go unnoticed by Google and potential customers. To avoid being lost in the internet clutter, ensure your business is easily accessible both locally and across the globe.
Your website and social media presence are opportunities to make a great first impression. Inspire trust and confidence in your clients from day one with a well designed and comprehensive digital strategy.
If this blog has you considering how you can improve your online presence, maybe it’s time for you to find a digital marketing solution that fits your business. Webware.io is a digital marketing agency that provides the services, support and expertise to help you stay competitive in today’s web-based world. We work with you to provide website design services, e-commerce solutions, blogging, email newsletter management, social media marketing, reputation management, and more.
To learn more about our services, please click here. If you have any questions about how we can help you or digital marketing, we’d love to hear from you. Please contact us here.
Don't Believe These Myths When Marketing Your Small Business Online
By Sarah York | | Tagged Website Resources
Have you considered online marketing for your small business? If you have a website, online marketing is a great way to increase traffic, leads and sales. Online Marketing covers a range of business-boosting activities: SEO (Search Engine Optimization) social media marketing (Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram etc), content marketing, email marketing, paid advertising to name a few. If you’re not sure if online marketing will work for your business, here’s 6 online marketing myths debunked to get you on your way!
Have you considered online marketing for your small business? If you have a website, online marketing is a great way to increase traffic, leads and sales. Online Marketing covers a range of business-boosting activities: SEO (Search Engine Optimization) social media marketing (Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram etc), content marketing, email marketing, paid advertising to name a few. If you’re not sure if online marketing will work for your business, here’s 6 online marketing myths debunked to get you on your way!
Myth #1 My Business Doesn’t Need an Online Presence.
Perhaps you feel that your customers aren’t online (they are!), or maybe you don’t need more customers at the moment. While that’s a nice, comfy position to be in, it may not last forever. Even if your business is in a good spot today, an online presence can help solidify its future. The majority of the North American population use the internet from all age groups: over 90% usage rate for ages 18-50, over 80% usage for ages 50-64 and almost 60% usage rate for over 65 years. For many of these internet users, heading to Google search is the first thing they do when they’re looking for more information. If your business is online, your potential customers have a much better chance of finding you! An online presence increases your business’s visibility and accessibility while building trust and confidence with your customers. In today’s digital age, it is no longer a luxury to be online - your customers expect it! Read more about why your business needs a strong online presence here.
Myth #2 I Don’t Have Money For Online Marketing.
Spending money on online marketing is an investment in your business’s future. Once you find the right online marketing strategy that works for your business, you will see an increase in traffic, and leads. You might be surprised at the results even a small online marketing budget can yield. Start small and use analytics to find what works - you’ll be glad you did! Even the most limited budget can benefit from Google’s tools to help your business communicate up-to-date business info, manage reviews and connect social media accounts to boost search engine results.
Myth #3 Online Marketing Doesn’t Work.
Perhaps you’ve had a sour experience, received some bad advice, or didn’t give the online marketing strategy enough time to work. While it’s true that not every type of online marketing works for all businesses, there is a strategy that will work for you. If online marketing hasn’t worked for you in the past, or you’re skeptical of it altogether, Google is a trusted and safe place to start. Google is continuously improving its search algorithms so it’s easier for your customers to find you - making online marketing easier for small business. Learn more about how Google can help your business here.
Finding an online marketing strategy that works for your business starts with market research. Get to know where your customers and target audience spend time online; focus your efforts on those channels. Once you know WHERE to market online, creating quality content is more important than quantity. Understand who your customers are and tailor your content to their interests and needs. If you plan to hire an agency to help you, check reviews, ask specific questions about what methods they use and what kind of results to expect.
Myth #4 - I can expect results right away!
As they embark on an online marketing journey, many businesses have the expectation that they will see results right away. Unfortunately, gaining solid SEO (Search Engine Optimization) ground is mostly about building strength over time (for example - with keywords, link building, blogging etc). A quality, online marketing strategy that includes SEO will likely yield results starting at the 6 month mark. It’s common to see small results as early as 3 months but investing a minimum of 12 months into an online marketing strategy is your best bet. Once you’re happy with how your strategy is performing, implement a maintenance strategy to keep up the momentum. Don’t let minimal results in the beginning discourage you; online marketing is a marathon - not a sprint!
Myth #5- My business doesn’t need a website; we are on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram!
Social Media Marketing is only one part of a comprehensive online marketing strategy. While using the same social networks your customers use is extremely important, they don’t take the place of a website. Even though your social media profiles will show up on Google searches, they are not contributing to your SEO ranking. Additionally, social media platforms are likely to change over time; websites aren’t going anywhere. It’s hard to imagine platforms like FaceBook and Twitter becoming irrelevant, but MySpace is a great reminder that it can happen. Lastly, your website and the content within it, are owned by you. Facebook owns your business page (and its content) and can choose to shut it down at any time. For the best chance at online marketing success, be sure to include a range of proven marketing tactics, like a website, in addition to your social media campaigns.
Myth #6 - There’s too much competition; there’s no point in online marketing.
If your competition includes a lot of big companies with huge marketing budgets, it can be difficult to increase your search ranking for certain keywords. However, that doesn’t mean you can’t find a strategy that works for your business. Even if you aren’t competing with Fortune500 companies for search engine rankings, here’s 3 ways to step ahead of your competition:
- Long-tail keyword strategy. A long-tail keyword is a specific, detailed phrase (usually contains more than 3 words) to narrow search results. For example, “where to buy conflict free diamonds online” is a long-tail keyword option for “diamond”.
- Great content marketing. As an expert in your industry with hands-on experience, you have the opportunity to provide valuable information to those looking for it. Get blogging!
- Local Search. Small businesses can leverage the power of local search by incorporating the neighbourhood or city into their SEO strategy. For example, “best fish tacos in The Distillery District, Toronto”.
People are using search in a more conversational way than ever before. Small businesses can use their unique expertise and experience to employ these strategies to get ahead of big competition.
Finding the right mix of online marketing activities to suit your small business can positively affect your bottom line. Don’t let these 6 online marketing myths discourage you from finding success!
If this article has you thinking about how you can improve your digital strategy, maybe it’s time that you consulted a professional for a digital marketing solution for your business. Webware.io is a digital marketing agency that provides the services, support, and expertise you need to stay competitive in today’s web-based world. We work with you to provide website design, e-commerce solutions, blogging, email newsletter management, social media marketing, reputation management, and more.
To learn more about our services, please click here. If you have any questions about how we can help you or digital marketing, we’d love to hear from you. Please contact us here.
Websites Behaving Badly: How to Find Out What’s Wrong With Your Website
By Ivana Taylor | | Tagged Website Resources
I just knew that something was wrong with my website. No one would believe me. But the numbers didn’t lie. Here’s my story and what I learned from the process. Hopefully, this will help you fix your website.
Bio: Ivana Taylor is the publisher of DIYMarketers.com. She ranked #21 out of 30,000 influential people on the Internet in Fast Company. Ivana is also one of D&B Top SMB Influencers. She is the book editor for Small Business Trends, a contributing author to AMEX Open Forum and has appeared on MSNBC.
I just knew that something was wrong with my website. No one would believe me. But the numbers didn’t lie. Here’s my story and what I learned from the process. Hopefully, this will help you fix your website.
WTF?!
When something is wrong with your website, it’s hard to figure out what’s going on and where to go for help. In this article, I’ll cover how to find out what’s wrong with your website and where you can go for help.
My Personal Struggle With a Sick Website
I’ve had my website since 2008, that’s fairly ancient in internet time. And since I’m not a technical or SEO expert, I’ve made many, many mistakes over the years. I can’t believe I’m going to share them — but here are just a few:
I ignored SEO for too long.
For the first five years or so I basically ignored SEO. I didn’t understand it and I’d heard that if you write for the reader, you should be ok. Let’s just say that ignoring something doesn’t make it go away.
I didn’t organize the site very well.
There was a lot of old, thin content that was perfectly fine back in 2008 but isn’t very good today.
The site has been hacked twice!
I’ve done some fixes, but there are still some issues in there somewhere.
I let outsiders in to help — but they screwed it up
After the hack, I wanted to fix some of these issues with SEO and tried to save money by hiring an outside person. This was a fiasco.
Traffic started to drop...
After setting a goal to grow my traffic and engagement, I figured that I needed SEO help. But, I didn’t understand enough about SEO to find out what was really wrong and how to fix it.
The multiple SEO people I talked to just kept saying write more, better content. And I was doing that. But traffic continued to drop.
Something was definitely wrong. I didn’t know what, but it felt like I was driving my car with the parking brake on.
The list goes on and on, but I wanted to lay out my “ugly” right here so you can see that I’m a lot like you.
How You’ll Know if There is Something Wrong With Your Website?
Here is a short list of a few things that might indicate that there’ something wrong with your website.
- You notice a drop in calls or website visitors.
- It takes a long time for your site to load on a desktop.
- When you enter your website on mobile, it takes a long time to come up.
- When you open your website on mobile, it loads slowly and the text is small and hard to read.
- Not converting the visitors you get.
As I shared, I’ve been there. And I’m sharing what I’ve learned in this journey (so far) that might help you as well.
Do a Simple Diagnosis on Your Website
Rather than just trusting your intuition, it’s best to “check the oil” of your website and peek under the hood.
For this, you’ll need to get familiar with Google Analytics and Google Search Console.
Here’s what I’ve learned: the most reliable tools to diagnose Google issues are Google tools. The good news is that Google tools are free. The bad news is that they can be hard to read and understand.
Google Analytics will give you information about your visitors’ behavior on your site. Google Search Console will tell you about Google’s behavior on your site.
Believe it or not, 80% of your problems can be identified from a close look at these two tools.
I know you’re not a technical expert. I’m not either. But I’ve learned that there are certain things you HAVE to know, otherwise, you won’t get the help you need. Or worse, the help you find, will not actually fix your site.
Look for Trends on Google Analytics
The first place you want to go to is Google Analytics. Google Analytics is a free web analytics tool offered by Google to help you analyze your website traffic.
You’ll find everything you need to know about Google Analytics on the “Google for Beginners” page.
Once you’ve set everything up, take a look at the traffic coming to your site and notice any trends up or down.
Read More:
Google is constantly updating its algorithms with a focus on improving user experience. In other words, when someone asks a question or searches for something, they get the best answer to their question at the top of the Google search results.
You’ll want to pull a 6-month time frame of data so that you can see if there is a cycle or some type of change in your website visits.
Compare a recent time period to a past time period and note what changes there have been.
You can also check to see if your drop in traffic was due to a Google Update. You can see a history of Google Algorithm updates on Moz. If your drop in traffic matches closely to a recent Google update, you want to read up on what the update was and see what you need to do differently.
Check Google Search Console
Next, head over to Google Search Console. While Google Analytics is more user-focused, Google Search console reports on your site’s performance on the search engine.
Google Search Console is a free service offered by Google that helps you monitor, maintain, and troubleshoot your site’s presence in Google Search results.
What you can learn from Google Search Console:
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The queries and questions people ask where your site is a result.
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The pages that get the most impressions and clicks.
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Identify your lowest ranking pages.
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See how your site is indexed (how does Google see your site, and your pages)
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Find issues with your site on mobile
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Identify the pages that have the most backlinks (most authoritative)
If there’s something wrong with your website, you’ll most likely see evidence of it on Google Search Console.
There are many, many other ways that Google Search Console can give you a peek inside the performance of your website.
Unless you’re checking your analytics regularly, you may not notice that there’s a problem until you see some type of drop in your business. That’s why it’s a good idea to make checking these analytics regularly important.
What Makes Your Website Sick?
If you build a house and let it sit there without maintaining it — things will ultimately wear out and break down. The same is true of your site.
Getting hacked:
If you aren’t updating your site and keeping it safe and secure, you could get hacked. Think of this as an “infestation”. Someone was able to break through a wall and infest your site with bad code. That means you’ll have to get a web developer to serve as an “exterminator” of sorts to clean all of that up.
A “bloated” WordPress theme or bad coding:
Some WordPress themes can be very “code” heavy. Developers call that “bloated” and it often impacts the speed of your site and the performance.
Many popular WordPress themes that come with a lot of layout options are considered bloated. This happens when you include all the layout options. You can minimize this bloat by eliminating or turning off any features that you don’t use.
Another contributor to bloat is large images. Images are a double-edged sword because today’s high-resolution screens require big, beautiful images. The good news is that there are tools like TinyPng that will help you reduce the size of your images without sacrificing sharpness.
Not Mobile Friendly
I see a lot of small business websites that are not mobile-friendly. More and more people are accessing sites from their mobile devices. So it’s critical that your visitors can easily see and use your site on a mobile device. That means that if your site is a miniature version of what’s on a desktop — that’s not good enough.
You can test to see if your site is mobile-friendly on Google.
Google doesn’t see all your pages
With billions of websites and even more web pages, Google only has so much time and bandwidth to index all of them. So, every website is allocated a “crawl budget”. That means that Google only has so much time and bandwidth to spend on your website.
Learn More: How Do Search Engines Work
Too many plugins:
WordPress themes use plugins to add customized functionality to your website. The more plugins you have, the more “outside” influencer you’re adding to your website. Plugins that aren’t secure make your site vulnerable to security breaches and hackers. They can also slow your site down and mess with your website performance. Nine times out of ten, if you’re having a problem on your site – it’s a plugin.
Bad hosting:
Think of your website host as the “apartment” where your website lives. And, like most apartments, they might be nice — or not so nice.
You want to give your website the nicest home that you can afford. Here are a few tips on choosing a host:
- Look for a “medium” sized host. Some hosting companies get too big and you end up paying more money for less service and support.
- Make sure they get good ratings for customer service.
- Avoid private hosting services.
Read More: Web Hosting Fundamentals
Don’t Abdicate Responsibility For Your Site
If there is anything I’ve learned as I go through the process of fixing my site, it’s that you, as the business owner, have to know and understand the channels that drive customers to your business.
Sure, you can and should ask for help. But you have to know enough about the basics of website functionality so that you can LEAD the effort.
Take the time to read and research what trusted sources say about what you are experiencing.
Talk to numerous technical experts such as website developers, technical SEO professionals as well as content SEO practitioners. Like most things, you’ll find that many issues overlap. The process can become overwhelming, but if you don’t care to know what’s wrong with your website, how can you expect others to help you fix it?
Introducing The Digital Voice - The One Email You Should Care About
By Sarah York | | Tagged Website Resources
You’re a small business owner, and you’re busy. We get it. Your email inbox is most likely a daunting task to get through in one day, at best. Your time needs to be carefully allocated to things that create value for you and your business.
You’re a small business owner, and you’re busy. We get it. Your email inbox is most likely a daunting task to get through in one day, at best. Your time needs to be carefully allocated to things that create value for you and your business.
Doing your own research for the best, industry leading tips and tricks takes time, and it’s hard to know who to trust. We can provide the expert advice your business needs to attract, engage, and keep customers. This is why, each month, Webware will be sharing our knowledge, as well as industry leading advice from subject matter experts, and influencers to provide you with the tools for success.
As digital marketing experts, Webware is constantly seeking to deliver value to entrepreneurs and small business owners. In order to do this, we understand that your business needs don’t stop with online marketing. You need holistic advice on how to drive sales, manage the day to day needs of your business, and foster personal growth.
This is the driving force behind The Digital Voice. We want to be your trusted resource for sound business advice. Whether you’re a small business that wants to stay small, expand, or become a big business, we want to provide you with the tools and resources to help you grow professionally and personally.
So, if you’re reading this because you received our email newsletter, don’t let this become another email that gets ignored amongst the chaos of your day. Let us help you stay up to date on what you need to know in order to stay ahead of the competition.
If you’ve stumbled upon this blog today and would like to start receiving The Digital Voice newsletter, simply provide your email in the form in the column to the right of this article and you will start to receive this great resource!
Choosing the Best Digital Marketing Agency - Common Mistakes People Make
By Sarah York | | Tagged Website Resources
Nobody likes burning their fingers, but sometimes, the business decisions we make, backfire and put a strain on our finances. As digital marketing is still a burgeoning industry, it’s nuances aren’t fully understood, and small business owners often fall for the smoke and mirror tactics of agencies that offer digital marketing services.
Nobody likes burning their fingers, but sometimes, the business decisions we make, backfire and put a strain on our finances. As digital marketing is still a burgeoning industry, it’s nuances aren’t fully understood, and small business owners often fall for the smoke and mirror tactics of agencies that offer digital marketing services.
The truth is, the dawn of digital marketing has opened innumerable avenues to market your products and services successfully. Whether you’ve been running a successful business for decades, or maybe you’re the new kid on the block, digital marketing can propel your business to the heights you’ve dreamed of. However, to get there, cutting out any mistakes that may be made along the way becomes essential.
As a growing digital marketing service provider Webware understands the struggles small business owners face and want to help you overcome the challenges that come your way. To help you navigate through the web of digital marketers and select a team that best suits your requirements, we’ve put together a list of the most common mistakes people make when hiring a digital marketing agency and how to avoid committing them.
1. Not working with a full-service digital marketing agency.
Some agencies focus their offering on a single service such as social media marketing or SEO but do not offer an entire suite of services. The challenges of working with providers who specialize in one or a handful of areas of digital marketing expertise are two-fold. First, in order to get the full-suite, you will have to work with and manage numerous resources adding to your already stretched workload. Second, often there is integration between the different channels that are easier to manage by a single entity. To gain an understanding of an agencies’ capabilities it’s important to ask for examples of previous integrated campaigns they have worked on to verify the services offered. Experience in creating and developing a website, optimizing for keywords, launching appropriate digital marketing services, managing social channels, placing ads, and creating content to generate the maximum level of engagement are table stakes for an experienced digital agency. Also, an accomplished agency will provide monthly analytical reports to demonstrate the success of their efforts and to make recommendations for improvement.
2. Choosing the cheapest as opposed to the best digital marketing agency.
Price is a major constraint for most companies, but going with the cheapest digital agency could damage your brand image in the eyes of your customers if the work is not up to the mark. A reputed marketing agency will enhance your brand perception instead of damaging it, which is why it’s important to set a reasonable budget and also expect to pay a competitive rate for exceptional work.
3. Approaching an agency without a clear marketing goal.
It’s essential to have clear digital marketing goals and carry out research before you start approaching digital marketing companies. You do not want to end up taking on services that are unnecessary, based on recommendations from the agency. You know your business best, so make sure that the company you choose aligns with your overall mission and vision and not the other way round.
4. Not getting a plan from the digital agency.
When you work with an agency, it’s important to ask for a plan that includes timelines, goals, and the platforms that will be used to enhance your brand. Your company may be more successfully promoted on Facebook and Instagram if you‘re into retail, or it may receive better traction on LinkedIn and Twitter if you’re primarily B2B. Email marketing and newsletters could also help your strategy, so explore a customized package based on your needs.
5. Working without a marketing budget for campaigns.
Every company needs to have a marketing budget for the year. You will have to consider what percentage of your budget you are setting aside for digital marketing and the budget for traditional marketing. Getting a beautiful website designed will be a one-time cost, but digital marketing services are usually charged on a monthly retainer basis, so this needs consideration. Also, running ads on digital marketing platforms increases the visibility of your brand, but it’s important to set a budget, so you do not end up overspending.
6. Not checking the reputation of the firm.
A company that is providing digital marketing as a service should have a strong reputation online. It’s vital to check the company’s social media channels and read reviews and ratings from past clients. Also, the kind of language, images, and videos used on the website will give you a clear indication of the caliber of the company.
If this article made you sit up and think about your digital strategy, maybe it’s time you consulted a professional for a digital marketing solution for your business. Webware.io is a digital agency that provides all the tools you need to succeed in today’s web-based world, on one platform. We work with you to provide website design, e-commerce solutions, blogging, email newsletter management, social media marketing, reputation management, and more. Our head office is located in Toronto, and we serve clients across Canada and North America.
To learn more about our services, please click here. If you have any questions about how we can help you or digital marketing, we’d love to hear from you. Please contact us here.
Why You Need Digital Marketing - Don't Believe These Myths!
By Sarah York | | Tagged Website Resources
Over time, digital marketing has evolved and changed the way businesses operate. As a result, digital marketing agencies are upping their game and offering a range of new tools and channels for organizations to connect with their audiences and simultaneously expand their client base.
Over time, digital marketing has evolved and changed the way businesses operate. As a result, digital marketing agencies are upping their game and offering a range of new tools and channels for organizations to connect with their audiences and simultaneously expand their client base.
However, as digital marketing is still an ever-growing field, there are countless myths and misconceptions associated with it. Those that fall for this misinformation can miss opportunities that could take their business to the next level.
To take advantage of the right digital marketing services, we want to help you steer clear of these falsehoods, and to do so, Webware.io has dispelled three of the most widely believed myths about digital marketing.
Myth 1: You can be successful without having an online presence.
The reason this myth has become so widespread is due to the underlying fear of failing. Many understand the potential digital marketing could have on their business, but they are afraid of making a mistake and a possible adverse outcome.
However, any effort online will directly benefit their business. At Webware.io, our clients are happy, ranking higher on Google’s organic search, and have a better focus on operations.
Myth 2: Your offline product/service can beat your online competition.
If you do not have any online visibility but your competitors are marketing on the web, they already have the lead. Entrepreneurs or new businesses often believe that better services or products are solely more crucial than marketing efforts.
Unfortunately, if you don’t sell to the group of hungry buyers online, it is likely that they are looking at your competitor’s website or page and may end up being more interested in them.
Without a digital presence, you are practically spoon-feeding your potential buyers to your competitors. To rectify this, you need to identify areas in your current online marketing that are weak and need improvement. You can try A/B testing to find what works and then double down on it.
Myth 3: Digital Marketing Services are Expensive.
It is costly if you don’t do it right!
If you leave it to the marketing professionals, every penny will be paid back to the business. Through our years of experience, we have gained sufficient knowledge to place your money in the areas that offer the most return.
To steer clear of these and any other myths, and get access to a all-in-one digital solution, reach out to Webware.io. Our solution provides the tools, expertise, and support to get digital marketing working for your business. In addition to building and maintaining websites and online stores, we offer SEO marketing services, newsletters, multiple blogs, and manage your social media platforms.
To learn more about the services we offer, please click here. If you have any questions about digital marketing, we would love to hear from you, chat with us here.

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