Posts Tagged ‘marketing tips’
Posted on August 3, 2010 - by Kwame
10 Tips to Remember When Writing Sales Content
Do you sometimes forget the ingredients needed to cook up great sales content? Writing quality content is the only way to convince people to buy your products. If you sell soccer boots and just write, “red soccer boots”, next to a picture, all you’ll be doing is showing bones. And that’s scary.
Give your sales copy some skin. People want details so give it to them. You also need sales so here is a simple list to help you remember how to write your copy.
1. Picture your audience: You need to have a clear mental picture of who your audience is, the problems they have and how you think your solution will help them.
2. Talk to them: Not about yourself. Your “About” page is there to say everything about your business. Your sales content is supposed to have “you” and “your”; directly referring to anybody who reads it (in this case, your target audience).
3. Emotions trigger action: People act on two basic emotional principles:
- They take action on their fears
- They take action on their pleasures
With this knowledge, you can use words that spell out your reader’s fears and couple it with the joy (pleasure) they’ll get after using your product.
4. Spill out the benefits: What benefit does your product offer? People read about products because they want to know what it does so add some detail.
5. Spark imaginations: Make your content memorable by sparking the reader’s imagination. Some people read content with half-dead minds so you need to awaken them by taking them to Wonderland. Use phrases like, “imagine you …”, “think about the benefits.” Etc.
6. Where’s the proof?: Has your product helped many people already? Has it won any awards? Are people saying anything about it? Where’s the proof? Show it. It will help you get more conversions.
7. Any offers or bonuses?: Do you have any bonuses to offer? Do you have any discounts? What are they? This is not a necessity but it helps in conversions.
8. Where’s the call to action? Your content needs an enabler and that is what a call to action is for. After reading your content, people want to know what to do next. Tell them what you want them to do: buy a product, fill out a form, etc.
9. Say your last words: Your post script (P.S.) is a great tool for summing up your content. It’s a way of reminding the reader of what they’ll be getting or why they need to act fast.
10. Go over it: Your letter is not perfect yet. Go over it and see if it sounds right. Does it convince you? You can also show it to your family or friends you trust. Does it convince them? To find out, ask them if they’ll take action if they were to be your audience.
All you have to do now is to save this list somewhere and use it when you write.
Did I leave anything out? What do you use to spice up your sales copy? Let me know.
Posted on June 16, 2010 - by Kwame
How to Add a Unique Voice to Your Brand: 14 Tips and Ideas to Help You Win
Differentiating your brand from other brands can be a daunting activity these days. This is because of the many other brands that are also out there competing for attention from the same audience you need.
In this article, we will not be looking at the very basics of brand recognition: logo and brand colors. What I’ll be sharing with you are tips that will give your brand a unique image and the unique voice it needs to speak to its audience. I am using the word “unique” because every brand has a voice so if I use just “voice” it will sound too regular. You don’t want a regular brand. That sucks.
When your brand has a unique voice, every message it sends out is heard by its audience; the right audience. Your audience will then send out your message to other people who may already be involved in your brand’s conversations or may be total strangers to your brand.
All-in-all, it is essential to give your brand a voice that can be differentiated from the masses.
Let’s look at the ideas you can use to boost your brand.
1. Use a Powerful USP: I am not going to assume you already know what a USP is, so I’m going to define it. A USP is the abbreviation for Unique Selling Proposition, which is a feature of a product or brand that makes it different from other products or brands it competes with. To form a strong brand, you will need a powerful USP that people will want to put to test. For example, a pizza delivery service may have, “we deliver in 30 minutes” as their USP. If you have a pizza delivery service and you think you can deliver in 20 minutes within a certain radius, use “we deliver in 20 minutes within ‘x’ miles” as your USP. Use USPs that sound better than your competitors’ USPs and you will be one step toward winning.
Caution: Be sure you can guarantee that you can deliver on your USPs promise before you put it out in public. If you don’t do this and you keep on breaking your promises, you will fail fast.
2.Use a Mascot: Mascots are great brand building assets. The Santa Clause we know today was a mascot for a Coca-cola X’mas campaign. The campaign was so successful that the image of the mascot spread across borders and the jolly mascot in the red and white suit is what so many people around the world refer to as Santa Clause or Father Christmas in some countries. It’s a shame so many people don’t know about where the new Santa Clause image (as we know it today) came from. You can also create a mascot that will spread your brand’s voice across borders.
3. Create a Tradition: Start a brand tradition. Some businesses have a freebie day as their tradition. They give out free stuffs only on those days. This gets people to spread the word out to their friends. You can choose to do certain things on certain days; on your brand’s birthday, or on Christmas day or Independence day. It could be a once in a month, once a week or once in a year tradition. It could also be a full day or half day event. Choose a day and do something remarkable on that day. Some ideas: give your biggest discounts on those days, host customer meetups on those days only.
4. Customer Participation: Host online and offline meetups for your customers. Get them involved in competitions. Choose brand evangelists from them. They own your brand on the internet now so give them a chance to be part of it. When you do great things for your customers, they will do greater things for you. Reciprocity, remember?
Below is a video of a Mini Cooper meetup. Mini Cooper owners met to showcase their cars and engage in Mini conversations. Can you imagine the benefits? Watch the video and see what I mean.
5. Staff Participation: You and your staff need to participate in customer meetups, your business’ online communities and industry events. Wear T-shirts with your brand’s identity to events that don’t have a dress code attached to the invitation. If you have a mascot, you can even take it along.
6. Practice Barter: There might be an area in your business that itches constantly. Get another business to scratch that itch so that you scratch theirs. Every business has an itch. If you are great at accounting and awful at marketing, marketing is your itch. There are businesses that also have accounting as their itches but that are great at marketing. If there is a situation like this, you can exchange your “itch scratching” services instead of paying for them. You can then ask the other business to list you as their partner on their website or other places both of you deem suitable.
7. Leverage influence: Do you know of a place where your target market is constantly gathered? Blogs are great examples of where you can find your target audience. Reach out to influential bloggers to publish reviews of your products to their readers for a fee or service exchange (remember barter?). When you reach out to influencers, be succinct and straight to the point; don’t go on and on with your idea in the first message. If they want to know more, they will ask you. You can also choose to write guest posts for them if you don’t want to pay with your time (at least, much of it) or money.
8. Start a cause: If you have the support, start a cause. By support, I don’t necessarily mean money. Having a large customer base is also support. Help people save the environment, help people feed orphans, help people save animals, help people do… et cetera. Put your brand forward. Be genuine; no melodrama accepted please.
9. Watch Your Footsteps: Watch your brand’s activities in order to keep your reputation clean. Your competitors will be watching your footsteps and they may be ready to bring you down. Cover where you step by first making sure it’s the right place to step. Makes sense doesn’t it
? Maybe it doesn’t. Okay, if you step in mud, it will show in your footprints and people will see it. Now it makes more sense
.
10. Follow your Mission and Vision: Many businesses with mission and vision statements get side-tracked at some point in time. Some just write their missions and visions and then leave them on the desk to collect dust. They are among the 90% who fail. Want to win? Don’t let your mission and vision statements collect dust. If you don’t like it, re-strategize and change its content.
11. Create a comic: There’s nothing like a good laugh right? Consider hiring someone to create a comic about what your brand or the industry you find yourself in. Make a comic of your brand (or your mascot. That is, if you have one) kicking the ass of your biggest competitor. Make it funny, put it on your site, make it downloadable and encourage people to share it. Have your own ideas? Play with them and get that comic out.
12. Get Free Media Publicity: Getting media publicity is fairly easy. You just have to be worthy to be talked about. Perhaps, you started a cause about the environment and have made some contributions. Great! Request to share your story on the green channel or in the green magazine. Maybe a big industry player was at your event. That is great too. Interview that person and give it to the appropriate media to publish or broadcast for the price of them making reference to your business as the source. Don’t be shy to ask for the credit. If you do something remarkable, work at getting free media publicity.
13. Consider Your Website: On your website, tell people about your traditions and everything about your brand. Get them interested in you. If you communicate your brand’s story with them, they will be easily convinced to get involved with you. Integrate your social profiles on your website so that your audience can engage with you on the social side of the internet.
14. Be Consistent: There has never been an inconsistent brand that won the battle of branding. If you are not consistent with your branding efforts, you send different (very confusing) signals out to your target audience. If you want to win, be consistent with your efforts in all branding areas.
Did you get any ideas from this list? Write them down. Develop a strategy on how you are going to deploy them and take action. Don’t leave your brand’s tongue hanging out like “blahh”. Put it back into its mouth and let it start talking.
Posted on May 18, 2010 - by Kwame
How Competitions Can Build Your Online Business
We all love competitions and winning prizes don’t we? We certainly do. The businesses who organize these competitions and sweepstakes also love giving out their prizes.
That is why they spend money easily to organize these events. Hmm, I guess I have to explain more.
There are tons of benefits of organizing your own competitions and sweepstakes. I will be sharing the benefits your business can derive from organizing such events and also share some ideas on contests and sweepstakes with you.
First, let’s look at the difference between contests and sweepstakes:
A contest is an event in which individuals with required skill sets submit their work for judgment. For example, an art contest will require good art skills.
A sweepstake is an event which requires no skill at all to enter to win a prize. With sweepstakes, winners are chosen through random picking in the style of a lottery.
With those two words defined, let’s look at the benefits of organizing them.
Sweepstakes and contests can:
- Drive traffic to your website or social media profile
- Build brand awareness
- Increase your social media following or fan base
- Make people (who may or may not be your customer) feel connected to your brand.
- Help you build some sort of collaborative bond between your brand and people. For example, let’s say you have a site with an API that you want people to develop into apps, one of the best ways you can do that is by hosting a competition or sweepstake to get people to start building an App community around your website.
These and many other benefits can be derived from hosting a sweepstakes or contest.
I want us to also look at how you can organize your own and also what criteria you can (or should) follow.
First, you must set rules for your competition.
Rules of the Competition:
The rules of your contest or sweepstakes must cover:
1. How to Enter:
State how people can enter; basically, the requirements and non-requirements.
2. Number of Entries:
You will need to state how many times participants are allowed to enter.
3. Prizes:
You will need to tell the participants about what they will win if they are chosen.
4. Disclaimer:
If you are going to use the winner’s name or photos in an advertisement or infomercial after they have won, you may need to ask them to sign a waiver that will confirm their agreement.
5. Liability Clause:
You may also need to state in a clause that your company will not be responsible for any injuries or damages that participants may incur as a result of entering the competition.
6. Other Rules:
You may also need to state other rules and guidelines you will want participants to adhere to.
You may need to advertise your competition so that more people will see it and participate.
You can buy advertisement or you can use free forms of advertising that may be available to your business.
If you don’t have any online influence (on Facebook, Twitter, your business blog’s RSS or email list), then you should consider paying for advertisement to get exposure for your competition. On the other hand, if you have online influence, you can use that influence to promote your competition.
I got the chance to get Maya Grinberg, Community Manager and Product Evangelist at WildfireApps to answer two questions about online competitions and this is what she had to say:
KWAME: Where do most businesses go wrong when they organize competitions and sweepstakes?
MAYA: Organizing competitions and sweepstakes is an excellent way to drive user engagement, increase awareness of your brand or product, and build up your fan base. Creating great, engaging, and fun promotions like these to accomplish your social media strategy goals is one thing though– there is another key step to the equation that sometimes gets left out.
Creating a promotion and sitting back to “hope for the best” will not lead to success. Unless you’re one of the lucky multi-national companies who seem to have infinite brand awareness and tons of fans who send news on its merry viral way instantly, you’re going to have to kickstart the spread yourself a bit.
We wrote a blog post previously about some of our favorite advertising strategies that will help companies do that…and the good news is, many of these wont cost a single penny! Feel free to read that post at http://blog.wildfireapp.com/2010/03/25/7-strategies-for-marketing-your-facebook-fan-page-promotions/
KWAME: What makes a successful competition or sweepstakes event?
MAYA: A successful contest or sweepstakes depends very much on how relatable, engaging, entertaining, and interactive it is for your users. This is a relative thing– depending on what your brand or company does, your users may appreciate different things, like gardening tips for home improvement enthusiasts or pictures of babies for parenting communities.
The key is to listen to your audience, capture some of their interactions with your brand, and use that knowledge to create compelling promotions. For example, fan pages for products related to raising toddlers can almost always feel secure in creating user generated photo contests relating to cute babies. Parents just love to take photos of their kids, and the only thing they love more than that is sharing them.
If you know things like this about your audience, use them to your advantage. Have a dental office that needs a social media strategy? Consider a sweepstakes that rewards the winner with a free teeth whitening. Have a bakery? Put up a coupon for a dozen free cookies with any other purchase. The most important thing to increasing your odds at running a successful promotion is to try to understand your audience, and cater your promotion to their interests.
Thanks to Maya for providing this wealth of information. Anyways, you can follow Maya on Twitter @papayamaya
WildfireApps is an excellent service that can help you promote your competitions online if you don’t want to do it alone or if you need help.
You can share your thoughts or experience with contests and sweepstakes in the comment box below.



