Savory Random Slam Pow, Hold the Spandex

Copywriting, Marketing, Opinion Comments

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Wow, what the heck am I talking about? Did I get your attention? Don’t worry, you will be rewarded!

Remember when I said this was an experimental marketing blog? Did I not say that yet? Ah, right then . . . this is an experimental marketing blog. That means a couple things actually.

This is certainly my experiment with marketing and blogging ideas in general and blogging about it all at the same time. But it’s also a blog in which I’ll use ideas I think will be useful and we’ll all see if any of them work, or not.

Don’t worry, I’ll be documenting my successes as well as my failures. Even the epic ones. Really. We will all win.

So about that headline . . . Read the rest of this entry »

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Images: The Next Web Traffic Frontier

Marketing, SEO, Traffic Comments

green-cow-purple-spots-golden-crown.gifIf I type your name, or your product name into the Google image search engine, what will I find? Do you know? Have you checked? The results may be critical to your online success.

If you haven’t thought about image search and tagging, start now. I recently read a great post about image optimization by Judith Lewis over at SEO chicks where she details some excellent points about using images to create relevant results and, by extension, relevant visitors. It gave me some curious ideas about putting image search to use for much more than simple image browsing.

Here’s an SEO image exercise suggested by Lisa Ditlefsen (also from SEO Chicks): go to Google image search and type in your full name. If you’re like most of us, there’s likely nothing there.

Wow, an empty space. So you now have the opportunity to fill that space the way you wish. Make sure people looking for you, or your product, find you. If it’s not empty, you now have the opportunity to make sure what you find is what you want others to find. Probably an important thing. Are you monitoring your image online?

But wait, there’s more . . . Read the rest of this entry »

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WordPress.com Cracks the Whip on Scrapers, Sploggers, Affiliates

Blogging, Marketing, WordPress Tips Comments

wp-logo.jpgI’ve just recently discovered that WordPress has changed its terms of service (TOS) for blogs hosted on their sites. This is good news.

Here’s a quote from the page where WordPress gives examples of types of blogs they are deleting:

And here are some examples of blogs that are banned from WordPress.com (all of these fall under the general heading of “spam blogs”, or splogs, and we will be deleted as soon as we find them or they get reported to us):

Read the rest of this entry »

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Don’t Mangle Your Comment Backlink, You’re Losing Visitors

Blogging, Marketing, Productivity Tools & Tips, SEO Comments

lost-poster.jpg
Photo by jaqian

You know how you read a great blog post and get to the bottom of it and someone’s made a truly stellar comment? You know how you think to yourself, “holy mackerel, that was a good comment, who the heck is this person?” (Don’t tell me you don’t say holy mackerel! ok, ok, you probably say “shazam!” or “zoinks!”, but you get my point, ya?)

Anyway, let’s say you then attempt to click on the person’s name in the comments and check out their site. And it doesn’t work. The commenter mistyped the URL. Horrors! You’re sad. You can’t find out who this amazing person is. You’ll never know what else they might have to say. And the name they typed in was something like “Dan”. Argh, how will I ever search for that?

BUT you’re not half as upset as the person who mistyped their URL in the comments box would be if only they knew.

The commenter has completely lost the greater opportunity to join the conversation web-wide; they’re only conversing on that little blog post floating in the info-ether with no link back to their site. Such a great comment and they get no search engine, or pagerank credit whatsoever for having made the effort. And all because of a little typo. Now that hurts.

Here’s how I avoid this problem altogether: Read the rest of this entry »

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Even if You Don’t Write Ad Copy, You Need to Read These

Copywriting, Marketing Comments

So I seem to have contracted a cold and have been out of commission this week, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been thinking. In fact, getting sick creates a nice big time space for me to catch up on the backlog of books that tower around the place and it sure makes me happy to be reading while I drift in and out of consciousness.

I have been reading a number of great resources recently and today I thought I’d share a couple of them. If you haven’t heard of these I think you’ll be well-served to have a look. If you have them, I’d love to hear your comments and any suggestions for further reading.

Writing ad copy is the mainstay of marketing. I wanted to learn all I could about marketing and the one thing I heard more than any other was, learn copywriting, or at least learn to recognize good copy so that when you need to hire someone to write it for you, you won’t be taken for a ride. So, to that end, I’ve found a couple books on writing ad copy that are recommended across the board as best-of-breed and I’m reading them right now.

The first is, Advertising Secrets of the Written Word: The Ultimate Resource on How to Write Powerful Advertising Copy from One of America’s Top Copywriters and Mail Order Entrepreneurs by Joseph Sugarman. What a mouthful; and what a price!

If you search for that on Amazon you will quickly realize that this book is out of print and sells for about $95 used. However, I did a little looking around and discovered that Adweek republished this as, The Adweek Copywriting Handbook and you can pick it up for a much more reasonable price.

The Adweek Copywriting Handbook

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The other copywriting book is, Tested Advertising Methods by John Capleswhich is also a classic and required reading in many marketing classes.

Tested Advertising Methods by John Caples

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The most enlightening thing about reading these books is the way it changes how you look at all the ads and blogs out there. As you compare everything, the good stuff suddenly pops right out at you. It saves you a lot of time, in fact, when you don’t bother with stuff that’s quickly identifiable as sub-par.

Of course, I’m also an advocate of a number of plain old, traditional books on writing. The number one book in my library that will profoundly change and improve your writing, whether for ad copy, for writing a masterpiece of short fiction, or for the greatest blog post of all time is certainly, On Writing Well by William Zinsser. Granted, I still don’t follow all of his suggestions. I tend to have nightmare sentences that run on for days so you can imagine how rough my writing was before I read it.

On Writing Well By William Zinsser

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And lastly, if you’re just looking for some assistance with grammar and usage, check out the Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation blog. I’m particularly interested in the Blue Book post on commas, semicolons and colons as I still have a bear of a time with those bits.

I hope you find some enlightening reading in the resources above. Until next time, don’t get sick. Or maybe DO get sick if that will help you catch up on some reading. But just a little sick; nothing dreadful, please.

-Zack

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The Evils of Compulsory Audio Ads

Marketing, Opinion Comments

I read on TechCrunch this morning that Duncan Riley is against the new Pay-Per-Play audio ad idea (although he recommends it for his competitors) and I’d like to point out why he’s spot on with his assessment of the situation.

The Web started out as a silent affair and while I don’t believe in slavishly standing on ceremony, as it were, I do believe in respecting the ears and needs of your reader/viewer/listener and respecting the nature of the system and its current state of transformation.

Granted, the Web has now become a fully multi-media laden world and there are many advertisers successfully using audio, even compulsory-on-page-load audio in their ads. But, didn’t we agree a while back that the Web is not TV? TV is passive and we all accepted long ago that we watch what we get and the most control we have over it is to switch the channel, or mute it, or shut it off if we don’t like what we’re getting. Therefore, we don’t get pissed when a commercial comes on because we know that’s how it works.

But that’s not how the Web started, or how it works today. The Pay-Per-Play idea is old-school mass media trying to force the one-to-many model back down our throats and that’s not only irritating, it’s downright disrespectful.

The Web comes from a completely opposing side of the control spectrum where we have always had almost complete control over what we’re going to look at, or look for, and how we’re going to consume what we find. To suddenly and arbitrarily violate this agreement between Web consumers and information providers is a slap in the face to both parties and I suspect that’s why it’s so annoying for most people.

I know I will leave a site immediately if I can’t control the audio on the page, and apparently these Pay-Per-Play ads are set to fire off uncontrollably at 3 minute intervals the whole time you’re on a site.

From the Pay-Per-Play site:

The audio ad is only 5 seconds in length and a website visitor will only hear one 5 second advertisement per visit to any specific web page where the PPP code has been inserted. The visitor will only hear one audio ad for every 3 minutes they visit if they have already heard an audio ad on another page of the same website.

I just experienced the demo ad, and guess what? My speakers were turned way up (which I hadn’t realized) and the sub-woofer was turned up for a CD I was listening to recently and that Taco Bell ad blared horribly for 5 seconds.

It was so short a time that even if there was a pause button, I would have spent the whole time looking for it and attempting to click it. Ouch. Truly an ugly experience and not one I care to repeat, let alone every 3 minutes while I’m moving from page to page on someone’s site.

I think a good solution for advertisers and readers is to offer video, or audio content either paused with a play button, or muted with an option to unmute and start at the beginning, as I’ve seen some interstitial ads do recently. That way we can have the audio-visual experience, or not, as we’re so inclined.

Will you put these ads on your web site?

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Where Are the Best Posts? What’s Everyone Talking About?

Information Overload, Marketing, WordPress Plugins, WordPress Tips Comments

RadarI am officially overwhelmed. But that’s nothing new. In fact, I’m sure you’re pretty blasé about being overwhelmed now too. Everyone’s been overwhelmed for the last few years and it’s only getting worse by the second as a new cornucopia of interesting and not-so-interesting blogs hits the net daily. But what to do about it. I need to keep track of everything happening in my area as best I can and I’ve been searching for a good way to do that for a while now. I found a few very cool answers.

Track Your Posts, Track Your Blogs
Need to track your own blog and other blogs you read every day? Wish you could track more easily? Want to find out how well a specific post is doing compared to your other posts? Want to quickly find the best posts ever made to your blog, or to any or all of your favorite blogs? Definitely grab an account over at aiderss.com. I just stumbled across these guys a few days ago and I’m thrilled with it so far. You can track trends, see the historical performance of your blog, or any blog you’re interested in. I could go on . . . but the best way to see why I’m so pleased with it is to just check it out. (You can also do RSS mash-ups here too.)
Check out AideRSS

Follow the Conversation
I mentioned before that marketing and blogging are all about conversations. Now I’ve found a great tool that helps you track blog conversations and will really surprise you with the alternate view it provides. It puts even older stuff you might have seen before into a different context that might trigger new ideas, or interpretations. Never mind the fact that you can watch what people are talking about in an up-to-the-minute sort of way about whatever key phrase is burning a hole in your brainpan today. This tool may be my tool-of-the-month, if I had such a thing.
Check out TalkDigger

Mash Things Up a Bit More: 2 Great Video Tutorials on Using RSS Feeds
If you were to take all the information you’re interested in and mash it up together and then sort it so the most important and relevant stuff popped to the top, wouldn’t that save you a ton of time? Wouldn’t that be cool? That’s what a feed mash-up can do for you and all you need is a good feed masher. There are a number of feed mashers out there, but I recently ran across an RSS tutorial over at John Jantsch’s blog that covers the how, but also suggests a site I hadn’t seen called mySyndicaat. I’m still having a go at mashing my favorite feeds and comparing all these tools, but so far mySyndicaat definitely seems worth checking out.

Alternatively, Jack Humphrey posted a great tutorial on another great feed manager called BlogRovr which you may find very useful. So far, this one is duking it out with AideRSS above for my favorite, but they do slightly different things and I can see using both of them.

Have fun finding yourself and others and have a great weekend! (Holy mackerel, I used an exclamation mark. What on earth was I thinking? . . . was that wise? Hmmm, we shall see.) [dang, WordPress won't accept my interrobang . . . argh.]

-Zack

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O My God, the Next Great Thing! Just Quit It.

Copywriting, Marketing, Opinion Comments

Megaphone Guys ScreamingHere’s a truth I’ve discovered: there are a lot of people selling hype and a lot more buying it. I got absorbed a bit myself for a short time, and then I remembered what turned me off and what was worth it and where I wanted to be as a human and a genuine, compassionate contributor to the greater good on this planet. I think we can all get swept up easily enough in the rush for what we think is a fast and easy buck. But there’s the rub: there ain’t no such thing, if you’ll pardon my colloquialism.

It’s painful to see a majority of online marketers and buyers stuck in the fast buck syndrome. I imagine it happens because every once in a while it actually appears to work for one of the parties involved, but it never lasts. And then disappointment and disillusionment set in. I’m speaking from personal experience as a buyer and a seller. But mostly just a buyer observing it all.

Even many of the folks I’ve bought genuinely good products from have forgotten, or never knew, how to market without arm-twisting and “yelling”.

I think hyperbole is a kind of lying and we’re all long since weary of the next “incredible, stupendous, amazing” product. I know the moment I see any verbiage like that I shut down now. And sadly many really good products are now unwittingly being cloaked in hyperbole and not making it into the hands of folks who might genuinely benefit from them. I know I’m probably missing out on some good products because the business owner is clothing their offering in so much overblown language that it’s a complete turn-off for me and I smell what I have learned must be BS a mile off.

How can we sort honest business folks with a great product, but bad, hyperbolic advertising from the scam artists who are still trying to trick us into buying? It’s hard sometimes. I rely on word-of-mouth recommendations and reputation almost exlusively now. Kind of like I did before I got interested in marketing studies. Funny, that.

So here’s a tip for the day: don’t use hyperbole in your sales copy, in your blog, in your conversations online. Really. Yes, there is definitely a place for exclamation marks here and there. But man, if you use them sparingly, they will work wonders. In fact, don’t use them where they’re most expected and they’ll work even more powerfully. Really.

Building word-of-mouth recommendations and a great reputation is critical to creating a great business that will last, and a great reputation is infinitely more valuable than a few bucks made in the short term by yelling and screaming about the greatest thing since margarine-flavored lollipops.

[I include loud, blinking graphics, pages covered in ads so completely you can't find the post, and loud video and audio that starts playing the moment you hit the page under the category of "screaming-at-your-reader", and although that's not hyperbole, it really bugs me so I had to type it. Maybe that's a good subject for another post later on . . . .]

Thanks for reading this far. If you made it, that is. I know I do go on sometimes.

-Zack!

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When Marketing Isn’t Marketing, It’s Successful Marketing

Marketing, Opinion, Social Marketing Comments

So what is marketing anyway? Ultimately it’s a conversation between a buyer and a seller. And even more fundamentally, it’s an exchange of value between two, or more people wherein a successful exchange means everyone wins.

I believe that when you love what you’re doing, you tend to want to share it with your friends and even strangers on the street. When you love what you’re doing, you tell stories about the fun you’re having and the amazing things you’re discovering while you’re having it. And when you excitedly relate your experience to someone else, that excitement becomes contagious. We are all looking to optimize our experience, find our passion, experience joy, etc. And when you meet someone who has that feeling, you tend to want to hang around and hear what they have to say. In some circles, this is even called friendship, if you can believe it.

Passion

So what am I saying here? Successful marketing happens when one person is so honestly thrilled about what they’re doing that they have gained the depth of knowledge necessary to create a great product, or service; so great, in the best case scenario, that it might even be called art. And when this product, or service is just as exciting to another person, both people can then have a great conversation about it and agree to exchange value. What a deal!

Conversely, unsuccessful marketing can be the result of not being particularly interested in what you’re doing (possibly because it is simply a means to “make huge wads of cash”) and you try to force your lackluster product down everyone’s throat in pedestrian and uninspired, copycat ways. Pretty stark comparison? Yup, but I really see it like that.

Successful marketing doesn’t feel like “marketing” at all. In fact, it’s really just offering the results of your passion and excitement to the niche that is just as excited about it as you are. The second example is the basis for the infamous “evil marketer” archetype that’s been shadowing our conversations since the beginning of time.

I’m not saying you can’t make huge wads of cash selling something you’re uninterested in, or ignorant about—many people do. But why the hell bother! You’re only making yourself and others miserable and you could be doing the opposite and still making huge wads of cash. Yes? In fact, I believe you will probably make vastly greater wads of cash if you market a product you love because everyone can’t wait to hear the latest story about your experience.

In the end, you know you’re doing it right when it doesn’t feel like work at all to you and it doesn’t feel like so-called marketing to the person who’s thrilled to buy what you’re selling. Seth Godin alludes to this same idea in his post, Workaholics.

“The passionate worker doesn’t show up because she’s afraid of getting in trouble, she shows up because it’s a hobby that pays. The passionate worker is busy blogging on vacation… because posting that thought and seeing the feedback it generates is actually more fun than sitting on the beach for another hour. The passionate worker tweaks a site design after dinner because, hey, it’s a lot more fun than watching TV.”

So take a moment sometime and have a look at your passion and excitement levels around what you’re doing. Are you doing it just to make “huge wads of cash”, or are you genuinely so damn thrilled to be doing what you love that you can’t wait to rip the covers off in the morning and dive back in?

[Please note that I'm not actually advocating blogging on vacation as that's a recipe for unhappiness too since we have to have a little balance. I'm just using this example to emphasize how important it is to love what you're doing since it makes your marketing effortless and very unmarketing-like. Obviously, part of loving what you do is learning to have balance among all your needs. I say this in response to Greg Verdino's disagreement with Mr. Godin's post.]

Welp, that’s all I’ve got today. Man that was a long post . . . Next post is gonna be wildly different. I have some interesting WordPress plugins and some basic marketing tips I want to tell you about, so look for it soon . . . and in the mean time, hope your conversations are superb!

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