Home Wealth Project
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Apr 6th
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Dec 8th
Smarter Faster Cheaper Podcast
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
Marketing podcast with David Siteman Garland (Click to play or right click and “Save As” to download – Subscribe now via iTunes
Those three words – smarter, faster, cheaper are certainly the rallying cry for these times and a welcome dose of marketing reality for those trying to build a business.
For this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast I visit with David Siteman Garland, creator of Rise To The Top and author the new book Smarter, Faster, Cheaper - Non-Boring, Fluff-Free Strategies for Marketing and Promoting Your Business.
David is a great example the new kind of business owner that is profiting from a consistent focus on content creation and networking, or as he calls it digital schmoozing, online.
Smarter marketing means finding ways to do things that work in the long term and create a win for customers rather than simply spending more to get more eyeballs.
Faster marketing means doing things today, in real time, and not fretting over every detail or old school rule about how things are done. Experimentation is the order of the day.
Cheaper marketing means finding ways to do things with little or no money. Even if you have the budget, there are so many smarter, faster ways to do things that cost next to nothing these days and why wouldn’t you grab and use these resources.
This book has the best insights of over two years of research, 200 interviews, thousands of conversations, and personal experiences all designed to help you and your business on your own terms – and without having to spend your life savings in the process!
You can listen to the show by subscribing the feed in iTunes or a variety of other free services such as Google Listen (Use this RSS feed) or you can buy the Duct Tape Marketing iPhone app. (iTunes link – Cost is $2.99) or Android app and listen to the show as well as about ten past shows on your phone.
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View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Dec 5th
The phrase “smarter, faster, cheaper” sounds exactly like what any small business owner or entrepreneur (or manager or executive) wants in their business. We all want efficiency, speed and low cost, don’t we?
Smarter, Faster, Cheaper is also the name of the new book by David Siteman Garland (book website here). The subtitle “Non-Boring, Fluff-Free Strategies for Marketing and Promoting Your Business”
is a description of what’s inside this book. The author uses the phrase “smarter, faster, cheaper” often compared in the same sentence with the phrase “dumber, slower and expensive” to highlight the difference between today’s marketing and traditional forms of marketing.
Regular readers of Small Business Trends will no doubt recognize the author. He is an expert contributor here. David Siteman Garland caught my attention with his exuberant upbeat attitude — an attitude that permeates this book. So I couldn’t wait to dive in when he sent me an advance copy of his book.
Content as Core to Your Marketing
This is a marketing book. But marketing is a wide topic, so let me narrow it down for you. This book is heavily oriented toward marketing via creating online communities and online content. Although in a few places it covers offline marketing such as networking at events, the majority is geared toward the online world.
John Battelle, Founder of Wired magazine, once made a crucial observation when he said that everybody is “in the media business today.” If you expect to have your business found online and spur online word of mouth through social media, you have to be creating and sharing content. It’s content that gets indexed in the search engines that your prospects and customers will search. It’s content that consumers and other business people consumer online. And it’s content that people share online. There’s a huge, never-ending, 24/7/365 conversation going on; your business needs to be part of that conversation online.
Let me put it to you this way. Today, without content you might as well be armed with a crossbow but no arrows in your quiver. You may aim, but you’re going to find it hard to hit your target.
And content is really where this book shines: when it discusses strategies and techniques for creating and promoting online content to market your business.
The Big Picture
But David’s book is different from, say, a how-to-blog or how-to-use-social-media book. Yes, you will get some tips for how to write successful blog posts online, or how to create effective video, or how to use Twitter or YouTube. But this is primarily a book about marketing, so the emphasis is on strategies and tactics for promoting content and using content to build a community of loyal followers for your brand.
This is a book that’s always bringing you back to the big picture. At regular intervals, David forces you to step back and think about your overall business goals. For instance, in a chapter about online video, he says “forget viral, focus on function.” Sure, we might dream of a video that goes viral and gets a million views. But as David points out, the real value of video is “providing content for a targeted market.”
That sounds deceptively simple — you might even think simplistic. But I think it’s a profound point that more businesses should pay attention to. I see this come up all the time with small businesses that get sidetracked by attempts to create viral videos or “link bait” articles. While funny or outrageous, they may not get you any more customers. Worse, they may even be a turn-off for serious prospects. And they’re certainly a misuse of your precious company resources of time and money if they are offtrack.
What I Liked About Smarter, Faster, Cheaper
I mentioned David’s exuberance — well, that comes through in the book like a cheerleader with a megaphone. Part of the reason his personality comes through so well is the informal writing style. It makes the book very readable, with its me-to-you style in sentences like this:
“Here comes another hockey example (stop groaning! Hockey is a great metaphor for business … and for life).”
Another thing I liked about this book is the down-to-earth advice. For instance, in a section on how much time you should spend creating content, such as blog posts and videos, versus marketing it, David writes:
“Your time — and any given person’s time — is finite. The biggest pitfall here is to spend all of it creating — worrying about this word or that word, staring for hours at a shadow in your video, being concerned that it is not perfect, and other endless time wasters. None of us is Shakespeare or Spielberg. This doesn’t mean that we should rush through the creation process and put out garbage. But from my experience, and picking others’ brains, you have to focus at least as much time and energy on marketing and promoting (hence, this section of the book).
Those who have created strong content often skyrocketed because of the 20/80 rule. Twenty percent of your time is allotted to creation; 80 percent to promotion, relationship-building, and so forth.”
Why Read Smarter, Faster, Cheaper
Content is fundamental to any online marketing strategy today. You have to become good at creating content. But creating alone is not enough. You must be adept at spreading your content widely, and starting and engaging your market in conversations. In short, your business must develop a competency in marketing your content. And that’s why you should read Smarter, Faster, Cheaper.
Smarter, Faster, Cheaper: A Review
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Oct 15th
Aug 31st
Google, which has most recently been trying to divert users away from Skype by integrating Google Voice with Gmail, just added another innovation to its stable: Priority Inbox. TechCrunch has more:
Google has built a system that figures out which of your messages are important, and presents them at the top of the screen so you don’t miss them. The rest of your messages are still there, but you don’t have to dig through dozens of newsletters and confirmations to find the diamonds in rough.
The beauty of the system lies in its simplicity — it’s nearly as easy as Gmail’s one click spam filter. There’s almost no setup: once it’s activated on your account, you’ll see a prompt asking you if you want to enable Priority Inbox. You can choose from a few options (the order of your various inboxes and if there are any contacts you’d like to always mark ‘Important’) but don’t have to setup any rules or ‘teach’ Gmail what you want it to mark important. It just works, at least most of the time.
The system uses a plethora of criteria to decide which messages are most important: things like how frequently you open and/or respond to messages from a given sender, how often you read messages that contain a certain keyword, and whether or not the message is addressed solely to you or looks like it was sent to a mailing list. If you come across a message that’s been marked important when it shouldn’t have been, you can hit an arrow to tell Gmail it’s messed up. Likewise, if a message that should have been flagged gets sent to the ‘everything else’ area, you can promote it. Through these actions Gmail gets progressively smarter, so the system should work better over time.
TechCrunch writer Jason Kincaid also says that now that a computer is prioritizing your email, intros will becoming even more important. Perhaps someone will develop a kind of SEO strategy for getting a prospect’s attention via email, based on the kinds of keywords Gmail tends to prioritize. That said, not doing annoying things in an email, like starting it with “Dear Sean” (not my name) or “Hey there,” both intros that I discovered in my inbox this morning, will always help your case.
View full post on Business Pundit
Aug 20th
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For a long time, social monitoring has been about tracking keywords. But recent advances have sparked an arms race in two fields: cluster analysis and… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Aug 13th
So, you are marketing to Gen Y. You know, the text-messaging, multi-tasking, advertising-wary, trendsetting, sarcastic, blog-reading, information-addicted, social media-savvy, tech-embracing, fast-moving, highly ambitious, quick-talking, well-educated, iPod, iWhatever-listening crowd.
Yes, I’m talking those insolent little brats who are entitled to everything (And yes, I’m a Gen Yer, so stop laughing.)
There is a tremendous opportunity as these newly spending information gatherers are a gold mine if marketed to correctly. On the other hand, ill-fated attempts can result in a barrage of negative publicity for your business.
Is there some secret sauce for bursting through the clutter?
Here are a few ways you can gen-yify your marketing efforts:
1. Lose the formality: Be a human.
Dearest Young Customer,
It is with exceeding pleasure that I invite you to become a loving customer of ours. If it is agreeable to you, I would be most appreciative if we could connect via these new “social networking websites” and do business in the utmost of fashions.
Sincerely,
Out of Touch
Seriously? The jargon. The fluff (if you want some fluff, go pet a bunny). You can take off the suit (or pantsuit) and tie.
Have a personality. Don’t be afraid of self-deprecation and poking a little fun. This doesn’t mean you should not be yourself and start wearing skinny jeans, but show that personality…through and through.
Where does this apply? Everywhere. On your website. On social media sites. In the videos and content you make. In person. Everywhere where you are communicating.
People trust people, not stiff companies (big or small).
2. Go for the long-term relationship, not the one-night stand.
It used to be your job as a business owner was to create a product (or service) and sell, sell, sell, sell. Without sales, you had no business.
Now, in every industry, there are more options available than ever before. More competitors. More noise. What do you need to do to stand out?
The answer is create trust. Believe it or not (and contrary to popular belief), Gen Y’ers are very loyal. But we aren’t loyal to product pushers looking for the quick sale or to overbearing salespeople (think of the used car salesman with the mustache and tweed coat).
Are you going for the hot, sexy one-night stand, or do you want to build a relationship with a customer for life (or at least a long time)?
What are some ways you build trust as a small business owner? One key point is never making the first point of contact an attempt to make a sale (unless someone of course inquires). Offer something of value instead. This value, of course, varies.
A great way to build trust is to create content around your knowledge, not your product. Perhaps it is a blog. Or a webinar series. Or an online radio or video show. Or a series of speeches and workshops. Or fun events. Something that screams trusted resource, not sketchy salesman.
3. Rethink advertising.
Is advertising dead to Gen Y? No. Is traditional advertising ineffective (especially for the small business owner/entrepreneur on a budget)? Absolutely.
Are there paid options that work? Yes.
What are they? (Stellar question!) Here’s the thing. Gen Y eyeballs are online and on mobile phones, consuming blogs, watching and listening to online shows and participating in online communities. And we trust the writers of our favorite blogs and the hosts of our favorite shows. They are like friends to us.
Contrast that with traditional TV, radio and print…all of which have essentially have become irrelevant in many cases to our generation. This just isn’t how we get our information and entertainment.
And just because the location of eyeballs has changed doesn’t mean all you have to do is apply the same principles of traditional ads (which essentially means interrupting people with “clever” ads).
Effective advertising online to Gen Y is based on trust and authenticity. There is a new rise of trusted resources online in every niche.
Let’s pretend you sell sausages. The old school approach would be to buy an ad in food magazines, on the Food Network and maybe on a food show on the radio. Problem? These ads are expensive and there is no guarantee the audience actually likes sausages. You pay for 100 percent of the audience, but probably only 2 percent like what you are selling. And you have to spend money on creative (graphic designers, videographers, etc.) all to take a risk.
Now, a simple Google search and maybe a little sleuthing would reveal BBQ blogs, online sausage shows and more. Perhaps their audiences are big. Perhaps they are small. But, either way you are laser-focusing on your niche.
If someone reads a sausage blog every day, it is safe to say they like sausages (or they are nuts) and they trust the blogger. Nobody forces them to read it. It isn’t like browsing through TV channels.
Perhaps the blogger, for a fee far less than traditional media, will allow you to sponsor a series of posts, or interview you about your sausages or plug your sausages before each Sausagecast. I promise cost and benefits will destroy the traditional way of thinking about advertising.
Bottom line:
Of course many of these principles are generation-shifting. In many cases, Gen Y is more of a mind-set as opposed to an age (you know…those people who act really old and others who are young at heart).
But, by shifting your mind-set and strategy regardless of your generation, you can tap into the new world of marketing and promotion that rewards the passionate entrepreneur and small business owner.
3 Smarter, Faster, Cheaper Ways to Market to & Earn the Trust of Generation Y
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Jul 6th
Marketers fall into one of two categories:
A few benefit when they make their customers smarter. The more the people they sell to know, the more informed, inquisitive, free-thinking and alert they are, the better they do.
And most benefit when they work to make their customers dumber. The less they know about options, the easier they are to manipulate, the more helpless they are, the better they do.
Tim O’Reilly doesn’t sell books. He sells smarts. The smarter the world gets, the better he does.
The vast majority of marketers, though, take the opposite tack. Ask them for advice about their competitors, they turn away and say “I really wouldn”t know.” Ask them for details about their suppliers, and they don’t want to tell you. Ask them to show you a recipe for how to make what they make on your own, and “it’s a trade secret.” Their perfect customer is someone in a hurry, with plenty of money and not a lot of knowledge about their options.
You’ve already guessed the punchline–if just one player enters the field and works to make people smarter, the competition has a hard time responding with a dumbness offensive. They can obfuscate and run confusing ads, but sooner or later, the inevitability of information spreading works in favor of those that bet on it.
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View full post on Seth’s Blog
Jun 5th
| Intellectual honesty and html5 OK, this is the post that contains everything that everyone on the inside of the browser market knows, but… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Apr 30th
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Whether you want… build a network marketing organization, start a non-profit, monetize video, turn a hobby or passion into income (out of a love… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!