55 new people interested in your company – guaranteed

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Would you like 55 people to be newly interested in your company this month?

It’s easy.

Below I set out how.  And although I don’t like to say, “I told you so,” on this occasion…

Two surveys have confirmed that websites and blogs run by businesses are the most important source of generating new leads.

In a survey by Demandbase the percentage of respondents to the survey citing that the business web site is their top source of leads is 64% higher than those citing email (which is the second most popular online lead source).

A mere 3% of companies cite social media.

This finding is similar to that from Eden Platform which found the same: that a standard web page can deliver more advertising value than many companies realize.

In August this year Eden Platform measured pages and visitors for a sample of more than 100 small business websites.

They found that each page on a small business website produced 55 unique visitors during the month.

Now let’s proceed with this logic: adding one new page of content to a business website each week can be as effective as having a £50,000 advertising budget, the study concluded.

Of course there are some complexities and technicalities.

The Demandbase survey points out for example that many visitors to sites are often not fully engaged with.  So some businesses, realising the importance of the web site, then ignore the audience they have worked to get.

They don’t make enough of an offer, give enough encouragement to get people to phone, buy, ask questions, email or in some other way engage with the company.

In other words, what often happens is that the companies spend money on the razzamatazz of making a web site look good, but then don’t add to it with new articles regularly, and don’t give the customers reasons to come back and talk with the company.

As I hinted at the start, this is an issue that I have been talking about for some time.  Indeed the Hamilton House experiment 3 years ago in setting up a couple of web sites from scratch, totally away from our core business, to see if we could make the theory work, has proven a huge success.  Last month they got just under half a million page impressions between them.

Their design work is very basic – everything is to do with putting up new content all the time.

If you would like to talk about this approach, please do call 01536 399 000.   The programme in which we work with clients to integrate their email marketing, postal campaigns and their web sites and blogs is Velocity (www.velocity.ac)

The main Hamilton House site is www.hamilton-house.com – as you will see throughout we are very relaxed about the zap and pow of design.  But we keep adding new text.

Tony Attwood

 

 

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.

What’s in a web name?

Hamilton House owns about 120 web sites – some of which turn up high in the rankings, some of which don’t – although it all depends on what search words you put in.

But positioning, is not, in my view, everything.  Having a web address that people can remember is good too.

For example we own www.emails.gs – something that invariably leads to a conversation of what “gs” means, and how did we get something as fundamental as “emails”.

I mention this because the Corporation of the city of London has announced it will apply for its own web domain for the city.  New York, Paris, Sydney, Rome and Berlin are all apparently doing it too.

This is all part of the change of approach from the American Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) which is now allowing firms that replace .com with their own name.   So you could, if you wanted to, go out and get .Money

What it probably won’t do however is help those people who buy such names to get up the rankings.  It will all be down to memory.

Which then takes us back to site like www.velocity.ac and www.theory.bz – sites that HHM owns.   These cost far less than the new types of name being offered.  I really wonder if the new names are a step too far.

You can follow us on Twitter @HHMailings

Tony Attwood

No brainer

I was writing the other day on the Education Marketing news group about how some companies like to try and sell lists which, how shall I put it….  are not quite what they seem.

Here’s an offer I got by email today – not for UK education lists, as I was discussing earlier this week, but even so, my point about being cautious is the same…

CONSUMER LISTS -  3 lists with over 4 million emails -> JUST $99!

These are all quality OPT-IN lists sold with UNLIMITED USE RIGHTS!

The simple rule is: is it possible for someone to get this number of opt in addresses, and then sell them for this price, all while making a profit?

In this case the answer is obviously no.  In some cases the maths is more complex, but all I can do is quote the old adage: if it looks too good to be true, it probably is.

Tony

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.

We interrupt your thoughts to shout at you

Way back in the ancient days in the USA adverts on TV were preceded by a statement along the lines of ”we now interrupt your program to bring you this important message.”

People accepted that, because that was how it was done.   Zap Pow I am the advertiser and I want to shout at you.

Now it is not like that – disruption of MY personal activities and MY personal space does not work.

Instead you need to grab attention and work from the notion of what the customer is interested in, not what you want to say.

So we come back to two eternal questions that the customer will ask:

Why should I buy this

Why should I buy this from you.

The best advertising answers these points before the customer asks them, by using the interesting question technique…

“What is the most effective way of…”

etc etc.  Alternatively tell a story, share a laugh, and answer their needs.

Don’t tell them how important you are, just tell them how important they are.

Tony Attwood

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.

Advertising on the rise

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Reports from the US show total advertising expenditures in the first six months of 2011 increased 3.2% from a year ago.  The feeling is that a similar rise is being experienced here.

Newspapers continue to fall, and radio seems to be having a tough time, but the rise of digital advertising continues – both in terms of straight email advertising and advertising in terms of internet.

It is the latter where the growth is coming through the exploitation of new ideas, ranging from the ones that I often mention such as implanting links and blogging, as well as other areas such as Facebook, Twitter and the like.

Tony

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.

Longer word searches add value to blogs

The most recent analysis of the way search engines are used show that search queries, averaging five to eight words or more, increased by 3% month-to-month.  Shorter searches (one to three words) are down.

The figures below show that while most searches are still one to three words, people are getting more and more used to longer searches.  This means that the results they get tend to be more specific.  (The detailed figures below are from the US but there is no reason to think UK figures are any different).

Such results aid those companies that have posted the most, because whereas there will be millions of results for ”choosing coffee” there will be fewer that meet all the criteria of “choosing coffee for the office”.   Anyone who has written a web page or blog on “choosing coffee for the office” is likely to find themselves nearer the top of the list of hits.

Naturally the writing of such articles doesn’t in any way reduce your chances of getting near the top of an enquiry even if the reader is searching for one or two words – it is just that the more you put up, the more you are likely to be found by exactly the right person.

If you don’t have a blog and would like to put one up, we can help – there is information on http://www.hamilton-house.com/blogs – or call 01536 399 000.

Meanwhile here’s the full analysis of the current findings.

Hitwise search data

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Tony Attwood

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.

Do you block social networking at work?

The number of businesses that are blocking social networking sites in their offices is rising rapidly. According to research by Clearswift, 20% more companies are blocking access to social media sites, mostly because they are concerned about security and data loss. These figures come from a survey of employee and managers in the UK, US, Australia, Germany, the Netherlands and Japan.

But on the other hand many companies see social media as critical to business success, although few see it is a key to growth.

So we have interesting contradictions – banning its use in the office, seeing it as critical, but not seeing it as a key element in the growth of the company.

The big problem of course is the lack of control of social media has made businesses wary of it. Everyone can do it, and can use it in any way they want. The growth of fake accounts (where someone pretends to be someone else) is huge and hacking is beyond any doubt now out of control.

Worse, the research also found that the majority of managers believe employees are ignorant of security concerns with the view expressed that “Companies do not do education. People are oblivious – a lot of the time the IT policy is seen only when you join the firm.”

Personally my biggest worry about social media is what happens when one employs a young employee who thinks that updating her/his Facebook entry with rude comments about her employer is a reasonable use of company time. If ever there was education needed it is in the zone of “You work, I pay” – but some youngsters don’t get that.

(You can tell I’m getting old can’t you).

Tony Attwood

The problem with website reviews

How much is a good on-line review worth?

In recent surveys  around 60% of shoppers say they use customer reviews as part of their purchasing behaviour.  It might be for a hotel, a book, a holiday, a CD, anything…

But nothing on the internet stays still so now people are selling reviews – the going rate for writing a glowing piece is about $10 in the US according to the New York Times.

Likewise people who get great reviews for their product or service (especially hotels) are starting to thank the writers with discounts, gifts and the like.  And when there’s a bad review they are trying to get that taken down.

I can confirm this latter point personally.  If you buy from a third party via Amazon you are asked to rate the seller.  I have three times given a third party seller a bad rating and all three offered me something to change that rating.  The ratings in fact are now useless.

Unless of course you want to get something out of the supplier, by giving a good or bad review.  There’s a difference of opinion as to which one is most likely to bring a result quickly – I get the feeling that bad reviews will give you something more quickly than good, but there’s no scientific coverage of this.

But nothing stands still on the internet, and Cornell University is working on a program to detect fake reviewers.  I would imagine this is quite easy, as I have the job of removing fake commentaries on the Hamilton House blogs that we run (including our blogs in the world of football, which do get a lot of comments each day).   After a few days it is easy to spot the fakes – normally because they have no detail, because the writer simply has bought it, been there, used it, or whatever.

So it goes – the world moves on.

Analyses like this are just part of what we do for clients of our Velocity programme.  If you would like to know more please do have a look at www.velocity.ac or give us a call on 01536 399 000.

You can follow us on Twitter @HHMailings