Archive for category Interactive
Improve Your Small Business’ Online Advertising
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
According to this article about online advertising, American consumers spend almost 4 hours a day using online media, accounting for about a third of a typical American’s media usage each day.
In light of this behavior, does your small business marketing plan account for this behavior? Does your small business take advantage of the opportunities the online media provide for connecting with your target audience?
Take a few minutes to read these tips for online advertising and how you make it work for your small business.
Intentional Online Advertising
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
A fatal mistake many small business owners make when trying their hand at online advertising is that they don’t invest in creative designed specifically for that medium. Banner ads are often smaller versions of a print campaign without any regard to the behavior of online audiences.
But would you use a newspaper ad for your outdoor display? Would you air your radio spot as a TV commercial?
Interactive advertising provides a near limitless set of choices for a small business that’s advertising online. This article offers a few examples of how companies are already thinking intentionally about their online advertising campaigns. Small businesses owners would benefit from this kind of approach.
Ways to Give Your Small Business Website a Personal Touch
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
I’ve heard several small business owners over the years voice a common concern about their websites: they’re concerned that placing too many eggs in the website basket will somehow alienate them from their customers.
I think the concern is legitimate. Even for companies that conduct 100% of their business online, the perception of being “real people” is important for online consumers. Small businesses must strive to be both high-tech and high-touch, balancing interactive marketing methods along with traditional customer service interactions.
But there are some ways you can help add some personal warmth to your small business’ website to help bridge the gaps between pixel and person.
5 Steps to Jumpstarting Your Small Business Email Marketing Campaign
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
As a consumer, you probably get several promotional emails each day. But as a small business owner, you may not know where to begin in executing your own email marketing campaign.
Here are 5 steps to help you get your email marketing campaign from concept to execution.
1. Plan your campaign
- Make sure you understand the difference between goals, objectives, strategies, and tactics
- Decide what you want your target audience to do
- If you want them to visit your website, create a single page, usually called a landing page, that’s accessible only from the email. That way, you can accurately track visitors from your email campaign and focus specifically on the message of the campaign.
- If you’re using an email campaign to support in-store marketing efforts such as a pricing promotion, be sure to include a coupon code for your POS system and brief your sales staff on how to handle these coupons.
- Brainstorm your messaging and creative
- Write copy for the subject lines as well as the body of the message
- Incorporate compelling imagery and product shots if the strategy calls for it
- Set measurable goals for the campaign
- Open rate
- Click through rate
- Conversion rate
- Overall campaign ROI
2. Build and clean your mailing list
- Read my 5 tips for building your mailing list
- Take time to ensure accuracy of the data in your list
- Place contacts without email addresses in a separate spreadsheet
- Remove duplicate entries
3. Setup the email campaign
- Choose a reputable email campaign sending platform
- MailChimp (I prefer MailChimp for it’s tracking functionality, flexible pricing, and great design)
- iContact
- Constant Contact
- Using a service provider for your small business email marketing campaign is important for several reasons:
- Using your personal or small business email address for large mailings will likely result in email service providers, such as Yahoo!, Hotmail, and Gmail, blacklisting your address as spam
- These programs provide excellent tracking tools for you to measures the benchmarks you set back in step one
- They provide list management functionality to help you manage your data
4. Track your progress
- Using the tools you setup in step 3, relentlessly track the success of your mailings
5. Test your campaigns regularly
- Email marketing provides the ability to instantly track the success or failure of your small business’ email marketing campaign
- You’ll want to test against several variables:
- Subject line copy
- Headaline and body copy
- Different calls to action
- Text vs. HTML
- Types of creative
- “from” address
- Use A/B testing methods
- Split your list in half
- Send group A the original email
- Send group B the same version but with one variable altered
- This way you’ll know for certain that the single variable your changed was responsible for the change
Now repeat this process for each email marketing campaign you conduct for your small business.
Small Business Website Makeover: Pre-design Checklist
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
Many small business owners I’ve spoken with already have a website, but simply aren’t happy with it. Maybe a nephew designed for a class project or the just went with a friend of a friend for the design. But for whatever reason, they’ve realized that their small business website needs a makeover.
But owners beware: a site redesign isn’t and end unto itself. Rather, a redesign is a chance at rebirth, an opportunity for your website and by extension, your brand, to rise from the poorly designed ashes.
If you’re taking the time and money to redesign your site, make sure you’re working with a strategic framework in mind. To help you formulate your plan, you should consider this list of things to consider before redesigning your small business’ website.
Online Video Marketing for Small Businesses
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
The advent of low-cost high-quality video cameras, affordable or free editing software, and global video distribution channels like YouTube has given small business owners the chance literally to reach the world with their content message.
The learning curve may be high, but depending on your goals and objectives and your content marketing strategy, the payoff of a great video series can be priceless.
So you may have some big questions about how a small business can use online video as a marketing strategy: what are the benefits of video? what are the do-it-yourself options? how will people hear about it?
This article from Entrepreneur offers plenty of great advice for starting your online video marketing program.
Small Business Website: Product Order Affects Purhcase Rate
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
Do you have a strategy for placement of items on your small business website? Would you believe that the the placement of a product’s image in a horizontal list of similar items has an effect on that product’s sales?
Read this insightful article on how an item’s placement can increase its sales by 2.5 per cent over other items in the list.
Small Business Email Marketing: 5 Tips to Build Your List
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
Email marketing has proven to be a powerful tool for small businesses, but the effectiveness of any email campaign is directly related to the size and quality of your distribution list. Here are 5 simple tips for growing your email subscriber list.
- Collect business cards for a drawing. We’ve all seen this, but it works!
- Hold weekly or bi-weekly drawings depending on the amount of cards you collect
- Offer gift cards to your store; or if you’re operate a service business, consider offering free consultations
- Make sure your small business’ website has an opt-in box
- You can use your website for simple email address gathering for newsletters, or full contact forms for lead generation
- Emphasize the box in the overall layout of your website
- Promote opt-ins by offering email promotions, inside industry news, or exclusive how-tos
- Gather email addresses from visitors to your booth at conventions
- Follow-up with an event debriefing campaign with special offers for attendees
- Require completion of a sign-up form as part of your content marketing strategy
- Write an eBook or write a white paper to position yourself as a thought leader in your industry
- Make sure to add a checkbox to the sign-up form for permission to send follow-up emails
- Ask for email addresses as part of the checkout process
- Keep existing customers separate from your general population so you can target them with customer retention campaigns
With all of these tactics, be sure to make clear that the email addresses will be used for future mailings. Sending unwanted messages not only wastes your time and resources, it harms your image in the eyes of your target audience.
Small Business Website Planning: Site or Strategy?
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive on
Increasing numbers of shoppers begin the research stage of the buying process by searching the web for info on the product a service that will meet their needs. In and effort to stay current, many small business owners I’ve worked with will post an unattractive, poorly planned website so they’ll have a URL to put on their business card. The end result, though, often poorly represents the small business’ brand and actually does more harm than god.
Now, the title of this post assumes your small business does, in fact, have a website. If you don’t have a website for your small business, this is a great place to start thinking about one. If your site is already live, use these points to diagnose what you already have.
What is the purpose of your small business’ website?
- How does it fit into your overall marketing strategy?
- Is it for lead generation?
- Is it used for direct selling?
- Is it used to raise brand awareness?
- Is it used for interacting with customers?
What do you want the website visitor to do?
- Download your white paper or request a demo (lead generation)?
- Buy a product (direct selling)?
- Join your mailing list, visit your social media property, or watch a video (brand awareness)?
- Comment in your forum or on your blog post (interacting with customers)?
Who will visit your website?
- What do you know about your target audience?
- Are they experienced web surfers (e.g. teens; young adults)?
- Or are they new to the web (e.g. senior citizens)?
- Are they new to the site or are they repeat visitors?
What are your technical requirements?
- Will you need a shopping cart?
- Database interactivity (i.e. forums, blogs, mailing lists)?
- Will you need video or Flash support?
- Is your content in a single languages, or multiple languages?
This website planning checklist for your small business is by no means exhaustive, but it’s a good starting point to help you begin thinking strategically about your website.
Creative Interactive Marketing
Posted by Patrick Woods in Interactive, Social Media Marketing on
To encourage visits during the summer tourist season, MoMA has developed a social media website that plans itineraries based on your existing preferences. How does a website know what you like? By connecting to your Facebook profile and suggesting plans based on what it finds.
While an interactive social media website of this scale may be out of the question for most small business owners, it is possible to scale the creative thought put into this site.



