This video is a few years old, but the basic ideas haven't changed. You can use Microsoft Office as your RSS Reader, but that's a different video.
This is short and silly. Enjoy and learn:
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Jaco Grobbelaar is the owner of BroadVision Marketing. BroadVision Marketing works with business owners to put in place inbound and outbound marketing strategies that consistently secure new clients. The BroadVision Marketing Training Center is located in Petaluma, CA and primarily serves companies in the San Francisco Bay area.
Jaco can be reached at
jaco@broadvisionmarketing.com or
707.766.9778 or connect with Jaco on Facebook -
www.facebook.com/broadvisionmarketing - and LinkedIn -
www.linkedin.com/in/JacoGrobbelaar.
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Topics:
Using Different Media,
San Francisco Bay Area,
Petaluma California,
News aggregator,
Microsoft Office,
Really Simple Syndication,
RSS Feeds,
BroadVision Marketing,
Facebook,
Social Media,
LinkedIn,
Business,
Marketing strategy
Social media has come to mean an array of activities from your website to Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and beyond. But the foundation of all social media is your website and your blog.
With the infinitely vast ways your website can stand out which you can do yourself or spend anywhere from a small amount of money to the big bucks, there is no excuse to not to have the best website you can afford. WordPress is the going concern for the bottom layer of the site. On top of a basic WordPress foundation, you can add different skins that will change the look without changing the computer language at the foundation.
Furthermore, when the foundation gets a makeover, you can safely download the new version without losing what is on the skin above. This way you can keep up with the latest and greatest improvements.
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Topics:
Using Different Media,
Petaluma California,
Web search engine,
WordPress foundation,
WordPress,
Marketing in Petaluma CA,
Facebook,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
LinkedIn,
Business Owner,
Jaco Grobbelaar,
Business,
Branding,
Blogging,
Twitter
We have been working on the idea of doing your social media work yourself. I have been telling you uncompromising truths about the process of successfully marketing yourself. These things are what marketing companies like BroadVision Marketing do for companies who dont have the time, the resources or the desire to do-it-yourself.
The last blog I wrote we were talking about a simple system to tell if you are moving into a better ranking. We decided to use the Alexa number system, which for all its faults does provide a simple measurement of motion.
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Topics:
marketing,
Using Different Media,
Uniform Resource Locator,
StumbleUpon,
OnlyWire,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
Business Owner,
Jaco Grobbelaar,
Business,
Branding,
Blogging,
Yelp
I am going to go deep now into the world of Business Social Media Managing for those of you who want to do it yourself.
We have already decided that to write 3 business blogs a week will take approximately 6 hours of your time for a monthly total of 24 hours. Hypothetically speaking if your time is worth $30 an hour, blogging for yourself could cost you $720 a month.
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Topics:
Using Different Media,
Pinterest,
Chamber of Commerce,
National Association of Realtors,
Sun Tzu,
BroadVision Marketing,
Facebook,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
LinkedIn,
Business Owner,
Jaco Grobbelaar,
Business,
Branding,
Blogging
Have you ever gone fishing and taken several poles? Business blogging and other platforms like Facebook and Twitter are like having several poles in the water to hook a client into coming to your website and using your products or services. These platforms are not hard sell platforms. People wont come visit you if all you do is bombard them with why they need your product or service. They want to learn something or be entertained. What you tell them is the bait on your hook.
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Topics:
marketing,
Using Different Media,
blog,
BroadVision Marketing,
Facebook,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
Business Owner,
Jaco Grobbelaar,
Business,
Branding,
Blogging,
Twitter,
Marketing strategy
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Do you see yourself as Mr. or Ms. Business Blogger, along the same lines as the Cherry Ames, Companion Nurse stories by Helen Wells? Writing a business blog is a good step in the right direction, but if no one reads your blog, you have just wasted a lot of time.
How do you get that great article you wrote out there? Blogging and social networking are both parts of the same strategy. You have to go out and promote your blog by being social. There are many different ways you can use to get your word out. We are just going to look at four.
- Twitter is a quick way to let people know that you are in business and that you have a live website, as opposed to one that is static where nothing new is ever going on. You can tweet about your new post in such a way that people will be interested in reading about it. Remember that no one wants to be sold on social network. They do want to learn things and be entertained. If you are offering information, make that obvious in your tweet. Oh yes, its a good idea to put out around 10 tweets on various subjects a day and then spend some time actually on Twitter to show that you are a real person.
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Topics:
Using Different Media,
Google,
Corporate blog,
Social network,
Helen Wells,
blog,
BroadVision Marketing,
Facebook,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
LinkedIn,
Business Owner,
Jaco Grobbelaar,
Blogging,
Twitter
A cook starts with a recipe. A tourist starts with a map. So why do many small business owners think they can run their business without a marketing plan?
Many small business owners think marketing equals expensive advertising. Some advertising is costly, but marketing also includes less costly ways to engage prospective customers, thanks to the internet. With some research, planning and execution, business owners can market successfully without enormous spending.
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Topics:
marketing,
Using Different Media,
Small business,
Marketing Plan,
Facebook,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
Business Owner,
Business,
Branding,
Twitter,
Marketing strategy
All businesses selling products or services are familiar with the term marketing budget. This means a plan to organize and allocate future funding of business functions. If you only have money for a mini-compact car, you are not going to go look at limousines. Right?
Lets say you have a marketing budget of $1,000. If we use this to bring people to a computer site, we would call the same amount we intend to spend a traffic budget, since we are working to get the traffic to the site or even to our brick and mortar store using computer advertising.
Conversion is not just a religious term. It now means getting the customer to meet the business and to interact with it. Conversion is the mechanism and process of pouring targeted consumers into, through, and out the other side of the marketing funnel. The conversion rate is only going to be a percent of all those who come to the site, the percent who actually buy.
One way to get people to the site and to convert is to encourage them to do something, to become interactive. The best way to do that simply is a call to action (CTA).
A call to action has four main parts:
- The Call: This is the request that a person interact the way you want him to.
- The Action: On the computer, the simplest action a person can make is to click a button.
- The Outcome: What happens when the person clicks the button. This should be related to the call. For example, if you ask them to click to get a free coupon, you deliver the coupon when they click the button.
- The Design: The design will make a difference in how people respond, but there are many different types of designs. You will have to do some experimenting to find the one that works best for you.
Your CTA needs to be on every one of your website pages. If you have a blog site, it should be at the bottom of each blog.
How are you doing with this information? Are you having trouble getting responses?
Jaco Grobbelaar, owner of BroadVision Marketing, helps business owners and business professionals put marketing strategies in place that consistently secure new clients. He can be reached at
jaco@broadvisionmarketing.com or
707.799.1238. You can Like him at
www.facebook.com/broadvisionmarketing or connect with him on
www.linkedin.com/in/JacoGrobbelaar.
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Topics:
marketing,
Using Different Media,
landing page,
Conversion rate,
Hubspot,
Marketing Plan,
Facebook,
mobile marketing,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
Business,
social media marketing,
Branding,
Blogging,
Twitter
You have spent a lot of your marketing budget setting up your website. Your homepage looks real good and reminds you of the old newspaper ads of old. So why arent people converting using it?
Conversion about keeping your customer focused. A homepage full of your products is the opposite of focus. Even if you only have one service for sale, your homepage is full of details, again the opposite of focus.
What you need are specific landing page that you can manage and optimize in controlled isolation. Technically a landing page is any page on your website that customers arrive at or land on. It should be created as a stand-alone page, as a promotion specific site.
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Topics:
marketing,
Using Different Media,
Marketing and Advertising,
landing page,
Customer,
website,
Facebook,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
Business,
Blogging
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We are still looking at the basics in advertising. We all agree that advertisers are people who pay money to put up a message though a medium, including digital media, physical advertising, online, and
product placement. Lets take a closer look at digital advertising, physical advertising and promotions.
Digital advertising
Television commercials are The most efficient mass-marketing advertising platform. Thats why they cost the big bucks, especially during popular airtime, like prime time or the
Super Bowl football game. In 2009 the single 30 second spot during the game cost its advertiser $3 million. Besides just showing the ad, the advertiser includes a song or jingle that help people remember the product. Virtual advertisements on television are interesting phenomena. They are mostly used at sporting events where the backdrop has computer graphics that changes as different products are displayed.
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Topics:
Using Different Media,
Advertising,
Marketing and Advertising,
Super Bowl,
Email lists,
Product placement,
blog,
Marketing Plan,
Facebook,
Social Media,
Marketing Principles,
Business,
Branding,
Marketing strategy