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  • Complimentary Telesummit – Top Trainers Reveal the Best Social Media and Sales Tips

    Posted Feb 7th, 2011 By in Social Media With | No Comments

    Join me and 17 other fascinating speakers for the “Social Media and Sales Telesummithosted by Brandy Mychals and Gail Nott!

     

    “Finally…TOP TRAINERS reveal their Social Media & Sales Secrets for Making Connections, Increasing Your Exposure and Getting Paid!”

    Networking is a form of interactive communication with the goal of creating a connection. Social Media means taking that networking online with unlimited possibilities to reach a wide audience. Sales are about connecting with your clients…

    This telesummit will answer all your questions about how to use “online networking to boost your sales.”

    • Communicate effectively to get your message heard in person and online
    • Master the mindset required for success as an entrepreneur and in sales
    • Blogging tips to increase your credibility and be seen as the expert
    • Create sales by being authentic, transparent and without having to “sell”
    • Generate speaking events and new business opportunities through social media
    • Harness the power of telesummits to build your business and widen your reach
    • Savvy social media tips for Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and more…

    Sign up now for this FREE virtual event: http://dld.bz/KreT

    Look at these amazing speakers who are going to share their success strategies:

    2/1 Sharla Jacobs
    2/2 Trey Mcalister
    2/3 Alison Marks
    2/8 Patrick Schwerdtfeger
    2/9 Ivan Misner
    2/10 Jenn August
    2/15 Dawn Lyons
    2/16 Anastasia Netri
    2/17 Brandy Mychals
    2/22 Denai Vaughn
    2/23 Suzanne Falter-Barns & Jeffrey Van Dyk
    2/24 Gail Nott
    3/1 Jill Lublin
    3/2 Pj Van Hulle
    3/3 Ann Evanston
    3/8 Karen Clark
    3/9 Mirna Bard
    3/10 Rick Itzkowich

    Sign up now for this FREE virtual event: http://dld.bz/KreT

  • 10 Simple Ways Hotels Can Use Social Media

    Posted Feb 3rd, 2011 By in Social Media With | No Comments

    Image courtesy of http://younghoteliers.blogspot.com/

     

    Because social media is so huge today, more and more businesses are using it. Even hotels are getting involved with marketing on social media sites because they see the value in finding customers that way. If you own or manage a hotel, work for one, you’re thinking of starting one, or you’re thinking about studying hospitality management, you may want to consider the top 10 ways hotels should be using social media.

     

    1. Twitter questions and answers

    Create a Twitter page and let people ask questions about the hotel. They can get quick answers that way, without needing to call and talk to an employee.

    2. Set yourself as an expert

    Set yourself apart as an expert on something or as a specific kind of destination — like a wedding hotel, etc. Use social media to market your niche.

    3. Write content

    Write good content about your industry and offer it for others to use/purchase. This really helps get your name out there.

    4. Blog

    You don’t want to get left behind when it comes to a presence on the Internet. A website is great, but a blog can help ensure that you connect with your customers and keep them up to date.

    5. Respond to bad press

    If you get bad press or comments on social media sites, respond to them — appropriately. Don’t just fight back or argue, because that won’t help you keep or redeem your reputation. Instead, be respectful, polite, and clear about the issue. (more…)

  • 5 Unique Ways Non-profits Can Utilize the Social Web

    Posted Jan 31st, 2011 By in Social Media With | 3 Comments

    Summary:In a complimentary UC Irvine webinar to introduce my new online course for not-for-profits, I discussed five unique ways non-profits can utilize social media.   I have listed these below for those of you who missed the webinar.  The 4-week course also starts Wednesday, February 2, 2011.  To register for the course, please visit http://ht.ly/3MWA5.

    social media for non-profits

     

     

    Google Grants is an in-kind donation program that awards non-profit organizations free sponsored ads through Google Adwords.  Sponsored ads through Google are an extremely effective way to drive visitors to a website, blog, or social media platforms.

    Facebook Causes is a unique platform or a tool where members can discuss the issues, share their experiences, post media, and sign petitions.  Causes can choose whether or not to fundraise by selecting a beneficiary organization to receive donations; these donations are automatically delivered monthly by Network for Good.

    YouTube’s Nonprofit Program offers non-profits to deliver their message through non-profit channels and non-profit video pages.  This program provides call-to-action overlay, the option to drive fundraising, increased uploading capacity, posting a video opportunity on the YouTube Video Volunteers platform to find a skilled YouTube user to create a video for your cause as well as the option to embed donate links right in videos.

    Eventbrite for Causes is a program for non-profits who want to manage, promote, and raise money through successful events. Eventbrite is committed to helping non-profits leverage technology and best practices to raise money and build sustainable programs.

    Group Forming on any online platform can be an extremely powerful way to engage constituents.  The Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project has found that 75% of all American adults are active in some kind of voluntary group or organization and Internet users are more likely than others to be active: 80% of Internet users participate in groups, compared with 56% of non-Internet users. Social media users are even more likely to be active: 82% of social network users and 85% of Twitter users are group participants.

    Again, I will be teaching UC Irvine Extension’s new distance learning course for not-for-profits, “Using Social Media to Make a Difference.” The 4-week online course will be held February 2 – February 23, 2011, 7-9 pm Pacific. Course registrations are open through February 2 and anyone from around the globe may register. All sessions will be live through WebEx and will be recorded. To register for the course, please visit http://ht.ly/3MWA5.

  • 5 Reasons Why Your Emails Aren’t Opened (And how to fix it)

    Posted Jan 25th, 2011 By in Email Marketing With | No Comments

    Imagine this: You sent an email to your entire list to generate sales for an end-of-the-month push. Later you check your reports and see that your open rate were abysmal. What a blow! Not only did you fail to generate sales, a bunch of contacts unsubscribed from your list.

    There are a few reasons why this may have happened, but here are the four most likely reasons along with advice for how you can fix it.

    You send junk

    Would you sending the stuff you send to your list to your friends and family? If not, think about a different way to touch base with your contacts and provide something of relevance. Not sure if you send junk? If your email message is “useful,” it’s resourceful and people want to save and archive it. If your message is “interesting” it’s funny, relevant and usually good for forwarding to their contacts. If your message is neither interesting or useful … it’s junk.

    You use unoriginal, boring subject lines

    People are tired of receiving the same emails with the same boring subject lines. They get it. Really, that’s why they don’t bother reading them. Be imaginative and creative and make people think when they read your subject line.

    You are still emailing customers from 1998

    Do you use the same email address for everything? Probably not. Chances are, you have a primary address for friends and family and a secondary address for commercial offers. Your contacts are the same way, and are probably using their secondary address with you.

    Email permission tends to expire in about 10 months – so the more opportunities to confirm and re-confirm their interest (beyond an opt-out link), the better. To fix this, consider using an alternative follow-up campaign (phone/direct mail) to have people update their contact information and re-opt-in to your marketing. Disciplined email marketing pays off when you have a truly engaged, interested and hungry list – and you can really cater to the people who matter.

    You send just like the rest of ‘em

    We all get our nighttime to morning email flood. I admit, sometimes I just use my Delete key more liberally during those hours and my reply button during the daytime. To fix this, try mixing up and allowing people to choose if they want your message in the morning, in the evening or mid-day.

    You emailed to your entire list

    Not every subscriber is interested in everything you have to offer. Slice and dice your email list into relevant, targeted groups and send to those groups of users where the message is attractive, engaging and relevant.

    Not everyone’s open rates will always improve. It’s fact. However, the more you pay close attention to the result of your emails and more importantly, your recipients’ expectations and satisfaction – the more your email open rates will rise with your fine-tuning.

    To learn more about email marketing best practices, download a free report about Email Marketing 2.0.

  • The Lost Art of Conversion Optimization

    Posted Jan 21st, 2011 By in Search Engine Optimization (SEO), Website With | 2 Comments

    Commercial websites aren’t cheap to build and maintain, and if you own a business with a website you probably want something to come from that expense. For some businesses that means a sale, for others a lead, and for yet others it’s clicks on paid advertisements.

    Regardless of what you want from your website, it seems obvious that more traffic to the site would help with all of the above…right? Yes and no.

    Before you drive more traffic to a website, it is important to make sure that your website is doing what you want it to do as efficiently and effectively as possible. There’s no point pouring more water into a leaky funnel. Enter conversion optimization.

    If one were to define conversion optimization, the definition would be quite simple: making a website simpler and easier for customers to use.

    Have you ever made a purchase online? Filled out an online form for more information? Signed up for an online service? If yes to any of these, how was that experience? Easy? Frustrating? Keep those experiences in mind as you read the following.

    Though conversion optimization techniques can range from the ridiculously simple to the incredibly complex, the process can be broken down into 3 steps: Research, Measure and Test.

    Research

    One of the most beneficial things you can do, both for your business in general as well as your conversion rate is to exactly define and then thoroughly research your target audience. Only when you really know the people you are trying to reach can you craft a compelling message that will get them to do what you want them to do.

    Visit successful websites in your industry, as well as successful websites in different industries that cater to the same demographic, and make notes about the site. Go through the following steps on each site:

    1. Start at the home page, search for and locate a product you want, and add it to your cart (or start at the home page and find a contact form, if lead generation is your goal.) Make a note of how many steps were in that process, whether it was easy or hard to find the product/form, and anything else that stood out to you.

    Also pay attention to how you feel and the colors being used for backgrounds, headers and buttons. Colors can evoke an emotional response, so keep that in mind. (more…)

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