Sunday, August 25, 2013

Direct Response In Advertising - Motivating Action From Your Audience

Direct response refers to advertising methods that solicit an immediate action from the audience. For instance, a direct mail campaign may promote a discount that is only good for a short period of time to elicit immediate sales.

The best definition of Direct Response is advertising or marketing that encourages a direct action from a person. Typically, you want someone to request additional information or make a purchase and you expect them to do it NOW!!


Here is Our Itemized Checklist For Direct Response Advertising

Before submitting your advertising to media advertising suppliers, make sure it does most or all of the following:

  1. It must have a compelling headline
  2. It should evoke an immediate response, action, visit, call, or purchasing decision.
  3. It should overcome sales objections.
  4. It should focus on benefits, not features.
  5. It should answer all major questions.
  6. It should promise performance or results.
  7. It should back up the promise with a risk-free warranty or money-back guarantee.
  8. It should be keyed in such a way that you can analyze the value, profitability, and performance.
  9. It must have your contact information.

Additional considerations…
  1. It should acknowledge the person as being valuable,
  2. It should be personally written, and written as if one person only was reading it,
  3. It should begin with the results the person should expect,
  4. It should explain to the person your reason why he or she should get those results,
  5. It should give the person some background,
  6. It should give the person some detail,
  7. It should prove any claims you make in a way the person can embrace,
  8. It should tell the person what he or she should expect in terms of improvement or results,
  9. It should remind the person why he or she should choose to at least learn more,
  10. It should show the person how he or she can try it out without risk,
  11. It should assure the person that if he or she is not comfortable taking action now, as a courtesy you will follow-up on the telephone just to make sure that they understand, to answer any questions, and to give them a chance to take advantage without fear, risk or obligation.
  12. Various alternatives of ads should be tested in small samples before the best ad is green lighted. If a limited test of 200 ad spots makes you money, then authorizing an additional 2,000 spots should make you 10 times as much. But test first.




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Nancy Beth is an Entrepreneur & Small Business Owner, Founder of Sweet Spot Marketing Canada and a Motivational Speaker for Women & Girl Leadership.
  • As an Internet and Digital Marketing veteranNancy Beth has vast experience in Internet Marketing, Social Media Marketing, Online Safety and Protecting Your Digital Footprint.  Since 2010, Nancy Beth has been highly sought after to share her message on being a Digital Leader, using the Internet & Social Media for good, and how to safely navigate the Social Web. 

    Keynote Speaker | Executive Coach | Training Consultant | Founder of  Sweet Spot Marketing Canada (@sweetmarketing) |(@nbguptill) | Digital Leader |
     Women & Girl Leadership

Monday, August 19, 2013

YES! What You Post Online Matters .... Here's Why



Jobvite 2012 Survey
Did you know 92% of Businesses proactively use Social Media as part of their Talent Recruitment programs and to source suppliers?

Yes, it's true!  According to Ciphr and Jobvite's 2012 Social Recruiting Survey, 92% of companies use, or plan to use Social Recruitment.  They Socially Creep potential Candidates to obtain first hand insight into their true character.  Anybody can 'doctor-up' their resume, company profile or application to present themselves as the ideal candidate. At the same time, there's no hiding behind our online actions and behaviors.  For this, and many other reasons, what you post online really does matter!





Wikipedia defines Social Recruiting as "a concept at the intersection of recruitment and the embryonic field of social media.  There are several terms used interchangeably including social hiring, social recruitment and social media recruitment."  

While Social Recruiting is in its infancy, there's no question it has become a mainstream method used by companies, governments, non-profits and institutions to source top talent, suppliers, partners, stakeholders and volunteers.     



The past two weeks I ran a two-part blog series on the importance of Protecting Your Digital and Shadow Footprints. This week, I'm sharing information and facts on Social Recruiting, including content that encourages or discourages recruiters from selecting you as the ideal applicant for the open position, whether it be:
  • Employers seeking full-time, part-time or contract employees
  • Non-profits seeking Executive Directors, Board of Director Candidates, volunteers
  • Companies, Governments & Institutions seeking suppliers, partners and stakeholders
  • Parents seeking babysitters (yes, even parents socially creep babysitting candidates)

The reality is, most people will Google you, your business, your staff, associates, and business networks before they even meet with you, decide to do business with you, or hire you for the opening at hand.


What they find online will positively or negatively impact whether they will do business with you … or not.


SOCIAL MEDIA IS CHANGING RECRUITMENT




CONTENT THAT DISCOURAGES






CONTENT THAT ENCOURAGES



YOUR REACTION TO POSSIBLE CONTENT
Jobvite 2012 Survey
               

MOST POPULAR SOCIAL NETWORKS
Jobvite 2012 Survey

DO YOU USE THE CONTENT
Jobvite 2012 Survey
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Nancy Beth is an Entrepreneur & Small Business Owner, Founder of Sweet Spot Marketing Canada and a Motivational Speaker for Women & Girl Leadership.
  • As an Internet and Digital Marketing veteranNancy Beth has vast experience in Internet Marketing, Social Media Marketing, Online Safety and Protecting Your Digital Footprint.  Since 2010, Nancy Beth has been highly sought after to share her message on being a Digital Leader, using the Internet & Social Media for good, and how to safely navigate the Social Web. 

    Keynote Speaker | Executive Coach | Training Consultant | Founder of  Sweet Spot Marketing Canada (@sweetmarketing) |(@nbguptill) | Digital Leader |
     Women & Girl Leadership

Monday, August 12, 2013

How To Protect Your Shadow Footprint - Part 2

We learned last week our Shadow Footprint is content someone else publishes about us online, on websites and social networking sites in the form of text, video, audio and pictures. We also learned our Digital Footprint is content we publish online about ourselves.

We have complete control over our Digital Footprint, as we are in control of our own actions and behaviors. We can choose to be Digital Leaders and good Cybercitizens. 


However, when it comes to our Shadow Footprint, we have no control over the actions and behaviors of others and what they post about us online.

With our Social Web, we need to be concerned about protecting our online image and reputation as it has become more important than any hard-copy document we publish about ourselves or our business. The power of Social Sharing on the Internet means hundreds, thousands, literally millions of people can be reached in a very short period of time.

Further, Social Creeping has become significant! Many businesses, organizations and institutions will socially creep you before interviewing you for a job, accepting your entrance in to post-secondary education, partnering with you on a project, accepting you as a client, placing their business with your company, confirming your position on an elite sports team or allowing you to join their professional organization.

People will creep your profiles to get a sense of your attitude, behaviors and personality which they determine by your online activity which includes your online posts, conversations and interactions with others, Facebook likes, Tweets and re-tweets, YouTube channel subscriptions, blog posts, news articles you are mentioned in, etc. They will also creep and search for content that others post about you.

I have many colleagues that work with Human Resource Departments and Recruiting & Admission Departments on How to use the Internet to Socially Creep and Recruit Top Talent and discern against potentially toxic individuals that can harm Effective Team Management and Corporate Culture.

Needless to say, we are living in the Digital Age and it is crucial for us to protect our Digital and Shadow Footprints ... but how do we do this?

Protecting our Digital Footprint is easy as it's within our control to manage. All we need to do is become a Digital Leader.  We need to learn about Internet & Social Media Etiquette, we need to learn about what is appropriate and inappropriate behavior and content, we need to learn what content positively and negatively impacts our online image and reputation.  We need to understand what content positively influences employers and recruiters, and what content turns them off. We need to understand the laws around Internet Defamation and publishing a Libel. I will share more on this very topic in a future blog post, in the meantime, you may be interested in reading:  Complain About Others Online Much?


OK, so we now know what we need to do to protect our Digital Footprint, but what of our Shadow Footprint … how do we protect it?


The very first thing you need to do is create an Online Listening Station so you can monitor name mentions of yourself, your brand, your company, your innovations, your product and services. Your Online Listening Station is like setting up a powerful set of digital ears to monitor the different conversations that may be taking place about you or your organization across the social web.

By setting up filtering, aggregating and alert technology services you can gain access to real-time conversations about:


  • What people think about you, your business, your products & services
  • Complaints against your company and your brand
  • Negative comments made by competition and customers
  • Posts made by strategic partners, employees, suppliers
  • Inaccurate information about you and your organization
  • False information and statements that are meant to harm your image and reputation
  • Positive posts, compliments and flattery towards you and your business
The goal is to stay tuned-in to what is being said about you and your business across the social web so you monitor your Shadow Footprint, allowing you to be in a position to properly deal with both positive and negative information that is out their on the web for everyone to see.

Your goal is to create a Dashboard where you can manage the different conversations in pretty much the same place, that gets delivered to your email inbox or through text alerts. Your Dashboard should include:

  1. HootSuite: A social media dashboard that manages and measures your social networks.

  2. Feedly: A news aggregator application for various Web browsers and mobile devices running iOS and Android, also available as a cloud-based service. It compiles news feeds from a variety of online sources for the user to customize and share with others.

  3. Google Alerts: Google Alerts allows you set-up custom searches for any phrase and receive email or RSS alerts any time your phrase shows up in online media, blogs, web pages, social media sites and news.

  4. Twitter Search: The basic twitter search allows you to set-up searches on your name, company name, brands, competitors, etc. so you can monitor your business and reputation, plus know when people are replying to your tweets. Advanced search allows for real data mining that's very beneficial in protecting your Shadow Footprint

  5. Tweet Beep: TweetBeep is like Google Alerts for Twitter. Great for online reputation management, catching all your @replies and @mentions, finding job/networking opportunities, keeping up on your favorite hobby, and more!

  6. Social Mention: Social Mention is a social media search and analysis platform that aggregates user generated content from across the universe into a single stream of information. It allows you to easily track and measure what people are saying about you, your company, a new product, or any topic across the web's social media landscape in real-time. 

  7. Pipl: Pipl is the most comprehensive people search on the web. Pipl dives into the deep web to bring you results you won't find in any other search engine then we use a powerful identity resolution engine to link those seemingly disparate results into a set of meaningful profiles so you can easily find the person you are looking for. 

  8. 123 People: 123people.com is a free real time people search tool that looks into nearly every corner of the web. Using proprietary search algorithm, you can find comprehensive and centralized person related information consisting of public records, phone numbers, addresses, images, videos and email addresses.

Once you have your listening station in place, you need to educate yourself on Libel and Internet Defamation legislation in Canada, as well as Online Harrassment and Abuse. Given some pretty high-profile cases in 2012 and 2013, new legislation is being developed to hold people accountable for Internet Defamation, Online harassment and Abuse. Become familiar with federal and provincial legislation.  Know Your Rights!


If someone is harming your Shadow Footprint and it is most definitely a criminal offense, there are 6 steps for you to consider in dealing with the matter:

(1) GET PROOF & EVIDENCE: Use computer and smartphone monitoring software that has the ability to capture online conversations and take pictures of the computer screen, or use screen capture software such as SnagIt or Jing.

(2) FILE A COMPLAINT REPORT: Social Networks have the ability for you to report the person and their comments. For Facebook, visit: https://www.facebook.com/help/420576171311103/  Other social media sites have similar capabilities - search their help section or do a Google search to learn how to report.

(3) APPROACH THE PERSON: Call, write or message the person saying they are committing a cyber crime and to immediately remove all posts and refrain from doing it in the future, otherwise you will report them to the police for Internet Defamation, Online Harassment and Abuse.

(4) TELL THEIR EMPLOYER: If the person is an employee acting on behalf of a company, file a complaint with their employer, advising their employee has committed a cyber crime. Send the evidence, ask for the content to be removed immediately. Inform them if the content is not taken down, or if anything else appears you will file a report with the police for Cyber Crimes, particularly if it is the act of harassment and cyber bullying.

(5) APPROACH OTHER PEOPLE: If the posts appear on someone else's wall or on a picture that was posted, send a message to that person asking for the negative posts to be removed. Advise them a cyber crime was committed and they have a responsibility to protect others online and to shut down the online harassment and abuse if it's happening on their account even if it's someone else that is instigating it.

(6) REPORT, LAY CHARGES, FILE HARRASSMENT & ABUSE CASE: If the cyber crime continues, report the person to the police. If all else fails and the damage warrants the legal cost, file a libel, internet defamation, harassment and abuse affidavit. I strongly suggest working with a lawyer that specializes in Internet Defamation, Harrassment and Abuse cases.



One last point: We as adults need to set the tone and behavior of appropriate online conduct. We are the role models so we must demonstrate being a good digital leader, cyber friend and using the internet and social media for good. This means we must refrain from online complaining against others, including brands, companies and individuals. 
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Nancy Beth is an Entrepreneur & Small Business Owner, Founder of Sweet Spot Marketing Canada and a Motivational Speaker for Women & Girl Leadership.
  • As an Internet and Digital Marketing veteranNancy Beth has vast experience in Internet Marketing, Social Media Marketing, Online Safety and Protecting Your Digital Footprint.  Since 2010, Nancy Beth has been highly sought after to share her message on being a Digital Leader, using the Internet & Social Media for good, and how to safely navigate the Social Web. 

    Keynote Speaker | Executive Coach | Training Consultant | Founder of  Sweet Spot Marketing Canada (@sweetmarketing) |(@nbguptill) | Digital Leader |
     Women & Girl Leadership

Saturday, July 27, 2013

How To Protect Your Shadow Footprint - Part 1

Huh? What are you talking about? What's a Shadow Footprint?

Good Question!   With our Social Web, it is important to protect your Digital Shadow because what others say about you online can either boost your image and reputation, or completely destroy it. This holds true regardless of what people say, whether they are talking about you, your brand or your business in a professional or personal manner.

Your Shadow Footprint is defined by what others have to say about you online. This includes pictures, video's, audio recordings and text posts on blogs, social media and internet websites. On the Social Web, your image and reputation is the the sum of Google's Search results.

Most of us have heard the message “Protect Your Digital Footprint”. Your Digital Footprint is defined as anything you put out on the internet and social media sites about yourself. Your Shadow Footprint is content and information that others post and publish about you or your business online.

While you may take the action to be a good Digital Leader, others may not, and what others say and post about you or your company can really hurt your reputation.

Why is it important to protect our Digital & Shadow Footprints?

In our digital world, most people go to the internet as their primary research tool to look things up on Google, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other search engines. Thinking about our Digital and Shadow Footprints, anything you, or others, put up about you on the internet is searchable and can have more meaning than anything you might include in a proposal, company overview, a resume or application paper.

Here's the thing, even if what is being said about you is not true, when people see things in print they tend to believe it, especially if the content is published on a credible site like an online article on a newspaper's website, or a podcast on a radio station's website.



The reality is our Digital & Shadow Footprints:
  • Remain on the Internet Forever
  • Are defined as the amount of content that is traceable back to a given individual, brand or company, whether the content is words, photographs, audio, or video … regardless of the publishing source
  • Define our social identity, online brand and persona. As an internet user, we create our social identity in online communities, blogs and websites. It is defined through our actions, behaviors and interactions with others. Through our social identity people determine our online personality / persona which defines our online brand. Our online brand and persona is who we are as a person and how others perceive us online.
  • Over time, our digital and shadow footprints combined, create our Social Identity
  • Can be our new first impression.  By this I mean, people may meet you for the first time online through social media sites or reading about you on a blog or in the news. Think of it this way, you have probably met people online first through reading a news article, through your friends, or by joining an online community, before actually meeting them in-person offline. What they see about you online will create a first impression, and that impression will either be good or otherwise. I am sure many of you have accepted friend requests from people you never met, and did so because they had a positive online image. I am also sure many of you have declined friend requests or blocked people because of their online behavior and negative online image.
  • Examples of Digital Footprint: photographs you uploaded to social sites, blog posts, shared video files, posts you wrote as status updates or comments you made on a friend's wall.
  • Examples of Digital Shadow: photographs, video's and audio clips your friends or family members post about you as their update status, news articles published on the newspaper or radio station's website

As internet users, we are responsible for our own actions, and we need to be Digital Leaders. We can make a conscious decision to protect our Digital Footprint, as well as the Shadow Footprint of others by being a Digital Leader and a good Cybercitizen. We control what we post and we should not let technology betray us or others.

One of my all time favorite authors and speakers in Digital Marketing is Erik Qualman [@equalman]. When we interact through social media and email, he calls me #OhCanada and I just love it! Erik is the author of Socialnomics and Digital Leader, and he is a strong proponent for Digital Leadership. Two must read books for ANY user of the social web is Socialnomics and Digital Leader by Erik. I strongly encourage you to read both of his books as they are truly insightful.

While we can control our Digital Footprint we have no control over our Shadow Footprint. However, we can … and MUST ... take measures to protect it.

Next week, I will share part two of this two-part blog series. In part two, I will share strategies and tactics on how to actually protect your Shadow Footprint. In the meantime, if you have any questions on part one, please post questions on this blog, or you can post them to my Facebook Page http://www.facebook.com/sweetmarketing

In closing this post, take a moment to watch “A Tale of Two Footprints” by Mr. Sheehy  This video reinforces the content in this post.


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Nancy Beth is an Entrepreneur & Small Business Owner, Founder of Sweet Spot Marketing Canada and a Motivational Speaker for Women & Girl Leadership.
  • As an Internet and Digital Marketing veteranNancy Beth has vast experience in Internet Marketing, Social Media Marketing, Online Safety and Protecting Your Digital Footprint.  Since 2010, Nancy Beth has been highly sought after to share her message on being a Digital Leader, using the Internet & Social Media for good, and how to safely navigate the Social Web. 

    Keynote Speaker | Executive Coach | Training Consultant | Founder of  Sweet Spot Marketing Canada (@sweetmarketing) |(@nbguptill) | Digital Leader |
     Women & Girl Leadership

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

MARKETING IS LIKE BUILDING SAND CASTLES : The Rule of Seven In Marketing - Why Frequency Matters!

The rule of seven is one of the oldest concepts in marketing.    


Although it is old, it doesn't mean it is outdated. The rule of seven simply says a prospect needs to see or hear your marketing message at least seven times before they take action and buy from you. Now the number seven isn’t cast in stone. The truth of the Rule of Seven is you can’t just engage in a marketing activity and then be done. Marketing must be an on-going process in order for it to be successful.

Traditionally, number seven has been given precedence over other numbers by many cultures. Therefore, you may notice various things coming in number seven.  The important thing in the rule of seven is not the number, but the message. This simply tells you that you need to let the prospect hear and see your marketing message so many times before they buy it. There are many reasons for the need of repetition. Buyers just can't trust you and make the buying decision at the first time you show your message.

So, this simply means that your marketing effort should be repetitive and consistent. You cannot just run a couple of advertisements one time and expect the customers to buy the product. The hidden message of rule of seven is the continuous and repetitive effort that should be put in for marketing.

Why do prospects need to hear your message so many times before taking action? If you are doing your marketing well, you are targeting the right people; your ideal customers. You have created powerful marketing materials that use language your target audience relates to. You speak to their major problems and how you can solve them. Why don’t they jump to their feet and grab what you have to offer the first time they see your message?


What Can You Do?  In order to enhance your marketing through the message of rule of seven, consider the following points.

1. The Noise:  Today's world is an information world. People are overloaded with information; people are being bombarded with messages constantly. It is truly difficult to get past all this noise and be heard.  The first few times someone sees your message it is likely it won’t completely register with them. We all have marketing blinders we’ve built up over time – otherwise we’d be overwhelmed with the constant noise from businesses clamoring to be heard.  It’s no different with your prospects. They’re not sitting around waiting for you to show up. They’re busy living their lives and you may not even be a blip on their radar.

Further, people have access to the best information source at all time, so you cannot fool them at all.  If you want to convey your marketing message to the people who have been bombarded with information, you are gong to have tough luck. It is never easy for a person or a company to be heard by the prospective buyers.  

Due to all the 'noise', you should repeat your marketing message and should consider using special strategies to help stand out from the crowd.  As mentioned, the first few times someone is exposed to your message, they may not even notice it. People are usually resistant to marketing messages by nature. Otherwise, people will be overwhelmed by the noise made by all the different marketing companies are doing.  

Bottom line is, you have to compete in this noisy market. So, you need to repeat your message until they hear you out.


2. Customers may not need your product:  You may be targeting the exact type of ideal customers for your product or service, but there are chances they may not need your product ..... yet.  In cases where they see your marketing message once, they may not remember you when they want to buy the product by next week or next month. Therefore, you need to keep your marketing message in sight.

Out of sight for marketing is out of mind.  Let me take an example. Most people do see and hear about great products or services and they make a mental note that they will buy those when they need it. But in reality, when they buy the actual product, they go with the latest marketing message they heard or saw. That's why you need to keep playing your record.


3. The price may be too high: Sometimes, people do not buy things due to the price. Mos times, this is nothing to do with the price of the product or the service. This simply means that you have not been able to convince the customers fully about the value of your offering.  If someone sees the value of your product or the service, they find a way to buy it. They never worry about the price if it's the right thing they want.  Therefore, through your message, convince them about the value you offer. Through the rule of seven, they will hear about the value you offer many times, so the money will not be a problem.

However, in these troubled economic times, price may very well be an issue. Keep in mind, objections about price are usually code for “I’m not really sure I need/want your product”.  If someone really wants what you have to offer, it’s amazing how quickly they’ll figure out how to pay for it.

If a prospect sees your message and is interested but worried about money, it just means you haven’t quite convinced them of the value of your offer. The good news is you’ve gotten past the noise. If they continue to see powerful marketing messages from you, they may get closer to seeing your value and forgetting about their price concerns. That’s why you need to keep marketing.


4. They don't know you:  The real reason people don’t buy the first time they run across your marketing message is they don’t know you from a hole in the ground. Remember what I said about noise. It’s not just there are too many messages; there are too many messages that aren’t true.

Do you take every commercial, flyer or email marketing message at face value? Or do you have your own personal BS meter that’s shouting “yea, right” when someone makes a claim? Of course you do. I do to. If someone wants to sell to me, they need to prove they can do what they say.

This is the real truth about the Rule of Seven. It takes time for people to get to know you – remember your name, your offer, your message. Once they know you, they need time to get to like you – and your business. Over time, they’ll eventually start to trust you. Once they trust you – trust that you’re honest and provide true value – then, and only then, will they be ready to buy.

How long does this process take? Probably not in seven contacts. It really depends; it depends on the value of your offer, how badly they need it and how many charlatans they’ve run across before.


How do you use the Rule of Seven in your marketing plan?  

First, never rely on only one type of marketing method. Even if you are getting stellar results today, that might change in the future. Think of internet marketing. Email used to be much more effective than it is today. That’s why the spammers got involved. Now with spam filters, it’s harder for legitimate marketing to get through.

The same may be true of other marketing methods. Some factor outside your control may change how easily you can reach your prospects. So even if you have discovered a method that is getting you all the customers you can handle, add a couple of other tools to your marketing toolbox to ensure you don’t get blindsided by unexpected changes.

The Rule of Seven is why “information marketing” is so effective. By providing free information to your prospects on a regular basis, you are building a solid relationship. Information offered in a newsletter or blog doesn’t set off alarms because it’s not a sales pitch; it’s a genuine attempt to educate and help.

Finally, simplify or automate the process as best you can. Too many entrepreneurs only market sporadically because they are “too busy” to market themselves. Then they wonder why they don’t have enough clients. Set aside regular times to engage in marketing activities, even when you’re busy. If you continue marketing even when you’re busy, you’ll have fewer slow times.

Conclusion:  Rule of seven is one of the oldest, but practical concepts in marketing. Similarly, rule of seven can be applied to many other areas where the consumers are concerned. The main learning from rule of seven is the need to repeat what you do.


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Nancy Beth is an Entrepreneur & Small Business Owner, Founder of Sweet Spot Academy and a Motivational Speaker for Women & Girls.

At Sweet Spot Academy, we solve and simplify "HOW" to keep your business moving forward by offering a suite of know-how based business training and empowerment programs.  We focus on small group workshops and customized training programs.