Have you ever lost an entire afternoon diving into an incredible book? Despite the numerous decades that have passed since the publication of countless works of classic literature, people still manage to lose themselves in the words. They imagine themselves as a part of the plot-- trying to understand the characters and their motivations. They root for their favorite hero or heroine while cringing every time that famed nemesis appears.
We are all accustomed to trying to understand the motivations of our favorite characters. We know that if you do not make an effort to comprehend the âwhyâ behind the actions, the book will lose much of its appeal. Humans are naturally complicated! We relate far better to well-rounded characters than the more superficial ones.
Although we all have the skills needed to complete this type of analysis, most marketers neglect doing it in one of the most essential aspects of their jobs: understanding Google.
The Struggle of Marketers
The past 18 months have been big for marketers. The mobile update that hit in April sent many brands scrambling to make sure their sites were ready. There were also Panda updates and a suspected Phantom update, just to name a few. Each change impacted countless sites both positively and negatively. Some sites saw their rankings plummet-- and with it their traffic and their business. Others saw their sites suddenly appear on page one of SERPs (Search Engine Results Page) for the first time and experienced a much-needed jump in traffic and revenue.
Many professionals dedicate their time to trying to correct whatever errors might have hurt them in the last update. When the Panda update hit, they learned that thin content was frowned upon, so they spent time trying to beef up certain pages that were damaged by the update. When Google made the announcement that sites could expect a mobile update in April 2015, numerous marketing and IT departments found themselves scrambling to make sure their sites were mobile ready.
The problem with these techniques is that the site is always one step behind. If you are always trying to catch up to the latest Google update, then you have already lost your spot on the SERP. If you want to have a successful site, you need to be one step in front. Just like targeting the motivation of a character in your favorite book, you need to understand the motivation of Google. You want to know the âwhyâ.
The why is actually simple. Google does not care about your business. Google cares about making their users happy, which in turn means delivering sites that answer their queries. Every one of the Google updates has been designed to better sort through poor websites and track down the high quality ones to display for users.
If you want to create a website that is successful, you need to focus on the end user.
You need:
- Content that provides immediate value and is not just a superficial, general treatment of your subject.
- Text that is easy to read, skim, and digest.
- Vocabulary that matches what people tend to put into search engines to help them find the material.
-That same vocabulary present in page titles, meta data, URLs, and other parts of the page that Google and users examine to see what your site discusses.
- Careful analysis of how your content performs in the short term and the long term to identify the types of content people respond to the best.
- Analytics that do not just look at the number of views or shares, but actually measure leads and conversions.
Understanding the whys behind behavior is important for understanding a great book, and for understanding Google. Rather than always playing catch up with algorithm updates, get out in front of it by focusing on the same thing Google does: the end user.
If you are ready to get a new marketing campaign off the ground, contact us to get started.
Bill
www.inkimages.com
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Overcoming Negativity
Irish author James Joyce once said that anything you don't feed dies. He was talking about spirituality, but the statement applies to just about every facet of your life from your stomach to your imagination.
Positive energy is something each of us benefits from in several ways. It helps generate positive feelings within us, but it also transfers to the people we come in contact with. A smile can make a significant difference to someone who happens to need one at just the right moment. But what happens when you cultivate negativity, instead?
Appropriately used, sarcasm can be quite entertaining and revealing. But at its base, sarcasm is an expression of negativity. Even when the ultimate message is a humorous, positive reversal, the delivery of that message through sarcasm is negative. Yet some people seem to thrive on delivering a kind of satirical sarcasm. However, while these folks may be seen as clever, they are rarely perceived as happy individuals.
Negativity and pessimism are just as contagious as optimism and positive attitudes. They have a certain toxicity that becomes a shared experience. Negative people spread negativity like a disease, while positive personalities spread the warmth of optimism more like the vibrancy of good health. And really, what this is actually about is health, because few things in life make you feel better about yourself than a positive outlook. Few things make you feel less good about yourself than a negative one.
You don't have to be arrogantly negative to spread a negative outlook. Even humor and light-hearted expressions of mock jealousy can color a situation with a darkness that partially blocks out a portion of the comedic effect. As funny as Rodney Dangerfield's "poor me" approach was, it still left us feeling a little bit genuinely sorry for him in some way.
Being negative can devalue the spirit. It can tarnish the soul. It defeats you with your own words. Refusing to allow negativity to take hold and control you is a daily objective that can literally turn your life around, as it has done for many.
There is an old Native American tale that bears witness to this fact in an entertaining way. As the story goes, one evening an elderly, Cherokee brave told his grandson about a battle that constantly rages inside people. He said, "My son, the battle is between two wolves fighting inside us all. One wolf is evil. It is anger, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, lies, guilt, self-pity, envy, jealousy, resentment, false pride, superiority, inferiority, and ego."
He continued, "The other wolf is good. It is joy, peace, love, truth, humility, kindness, benevolence, hope, serenity, empathy, generosity, compassion, and faith."
The grandson thought about this for a moment and then asked his grandfather, "If it is a battle, which wolf wins?"
The wise, old, Cherokee brave replied, "The one you feed."
Bill
www.inkimages.com
Positive energy is something each of us benefits from in several ways. It helps generate positive feelings within us, but it also transfers to the people we come in contact with. A smile can make a significant difference to someone who happens to need one at just the right moment. But what happens when you cultivate negativity, instead?
Appropriately used, sarcasm can be quite entertaining and revealing. But at its base, sarcasm is an expression of negativity. Even when the ultimate message is a humorous, positive reversal, the delivery of that message through sarcasm is negative. Yet some people seem to thrive on delivering a kind of satirical sarcasm. However, while these folks may be seen as clever, they are rarely perceived as happy individuals.
Negativity and pessimism are just as contagious as optimism and positive attitudes. They have a certain toxicity that becomes a shared experience. Negative people spread negativity like a disease, while positive personalities spread the warmth of optimism more like the vibrancy of good health. And really, what this is actually about is health, because few things in life make you feel better about yourself than a positive outlook. Few things make you feel less good about yourself than a negative one.
You don't have to be arrogantly negative to spread a negative outlook. Even humor and light-hearted expressions of mock jealousy can color a situation with a darkness that partially blocks out a portion of the comedic effect. As funny as Rodney Dangerfield's "poor me" approach was, it still left us feeling a little bit genuinely sorry for him in some way.
Being negative can devalue the spirit. It can tarnish the soul. It defeats you with your own words. Refusing to allow negativity to take hold and control you is a daily objective that can literally turn your life around, as it has done for many.
There is an old Native American tale that bears witness to this fact in an entertaining way. As the story goes, one evening an elderly, Cherokee brave told his grandson about a battle that constantly rages inside people. He said, "My son, the battle is between two wolves fighting inside us all. One wolf is evil. It is anger, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, lies, guilt, self-pity, envy, jealousy, resentment, false pride, superiority, inferiority, and ego."
He continued, "The other wolf is good. It is joy, peace, love, truth, humility, kindness, benevolence, hope, serenity, empathy, generosity, compassion, and faith."
The grandson thought about this for a moment and then asked his grandfather, "If it is a battle, which wolf wins?"
The wise, old, Cherokee brave replied, "The one you feed."
Bill
www.inkimages.com
Friday, September 4, 2015
Wearable Devices: A New Frontier in Marketing Opportunity
Though the Apple Watch has only been available to the public for a few short months, make no mistake: wearable technology is here to stay. Not only are these devices a bold, new way to impact the lives of consumers in terms of both productivity and monitoring their health, it also represents an incredible, new marketing opportunity that cannot be ignored.
Behavioral Data
One of the key benefits of wearable devices to consumers is the huge amount of behavioral data that they're designed to collect - even more so than a traditional smart phone. Location data has been a huge emphasis of devices like the Apple Watch, for example, as this information is typically leveraged to help people keep track of the number of steps that they're taking in a day, the number of calories that they're burning, and more.
On the marketing side of the equation, this means that you can now use a customer's location to your benefit in ways that weren't possible just a few, short years ago. You could literally send a message to customers automatically when they enter a certain radius of your physical business, for example. Automatically sending a coupon whenever someone gets within three blocks of your store is a great way to entice them to come inside and look around, even if they weren't necessarily planning to do so.
Unfettered Access
Another one of the major benefits of wearable devices from the consumer side of things is that people now have a device that they essentially have instant access to at all times. They no longer have to take their cell phone out of their pocket or purse to check their e-mail, read a new text message, or more - they can have instant access to that content just by simply raising their wrist.
From a marketing perspective, this means that your audience will also no longer need to take their cell phone out of their pocket in order to see your marketing materials. As a result, the content that you're putting out into the world becomes that much harder to ignore - for better or for worse.
If a consumer both knows they've just received a marketing message from your brand, and is then reading it in seconds, the benefit of this is that you're now connecting with that individual in a way that is more direct than ever before.
The potential downside is that because these types of e-mails are no longer as easy to ignore as they once were, it could become easy for a consumer to feel jaded about the whole process. If you send too many messages and a customer begins to feel overwhelmed by the amount of contact that you're trying to make, you're suddenly that much closer to losing a potential lead who feels you're being too direct. A certain degree of caution will need to be practiced and restraint will need to be emphasized for the best possible results.
As is true with any new type of technology, using wearables for the purpose of marketing is something that will certainly require a degree of trial and error moving forward. Even though these devices are essentially designed to collect as much information about a consumer as possible, privacy concerns regarding how and where that information is used will still need to be addressed moving forward. If you're able to properly use that data in a comfortable, engaging and organic way, however, you'll find a new avenue through which to connect to your target market unlike one that you've ever had before.
Bill
www.inkimages.com
Behavioral Data
One of the key benefits of wearable devices to consumers is the huge amount of behavioral data that they're designed to collect - even more so than a traditional smart phone. Location data has been a huge emphasis of devices like the Apple Watch, for example, as this information is typically leveraged to help people keep track of the number of steps that they're taking in a day, the number of calories that they're burning, and more.
On the marketing side of the equation, this means that you can now use a customer's location to your benefit in ways that weren't possible just a few, short years ago. You could literally send a message to customers automatically when they enter a certain radius of your physical business, for example. Automatically sending a coupon whenever someone gets within three blocks of your store is a great way to entice them to come inside and look around, even if they weren't necessarily planning to do so.
Unfettered Access
Another one of the major benefits of wearable devices from the consumer side of things is that people now have a device that they essentially have instant access to at all times. They no longer have to take their cell phone out of their pocket or purse to check their e-mail, read a new text message, or more - they can have instant access to that content just by simply raising their wrist.
From a marketing perspective, this means that your audience will also no longer need to take their cell phone out of their pocket in order to see your marketing materials. As a result, the content that you're putting out into the world becomes that much harder to ignore - for better or for worse.
If a consumer both knows they've just received a marketing message from your brand, and is then reading it in seconds, the benefit of this is that you're now connecting with that individual in a way that is more direct than ever before.
The potential downside is that because these types of e-mails are no longer as easy to ignore as they once were, it could become easy for a consumer to feel jaded about the whole process. If you send too many messages and a customer begins to feel overwhelmed by the amount of contact that you're trying to make, you're suddenly that much closer to losing a potential lead who feels you're being too direct. A certain degree of caution will need to be practiced and restraint will need to be emphasized for the best possible results.
As is true with any new type of technology, using wearables for the purpose of marketing is something that will certainly require a degree of trial and error moving forward. Even though these devices are essentially designed to collect as much information about a consumer as possible, privacy concerns regarding how and where that information is used will still need to be addressed moving forward. If you're able to properly use that data in a comfortable, engaging and organic way, however, you'll find a new avenue through which to connect to your target market unlike one that you've ever had before.
Bill
www.inkimages.com
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