Why you need an Editorial Calendar

Editorial Calendar?


Editorial Calendar

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Marketing Plan

I know – you’re not a newspaper or a magazine – so why do you need an Editorial Calendar? Well, marketing your business is all about putting the right message in front of the right customer.

Specifically

This means getting an article about how wonderful and relevant your services are on someone else’s website, newsletter, Facebook page or Twitter feed.

It’s about the humans

Behind every channel there is a human being – someone who is tasked with the creation and distribution of content. If you can offer them unique content that is relevant and interesting to their readership – you just saved them a lot of time.

It’s about relationships

You can’t just send an email to them and say “Hey, please let me use your online reputation, (which you’ve spent years building up) to market my business for free.” Like most things that we want from other human beings, you need to get to know each other first.

It’s about a plan

It can take weeks to develop a digital relationship: finding the target through social media, initiating contact, not appearing like a stalker, swapping email, sending the appropriate content, reviewing, editing etc. You need to be planning at least a month in advance.

It’s about your time

An editorial calendar forces you to focus on how you’re going to market your business and how you’re going to manage your own time. If you’re serious about growing your business you should start thinking about 2012’s editorial calendar in November.

If you would like some help, reply to this email and book a session.

WTF is Google+

WTF is Google+?


Google+ is a loud screaming

message that you need to be

involved in social media

It was about links

If someone linked to your online content it was a pretty good indicator that it had worth. Links (both number and weight) made up a large part of Google’s algorithm in deciding where you appeared in search.

It is now also about interaction

With the rise of social networks, people can interact with your content in many other ways: they can share it, like it, comment on it, tweet it, subscribe to it etc. For Google’s algorithm to remain relevant they have to factor this “Social” behavior into their search results

Participation

Building followers and contacts on social platforms gives you a group of people who can share your new content if they deem it good enough. Making sure the content is formatted appropriately for the platform will also facilitate its movement.

Not being part of these networks: LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, Google+, & YouTube, will mean that your content ultimately performs worse in search and you become less visible.

What about Google+

The jury’s still out. I don’t see any need for it and rarely use it myself. However, when they launch Google+ for businesses later on this year, everything might change. For now, I’d recommend you sign up for a personal account to see what the fuss is about but I wouldn’t be spending a lot of time on it.

If you would like to develop a social marketing strategy, reply to this email and book a session.

WTF is a phone?

WTF is a Phone?


A phone is the killer marketing

device of the 21st century

Image is important

Last week’s commentary on design highlighted how important “look” is becoming. With so much information, human beings are searching for non-verbal cues to indicate validity. Your imagery and videos become even more important

Convenience is everything

With the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S you can shoot quality photographs, edit and publish video, all with the same device and in less time than it takes to produce a quality blog post.

Those of you already writing to an editorial calendar; stop and think about that.

The new iPhone 4S

Sure your teenage son might be bummed that it didn't look different and maybe your IT guy is telling you to wait until next June, but do either of them actually run & market a business?

An 8 megapixel camera, improved lens, improved lighting, full 1080p HD video, image stabilization…this thing is better than most people’s actual camera. If you’re sitting on the fence about whether to buy one or wait – buy one.

Takeaway

The sooner you can get into the habit of recording great imagery of you and your business, both photos and video, the better your marketing efforts will be received.

If you would like to discuss how to embed video into your marketing behavior, reply to this email and book a session.

Why Design is important...

Why Design is important


94% of people online make their

mind up about you before

they’ve even read a word

It's the 21st century

This is the most competitive time on the planet, ever. There are more Attorneys, more Realtors, more Financial Advisors, more Consultants than there have ever been before, and we’re all adding information to the internet to reach new customers.

The Internet is a visual medium

People form an impression of your business in less than 50 milliseconds. They’re not thinking about what you’ve written, in fact they’re not really thinking at all. They’re making an involuntary subjective assessment based on space, navigation, imagery, colors, font size etc. This isn’t just true for your website’s front page, it’s true for your blog posts, your Facebook page, and even the short bio you have across professional networks.

Design saves time

With so much content to read and research, human beings are giving design a far greater weight in determining value than ever before. That first impression colors every subsequent decision they make about your information. You could be Mark Twain but if your content doesn’t look “right” there is a disconnect; at best people won’t believe you, at worst they won’t read you

They're thinking...

“If you can’t present your message in a modern and professional manner, then how good can your actual product be?“

Think about that for a moment.

If you would like to discuss the look of your digital footprint, reply to this email and book a session.

 

WTF is Facebook (Part 2)

WTF is Facebook (2)?


Facebook is not about friends

It is about advertizing

Smart Targeting

OK, so say you have a marketing plan (see last week's WTF,) and you're going to focus on growing a particular area of your business. You look at your customers and clients over the years and begin to identify some common threads, for example:

  • they all live in the same zip code
  • they're mostly women
  • they're women in their mid thirties
  • they have a penchant for DIY
  • they just moved to the area
How can you "speak" to these people directly?

Facebook Ads Are Awesome

Where Facebook really wins for businesses is in their ad targeting. Using the above example with a business located in Silver Lake, Los Angeles - how would the market stack?

Of the 151,432,400 possible US targets:
  • 2,920 live in the 90026 zip code
  • 760 are women
  • 740 of them are between 30 and 40 yrs old
  • 40 of these mid 30's women enjoy DIY
  • 20 of them have just moved to the area

Pretty amazing stuff!

There are a million different ways you can slice the market: relationship status, numbers of children, taste in movies, and so on. The point here is - the better you understand your business and your customer, the more targeted your marketing can be.

But Hold On...

Before you go rushing off to set up your first ad there are a load of questions you need to ask yourself:

  • What is my message?
  • What do I want viewers of the ad to do?
  • Where should I send them?
  • What should they do when they get there?
  • Now what am I going to do with them?

Brand awareness is one thing but unless you have a strategic approach that incorporates a Facebook campaign as part of a larger marketing plan, you're throwing money away.

Yes, People Can Still Like You

As outlined in WTF is Facebook (1), getting people to "like" you on Facebook enables your message to appear in their newsfeed and potentially in their friend's newsfeeds, and running an Ad is the fastest way to grow this number. However, unless you're actively "working" Facebook, i.e. investing resource in managing your page, interacting with people who "like" you, adding Facebook only content and nurturing the people who have expressed an interest, they'll probably never see you again unless you run another ad.

If you're not going to invest resource in Facebook, the only reason to run an ad is to get people onto your email newsletter. You do have an email newsletter don't you?

If you would like to develop an ad campaign for Facebook, reply to this email and book a session.

 

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