Friday, November 12, 2010

How to Build Your Business by Walking Away from the Sale

image of high-heeled shoes walking away

Some marketing feels almost impossible to resist.

Your favorite product is 85% off! This really smart expert is only offering advice until Monday! This service will change your life or your money back!

Smart marketers know how to reduce risk, boost urgency, and tempt our wallets with irresistible offers.

But are there times when those techniques work a little too well?

Have you ever been so excited by great marketing that you bought something you just plain didn’t need?

I’ll give you an example. As I was cleaning out my closet this morning, I came across a pair of shoes that I must have bought in another life.

They weren’t my style, I had nothing to wear them with. And — worst of all — they didn’t fit. Why did I buy them?

There was nothing wrong with the shoes. For another person with a dressier wardrobe, a flashier style, a higher pain tolerance, and smaller feet, they would have been perfect.

Some clever shoe store had managed to entice me with a great sale — only for me to wind up with a product that was a bad fit in every possible way.

Are you helping your customers get a good fit?

There are lots of strategies to persuade people to buy. (I mentioned a couple of them in the first couple of paragraphs above, and you can find a lot more in those “resource” links to your left.)

But if too many people buy something they don’t actually want (or need), what happens?

They get their shiny package and realize it’s not for them. At all. They’re frustrated, disappointed, and feel sort of dumb for being taken in.

They may not ask for a refund. They may not say anything to you at all.

But the next time you have a product for sale, they’ll be far less likely to buy it.

That’s why the really smart marketers, the ones who have fantastic customer loyalty that lasts for years to come, let prospects know immediately who the product is for … and who it’s not for.

To figure out whether it’s better to give up the sale or urge your customer to make a purchase they won’t regret, ask yourself a few questions:

Who, specifically, is it designed for?

If you offer a training program for people who run small businesses, and wouldn’t be useful for those who don’t, you’ll want to specify that in your sales page.

If someone asks if your product would work for a freelancer or a large business, tell them it wouldn’t be the best fit — but you’d be happy to tell them about new products that might work for them.

It’s a bit like selling flashy designer shoes to a lifelong Birkenstock wearer. If it just doesn’t suit who they are, they won’t get any use out of the product — and they’ll be unhappy you convinced them to buy.

How much prior knowledge do they need to benefit from your product?

If your product is a 101 guide, it’s just going to bore and annoy advanced users.

And on the other hand, if your product requires an advanced degree to be able to understand and use it, don’t pitch it to newbies or you’ll just frustrate the daylights out of them.

Don’t sell five-inch stiletto heels to a woman who’s only ever worn flats in her life. Sell them to someone who has the entire Sex and the City box set and could climb Everest in her Jimmy Choos.

Let your customers know beforehand what level of expertise is required for your product, and they’ll be able to tell if they’ll enjoy owning it.

Is it location-specific?

If your resource list includes only US and Canadian locations and all of your buyers are in the UK, you’re going to have a bit of a problem.

Or if you’re explaining something that varies from country to country, you could actually wind up leading people astray.

Some sneakers are meant for gym use only; some are great for trail running.

If your customers don’t know where your product is designed to work, they might wind up getting hurt — or at the very least, annoyed and frustrated.

Cultivating customers for the long haul

I recently had someone give up a sale he could have made to me — and I was so grateful I became a longtime loyal customer.

I wanted to buy a specific e-book as a Christmas present, and sent a quick e-mail to the author to ask if it would be a good fit for a relative beginner. He quickly responded to let me know that the information was really intended for a more advanced audience.

This was in 2007. Although he did not get this particular $99 sale from me, I’ve since bought four other products from him.

Giving up a few sales that will make your customers unhappy isn’t just good karma, it’s also a good long-term strategy for customer loyalty.

Tell someone the too-small shoes look great on her, and you’ll sell a pair of shoes your customer will always regret buying.

Tell the same person the shoe doesn’t really fit, and you’ll have a customer for life.

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Online Marketing … Without the Arrogance

This post was written by the Web Marketing Ninja—a professional online marketer for a major web brand, who’s sharing his tips undercover here at ProBlogger. Curious? So are we!

There are many less-respectable professions than internet marketing, but even today I get a glare—“so you’re one of those guys”—when I’m introduced to someone for the first time.

For many, the word “marketing” conjures images of people whose sole job is to convince others to spend money they don’t have on products they don’t need, using every tactic possible—no matter how sneaky. The business owners I speak to all the time consciously ignore all forms of marketing because of this.

But I’m here to tell you that you can be a marketer without being a die-hard, arrogant salesman, and the secret is simple: you just need to know where the lines are.

Silence or the megaphone?

You or your product may be the very best, most valuable product in the marketplace, but if you sit in the corner in silence, no-one will ever know your name. On the flip side, if you stand in that corner on a box, and scream how awesome you are into a megaphone, everyone will remember you—but as that irritable person who just wouldn’t shut up!

The secret here is engagement. Be ready to start or join a conversation, and be prepared to listen as much as you contribute. Engagement is a two-way street, and it requires you to get out of your cave not just for face-to-face conversations, but in all your forms of marketing communication. Your customers have a voice. Seek it out, listen, and show you care.

The moral: engage, engage, engage!

Over-deliverer or over-promiser?

Do you write, “This product is going to make you a billionaire!” or “I’m going to share with you all my secrets to becoming a six-figure blogger”? These are two very different approaches to tag lines that I’m sure you’ve seen, and it’s not hard to guess which is more credible in most peoples’ eyes.

When it comes to taglines and copy, it’s very easy to overstep the mark. You’re told time and time again to focus on benefits, not features, and it’s so attractive to launch into the most outrageous, fantastical benefit you can—without thinking about whether it has any credibility, or your product can deliver on the promise.

Keep your messaging benefit-focused, but don’t claim to be able to better the human plight forever—unless you’re convinced your product actually does this. Focus on the benefit for the specific problem your product solves, and you’ll be set.

The moral: promise something great—and deliver.

Humble or egoistical?

A company that I believe has walked very close to the line when it comes to being confident in their product, but not egotistical, is Apple. They were brave with their Mac vs. PC campaign, and initially they focused on what the Mac could do that the PC couldn’t—and it was a great success. Over time, as it became harder to find new points of difference, their approach did devolve into an all-out attack on the PC, but they backed off that tactic pretty quickly.

When looking at the brand you project, as well as your products, if you can instill confidence, it can give you credibility. Arrogance will only project insecurities. Darren and Brian Clarke http://www.copyblogger.com/ are two people who are perfect examples of this philosophy in action.

The moral: be confident, but not arrogant.

Marketer or con artist?

In my mind, the difference between a marketer and a con artist is honesty. If you’re being told that the key to marketing success is to lie to your customers or leads, then you’ve crossed a line—it’s as simple as that. There are also laws designed to protect consumers against exactly that kind of behavior.

The moral: honesty is the best policy.

Friends or profit resources?

If you believe that your customers are your friends, you’ll look at what you do as a gift to the world, nothing more. And if that’s truly what you want to do, then no one will question you. The other extreme is to see people purely as resources from which to extract as much cash as you can; you judge their value by how deep their pockets are.

If you want to run a business, you need to be somewhere in the middle of this continuum. Again, it comes down to solving a problem for someone, and more importantly, solving a problem they’re willing to pay for.

There’s nothing wrong with asking people for something you value—money—in exchange for something they value—your product. It’s been happening for a while, and we’re doing okay so far.

The moral: ot’s okay to ask for money, but not to bleed them dry.

Does it feel wrong?

I have a very close network of people who act as my arrogant-web-marketing-o-meter. I seek them out when something I’m planning feels a little wrong. Just the fact that I feel I need a second opinion is usually warning enough, and in most cases, my suspicions are confirmed by a group of people I trust. Because the reality is, if it feels wrong, it probably is.

The moral: go with your gut feel for what’s appropriate.

Don’t cross the line

In my history I’ve done things that pushed the envelope on every single one of these points. Some I regret, some I don’t, but by doing this I’ve been able to more effectively understand the balancing act that exists between being a marketer and being nothing more than an arrogant salesman.

It’s something that you’ll only really understand over time as you conduct marketing yourself, but all I ask is that you don’t let the worst cast scenario prevent you from using online marketing to help your blog or your business grow.

Stay tuned from most posts by the secretive Web Marketing Ninja—a professional online marketer for a major web brand, who’s sharing his tips undercover here at ProBlogger.

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Interview: Peter Askew

Peter Askew is the owner/operator of the website DudeRanch.com, which revolves around the dude ranch vacation industry. He’s also active in the domain name industry, acquiring and monetizing domains from either expiration or end-users. He and his wife are expecting their first child in December 2010, and they love spending time in the Western North Carolina mountains.

Tell us a little background info about yourself. Where are you from? How old are you? How long have you been making money online?
I’m 38, and born and raised in Atlanta, GA (but I’m really a mountain man at heart). I’m an Ole Miss Rebel who graduated with a degree in History (actually called Southern Studies, which essentially is a southern History degree - crazy, I know). Bounced around after college, lived in NYC, LA, and DC, before heading back home to ATL. First career choice was the movie industry, but once I treaded those waters, quickly pulled the ripcord. Jumped into the internet industry in 1998 and never looked back. Been making money online since 2004, and doing it full time since 2009.

Do you have any experience with affiliate marketing? If so, to what extent?
Currently, my monetization methods mainly revolve around Adsense and selling ads direct to end users/businesses. I have exposure, and several sites, which utilize affiliate offers, but it’s less than a third of my total revenue per year. I plan on increasing my exposure in affiliate marketing in the coming months, though.

What accomplishments so far are you the most proud of?
I guess I’m proud of the fact that I’m a self-taught web guy – everything from html, ppc, seo, domaining, graphic design, cms, hosting, analytics, conversion tracking, and content management systems. I’m doing my best to expand my knowledge in other areas, though - mysql, php, and javascript mainly.

What do you think it takes to be successful?
Passion, perseverance, and a natural curiosity. Creativity doesn’t hurt either.

What have been your biggest failures?
Too many to list, but a recent project revolved around restaurant health inspection scores. We attempted to launch a website which centralized health scores across the USA, and normalized the data a bit so it was a bit easier to digest (no pun intended). We knew it’d be a challenge as our main conduit of data was from city, state, and local government municipalities. In the end, after a year of development, the red tape proved too much of an obstacle, so we pulled the plug.

What have you been up to recently? What projects are you working on?
My baby, my heart and soul right now is DudeRanch.com. I acquired the domain last year and launched the site in March of 2010 after 6 months of development. Its main purpose is to help vacationing folks identify and locate dude ranches across the USA. The site also highlights dude ranches for sale as well as job openings.

What problems have you had with those new projects?
I’ve hit a few coding walls during development, but am lucky to have several friends in the industry to lean on when those times arise (w00t to Charles Lumpkin, Ryan MacDonald, and Nick Downey).

You mentioned the domaining industry. Explain what you’re doing there.
I stumbled into the domaining business in 2006, mainly buying domains from the expiration/drop process and monetizing through Sedo parking. From there, I began contacting end users who owned generic domain names, and began buying direct from them. What I didn’t expect was how addictive the process was. Once you get the domaining bug buying, selling, and monetizing, it’s tough to turn back. Like the prolific domainer Kevin Ham said, “If you control all the domains, then you control the internet…” And c’mon, who wouldn’t want to own the internet? :)

Outside of DudeRanch.com, what are some other favorite domains in your portfolio?
Hmm. These probably ain’t the most valuable, but ones I like personally. I own a few wedding domain names, like SavannahWedding.com, which are developed and are simple city wedding directories. I also own VaughtHemingway.com, which is the football stadium for the Ole Miss Rebel football team (Hotty Toddy). It’s developed as well and provides a pretty handy photo gallery of seating views from every section (Go to hell LSU).

How do you like to spend your free time?
My wife and I love the outdoors – mountain outdoors that is. Most vacations we head to the western North Carolina mountains to hike and spend time in the wonderful climate.

If you could go back to being 18, what different career choices would you make?
Ha.. not so much a career choice, but.. I’da loaded up on every generic dot com domain name I could lay my hands on :)

Do you have a Twitter account or Facebook “Like” page?
Yup.. my personal twitter is @searchbound, and my Twitter account for DudeRanch.com is @DudeRanch.

Super Bowl Ads and the Evolution of Online Marketing

Do you remember Pets.com? Back in 2000, the internet company made a big splash with a clever Super Bowl ad that had pet owners rushing to the site to buy dog food. Actually, not the second part. Like a lot of companies during the dot.com boom, the Super Bowl ad was the first and final hurrah for Pets.com.

While you won’t see the return of the dot.com dandies this Super Bowl, Advertising Age is predicting a big run on ads that are digitally and socially enhanced. Go read the article. I’ll wait.

(Insert “The Girl from Ipanema” here.)

Back? Great. Pete Blackshaw makes a reference to a POEM framework: paid media, owned media and earned media. It’s his contention, and I totally agree, that the successful brands will find a way to balance the golden POEM triangle in order to get the very most out of every ad dollar.

Let’s look at the Super Bowl. The ads have become as important as the game. They’re the only reason I watch. But in the past, even the most ingenious ads had a short shelf life. Today, that doesn’t have to be the case. That clever ad can now rest on a company’s home page or Facebook page. People can leave comments on it and share it with friends. Before the game is even over, viewers will likely be Tweeting about their favorite ads and if you’ve done your job right, they’ll mention the brand. Remember herding cats? Do you remember the company behind the ad? No one does.

With the proper mix of TV, social and digital marketing, a single Super Bowl ad can live on through the Stanley Cup finals and beyond. As Blackshaw says, “Google never forgets.” Just like I was reminded of Pets.com and EDS (the herding cats people) when I looked up the history of Super Bowl ads. Once it’s out there on the net, it’s there to stay.

Now you’re saying, ‘wonderful, but I’m not a big brand name. I can’t afford a Super Bowl ad.’  To that, I say, it’s the principle not the Super Bowl that matters. Too many companies segment their efforts instead of working together to create a cohesive message. Banner taglines should match Twitter posts and Facebook updates and, as we’ve said before, each effort should drive traffic to the others.

What’s also important is that you take advantage of short trend windows and brand hype. If the Tweeters are all a Twitter about a new running shoe, then maybe it’s a good time to Tweet about your patented running shorts or granola bars for quick energy.

You don’t have to run a Super Bowl ad to benefit from the ad hype. Create a short YouTube vid and call it, the “Super Bowl ad” I would have made if I had the money. If it’s clever enough, it could go viral and for a fraction of the cost.

It’s time to get creative people, and to get your creative people all on the same page. Whatever the size of your company or budget, use the ads and the social media campaigns of the big boys to inspire you to step up your game.

Have a favorite Super Bowl commercial or a great idea for an ad of your own? Tell us about it.

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IAB Puts Out Plan to Standardize Mobile Metrics

If you’re running a marketing campaign with no means of measuring the results, you’re wasting your money. Trouble is, with the marketing world changing as fast as it is, we haven’t even developed a baseline for what’s considered a success in Twitter or Facebook and mobile is even further behind. Because of this, the Interactive Advertising Bureau and the Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) have put together a set of measurement guidelines that they’re hoping will become the standard for all mobile advertising.

Randall Rothenberg, President & CEO, IAB says;

“Consumers have brought mobile devices into their daily lives at an astonishing pace. The ‘Mobile Web Advertising Measurement Guidelines’ will give marketers greater assurance that their advertising messages are reaching consumers on these mobile devices and that’s critical for continued growth.”

Cameron Clayton, Senior Vice President of mobile and digital applications at The Weather Channel, co-chair of the IAB Mobile Advertising Committee and member of the Board of Directors of the MMA had this to add;

“By adopting these guidelines, publishers and ad servers will all count impressions in a consistent, rigorous way, helping assure marketers and agencies that they are getting what they pay for when they purchase mobile Web advertising.”

The objectives of the “Mobile Web Advertising Measurement Guidelines” include:

  • Defining the mobile Web ad impression
  • Creating a common definition and methodology that will become widely adopted in the U.S. and globally for counting mobile Web ad impressions
  • Encouraging U.S. mobile Web ad servers to have their impression counts audited by an independent third party
  • Distinguishing between the established IAB Web ad impression and the mobile Web ad impression, and when each metric is appropriate
  • Providing marketers and agencies with greater clarity and certainty (via the auditing process) that key metrics used for buying mobile Web ads are methodologically sound and meet the highest standards available to the media industry
  • Reducing levels of discrepancies and spurring the industry’s growth by offering Internet publishers and ad servers a consistent, rigorous way to count the delivery of ad impressions

Certainly, the idea of standardizing metrics is a good thing but I must say, I didn’t realize the complexity of the issue until I read the new guidelines. I had always assumed that mobile worked pretty much the same way as banner ads when it came to click-throughs. Not so says IAB’s Joe Laszlo in a recent ClickZ interview.

“The way that mobile networks handle data is different, and mobile device capabilities are different. They can’t quite handle things like cookies the way PCs can, and mobile network operators play a much larger role in passing along data, which makes it harder to measure.”

Mobile isn’t going away, so it’s time to put this plan into action. If you know your WAP Header Controls from your Activity-based Filtration, you should read and comment on the proposed guidelines. You’ll find them at the IAB website. You have until Friday, December 10 to make your opinion heard.

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Thursday, November 11, 2010

The Simple Way to Get Everything You Want From Online Marketing

image of woman raising her hand

I want to tell you a story about two women.

One is my hairdresser and the other is my massage therapist.

Of the two, I have a stronger connection with my massage therapist. I see her more often, she’s closer to my age, and well, there’s just a certain bond that develops when you get naked that often with a person.

A month or two ago, my hairdresser asked me to recommend her for a “best of” list our local TV station was running.

She didn’t cajole, bribe, beg, threaten, or promise me a free haircut. She just said, “Hey, if you think about it, would you mind logging into this site and giving me a review?

I like her, so I went home and did it. Took me about three minutes.

A few weeks later, I noticed that my massage therapist had a banner over her business saying that she was mentioned in the same program.

And I felt really bad.

I would have been very happy to give her a review as well. I’d love to support her business. And I’d love to do something nice for her.

But like a dummy, it never even occurred to me to check the other categories. The contest was finished and the votes were all counted.

And she didn’t ask.

You don’t get if you don’t ask

We don’t ask for referrals. We don’t ask for the order. We don’t ask for a guest post. We don’t ask for advice. We don’t ask our readers to buy high-quality stuff that would help them out.

We even get uptight telling them to click here.

It sounds so salesy! I feel like an infomercial!

We think that by asking we’re being pushy.

(And some people do push it a little too far. It’s probably contact with the pushy ones that makes us so nervous.)

The two most common mistakes in online marketing

Online marketers seem to fall into two camps.

A few aggressive types pitch too much. Everything they send is a pitch. They burn out their lists, can’t make any professional friendships, and just generally make pests of themselves.

They often do ok, but they’d do better if they provided a little more value and a little less promotion. If they cultivated some relationships instead of just harvesting eyeballs.

But I think the more common camp is the one we don’t see.

They’ve got something valuable to offer. But they’ve over-internalized the advice to “give before you get.”

They give and give and give and give and give. But when it comes time for the “get” part, they freak out.

Not coincidentally, many of these people are broke. Lovely, but broke.

“I only want customers who already want me”

Sometimes I hear from people who don’t want to have to tell customers to “click here.” Or they don’t want to nudge prospects off the fence with a clear call to action.

If I really have to play all of those manipulative copywriting tricks, do I even want these people as my customers?

To me, that sounds a lot like “I want customers to buy from me, but they have to read my mind to find out why.”

Your customer is supposed to:

  • Find you without help, because you haven’t promoted yourself,
  • Figure out what you do without help, because you rarely mention it,
  • Develop a raging desire for your product, even though you haven’t told her why it’s good,
  • And then somehow intuitively fight her way through the navigation of your site in order to buy from you.

That’s a lot to ask of your poor customer just because you feel weird about asking them to do something.

You may be awesome, but I promise you, you aren’t that awesome.

Running a business can get uncomfortable

I don’t care who you are, there will be something about running a business (even if it’s a small side business to pay your blogging expenses) that makes you uncomfortable.

For me, it was selling. I would rather have extensive dental surgery than stand up on stage and sell something. That’s not colorful overstatement — I really would prefer the dental surgery.

But I’ve done it, in front of a cold crowd who didn’t know me and didn’t have a multi-month warmup from the blog.

And (this still amazes me) I was successful at it. I sold a ton of stuff. It was horrendously uncomfortable, but now I know I can do it. And I never have to feel limited by the “I’m not a salesperson” belief again.

Ethical business is a nonzero-sum game. In other words, you win when your customers win.

But that doesn’t mean you never spend time outside your comfort zone.

If you want the sale, ask for it. If you want your business to grow, learn some ethical copywriting techniques to help you ask more clearly.

And if it feels awkward, you might just be growing into the kind of person who knows how to ask for what you want.

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Consumers Plan to Use Mobile Phones for Holiday Shopping

59% of mobile consumers plan to use their mobile phone for holiday shopping and planning holiday celebrations, not including making phone calls. That’s a huge jump over 2009, when the number was only 25%.

The numbers come from the October 2010 U.S. Mobile Consumer Briefing, which was conducted on behalf of the The Mobile Marketing Association and it’s even further proof that mobile marketing is on the rise.

Of those who expected to use their phone to faciliate shopping, 64% said they’re check their phone before going to a store, but only 12% said it would be in response to a  TV, billboard or newspaper ad. What are they using the phones for? To search for locations where a gift is sold and to compare prices were the two most common responses.

The survey’s other key findings include:

  • Asians, Hispanics and adults ages 25-34 are the demographic groups most likely to use their phone to a great extent for holiday shopping and celebration planning.
  • Thirteen percent of mobile holiday shoppers expect to use their phone to purchase or pay for gifts (13%).
  • Movies, music, consumer electronics and books are the top gift types that mobile holiday shoppers thought would be helpful to shop for using a mobile phone.
  • Among mobile holiday shoppers, Hispanics and Asians were more likely to think that toys or games would be helpful to shop for with a mobile phone.

Though I do believe that our dependence on mobile phones is rising (my husband forgot his when we went out shopping today and he wanted to go back home to get it), I’d take these results with a healthy dose of skepticism. Not that I think they’re wrong, but I don’t believe that people really know what they’ll use their phones for let alone what kind of gift would be better served. I suspect people responded with the most popular categories for gift buying, the same answer you’d get if you asked them what they buy online or at the mall.

Here’s a quote from the press release that does sum it all up nicely. It’s from Jacqueline Rosales, EVP, Business Development & Client Service of Luth Research;

“Holiday shoppers are always in a time crunch, and in this economy, they’re in a budget crunch, too. Both of these factors have them relying on their mobile phone more than ever as a tool for finding bargains, the right gift and the quickest way to get to a particular merchant. This dependence makes the mobile channel a highly effective way for brands, marketers and merchants to reach consumers this holiday shopping season, including by mobile-enabling campaigns that involve traditional media.”

All true. So spiff up those websites, mobile apps and mobile coupons and then start planning an even bigger mobile push for next year. With the growth in Smartphone usage, this year’s 59% will probably jump to 75% when Christmas 2011 rolls around.

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Branching Out From Affiliate Marketing


Crazy week!

After a few months of work, I am getting ready to branch out from my main two sources of income and add an additional (hopefully).

Right now I make the majority of my income from:
1. Affiliate marketing (duh)
2. This blog / teaching people how to make money online (such as the Facebook ads guide)

While this is good money by most standards, I have decided to also put some time aside to branch out even further and add another "leg" to the business I am trying to build.

I don't ever see myself stopping affiliate marketing because the money in affiliate marketing can be quick, large, and insanely awesome. I plan on having it be just another branch of the company I am working to build.

So this new branch is going to be ecommerce websites.

The main reason I chose ecommerce is because:
1. My dad is really successful with ecommerce and has taught me a lot.
2. We have a warehouse that I can use to store stuff.
3. I won't have to fight with advertising companies (Google, Yahoo, Facebook, etc) to allow me to advertise.

While these ecommerce sites take a lot of work and effort to start up, I think it'll be a nice steady asset that I can build.

Starting Fresh

Do you remember what it was like when you first started affiliate marketing? Maybe you're just now starting. If you are, you should definitely get my guide to affiliate marketing.

I wish I had something like that (the aff marketing guide) for ecommerce because I have had to go through that "newbie" learning process. While I've been enjoying it... it certainly has cost me a lot of time and money.

In fact, just this one ecommerce site will probably end up costing me low $xx,xxx. The "scary" part is that I have no idea if it is going to work out.

So, all of that to say, I am excited for this next step and look forward to launching many more of these type of sites.

So my question is, what are you doing to diversify your income? Do you plan on just doing affiliate marketing or do you have other websites that you want to make that are more long term assets?

[Image credit]

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Internet Marketing for Smart People Radio No. 2

Over the last decade, a prolonged magnitude 9.1 technological earthquake completely altered the landscape of online marketing and public relations. The entire topography has shifted from one of cold, repetitive interruption to the gentle, authentic drip of attraction over time.

A large part of navigating this strange, new terrain is the building and care of real relationships. If you enjoy the frustration and futility of beating your head against the abandoned brick walls of how things were, this show is not for you…

In this episode Brian Clark and I discuss:

  • The fundamental foundation of all good marketing
  • Why the traditional “pitch” doesn’t work, and what to do about it
  • The single most important factor in getting online attention
  • How to become a world-class influencer
  • A very popular piece of advice that might just keep you broke
  • The simple truth about building lucrative business relationships

Hit the flash player below to listen now…

Or…

Click here to download the mp3 | 22.2 MB | 19:26

Or…

Click here to subscribe via iTunes

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How to Increase Affiliate Income by Hitting the Affiliate Marketing Sweet Spot

At BlogWorld Expo this year, I presented some tips on affiliate marketing in one of the sessions I ran on monetizing blogs.

One of the most powerful affiliate marketing concepts—one that can make or break an affiliate campaign—is summed up in this slide:

Screen shot 2010-11-05 at 1.23.05 PM.png

The key is to find the overlap between the intent and need of your reader, the product you’re promoting, and the message you use to promote it with.

To say it another way, the product, reader need, and your promotional message need to be related. The product needs to relate to your audience, and you need to promote it in a relevant way.

Let me give you an example of an affiliate promotion on a blog that I saw recently where there was no sweet spot.

Missing the mark

I won’t reveal the blog because I don’t want to embarrass the blogger but the blog’s topic was beauty and fashion.

  1. Reader Intent - The blog’s content focused on the topic of beauty and fashion, and the blog’s comments revealed that readers were there to explore that topic (so the reader intent was to learn and talk about beauty/fashion).
  2. Product – The product being promoted on the blog was my 31 Days to Build a Better Blog ebook. While I’m flattered that the blogger wanted to promote my book, there’s not a great deal of immediate overlap between the reader intent/need and the need that my product solved. My ebook helps people improve their blogs; the reader intent was to talk lipstick, skirts, and stilettos.
  3. Message – The promotion was a banner ad. There was no in-content promotion—the blogger had simply used one of our default banner ads in the sidebar. As a result there was no tie-in, or message that tried to close the gap between reader need and the product. Perhaps if the message had been a blog post written to highlight how the product could be helpful to other fashion/beauty bloggers, or a call to fashion/beauty bloggers to work through the ebook together (making things more relevant to the audience), the promotion might have been more successful. However, the banner ad alone provided no obvious tie in.

There was no sweet spot here. As a result, the promotion saw no conversions.

Take-home lessons:

  1. Know your reader intent and needs.
  2. Find affiliate products that solve those needs.
  3. Promote products in a way that’s relevant and that communicates how the product will solve reader needs.

Further reading on affiliate marketing

  1. 10 Tips for Using Affiliate Programs on your Blog
  2. 6 More Tips for Affiliate Marketing on Blogs

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3 Reasons You Should Care About Multicultural Social Media & 3 Tips for Multicultural Social Media Success

Multicultural is the anti-thesis of the become like us phenomena. It turns assimilation on its head, upside down.

Multicultural: According to Webster of, relating to, reflecting, or adapted to diverse cultures.

Diverse: According to Webster, the condition of having or being composed of differing elements : variety; especially * : the inclusion of different types of people (as people of different races or cultures) in a group or organization.

By its very definition Multicultural Social Media looks at difference and acknowledges, we are not all the same. There are cultural, linguistic and identity politics that drive us. They inform our purchasing behaviors and preference. They have an impact on how we relate to each other and the world.

In a few hours, I’m going to be joining some amazing folks at Social Media Atlanta in what promises to be a fascinating conversation about Multicultural Social Media.

There are so many layers to this conversation, I almost don’t know where to begin. So, I’ve decided to begin at the beginning (like Julio Iglesias says) with three reasons why folks should care about multicultural social media.

#1- Population:

US Census Bureau US Population Graph

US Census Bureau US Population Graph

In May of 2009, money.CNN.com published a piece called Minority Populations on the Rise.

“The nation is becoming even more diverse: More than one third of its population belongs to a minority group, and Hispanics are the fastest-growing segment.

The U.S. Census Bureau reported Thursday that the minority population reached an estimated 104.6 million - or 34% of the nation’s total population - on July 1, 2008, compared to 31% when the Census was taken in 2000. Nearly one in six residents, or 46.9 million people, are Hispanic, the agency reported.”

According to that report, the break down of the U.S. population was as follows: Hispanics 15.4%, Blacks 13.5%, Asians 5%.

These were the numbers in 2008. A few months ago we just completed the 2010 census. Although the results of the census are not yet tabulated, many anticipate that the results will show an even greater increase in the minority population.

#2- Money: The second reason that you should care about multicultural social media is money. The demographics alone are striking. However, add to that the estimated spending power for these groups and you have a very compelling case that any brand would be foolish to ignore. According to a post in Mashable by Jessica Faye Carter earlier this year, that 34% has an estimated spending power of over $2 trillion. That’s nothing to scoff at. It represents a tremendous economy opportunity for brands.

#3- Future: If the present state analysis is not enough for you, then consider the third reason you should care about multicultural social media - this is the future. As I previously mentioned, the demographics of the minority populations in the United States continues to grow. This trend is not going to stop. Projections for 2050 show the white population in the U.S. at just slightly more than 50%.

US Department of Labor Projections for US Population

US Department of Labor Projections for US Population

Two years ago the Washington Post ran an article highlighting that according to the census, nearly 25 percent of children younger than 5 are Latino. That was two years ago. That cohort is moving up through the age distribution making each group that it passes through more Hispanic. Moreover, this is not just a blip on the screen. According to Jeffrey S. Passel, senior demographer at the Pew Hispanic Center “Hispanics have both a larger proportion of people in their child-bearing years and tend to have slightly more children.” Passel is co-author of a Pew study that predicts that the Hispanic population will represent 30 percent of the total US population by 2050.

Our society is continuing to grow more and more multicultural.

3 Tips for Multicultural Social Media Success:

I promised you three tips for multicultural social media success, so here they are.

#1- Engage in the communities that are being created.

For a long time there was a myth that pervaded the social media space. Many people believed that multicultural communities were just not online, that the digital divide kept these communities from engaging in this space. The research and case studies that we have seen over the last two years have truly dispelled that myth. It has become clear that multicultural communities exist in social media and in fact in many instances engage at higher rates in this space than their white counterparts. Brands that are not engaging these communities in social media are missing out on a tremendous opportunity. Go find the influencers. Go have conversations where these communities exist.

#2- Honor and respect the communities, be careful of stereotypes and be mindful of the value exchange.

One of the most important things that brands in the private, government and non-profit sector can do when trying to engage folks in this space is to honor and respect the communities and their respective traditions and values. A person does not have to come from that community to engage with the community in social media. However, there are several pit falls that someone who is not from the community should be wary of, first and foremost among them replication of negative power dynamics that exist in the real world.

a- Do not expect that the messages that you have crafted for other audiences will resonate in this space. Remember multicultural social media looks at difference and acknowledges, we are not all the same. Therefore, the way to engage these communities will not be the same cookie cutter approach that is used with other audiences.
b- Ensure that there is a value exchange. It is important that brands who come into these communities do not come to just ask for things from the community but that these brands are ready to invest and ensure that there is a value exchange.

#3- Keep it real and be sincere.

Multicultural social media is an exciting, tough and complex conversation to engage in. There are several brands that are leading the charge and investing in multicultural social media and there are several success stories to point to.

However, there is still a very real back lash to contend with. There are some folks who still see multicultural as a dirty word, despite the tremendous opportunity it represents and this is not lost to those of us who work in one capacity or another in multicultural social media. When engaging multicultural communities in social media, brands should be ready to have honest conversations about this.

This is not about pigeonholing. This is not about creating ghettos in cyberspace.

This is about:

1- acknowledging the fact that there are cultural, linguistic and identity politics that drive us as human beings
2- understanding that the growing “minority” populations are creating communities that celebrate those preferences online with or without you
3- brands realizing that there is a tremendous opportunity in reaching out to those multicultural communities and influencers online

We are more than just the sum of our parts and we are more than just a part, but this is definitely a part of the conversation that presents a tremendous opportunity for engagement.

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Alleged Facebook Firing Gets Attention of National Labor Relations Board

We talk a lot here at Marketing Pilgrim about how what you say or do online can impact your business or career. In fact, someone even wrote a book about that kind of thing. Since this is such a growth area in the online space you can almost sit back and wait for the next level to be reached because people are screwing up online in droves on a daily basis and of course, where there is stupidity, there are lawyers.

The New York Times reports on a landmark case that is going to the next level as the National Labor Relations Board climbs into the ring over an alleged firing of an EMT regarding Facebook posts about their supervisor

In what labor officials and lawyers view as a ground-breaking case involving workers and social media, the National Labor Relations Board has accused a company of illegally firing an employee after she criticized her supervisor on her Facebook page.

This is the first case in which the labor board has stepped in to argue that workers’ criticisms of their bosses or companies on a social networking site are generally a protected activity and that employers would be violating the law by punishing workers for such statements.

The labor relations board announced last week that it had filed a complaint against an ambulance service, American Medical Response of Connecticut, that fired an emergency medical technician, accusing her, among other things, of violating a policy that bars employees from depicting the company “in any way” on Facebook or other social media sites in which they post pictures of themselves.

Ok class, repeat after me “No matter what the courts say, don’t ever do anything in your online life that could come back to bite you in the behind!”. Sure there will be plenty of harping about how this activity is to be protected blah, blah, blah. At the end of the day, it requires a little self-control and self-monitoring for people to realize that even though the courts may find it legal to do so, you just don’t say stupid stuff in your online life. Even if you keep your job it still impacts you so why do it?

The larger implications of this case could be around the policy that the company had in place for social media that will be argued as too restrictive.

The labor board said the company’s Facebook rule was “overly broad” and improperly limited employees’ rights to discuss working conditions among themselves.

Moreover, the board faulted another company policy, one prohibiting employees from making “disparaging” or “discriminatory” “comments when discussing the company or the employee’s superiors” and “co-workers.”

In essence the employee had a beef with her supervisor then took her complaints to her Facebook page where other employees chimed in. For the record, she called her supervisor a “17″ which is an EMT code referring to a psych patient or issue. This then became a concerted effort (in other words not just a solo rant) and as a result became protected because co-workers are allowed to talk amongst themselves about their work.

This stuff turns real grey real quick though because if a mention about that supervisor can be seen as stepping outside the lines of work related issues then the protections could go away. In a rather disturbing scenario the NYT says

But employees might cross the line into unprotected territory if they disparage supervisors over something unrelated to work — for instance, a supervisor’s sexual performance — or if their statements are disloyal.

Whoa! Hey if you are having sexual relations with your supervisor breaking the company social media rules are the least of your worries!

At any rate, this case will be worth keeping an eye on because the implications of any precedent setting ruling can run far and wide. As a result, all businesses need to be on top of this kind of legal assessment of just what activities warrant action from a company or just need to be left alone for fear of legal backlash.

Let’s face it, most things in this world are unsafe for many people because lawyers like to sue people so they can make a living. It’s a matter of just how well versed the business community stays on this subject that will determine just how close any business is to a lawsuit at any given moment.

Your thoughts?

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6 Marketing Lessons Pharma Can Learn From Other Industries

Yesterday I spent the day at the eyeforpharma eCommunications Summit where brands including Novartis, Bayer, Pfizer, J&J and many others shared thoughts and perspectives on using digital communications to reach patients and healthcare professionals. As someone who has spent a significant part of my career working in pharma marketing - but also has worked outside that industry, my topic was one that I have often wished that more pharma-oriented events would include: lessons from other industries.

Generally when I consider sharing a case study from another industry outside of pharma, it leads to a debate within our internal teams and also with clients about whether those examples could ever be relevant enough to offer value to a marketer working in the pharma industry. As I shared at the event yesterday, this usually comes down to what I call the “pharma case study excuse matrix” - a collection of four points that most marketers in pharma use as rationale for why their situation is unique.

imb_pharmaexcusematrix
It is not that these points aren’t valid or important, but solely using those as justification to make the conclusion that there is nothing to learn from other industries is a mistake. The problem is that when marketing consultants like myself bring in examples from outside the industry, often it is used to compensate for the fact that they don’t have any examples from within the industry to share. When you look at those external examples with an eye towards the relevant lessons, however, there are some very important lessons that those industries could offer. Here are a few of the lessons I shared at the event yesterday:

  1. Financial - Be real people instead of faceless companies.
  2. Automotive - Share your “insignificant” backstory with the world.
  3. Consumer (CPG) - Give meaning to the habitual, so people share more.
  4. Technology - Inspire pride from your employees by telling a bigger story.
  5. Travel & Tourism - Fulfill a real need and be useful to stand out.
  6. Retail - Focus on timing and taking advantage of seasonal behaviours.

There will be a video to the entire presentation coming out in the next few weeks, and I will share that video here as well. In the meantime, the bottom line lesson that I repeated at the event was this: the best thing you can do is to move from using case studies as PERMISSION for you to start a program, and to instead see them more as INSPIRATION for what you could do. Inspiration can come from anywhere, and paying attention to examples from outside pharma might be the most important thing you can do as you prepare for 2011.

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Two Important Discussions at WOMMA Summit

womma_summit

Attendance is up this year at the upcoming WOMMA Summit. I attribute that to a great agenda and teh coming of age of social media in major brands. I serve on the board as past president and you would expect me to be bullish about the organization and its events. I am. No apologies there. But I could not endorse something that had a good chance of disappointing people. That would be bad.

You can see the full agenda here (IBM, Harrah’s, Motorola, HP, Ben & Jerry’s, Unilever and more).

There are two conversatiuons that will happen at the Summit that I am looking forward to sparking and participating in…

Which Marcom Disciplines Do What In Social Media?

Where is a brand manager to turn? If they want an authetically “social” solution to drive sales, lead generation, improve brand performance, should they turn to their advertising or media experts, their communication professionals, their word of mouth specialists? All the happy talk about “who owns social media? No one. The CEO. The customer,” is really just a sound bite. When it comes to applying social media to move enterprise or brand business, it is ridiculous to think that media agencies, ad agencies, PR firms, social media consultants, internal marketing and communications teams are all offering the same solutions. They aren’t. It’s time to unpack what “social media” truly is at least in the marcom space and start to recognize the differences, benefits and drawbacks of each disciplines’ approach.

There will be all types of groups representing different discipliens presenting at the WOMMA Summit. I am particularly intrigued by this session:

Redefining the Role of the Media Agency

Media agencies are struggling to find their footing in the social world of earned media. Erin Matts, Chief Digital Officer at OMD US, believes adaptability is the key to survival. In this session, Matts will explain how media agencies need to adapt to the new consumer engagement paradigm, and stretch beyond the concept of buying ad time towards a new mandate of developing and placing entertainment content

What Are True Best Practices Today?

Once you master the fundamentals of strong ethics, some reality-based measurement model, you are left with a rather subjective discussion around ‘best practices.’ Set aside the platitude manifestos that wax poetic about “transparent dialogue,” two-way conversation, listening, engagement vs. messaging - that stuff is a given and not all that helpful once you “get it.”

We’re talking about “best practices” to achieve a business result. Case stories are the best way to talk about best practices. This is where true experience gets documented, not theory. The WOMMA team has lined up a steady stream of case studies as the primary sessions.They have applied discipline to how these stories are told to ensure that they start with business objective and end with evaluation. These cases will reveal each group’s true best practices.

On top of that, there is a qualitative slice of the “best.” in the form of the WOMMY Awards. The board re-invented this award with ‘tooth’ and discipline last year. You really must reflect impact and a “best” execution to win. I give loads of credit to board member David Rabjohns, CEO of Motivequest, for this reinvention. It is largely due to his seriousness and marketing discipline that I place so much value on the WOMMY’s as a choice forum for best practices.

As many of us grow and scale our businesses around social media, we need a forum of like-minded inventors who are writing the rules of these new disciplines: word of mouth marketing and social media marketing and communications.

I am going to be part of that forum and hope to learn and share a lot.

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Speaking The Language of Money

How to make cash on the multilingual web.

The internet offers a myriad of money-making opportunities for those with the guile and grit to make things happen. But in an increasingly competitive market, with literally billions of web-pages flooding the so-called cyber-highway, how can budding businesses and entrepreneurs get one-up and put themselves at a competitive advantage?

English and the Global Web

Well, the Web – by its very definition – is global. And that means anyone from Alabama to Albania can tap in and follow your every word online – but only if they can understand what you’re saying.

Language is one of the last remaining barriers in creating a truly global web. Many people may be deterred from looking beyond an English-speaking audience, by the simple fact that they don’t speak another tongue.

But even if you genuinely only want to target English-speaking audiences, there are measures you can put in place to ensure your website is as accessible as possible to English-speakers across the world.

For example, an internet user in London may not understand many colloquialisms and culture-specific references of a website in Louisiana. The point is, to ensure your website appeals to as broad a global demographic as possible, there are simple steps you can take to ensure the millions of internet users in the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa are all engaged by your online offering.

Simply put, you need to write with the world in mind.

And English, of course, is also one of the many official languages of India, spoken by a large proportion of the population.

With internet penetration in India at less than 10% of the population, it may seem foolish to even begin thinking about Indian audiences on the Web. But there is more than a billion people living in India, so even 8% amounts to about a hundred million people – roughly the same as Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, and the Netherlands collectively.

Money talks...many languages!

But English will only get you so far on the Web. Only a quarter of the Earth’s population speak English…the vast majority of whom do so as a second language – Asia alone accounts for 40% of the world’s internet users. So by tapping into international markets online, you open yourself to over a billion more people.

How machines can help

If you happen to speak Spanish because your grandmother used to babysit you when you were a kid, then you should be in a pretty good position to offer bilingual versions of your blog/website. However, do you really have the time to translate all your text into another language? It can be time-consuming enough to write it in English in the first instance, without having to write it again.

Free translation tools such as Google Translate can actually be quite good for ‘general gist’ translations, and if you’re not too bothered about offering 100% grammatically correct text across multiple languages, this isn’t all that bad an option.

For this, you have two options. You can either pre-machine translate your text so that the text is good to go for anyone who happens upon your website from outside the English-speaking world; you can even set your site up so that it automatically detects the country of origin of the user, so your site defaults to the language of that country.

Or, you can install a widget on your site which enables users to translate the text with the click of a button – this gives added flexibility, given that many international visitors may speak English perfectly well and they may prefer to read your text in its original form.

To improve the likelihood of hitting a good machine translation, you need to think about how you write the English text. Machine translation tools such as Google Translate aren’t smart enough to understand jargon or colloquialisms – so you may want to avoid having a ‘swell’ time and perhaps consider having a ‘good’ time instead.

Also, English has a tendency to use many different words to depict the same notion. For example, ‘hound’, ‘mutt’ and ‘dog’ all mean the same thing, so you’re best sticking with the most obvious option if you want to hit a good machine translation. And verbs can often be used as nouns…even in the same sentence: “I’m going to race in a race”

You can construct your English text in such a way that it’s less likely to hit a bad machine translation: so a ‘one word, one meaning’ approach can definitely help you on your way to a new found wealth on the web, whilst avoiding slang will help too.

However, with machine translations, there is still likely to be some errors creeping in and it may not give you the creative flexibility you crave on your site. So you may want to consider pre-machine translating your text and then use a native translator to simply check/proofread it for accuracy and style. Or, if you happen to speak the target language, you can even do it yourself.

This helps maintain the creativity dexterity of your English-language blog, whilst also ensuring any colloquialisms are suitably localized for your target audience.

Multilingual SEO

Of course, the key to succeeding online lies in being visible. There’s no point having the world’s most attractive website in umpteen different languages, if nobody can find your site.

Multilingual SEO deserves an article to itself, so I’ll keep this brief. The one golden rule when optimizing your site for international markets is NEVER translate your keywords into other languages.

So, if you happen to rank highly for ‘Affiliate Marketing’ on Google.com, you’ll need to research the keywords from scratch to ensure you rank highly on Google.fr or Google.de for the equivalent term. A correct, dictionary translation may not be what people use to search online with locally, they may use synonyms, abbreviations, colloquialisms…any number of variations on what even a professional translator would consider to be an accurate adaption.

Good luck…now go forth and prosper!

About the Guest Author
Christian Arno is founder of international localization company Lingo24. With 130 full-time employees spanning three continents, and clients in over sixty countries, Lingo24 is on course for a turnover of $6m USD in 2010.

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Monday, November 8, 2010

From Sponsored Links to Ads: What Does Google Have Up Its Sleeve?

Normally, the change of terminology in any company is a pure marketing move designed to breath new life into something that has some wear and tear. Aside from just the “new and improved” kind of changes, you occasionally get a completely different word to make a person think about the product again. Rarely, however, do you see a change like Google is experimenting with as they move to calling AdWords ads just that, Ads, rather than Sponsored Links.

First brought to my attention by Search Engine Land last week that this switch is official, I had some time to think about the possibilities. I will now happily cross-over to ‘speculation land’ and let my imagination run a little wild. So what could this change indicate?

Paid search moving to blended ad option – By calling a Sponsored Link an Ad, Google is no longer constrained by the limitations of the blue link text paid ad in the ever so lightly tinted (read: barely discernible) box at the top of the SERP’s and along the right column. With all of their advertising in the trades like AdAge and MediaWeek about how Google is changing display advertising maybe this is one of those ‘game changers’ that we could see. Imagine that top spot in the SERP’s being a display ad? What kind of premium would that draw?

Display ads just being more prominent period – With Google changing the search landscape with its moving around, resizing, rearranging and otherwise blowing up the local search side of the business Google is getting us used to seeing an image in the right column (where the maps are generally showing up). Wouldn’t it be very Googleesque to announce “Oh, the whole map on the right thing isn’t working’ after getting people used to it. They could then move the map back where people were familiar with it then replace that newly created empty space with an, you guessed it, display ad.

Google x.0? – Let’s face it, everything online is changing and shifting. Even Google will have to look different at some point or else they run the risk of appearing to be ‘your father’s search engine’. What better way to do this than by easing people out of things that were not necessarily top of mind (let’s face it, who amongst the regular Google users even saw the Sponsored Links moniker considering many people STILL don’t know those are paid ads). By also changing the rules on the still under appreciated local side of the ledger Google is making a nuanced shift to the next generation product and presentation of that product.

Clearing way for social search product of the future – This is a real stretch here because I am not quite sure how this would all play together but Google’s anticipated foray into the social realm has few options but to be heavily integrated into their flagship offering. Why? They already tried Wave as a standalone and that has been shelved. Google Buzz has been a relative non-issue and that was integrated into Gmail. So what’s left? Playing with the secret formula by integrating their flagship search product and the social web. Of course, they run the huge risk of pulling a New Coke or they could knock it out of the park. Nothing ventured, nothing gained, right?

So these are just a few thoughts behind why an otherwise innocuous event could actually be signaling a larger and more sweeping overhaul for the search giant. I have no inside track or anything like that. I am just observing the landscape and thinking about what could possibly take place. I’m a blogger and this is what we do ;-) .

Maybe Google won’t admit it but the heat has been turned up by Facebook, Apple and others on several fronts. If they sit still and don’t do anything they will probably still be OK but they may end up looking like the Internet’s version of Microsoft which I doubt Google is willing to settle for.

Just imagine 10 years from now and we are making fun of Google’s every attempt to play in the social sphere while they still milk the search cash cow. Sounds a lot like how we treat Microsoft today with regard to their Internet efforts.

So am I reading too much into this little name change? Maybe. What are your thoughts?

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Sunday, November 7, 2010

Nielsen Numbers Glitch Results in Low Traffic Numbers

When it comes to online marketing, traffic is everything. It determines what marketers pay per click, which web sites get which ads, and if traffic is low enough, it may keep a site from getting ad dollars at all.

That’s why the latest faux pas from The Nielsen Company may be bigger than it seems. On Thursday, the company sent out a note to all of its clients saying they had been undercounting traffic for the past three months.

The problem was one of long URL’s. One’s with more than 2,000 characters as a matter of fact. They found that their system wasn’t recognizing these URL’s all the time resulting in an estimated 22% decline over the prior year.

Long URL’s have become increasingly popular – just look at a Facebook URL after you’ve been moving around the site awhile. And URL’s from email and RSS feed clickthroughs can be enormous.

Nielsen says the problem will be corrected by December in time for the first reports delivered in January 2011.

A headache for everyone involved, for sure, but I’m not here to point fingers. Nielsen believes this issue happened because the Internet is changing at a pace that’s hard to keep up with. Here’s a quote from the letter:

“The extraordinary changes and complexity of how the Internet is used warrants our increased attention to help the entire industry mature with a trusted source of data.”

What everyone needs to take away here is that it’s easy to get complacent. We have systems that work so we sit back and assume they’re still working a year later. But the reality is, that through no fault of any human being, systems break because the way we move around the Internet has changed.

So take a few minutes tomorrow and look at your analytic software, compare what you’re seeing to other measuring tools to see if you can spot any glitches. Look at the clickthrough and sales reports that come in on your ad placements. Make sure your Adsense accounts are still functioning.

Don’t just assume the numbers are right. Make an appointment every few months to make sure they’re right so you can correct issues before they turn into big problems.

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