Showing posts with label tweet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tweet. Show all posts

6 Smart Mention Monitoring Tips to Stay Ahead of the Game | Dramel Notes

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There is too much content in the world to keep up with it. At the end of 2013 it was estimated there over 14 trillion live webpages on the Internet. Out of those, just 48 billion were indexed by Google. So if Google is the Internet made visible, we can basically see about 0.3% of the whole online content. At least we could. It’s not just that the Internet is unfathomably huge, it also grows at an absolutely staggering rate. With this soaring growth, having access to the all the content out there seems like an impossible task.
Just three of the biggest publications out there, New York Times, the Guardian and the Huffington Post, published over 11,000 articles last week. And when it comes to blog posts, the content world gets even larger: over 86 million blogs published just on WordPress.

Even this is nothing when compared to the explosion of information that social media has brought to the table. Every minute Facebook users share nearly 2.5 million pieces of content, Instagram users post 200,000 photos, while YouTube users upload 72 hours of new video content . Can you imagine the rate of that? It takes just 1 minute to post 4320 minutes worth of video!

In fact, it’s gotten so bad, a few years ago the Daily Mail was warning us that we might be running out of words to express just how much information there is in the online world.
 
The latest word accepted by the International Committee for Weights and Measures was yotta (a digit followed by 24 zeroes) and by all estimates we might have already passed that in terms of bytes of information available online.
In all this sea of content, how can you make a difference?

Be a Pacesetter!

Making a difference amounts to standing out of the crowd, which is crucial in terms of being a little better (at least in some aspects) than your competitors. In the critically acclaimed The Wire, one of the main characters on the show warns his nephew about the perils of the crime world:

All it takes to ruin everything is to be a little slow, be a little late, just once.

The reverse is just as true in the online world: all it sometimes takes to make it is to be a little faster, a little earlier than your competition.

The following is a list of tips and tricks you can employ  to stay ahead of the curve. This is a system where you get just the relevant information about what interests you and you get it straight in your inbox. You get ideas about what works for you, but also what works for the competition. You don’t always need to invent something completely new. Sometimes improving on something that’s already being offered can be enough. This is why we’re focusing on keyword mentions around the web and offer you a tool that lets you know when certain words are mentioned online.

1. Relationship Building Using Brand Mentions Monitoring

A business may be defined as a system where goods and services are exchanged for one another in return of (usually) money. Yet, we all now that at the end of the day it’s not just a simple transaction we are talking about, but that there is a human relationship involved. And the sum of all these relationships is actually the business’ engine.

We often get by with a little help from our friends.  If you have content you want to amplify, one thing you can do is to identify the sites you may be able to partner with. It’s quite a common tactic and it might bring you some benefits. However, another less used tactic is to do the reverse: constant monitor your mentions, check out who wrote about you and start building relationships with the persons who mentioned you.  As it might sound a bit difficult to put in practice, let’s see what steps one should take.

I. Identify the mention and its author 

You probably get to browse through dozens of mentions. Each of those mentions is posted somewhere and very likely has an author. Dig a bit into the mention and see exactly where is that mention posted and who is “responsible” for it. You can easily do this with the new free tool BrandMentions.com

II. Connect with the person who mentioned you

Once you identified the person who posted the content you are mentioned in, in the era we are living in, finding his contact details is not such a big of a deal. Especially if you know not only that person’s name, but also his affiliation with a publication, channel, blog, etc. As a first step in the building relationship process, add that person on your social network channels.

III. Contact the person in question

Along with connecting on social networks, you can always send an email, letting that person know that you are the one trying to connect with him. You can also tell him a bit about what your opinion about the content you were mentioned in and why that is important to you. Try to build a relationship on a long term as it might bring you a lot of benefits: you may receive precious feedback or you may have future collaborations.

2. Know How Your Competitors Are Moving in the Market … The Minute They Do


Checking what and how competitors are doing should be part of a routine and not a one time job. Yet, this task may consume more resources than you’d expect and you might often feel like the James Bond of the web, a spy with a very difficult mission to accomplish. However,  you can use Brand Mentions  to look at your own site , but there’s also another handy use: looking and analyzing the content and presence of your key competitors. Let’s say you’re a New York restaurant that’s doing fairly well but could do better. You have 4 or 5 other restaurants in your area that are your direct competitors. Let’s say we are looking for some marketing strategies for  Gramercy Tavern (a top rated restaurant from Manhattan ) and we want to see how the competition is doing:  Le Bernardin and Eleven Madison Park, other 2 well rated restaurants from the same area.

As we look at the screenshot above, we can easily see that the restaurant we are analyzing is doing pretty well. Around 51 new mentions in a week, most of them coming from high authority sites.

Yet, what is the competition doing? Why should they be faring better than our restaurant here in question? Let’s look them up and see what kind of mentions they have.

With 108 mentions in the same period of time, Le Bernardin seems to be doing far better than Gramercy Tavern as far as the online occurrences go.  As we take a look at our other competitor, we see that is not “as famous” as the first one, yet Eleven Madison Park seems to be also more visible than Gramercy Tavern, the restaurant we are analyzing.

The first step has been made and now we know how our restaurant is standing overall. What we can do next is go through the results and evaluate how positive each of the mention might be. We can also  look at where the mentions come from – is it an article or an ad? What’s the hosting publication and what are the chances you can get them to have your name in there as well? Is it a generalist website or a specific, even niche one? Does it have a high or low authority? There’s plenty more questions to explore and some important decisions to make once you’ll have some answers to those questions.

3. Get Notified When Your Brand Is Mentioned on the Web


As mentioned above, we can agree that data are overwhelming. More and more producers, buyers, consumers are creating content everywhere they go. In this context, brand monitoring, or better said “web listening” is essential . Not only does the brand monitoring help you to create marketing strategies and build relationships with your users, but it also helps you to protect your brand’s reputation. Putting at your disposal the world’s widest database, Brand Mentions help you to collect and monitor mentions and conversations about businesses from across the whole online world, giving you a clear idea of any threats , as well as any opportunities to your business.

One of the ways that can guarantee you always being a step ahead of your competitors and a top player in your niche is to be up-to-date with how you and your competitors are doing are doing at any moment. And the best way to monitor this is through setting the relevant alerts required for this.  This way, you can be the first to know when your brand is being discussed online. You can be notified, with the frequency you choose,  whenever your brand name is mentioned in any type of content on the web.  Simply create an alert with the topic, keyword, brand you are most interested in and customize it just the way you want, as seen in the screenshot below.



4. Get Fresh Content Ideas by Researching “Topic Mentions” in Your Niche


Let’s say you are the content marketer for Gramercy Tavern and you’re more than exhausted of searching and researching, of writing great pieces of content that don’t have the traction you were hoping for. There are cases when the content is not a quality one but sometimes we just need to turn around, have an airplane view and search for alternative content ideas. Good content isn’t found just in articles and forums. It can be also found in videos, slide shares or images. BrandMentions returns mentions coming from all types of sources, therefore it will be easy for you to identify such content that works.

Furthermore, Gramercy Tavern is a restaurant located in New York, therfore most of the mentions will be in English. As a restaurant located in a highly touristic area in a country where several communities coexist, it might be wise taking a peek at the mentions written in other languages as well. Eleven Madison Park, one of our Gramercy Tavern’s main competitor seems to have understood the intercultural dimension as it has such mentions.
Music knits people together in some strange way. So does food. We can find so many similarities between music and restaurants and it seems that so did Le Bernardin. They were mentioned in The Telegraph, in an interview held with the famous singer John Legend. Of course, this mention might be out of their control and they can only be glad that they were mentioned. Yet, this type of content, as interviews, might be a great content idea for this type of business.


Looking for topic mentions in your niche is always a good idea. As we are looking at the restaurant niche, if you look up “wine tasting” results for the past week, you might notice that a lot of the titles are about wine tasting events in unexpected settings: by bicycle, at a costume event, on the Mississippi river, at the ruins of a historic plantation etc. Not to mention the high number of mentions: 881.

Is “outdoors” wine tasting the new thing? It might be. After all, how many wine tastings in a cellar next to the grapevine can you go to before you get bored with the view? Maybe it’s not necessarily the outdoors factor, but the unexpected setting that draws people, or the unlikely combination of event and setting.




5. Identify a Brands’ Popularity by Looking at the Number of Fresh Mentions in the Last Month


There are many ways to measure a brand’s popularity, but this would probably be one of the more relevant ones. Something that’s popular should constantly be in the news. But to what extent? Are you trailing behind competition because you don’t get picked up by news as often?
Take 2 of the best known batteries producers, Duracell and Energizer. They’re both known to be reliable brands and with no prior experience of either, you could probably make a random choice when buying new batteries. It’s just that there’s a higher chance of having heard more often about one instead of the other in the past month.

The popularity remains in favor of one brand over another even when we switch the time frame to last week, but the difference is much smaller now.


That’s very useful information in terms of what works and what doesn’t. Three weeks out of four I might be neck to neck with my competitor, but then one week I trail behind quite a lot. What happened during that week? Where did all the mentions come from? Were they positive or negative? There’s just so much room for analysis and useful conclusions. If you monitor the results constantly, you can find out which day of the week gets you more mentions and what resources for mentions you can tap into. Find out what works for your competitors and whether or not it can work for you as well.

6. Spot Influencers Using “Topical Mentions” Research


Another key strategy is the ability to identify the key influencers. What you can do is see who are the most influential people in a particular subject area and create a list of people to engage with. Creating a relationship with these people in advance may convince them to retweet or support your content when the time comes, which will place in front of their many followers. Take the example of Le Bernadin, one of Gramercy Tavern’s competitor and a New York’s restaurant with 3 Michelin stars. It’s clear it has its own established audience already, but a mention on an MSN page dedicated to expensive and exquisite restaurants in New York, or in a Washington Page article about a controversial public figure, couldn’t possibly hurt its business.



This could be a great piece of information for Gramercy Tavern, the restaurant fpr which we are looking new marketing strategies for. But even if you’re not a top of the line restaurant, those are still ideas you can draw influence from. MSN is likely to do pieces about more than one style of restaurant. Next time it does a piece about a category you fit in, will you have something to draw its attention? And sure, not all your employees (present and past) are likely to become famous enough to be the center of attention of the Washington Post, but if they did, how would they remember you?

Conclusion

Yet, the question might still pop in your mind:
With millions of fresh webpages and billions of comments posted on social media daily, how could you ever hope to find, follow and manage them all?
To offer an answer to this question (and possibly calm several existential crises we may have started with the intro), we created a free new tool that aims to give you back some control: BrandMentions. It goes beyond what’s available on the market for the moment, but it also allows you to go deeper. Google Alerts doesn’t report fresh and accurate data for a while now and other tools that are intended to do a similar job fail to offer relevant results.

The ideas listed above are just some “hints” on how you can best make use of mention research and monitoring. The truth is that each person is unique and each business has its own particularities. Hence, these are just some useful cases for brand monitoring but we are sure that anyone working in the field will find even more opportunities they can exploit.  As there is no better way of finding out what Brand Mentions can do for you than trying it, we invite you to take the tool for a spin and get access to the widest web mentions database.


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24 Evergreen Content Types That Will Boost Your Traffic [The Mega List] | Dramel Notes

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Fluctuations in traffic happen to the best of us. Yet, there is no excuse for poor content strategy on your website. There are two types of content from the point of view of relevance over time: the first category includes any article written based on a trending subject. Its advantage is that, treated properly, it boosts your website’s audience overnight – of course, the inherent drawback is that people will shortly lose interest in that specific subject. The second type of content does nothing of miraculous sorts overnight – you may not even see anything spectacular about it on the short run.
Evergreen content is content that remains valid over time, it is timeless and always attracts new readers.
Evergreen content treats a topic that doesn’t date quickly (or at all?) and retains relevance; this way, it delivers growth in traffic, leads and social media shareability over a long period of time as well as associated revenues. While news are crucial in our rapidly ticking clocks, when thinking on your return on investment you have to keep in mind that timeless content builds brand trust on the long run, especially when researched properly.

1. Case Studies
2. Stats and Data
3. Product Reviews
4. The History of Something
5. How To Guides
6. Beginner’s Guides
7. Curate Content
8. Lists
9. Top Tips for People to Understand Your Industry
10. Best Practices
11. Checklists
12. Reference Books in Your Market
13. Rethink a Common Viewpoint
14. Refresh and Update Old Content
15. Definitions, Glossaries, Acronyms
16. Attack a Sub-Niche
17. Series of Tutorials
18. Strategies for Common Problems
19. Famous People Interviews
20. Failure Stories
21. Your Success Story
22. Storytelling
23. Encyclopedia Entries
24. Pros and Cons of Something

1. Case Studies

It’s not easy to write a relevant case study, that will maintain its applicability two or three years from now. However, it depends a lot on the industry you’re active in. For instance, if you’re making a case study now about the latest Android updates, it’s hard to believe that you’ll have a constant flow of readers in 6 months’ time. A white hat SEO case study will maintain relevance as long as you treat it as an evergreen practice that works like a reference. Stories about major traffic increases and other ranking plot twists tend to be relevant and timeless, because they reveal a way of handling a difficult situation. And we all know how much this weighs.

If, on the other hand, you’re covering subjects like higher education, a good case study on pedagogical practices has real chances to be a steady source of readers 5 years from now.


2. Stats and Data

As long as you include the period you’re talking about, they keep relevance even after a period of time has passed. It’s entirely your choice whether you adapt it to the present status quo or just keep it like that for people who look for references in the past. However, it doesn’t hurt to update stats from time to time, especially when they’re about such a dynamic and volatile domain.

Exposing statistics in an appropriate context is useful in itself, as it also helps your audience to understand the perspective instead of a situation of little relevance. However specific your conclusions may seem, your audience will extrapolate to their practices, which ultimately leads to relevance and credibility as a source. Context is relevant for your niche, and you should give your readers the information that they needed to know.
When it comes to statistics, you may think that your numbers and figures are not relevant to the people around you, but you may be wrong about that one. Our capacity to extrapolate and extract the essential from what is being shown to us trumps specific differences. If you believe there are certain shared aspects about your situation, be willing to share them!
And there’s the other type of facts and figures as well – the ones that put things in a new, more enlightening manner. Things that weren’t necessarily unknown to you, but needed to be made clearer.
In such cases, it’s the effort that is going to pay off in time, through content that not only doesn’t date, but also keeps a fresh eye over things of particular interest to people in your niche.

And effort doesn’t just mean professional research that may take days, but also presenting your information in a manner that engages your audience – since the digitization of information has made us very graphic-sensitive. Speaking of online reading behaviors, this is a great example of evergreen content – since it’s based on how technology influences our brain wiring.

3. Product Reviews


Reviews are based in general on one of the two following ideas: either on what the masses think – which makes it not always reliable, or what an expert in the field believes of certain, specific features.

The second technique is always more trustworthy, mainly because credibility is built around competence – instead of reviewing something very far from your area of expertise, where you’ll be just another user, by analyzing a product that is related to your work (even remotely) you build engagement on the long run. It tells a story that people will be willing to hear, and if among your audience there are some who share your opinion, this will work as a binder. For instance, Firstround, a tech-oriented company designed to facilitate contact between ideas and entrepreneurs recently, reviewed  the widely popular Producthunt.

The insight of a review helps you to build credibility. It is recommended not to lose touch with the product after the article is published. Update it from time to time, depending on what major changes have happened since your analysis – this helps you to maintain accountability.
That doesn’t only help your readers to understand the review better and rank it higher in their preferences, but it also boosts your image, suggesting that you have an eye for detail and you’re passionate about your niche. However, if you’re posting on a popular news site for your target audience and you’re an influencer, chances are you’ve hit the Jackpot.

4. The History of Something


Contextualizing an article in such a manner as to make it relevant to your target creates exceptional content that will bring you steady traffic. Of course, instead of trying to fill out this article with superlatives because it is fancy, my definition of exceptional content lies around relevant information, uniquely put to be remarkable and memorable.

Writer’s block is something that all of us have suffered from and this is why it’s perhaps so easy to relate to it. You don’t have to take part in literary contests monthly, it’s enough to be a copywriter to know precisely what it means. But when you’ve got an audience in mind, it’s not that hard to keep them interested in the history of something they already like.

5. How to Guides

From caring less about what people think of our daily decisions up to using Google Analytics URL builder to track campaigns, we all need guidance at some point. Human diversity makes our needs not only perpetually different, but always in search for new solutions.

Breaking the answers into easy steps more than halves our problem-solving jobs, thus becoming a great source of evergreen content – as long as the approach doesn’t refer to something very time specific.
 
For instance, if your ‘how to’ article refers to specific settings of an operating system’s version that may as well be outdated in a few months’ time, your guide will hardly be relevant one year from now. Instead, addressing a more timeless issue, however specific it may be, will bring a steady flux of readers to your blog instead of a spike followed by an equally sudden drop.

Getting started with advanced remarketing is an appropriately formulated evergreen idea, pointing towards a general direction instead of a recipe that can get old.

6. Beginner’s Guides

One could argue that this one is roughly the same as number 5, to which I would have to beg to differ. The fundamental difference between the two is that the second one is a more bountiful source of evergreen content. While the very specific steps of doing something may change over time, the basics are less prone to suffer dramatic transformations.

Think of it as a huge spiderweb of theories and practices – the outer edges are softer, easier to modify than the very core of that technique.

Beginner’s guides are easily built. They will still be relevant in a few years, regardless of the dynamics of your domain. Yes, the web is as volatile as it gets – and yet, any content writing 101 will advise you to never compromise quality over anything before any other lesson, just like it did two or three years ago. This example from Moz does a great job.

Plus, there’s the undeniable advantage of more interest – the more general the topic in question, the higher the interest rate of reading that. And while this could be perceived as sad and superficial, it actually shows that we’re curious and always eager to try out new things. Unlike a very specific topic that attracts a small, but constant flow of readers, the less specific topics cover a broader audience, which also comes in relatively constant flows, such as Neil Patel’s beginner’s guide to online marketing.

7. Curate Content

Whenever trying to better understand a domain, people often get lost in the uproar of information. There’s no wonder why curating content is one of the most solid sources of evergreen content – it’s easy to access and it’s already systematized, giving a general sense of direction to whoever lands on your page. But perhaps the most outstanding quality of this type of article is that it is easy to follow, take notes on and come back to whenever losing compass. This aggregation of content writing secrets makes an illustrative example for copywriters.

Don’t oversimplify. Give all the necessary information, and try to keep rich content within a simple structure – it’s what most of us look for when dealing with a new field.

8. Lists


They don’t have to be all insanely long, but they do have to be exhaustive. Whenever you’ve decided to hit enter 20 times, it would be amazing to actually include everything your reader needs to know – the very idea of reading lists is to deplete all the possible questions.

If you’re doing a very good job, people won’t only read your article once – they will come back remembering what a good source of information you were, like they did with this list of content creation tools. Don’t disappoint!

9. Top Tips for People to Understand Your Industry


It’s not uncommon, especially on the web, for people to want to know more about the services they’re paying. Regardless of the type of service that you’re offering, clients will always want to know more about your industry – it gives them the feeling that they’re in control, not left outside, not outsourcing because they’re not up to date anymore.

This is exactly why you’d like them to be informed, and you also want to be the one who’s giving them the insights. This way, they won’t only be able to understand and appreciate what you’re doing, but assign it to you as well, understanding the effort behind the lesson.

 
Giving tips, as much as it may seem like a professional violation, is a great way to get closer to your clients. Use it well and witness it as part of your ROI. This post on how to grow your twitter followers for instance has 4.5 k shares and generated engagement on page as well in the comments’ section, through effective, personal advice.
 

10. Best Practices


I was just saying that there are no recipes. I stand by that. However, people who’ve achieved success have all the right to preach their way into doing it properly. If you’re one of the lucky actors in your business, don’t keep it to yourself. I agree that market share isn’t something you’d like to lose in front of your competitors, but some guidelines never killed anybody (aside from the Pirates of the Caribbean, at least). If you’ve got your eyes on building credibility, a great take away for your readers is a valuable piece of advice.


Be that as it may, the idea that evergreen articles aren’t ‘soft’ copywriting should never leave your mind; after all, you’re only as good as the advice you give. Businesses claim to practice and value good writing, but effective copy should be a business-wide endeavor, focused on maintaining relevance. Here’s an article that advises against so called ‘best practices’.

11. Checklists


The difference between a checklist and a simple list is that the second one is more of a process rather than a conglomerate of things that may be taken randomly.



You may want to treat these seriously and without leaving out important pieces of advice. This type of content is supposed to guide the reader through a process that you’ve simplified through your personal experience. So don’t be surprised if, at the end of the day, a conclusion will be drawn correlating the checklist accuracy and your performance as a professional in the niche.

 

12. Reference Books in Your Market


Everybody’s got to start somewhere. You did. Don’t be shy – tell people what remarkable reads gave you perspective. But unlike lists, book recommendations don’t have to be exhaustive. There is no universal recipe, neither are there sets of books that guarantee performance. Tell your readers what you’ve gained from the lectures you’ve particularly enjoyed and what was about them that helped you so much along the way.



Instead, focus on outlining what a great job those reads did in completing your knowledge, or founding it, fixing a point of development that you will give details about. There’s no need to be dramatic. Realism about people who influenced your knowledge and their work is what builds reliability – start small.

13. Rethink a Common Viewpoint


The world is one huge confirmation bias. Anything you’re trying to say will be a lot better received by any audience if it confirms their previous empirical theories. And while stating a fact that we all agree with can go unobserved, stating the opposite will be seen as an outrageous act that’s prone to create buzz. There’s nothing wrong with a more powerful approach to state the importance of what you’re about to expose.


There’s a fine line between not taking any common misconception for granted and doubting everything that’s common sense. As much as I’m a fan of new perspectives and twisted points of view, keep in mind that your arguments have to be significantly more powerful – after all, you’re trying to change an opinion instead of confirming one and we know best how reluctant we all are to that. An approach of myths and misconceptions in your niche can be informative even for the pros, exploiting a trait that often enough ruins businesses – debunk undocumented misconceptions.

14. Refresh and Update Old Content


Sometimes it’s hard to let a great article go; the harder you work on it, the more you get the feeling that it’s unfair how no one opens it in 6 months’ time. Old content can be recycled and updated, having the great advantage of creating a deeper perspective – since it’s already been documented once.

 

Every time you decide to update it, its informational value increases, provided that you don’t just do it out of sentiment; the easiest way is asking yourself what is that an article should have to keep you interested in reading it two years after it’s been originally written. Then document it accordingly to guarantee its relevance in time.

15. Definitions, Glossaries, Acronyms


Being humble does pay off. And since business is all about competitive advantages, you wouldn’t like to seem arrogant. Working in an ever changing niche is sometimes overwhelming in terms of keeping vision and relevance – and it’s not any easier for your clients, either. Their perpetual effort is to always know what to ask from you, and sometimes this is not an easy job. Give your readers a good start.

 

In this context, an intro in the terminology of your niche is a godsend idea – it is your way of letting your clients know there’s nothing wrong about the inability of mastering your slang, as you’re going to offer them constant guidance from the very first step. While this kind of content may seem redundant to you, it’s a well received declaration of humility in the eyes of your clients that you wouldn’t like to miss out on.

16. Attack a Sub-Niche


Google has been making annual studies concerning people’s informational needs ever since 2011. They suggest that the search engines, as much as us, should pay attention to in-depth content analyses more.

Additional research proves that the long, well documented content that we see boosted during some Google searches consists, actually, of evergreen posts that are worth reading if you’re looking to a more specific understanding of the topic and not just a short definition or intro. It doesn’t have to be exactly ‘War and Peace’ in length, but relevance is a must.

17. Series of Tutorials


DYI techniques have sprouted in our lives quite as much as cat videos, and we tend to love them equally, to take pride in not having to subscribe to an entire course just to perform something that is somehow out of our area of expertise. The genesis of this idea lies in our very varied needs. Generally, the things we follow tutorials for aren’t our first-class priorities, but somewhere in the second or third place, where it’s important to be knowledgeable, but only as a complementary direction from what we’re usually doing.

This is why tutorials come best in series, satisfying the very beginners as well as the pros. Also, there’s the advantage of being able to stop whenever you’ve achieved the level of knowledge we were aiming for.

18. Strategies for Common Problems


Let’s assume that your strategies refer to a broad area rather than a niche. Your approach would work best when detailed and well documented. Effective, practical strategies should attract people regardless of the time frame, but you would still have to be specific about the execution of every step you’re suggesting.

Giving solutions to general issues in your industry establishes a more manageable connection between you and your key public. Embed some of your core values in the execution of the tactics, making your whole approach specific and recognizable.

19. Famous People Interviews


They say truth is a matter of perspective. Our influencers have made it to our top stories through hard work, endless amounts of coffee and very little to no free time. However, it’s sometimes refreshing to see the man behind the article, that potent machine that turns trends to ashes and unknown practices to trends.

Seeing someone in an interview is getting a sneak peek of the person behind the persona. And while this is sometimes a little off topic, more often than not it changes the way we perceive a professional’s work – not as a given, but as a perpetual effort from a wonderful mess often covered in sketches, drafts, awards and mistakes.

20. Failure Stories


Truly potent examples feed on people’s fears. There’s nothing shameful in exploiting them, as long as it is done accurately. Failures – of any kind – are often the monsters under our beds and peeling them right to the essentials helps your readers avoid going through the same mistakes.
Saying what you’ve been through is a declaration of strength as much as it is a warning for anyone in a similar position.

21. Your Success Story


People often underestimate how much effort and how many sleepless nights it takes to start making money from your business. The success stories are, as counter-intuitive as it may seem, a way of bringing people’s feet on the ground – exposing the entire picture of your success, not just what’s noticeable from behind the shiny screens.

22. Storytelling


Not everyone can put very distinct elements together in an attractive, useful way. However, these very few are being referred to as storytellers – and they never have to worry about the number of people reading their articles. And while it sounds otherworldly, it has nothing to do with magic, but lots of research, constant professional development and maybe a drop of inspiration.
 

23. Encyclopedia Entries


While there is no scientific ground to stating that we process visual information 60,000 faster than when written, visual marketing seems to have a great success, notably when people don’t want to spend too much time in front of an article.
Deliver your information in a manner that engages and flows.
Sometimes an infographic is even more efficient than an in-depth textual approach, depending on the nature of information you wish to deliver. However, it’s best to update it from time to time, just so people know you’re on a constant search for progress.

24. Pros and Cons of Something


We like to think that our decision making processes are exclusively rational. That is false. It turns out that our every decision is based on emotional resources as much as it is based on rational ones – which can best be exploited in listing popular opinions as pros and cons.
Use emotional attributions to build pros and cons on a topic, based on the factual data.
Besides helping people to make decisions, this is also a great resource for documenting a topic that is on everybody’s minds. Polarization of a subject is tricky, but whenever the situation allows it, you can transform it into a very useful source of information.

Conclusion

There are endless things you can do content-strategy-wise to make it actually say something to your audience. According to our analyses, exceptional evergreen content comes with a hook that stands out as information with competitive advantage.

Writing news-related articles is vital as it shows interest for posh, brand new stories in your domain. However, it gets even more relevant if you balance it with perpetually pertinent content that shows you know how you strategically manage  your experience in dealing with information. While there’s no perfect strategy recipe that universally applies, remember not to always choose sprint over marathon.


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43 Relationship Marketing Articles That Will Boost Your Inbound Marketing Strategy | Dramel Notes

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Dealing with the truth isn’t always an easy job. But your best product can get lost on the way without a solid network to confirm its value. This is why investing in strong professional relationships and building a powerful audience around your products is something that deserves your best attention. And while this is a troublesome process in itself, gathering the most pertinent solutions isn’t a walk in the park either.
Almost a third of the B2B marketers admitted that their posts are rather company focused than customer-centric. Networking is about creating a personal experience rather than repeating a robotic message over and over again. 
A short explanation for relationship marketing is that it focuses rather on the long-term objectives that build solid engagement than on immediate profit based on one-time acquisitions. We’re about to present to you the most powerful relationship marketing articles, carefully collected by us. The purpose is to ease you into the overall marketing relationship perspective we should all be adopting when trying to promote our products and services.


1. 5 Steps to Relationship Marketing Success

Fix the Communication Link Between You and Your Website; You and Your Customer
Rosalia Cefalu talks about building a loyal community that will increase your revenue. The 5 steps to relationship marketing success start with being aware that what your customers care about most is their needs. There is nothing you can do on the long run without constant interaction and responsible concern. Provide value, engage your audience and don’t dare to make this relationship about yourself – it’s not. It’s about your customer, their passions, their wishes, their habits and you getting to know them like the back of your hand.

2. This Is the Most Important Word when It Comes to Relationship Marketing

Create an Emotional Connection with the Customer
Steve Olenski interviews Jay Deutsch, CEO of BDA, one of the largest branded merchandise agency. The interviews focuses on the ultimate purpose of branding and fostering customer loyalty. Cultural experiences and virality makes it easier to focus on creating an emotional impact on your customer. The value of branded merchandise lies in making the competitive advantages stand out, while helping your customers create powerful experiences. Ultimately, your brand – as intangible as it is – is what is remembered from those experiences. This is why ’emotion’ seems to be the most important word in relationship marketing.

3. 7 Relationship-Building Strategies for Your Business

Make Your Company Indispensable; Build a Solid Two-Way Communication
Kim T. Gordon clearly frowns upon communicating with prospects and customers just for special sales. Instead, she advises to reach out to your target as often as you can, without being spammy. She recommends reward programs and special events to enhance customer loyalty. Make your customers’ problems a top priority – contribute to their experience and launch multicultural programs to stir up your marketing efforts. From time to time, don’t forget to go beyond standard sales calls and actually visit your trenches.

4. 12 Tenets of Relationship Marketing Effectiveness

Conduct Regular Pols and Monitor Social Media; High-Tech Goes Best with High-Touch
Mari Smith writes about the importance of understanding the perpetual needs and challenges of our market. Generating warm leads is impossible without being active on all social media platforms. A reliable customer relationship management strategy comes with a personal approach and a very high customer satisfaction rate. There are no best practices without consistent information about your customers. Never underestimate how important it is to integrate customer feedback into your future development strategies.

5. The 7 Secrets to Strategic Marketing Success on the Social Web 

Strategic Plan to Boost Your Business on the Social Web
Juan Felix approaches a sensitive subject regarding the average reach on social media. Given that most of the companies are unhappy about their engagement rates, fans and buzz, the main mission is to start changing the status quo. Great stories are the ones that generate emotions, particularly when the tone is clear and your overall strategy is very well defined. Start with a comprehensive picture of your audience’s ‘profile’ if you want to engage them. And whenever you achieve success, monitor the key factors that led you to it and make it permanent.

6. 5 Reasons Why Relationship Marketing Is Important in Business

Make Yourself Known and Liked, then Bring Something Unique

Kim Garst explains the importance of relationship marketing in business. It all starts with building awareness – you can’t be recognized and liked if people haven’t heard of you yet. Make sure you make a great entrance, word of mouth is one of the most powerful information instruments today. Create new business opportunities and never dare to leave a customer displeased. The more personal touch you add to your business, the more reliable you will be. Nobody likes a boring copycat. Also, once you’ve promised to be the best, do not disappoint.

7. How to Rock at Relationship Marketing like the Best Sales Pros

Your Marketing Efforts Should Be Customer-Centric, Not Company-Centric
Nathan Ellering thinks that content marketing is the bread and butter of relationship marketing when you’ve got a business that (also) takes place online. From sharing your secrets to finding something out of the ordinary to bring to the knowledge of your audience, this is the best and shortcut-lacking recipe to get people to care about your services. Finding commonalities and providing solutions may be interesting but not enough, but consistent content and useful calls to action won’t go unnoticed.

8. 5 Marketing Tips for Improving Customer Relationships & ROI With Better Communications

Customers Are Your Brand-Advocates-to-Be
I was going through Ashley Zeckman‘s article on how crucial communication is when you want to engage your customers. From content to product design, pricing offers and the FAQ page on your site, everything should be customer-centric. And not just because they may pick the competitor instead of you, but because business isn’t done by people who buy your products or services once. A sustainable business will not fail to commit. Engaging in providing the most personal support for online customer service and constantly working on improving your communication makes a statement on how devoted you are to your business ideas. Always seek for innovative ways to showcase the needs of your team.

9. How to Build Better Business Relationships

 Like Any Other Business, The Relationship Marketing Requires a Lot of Time and Has to Be Mutually Beneficial
Darren Dahl suggests starting with listening to any honest feedback. Before taking any action, stop for a bit. Get a notebook/and take notes when you’re meeting someone of interest. Getting back to the office, add those to a contact list with detailed information and specific keywords to remind you of their stories. Be personal and honest. Meet face to face with your customers, and try not to look pretentious. Don’t try to look like a robot – people aren’t so fond of those. Instead, look human, show vulnerabilities, make jokes. Be yourself – the professional.

10. 5 Considerations for Building Strong International Business Relationships

Main Takeaway – Leverage the Technical Evolution in Building Credibility
Louei Ali doesn’t think we should take all the technical evolution that’s constantly happening around us for granted. I second that. And there’s no better way of showing how grateful you are to have new instruments at your disposal than using them right. Be as transparent as Joey’s (F.R.I.E.N.D.S.) humor in your communication processes. Adapt your offerings to the global customer demand and share your knowledge with the partners who travel towards fulfilling the same purposes. Last, but not least, trust should accompany your every move – both received and given.

11. How Co-Creation and Relationship Marketing Can Improve Your Business

With Technology on Your Side, Real-Time Customer Feedback Is Your Friend
There are examples of co-creation marketing innovation that Matt Crawford brought to our attention to suggest that the primary objective of relationship marketing should be leveraging customer data. This includes both the information that you’ve already got and the tech-based ideas the author indicates for visible improvements. From social media listening and the associated instruments to friendly webpages created following the customers’ needs co-creation is all about the right message through the appropriate channels.

12. The Business Case for Building Real Relationships with Customers

Facts of Relationship Marketing and How to Use Them in Your Favor
Gregory Ciotti makes it clear: customer service, content, social media, email, loyalty programs and surveys are the foundation of successful relationship marketing. The latter is where experience turn to word of mouth and expansion happens without any cost of acquisition. It is because it now costs 6 or 7 times more to attract new customer than to engage the existing ones which makes relationship marketing worth it. It does take reciprocity and personalization to achieve this great purpose, but at the end of the day building a relationship with your customers is about helping them.

13. 8 Tips for Relationship Building in Business

Relationship Marketing Is a Selfless Pursuit Governed by the Laws of Business Intelligence
Neil Fogarty finds and debates the 8 rules that he considers essential to relationship marketing. The first one sums up pretty well the entire idea of relationship marketing: ‘Before Asking for Something, Offer Something’. It’s not an easy job to be a professional friend, to always be prepared and know what lines should(n’t) be crossed. To know who is influential is to treat everybody as if they were – position and influence don’t always go hand in hand. Emotional intelligence and careful listening only work as long as you also keep your word. Practice what you preach and success will be your business story.

14. Five Relationship Marketing Strategies that Work

Market Your Brand Through Strong Existing Relationships
Brian M. Finnigan recommends applying 5 relationship marketing strategies in tandem to maintain and improve your existing customer relationships. Of course, your stakeholders aren’t limited to your customers, but the latter category is the most common, so we’ll refer to this one. Networking helps you to gain organic engagement. Introductions make the world go round – the power of referrals is never to be underestimated. So treat your clients as equals and organize high quality events to organically attract people in your niche. Your website and the communication system should be no exception when it comes to top-notch services. Make sure everybody is satisfied and your ROI will show you how much that matters.

15. What Is Relationship Marketing

Retain Long-Term Customers and Increase Referrals
Jordan Skole shares the importance of brand experience, which is people knowing the faces behind your logo, understanding your professional story from a personal perspective, knowing they interact with people who care and not with robots. Maintaining relationships with long-term customers increases the chances to get meaningful referrals. Plus, one of the most searched-for feature when choosing a service over another is having the chance to offer feedback that is going to be taken into consideration for that customer’s better experience. Offering this opportunity at every step gives you a competitive edge, which is worth its weight in gold when everybody’s trying to shift from the selfish traditional marketing.

16. Relationship Marketing 1-2-3: Why Building Relationships Matters Most

Increase Your Brand Experience
R. Kay Green recommends 7 basic rules to stand by when nurturing your clients into loyal customers. Assert yourself through professional engagement and updates of your accomplishments. Be active constantly and don’t disappear from the interest map of your clients, and remember that social media is merely a complementary means to solid marketing pursuits. Know your clients inside out – from their pet names to their middle names. If you’re trying to send the message that you’re in for the long haul, don’t forget that relationship building is something you should work on every day. Happy clients are the ones who make referrals. It’s in your best interest to keep them close, especially when they’re changing jobs.

17. Building 4 Key Relationships Every Content Marketing Strategy Needs

Research Is Your Friend in Making New Allies
Anthony Gaenzle believes that closely monitoring your competitors can give you a significant competitive edge. Start from there. Research well, do your homework and don’t forget to share the results. Be transparent about it and transform your audience into a community. The more your ideas resonate with their needs, the more loyal they will become. Don’t forget planning and scheduling ahead if you don’t want to leave people with the impression that your efforts are chaotic and selfish.

18. Building Customer Relationships (6 Tactics)

Your Customer Service Should Be Legendary
Ross Beard shares 6 tactics to build long-term customer relationships that make a difference. There’s nothing you can do without not arbitrarily knowing, but studying your client first. Don’t forget that negative feedback is always the most useful, since it gives you an honest perspective on what should be improved – keep those complaints in mind and put them on your road map. Be realistic about your solutions and keep a regular contact with your customers if you want to know their honest feelings. Like any other life-long partnership, a lasting relationship is best built with lots of patience and commitment.

19. 7 Experts on Why Building Your Email List Is So Important

Make Email Marketing Your Friend
Aaron Beashel presents 7 experts on successful email marketing techniques. It’s worth investing in such an ongoing challenge because it converts more than most of the marketing techniques if you’re sure of three things precisely: what you should be addressing, when and how. Driving people on your site on a continual basis is one of the biggest assets on driving new acquisitions. It’s critical to include your name in any marketing pursuit, so that people keep in mind a strong brand figure. Make checking emails a Christmas morning with presents to be opened and your customers won’t forget who you are.

20. 17 Social Marketing Experts Share Relationship Building Tips

Customer’s Needs: Conversations and Relationships, Real Interaction
Jasmine Henry gathers the opinion of 17 most respected figures in Social Marketing to make a strong point: brand experience is all about creating a personal relationship with your customers, very much like the one we have in mind when making new friends. Engage with your clients from a position of expertise and you’ll have their professional trust – if you’re not smug about it. Be consistent and deliver a personal touch along with every message. Engage and support; offer technological solution of high-end performance and maintain relevance. And remember that there is no strong brand without a powerful story.

21. Why Relationship Marketing Is the Key to Your Content

Relationship Marketing Fuels Content
Wade Harman approaches the importance of correct, selfless social media engagement. 42% of the customers expect to be answered in less than an hour. Understand what emotional attitude your audience wants you to adhere to and don’t fail to deliver. Make yourself available at any price and keep in mind that social media presence should be all about helping and servitude.

22. Build Audience Connections with Content Marketing 

Content Marketing Builds Relationships Through Trust and Expertise
Ritika Puri and Neil Patel both agree that finding a system and some standards is crucial in delivering content that engages. To do this, you should address the most relevant matters to attract, acquire and engage audience. Try to post content from people with expertise that truly have something to share that gives and immediate takeaway. The idea of relevance starts from the premises that you know your public inside out.

23. Relationship Marketing Techniques You Have to Nail

Leverage Your Relationship Marketing Game Through Social Media
Julian Diaz is convinced that social media relationships are the currency of digital marketing. From social butterflies to community organizers, everything grows organically if you’re dedicated and accurate. A saturated social landscape is a feeble reason not to engage new layers of audience, especially if you make it clear that being treated as the most relevant customer is the birth-right of your every customer.

24. The 5 R’s of Starbucks Relationship Marketing

Starbucks: Always Learn from the Best
Joseph Ruiz gives a recipe: to be successful, you have to recognize, have a relevant offer, reveal, redeem and reward. The theory is simple. Email marketing starts from the idea that every inbox is as crowded as you’d like your shop to be. Using visual means to make yourself stand out is necessary, mainly because it builds strong associations between your content and your brand, if treated consistently. Be clear, minimalist even and keep in mind that a little incentive goes a long way.

25 The Dos and Don’ts of Relationship Marketing

Focus on Free Will Investments 
Josh Kraus seems to think that free will is not quite a commodity in relationship marketing. Most of the people with successful businesses often forget where they started from and push contractual obligations a little bit too much. However, there is a very strong connection between the feelings of gratitude of your public and the seller performance outcomes. Consumer trust and commitment should be at the bottom of this relational pyramid and relationship marketing investments should stop being seen as efforts for the sake of a blurry cause. Instead, generating loyalty is easier when people think you don’t only know their needs, but care about them as well.

26. Relationship Marketing: Focus on Customer Enablement Instead of Product Marketing Helps Toshiba  Medical to Maintain Revenue in Shrinking Industry

Customer Enablement Trumps Product Marketing
David Kirkpatrick takes the example of Toshiba Medical in a case study whose conclusions can be easily extrapolated to any online business there is. The healthcare industry is very regulated and the rules are much harsher in the case of marketing pursuits. However, education is something we should all do life-long, and keeping yourself informed on your markets’ most obscure characteristics is a big part of the game. In the scheme of it all, a relevant event should reach out to and educate your public, the same way that you keep educated following trends. Always measure results to see where you’ve hit the jackpot and what you should work on in the future.

27. StartUp Social Media: Why Relationship Marketing Is Essential for Growing Your User Base

Create Awareness and Prevent Crises
Katie Leimkuehler makes a point on how hard it is to prove the impact and influence of your product and services. In this whole game, social media should be your partner in crime. Topical conversations along with strong content have the power to engage audience on any platform, if you’re creative and consistent enough. And if you deliver. Cultivating relationships takes time, but so does everything that is worth it. Besides constantly being there, listening and monitoring closely is also part of your job if you wish to be appreciated as a professional in the niche. Draw your conclusions and formulate pertinent techniques based on them. Don’t miss out on the relevant data that social media can provide to your business.

28. Relationship Marketing is Key to Your Business’ Success

Increase word of mouth referrals
Fundivo‘s article focuses on how much more expensive it is to build new customers than engage and turn the old ones into loyal partners. The answer to this riddle is 6 times. Of course, there’s much effort in relational marketing than it is in the traditional, transactional one,  but the results are completely worth it. Value your customers’ feedback and ideas and they will love your product; from being willing to pay more for your services to recommending them to everybody they run into, there’s nothing a pleased customer won’t do.

29. Relationship Marketing 101

Customer Oriented Marketing Works Wonders
Steven J. Adelmund shares his experience with relationship marketing, through four main ideas. He starts from the restaurant niche, but the conclusions apply to any other business at your choice: a) there isn’t such a thing as being too careful when it comes to your customers’ interests; b) your employees should be the embodiment of the message you wish to convey about your brand and nothing less; c) keeping your employees informed and instructed is the first step into achieving success; d) a sense of family felt by your employees will transmit to your customers as well, giving the personal touch that every business needs.

31. The ULTIMATE Guide to Relationship Marketing

Invest in Long-Term Profitability
Jamil Velji has documented a complete guide to relationship marketing, from the definition and uses to the most valuable why‘s. As brand loyalty increases, pricing becomes less important. Additionally, people will recommend you among their circles and this is what the buzz you generate should be all about – gaining access directly to an audience that doesn’t only have a high intent, but a matching profile as your audience. The main disadvantage to take into account is the expertise involved to generate such a social engagement. It usually takes time and a lot of planning, but if you’re doing it properly the results are astonishing. Prove that you’re reliable and constantly underline the solutions that you’ve got for your customers’ needs. Be open and transparent about your practices and try to share some of your experiences. This latter method builds credibility and trust, as it also shows your human side. Customer service and social media are your best friends in this journey.

32. Relationship Marketing: Making the Emotional Connection

Make an Emotional Connection
Yvonne A. Jones believes that the emotional connection a brand creates with its customer is the milestone of competitive advantages. All lines of communication should be kept open, while creating top of mind awareness by continuously being in touch with your audience as a group and as individuals too. If your niche allows it, give your customers/clients the opportunity to know you personally. If it’s impossible, blog on a regular basis so that people know what you’ve been up to. Don’t leave out your latest professional experiences and credentials, as they are a confirmation of your status.

33. Relationship Marketing in Big Blue

Invest in a Portfolio of Relationships
Krystal Yu addresses a case study on IBM. While there are some specific tactics that are part of the brand identity, most of the rules apply as much to the guy next door. Individual relationships have never been this important, as until recently brands were supposed to provide a product or a service instead of an experience. However, it is almost impossible to survive a relationship marketing pursuit without carefully initiating and developing strategic partnerships. Customer satisfaction is key when trying to generate loyalty, as is the personal approach. This technique is, indeed, consuming with regard to any of your resources, and you may encounter unexpected demands along the way. Once you’ve started this, you should deliver and actually take any feedback into consideration.

34. When Relationship Marketing Becomes Prickly

Digital Courtship and Strategic Planning
Greta Paa-Kerner makes a very good point underlining that there’s a fine line between always being there for your customers online and being creepy. We’re not trying to enact an Orwell play, we’re trying to be taken into consideration as customers. Regardless of the marketing technique that a company may prefer over another, the idea of marketing is a continuous pursuit. Having established that, personalization is what drives courtship to the next level: website optimized by device, personal promotional offers, price comparison capabilities, etc. While it’s important to know your customers’ behavior as intimately as possible, you should never use their personal information to achieve strategic results – it won’t last long. Take what you’re given and keep an eye on your audience. Be moderate.

35. How a Conversation Inspired a Relationship Marketing Campaign

You have a USP; what’s unique about your customers?
Hakeem Aitoro approaches this systematically: if your customers should choose you for your competitive advantages that separate you from the crowd, it’s common sense mutuality that you should also know something that individualizes your every customer. Cultivating a personal relationship with your audience isn’t an easy job, especially if you’re popular. However, treating people personally engages and builds loyalty. Offer additions to your products, ask people what their ultimate product-related experience would be, observe and learn from your competitors as well as people from other industries what it means to do a great job. See who managed to engage you and what strategies they used. Be watchful and don’t settle for ‘good enough‘.

36. Personal Relationship Marketing

Relationships Go Beyond Business
I agree with Joseph Pagano on the fact that the distinction between business and personal relationships are getting blurrier by the day, given the technological assault and the social media platforms that seem to erase any communication barriers. Start from here and cultivate the status quo. Don’t take your customers for granted and be personal in interactions. Generate prospects by cultivating personal relationships – you don’t have to have dinner with all your customers, but a birthday card didn’t kill anybody.

37. Relationship Marketing & the Future

Platform Engagement Is Your Friend 
John E. Walker notices that a growing use of text in communication represents the symbol of the social media era. From texting messages when being with friends to the regular check-in, nobody lets their smartphones battery last too long. So it’s only fair to presume that text optimization is where we should all start from. Create engaging content from email marketing to Facebook posts and tweets. Attract people’s attention. The following step is to maintain your audience engaged through personalized messages and business approaches.

38. Ignore the Human Element of Marketing at Your Own Peril

Your Brand Is Forever Entwined in Relationships

Bob Garfield notices that there are two main points to be raised: a) people love brands (hopelessly so) whether you like it or not and b) your brand is no exception to this rule. So the best you can make of this is to try as hard as your resources allow it to build trust. Maybe you won’t be Harley Davidson, Volvo or Apple, but an emotional relationship is also part of this equation. Imagine two axes: one representing brand respect and the other one the amount of generated emotion. Ideally, you’ll be an ace on both of these. Awareness, opinion, consideration, preference and purchase have started to be accompanied by advocacy.  Given that core values can’t be faked, you may want to start working on a sustainable marketing development plan.

39. Your Customers’ Stories Improve Your Products. And Marketing

Let Your Customers Do the Storytelling
Katy Klotz-Guest strongly suggests focusing on story driven products, services and experiences, as branded names often come up in the daily narrative of happy customers. Besides talking among them and enlarging your networking, your customers can always inspire you to create design and artwork having their ideas/opinions/experiences as starting points. But don’t stop here: listen to the feedback and seriously take it into consideration when launching new products/services. You may have a pleasant surprise. As the author underlines, at their best product stories are not positioning after-thought, but the inspiration behind product innovation.

40. Why Relationship Marketing Is the New Model for Luxury Brands

Reconnect to Your Core Values Through Digital Tools
Nicolas Chabot implies that it is no longer enough to be innovative and exclusively driven by premium pricing and social prescription. It takes emotion to survive this new paradigm of luxury (which, I may add, extends to any other brand type). The two pillars of this business paradigm are: a) brand platforms focusing on building a unique brand image and creating a sense of exclusivity and social aspiration and b)having developed integrated business distribution networks. This milestone has, however, suffered a mutation – the infiltration of emotion in every sector and stage of business interactions. Constantly and consistently engaging with customers, being omnipresent on social platforms, cultivating relationships are the new directions to be followed. And they’re a must.

41. 4 Tactics to Create Brand Loyalty Through Relationship Marketing

Building Trust Trumps Being a Professional
Brian Horn believes that the most fortunate case scenario includes a professional who’s genuinely interested in building organic relationships for networking purposes, which additionally will constitute business intelligence and convert. He also puts 4 ideas on the table for the brand managers interested in long-term, sustainable relationship marketing. Returning customers should be offered discount on services, as this would acknowledge your appreciation, and reward references should be implemented, as gratitude. Updates aren’t only to be posted on social media, but whenever the situation allows it, you could try being more personal with your audience as well. Faking a genuine interest in your audience’s trust will do more harm than good, so the first thing to be taken into consideration is being honest and transparent.

42. 5 Ways to Build Trust When Mixing Social and Marketing

Building Trust Trumps Being a Professional
Joseph Ruiz believes that the marketing mindset should be oriented towards social media. Trust is one of the purchase pillars and personal opinions on brands are very well guarded territories. If you’re privileged enough to have entered a consumer’s circle of trust, there are some things you should follow religiously. Relevance isn’t optional, neither is knowing your audience when you’re trying to transmit that your intentions are of serving rather than just selling. Consistency builds engagement and long-term communities of loyal partners, as long as you’re honest and genuinely interested, monitoring their every reaction.

43. The Essential Guide to Trust in Marketing

Increase Conversions and Extract Maximum of Value
David Rosenfeld advocates trust as being the most essential factor in generating profit. Despite having the best product/service in your niche, lack of trust will strike with no regret. However, the first two steps when looking to achieve trust among stakeholders are a) transparency and b) talk about your best practices. While the first step is pretty much intuitive, the second implies writing case studies, documenting happy stories, using testimonials and endorsements. It goes without saying that ‘selling’ trust as a marketing advantage shouldn’t be an act. While promoting your business as being transparent and customer-oriented, delivering every promise should be your primary concern.

Conclusion

Today, marketing revolves a lot around trust. Business intelligence requires relevant experience and credibility in order to convert, maintain and develop professional relationships. Giving the impression of running company-centered marketing campaigns is unforgivable, as the audience seeks for a personal, emotional experience more than just a product that robotically satisfies a list of needs. Just like you use the competitive advantages you’ve got to separate yourself from the competitors, your customers and business audience would like to know they are unique in relation to you. Your permanent marketing pursuit would have to start from this premise to even have a chance. Listen to the feedback you’re given and try to implement it as much as possible, as the most honest purpose of every marketing endeavor should be fostering target loyalty – from the partners you’ve started the business with to the future customers that haven’t even tried out your product yet. And remember – everything is expendable in business, don’t give up.
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Improved Link Audit with the New Import Feature | Dramel Notes

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You might be familiar with the epic space opera Star Wars. Many interesting dialogues have been initiated throughout the series, yet a particular one from Episode VI – Return of the Jedi, comes to my mind now. It’s a dialogue between Obi-Wan and Luke and it goes like this:
Obi-Wan: “So what I told you was true, from a certain point of view.”

Luke: “A certain point of view?”

Obi-Wan: “Luke, you’re going to find that many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.”

How many times did it happen to you to think how your website would look like from a certain point of view? Having the whole picture is great, yet sometimes you might want to see how your business is performing from a specific standpoint.

In Depth Link Audit on the Links You Chose

Let’s say that you have a website and you want to check its backlink profile. An in depth link audit will help you to find the best strategies for your website and why not, outsmart your competitors. Yet, as interested as you might be in checking all your website’s links, seeing specific backlinks might be really useful.

Within cognitiveSEO you have the possibility of importing any links you want, coming from anywhere in order to have the most comprehensive possibly view over your links’ profile . No novelty here. Based on our cognitives feedback and after studying our users’ behavior we’ve come up with a feature that is really useful. We now offer you the possibility to analyze websites based on imported links only. All you need to do is use a simple CSV format that will allow you to easily import links. No more different file formats, no more confusion; just one simple CSV format, easy to operate with.
What makes Superman a hero is not that he has power, but that he has the wisdom and the maturity to use the power wisely.
Therefore, what would the analyze website from import file only feature would help you with? There are several use cases of this function. Let’s go through some of them:

Compare Different Link Sources and Databases

There are so many sources you could have links from: Google Webmaster Tools, cognitiveSEO, one of the many digital marketing tools out there or even your own database. Yet, which one is the ultimate, complete list of links? Even if we offer links coming from several database and we are proud to say that we do provide a n all-inclusive list of links, it’s a bit unrealistic to say that there is a place where you can find absolutely all your links. However, you might be interested in finding the differences between several link sources.

Let’s take for instance an analysis based on Google Webmaster Tools links and one made with cognitiveSEO’s links database. As we can see from the image below, there is a big difference between the number of referring domains and links analyzed. The analysis based on the links coming from Google Webmaster Tools take into consideration around 1800 referring domains and 6000 links while the cognitiveSEO’s link database report around 1900 referring domains and 7000 links. At a first look you might find the difference rather insignificat; yet, there are 100 referring domains and 1000 links we are talking about. That missing data might be translated into links that caused you a penalty or gave you some competitive advantage over your competitor.


Naturally, analyzing different links lead to different results. As we take a look at the snapshot below, we can see various data for the analysis based on Google Webmaster Tools info and for the one made with cognitiveSEO’s links database. These various results could make us draw disparate conclusions and create different digital marketing strategies. If in one case, the main link positioning seems to be on blog posts and forum threads, the analysis which take into consideration a higher number of links let us know that the main link positioning is in short paragraph of text. Of course, this is just one difference that we can spot at a first sight between the two analyses. The more in depth we look, the more discrepancies can be noticed and therefore, additionally conclusions can be drawn.

Analysis a Specific Segment of a Link Profile

With the latest import feature we’ve implemented, we now give you the possibility to run a website’s analysis based on specific links only. By selecting this option we will crawl only the links you import and we will ignore any links we have in our database. This way you can create campaigns with certain tools link data or you could analyze only a particular segment of a link profile.

Let’s say we are interested in lost links’ profile only. It couldn’t be easier. We import a csv file with lost links only (if we don’t have such a list, you can export it from a previously cognitiveSEO’s analysis) and run the in-depth analysis based on these links only. Precious info can be extracted from this link audit: where are most of the links positioned? What is their status? Do they have high authority? Where are they coming from? Analyzing all these can lead to some great strategies that will come at hand in your big digital marketing strategy.

Better Management for the Links that Matter Most to You

Also, importing just a segment of links can be really useful for link management for instance. Let’s say you want to keep an eye on some specific links only, be it 2, 12 or 20. Maybe they are some very important links for you or you have your own reasons to supervise those links closely (links that are not live yet or backlinks should reappear as live, etc. ).
 
In the screenshot below there are some charts based on the analysis on 12 links only, links that we wanted to closely monitor. We were interested in their status, position and some other data that could give us important insight on those links in order to better analyze and monitor them.
The reasons one should conduct an in-depth audit are so many and I will not list them all here. Yet, one of the biggest benefits for running a link report is probably the fact that you get to look at the big picture. However, the big picture might not always be what you need or what you are looking for. Think small or think big but anyway you choose to look at your links, it should be in a way that will bring you the insights you need. Think of your link audit like a puzzle solving task. Choose the important pieces first, put them together in a logical way,analyze them closely with an objective eye and keep in mind that the art of simplicity is a puzzle of complexity.
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When Referral Traffic is Integral – An Insight into Tackling Declining Referral Sources | Dramel Notes

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Marketing managers and directors of companies care about top-line analytics. Especially when a year on year decrease in traffic becomes a reality. As an SEO consultant or agency, you are the first person to turn to in these situations and are relied upon to find a solution. We found ourselves in this position and had to find logical reasons and solutions, fast. So who am I to tell you how to deal with what could be a pretty painful situation for any SEO?

Well, my name is Tom Clark and I run Convert Digital. We have to deal with all sorts of traffic issues from penalties to start-ups who don’t even know where to begin on the journey of online business.
What you will learn:
  • How to identify potential causes for a year on year decline in overall traffic and organic traffic
  • How to analyse the performance of referral traffic
  • How to hone efforts on higher reward activities
  • How to boost both referral and organic traffic through reigniting relationships online

Before you can find a solution and create a strategy for seeing year on year organic growth next year, you must first open up Google analytics and your ranking tracking tool. Your role as an SEO should encompass a command over analytics, as commonly the marketing department and directors in a company do not have the expertise or time to have a detailed knowledge of the tool.

As a result, an organic traffic issue such as a Google penalty could easily become their self-diagnosed culprit. This is where you take a look at both the rankings and the Google analytics to find some potential reasons for this decline in traffic. If rankings have taken a dive, then you need to be honest and upfront about this with the client. But what if rankings are stable?

First off, taking a look at the rankings showed that it was stable on this front, when comparing year on year.


In fact many rankings had actually improved, including long-tail rankings, so our first thought was how could organic traffic be lacking?
Are we to blame for organic traffic being down 10% when comparing August 2015 to August 2014?
Slightly baffled at first by the steady rankings, but declining organic traffic, we decided to analyze the prospective customer journey from Google search to entering the gates of the zoo.

The visitors we are trying to entice to the zoo are one of two types of visitors:
  1. Visitors who are aware of the zoo – these visitors go on the website to find opening times, potentially check to see if ticket prices have changed and call in to see if any special events are going on.
  2. The second type of potential visitor is searching for ‘things to do in Sussex/Brighton/East Sussex’ and child friendly activities in Sussex. This type of visitor is possibly not yet aware of the zoo and is highly influenced by the aggregator sites that offer a lot of advice for family-friendly activities in your area.

Being one of the biggest family attractions in the area, we were pretty confident our client would be listed in some format on most of the local tourism/aggregator sites. But what if our client’s visibility on those sites has decreased since this time last year? If this was the case, then the result would be less people searching for our clients company name in Google, once they have mulled over their options the day before.
We had also noticed that the Google ‘My Business’ listing was also getting a lot more visibility for all sorts of keywords with the modifier ‘Brighton’ or ‘East Sussex’, when compared to last year. What does this mean for organic traffic?


Essentially, when a Google My Business listing gets a higher visibility than usual, the result is that some potential website visitors will get all the necessary information from the listing and not click through to the website. With the phone number, reviews and opening times all visible from the my business listing, visiting the website is not essential unless you want to purchase tickets on the website.
At this stage we already had two culprits for why the organic traffic has seen a decrease.

a) Referral Traffic Sources as part of the blame for a decrease in traffic/organic traffic


When we looked at the referral traffic sources (with dates set to Aug 2015 compared to Aug 2014) we could quickly see a lot of the best traffic driving sites had sent far less this year. As briefly mentioned earlier, this impacts the number of people who perform a branded search in Google after looking into their options and checking out the site previously.

b) How to combat declining referral traffic


When attempting to address the decline in referral traffic, you have to understand if any given linking site has experienced a growth or decline in organic traffic since last year. I was able to identify that the first site we were focusing on (daysoutwiththekids.co.uk) had slightly declined since Aug 2014, but not enough to warrant sending less than half the referral traffic when comparing Aug 2014 to Aug 2014.

If the linking site’s organic traffic had massively dropped since last year, this could also shape whether our client should consider continuing advertising through their site, or negotiating the fees based on these findings.

We also found instances like visitbrighton.com, where the referring site had grown really well organically since last year, but the traffic to our client’s site had diminished. This is a great area of opportunity, as you then need to focus on how you can get greater visibility on that site.

It was at this point that we started to discuss all the potential areas of opportunity with the Zoo’s marketing manager. We began to develop a simple Google doc with all of the sites/pages on sites worth focusing attention on. We gave really actionable directions for how the visibility on each site could be increased. Of course this could mean an increased advertising spend on some of those sites, but the outcome would be very beneficial.

As we went through this process we noticed some common themes for why the referring traffic had declined:

  • Our client had not provided any new information to the tourism sites since last year, so the editor of the tourism site had naturally let the old content slide deeper into the site where there are less visitors.
  • Voucher code deals arranged with sites like tesco.com and moneysavingexpert had expired, so the page had been removed.

With a few upcoming events looming up surrounding Halloween at the zoo and Christmas events, this was the perfect time to take action and provide new value to these once beneficial referring sites.

We also used Google search rankings to help shape which sites should get priority attention. For example, a site ranking well for ‘Things to do in Sussex’ or Kids days out in Sussex’ will be attracting our ideal prospective customers.

Wrapping it up

Implementing this strategy across tens to hundreds of linking domains will have a substantial impact on the overall and organic traffic. Covert Digital will be working closely with zoo’s marketing department to measure the impact of increased visibility over the coming months.

Disclosure

This is not a paid post and cognitiveSEO didn’t make any kind of agreement with the author. This is an analysis of Tom Clark, written and documented by himself.

About the author



Tom Clark is the director of Convert Digital a small SEO and PPC agency in Brighton, UK. Convert Digital put an emphasis on tailored digital marketing campaigns, with an emphasis on onsite SEO and link building.
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5 Keyword Generation Tips that Will Blow Your Mind | Dramel Notes

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The trick with ranking is not to force it. When everybody’s trying to rank for the same keywords, there’s not much room for long term development. This is where you can improve – find keywords semantically related to your niche, but not necessarily used by your competitors.

 

It’s in Google’s best interest to suggest semantic results, as closely related to the search query as possible. This should be in your best interest too. But what happens when your industry’s a crowded market share where every marketing campaign is survival of the fittest at its best?

 

Before we get started on the actual suggestions, there’s just one more thing. Take a second to understand how much search engines have evolved. When you type ‘Halloween costume Batman’ on Google, it won’t distinctly show you results of Halloween costumes in general and Batman related content – it now looks beyond your words and shows you whatever is most relevant for you, in this case understanding that it’s a Batman costume you’re looking for.

 

 

This is why approximately 70% of the search results have derived from the words typed when searching, according to studies made by Google itself – because the search engine is beginning to understand your intention more than the words you’re expressing it through. It’s true that the results can vary depending on your previous searches, your location and other variables, but browsing in Incognito mode can change this, if you’re looking for more ‘objective’ results.

 

1.Get Keyword Suggestions Using Free Stock Image Sites

 

It’s, therefore, clear at this point that the key is to look in new places for relevant keywords. Depending on your niche, it may be a great start to look for pictures. Because Googlebot cannot understand the content of a picture by itself very accurately yet, we most often post a relevant description whenever adding a photo on our sites. Reversing this principle, we’ll notice that looking for keywords on pictures’ descriptions is an easy, effective way to generate new ideas.

Photo Sites are a great source of inspiration, particularly if your niche has enough graphic applications as to find useful photo related keywords. For instance, if you’re looking for dog food, you’ll be shown both branded and non-commercial descriptions of dog food, as they are characterized in the photo captions.

There are various sites where you’ll find access to online pictures that are not protected by copyrights, and you should find the most suitable ones for your industry. You’ll see that the sites are of an impressive versatility, which means that the search patterns differ, along with the suggested keywords and the images you’ll find. Here are some great sources of inspiration:
 

Pixabay

 
The site’s of great value since it has almost 500,000 photos, and you can split your search by category. This way, it’s also easier to find out how searches differ from one category to another.

Pixabay is more of a community than a conglomerate of pictures, and it can work as a niched, micro social media site with followers, messages and all the perks. I find it important to have a constant source of copyright-free images for current usage, and Pixabay seems to solve two problems at once: free photos and brand new keywords from their descriptions.

Also, being a community based website, it is free to use and your contribution should consist of uploading photos on your behalf. This social payment isn’t, however, compulsory, and you can use the site regardless of your personal portfolio. I would suggest uploading images whenever it’s possible, but it is a matter of personal choice.

 

As it appears in the search suggestions, ‘silhouette’ isn’t your generic keyword when it comes to dog related content, neither is it one of the most popularly encountered. Despite this, it’s a suitable word to be integrated in your articles, and the search engine will associate it with your topic without problem.

 

 

Shutterstock

 

Shutterstock is a paid service. The pictures here do have copyright, but this is an additional sign of quality – people who pay this service to be given relevant photos are tech oriented people, who work in online industries and value precision. Therefore, the keywords you’ll find generated from previous searches and from photo descriptions are both specific in nature and refreshing for your niche.

 

The subscribers will search for the most relevant keywords in order to be shown the proper photos. It’s the paid subscription and the reputation for reliability that makes this a viable source for taking a fresh look at your niche’s most fitting keywords.

The autofill suggestions will be relevant and refreshing, although not always very niched. But in the context of semantic focus from the search engines, being relevant trumps being specific – if the autofill suggests previous searches on a word, this can be easily integrated semantically on our topic.

 

Stockvault

 

Stockvault is a free micro search engine for photos and it’s great for searches of highly popular industries, and not very specific niches, since it’s used by people from different environments.

 

And because they’re so versatile, it’s best to search for a word in a category, and then see the description of the pictures returned as results. Also, you can see how they differ depending on the category you choose (for instance, men vs. women). The returned results, as well as the autofill suggestions, will differ depending on the previous searching behavior on that particular category.

This is, therefore, the cornucopia of differential approach for distinct targets. If you’re looking for keywords for distinct approaches between several target groups, this site does the job pretty well.

 

Freedigitalphotos

 

Freedigitalphotos is another reliable source when looking for new keyword ideas. Despite being free, there’s nothing cheap about it. You’ll always have plenty of search results, each of which has a caption text, which you’ll find more than useful, since it doesn’t require manually going through all the results.

 

You can set up your search by an advanced set of parameters, thus influencing the results. One other very interesting feature is the ability to exclude keywords from your returned searches. If, for instance, you want to search ‘Coca Cola’ but not ‘Pepsi Cola’, you can always use the ‘Exclude Keywords’ filter.

 

2. Generate Keyword Ideas Using Offline Magazines

 

Start reading magazines. See what keywords those in your industry use in writing their content – as the general style is so different from online to print, you’ll get plenty of ideas that you’ve been ignoring because of SEO assumptions.

 

When working online, it’s crucial to keep a fresh mind. And if you want different results in rankings than your competitors, maybe you should look where they don’t, too. As we’ve documented before, magazines are a divergent resource with unique content, that could make great keywords for your business.
 
I’ll only cover the most important reason – magazines are a perfect resource for someone preoccupied of words. Afterall, they provide what we hope for the web to become one day in terms of content: articles that attract through subject and writing, without being obsessed with keywords and rankings. And perhaps this is what we should all turn towards to keep a fresh mind.
 
There are hyper targeted niches in the magazine market. If your industry allows it (and chances are, if you’re reading this post, it does!), take a look in the niche magazines. The intent for great content on a magazine is exceedingly higher, since the investment is thousands dollars and the editors don’t afford to make mistakes. While a blog is much easier to manage, promote and reinvent every time an article chopps of the numbers of the audience.

 

3. More Keywords Suggestions from Amazon

 

Amazon is the Google of selling. Its power consists of being so huge, that it’s impossible not to find what you’re looking for, from beauty products to books and video games. It’s also where you can find out what people search for, to a very specific extent.

Because of all its categories, there are two kinds of insight: one from the different search suggestions you’ll get for the same word in distinct categories and one from the category and its suggestions that you’re offered when searching for a product.

 

 

Because Amazon is such a valuable source, you can consult third parties for advanced results of what people search for. Merchantwords for instance is a highly professional paid service that puts the Amazon search database in perspective.

 

Kindle’ is one of the most popular Amazon searches. Being able to organize the results after highest/lowest search volume or by alphabetical order allows us to examine the specific parts that we find most relevant for our online business. The results can also be exported as .csv for further examination, which allows comparisons from one time interval to another. Depending on how trending your results are, using this tool can help finding keywords more than just once, by identifying the trending topics the exact ways they’re being searched on the site.

4. Answer the Public

Writing perennial articles isn’t easy, particularly when evergreen content seems to have additional requirements for making a good impression and not looking like junk. It takes vision to maintain relevance over time. Answerthepublic is a site that suggests questions people would ask on a different topic or keyword that you insert, which you can materialize in new keywords or – why not? – in new content ideas.

The homepage of this site is a very impatient man, in a sweater, who seems eager to hear you answering a question that is of elevated interest for a larger public. There’s also a number of popular countries from which you can select, and the results differ from each local trending search.

The results are formulated as popular questions, popular phrases containing the keyword, and they’re followed by alphabetical suggestions of the desired topics.

You can also be displayed a pop-up with the results per each letter.

 

5. The Wikipedia Database

Wikipedia is a source of keyword research in multiple languages, especially since it covers a lot of topics. Because the articles here are information-centric and not keyword-centric, you may find a reinvigorating perspective on the textual approach.

Of course, the encyclopedia is unbiased (or it should be), and most of the articles aren’t necessarily written in a very creative way. But by not abiding to the general rules of online writings, the result will be similar with the one produced by reading niche magazines – only in a different writing style.

Conclusion

 

Whenever the competition is too high, you risk tilting at windmills. This happens because you, as well as your competitors, are trying hard to rank for the same keywords, suggested by (roughly) the same sources. I always search incognito whenever there’s something I want to take a fresh look at. Because, smart as they are, search engines memorize my historic and suggest answers related to my previous queries. The same kind of story happens here – you’ll get to run in circles pretty soon.

 

Using the same keywords as your competitors when writing in your niche often turns the common words into the ground zero in SERPS. On the other hand, there are plenty of creative ways of keeping a fresh perspective on your work. Looking for answers (or questions?) where nobody else does makes the difference between a trend setter and the next in line.

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