Wednesday, November 2, 2016

7 Lessons from Top Performing Drip Email Campaigns

Automated email workflows can net you 20% more sales opportunities.


They're more personalized, timely, and targeted.


The problem, is that the vast majority of marketers – as high as 85% – are unhappy with their performance.


Not the results of those campaigns. But of their own execution or implementation of them.


Instead of rehashing the same onboarding campaigns from the same companies that others have covered well, I spent a Sunday morning digging through my inbox to find examples from different industries. (Sounds like a fun weekend, right?!)


The objective, was to pick out different campaigns at random that were each utilizing different personalization techniques to give you a fresh approach and hopefully inspire new ideas.


Here are seven (plus one special bonus) to emulate, research, and try for yourself.


1. Time Etc. Specific Task Spotlight


Tell me if this sounds familiar.


You find (or hear) about a new amazing service.


First pass, it looks awesome. So you sign up, mess around for a few minutes, and… ?


You hit a wall. A blank. And you're not sure what to do next.


There's a reason the vast majority of free trials (~50%) don't turn into free accounts. People aren't sure what to do next, and they haven't seen that 'first win' yet.


UK-based, virtual assistant service, Time Etc., sends an early task or feature highlight to new sign-ups who haven't used the service yet. The goal is to avoid this decision fatigue by helping to prompt people with specific ideas for what to do next.


For example, this one focuses on creating a new repeating task.


time-etc-repeating-task-email


The single column email is just long enough to provide context to a user, before expertly using a primary (create the task now) and secondary CTA (learn more) to get started.


The hope, is that these leading emails can jog some ideas in those reading it, getting them thinking about ways around the initial problem that blocked them from taking the first critical step in the first place.


2. Rock & Roll's Event Repurchases


The Rock & Roll Marathon Series has grown from humble beginnings in my beloved San Diego, to now stretching out across most major U.S. (and some European) big cities.


They now regularly feature 30,000+ attendees running urban courses with bands, DJs, and more every mile or two of the half and full marathon routes.


As anyone's who's thrown an event can tell you, they rely heavily on early sign-ups (even at discounted prices) and repurchases (from past happy attendees) to help forecast and make up for the fact that most will wait until the very last second (and they've already shelled out the money to organize everything upfront).


That brings up two key segmentation features:



  1. By Location

  2. By Event


Let's start with the basics:


rock-n-roll-marathon-arizona-email


The first example highlights a simple event segmentation, sending a scarcity-based promotional message that would make even Cialdini happy.


This one's relatively straightforward, relying on the urgency of an early pricing discount expiring to be the entire messaging.


The second is slightly more nuanced.


rock-n-roll-marathon-san-diego-email


This one is pulling in the (1) event and (2) location details to inspire (and hook) those who just completed that specific event in that specific city to repurchase.


Receiving these, in a succession of months, with the aforementioned urgency-based price increases, are like a war of attrition that slowly but surely whittles away a large list to capture as many early purchases as possible.


This example, along with the Time Etc. one before it, was relatively basic time sensitive examples (where campaigns are sent X days out from Y trigger).


Time to get a little more sophisticated.


3. Expedia's Recent Booking Abandonment


A hotel booking process is no different than an eCommerce checkout one when you think about it.


A sample of people begin the process, selecting dates (like products) to see how much the grand total might be, before getting distracted (or jumping over to a different product or website to compare prices) and leave the site.


The statistics are also (unfortunately) similar. While as many as 67% of eCommerce people might abandon a cart, 81% of people booking a hotel or travel might bounce as well.


The good news is if this user's logged in, you can track and react.


Case in point: Expedia sends these behavioral, event-based messages shortly after searching for hotels in specific locations.


The first example pulls in the specific city name in the subject line of the email, while the body copy tends to be a little more generic, focusing on the 'upsell' of booking an entire package vs. just selecting a hotel.


expedia-recent-booking-email


The second, features a subject line that's almost an exact carbon copy of the first (complete with personalized city-name).


However this time, the second one also features a customized message that personalizes the (1) headline, the (2) body copy, and the (3) CTA.


expedia-hotel-deal-email


This campaign successfully executes on message match; aligning what a user was just thinking about and doing on your site with the subject line (that will get their attention), and the email content (to get them to click).


4. Ramit's Warm-Up to Pre-Sell


There's one sure-fire way to learn from other marketers:


Ignore what they say, and watch what they do.


Some of the best digital marketers pull off a sleight-of-a-hand like a Vegas magician; distracting you with one thing over here while they're really laying the groundwork for a powerful move later in the act.


There's no better example of this than Ramit Sethi.


Subscribe to his email list (with a different email or at least some kind of filter) and watch the magic literally unfold.


You'll get tons (and tons and tons and tons) of text-based emails that do everything from grab attention, to engagement and trust building, before finally witnessing these brilliantly executed sales emails.


First, you'll be pre-segmented based on what offer (or where on the site) you opted in. Then you'll receive a mix of content that will switch from the regular ongoing stuff to more choreographed sales efforts.


Typically you can see these coming with an anticipation-inducing “Day 1/X” in the subject line. The copy itself will start layering in social proof (like the number of comments, the number of emails, etc.) before closing with a specific call-to-action to get the reader from passive-to-active.


Here's one good example:


ramit-sethi-hate-mail-email


These start out slow. But watch how they build over the course of a few days (to a few weeks for the larger ones), increasing frequency by as much as 2-3 emails per day and altering the messaging based on if you don't respond, open, or click.


Watching how Ramit seamlessly transitions from focusing on problems and pain points to eventually providing a solution for those should help you not only rethink your email strategy, but all of your content marketing efforts too.


5. Audible's Proactive Churn-Reducing Outreach


Subscription-based services can be profitable. But it usually takes a few months.


They're capital intensive businesses, that require you to front-load cash into soft costs (like salaries, etc.) and hard ones (like advertising, etc.) to acquire customers that pay a little at a time (hopefully turning cash-flow positive within a few months).


A churn rate of 5-7% might be acceptable, but anything greater can quickly send your profitability into a tailspin at an accelerated rate (working almost like negative leverage – see: Bear Stearns).


Audible does a good job sensing or predicting churn and proactively responding to hopefully avoid it.


This promotion gives away something with a high perceived value (even though giving away an extra digital copy of something costs, well, air) to 'win-back' a customer's attention.


audible-last-chance-email


Highlighted in fine print at the bottom, you can see how they're pulling out a segment of people to receive this special offer (unused credits as of a certain date).


It's simple, but effective.


6. Mint's Important Win-Back Notification


Mint's another subscription-based service, however they don't charge consumers anything up front (instead relying on partnerships, revenue shares and affiliate deals).


That means they really need a sticky model that keeps people for months on end.


Deciding to take out a loan, or switch credit card companies, isn't a decision most consumers make lightly.


They also have this uphill battle at getting people to understand or recognize the problems Mint wants to help you solve (so they can get paid) – when that consumer's need awareness often doesn't exist in the first place.


So… how?


mint-unusual-spending-email


Mint tracks your personalized, historical averages and then sets up notifications or alerts when new aberrations pop up.


Some categories, like spend more on Travel, might be ignored because people are generally delighted to spend there.


However highlighting other frivolous ones, like Shopping, bring up all sorts of insecurities and question marks in someone's head.


The subject line and matching headline act like a cliffhanger; introducing the problem with a suspicious 'power word' (“Unusual”) before directing people to the road to salvation (that big, bright orange “Login Now” button).


7. Salesforce's Trial Expiration Sequence


We've already looked at the dismal statistics of free trialers to paying customers. So let's jump straight into the examples.


This sequence of three emails is being sent to based on the classic example: user (me in this case) logins in on the first day, before eventually failing to login back in or use the product over the next week of the free trial.


So midstream, Salesforce picks up on this and hints at it with the opening line of the email (“I'm guessing you're swamped”).


salesforce-trial-experience-email


The messaging around it goes for the soft-sell, trying to elicit some response or engagement of any kind so they can intervene and get you back into the product.


The personalized approach, design, and tone also help make it easy (and low-stress) for someone to reach out and get help (as opposed to 'be sold').


After not responding for a few days, the tone switches to a more direct, hard sell.


salesforce-trial-expiration-email


Again, the same personalized style is used to get that one-to-one interaction. But this time the language is less friendly and more business (relying on scarcity yet again to drive action).


A few days later (after again not responding), a more generic re-engagement campaign goes with a 'action required'-style subject line, and a message that lets you know there's still time to recover your account and information.


salesforce-reengagement-email


Bonus: Inbound's Personalized Scale Outreach


Each of the examples listed above incorporate clever segmenting and behavior-based techniques to scale personalized emails.


However one of my favorite (and most thought-provoking) examples comes from Inbound.org and Ed Fry that takes this to new extremes.


inbound-org-new-post-email


Inbound.org is a community-based site, which is completely dependent on members (of said community) logging in frequently and supplying it with content (posts, answers, interactions, etc.).


The above email incorporates extreme personalization at scale, using:



  1. My name

  2. My job title / profession (agency)

  3. My level of profile completeness (whether my Twitter is connected)

  4. My engagement (inserting these in between and other emails I receive from them)


Fortunately, Ed was kind enough to share his experience (and results) in running these personalized campaigns.


Ed likened these emails to multivariate tests (as opposed to a more general email campaign), because so many variables are at play within a single email (including the question being asked, the targeting, the messaging, and the lists being selected).


Unsurprisingly, incorporating as much specificity as possible reportedly resulted in the best engagement. So they would test subject line & messaging like:



  • Can you help Casey?

  • Can you help Casey's client?

  • Can you help Casey's PPC client?


In order to create campaigns like this, you need a vast amount of customer data (along with the ability to create specialized lists quickly). Here's a sample of what they used to run these:


customer-data-in-email-campaigns
(Image Source)


This extremely personalized approach is time consuming and complicated to pull off. But the results show extreme promise, too.


personalized-email-campaign-results
(Image Source)


Conclusion


Average website conversion rates are a depressingly low 3% in most industries.


Automated email workflows can help dramatically… assuming you're going above-and-beyond the basic, Hey $FNAME.


Instead, some of the best combine nurturing, timing, urgency, scarcity, and extreme personalization to break through the noise, get opened, and get clicked.


Use these seven (+1) examples as a starting point to analyze where your own are falling short, and a model for new techniques to experiment with going forward.


The glass half-full version, is that we have a lot of room for potential.


If the final Inbound.org example is anything to go off of, it's that most of us are still scratching the surface of truly personalized, data-driven techniques that work.


About the Author: Brad Smith is a founding partner at Codeless Interactive, a digital agency specializing in creating personalized customer experiences. Brad's blog also features more marketing thoughts, opinions and the occasional insight.




Life After Vine: 5 Tips to Help Brands Move on With Video

life-after-vine


Vine, the social media app known for 6-second video loops, is shutting down. Twitter announced its decision to discontinue the video service in a press release last week.


According to Marketing Land, Vine debuted in 2013 when mobile video wasn't really a thing. But the rise of Snapchat, and the addition of live video capabilities on Facebook and Instagram, has drawn Vine's top stars, audiences and advertising dollars away from Vine. In addition, rolled out its own native video platform in January 2015, serving as yet another Vine rival, the publication noted.


For some, the loss of Vine seems to be part of the natural evolutionary cycle of the digital world. But others are saddened and even angry at the loss of the platform. Shortly after the announcement, in a The Verge article by Casey Newton, one of Vine's co-founder Dom Hofmann reportedly said:


“The most important of part of Vine has always been the people that are on it. … It's also the only part that can't be replicated. So I'm going to miss them. Even though I can and do follow some people from Vine on Instagram or Snapchat or Twitter or wherever they've decided to go, it just doesn't feel the same. It's like the band is breaking up and everyone's going solo.”


For now, Vine is still up and running, allowing people to access and download their videos. But brands that have invested time, effort and marketing dollars into the platform are left wondering: “Now what?”


There's no question that video-especially video on social media-is a powerful marketing tool. Video can help brands capture audience attention, show value and encourage engagement. But how do you make sure your Vine content isn't lost? Which alternative video platform should your brand turn to?


Below we dive into a few tips for moving on with your video endeavors after Vine.


#1 – Don't panic.


If your brand has invested heavily into Vine as a marketing tool, not all is lost. While the platform offered something very unique, you have other options and you can still access your content for now. 


Oh No Cat


#2 – Download (and repurpose) your Vine content.


While Vine videos are just six seconds long, that doesn't mean you didn't put serious creative effort into making them awesome. Also, these videos are pieces of content. Don't let them go.


While the Vine platform is still alive, it won't be forever. If you don't want to lose the content you've created, download it to your computer or a storage device. Mic offers a simple how-to guide for doing just that.


You can also turn Vine videos into GIFs. GIPHY has created a tool that allows users to convert Vines into GIFs and save them to their GIPHY account.


GIPHY's Vine Converter


This option not only gives you an easy place to store your content, but also enables you to share that content across any network that allows GIFs-–which is content repurposing in its simplest form.


#3 – Consider alternative video options.


As mentioned above, there's no doubt that video is an important tool in your marketing arsenal. Humans are visual creatures by nature, and visual content is a way to catch their eye, further brand awareness and get audience engagement and shares.


If you've invested in Vine, you're likely familiar with the other social media video options that are out there. But below is a quick rundown of what some your options are:


Facebook


The more recent addition of Facebook Live allows you to give your audience a window into your company or products in real-time, while also saving it for later viewing. Of course, you can also upload produced videos natively.


Instagram


Like Facebook, Instagram allows you to natively record video or upload video right from your mobile device. But your video has to be between three and 60 seconds. Click here to learn more about video on Instagram.


In addition, if what you loved about Vine was the video looping, Instagram's Boomerang app could be a potential alternative. The app takes 10 photos and stitches them together, speeds up the video and then loops it back and forth.


Boomerang for Instagram


Snapchat


While Snapchat could've easily become a passing trend, it's proving to be an increasingly embraced space for sharing fun, raw and engaging visual content-presenting both B2C and B2B brands with an awesome opportunity to grow brand affinity and audience engagement. And with the platform's more recent addition of Snapchat Stories, this gives your snaps a little more accessibility and staying power.


For more on Snapchat, read:



YouTube


Despite the video options on other social networks, YouTube is still a leader in the video world. YouTube videos are easily shared on social media and can be embedded into website or blog pages, too. In addition, you can optimize your channel page with brand information, website links and links to other social media profiles. Here's an example from HubSpot.


HubSpot on YouTube


Twitter


Like Facebook and Instagram, Twitter also allows you to shoot video or upload video from your mobile device. You can also edit that video before posting. Learn more about video on Twitter here.


As far as choosing a platform, don't force it. Ultimately, your choice should depend on who your audience is and what resonates with them, as well as what your overall marketing and business objectives are.


#4 – Continue to focus on building your brand.


If you're shifting your video efforts to a new platform, don't forget why you're doing video in the first place: to build brand awareness and engagement with your audience.


A recent opinion article from Jeri Smith on Observer.com highlighted some fantastic questions that all brands should ask themselves before investing in a new platform:



  • How will this platform help improve perceptions of our brand and purchase funnel?

  • How will this platform amplify the impact of the dollars we're investing in other media?

  • Which platform/channel will we take time and money away from in order to develop custom content for this one?

  • How much of the urge to explore this channel is simple fear of being left behind?


For more of her insights, you can read the full article.


#5 – Stay flexible.


If there's anything that brands and marketers can agree with these days it's that media channels can come and go quickly. So, your efforts should be spread across established, young and emerging media channels. This will allow you to experiment with new things and refine your marketing efforts regularly.


How do you feel about Vine's shut down? Mad? Sad? Happy? Indifferent? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.




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5 Common Email Marketing Issues (& How To Solve Them)

Email marketing is an instrument that helps your business stay in touch with your clients, keep them informed, force to visit your website, go to the offline store, and/or participate in an event you're organizing. From our experience, email subscribers […]

Post from: Search Engine People SEO Blog


5 Common Email Marketing Issues (& How To Solve Them)


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Written by Nadiia Gryshchenko, https://www.promodo.com/blog/


The post 5 Common Email Marketing Issues (& How To Solve Them) appeared first on Search Engine People Blog.




The 4-Step Plan to Construct Your Own Keyword-to-URL Map

Posted by Carson-Ward

Knowing how to find and effectively use keywords is probably the most important skill for an effective search marketer. Smart keyword planning and tracking should also heavily inform content planning and strategy. Unfortunately, most keyword research is done on the fly as a new page is created. Rather than helping marketers find new opportunities and plan strategically, keywords are usually found and applied to existing posts and in-flight projects.


If you're an SEO or content creator and don't have a living, regularly referenced keyword map, this post is for you. We won't discuss how to optimize existing pages. There are lots of well-done technical SEO posts around if the optimization process is new to you. But if the concept of a keyword plan is new to you, this post should walk you through the process completely. If you're experienced, you'll probably pick up at least one new trick or application for keywords.


If you'd like to follow along with a keyword research template I've created, feel free to make a copy of this Google doc. You'll see images of it throughout the post that might make more sense if you open it up.


Finding and selecting keywords


Obviously the first step to using keywords is finding what people search for. While thorough and hopefully helpful, there's nothing shocking or ground-breaking in this first section. The real magic is in how you use your keywords.




Step 1: Build the “Big List”


Your goal in this first phase of keyword research is to gather every keyword that your business would want to appear for. You won't achieve that goal, but set your sights high. Think outside the structure of your current site. Look beyond keywords you currently rank for and knowingly compete for.


Moz Keyword Explorer


Moz's Keyword Explorer is a great tool, and I'm not just saying that because of Moz's resident hypnotist. I must have missed its launch somehow, yet it's quickly become my first stop for collecting lots of keywords quickly. The grouping function is great for finding head terms, and the sub-terms will be useful later on in either optimizing terms on existing pages or finding related pages worth creating.




Here I'm using the Moz keyword tool and excluding very low-volume keyword terms that I know I'll be ignoring. Throughout this post I'm using our site, HighSpeedInternet.com, as an example.


Put in your known head terms and export them all using the “Export CSV” function. I'm impressed by the speed of the tool, and often use volume filters to avoid exporting terms I won't actually use. That might sound small, but many tools force large exports prior to any estimation of search volume. Once you're done gathering and exporting, you can remove duplicates and sort using Excel or a (slightly clumsier) Google Sheets script.


SearchMetrics


SearchMetrics is good for those who aren't sure which keywords they want to rank for. We'll need to input competitors' sites to find keywords. For those who don't know who competitors are, there's a handy tool that shows likely candidates under “SEO research > Competitors.”




SimilarWeb (not shown) is also helpful in checking for competitors. If your site is new, simply plug in some of the queries you'd like to rank for and look those sites up. Once you've discovered some competitors, throw them into SearchMetrics and head over to the “Rankings” section under “SEO Research” and click “Long Tail.”




If this were a competitor's site, I'd see a list of keywords they rank for and the potential traffic.


Other tools



  • SEMrush has a tool that can find keywords with search volume by site or related terms. One of the better all-in-one tools for keyword research.

  • UberSuggest spits out tons of related terms. It's no longer a favorite, as many have found suggestions to be irrelevant or low-volume terms.

  • KeywordTool.io is a good complement to a more full-featured tool. It's reliably better than most tools at finding mid-tail terms that others don't find.

  • Google Keyword Planner offers free suggestions. One major downside is that your competitors will probably be using the tool the same way you do, resulting in lots of competition for the more narrow set of terms that Google suggests. Still, it would be fine to use this tool and nothing else if your tools budget is low.


There's an almost unlimited number of keyword tools, but you really only need one or two. The more thorough your Big List process is, the more work you'll save yourself later on. It's usually worth it to spend a day or two gathering lots of keywords for a site you'll be working on regularly.




Step 2: Get keyword volume


Use Excel's handy function or a Google Sheets script to remove duplicate keywords. For most of us the next step is to import/paste sets of keywords into the Google Keyword Planner, export the volume, and repeat. There's a limit to how many keywords Google will allow you to run at one time, so pre-filtering bad keywords might be a good idea. For example, I often pull out competitors' branded terms.


Work-around for “low-volume” accounts (+extra precision)


Google recently continued its creeping war against those who use Google products for free by returning ranges in the keyword planner for low-spending accounts. These ranges (as in the image below) are so broad they're essentially useless for anything but pre-filtering.




To get around this limit, you can just click the nice “Add to plan” button on any one of your terms.




If you're only curious about volume for a few keywords, you can just click the “Add to plan” button for multiple terms. It's easier to paste them in the next step for larger lists. Once you've added at least one keyword, click the “Review plan” button.




Now you're on a new page where you'll need to be careful about avoiding the “Save to account” buttons unless you actually want to start bidding. Click “Add keywords” to paste your terms in, then save it to a new ad group.




Now click the ad group. You'll see a large table that's mostly blank. Fill in a $999 bid and set the range to monthly. I also like to try different match types, but I typically use exact-match.




So why is this cool?



  • Impression count is more accurate, and not rounded like in the regular tool.

  • You can set custom date ranges if you want a more accurate figure for forecasting purposes.

  • You can play with match type again (which is something Google took away from the standard planner interface).

  • It works for free accounts.


At the end of Step 2, you should have a simple two-column list.






Step 3: Filter keywords


Notice I said we should filter keywords - not delete them. You'll generally want to break keywords into three groups:


1.) Priority terms: Keywords you want to rank for immediately. A good priority term has the following attributes:



  • Related to current and near-future business

  • Implies a question you can answer well about a product you sell, OR implies a need you can fulfill

  • High-enough volume to be worth the investment


2.) Secondary terms: We'll want to go after these some day, but not before we have our priority keywords locked in with query-responsive, well-optimized pages. Secondary terms usually have the following traits:



  • Doesn't have buying intent, but has healthy volume and relates to what your site does

  • Implies a question you don't have the expertise to answer

  • Low-volume terms that might convert


3.) Other terms: You might lay out some tertiary keywords (i.e those where you plan to expand the business), but you can generally stop there and label any others as keywords to “ignore for now.”


You'll usually want to note why you are or are not pursuing a term so you don't have to re-evaluate it every time you look for new keywords. Step three's endpoint just adds a few columns:






Using keywords effectively


Now that you've gathered keywords it's time to figure out how to use them. Your ultimate goals are to 1) find new opportunities on existing pages, and 2) find keywords for which you don't have a good landing page so that you can create or suggest a useful new piece of content. Before we can do either, we'll need to map the keywords to pages on your site.




Step 4: Map priority keywords


Just like you needed human judgment to determine priority keywords, you'll need to use good judgment to map them to pages. You can skip the judgment steps and still come out with a final product, but it will ultimately be far less useful. Besides, this is why we have jobs that machines won't be taking over for a while.


Scrape Google


First, scrape Google for your keywords and current ranking. Google frowns on rank tracking and SERP scraping, but consider it fair game for all the content they scrape and save. If you don't want to scrape SERPs you can manually map each page, but it's nice for larger sites to check yes/no rather than thinking through a list of potential pages every time.


There are tons of tools and services for this. AWR is probably the most common choice, as this is a one-time deal. You could also write a simple script with proxies or find a freelancer on one of a dozen sites. Moz Pro's campaigns work up to your keyword limit, but the Moz tool is far better at helping after you've mapped keywords.


Mapping new & existing URLs




Once you have each keyword's page and current rank, you'll want to quickly check that the page matches the query.



  • How does this page help the user? (Don't confuse this with what the user does next.)

  • Would the ideal version of that page do what you'd want if you typed this keyword into Google?

  • Would a page about this keyword or set of keywords only serve the query better?


You don't want to create new pages for every tiny keyword variation, but we do want to make sure the page feels tailored to the user question. You're trying to close the gap between what people want from Google and what your site does, so it shouldn't be surprising if the questions you ask yourself feel UX-heavy.


After asking these questions a few hundred times it'll become second nature. You won't rank at all for some terms, so you'll have to either manually select a page or create a new one. For some pages (especially those 50+), Google will just be plain wrong and you'll have to re-map them.


The hardest choice is often whether an existing page could be optimized to be a better fit, or if a new URL is more appropriate. As a general rule, anything that would augment an existing page's core purpose can be added, but anything that would detract or confuse the core purpose should be placed elsewhere. Don't worry if it's not immediately clear what the core purpose of the page is. Part of the value in this process is refining page purpose with keywords.


If you have a page in the top 5 or 10, it's usually best to assume optimizing the page is a better path than creating a new page. If you have sets of conflicting keywords (meaning optimizing for both confuses the page) ranking on the same URL, you can generally choose the higher-value terms and then link to a new page about the second set.


For example, if we had a page appearing for “internet providers by zip code” and “satellite internet providers,” these would be considered conflicting. Trying to talk about satellite Internet (which is available almost everywhere) and zip code-specific Internet at the same time would be confusing. We'd create a new page for satellite Internet, delete the existing satellite Internet content, and link to the new page from the ranking URL.


Building new pages


If you've identified new pages that have opportunity, well done! Ensure that the amount of effort is worth the reward, and utilize the opportunities in your production process. Keyword research done well comes with a built-in business case. If you can show keyword volume and argue for keyword intent, you only have to make some assumptions on click, call, or purchase rates to put a potential dollar figure on the project.


Once you've mapped keywords to a new page, you should also have scope settled at a high level. Knowing what questions you're trying to answer and what the page should do gives everyone the information they need to contribute and determine the best way to build it.


Optimizing existing pages


Improving existing pages is usually easier and less time-intensive, but don't simply optimize page titles and call it a day. Actually look at the page and determine whether it's a good fit for what you'd want to see if you were the one Googling. Also consider the competition and aim to be better.


There will be a larger list of existing terms ranking below the top spot where optimization and improvement need to be prioritized. Here are a couple examples of prioritization helpers:



  • Keyword opportunity: Find a click-through study, estimate the traffic you're getting in your current position, and estimate how much traffic you'd get from the top spot. Consider both keywords and pages.

  • Competitive opportunity: Combine the opportunity above with competition metrics (e.g. PA/DA in the SERPs).

  • Crawl your pages to get titles and content, break the keyword into its individual words, and see how many of the words appear.


Use these figures as guides, and be smart about competition. It's easy for analytical people to get too deep into a spreadsheet. Make sure you're looking at your website and that of your competition, rather than making decisions on a pet formula alone.






A word to skeptical content strategists/marketers


I understand if you think this looks like a post for SEOs. Content that comes from highly searched keywords tends to be evergreen, but the result of writing keyword-targeting content is rarely something your visitors will rush to share. It's very rarely inspiring, timely, fun, or otherwise sexy. Keep some things in mind, though:



  1. Depending on who you believe, organic traffic on average is 2–4x average referral traffic across the web. Don't sell yourself short with a content strategy that only reaches half of your potential audience.

  2. You don't have to create content the way everyone else has. In fact, please don't! See a bunch of dull articles ranking for the term? Maybe make it an interactive tool. Write something that's not dull. Answer the question better than anyone else has.

  3. You'll drive more sales creating good content for boring searches than you will creating viral posts that get shared and linked to. Combine keyword hunting with shareable content for a truly business-changing organic/inbound strategy.


You don't need an SEO's permission to create useful content for things Google explicitly tells you your potential fans and customers are looking for. Incorporating a keyword strategy into a comprehensive content strategy almost feels like cheating.




Getting started: A spreadsheet template


If all of this sounds a bit overwhelming, I've created a template in Google docs that you can begin using. Just choose “File > Make a copy,” read through the comments, and start entering in your own data once you feel comfortable.


Get your keyword mapping template


The Google doc does a lot of the boring stuff for you, like calculating keyword opportunity, title optimization (if you put in page titles), and organizing your keyword map by page and keyword with opportunity, volume, and more.




When it's time to automate


There are tools for doing much of what this spreadsheet does. The right tool will be worth the money as long as you keep some things in mind before you dive in and start paying:



  1. It's wise to know what you want a tool to do before buying it. Use the keyword mapping template, experiment with what you actually want and use regularly, and then you can start looking for tools to help you map keywords and optimize pages. Avoid tool clutter by using them deliberately.

  2. Most tools will try to map keywords to pages, but none can reliably tell you when or how you should create new content. If you're never actually looking at keywords with human judgment and asking, “Am I answering that query?”, then you're probably over-relying on the tool.


For Moz Pro members, plugging in some keywords and playing around is a great place to start. Play around until you're comfortable with rank tracking and page mapping, then look at some optimization suggestions. It's now even better when combined with the keyword tool.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

A Guide to Contextual Marketing

Content that not only works but also makes users want to share it? It's possible when you understand the basics of contextual marketing. Read the full article at MarketingProfs

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

We Used the Latest Holiday Selling Data to Create These Cyber Monday Hacks

I've always been a little skeptical of Cyber Monday. It always felt a little forced. Black Friday is a media bonanza as well, but Black Friday always seemed more discovered than created.


Cyber Monday on the other hand came off a bit manufactured. I figured that while there were certainly sales to be made from an ecommerce-centered selling holiday, the real money in online sales would be made on Black Friday as buyers become increasingly resistant to the Black Friday hype machine.


So, we pulled the data. We wanted to see how Cyber Monday works and what makes it tick. Inventory tracking is our bread and butter, so we maintain a multi-tenant database comprised of sales data from our ecommerce business owners. That's millions of sales. This gives us an overview of general trends within the industry across marketplaces, platforms, and niches. We extracted an SQL query of all sales data between November 25th and December 2nd minus POS systems, ensuring that our conclusions would be specific to ecommerce.


The goal? Discover what's fact and what's opinion behind the Black Friday vs. Cyber Monday debate and create a seller resource that allows retailers to be more methodical in their Cyber Monday strategy.


And I have to admit that looking at these data reports had me replacing my turkey with a big helping of crow. Cyber Monday is king.


Focus Your Efforts on Cyber Monday


ecommerce-sales-week


The buying public is biting hard at the Cyber Monday lure. While Black Friday does stand tall with over 1.5 times the sales and transactions of the previous day, Cyber Monday towers over the entire week, sticking out like a pimple on prom night. Nearly 2.5x the sales and transactions occurred on Cyber Monday as on Thanksgiving Day. In fact, the Cyber Monday fallout stretching into Tuesday is nearly as good of an e-tail day as Black Friday.


But what does this all mean? How can you apply it in 2016 to increase your sales and maximize on perhaps the most important week of the year for your business?


Here are four actionable tips to get you started. These don't require any expensive software systems or a huge amount of expertise, but they go a long way on capitalizing off the data-proven buying habits of shoppers during the first week of the holiday season. I've also provided some great examples of Cyber Monday sales from throughout the years from deep in my inbox. For extra fun, I only picked examples that personally made me convert. Let's dive in.


Have Your Email Marketing to Inboxes by 6AM


The first thing I do every morning is check my email, and I'm not the only one. Smartphone usage for email spikes in the morning around 6AM according to data compiled by Movable Ink.


email-opens-by-device-time-of-day


That explains why our data found that Cyber Monday begins at 7AM. People are waking up, immediately checking their phones, and making purchases. The sales eclipse the transactions for the next three hours, indicating customers may be more receptive to your email marketing efforts for big-ticket items in the morning.


cyber-monday-hourly


Data found by Marketing Charts drives the point home further. Average email open rates begin their daily upswing at 6AM and peak at 10AM.


open-rates-by-hour-marketing-charts


By the time your potential customers wake up, you need to have you email marketing efforts right in front of them. Why waste time? Feature your biggest ticket items and your best sales right off the bat. This example from Journeys hit my inbox at 2:10AM. It caused me to buy a pair of cream-colored Converse All-Stars. It shows us a couple of great ideas about how to cut through the sleepiness of someone's brain and claim an early morning conversion.


journeys-free-shipping


What I find really interesting here is that Journeys doesn't include a product photo. The email sells the deal rather than clothes. It reads as almost more of an announcement than an advertisement. There are three more replicable techniques for an early morning Cyber Monday email we can find here.



  1. Make the offer provocative and enticing. Words like “free” and “X% off” are sure to wake up your customers.

  2. Shove that offer directly and explicitly at your reader. Big, bold letters are a must.

  3. Dark colors that won't blind your reader are a great idea. An email with a lot of bright colors might hurt their eyes and cause them to put down their phone.


Advertise a Lunch Break Flash Sale on Twitter


Going back to our hourly data, we can see that the most money is being made around lunchtime. 1PM to 3PM is the largest peak you'll see throughout all of Cyber Monday.


Conveniently, Hubspot has found that 12PM to 3PM on weekdays is Twitter's most active period. Launching a 12-hour flash sale on Twitter at 12PM is a great way to get a great deal in front of the most customers at the time when they're statistically most likely to convert. It's a trifecta of data-driven methodology.


Use the hashtags #cybermonday, #flashsale, as well as any other relevant hashtags for your brand. Include an image, especially if you're able to include it as an embedded link. I bought this wonderfully nerdy t-shirt for an English teacher friend of mine last Christmas. I was browsing the #flashsale hashtag on Twitter during my lunch break. The limited time offer and the fact my lunch break was also limited increased my urgency, leaving me less time to waffle and potentially abandon my cart.




Perhaps you're a little wary of putting eggs into your social media basket. You've got that big fancy email list, but perhaps you've relied on it a little too much. Keep in mind that your customers are going to be bombarded all day with sale after sale in their inbox. You don't want to blend into the background noise. Moving some of your marketing efforts over to social media gives you an opportunity to attract new customers on an open platform, Type A buyers who are looking for Cyber Monday sales. With that in mind, apply these three tips.



  1. Attach the flash sale to a lower selling item, or one in which you have excess inventory. Don't risk it on a high selling item, especially if this is your first flash sale.

  2. Use Twitter's audience management tools to create a targeted Twitter ad to promote your flash sale.

  3. The shorter the time for your flash sale, the more urgency you create for the buyer. On the other hand, they have less time to see the sale. It's a delicate balance.


Send Out an End-Of-Day Marketing Email


After the workday ends, customers begin to spend less money. The number of overall transactions spikes at 7PM as a result of people getting off work who perhaps are in jobs where they're not able to online shop on their lunch break. Similar spikes occur at 10PM and 11PM as the slowpokes among us suddenly remember its Cyber Monday, or finally have time to sit down and shop. That's why you should send out one more marketing email at the end of the workday to capitalize on this group of buyers.


“But what about bombarding my customers? Won't they get annoyed if I email them twice in one day?”


On Cyber Monday, they don't. MailChimp notes that the overload of email offers decreases open rates across the industry on Cyber Monday, but don't significantly increase unsubscribe rates. They go on to note that the best way to get noticed is to send more emails than normal. This is not the time to be quiet and hope you'll get noticed. There's too much money on the line to be timid.


campaign-unsubscribe-rates
(Image Source)


This sleek AT&T Cyber Monday sale landed in my inbox at 4:15PM. We were desperately trying to introduce some technology into my dad's life at the time, so this seemed like the perfect present. Notice how they lead with the FREE tablet. I also really like the messaging that this is where the holiday cheer is “starts,” as it implies a season's worth of deals and shopping is to come.


att-holiday-email-advertisement


Another key takeaway here is bundling your items. Since people seem to spend less in the evening, but the total transactions increase, it's important that you can get as much as you can out of each transaction. Bundling items together means you can charge more for each transaction.



AT&T is technically doing two different bundles here, one much subtler than the other. Not only are they bundling the tablet and the phone, but they're also offering a $200 credit. What could you use that $200 credit on? Maybe some of those wearables they advertise below. AT&T is not only bundling their products, but also bundling the sale itself. A three step series of purchases that starts with the headline FREE is great marketing from this mobile giant.


Getting one last email out completes a nice full days' worth of Cyber Monday digital marketing. Let's make sure we've got our Cyber Monday marketing timed out to perfection.


kissmetrics-watch


You've taken advantage of the early birds, the night owls, and the lunch… larks? Being an active seller throughout the day ensures that you're getting the most of out the holiday.


Allow Customers to “Earn” Free Shipping Rather Than Giving It Away to All


I'm a big believer in free shipping. What it does for ecommerce conversions is undeniable at this point. It's worth the cost. According to Compete.com, over 93% of customers cited it as a factor that would make them more likely to buy an item. The same study found that 38% of customers found the shipping cost to be the least satisfactory part of their shopping experience.


free-shipping-increase-sales
(Image Source)


Our own research, however, appears to suggest perhaps buyers aren't as sensitive to shipping costs as they say they are. We found that offering free shipping does not move the needle on your sales throughout the week of Cyber Monday.


percentage-free-shipping


I've got two theories as to why this is. The first is that Cyber Monday may be attracting some non-traditional online buyers. Those of us who shop online often throughout the year know that if one vendor isn't offering free shipping, it's probably worth the time to find a similar item with a vendor willing to ship for free. Cyber Monday shoppers may not be familiar with this, so it doesn't become a major factor in whether or not they convert.


My second theory is that the event of Cyber Monday is outweighing the normal aversion to paying for shipping. People want to feel as if they are a part of something. It could make them less prudent than normal and more prone to paying for shipping, especially if they perceive the deal as being worth it.


Either way, we can make a few data-driven decisions based on this info. We could of course just take away free shipping altogether for the week of Cyber Monday. Customers are willing to pay for it, so we might as well just take their money, right? That feels a little wrong though, doesn't it? After all, the benefits of free shipping outweigh the negatives. It's good for the customers and the sellers.


With that in mind, offer customers a chance to “earn” free shipping. Check out what WWE Shop sent me on a Cyber Monday a few years back.


wwe-shop-cyber-monday-sale


WWE Shop set the free shipping limit to $15. Doing something similar with your business will allow you to increase the value of each transaction. Buyers may spend more to get the free shipping, and transactions that remain below $15 will be less expensive for you to process.


Consider other ways you can allow your customers to earn free shipping, such as in exchange for filling out a customer experience survey, registering on your site, or bundling the item with a less popular item.


Conclusion


Let me sum up all these graphs and examples for you as simply as possible.



  • Cyber Monday is a phenomenon, not a flash in the pan.

  • Be methodical about your digital marketing to capitalize on sales spikes throughout the day.

  • Allow customers to earn free shipping rather than giving it away to everyone.


I think data is beautiful, especially data that makes us money. By going about your selling in a data-driven manner, you can take full advantage of Cyber Monday. We'll most likely see sales spike on this ecommerce holiday. But wasted motion is wasted money. Don't fumble around in the dark and hope you'll stumble on profit. Use these hacks instead, experiment to see which works best for you, and make Cyber Monday your best sales day of the year.


About the Author: Dion Beary writes about ecommerce for ecomdash, a software company that automates inventory management for small businesses selling online. His passions are Twitter, casseroles, and 00's rap.




Content Marketing: 10 Daily Habits to Create More Powerful Content

more-powerful-content


Marketing is a game of inches. We tweak a headline to get fifty more clicks. Add visual interest for ten more subscriptions. Change the button on the landing page to get five more conversions. All the little gains add up over time to generate real results.


Writing more effective copy is a game of inches, too. You don't write Twilight one week and Moby Dick the next. Instead, every day you can work to be a little bit better than the day before.


The tricky part is if you're not steadily improving your writing, you're actively moving backward. There's no such thing as maintaining the status quo-it's self-improvement or bust.


The following ten daily habits can help you make steady incremental improvement. Try as many as you can for 28 days, and be amazed at how those daily inches add up.


10 Daily Habits to Create More Powerful Content


#1: Read at Least One Marketing Article


There is a massive amount of informative marketing content out there, with more coming every day. These articles can help inform and improve your marketing, but that's not the only reason to read them.


How It Helps: Marketing articles are really content marketing targeted at marketers. And it's hard to market to marketers. We already know the ways copy can be persuasive. We soak in it. So effective marketing posts with thousands of shares are guaranteed to have top-notch writing.


 


#2: Read an Article about Literally Anything Else


As in any industry, it's easy to get stuck in the marketing “bubble.” You read marketing content. You write it, too. Over time, it gets hard to write anything that doesn't sound like it was written by marketers, for marketers. If marketers aren't your target audience, that's a bad situation.


How It Helps: Reading a good variety of content gives you different voices to try on for your own content. See how Harvard Business Review covers a story versus Mashable versus Buzzfeed. Browse Medium for hundreds of unique voices you can borrow tricks from. All this input is invaluable in keeping your writing flexible, and building your own voice.


 


#3: See What Your Audience Is Sharing


One way to make sure your content is worthy of being shared is to borrow tips from content already resonating with your audience. Check out BuzzSumo's trending content for your topic. See what the top SlideShare presentations are in your industry. Even a search for the most-watched videos on YouTube could be informative.


How It Helps: You can discover what topics are most valuable to your audience and see how others have addressed them in an effective fashion. You might even get ideas for how to write a better version for your audience.


 


#4: Do a Free-Writing Exercise


The hardest part of any writer's day is the beginning. The blank page is our worst enemy, sapping motivation, inviting self-doubt, and generally keeping things from getting done. A free-writing exercise eases your brain into content creation mode, while keeping the stakes low. Try these random prompts to get started.


How It Helps: Free writing gets you in productive mode faster, but it also allows you time to let your creativity flow and find new pathways for your thoughts to flow. That refreshed creativity will reveal itself in everything you write.


 


#5: Revisit Old Content


If I have a personal writer's hell, it's full of the short stories I wrote when I was 16. Or 18. Or 28. Heck, the stuff I wrote six months ago is embarrassing. It can be downright painful to look at your old content. But if you have the courage to go back and revise it, old content can help you improve.


How It Helps: First, it shows you that you're making real progress. If an old blog post makes you cringe, it's because you're so much better now. Second, the act of rewriting it up to your current standards is fantastic for reinforcing good habits. And hey, you might end up with a piece you can repurpose for a new audience, too.


 


#6: Watch a Viral Video


It's worth taking 2-3 minutes out of your day for the .gifs or Vines (RIP) or YouTube videos that everyone can't stop talking about. These new cultural touchstones are fascinating. It's a way to see what captures the attention of the widest swath of humanity at a time. And it keeps you from looking out-of-touch on Facebook.


How It Helps: Viral content got that way for a reason. Something about it compelled people to link to it. So watching a viral video or two is a window into the zeitgeist, and can contain swipeable ideas to make your content more compelling.


 


#7: Change Part of Your Routine


We've all heard about famous writers' routines. Nabokov wrote on index cards. Charlotte Bronte wrote standing up. Ernest Hemingway wrote in a pair of pink penguin pajamas. There's this idea that you need to find the magical combination of quirks that will produce great writing. Odds are your writing routine is nearly set in stone.


How It Helps: Hemingway wasn't a great writer because he wore pink penguin pajamas. The pajamas were within him the whole time. Truth is, if you're stuck in one particular routine, it can make your content start to come out routine as well.


Change it up: Stand up if you usually sit, or vice versa. Write before your first cup of coffee. Take your laptop to a different part of the office. Whatever it takes to shake you out of the status quo a bit.


 


#8: Drink More Water


If you work in an office building you are likely living in a state of perpetual dehydration. The air exchanges are drying your skin and throat to a papery crisp. Get a refillable water bottle and keep it on your desk at all times.


How It Helps: A lot of the headaches, fatigue, and fuzzy-headed feelings you get throughout a day can be caused by dehydration. Ditto the cravings for endless snacks even though you just had lunch (I can't be the only one). Drink water to stay sharp, be better focused, and improve your overall health.


 


#9: Write the Seth Godin version


Seth Godin has the gift of getting to the essence of a topic in 250 words or less. His micro-blogs are as insanely popular as they are concise. If you're looking to cut the fat from your writing, Seth's is a great place to start. Take the topic you're writing on and try to write the Seth Godin version. You can flesh it out after, but start with his get-to-the-point mentality.


How It Helps: We can't all get away with publishing 250-word blog posts. Most of my clients wouldn't stand for it. But writing the bare-bones version can help create better-structured, easier-to-read, more compelling content.


 


#10: Give Yourself Five Mindful Minutes


One of the most powerful things you can do for your marketing mind in a day is nothing. No screens. No phone calls. No email. Nothing to distract you from what you're doing-which, again, is nothing. Unhook your brain from as many entanglements as you can, close your eyes, and let your mind wander. You may have to work your way up to five minutes, though. It's amazing how long that seems in the age of smartphones.


How It Helps: The creativity that drives engaging copy comes in the quiet moments when you let your brain do its own thing. Most of us are adept at filling every waking minute, precisely so we don't have those idle moments. Your brain is likely starved for a nothing break. Let it bump out of its familiar ruts and you'll be surprised where it takes you.


 


Turn Inches into Yards


Becoming a better marketer is a lifelong journey, not a destination. Use these tips to continue your content creation development. Just think: In a year, you might read the post you just wrote today and be amazed at how far you've come.


Are you passionate about creating great content in an educational, supportive and fun environment? TopRank Marketing is hiring.




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