Archive for August, 2010

Cost Effective TV Advertising

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

You can pay thousands of dollars for a locally aired, 30-second TV commercial, and reach a regional audience of thousands.

Unfortunately, most of this audience is so deeply focused on its favorite programming that when the commercial break (and your 30-second ad) comes on, they are going to dash to the bathroom for a badly needed break, or to the kitchen for a snack.

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Tips for Cost Effective TV Commercials

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

A lot of small businesses discount Television Commercials as they often think it is a form of advertising that is simply out of their advertising budget reach. This couldn’t be a bigger mistruth. Many small businesses can cost effectively use targeted TV Commercials, either from a national, regional or local focus. The average U.S. Household watches an average of 8 hours TV per day, with the average viewer watching 4 hours per day. You are simply missing a huge opportunity if you aren’t using TV Commercials in your advertising and marketing campaigns.

Tips for Producing and Placing Television Commercials

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“Blogs are built for SEO,” Rebecca Lieb

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

“Blogs are long form, mature.  So why should we still use them in our organic search strategy or SEO?”

Tweets, YouTube, Facebook, and LindedIn.  They seem so wonderfully short form and new.  But, experience and research both prove out that blogs, as SEO expert Rebecca Lieb puts it, “are built for SEO …Their structure and architecture offer a baked-in SEO platform” [http://www.amazon.com/Truth-About-Search-Engine-Optimization/dp/0789738317].

Lieb is on the money.  That’s because text, which dominates blogs, exerts a pull force on search engines.  Great graphics might attract readers but not search engines which favor words.  There’s more.

Done right, blogs attract inbound links and allow for plenty of outbound ones.  Search engine algorithms are programmed to follow links [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Search_engine_optimization]. See, linking flags, in the spirit of the wisdom of crowds fashion, what’s popular.  In addition, blogs can be updated often, which excites search engines the way blood does sharks.

A 2010 survey by Toprankblog.com of communications/marketing leaders in corporations and outside in agencies, and consulting firms found that 95% use blogs as part of the SEO strategy.  Of those, almost 88% increased measurable SEO objectives through blogging.  Here are details of that study [http://www.toprankblog.com/2010/01/survey-seo-blogging/].

But not all blogs are created equal.  Here are the best practices to make blogs get attention from search engines and readers as well as influentials online and offline:

  • Keywords. These are the words which search engines and readers look for.  With SEO, words must have a topical tie-in [such as the mid-term elections] but relate to the subject matter [following them on Plasma TV] smoothly. For readers, they must be aligned with their thinking.  For example, customers for fish oil have in mind curing their depression, not improving their nutrition. Front-load the words in the subject head and first few sentences of text.  Review competitors’s sites for their keywords. This is must-have intelligence to achieve higher rankings on search engines.
  • Unique Voice. Blogs as a medium are personal.  That means they must have a strong voice. That becomes the blog’s brand identity. Test out a number of tones before going primetime.
  • Unique Content. Blogs should provide information, perspective and/or entertainment not easily available elsewhere.  That’s the value the site creates.  Get lazy or stale and SEO results will plummet, immediately.
  • Links to influential sites, topical material. What’s linked to provides a form of added value that search engines and readers notice.  It also gets the blog on the radar of those linked to.

  • Frequent postings. Search engines note this and return often to check out what’s new.  Continual updates also provide incentives for readers to bookmark your site for easy access throughout the day.
  • Course Correction. Decrease in the measurements important to blog authors is a red flag to analyze every aspect of daily operations, from topics to keywords to tone to content.  Experiment with changing what might not be effective any longer.  Failing fast is the new rite of passage in business [http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/12/fail_accept_defeat/]

Everything is in flux, including digital best practices.  Stay up-to-date by keying in “SEO blogging tactics” on the web.

Three Reasons Why Infomercials Don’t Work

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

Infomercials are used to market a huge variety of products, but of course, not every infomercial is successful.  For every Sweating to the Oldies DVD, Set It and Forget It rotisserie, and Thighmaster phenomenon, there are thousands of infomercials that provide zero ROI for hopeful business owners.  The truth is that up to 50% of interested organizations shouldn’t do an infomercial at all, but many of those companies learn that the hard way.

Wouldn’t you love to know ahead of time if your infomercial was going to be a dud in terms of revenue generation – that your phone wouldn’t ring, no one would visit your website, and all the extra packing supplies you purchased in anticipation of a stampede of sales would go to waste?  Well, by taking a hard look at your business and at the infomercial production company, you can predict whether your infomercial will succeed or fail.  Here are three reasons you should run for the hills instead of ramping it up.

1. No one wants your product. This is a tough one, but it should be the first thing you examine.  Of the three reasons not to do an infomercial, this is the only one outside the purview of the infomercial production company, so naturally you want to look at it first.  Even if the production company is honest with you about this fact, they’ll charge you a consultation fee to tell you, and it will be hard to accept if you don’t already suspect the truth.  If you’ve tried a variety of other advertising campaigns that haven’t worked, focus groups don’t indicate an interest in your product, or you’ve had other indications that sales for the product will always be weak, an infomercial is unlikely to correct the problem.  On the other hand, if you truly believe in your product and are sure that you just haven’t found the right marketing niche for it, a consultation with someone in the industry (about $200) would be worthwhile.  Look for a company with some longevity; people who want your business over the long term won’t encourage you to throw your money away.

2. No one is watching the infomercial. This is the reason microcosmic testing of your markets and timeslots is so important.  Rolling out a national or even regional paid programming campaign is an expensive proposition if you haven’t tested.  The media buyer at the infomercial company should have significant hard data on how and why particular markets and timeslots are being selected for your product.  That data should be supported by new data showing increased phone calls and website traffic when you test.  Testing generally lasts for about four months and costs $20K-$40K.  Once you roll out the program, investigate obtaining financing or paying a per-inquiry charge to fund airing it so you can make sure it’s placed in the best markets and timeslots for your product.

3. The program itself doesn’t work. Even if people are watching your infomercial, it doesn’t work if they don’t obey the call to action and pick up the phone or go to your website and buy your product.  Paid programming works for its money because viewers support it with their purchases.  Infomercials use tried-and-true direct marketing practices, so many companies are able to save money on production and use it to get the best airtimes.  But business owners sometimes get caught up in making a “quality” program, when the truth is that subtlety and direct sales don’t go together.  Don’t discount the parts of the infomercial that seem “cheesy;” they’re there because they work.  A one-stop shop with years of experience in the industry can help you put together a great program in a short time.

Paid programming may be the perfect way to direct-market your product, but due diligence is key.  Taking an objective look at your product and making the most of your consultation with the infomercial production company will help you determine whether or not paid programming will pay off for you.