Website vs. Facebook Pages

We get this question a lot… why should I have a Facebook page when I have a website? Do I really need them both? Yes, yes you do.

Facebook gives you an extra reach you don’t get with your website. That is one of the most general but true elements of why you would want to have a Facebook page. People that connect with you on your Facebook pages have a reach to others that you just don’t. If you want to have that kind of reach, you need to be where all those people are.

Creating your Facebook page is easier than you think. One of the things Facebook does well, that has allowed them to have the reach that they do, is they make a good majority of the things you want to do on there easy, i.e. setting up your facebook page. As you can see from the page below, they take you step-by-step on how to set up your page, even how to start advertising to reach more people who like you.

Now that you have your page set up, invite and share your page with those in your personal profile. Make sure you let everyone know through your regular channels too, like your monthly newsletter or in your email signature. Go really crazy and launch an advertising campaign!

Need help on what to put on your Facebook page? Read this guide from Clay on What’s on Your Facebook Page or check out our social media strategy services.

Three blogs to put on your radar

I have been telling clients and contacts these last few weeks about three main blogs that I ready daily. To my surprise, none of the people have known about these blogs… but they should! This made me believe that maybe our readers aren’t aware either, so if you’re in to reading good marketing/technology/blogging blogs to help you with your own marketing, put these three at the the top of your read list.

  1. Problogger – This blog is for beginning bloggers, advid bloggers, money-making bloggers… you get the picture? If you’re looking to read up on how to improve your blog, this is IT! So check out the blog, get yourself subscribed and start working on your blog posts. If you’re really committed to improving your blog, consider his guide 31 Days to Build a Better Blog. I have looked through it and it has quality material.
  2. Mashable – This blog has a slant toward technology and social media, but it’s still a groundswell of amazing information. How-to guides, the latest news on the iPad, what Google is up to and what videos are trending on the Internet are just some of the topics you’ll find.
  3. Seth Godin’s blog – This is just another daily read on my list. He keeps his posts short and to the point, which makes it easy to keep up with yet adds a bit of zing to your marketing day. Typically inspiring, always informative.

Raquel’s a Contributor on Inside Indiana Business

I made my debut for Inside Indiana Business yesterday, writing about how your website should be a lead generating machine. You can check out the article on their site. What topic would you like to see me cover next? Please post in our comment section. We’re always looking for content ideas that you would like to know more about.

8 Slick Eventbrite Features

Raquel wrote a post earlier this week covering some of the reasons you might want to look at Eventbrite when you’re planning your next event. She left the door wide open for me to write a post about some of the unique features that make Eventbrite so useful when you are selling tickets and managing communication with your event attendees. So here we go.

  1. Discount codes. Special offers sell. When you want to fill a room, it’s incredibly helpful to be able to tell someone that you are giving them a unique code they can enter for a discount. It also gives influencers a reason to promote your event if they can offer their audience a unique discount. If all that wasn’t enough, it sends a message that you are big enough to be taken seriously.
  2. Different ticket types. You can easily create different types of tickets at different price points. If you have an event with balcony and orchestra seating, create different prices. You can offer an early bird discount by creating a less expensive ticket that is only available during a certain date range.
  3. Recurring events. If you have an event that happens each week or month, you don’t have to keep creating it over and over again. Create the event once, set the schedule (or even custom dates), and people can buy tickets for each date.
  4. Built-in waitlist. Eventbrite can manage your waitlist automatically for you. When your event is sold out, people who want to come get put on the waitlist instead. As people cancel (or you move to a bigger room) you can release tickets.
  5. Affiliate program. Although we’ve never used it, what I’ve seen of the affiliate program (where someone gets a cut for promoting your event through a unique link created for them) looks simple to use.
  6. Custom order confirmation. You can send someone an email automatically when they register. Edit the text that shows up on their confirmation page, or just send them to a custom thank you page on your website.
  7. Less paperwork at the event. Eventbrite also makes your job a little easier in those last rushed hours before the event. Since they already have all the attendee information stored, you can print out a check-in list and name badges.
  8. Description formatting. You also have a lot of flexibility in the description area. The same fomatting and image placement you find in most content management systems is built into Eventbrite. We are using Eventbrite for our next event, ReTHINKING Your Pipeline. Compare our landing page with the description in our Eventbrite registration page.

Beyond just making these features available, the Eventbrite interface makes it surprisingly easy to manage. The learning curve to find everything is relatively small – which is perhaps the slickest feature of all.

Sharing my love for Eventbrite

We use Eventbrite to help us look slick on our events, because that’s what this nice bit of software does!

Clay can share all the easy, wonderful programming things Eventbrite does (Ed: Clay’s take on Eventbrite here.), so I’ll stick with the marketing reasons I like…

  1. Look professional. It makes you look like you are running a professional event. You know what I mean. Often you want to have a workshop or hold a free session to help you prospect, but you just don’t have the skills or know-how to make your own website. This is where you’ll love Eventbrite because it will easily help you look organized, professional and help your attendees feel like they are headed toward a great session.
  2. Payment Processing. If you decide to charge a fee for this service, they doesn’t kill you with fees. You can easily hook it in to your pay pal account and  keep everything nice.
  3. Market your event. See all the social media icons up at the top of this event page below? Your attendee (or even you) can just easily click one of those and it connects to your profile, imports your contacts or posts on your profile exactly what you want to say about your event. It’s so easy! You can even set up your event to tweet once someone has decided to attend, or, let all attendees see who else is coming. It’s very social.
  4. Now for Non Profits. Gather for Good:  Eventbrite for Causes launched earlier this year. It helps non profits do all this stuff really well too.

Give Eventbrite a try or tell us why you like it, or don’t, in our comments section. Join us at our next event:  ReTHINK YOUR PIPELINE The marriage of marketing + sales.

A big picture marketing message for Facebook

I was asked to present on Facebook to the F. C. Tucker Company this morning. They were a great, energetic group! While this presentation was made specifically for their needs and time, I think it has some relevant information so I’m sharing it.

In real estate, you know there is that saying:  Location, location, location. In this presentation, you need to keep in mind the three “R”s…

  1. Be Real
  2. Be Regular (I typically use the word consistent, but as you know that word doesn’t start with an “R”!)
  3. Be Relevant

In your Facebook fan page marketing, actually any marketing, being real, being regular and being relevant is key. The presentation goes ahead and shares ideas that could help you be real, regular and relevant.

If you would like a specific presentation for your organization or business, just ask us. We would be glad to help. Browse our list of services and see if we fit your needs.

Website Influence Grows – Up to 83%

When people ask me what they can do for their marketing, I always start with the website.

  • Do you have one?
  • Is it good?
  • How do you know it’s good?
  • What are you measuring?
  • Are you blogging?
  • How are you consistently working to improve your site?
  • What new tactics are you adding to bring in traffic?

Your website is one part of your marketing mix, but it’s a big, big part.

One of our clients, Maddox Industrial Contractors, came to us last fall for marketing help. Their website was, in one word, atrocious. They hadn’t shared any love with their website, or, marketing in general. Lost images, broken links, poor representation of their brand and lacking content spelled disaster. After going through the market snapshot service we provide, they decided that website needed immediate attention… and it’s paid off to the tune of consistent sales leads. New business is knocking… and they have used the new Maddox website to help them determine if they want to talk.

In real life, it’s working for Maddox. In statistical life, 83% of people are saying a company’s website influence their buying decision. This news released by HubSpot says:

The survey was conducted by RainToday.com and included more than 200 buyers responsible for more than $1.7 billion in professional services purchased, such as accounting and financial services; architecture, engineering, and construction services; human resources consulting; IT consulting and services; legal services; management consulting; marketing, advertising, and public relations; and training services. 

According to the survey, this is a significant increase compared to 2005, when 69% of buyers assigned websites at least “some influence” over this decision. Furthermore, the number of people who say websites have “a great deal of influence” rose to 28% compared with 16% in 2005.

Take a look at your website with your prospect’s eyes. What do they see? Are they seeing too much of your face and not enough about the value you bring? Are they finding remarkable content? If you’re not sure what they are finding, ask us. This is a perfect use of our small dose, big consulting service. We’ll tell you straight up… challenges and solutions.

Integrating social media in to your marketing

I had the pleasure of speaking to the Ft. Wayne Social Media Breakfast group yesterday morning. They were a sharp group with almost everyone in the room using, activly, social media. I love it! We talked about how social media is just part of the mix, that the basics of marketing apply and social media is like the little boost that helps communicate your message and/or assists with gaining ground on your goals. Here is the slide deck I promised to share. Let me know if you have any comments or questions.

Can You Digg It?

Earlier this week Raquel blogged about an extremely useful graphic that explains where you can get the most bang for your buck with social media. For the most part, there are no real surprises here. I already frequent the social media platforms that this graphic describes as particularly useful from a marketing perspective. Well, that’s not entirely true. There was one site that comes off smelling like a rose, and I spend almost no time there: Digg.

Digg has always been kind of a mystery to me. Sure the concept is simple enough. Everybody can give any page on the Internet a thumbs up. The pages that get a lot of thumbs up (referred to as being “dug”) are shown on the Digg home page. Those lucky pages get a massive surge of web traffic for a few days, crashing their previously obscure websites and driving their web hosting providers nuts.

Some very small percentage of the visitors from Digg stick around after the traffic spike, but for the most part they were just one-time visitors. I guess there’s a certain appeal to doing something like that, but I never viewed it as something to build a marketing strategy around. The social media graphic mentioned above, though, made me start to wonder.

Then I saw an article in Mashable talking about the new changes that Digg CEO Jay Adelson recently announced. Now there are a lot of changes discussed here. Integrating with Facebook and Twitter accounts is big. I think creating the means for a website owner to publish Digg comments right on their page sounds fascinating. But there was another change that really caught my eye.

It sounds like Digg is gravitating toward creating more niche communities of Digg users. Digg has some very broad categories, but nothing that could reasonably be described as niche. I love playing World of Warcraft. I don’t play other online role-playing games. I don’t even play many other computer games at all. I don’t own a traditional video game console. As I’m writing this the top dug page under the Gaming category is about Battlefield: Bad Company 2. I couldn’t care less. If I drill down to Gaming > PC Games the top site is another (different) page about Battlefield: Bad Company 2. I’m not even a little engaged in what’s going on here.

Now imagine that there was a category on Digg that was dedicated to World of Warcraft. Well, I would definitely be interested in the #1 page there. I’d also be interested in the second and third pages. In fact I could probably easily lose an hour checking out all the World of Warcraft pages that had been dug.

As a marketer this is exciting. Digg is embracing the long tail. I’ll be honest. I don’t know how to market a product or service to everyone on the Internet. That’s just too big of a group for me to get my arms around. What I can get a good, solid handle on is marketing to targeted groups of people with some similar interests.

And it sounds like that’s exactly what Digg is going to turn into over the next few months.

New work coming your way soon…

I’m excited to say Clay has been at work again. This time, his brilliance is taking shape in a new portfolio page. We’re adding in work you have yet to see! Even better, we talk about the marketing results each has had on our client’s business. We’re looking forward to sharing this new feature with you. Here’s a sneak peek!