Does Search Engine Marketing Work? Duh

So let’s say you are looking for a new pair of Common Projects Achilles because your old ones are turning into the definitions of “beater’s” (which I personally think adds a lot of character and tends to look cooler than brand-new shoes). You pull up your browser using Firefox because Internet Explorer is a joke, and you type into your browser Google.com. Google pops up and you type into the search bar “Common Projects Achillies Low Men’s Shoes”. BOOM after 0.41 seconds, 81,900 results pop up. Then you notice that the first two links have this icon next to the title that reads “ad”. Like what is that fam? Is that a real link? Is it spam? Am I going to get hacked by an anti-virus system which is actually a virus system posing as Norton anti-virus? Don’t worry fam, I got the answers to all of these questions.

SponsoredCommonProjects

This is what scholarly people call paid search AKA PPC AKA search engine marketing. I felt like a rapper when I typed that out. You know how a lot of rapper’s say things like, “Yo it’s A$AP Rocky aka that pretty flacko aka that PMF aka Lord Pretty Flacko Jodye The II” (Quoting the famous A$AP Rocky). Anyways, search engine marketing is an awesome service for companies looking to build awareness around their products or services. Before we talk about Google AdWords more in depth, I want to discuss some key building blocks that I have personally learned about from a nifty eBinder (which I believe is a pretty good term considering its over 350 pages long) created by Google.

  1. Keywords: You determine what keywords trigger your ad to appear. These would be words or phrases like my example of “Common Projects Low Achilles Men’s Shoes”, your ad would pop up.
  2. Placements: When you create an ad or campaign you have the choice of where you would like you ad to be placed. This is critical because you wouldn’t ideally want to have your ad on the side of the NYTimes.com if you are selling a luxurious pair of shoes. You can also allow Google to choose where they believe the ad should be posted based on the keywords that are used.
  3. Ad Ranks: Now let’s say that you are Tres Bien (High-end fashion company) and your competitor Mr. Porter (Another high-end fashion company) is selling the exact same shoes. Now let’s say that you both want your ad to pop up when someone types in “Common Projects Low Achilles Low Men’s Shoes”. This is where Ad Ranks comes into play. Ad Rank is a combination of your bid (how much you are willing to pay) as well as your Quality Score (measurement of the quality of your ads, keywords, and website).

Above I mentioned Bid’s and Quality Score, which I want to discuss a little more. When you do a keyword-targeted ad on Google and it’s search partners, your bid would be your maximum cost-per-click bid (this would be the maximum amount of money you are wiling to pay every time someone clicks on your ad). The Quality Score is a mixture of your keyword relevance, the quality of your landing page, your ad’s click-through rate (CTR), adjusted for its position on the page, and a few other factors. This is the present, and the future of marketing. As mentioned in my blog post about search engine optimization. A tremendous amount of people use search engine’s on a daily basis. In fact, Google actually has a counter and when I checked it at 9PM, they had well over 3 million searches just in that day alone. This is nuts!!! Think about how many potential customers you can get strictly off of search engine marketing. After using search engine marketing you will have way too much revenue, and your profit margins will be twice your age. Before you know it you will be throwing money in the air because you forgot your sunscreen, and you need shade. ObamaCreatingShadeHubspot also created an eBook titled, The Beginner’s Guide to Paid Search. This eBook goes more into depth on the benefits of paid search and how you can truly use it to your advantage. One thing that they discussed was the difference between paid search and organic search. These are important concepts to know, especially since you are considering dabbling in paid search.

  • Organic search: these type of search queries are based on unpaid, natural rankings determined by search engine algorithms, and can be optimized with various SEO practices.
  • Paid search: well this would be paid search, of course. When you pay that fee, it allows your site or ad to pop up when someone types in a phrase that correlates with the phrase that you “bid” on.

Hubspot also mentions that 70% of people press on the organic links, and the remaining 30% of people press the paid links. So you can’t expect insane ROI right off the bat. Think about it though, you are exposing yourself (wow, there man) to people that would have potentially never thought of your website. They might not press the link right at that moment, but next time they see your site, it will trigger curiosity in their brain. Before reading this blog post you probably thought that getting to the top of Google or any other blog post was impossible. Well now you know the impossible is actually possible. Thanks to search engine marketing. THINK AGAIN SEAN BEAN!!! Search Engine Marketing as stated before, is the present, and the future of marketing. Whether you are a small scale business that is trying to build awareness, or an enterprise-level business that is trying to build market share. Search engine marketing is the key to the door that leads to success. Until next time fellow smarketer… //

Does Search Engine Marketing Work? Duh

How to Create an Effective Landing Page

I don’t know about you, but I sure do love a beautiful landing page. I instantly bookmark or screen-shot that page for future viewing and inspiration on how to improve my own landing pages. A landing page can be seen almost as a first interview. When you show up to an interview, you are wearing your nicest professional attire, probably just got a haircut (or put some extra time into making it look perfect), shaved your face, maybe even splashed a little bit of cologne or perfume on. You are most likely wearing what the people in that building are wearing (sometimes even a little nicer). By doing all of this, you are showing them that you belong there, that you deserve to work there. You can think of a landing page in the same way. Except the landing page is the person interviewing for the job, and the visitor is the person hiring. When that visitor shows up to your site, they want to feel like they can relate to it, feel like they can connect and bond with it. They want to feel engulfed in an experience that is different from every other site. In the end they want to hire you, or in e-commerce language, purchase your products or services.

Suprised

Before I explain how to create an effective landing page, I want you to know the difference between a landing page and a home page. The people who are viewing your home page are most likely people who have already known about your website, they might have Bing/ Google searched you, or were refereed to by a friend. The people who are viewing your landing page, don’t know you. They found something online that linked you back to your page. According to Hubspot, the believe the perfect definition is: a website page specifically designed to convert visitors into leads. This person needs to be convinced that your product or service is beneficial to them. Now that we have that cleared up… let’s learn about creating an effective landing page.

So how do you create an effective landing page? Well, according to Mashable, they have generated some good ideas on how to do this.

  1. Make it clean, and simple-to-use
  2. Offer a clear call to action and robust incentives
  3. Design attractive, click-ready creative

According to Renee Warren, co-founder of Onboardly, stated that, “If you do something as simple as including a demo video on the landing page of your website, it can increase conversions by 10-20%.” For instance, Stussy had the below video on their home page of their website quite some time ago and would be great on a landing page if they were ever trying to increase their leads or even get potential buyers email addresses. This video was created for the collaboration between Bape x Stussy and incorporates a sense of eeriness and mystery while the hard-hitting deep bass instrumental from A$AP Ferg is playing in the background. When people view this video they feel like they will essentially become a bad-ass when they are wearing this clothing. They will be the type of person who rides dirt bikes and quads around the city and feel above the law. This video really spoke to the target audience that they were aiming at and the collection was a HUGE hit. This video gave the visitor of the home page an extra incentive to purchase the clothing (or possibly not). If they were able to incorporate this into a landing page, I believe that it would really speak to their target audience and generate a lot of leads.

It is also extremely important to know your target audience, and what they would like to see. This video might not do so well for a Dove commercial promoting its newest line of soap that has a small percentage of lotion in it. Figure out your audience, and then create a landing page that they will love.

CopyBlogger created a nifty 49-page eBook that talks about landing pages. Everything from the do’s and don’ts, to tips and tricks on how to increase conversion success. I decided that I would be a nice guy, and point out some of important things that CopyBlogger mentioned, and save you some time. You’re welcome.

5 landing page mistakes that crush conversion rates

  1. Creating a headline that sucks: The headline is a HUGE part of the landing page. It is your chance to really capture your target audience. A great headline will mask the mistakes that you made down the page (if there are any, of course).
  2. Using your regular site design: When you really want to boost your traffic and conversion rates, you want to create a landing page that draws in the eyes, and doesn’t cause your prospective buyer to become distracted by all the other distractions. Lose the clutter.
  3. Asking for more than one thing: When people are given lots of choices they become uncertain on what they actually want. Psychologists have done studies on people who are given choices vs. just given something. For instance, someone will be more happy if they are just given a piece of candy, then if they were given a choice to pick between two different flavors of candy. An effective landing page asks for one specific action. Make sure to be clear about what you are asking for too. If you don’t, then you will kill your conversion rates.
  4. Ignoring the basic aesthetics: Bad fonts, ugly colors, weird highlighting, and terrible graphics. That my friend, are the ingredients for a terrible landing page. A great landing page utilizes all these ingredients and creates a delicious landing page.
  5. Being lazy: The average web user actually spends 80% of their time above the fold. This is extremely important when figuring out what should be at the top of the page. You want to put your most valuable content above the fold because there is a high probability that your target audience will not see it if it’s not. Don’t be lazy about grabbing and holding attention!

Are you still with me fellow smarketer?

ClintAgreeing10 Tips for Writing the Ultimate Landing page

  1. Make sure your headline refers directly to the place from which your visitor came or the ad copy that drove the click: Match the language as close as possible. You want to keep this consistent, because if you don’t, then you will lose that visitor.
  2. Provide a clear CTA (Call to action): Tell your visitors what to do, and be creative. You want them to see this CTA! CopyBlogger recommends that you do a minimum of 2 calls to action in a short landing page, and 3-5 in a long landing page.
  3. Write in the second person – you and your: the prospective buyer doesn’t give a damn about your company, product, or the service, if it doesn’t benefit them in some way. If you are a clothing company, emphasize that when they are wearing your clothing, you look beautiful. If you are a technology company, emphasize that your customer’s life will be a lot simpler when they are using your new device. Show them the benefits.
  4. Write to deliver a clear, persuasive message, don’t try to show off your creative side by coming up with a creative phrase: CopyBlogger said something that I thought was quite interesting, “This is business, not a personal expression of your art”. You want your customer to feel persuaded, not simply think that you came up with a catchy phrase.
  5. You can write long copy as long as it’s tight: Your reader will keep on reading your long copy as long as it is capturing. You want to build up to it and keep them wanting to figure out why they want to use your product. One of my favorite quotes is from Mark Twain, which is, “If I have more time, I would have written a shorter letter”. Keep this in mind when you are writing copy.
  6. Be clear on your goals: Keep your body copy on point and consistent.  You don’t want you reader to be distracted by offerings that you bring up and ultimately leave your webpage. Know your goals as a company.
  7. Keep your most important points at the beginning of paragraphs and bullets: this ties back to rule #5 in that you want to capture your audience and make them HAVE to read your copy in its entirety. A lot of the time your readers are just skimming through the text. Make sure they are able to know what you are offering, and why it is beneficial to them without having them slow down.
  8. People read beginnings and ends before they read middles: With this in mind, keep your strongest points and arguments in these positions.
  9. Make your first paragraph short: Keep it 1-2 lines (lines, not sentence). Remember the Mark Twain quote. Less is better.
  10. Write to the screen: simply take a piece of paper to the screen and position the buttons where you would like them. Figure out what you want to have “above the fold”.

Soon you will be laughing at your competition because you have so many leads, but not just any type of leads, you have qualified leads.

LaugingChristianBale

As a young smarketer, I felt inclined to do a little more research on landing pages and went over to Hubspot Academy and watched a 45 minute video on the anatomy of a landing page. Hubspot brought up some interesting points, one thing in particular was that they referred to a landing page as your digital sales reps. These digital sales reps are up 24/7, 365 days a year. They generate the leads, so that the human beings that work for your company can spend their time forging relationships with those leads.

Hubspot’s Landing pages best practices:

  • Write clear, concise, compelling headlines
  • Explain the value and importance of the offer to your persona
  • Use bullet points to make information more digestible.
  • Select the appropriate number of form fields for your offer.
  • Remove navigation and all links.
  • Include a relevant image, gif or short video.
  • Add social media share icons.
  • Add testimonials when relevant.
  • Use industry awards and recognition.

This is a great start to creating an effective landing page. The landing page is arguably one of the most important parts of a website. It’s the first impression that you leave on an individual. Make that first impression count, and show them why their life will benefit immensely after purchasing your product or service. Make sure to collect data and figure out if the landing page is actually boosting your conversion rates. You can also try A/B testing to figure out which landing page is the most effective. If you want to learn more about landing pages, check out the eBook CopyBlogger created. Until next time fellow smarketer…

TheWolf

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How to Create an Effective Landing Page

Who Am I?

HEY.

Who Am I?

My name is Cody Hulsey. I am currently a senior at Western Washington University, and will be graduating after spring quarter (2015) with a major in business administration w/ a concentration in marketing. I love music, high-end fashion, abstract art, the internet, marketing, and working-out.

The reason I am taking Digital Marketing

The reason I am taking marketing 476 aka Digital Marketing, is simply because I want to further my knowledge in the area of marketing. Digital Marketing is on fire right now. I want to be able to use the skills that I have learned while taking this course to help businesses succeed.

What I would like to learn from Digital Marketing

As I stated earlier, digital marketing is on fire right now. I would like to become certified in HootSuite, Google Analytics, HubSpot, and Google AdWords. I strongly believe that having all four of these certifications on my resume will make me more valuable and desirable for future employers.

While interning at Bellingham Marine, I have dabbled in HootSuite, but I would like to enhance my knowledge of the crafty social media management dashboard.

I would also like to dip my toes in coding. I have always been fascinated by it, and would like to become more knowledgeable of the subject.

Knowledge and Skill Requirements for Marketing Jobs in the 21st Century

I thought the reading was very interesting. Especially since soon I will be looking for an entry-level job. The article written by Regina Pefanis Schlee and Katrin R. Harich is very eye-opening and something that I will most definitely bookmark for future review.

The article talks about the knowledge and skill requirements for marketing positions whether they are entry-level to senior-level. Technical skills are more important than conceptual skills. It also touches base on what industries are the most prominent in certain cities. Each city represents a region in which the study was done.

One thing that I found interesting was that Monster.com is more popular than CareerBuilder.com because Monster.com filters out duplicate listing of the same job. After viewing Monster.com, the user-face seems to be quite inviting (aside from the fact that the company is called, Monster). While CareerBuilder.com seems to be more boring, and the color scheme is nothing exciting, very similar to Facebook. I have not used either of these sites yet to hunt for a job, but I am confident that I will have to in the future. With that said, Monster.com will be my first choice.

Something that I thought was interesting and compelling was the fact that Internet and technology companies dominate the Seattle metropolitan area. I am very aware that the Seattle area is the stomping grounds of Microsoft, and Amazon. But I was unaware of the fact that Nintendo is considered one of the big dogs when it came to technology in the Seattle metropolitan area.

When viewing the technical skills (Table 2), it was quite evident that an entry-level employee must have MS Office skill (58.4% of job postings). But as you climb the ladder to upper-management positions, you will find that only 25% of the postings require MS Office skills. Which makes you think that they assume that you already have those skills, or if you never have to use them.

While viewing the meta-skills (table 3), I found it interesting that 13% of job postings for entry-level positions require that you have ethics. But for upper management only 4.7% require ethics. Once again, it makes you wonder whether or not it is assumed that you already have strong business ethics, or if you are not in a position where business ethics are not required (doubtful).

Marketing graduates need to obviously be able to possess oral and written communication skills. But also have technical skills that they can use to perform business analytics. Marketing graduates need to be able to use CRM systems and be able to understand the information and data that they are finding/ receiving.

Constantly stay abreast of the industry trends, and don’t be afraid to try the newest things. Fortune magazine has described a phenomenon called, “50 and Fired”. One of the reasons this happens might be because of age discrimination, but it also can be the fact that they are not staying at the forefront of the technology industry. They are staying in the past and using out-dated software programs. For their career to be profitable and healthy, they need to be able to get with the times.

DBM aka Database Marketing is something that needs to be taught in marketing curriculum’s. Universities need to recognize the fact that there is a massive benefit to offering a marketing technology degree. This will prepare their students for the real world, and will generate a lot of positivity for the university, and in return have higher amount of students applying to their university.

In the article written by Maureen Morrison for Advertising Age, called What’s Required of the Next Generation of Marketers, Morrison states, “At one time ‘you could be a functional expert in one very narrow area of marketing tactics,’ said Tome Collinger, associate dean and department chair-integrated Marketing Communications at the Medill Schoolat Northwestern University. ‘Back in the day, if you were a direct or data marketer or PR specialist, that was enough.'” I thought this was very interesting and relates to what I mentioned above about “50 and Fired”. Back in the day you didn’t have to be highly diverse to make a living. Now you have to a wide range of skills that you are able to use in an effective matter.

Forrester Interactive Marketing Forecast 2011 to 2016

The article written by Shar VanBroskirk is quite interesting, and truly makes you think about the future of marketing. 10 years ago, people would not have been able to predict where we are right now with marketing. For instance, social media is the way to go (for most businesses, but not all) and was not foreseeable 10 years ago. Every time I hop onto Facebook (which is honestly becoming quite infrequent) I see numerous ads, and they get thousands of likes. So it was quite obvious that consumers are enjoying this type of marketing.

Social media is quite inexpensive. I have promoted my own clothing brand, SomeFire.com, and I am able to reach thousands of potential customers all over the world for as little as $20. When businesses use social media to promote their business, they are cutting costs, and can use that saved money elsewhere.

Another interesting and important form of marketing is e-mail marketing. For the longest time I thought that sending ad campaigns through e-mail is the most archaic way to get businesses voice out there, especially with the option of ad campaigns getting sent directly to your spam folder. But recently I have noticed that I have been clicking on e-mails that have enticing headlines which at times can be click-bait, but for the most part are offering something that is of my interest. Businesses can utilize e-mail in so many ways. They can have you subscribe to their e-newsletter, or find out when they have new products. I believe e-mail marketing has come a long way and is only going to get better.

Forbes writer Jayson DeMers wrote an article called, The Top 10 Benefits of Social Media Marketing. In this interesting article Mr. DeMers says, “According to Hubspot, 92% of marketers in 2014 claimed that social media marketing was important for their business, with 80% indicating that their efforts increased traffic to their websites. And according to Social Media Examiner, 97% of marketers are currently participating in social media but 85% of participants aren’t sure what social media tools are the best to use.” I found this to be quite compelling. In the fact that, social media is something that is very prominent in our marketing world right now. I hardly ever watch TV, but I love to browse the internet, and that is where I see the most commercials, whether if it is a friend of mine that shared a comical Old Spice commercial, or if it is one of those mandatory commercials that you have to watch while you wait for your YouTube video to play.

State of Digital Marketing Talent

One thing that really stood out to me while reading this article was that there is a talent gap in digital marketing. Having a digital marketing team that is homogenous, and doesn’t rely on others to do certain aspects of the job for them is powerful, and in return your company will produce A1 marketing. After a survey was created, they found that only 8% felt strong across all digital areas. That is quite a small percentage. I believe that if the other 92% of they respondents analyzed what they were weak in, how they could fix that problem, then they will see a significant change in their marketing as a company.

I also found it interesting that one-third of the companies have groomed interns into full-time employees. I believe that if they created a system that really prepared and trained the interns and raised that percentage, then they could save money on hiring and training new people, as well as, produce the cream of the crop level entry employees.

Entitlement is becoming popular around young employees. I recently had this conversation with my boss. My boss thinks that college graduates come out of the gates and want to climb to the top as fast as possible. They watch movies like Wolf of Wall Street and they think that all that success and money came to Jordan Belfort over-night. They need to realize that you need to struggle, put in your 10,000 hours and prove that you deserve that raise, or promotion.

According to an article written called, How college students think they are more special than EVER: Study reveals rocketing sense of entitlement on U.S. campuses  states, “Psychologist Jean Twenge and her colleagues compiled the data and found that over the past four decades there’s been a dramatic rise in the number of students who describe themselves as being ‘above average’ in the areas of academic ability, drive to achieve, mathematical ability, and self-confidence.” I believe that it is important to believe that you excel in all four of those categories but I also think that it is important how you present yourself in the workspace. I believe that it is important to show your ‘above average’ capabilities in your work and not just talk about it.


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Who Am I?