Metzger Business

November 5, 2009

What web marketing can be done for my small local business?

Filed under: Small Business — Tags: , , , , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 11:28 am

Livros de Redes Sociais, SEO e Web 2.0

I’ll soon be addressing an organization about social networking. Most everyone in the organization has small businesses that serve the local market. Many are in real estate, financial advisors, mortgage brokers, carpet cleaning, catering, and other truly local businesses. They don’t need a national audience and they don’t need to spend money or waste time with efforts that won’t bring them benefit. So what are some strategies they can use with their customers for marketing locally?

There are three areas that to considered for small local businesses and one commonly considered area not to considered.

Lets start with what not toconsider. What I’m about to tell you may come as a surprise. You may need to sit down before hearing this from a web guy. BUT DON”T waste your time with SEO. SEO – Search Engine Optimization is great if you are a web-based business that serves a national audience. SEO is great if you have lots of money to spend on it. However SEO just doesn’t provide the return on investment that is required if your business doesn’t serve a national audience.  This being said does not mean you shouldn’t understand your marketing message or the Key words that are important for your web site.

So what should you focus on: Local Search, Paid Search and Social Networking/Web 2.0. Look for tomorrow’s post addressing Local search which is free and/or cheap to implement.

October 20, 2009

Yesterday’s blog, #NMATL, and @chrisbrogan notes! And Yes Twitter!

Filed under: Big Business,Musings,Small Business,Social Media — Tags: , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 10:54 am

Yesterday I wrote a blog on using twitter for notes and used Chris Brogan’s speech at NMATL as an example of pulling twitter data for notes. I also decided to run some stats on the information I found and posted those stats. Quite frankly the stats are meaningless to anybody and everybody other than perhaps Chris and maybe Brad and Matt who organized the event. You can read the entire post here.

So why did I run the stats? Well imagine if instead of Chris Brogan’s speech we instead inserted Big Company Name X and looked at the same data. What useful information might we find? How could we use the information to better understand what our customers are thinking of us NOW! How many are tweeting about us? What words are they consistently using? I used a dump of twitter data and Excel pivot tables to come up with the stats I posted yesterday in merely 10 minutes for the fun of it (I’m strange I know) what could you learn about your company’s reputation in 10 minutes.

September 15, 2009

Websites represent your business – What you need to know about building a web site

I randomly dropped into a conversation the other day with someone who had just had a “beautiful” new website built for them. They were very excited about the site and awarded a free Adwords campaign. Being diligent about their business and loving their new “pretty” web site they were excited about taking advantage of the campaign and driving traffic to the site, they have picked excellent key words targeted the correct market and built a strong strategy for driving traffic from the campaign.

unfortunately there are a few, well maybe a bit more than a few details missing. I’m dividing the following information into basic and advanced. Lets start with the basics.
Basics:
1) Make sure that you own the URL.

2) Have the web site hosted on a server that will be accessable to you directly and any other professionals that you might decide to use to replace a previous vendor.

3) Make sure you have a unique user ID and password that you do not have to share with your vendors and if you do have to share the id and password change it after the work is complete.

4) When referring to a web site you’ll often here the term “look and feel.” This means that a web site has to look pretty but also “feel” pretty. You want your web site to be easy to use. The main menu should be accessable from every page on the site.

5) The background on a web site should be flat and bright. If you have white text on a patterned dark colored background you are going to turn people away.

Advanced:
6) There are too many free easy to use content management systems out there to pay someone to build you a static site that you have no control over and can not add content to easily. A content management systems allows you the business owner to easily add or change content on existing pages or even create new pages without much effort and with minimal knowledge.

7) Understand why you are building a web site. The web has changed in the past five years. You can no longer throw up a brochure and expect to get business from it. Actually this type of web site has never really worked period. At a minimum your web site should bring the customer one step closer to making a purchase. That means you need to get the customer to giver you their contact information in a form – Don’t expect the customers to call you just because they visited your web site. They aren’t even lead until they’ve given you some type of information. You can encourage customers to give you their contact information by asking them to fill out a form for a free consult or by offering a free newsletter of some sort. You can even just say if you’d like me to contact you please provide your information here.

8) measure the success of your site. How long are users staying on your site? What pages do they click on most? Which pages don’t they see? Which pages do they see? Where are your customers coming to your site from? Where do they go when they leave? All these questions can be easily answered by a free program from Google called Google Analytics. There are other web stat tracking programs available as well. The fact is that you need to know this information if you want your site to drive business.

9) Just putting a web site on line does nothing for you. You will not gain any traffic especially if you haven’t created a web site that meets feature 6 above because search engines won’t like your site. Here I’m going to offer a word of caution. You don’t need SEO. It helps buy you don’t need it. As a small business the cost of SEO can be too high. But you obviously still want to drive traffic to your site. This is where paid search, see my article on Adwords, and social media make the big payoff. You can also read my article on Tweet Strategy Conversion and measurement for more detail here.

10) Make sure that whomever creates your web site also goes to the effort of submitting the web site to the search engines. You probably want to be sure they have submitted you on the local search functions as well as the general search.

Never hire someone to build your web site that can’t articulate an understanding of the principles expressed in this blog.

September 18th – Seth Godin just wrote an excellent blog that is well worth reading about building web sites. The questions he posses are of primary importance. You can find his article here here.

September 4, 2009

Bootstrapping – Minimize your computer Costs

Filed under: Musings,Small Business — Tags: , , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 10:24 am

It seems like the new hot topic is bootstrapping. Bootstrapping is starting up a business with minimum cash. Well this can be difficult if you have to buy a computer and all the Microsoft products to get your current. I know many people have heard that there are other products out there that are free but some folks are still hesitant to use them. They fear compatibility issues, or think it will be difficult to learn a new tool. This post will give you a few quick office type tools you can use for free that work just a good if not better than Microsoft Office and are completely compatible with someone who uses MS Office applications. Hey you can even smile politely when someone tells you how great your work is know that you didn’t pay those incredibly high licensing fees for Microsoft.

Google – Google has just evolved tremendously over the last five years so that now you can have an integrated email, calendar, task management list, document producer, spread sheet application, presentation builder and web based form builder. This set of applications is easy to use and pretty much completely integrated. Additionally you can store your documents on Google’s cloud (Google’s servers) and access them from anywhere in the world. On top of that you can actually share your Google docs with select individuals so they can edit from remote locations as well. This function can be very powerful if you work with virtual assistant or even remote employees. I personally believe Google is fairly safe and do use their services which can be found at http://docs.google.com and http://mail.google.com. If you are not comfortable storing your documents on line then you’ll want to go with another free option.

Open Office is the leading provider of alternative office software. Their programs are excellent and they offer document, presentation, graphics, database, and spread sheet applications. This program allows the user work locally on their computer and store documents just like MS Office. Additionally Open Office allows users to store documents as PDF’s without any additional work.

So now you can go out and buy your $300 netbook and not spend another dime to be in business.

August 27, 2009

Social Media options what works

In this series of blogs I will be examining the various social media strategies and the social media tools that support them. I’ll be examining companies that are using the strategies, looking at why a particular strategy might have been chosen and discussing the success of the strategy. All of these companies and strategies are marketing/PR campaigns.

My goal is to write a case study for each of the social media tools and explain what strategies were applied to make the tool successful for the company applying the tool and strategy.

Here are the Social Media Tools we’ll examine.
Blogging
Bookmarking/tagging
Content Aggregation
Crowdsourcing
Microblogginng
Mashups
Online video
Photo Sharing
Podcasting
Social Networks ie. Facebook, Linkedin
VIrtual Worlds
Widgets
Wikis

I’m going to pick companies that have successfully applied these tools and attempt to define and explain the strategies they have applied. Since I want to be impartial I’ll pick the companies from a list that was compiled by Peter Kim in September 2008 of Social Media Examples. The list contains over 300 companies and the tools they are applying. You can find the article here A List of Social Media Marketing Examples.

Look for the first case study early next week.

August 19, 2009

Tweet Strategy, Conversion, and Measurement

I went to visit my Chiropractor today. We traded for some services so occasionally we discuss business. I brought up his tweet strategy and asked if he had any idea if what he has been doing on Twitter is helping out. Answer – “Not Really.”

Hmmm. I say “Let’s examine this and see if we can develop a strategy that will allow you to measure your success and hopefully build your practice.” So after some discussion here is the strategy and requirements we came up with. These requirements are fairly general so they can be applied to any business. The strategy is simple so it too can be applied to any business. Try it use the measurements and you will find success on Twitter and maybe some more conversions. By the way this strategy can be used in Facebook or any other social networking site that broadcasts statuses.

1) Tweet Positive uplifting tweets that enhance your brand. Use a twitter sentence structure that follows the format what’s the Problem, What to do, positive result. i.e. work got you stressed out, get adjusted now, sleep great tonight – vist me to find out more http://bit.ly/123456

2) We also provided an action for the user at the end of the tweet. By the way the above tweet still leaves me 28 characters to play with.

3) Notice that I use a bit.ly url. There is 1 very important reason to use a URL shortening service and that is to measure how many people clicked on your link. The second reason is to save space. So now I have a measurement to see how successful my tweet was. Using bit.ly is easy by the way simply login and enter the URL you want shortened. Actually it’s slightly more complicated then that but I’ll cover this in another post.

4) So by now you must be asking what is the URL going to and why. AHHHH. The landing page, conversion page or squeeze page (I hate the term squeeze page!). This is a simple page that has a form for the person to fill out. This should not be a long sales page in this case. A chiropractor is a professional and shouldn’t dropt to the sleazy level that many long form sales letters drop to. In this case we’re offering a free telephone consultation. The page should briefly follow the same format as the tweets Explain problems, how chiropractic can help, what the results will be and offer the free consult. The objective is to generate a warm lead. The doc can now follow up with the potential patient.

The form should be simple and to the point. It should collect the person’s name, email, and phone. The email should be used only as a single contact unless otherwise stated. This is not a news letter sign up it is a lead generation form for already hot prospects.

5) Measure, Measure, Measure. The tweets, the click troughs’, the page visits, the page conversions. Tweak and Repeat.

Good luck this is a simple but effective strategy.

August 17, 2009

Google AdWords – On the Radio?

Filed under: Marketing,Small Business — Tags: , , , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 10:25 pm

Google has started an add campaign on the radio to encourage people to advertise with Google. I have never previously heard any advertising for Google outside of the web and certainly not for their service. This is likely an early sign that BING is beginning to hurt their ad revenue. Non the less AdWords can be a very powerful tool for a business that does not have front page placement in the natural search results. I’ve put together a short video explaining how to sign up for AdWords and how to use it effectively to drive traffic to your site. The campaign I demonstrate is for local businesses that want to drive local traffic to their sites for advertising purposes.

Sign up Process
YouTube Preview Image

Create Local Ad

YouTube Preview Image
The remainder of the process simply sets up your billing preferences. Because I don’t intend to create this add I did not complete this process but you have 2 options in the billing process. Option 1 lets you post pay or pay after the ad has run and Option 2 allows you to pre-pay the add. Option 2 was added recently to help control costs. Google will never spend more than what you have in the account if you pre-pay the ads. This second option was added after complaints and law suits because of Google over billing customers budgets.

If you as a business have a web site that promotes your business but you do not rank high in the search engines then running local ads with Google AdWords is an extremely effective strategy.

August 11, 2009

Google Profile – Almost guaranteed 1st page search results

Today I wanted to discuss a technique that almost guarantees fist page search results when someone is searching for your name. This strategy is very valuable for individuals involved in sales.

Search for Kevin Metzger

Search for Kevin Metzger

To test the strategy I had to do a search for my name and as you can see I come up in 5 places on the first page of Google although none of the results go directly to my blog sites. The first result that is related to me is video results. I have some videos posted to YouTube so I come up when the user clicks on that page. The next site that shows me is a network that I maintain a profile on and sometime blog at. Then there is LinkedIn my radio show profile page and finally you see a picture of me at the very bottom of the search page. This picture and profile was created 2 minutes before I did this search. It was done on the Google Profile page and this is a very valuable tool.

If a searcher chooses to click on my profile they now have access to both my blog’s, my twitter profile page, my LinkedIn profile page, and my Facebook profile page. They can also see a personal bio I put together and some limited information about me. Here is a quick look at the profile page.

Kevin Metzger profile page

Kevin Metzger profile page

This page took 5 minutes to create and put me on Google’s front page with my picture in no time. If you think anyone will ever search for you and you want to be found. Then this is a simple strategy that you must follow to guarantee your spot on Google’s fist page. You can create your profile at Google Profiles. It’s as simple as filling out a form and following directions.

August 10, 2009

URL Shorteners: Does it matter which one I use?

Filed under: Small Business,Social Media — Tags: , , , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 11:13 am

There are many url shortening services available on the web. These services allow you as the consumer of the service to view statistics on click throughs. The service also provides an easy way to publish short urls when typing in Twitter or email so that the link will never get broken.

The problem with a url shorting services is what happens when they shut down. Any url’s that you have hosted with the service will no longer work and you will have to either fix the links or have many dead links to you web site. This weekend the URL shorting service tr.im declared that they would be closing. The URLs will be good through December at which time they will no longer work. So what should these users do? Who should they go with? And if you are a new to URL shortening then which service should you choose.

I personally like the bit.ly service. According to Tr.im in their press release this weekend the bit.ly service is said to be “anointed” by twitter as “the market winner.” It certainly has a large number of Twitter users, is easy to use, has been extended to work in word press blogs in conjunctions with Twitter Tools, and provides excellent data on click throughs. Additionally it will be around for quite a while.

Another good and seemingly permanent fixture is TinyURL.com. I have used tinyurl in the past but they do not provide the same statistical data bit.ly does. I like to know how many people click on my links. The other advantage of bit.ly is that when you log in you can see all previously shortened URL’s.

There are other URL shorteners out there but sticking with these two for now should ensure that you will not end up with dead links on your site.

July 28, 2009

Define what you want

Filed under: Musings,Small Business — Tags: , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 9:41 pm

I attended a seminar last night that was talking about the Law of Attraction. The presenter was Michael Losier. Michael hosts a radio show on the Oprah radio network about the law of attraction and is known as the “How-To” guy for Law of Attraction.

Michael is an entertaining speaker and in the hour in which he spoke I took 3 pages of notes and came away with a page of action items for my personal and business growth.

There were a number of tools that Michael spoke about but the one I liked best was My Ideal _____(BLANK)! It teaches you how to focus your brain on what you do want and can be used for business as well as personal development. This tool is used to help people define exactly what they are looking for and provide clarity. Here are the steps for using the tool.

1) Take a blank page of paper
2) At the top write My Ideal ____ (BLANK) – Let’s say prospect.
3) Draw a line down the center of the paper
3) On the left hand side write down Contrast (things I don’t like or want)
4) On the right side write Clarity (What I want)
5) Start a list of all the things you don’t want in an Ideal (prospect) in this case
6) After completing all the things you don’t want look at each of them and decide what you would like instead.

For example if I don’t want my prospect to be negative then I probably want my prospect to be positive.

7) After completing this exercise fold the paper in half and look at what you want. You have now defined your perfect prospect.

Next Step do this for Market Segment, Referral, meeting, project, supplier, blog, wife, life or whatever.

I tried this exercise with just a few topics and was amazed at the clarity it provided.

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