Metzger Business

March 2, 2011

Talking DADVocate Project

Filed under: Musings,Social Media — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 9:45 pm

I don’t usually talk directly about my other projects on this blog as it is geared to a discussion on social media and business. However I form many of my ideas for this blog by executing them over on The DADvocate Project or through other various outlets. Today however I’m going to solicit this audience directly. If you are a reader of this blog and you are a dad then please go over to The DADvocate Project and take the Survey. If you are a reader of this blog and are not a dad then you most likely have a dad and or are married to a dad. Please ask them to take the survey.

The DADvocate Survey was put together last year as an effort to define who today’s dads are. In the media and press dads tend to get a bad rap and honestly Dads are not a lazy beer drinking group who sit on the couch and do nothing. Dads are also no longer the sole bread winners in the family and our societal role as men in families is changing. By the way our spending habits are changing as a result of the family dynamic change too.

The DADvocate survey looks how and where we dads are spending our time and in some cases money. Over 390 people have taken the survey thus far and I’m closing the survey in May. I hope to have close to 500 respondents by then but to make that happen I need your help. Please take the survey now or tell some friends. Heck post about it on facebook, twitter or linkedin. Thank you in advance.

February 10, 2011

Idea Generation Tool

Filed under: Musings — Tags: , , , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 12:17 pm

At the beginning of this year I decided that I wanted to write weekly here on Metzgerbusiness.com. I’m very busy and knew that I would not have the time to think about topics weekly so I sat down and jotted down 52 topics. I knew if I wrote on each of those topics I’d be pretty happy with myself and this would be a good blog for highlighting my business knowledge.

It’s funny but five weeks into this year and tonight was the first time I actually looked at the list. I even picked a topic from the list to write about but then decided I wanted to write about the exercise of having written the list.

I realized when I was working on putting together my resume site at kevin-metzger.com that I hadn’t written here in nearly five months and it seemed time had just gotten away from me. I knew that not only could I but I want to write weekly on this blog about various topics related to social media, blogging, business, and marketing.

I also knew that it was sometimes difficult to come up with a topic on demand. So I decided to follow some advice that folks like Chris Brogan had given. That advice is to brainstormed for about thirty minutes and come up with ideas or topics. Heck Chris has even turned it into a business. He’ll brainstorm for you for $10 a month.

I decided that I needed 52 of my own ideas. Now I  had a topic for every week should I need a topic. Without an ounce of thought I could go to my list and pick something. Some require more work than others but some are pretty straight forward and can be written in one quick sitting. A few topics even require that I go and do work to expand and sure up my own knowledge base. They are not  a list of 52 have to write about the topic, but they are a list of 52 I can or want to write about the topic. But as I saw when coming up with this topic the list even supports another purpose. When I looked at the list tonight it helped me spawn another idea, it spawned this post and I realized the list is now an idea generator.

Now Let me try to explain why this simple exercise of brainstorming a bunch of topics for your blog in a dedicated, short time, done once works as an idea generator.

When you sit down and create the list you have to put yourself in the proper mindset. That is not always easy to do. You need to set the goal of a large number of topics. You have to think about the purpose of your blog and what you want to communicate. Then you come up with 52 words or ideas that express that purpose. Then when you sit down and read the list it brings you right back to the thought process and BANG! another idea just pops into your head that is completely related to your purpose.

You’ve actually put your thought process on paper and now when you read it your brain goes right back into the thought process thus helping you generate more ideas.
I hope this article helps you let me know if you have used lists this way.

January 12, 2010

Response to Reeking of Desperation

Filed under: Musings,Social Media — Tags: , , , , , , , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 12:15 am

An interesting question was raised by Julian Smith about how people spend their time acting desperate to get seen by the big names in Social Marketing.  I formatted the following response but then realized it was more the length of a blog then a comment so here it is.

9 months ago I started my blog MySpellingSucs.com – an unedited discussion of my dyslexia and ADD and my daughters Cerebral Palsy. I started it just to start writing something and do it consistently. I wanted to just say what I felt and do it the way I wanted to. I was tired of listening to fast easy money crowd who really didn’t know what they were talking about and I just wanted to do it my way. I write about how I have learned from my children and parenting, specific issues on CP, and I occasionally interview or write about inspirational folks with disabilities. I love writing there and it has brough me great pleasure as well as some recognition. I was awarded 2009 East Cobber Father of the year and this happened when my readership was only from my local network of friends.

Then about 6 months ago I started getting involved in community – twitter, expanding Facebook and LinkedIn, commenting on other blogs and that kind of thing. I found more readers coming to my site and then I really started getting interested in and attaching to people who were leading this revolution. Julien – Yourself included.

After a few months I found myself backing away from the “Guru’s” and focusing in the “Second Tier.” I do this because they have more time they are just as educated and have as many new and innovative ideas and they communicate more. I know the “Guru’s/First Tier” used to communicate with their audience as much as the “Second Tier” now does but the “Guru’s” don’t have the time to communicate with new folks as much as they would like and they need to keep their loyal audiences loyal so they communicate with as many as possible and are diligent about communicating with the folks that have helped them along the way.

It’s been in working with this “Second Tier” of bloggers that I have found I have the most pleasure and have begun to get the most recognition from the Guru’s. It makes sense.

In any community you want Gate Keepers. A Gate Keeper helps you know who the good and who the bad are when you don’t have the time to figure it out yourself. If the people I trust vet you and say your good than I’ll (as the guru) take a little additional time to find out more about who you are.

I guess what I’m saying is I like the idea of being yourself. That may have something to do with connecting with the crowd but do it your way and find the folks you enjoy communicating with.

This was originally going to be a comment in response to the blog post Reeking of Desperation but was too long. Julien thanks for the inspiration.

November 23, 2009

Web Marketing for small local businesses – Does Your advertising reach your audience

Billboard

http://www.flickr.com/photos/simonscott/ / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

ARE YOU SURE IT REACHES YOUR AUDIENCE?

Traditional advertising has lost a lot of it’d audience. News papers have lost their audiences. Billboards are practically overlooked! Nobody watches local tv anymore. On top of all that all these are expensive mediums in which to advertise and there is a good chance you won’t hit your target market even if you do advertise in the local paper.

So if all these mediums are expensive and they don’t hit your target market as effectively as you would like, what medium brings the best, cheapest, most targeted traffic? Paid Search.

What is Paid Search?

Paid Search is anywhere where you pay a sight such as a search engine to place a little ad and a link that will drive internet traffic to your site.

Who offers paid search?

Google, Bing, Yahoo, Facebook, blogs, you name it the site probably provides a form of  paid search and there a many forms of paid search.

What are the forms of paid search?

There are a number of forms of online advertising such as cpc (Cost per click) you only pay when someone clicks on your add, CPM(cost per thousand)- cost per thousand impressions,   CPL (Cost per lead) – you pay for leads in a more traditional form of lead generation and you don’t own the customer right out but the service can be very effective ie. Service Magic, there is also affiliate advertising but I consider that a completely different animal and not necessarily useful to the small business guy.

What should I use and How Do I use it?

Assuming you have a web site and it does a good job of converting browsers to customers, then CPC – cost per click is by far the cheapest form of advertising available other than word of mouth. We’ll explore CPC later this week in another post. The other advantage of CPC advertising is that usually you can target it to only show to people in a specific postal code who search for a specific term at a specific time of day. This is great if you have a limited budget to spend on advertising and you want to drive extremely targeted traffic. Traffic of this type is often looking to buy. Can you get any better than that?

Using CPM also assumes that you have a web site and it does a good job converting browsers to customers. The problem with CPM is that you will pay for the number of impressions (Number of times users of a web site see the ad) no matter how many clicks you get. The one traditional advantage over cpc is that you can control your costs. However in recent years you can now control you cpc costs much more effectively and generally target your audience much more effectively. However if you find a blog that speaks about your industry and seems to target your local market then CPM might be effective but generally I’d recommend against it.

CPL – cost per lead advertising is generally much more expensive and while you may find some platforms that don’t require you to have a web site most web-based CPL programs will expect that you do have a web site and it should generally be good about converting browsers to customers. The best CPL programs work by consolidating a group of businesses such as home improvement assuring that you meet a set of standards and then offer a number of programs to provide you leads to gain their customer’s business. These sites gamble that they can use other forms of advertising to drive traffic to their site cheaply and then turn over the lead to you to follow-up on. The real value to you is the lead is truly pre-qualified. There are companies out there that don’t do a good job of pre-qualification and you’ll end up wasting money so be careful when using this type of service and check it out thoroughly.

November 16, 2009

Web Marketing for Small Local Business – Other Local Search Directories

Last week we covered an overview of local search and how to register with the local feature of each of the big three search engines. If you want a review on how to register see: Google, Yahoo, Bing.

Today we’ll discuss other local search directories. These directories provide a large amount of local search traffic and are growing in popularity. Each of them has different features and are attractive for various reasons. Today’s blog is simply a listing of the options available. It doesn’t hurt to get listed in all or most of these forms depending on what your business does and the value the local search provides.

  1. Yelp
  2. Kudzu
  3. CitySearch
  4. Craig’s List
  5. Local.com
  6. Service Magic
  7. ibegin
  8. insider pages
  9. Judy’s book
  10. infoUSA
  11. MagicYellow
  12. MetroBot
  13. Search Site
  14. Yellowpages.com
  15. yp.com
  16. YellowUSA.com
  17. acxiom.com
  18. Discoverourtown.com
  19. pinpointpages.com
  20. merchantcircle.com

While these sites aren’t necessarily the most heavily searched sites they are targeting local people who are performing local searches and looking to buy. So when a customer does find your business on these sites converting that person to a buying customer becomes easier. Registering at these sites expands your reach and your personal web.

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