Thursday, 29 December 2016

Content is The King but SEO is The Messanger

In today's world, 72 percent of all marketers have a content marketing strategy in place, according to the LinkedIn Technology Marketing Community.

Meanwhile, Curata reports that by the end of next year, more than half of all companies will have an executive who is directly responsible for their overall content marketing strategy.

The popularity of on-site content marketing is easy to explain.

Audiences have become more cynical towards traditional advertising, email opening rates are historically low and there is an increase in the number of people using ad blockers.

Yet, this popularity means there is a huge amount of competition for an audience.

When it comes to building an audience via content and social marketing, your position on results pages of search engines should also be an essential ingredient of your strategy.

So what are the latest best practice action points that you, and your search marketing agency, should implement in order to optimize your website content to outrank competitors?

Aim to Please Your Readers

All good SEO consultants will tell you that, more than anything else, the success of your content marketing strategy will depend on the quality of the content itself.

If you are going to attract an audience, build trust and influence readers to engage further with your brand, your content needs to be engaging, useful, and well-written.

In addition to helping to organically build an audience, producing quality content impacts upon search engine rankings.

If the title is well researched, resonates with your audience’s interests or problems and includes your targeted SEO terms, the number of clicks it receives will increase.

If the content is helpful, fun, or solves some of your audience’s FAQs for instance, users are less likely to bounce back off the page and onto another search result.

Both of these things, as well as bounce rate, will influence rankings.

Study Reader Behavior and Adjust Accordingly

Furthermore, despite the popularity of content marketing, a lot of the content companies produce is actually poor in quality.

In fact, according to NewsCred, the medium time spent reading a piece of content marketing is just 37 seconds.

Therefore, by only publishing well-researched, quality content, you can stand out from the pack.

The focus should be on quality and substance rather than creating too many website pages with low-value content.

 

From a tactical point of view, it is good practice to do a review of your web pages every six months and check landing pages with the highest bounce rate, exit rate, the highest number of page views, errors, and conversions if relevant.  

You will probably end up with a number of pages that are low in traffic and performance, which you might then decide to either kill or optimize.

Think of it as a good spring clean that will improve the overall user experience as well as your website crawling and indexing.

Content Is King, but SEO Is the Messenger

 

Of course, while most experts agree that content is king, without employing some basic SEO techniques, even high-quality content can be painfully slow to attract an audience, making it poor as a marketin+g tool.

Whether you decide to work with a search marketing agency or go it alone, there are some best practices that can help you out.

One of the most important aspects of search engine optimization is keyword research. The goal here is to find search terms that people may enter into Google or Bing when looking for content like yours.

Ideally, one or two key phrases should be chosen and inserted sparingly into a piece of content, its title, URL, image data and meta description.

Don’t Overstuff with Keywords; Remember to Write for Humans

However, think of your landing page from a topic point of view rather than obsessing too much about keywords. Ideally, each page needs to shout about a specific topic (i.e. service, product or information) so that search engine crawlers can understand straight away what the page is about in order to index it correctly.

I always come across companies and brands who try to fit a bunch of services or information on one page, which not only makes it very hard for search engines to understand and index, but also confuses users as to what the content is about.

This results in high bounce rates, exit rates and less of a chance to rank on search engines.

Moreover, your website content should be optimized for mobile devices, should include a combination of text and images, and should contain links to both internal and external pages.

Using relevant links to other pages on your site can help to keep your audience engaged, while simultaneously influencing your rankings positively.

Provide Unique Value

The final step to outranking your competitors on sites like Google is to provide unique value to your audience. This may require you and your SEO consultants to do some market research.

It may be that you have access to unique data or can format it in a unique way. Maybe you have a unique perspective, which challenges established ideas.

In some cases, the unique value you offer may just be the pure quality of the content itself.

Whatever the case may be, setting yourself apart from everyone else is a great way to ensure your content outranks your rivals, attracts a larger audience and ultimately encourages readers to do what you want them to do.

"Now that you have this competitive advantage, in terms of the content... you can assemble this stuff in formats that other people don't or won't create," says Rand Fishkin from Moz.com. "

That could be things like guides that require extraordinary amounts of work, [or] highly customized formats that have unique interactive or visual components."

Parting Advice

To conclude, remember that all pages are not created equal. Think of the key pages on your website that need to work harder and contribute to your business’ goals. These are the ones you should start optimizing first, especially if you are low on resources and time (who isn’t!).

These landing pages should have great content components that resonate with your audiences (and ideally solve their problems) such as engaging text content, downloadable guides, infographics or fun tools, strong visuals, possible a video and second to none call to actions and links.

This optimization exercise takes time and real effort, but it will be highly rewarding if you get it right and your pages end up above your competitors’ in search engine result pages.


Christelle Macri is the founder of Ebizpromotion, a leading SEO agency in Berkshire, with a no-nonsense and ethical approach to digital marketing. She is also search engine consultant with over 17 years’ experience in the internet advertising industry. Having worked for a major search engine and pioneering pay for performance advertising networks, she is an expert at turning her clients’ websites into consistent revenue streams, using a variety of digital channels. Feel free to connect with her on Twitter.

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How Team Sprout Uses Message Tagging for Product Development

As our business has grown so has our customer base. As exciting as this is, the need to stay on top of brand-to-customer communication has become even more important. While it may seem overwhelming to think about managing customer feedback, you don’t need an entire customer service department to organize and address customer queries.

Here at Sprout, we believe that open communication between consumers and brands creates progress. We also believe that, regardless of size, it’s imperative to remain agile and evolve our product to meet the needs and demands of our customers and the marketplace. Social is where these ideals intersect.

The medium provides a rare opportunity to not only speak with customers but listen and discover. In fact, according to a Nielsen report, more than one-third of customers prefer to contact businesses for customer support questions through social media.

We don’t take customer feedback on social lightly—and you shouldn’t either. At Sprout, 25% of inbound messages are organized and tracked through message tagging. We then filter these messages using our Tag Report and present findings to the appropriate teams. Sprout’s Message Tagging isn’t just valuable for bolstering communication between our business and our customers; it can be beneficial when it comes to further developing our product based on customer needs.

For example, we used our Tag Report to analyze the message volume around requests for LinkedIn analytics. We then compared these asks with other product feedback we were receiving. This data collectively demonstrated that LinkedIn analytics were a priority for our customers and reaffirmed our decision to prioritize the LinkedIn Pages Report for development.

In addition to tracking inbound messages from customers, we tag any outbound message that has information on a product update or new feature. This lets us run a report that delivers learnings to our product team and provides us with a better understanding of customer sentiment. The product team continuously calls on us and Sprout’s Tag Report, to gather data, distill requests and identify patterns easily observed from our social community.

Promoting communication between businesses and customers strengthens the brand/consumer relationship. With Message Tagging, we’re able to monitor that communication in a way that helps us evolve our product and more efficiently understand and respond to our customer’s needs.

This post How Team Sprout Uses Message Tagging for Product Development originally appeared on Sprout Social.



source http://sproutsocial.com/insights/how-sprout-uses-message-tagging/

Wednesday, 28 December 2016

Why Your Search Engine Rankings Matter

Too many businesses simply don’t pay enough attention to their search engine rankings. For some, it just seems too overwhelming with all the theory and conflicting information out there. Others become apprehensive after working with a less-than-reputable SEO firm that talked a big game, but couldn’t come through with results.

No matter what your reasons may be for putting search engine marketing on the back burner, it’s time to make it a priority. Every day, more and more people turn to search engines like Google and Bing to find restaurants, contractors, dentists, lawyers and any other service you can imagine. If you aren’t on the first page, you’re missing out in a big way.

People are no longer only searching from desktop computers. Mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets are garnering an increasing percentage of searches. Users searching from those devices are looking for answers right away and are often ready to buy. Getting in front of people searching for services has never been so important or profitable and the competition is only getting stronger.

In the infographic below, you’ll see how your search engine visibility can bring in a substantial number of new leads. Search engine results have done more than simply help businesses improve. Rankings have turned businesses around by providing an exponential increase in leads and a steady stream of new customers.

You’ll also see why focusing strictly on Google results is an outdated technique. Bing is coming up fast and garnering a very respectable share of search engine users.

Whether you want to improve your organic search engine rankings, improve your search advertising results or implement both, this infographic will help you understand more about the importance of search engine optimization and search engine marketing.

Take a close look at the numbers to get a stronger understanding of why ranking on page one should be a priority for your business.

Share this Image On Your Site

The post Why Your Search Engine Rankings Matter appeared first on Ninja Outreach.



source https://ninjaoutreach.com/why-your-search-engine-rankings-matter/

10 Standout Social Media Marketing Examples From 2016

Tuesday, 27 December 2016

Guest Blog by Lynne Cockrum-Murphy: Loving Animals Hurts

Amazon No. 1 Bestselling Author Lynne Cockrum-Murphy joined the first group of social entrepreneurs who learned how to play the Game of Social Media at www.whatissocialmediatoday.com. She learned about blogging as a way to establish her brand identity. Find out more about her books and her healing work through her blog.

Loving animals hurts. The other day when I saw a clip on the computer of a guy walking up to a kangaroo and slugging it in the face –I had no idea the context. I actually hurt inside and made me sad too. I wanted to contact who was behind it and let them know my thoughts… When I saw some stupid animal trick on the news, I jumped up and called them right away and told them that cruelty to animals for the sake of a laugh is pathetic and not newsworthy. The most recent atrocity was seeing a hunter with a dead giraffe and learning people hunt polar bears. What is wrong with these people? Why the need for domination and false bravado? Why would anyone be proud of shooting an animal from a helicopter?

I love to think people are like me and rescue dogs and cats, pray for horses, and don’t eat animals. There are people who care deeply about animals. You find them everywhere, the internet, animal planet, the neighborhood, in veterinarian’s offices and amongst my friends.

Let me clarify, so this doesn’t remain just a rant about animal abuse I have felt this way about animals since I was a child. I had cats and dogs as pets of course. But when my step dad asked if I wanted to go rabbit hunting (target practice was something everyone in my family did in the Nevada desert). I said sure, I wanted to go and then checked to see if we’d take the rabbits to the vet afterwards. I was in elementary school and not too clear on what rabbit hunting was and what guns did. My parents said never mind, we’ll skip the rabbit hunting. I knew something had just transpired between them – you know when your parents whisper and smile that it’s about you. It was one of the moments that stayed with me.

Today we have more cats than usual. We’re always happy to have one or two. But in this holiday season we ended up with six which is a lot to take care of. One of the strays we feed had 4 kittens in the neighbor’s yard. She apparently is afraid of cats so as soon as they were big enough we brought them into our house and have been gradually introducing them to our two little buddies: Lucky who has lived with us for at least 4 years and Coco who joined us 6 months ago.

Just an aside, it has always been odd to me that people say they have a rescue dog because all the pets I ever had were from the “pound” or the street or from someone looking for a home for the animal. All were “rescued”. To me that is normal. I’ve never used the term these are my “rescue cats”. Aren’t they all being rescued from the streets or death when we invite them into our homes?

On top of all that anguish, how can people buy animals not to mention that people raise animals for money! Who purchases life? Each animal belongs to itself. We cannot own them. We are caretakers.

So now we have 6 house cats and 2 strays that visit regularly for meals. We just got the 4 kittens fixed. Fortunately these 4 are so ridiculously cute that we will most likely keep them all. There’s a 10 to 20 year commitment. What else can we do? That’s a rhetorical question. There are too many unwanted animals sitting in shelters already. We won’t contribute to the problem.

People who make capture, spay/neuter, release programs possible are #inspiring. They helped us once before by loaning us a specialized cage. We captured the stray we called Chocolate who after that lived a fabulous 5 years with us until his death from FHIV. We were able to feed, love, and nurture him for years as we domesticated him. He grew big and healthy and dominated the household a bit as he ran, jumped on the bed and flopped down next to us expecting to be petted and scratched. We indulged him.

Isn’t that was having pets is all about? Reciprocity. They get so much from us and we get so much from them too. Animals in the wild may not be cute and cuddly yet they deserve respect because they are life. All life is worthy of respect. All life is worthy of respect. Black lives, blue lives, animal lives!

A few resources:

www.alleycat.org

www.azhumane.org/stray-pet-resources/trapneuterreturn/

www.fixadoptsave.org/trapneuterreturn/

“Trap-Neuter-Return Ordinances and Policies in the United States: The Future of Animal Control” – Alley Cat Allies January 2013 legal brief

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source http://whatissocialmediatoday.com/guest-blog-lynne-cockrum-murphy-loving-animals-hurts/

source http://whatissocialmediatoday.blogspot.com/2016/12/guest-blog-by-lynne-cockrum-murphy.html

Outreach Best Practices: 8 Tips to Improve Brand Awareness

Conducting an outreach campaign to boost brand awareness used to be an expensive endeavor. These days, however, several low-cost platforms have dismantled the traditional barriers to entry to conducting influencer outreach and, instead of traditional media, more and more people’s purchase decisions are influenced by so called influencers, who use social media and blogging extensively.

The trust level that these influencers hold over their network has a high rate of driving their audiences to take positive action, and this is the sort of engagement you should capitalize on if you want to drive more brand awareness for your business in the most cost-efficient way.

The power of blogging and influencer endorsements to influence consumer decisions is increasing. According to online media source for marketing MediaPost.com, about 60% of of consumers consult social media and blog posts before making a purchase. Meanwhile, a survey by marketing firm Collective Bias found that nearly 60% of consumers take a blog review or social media post into consideration before making a purchase. The same study also found that 70% of millennials surveyed said they would trust an influencer endorsement (that is, an influencer they view as a peer) more than a celebrity endorsement.

Thus, for our December expert roundup post, we wanted to compile outreach best practices with tips gathered from influencers themselves— after all, influencers would have received more than their share of outreach from other businesses and bloggers, and would have a story or two to tell about how best to get these things done.

With this goal, we sent out queries to some select influencers in our list and got back 15 responses. For this expert roundup edition, however, we’d like to deviate from our usual format. Instead of compiling and republishing answers as they are, we will be organizing our influencers and their quotes according to the best practice concepts we have distilled from all their responses. Hopefully, this should give you a more coherent and story-fied reading experience.

So, if you are frustrated at not getting any responses from your outreach emails, or if you want to increase the number of influencers who respond to your emails, then this post is right for you.

Tip#1 Do Your Research and Know What to Say

“Be authentic and do your research.” These are the opening words of our first influencer tip from Sprout Content Co-Founder, Debbie Williams.

Williams, who is also Chief Content Officer for Sprout Content, is obviously no stranger to influencer outreach. If you want influencers to respond to your outreach, Williams says that you should “Prove why content collaboration would be mutually beneficial with strategic ideas that their community could relate to and find useful.”

Tip#2 Provide Value Upfront

Once you’ve done your research and prepped your pitch, another best practice, of course, is to make sure your outreach email immediately presents some sort of value to your target influencer.

According to the founder of digital marketing agency Gecko Squared, Charlie Lawrance, catching an influencer’s attention requires providing value from the get-go.

As a social media strategist with a digital marketing agency that specializes on Facebook advertising, Lawrance describes one of his agency’s more creative outreach methods, explaining “[we] contact the businesses behind the ads we get served on our own Facebook Newsfeed.”

Lawrance adds how he and his team normally connects with decision makers such as, say, the marketing director or CEO of a target company on LinkedIn. They then offer some suggestions as to how these decisionmakers could potentially improve their campaign.

“It’s a great foot-in-the-door technique,” Lawrance says.

Freelance writer Sherry Gray, who has written for Entrepreneur.com, the Huffington Post, and Business.com, advises that, “When pitching mid-level influencers, tell them what you will do for them.”

Adam Heitzman, meanwhile, who is Co-Founder and Managing Partner for internet marketing company highervisibility.com, insists on the same best practices. Instead of simply requesting for a link, he recommends making a point to “be creative about what you can add: guest post, social shares, testimonial, etc.” So the message is pretty clear. Always find a way to add value. Your success rate depends on it.

For digital marketing and social media consultant Lilach Bullock, she swears by three rules that she always follows when it comes to outreach.

First, keep your pitch clear and concise. Offer something of value and personalise the pitch.

Second, personalize your outreach email. Show your familiarity with the influencer and the influencer’s content, but avoid long-winded emails.

In Bullock’s own words, you should “show that you know about the person you're contacting, that you visit their website and read their blog.” She also cautions to keep your email short and sweet, because “nobody has the time for long, winded emails, even if they’re all about how amazing their blog is.”

And third, as other influencers have iterated, is to offer something of value, whatever you are looking to get from your outreach. As Bullock explains, “Most bloggers and influencers are flooded with emails daily, so you need to give them a good reason to reply to your email and take action.”

Tip#3 Find Common Ground, Be Personal and Relevant

Five of our influencers all agree that nothing turns an influencer off than the sense that you don’t really know them and don’t genuinely relate to or know what it is they do.

According to content marketer Salma Jafri, who has worked as marketing consultant for Deloitte & Touche and as marketing manager and technical writer for software and elearning firms, you should find something in common with the influencer. Identify some common ground, and spark up a conversation from there. From this tête-à-tête, see how you can delight, and execute your plan.

Reginald Chan of digital marketing solutions agency Marketing Lancers, offers a more aggressive way of connecting with your target influencer: that is, investigating your target for a while on social media. According to Chan, this is so you can identify and understand the target, then strategize accordingly how to open up the communication lines.

Meanwhile, Brenda Stoltz, Founder and Chief Strategist of inbound marketing company Ariad Partners, warns against the temptation to resort to mass email. “Keep it personal and relevant,” she says.

The comments of Marko Saric, owner of HowToMakeMyBlog, highlights certain situations he’s encountered which proves how sending mass emails indiscriminately can really backfire on you.

“You cannot imagine how many emails I get that have nothing to do with what I am working with,” Saric recounts.

As Director of Content Marketing for content management systems company, DNN Corp., Dennis Shiao rounds up the tips in this section with his own cautionary advice against generic outreach messages. “Instead of saying ‘I enjoyed your recent blog post,’ explain why you enjoyed it and connect specific points from the post to the reason you're reaching out,” he suggests.

Tip#4 Warm up Your Leads; Cold Outreach Is Less Effective

As the author of the Be Different or Be Dead book series, Roy Osing shares the lessons he’s learned from his extensive experience in business and the marketing industry. He was former President, Executive Vice-President, and Chief Marketing Officer for Telus Corporation.

Osing’s piece of advice for those doing outreach to influencers: connect with warm, and not cold leads. "Make sure you build a relationship base before you reach out. Build currency with your target so that when you reach out, you will be welcomed and your message will be listened to,” he advises.

Osing urges against cold outreach and says a cold approach is not a good investment. Says Osing: “It's one-sided in pushing your interests and often represents noise to the recipient; an intrusion in their space and time. You might get lucky and get 10% positive response to a cold contact, but wouldn't you rather have a 50% acceptance rate from people who are warmed up and already leaning your way?”

Tip#5 Instead of Bloggers, Try Reaching out to Businesses More

Dominique Jackson, a freelance content marketer and SEO specialist for Sprout Social gave us his own unique take when it comes to outreach.

According to Jackson, the most creative outreach tactic he uses is to focus on businesses rather than bloggers.

Jackson also notes that, compared to most bloggers who rarely have a dearth in content, businesses tend to have a problem with producing their own content consistently, and this is where you can come in to offer value. Jackson lays out his entire process for doing outreach directed towards businesses, which we shall feature in its own standalone post.

Tip#6 Transform Your Users into Brand Ambassadors

“User-generated content is highly effective, both in engagement and in cost.” So says Anthony Gaenzle, who has held various management roles in marketing and who currently manages digital and content strategy for William & Mary University.

Gaenzle further explains how Instagram takeovers are a great example for this, and describes how to build relationships and create brand evangelists by allowing a user of your product or service (in his case, college students) to post pictures showcasing their relationship with your company on your official Instagram channel.

Tip#7 Guest Post and Pay Attention to the Comments Section

As someone who has served senior management roles in media and brand management for companies like Procter & Gamble, Danone, and Unilever, Eugene Mota believes in the power of guest posting and the treasure trove that is the comments section when it comes to sourcing leads for an outreach campaign.

Mota, who now manages his own consulting business as an online marketing strategist and marketing coach for entrepreneurs, explains how guest posting lets you “reach a big and targeted audience in your niche. Then, people commenting on and sharing your post are sending you a signal that they resonate with your message.” From this point, Mota says, this makes outreach to them a no brainer, since they are already engaging with you in the first place.

Tip#8 Be Tenacious

Finally, when it comes to sourcing and following up on outreach prospects, Kim Orlesky, a sales coach who, after a long career in corporate sales now manages her own consulting business, concludes that tenacity is key.

After working as a solutions executive and account manager for the likes of Xerox, Clarion Medical Technologies, American Express, and Canada’s transportation and logistics network Purolator Inc., an influencer like Orlesky would know the backbreaking outreach work that it takes to build a brand and convert prospects into customers.

Conclusion

Before the internet and social media, there were few creative ways to promote brand awareness. Executing instant and global outreach was expensive, and left only to big media companies and well-funded advertising firms who rely on traditional media such as television, radio, and print ads, which, naturally, do not cost peanuts.

Now, armed with an internet connection, a keyboard, and the discipline to learn and execute a well-planned strategy, almost anyone can reach out to influencers online.

We hope that, with this best practices expert roundup, you have added enough useful insights in your repertoire to do so. After all, adding more arrows to your quiver of outreach tactics won’t hurt.

The post Outreach Best Practices: 8 Tips to Improve Brand Awareness appeared first on Ninja Outreach.



source https://ninjaoutreach.com/brand-awareness-best-practices-from-influencers/

How to Optimize Your Social Media Workflow

Thursday, 22 December 2016

Practical Startup Business Plan To Make A Lasting Impression

To make a lasting impression, startups, or any business for that matter, should aim not only to survive but to thrive. Only a practical startup business plan can create that lasting impression, and this article will show you how.

Your startup is your baby. As an entrepreneur or a startup, you need to know the do’s and don’ts of this all-consuming lifestyle. You also need to plan ahead of time and execute your plan.

You want your business to be recognized by clients and users, right? Your clients and customers need to feel the same passion that you feel for your startup. But 90% of startups fail for simple reasons such as running out of money or hiring the wrong talent.

And that is why you need to keep your investors, clients, and employees happy to get your startup off the ground and make it successful. So, I have listed these 13 ingredients that are essential for any startup that aims to thrive.

1. Develop a Vision, Create Your Startup Business Plan

Vision helps you hold on to activities that benefit and discard those that don’t. Your business maintains focus. A strong and purposeful vision paves the way, even for the smaller teams within your startup. In essence, your startup’s vision helps you define the activities necessary for results.

Do you have a clear idea (and you should!) about how your startup will grow? For instance, take a look at Google’s vision: “To organize the world‘s information and make it universally accessible and useful.” This short sentence seamlessly reflects Google’s products and services, don’t you think?

So, is your vision permeating through your startup?

Steve Jobs had a vision, and it changed the world! Jobs had a vision of technology making life simpler. He thought of minimalist innovation that changed the way we use technology. He started the PC revolution and the era of smartphones.

Does your product or service manifest your vision? Consider this when you develop a vision for your startup:

  • Reflect on the most significant aspect of your startup
  • Identify core values of your startup
  • What does your startup hope to solve in the next five years?
  • Craft a short and memorable vision that employees can easily remember.

2. Draw up Financial Projections That Are Vital to Your Investors

As a startup, forecasting your growth may seem like an overwhelming task. You want to spend your time on selling your product rather than planning.

But it is important that you forecast your expenses and revenues. This is to make a lasting impression both on your internal and external customers. Few investors are interested in a startup that has a blurry vision or unripe growth prospects.

To make a lasting impression, create two revenue projections for your startup. One based on your dream (aggressive) and the other based on practical reality (conservative). This way, you are open to making conservative assumptions while loosening up on your aggressive projection.

Don’t forget to get your expense report in order! Understanding your gross margin, operating profit margin and total headcount per client will help you avoid several expenses all the way.

3. Spend Your Money Wisely

Financing start up? spend wisely

Talk about forecasting growth and building revenue projections.

This takes us to the point of investor funds.

When you have investors backing your startup, they need to know exactly how you will spend the money.

Hiten Shah and Neil Patel, Founders at KISSmetrics, wasted $1,000,000 on a company that never launched!

The spending has to be meaningful. To make a lasting impression, make sure that your investors and your team have a clear view of where your money is being used in the business.

4. Provide ROI for Your Investors and Users

You need to figure out how ROI will be gained in your startup business plan

You need to get your documents in order and get transparent about your expenses, revenues, and benefits of your product and services.

This way, your investors can clearly see what return they would get on their investment. A visible ROI serves as an important motive for the investors for choosing you over your competitors.

This holds true for your customers as well. Users need to know the benefits they get from your product or service.

5. Get the Perfect Pitch Presentation on Your Fingertips

To get your startup off the ground, you need to deliver the perfect business pitch.

A meeting with an angel investor can be a defining moment for your business.

Unless your product, application or service is disruptive, they've already heard your story. (Meaning, one that changes the industry, creates a new market, etc.)

When you are out there preparing for your pitch, you know it is imperative to keep all your information handy.

Pitches can happen anywhere, not just in big boardrooms. You need to be ready to pitch in elevators, waiting rooms, cocktail parties, etc.

Being able to deliver that perfect pitch can get you great partnerships. And even lucrative incentives.

In no particular order, here's how to make a lasting impression with your pitch:

  • Know your audience. Be ready to answer “how many people need your product?”
  • Know your competition. How many players are in the market? How are you different?
  • Know your user base. What user base do you have already?
  • Know your numbers. Are you making any money? What do your numbers look like?
  • Know your growth. Forecast how much more money you’ll get.
  • Know your product. Be clear about the way it works, etc.

The emphasis is always on the investors. They want to know what's in it for them. And that keeps them engaged with your pitch and interested in your startup!

6. Offer the Right Customer Experience

Customer support is essential for your Startup Business Plan

Sure, you need revenues to drive funding. But what drives revenue? Users.

Users have great power in driving revenues for your business.

Just look at Google. The company reached close to $1 billion revenue within five years on its incorporation. So how can your startup make a lasting impression and get more users?

Can users navigate through your website easily? Does your application have any issues? How is your UI/UX user experience on a platform?

Customers know what they want, but not how to get it. You can market your products and services, but a great experience can only be felt first-hand. Improve your customer experience for more success!

7. Hire the Right Blend of Talent

Few startups are funded, some are self-funded, and others are crowdfunded. Either way, a startup has to be smart about paying employees during the startup stage.

Choosing the right resources is important. You need the right talent with the right attitude.

Founder of FoodtoEat Deepti Sharma Kapur hired too quickly in 2012. She realized that she hired people who needed jobs, not those who understood her vision for the company.

She had to let go of many at the startup stage which wasted her time and resources. Four years later, Deepti’s company is worth USD 5,000,000 in revenue.

8. Offer a Disruptive Pay Model

If your startup is not heavily funded, then get your customers to pay for the services.

This creates a lasting impression than if an investor was to fund your startup.

When you get your customers to pay as they go, you are mindful about the money spent in the wrong direction. Just look at how these disruptive innovations fuel Uber and Netflix!

Like a credit card, some startups can take the fund for granted, causing more damage. Plus, you will work harder to make a lasting impression.

9. Run Effective Meetings at Your Startup

Startup Business Planning in a team meeting

One of the easiest ways to build a lasting impression with your clients is the way you hold your meetings.

You can leverage meetings especially if you are a service-based startup.

Clients need to know what they are paying for. Besides, effective meetings unite teams and motivate employees. So, meetings are a great way to communicate and keep everyone engaged.

3 ways to make a lasting impression with meetings

  • Weekly Status Calls - Meetings are a great way to keep your investors or clients involved in your business and engaged. Discuss how the week went by and also talk about your plan of action for the next week.
  • Keep Meeting Agenda Clear - This way you are then focused on the agenda at hand. You will save everyone’s time and discuss the issues that need the most attention.
  • Schedule Follow-Up Meetings - Rather than extend an ongoing meeting to discuss impromptu points, schedule another meeting. Remember that simple language and offering simple solutions will always get you remembered.

10. Own up to Your Mistakes

Maintaining integrity is an important aspect of any business.

For a startup, it is doubly important that you keep your customers informed about any glitch, any error or problem, and do so, right away.

Be honest with your resources. Your client is your partner as well.

If you come across a blunder, own up to it. Your failures are your biggest lessons.

When you own up to your mistakes, your customers see you as responsible, accountable, honest and relatable.

11. Don’t Enter into an Already Crowded Market

If you want your startup to continue to exist and have an effect on your customers, then give them something new.

You need to enter a niche for a lasting impression.

Invent the wheel or innovate.

For example, Uber created something so simple that has helped improve economies all over the world. But Google engineered cars that don’t even need drivers! Now that’s a great example of disruptive innovation.

12. Offer Freemium Pricing

Freemium pricing works well for brands like Dropbox, Evernote, etc. who offer sufficient value to their free users.

For example, Linkedin allows you to make a profile and use many important basic features.

But you pay a little more and get access to more service benefits. Apple does the same. They give consumers a choice of storage space, then offer more space on their cloud at a price.

13. Don’t Use Jargon

Whether it is in a meeting, emails or any other communication. As a startup trying to make an impression, spare the jargon. When you say “it’s not rocket science,” someone can contend you to show them how it’s done. All this kills time.

Conclusion

As you can see, these tips are easy to do. You can easily incorporate them into your company culture. You and your resources are key in making lasting impressions to your clients and customers. A lasting impression is an amalgamation of great experiences over time. Use your time and efforts wisely and make it last.

 

Do you have any other tip or suggestion that can help startups make a lasting impression?

 


Alice Clarke is a content strategist from Topaussie review and a writer. She is always in search for the next thing in marketing, technology, and startups.

The post Practical Startup Business Plan To Make A Lasting Impression appeared first on Ninja Outreach.



source https://ninjaoutreach.com/practical-startup-business-plan/

How Team Sprout Uses Its Twitter Listening Report for Content Creation

Wednesday, 21 December 2016

13 Expert Tips on Running a Lucrative Business

You wake up whenever you want. You sit in your cozy pajamas, doing what you love, and it helps you grow revenue.

Running a lucrative business is just a kind of dream, isn't it?

According to one survey, 40% of people want to start their own business.

But:

Here comes the bleak truth about startups: 90% of them fail.

A logical question appears: what are the reasons?

  • Money: The main idea of starting up is to get profit, but you need to spend a considerable amount of money before you start earning them. Any business needs investments, so people can run out of money on running it.
  • Time: Although it's hard to say how many hours a week is required to run a business, some people work on their startup up to 60 hours. If you're not ready to spend a considerable amount of time working, you might find out that startups don't work well for you.
  • Expertise in different fields: No matter what the niche is, you need to have good skills in marketing in order to promote your business. Obviously, you can learn how to optimize your website, but you need to keep on improving different skills. (Yes, you need to be an expert even if you have a great staff).

Keeping all that data in mind, what are the odds of success? Why do people want to set foot in the business niche?

Actually, there are many reasons to start your business:

  • to be in charge of your income
  • to show your expertise in the niche
  • to grow as a team leader
  • to create a team of your dreams
  • to love what you do
  • to balance work and life

If you can stand out from other people, you can achieve a tremendous success. Thus, it's getting obvious why people give it a try.

However, many new entrepreneurs crave for actionable tips that are able to suit their needs, and learning from people who succeeded is a great way to get motivation and inspiration.

1. Set Foot in the Niche You're Interested in

An average person spends around 30% of life working, and 50.4% of people are not satisfied with their jobs. If you've decided to start up with your business, why not to choose a niche you're interested in?

If you love what you do, you can do it with a passion which means bringing better results. Plus, you can stay happy which also affects your well-being.

2. Learn from Your Customers

Listen to your customers, especially if they're not satisfied with the quality of your product. They can give you a hint on what to work on in order to keep on improving your services.

Although it might be hard to deal with negative feedback and not ruin your reputation, it's the greatest source of inspiration.

3. Never Give Up

Making mistakes is a normal process of gaining experience, and you need to know how to deal with regrets in business if you want to achieve success but not be to blame yourself for faults.

People can't be successful if they give up once failure happens. Do you need inspiration? Pay attention to the list of famous people who failed before succeeding.

4. Focus on Quality

While it's nearly impossible to create a product that can be perfect for all people, it's important to create a qualitative product that can be a perfect match for your target audience.

For instance, if you want to open a restaurant, don't try to serve all popular dishes. It can harm the quality of your services which also harm your reputation.

It's better to be an expert at one thing than be mediocre at everything.

5. Take Risks

Although many people are afraid of taking risks, you need to be risky as you never know what you can do until you try.

The business niche is competitive, but it's full of opportunities, so you need to take a step outside of your comfort zone and try things that might scare you.

6. Be Responsible for Your Team

To run a lucrative business, you need to be a true leader not a boss. If you know how to encourage and motivate your staff, you can achieve a lot.

However, a true leader will always be responsible for the team and its actions, so show your colleagues how much you value and take care of them, and you will get their respect.

7. Create Great Work Environment

If you want to grow your business and, therefore, increase your income, you need to start with motivating your team.

If your team is motivated to achieve the same goal, your business can flourish. There is no better way to keep your employees motivated and inspired than create great work environment.

8. Have Passion for Your Business

Do you track time while doing something that brings you joy? I bet you don't. If you have a passion for something, you do it with a big pleasure, and it can give better results as you put much effort.

What can be better than earning money with your hobby? It's a kind of dream, indeed.

9. Try Something New

Thinking outside the box is an actionable way to expand your knowledge and increase the number of opportunities around you.

Although it's hard to give something new a try, you need to do it in order to see things from different perspectives.

10. Set Big Goals

Even if successful people have doubts, they never set small goals. If you dream big, you achieve a lot.

Most entrepreneurs know about S.M.A.R.T goal setting and use this method to grow their business.

If you're a true leader, you're not interested in achieving small results; you struggle for better. Always.

11. Put Your Customers First

No matter what your product or service is, you should put your customers and their needs first.

If you know how to suit them, you can get positive feedback, and the number of your clients will increase even without investing much money into your promotion.

12. Contribute

Running a lucrative business is not just about earning money; it's also about being beneficial for people. If you can do something outstanding that will be useful for the humankind, people will never forget you, and it's a proof of being a successful person.

13. Take Your Time

Making decisions in a hurry can give you nothing but extra work. To make the right decision, you need to know all pros and cons to understand whether it's worth trying.

Thus, take your time, do research, ask experienced people for advice, and your decisions will give you benefits only!

Key Takeaways

If you're about to start up a business, and you want to make it lucrative, pay attention to the key takeaways:

  • 9 out of 10 people fail. Get ready for a failure, but do your best to stand out.
  • Hard work is a key to success. Sometimes you need to work overtime to achieve success, and you will work hard to grow your business.
  • Learn from other people. If you learn from your mistakes, that's great. If you learn from others, that's even better! Prevent making mistakes, and start living a better life!Thus, listen to people who succeed and implement things that might work well for you.

Wrap-up

Checking out the most profitable small-business industries is not enough to start up and succeed. Once you've decided what business to run, it's time to learn from other people, and the above-mentioned tips might be helpful to boost inspiration.

Are you motivated to start up? What is the most important tip you've learned today?

 


Andrew Howe is a student who dream of becoming a successful entrepreneur. He runs AdverbLess website to help people improve their writing skills. Andrew writes for different websites to share his expertise and grow as a writer. Don't hesitate to follow him on Twitter or drop him a line at andrewhowe306@gmail.com

The post 13 Expert Tips on Running a Lucrative Business appeared first on Ninja Outreach.



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Friday, 16 December 2016

#SproutChat Recap: Running a Successful Boutique Agency

Agency work isn’t easy. Strategizing, managing and executing a brand’s social and digital marketing initiatives requires a deep understanding of your client’s industry and audience.

This week at #SproutChat, we were joined by Sprout All Star, Brooke B. Sellas. In addition to starting her own boutique agency, B Squared Media, Brooke is a marketing and social media consultant and an adjunct for consumer behavior at The City University of New York (CUNY). During our chat we discussed how to grow, scale and achieve your entrepreneurial goals.

When Is It Time to Be Your Own Boss?

Deciding when to make the jump from working for someone else to being your own boss is the first step in starting your own social media agency. It’s also one of the scariest steps of your new business venture. There may never be a “perfect” time to make the leap but if you’re passion and driven it’s important that you try. Before taking the plunge, meet with other entrepreneurs, budget accordingly and really understand what you’re about to get yourself into.

Finding & Securing Clients

So you’ve decided to quit your day job. Now what? If you want your agency to be successful, you need to find and secure clients. Start by doing your research, listening to the experts, networking and playing to your strengths.

Know When You Need Help

As your agency begins to grow, you’re going to need to enlist the help of others. During our chat, Brooke said it best when she said that learning to hire people that are smarter that you is a win for your business. But once your ready to hire someone, how do you find them? Asking for recommendations and reaching out to your professional networks is a good place to start.

Recognize Your Agency’s Value

Setting boundaries and understanding your agency’s value is critical to driving a profit. Make sure that you’re logging your work and clearly communicating expectations and pricing with each of your clients.

Invest in the Right Tools

Keep your team of one or 100 on track by investing in the right tools. That’s why we asked our community what software programs they rely on to complete their daily tasks and meet the needs of their clients.

Remember Why You Started Your Agency

Being your own boss is a dream but the reality isn’t always as glamorous. Take time to reflect on what you’ve built and always remember why you started your boutique agency in the first place. From collaboration and relationship building to a diverse and evolving professional skill set–agency work is worth the hustle.

We’ll be back for our last #SproutChat of 2016 on Wednesday, December 21 from 2:00-3:00 p.m. CST. Get ready to for trivia on Sprout Social and social media trends. In the meantime, stay connected with other industry experts by joining our Facebook community.

This post #SproutChat Recap: Running a Successful Boutique Agency originally appeared on Sprout Social.



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