Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Understanding Marketing - An Overview of Strategies, Costs, Dangers and Risks

Marketing is a business discipline through which the targeted consumer is influenced to react positively to an offer. This can relate to the purchase of a product or a service, the joining of an organization, the endorsement of a candidate or ideology, the contribution or investment in a cause or company, or a variety of other choices of response.


The marketer can use a number of techniques to reach the consumer which can be based on artistic or scientific strategies, or a combination of the two.


Usually, the consumer is identified as a member of a particular segment of the populace, known as a market. For example, markets can be defined by age, income, area of residence, home value, interest, buying habits, industry or profession, etc., which facilitates and simplifies the marketing process. Knowing to whom the marketing effort is appealing greatly assists the marketer in developing appropriate language, reasoning and incentives to find success in its marketing efforts.


Choosing to target a particular market as opposed to the entire universe also greatly controls marketing expenditures but also may limit response. If anyone anywhere can be a customer, sales expectations may be higher but marketing costs will certainly also need to be higher as well with such a huge target as its goal.


To address this dilemma, more creative means of marketing are sometimes utilized to assist with marketing message delivery. If what is being marketed is considered newsworthy and of public interest, editorial coverage in the media can greatly assist marketing efforts. Since this usually is not reliant on major marketing funds other than what is needed to support the development, distribution, and yes, marketing of press releases to editors and publishers, the advantages of such publicity can be priceless, albeit usually miraculous on such a large scale.


Marketing is everywhere!


Everywhere we turn, everything we do is somehow connected to marketing, whether we have been induced to participate in some activity because of it or develop an interest in some idea as a result of it. Whether we realize it or not, there are personal, political or commercial agendas cloaked as news we read in the paper, behind the books, movies and music we experience as part of our culture, and within the confines of our stores and supermarkets where we shop. Of course, we easily recognize the blatant marketing efforts that reach us through direct mail, media advertising, and all over the Internet including the spam we receive ad nauseum. Marketing has become one of the most all-pervasive elements of life and we are fools if we do not question the validity or innocence of everything we read, see and hear.


Marketing is communication and education!


In order to be successful in business marketing, the customer must be reached in a variety of ways. First of all, not every customer gets the daily paper or listens to local radio. We have limited knowledge of which TV station they may watch, where they shop, what roads they travel or where they dine. Depending on what we are marketing, we may have to utilize a whole assortment of avenues of marketing to get their attention. And, if we reach them just once, that is hardly enough to make a lasting impression. Marketing is necessary on a repeated basis in a diverse number of ways in an ever-changing presentation to assure that every customer can relate to it in some way, learn what we are offering and understand how it can benefit them. To achieve long-term customer loyalty, the targeted consumer needs to be coddled into familiarity with what we are selling so they feel it is something they truly want as opposed to having it forced upon them as something they desperately need, only to find out later they were tricked!


Marketing Sounds Expensive!


Yes, marketing can get pricey particularly if it is done on a consistent basis. But in today’s world, we have marketing options we never had even twenty or thirty years ago. Now, instead of paying for expensive printing and postage to mail a brochure or postcard to a targeted consumer, we can utilize email marketing, website presentations or online banner ads to reach the same market, usually at a fraction of the cost. Today, instead of buying expensive print advertising, we can work on improving our website’s SEO (search engine optimization) – (something we can do for free, if we are so inclined) so that people in need of what we offer can find us through Internet searches, rather than our trying to find them at an astronomical expense.


What About Social Media Marketing?


In addition to alternative marketing options already mentioned, there is the latest craze for Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and other incredibly popular social media where people, young and old, spend hours developing relationships with “friends” they may never have met or ever will meet. Yet they share intense secrets of their deepest thoughts and desires as well as actual photographic representations of the same which sometimes land people in trouble with the law, or at the very least, their employer, school or parents.


Whether social media marketing is a worthwhile endeavor for businesses remains to be seen since businesses rarely accumulate millions of followers the way celebrities do. But as a way for customers to interact with a business for which they may have developed a fondness cannot be disputed. Can this translate into more sales for the business? We’ll have to wait and see, while continuing to devote precious time to composing meaningful 140-character tweets and building a Facebook “persona” for the business. From this writer’s standpoint, the only worthwhile social medium for business is that of LinkedIn since it provides a serious platform on which to create a business résumé where anyone interested in your professional stature can quickly summarize your capabilities, experience and accomplishments.


Marketing Can Be Intuitive


Much of what becomes marketing strategy is based more on common sense than on some mysterious scientific formula. As we see on a daily basis in stock market gyrations as well as political leanings, the herd mentality rules. On any particular day, if the Japanese or European stock or bond markets are selling off for one reason or another, you can safely bet that the U.S. markets will follow suit. And in any political race, as we are witnessing in the U.S. presidential primaries, the more one candidate gains ground, baby step by baby step, the more likely that candidate will become the Party nominee. Today’s world is governed by a minute-by-minute opinion survey measured by the endlessly publicized polls where people see what other people are thinking and use those results to form their own opinions. Monkey see, monkey do. The same holds true for marketing.


If we are told that a certain brand of coffee is the leading brand in America, we will probably believe what we are told, assume it tastes best, perhaps buy it ourselves regardless of cost, and perhaps adopt it as our own favorite. All because we were told everyone else was doing it. Safety in numbers, as they say.


It is ironic that those who become successful marketers usually dwell on the outskirts of the herd, have a more astute grasp of mass psychology, and approach business and life in a more innovative, creative and unique way, a mindset they use to formulate the next marketing phenomenon. The world is made up of leaders and followers: a few choice leaders and a glut of followers. It takes a lot more gumption to become a leader than it does to join the herd. That’s why marketing is a profession based in psychological control by a choice few over the mindless masses who have no initiative or courage to decide for themselves.


What is the difference between marketing and selling?


Selling is one aspect of the greater process of marketing. Marketing begins long before the product or service is even ready to sell. Marketing encompasses the concept, naming, branding and promoting of the offer while selling is the much more individualized effort to convince a lead who has possibly responded to the marketing offer to make the purchase. You can’t have one without the other, at least not easily. Marketing is a process by which we strive to reach the final goal of making the sale. Without marketing, the sales process is extremely difficult because the entire onus of educating the consumer about the offer is on the shoulders of the sales representative. On the other hand, if marketing has been successful, the sales rep can waltz in knowing the consumer is well apprised of the offer and can work his magic to convert the prospect into a satisfied customer.


What are some of the instruments of marketing?


There are many ways to market an offer, some of which are expensive, and others of which can be free. The methods we use that cost us dearly may not work as well as some of those we receive as a gift. Among the costly ways are media advertising, direct mail, conference presentations, distribution of printed literature, online advertising, email marketing, etc. Of those that are free are efforts referred to as guerrilla marketing, which are things we do ourselves to spread the word, network and publicize what we are offering. This can include posting flyers on bulletin boards in supermarkets, libraries, delis, small shops, and government offices, etc. Every time we add a tag to our emails where people can click to go to our website, we are using guerrilla marketing at no cost. Making sure we are easily found in Internet searches through search engine optimization of our website or other online presence, is an excellent way to achieve free marketing. One way to do this is to register your company or organization on every possible free online directory in your industry, region or interest group which translates into exponential growth as time passes.


What is viral marketing?


Viral marketing (as it relates to the word “virus,” meaning contagious and capable of spreading) is another means of free promotion facilitated by shrewd decisions we can make to further our cause. The easiest way to define viral marketing is that which is communicated via “word-of-mouth.” Related to the herd mentality discussed above, if a friend or business acquaintance mentions a product or service in a favorable light, we will be much more inclined to remember it and check it out. This can happen in a business meeting, at a mall, at a soccer game or over lunch. However, since most of us spend so much time on the Internet, it can happen practically everywhere we turn by clicking on the “like” buttons on Facebook or the “1” button on Google, among others. These are our personal endorsements where we give a “thumbs up” to something we have experienced and want to share with our friends so they too can enjoy it. Getting your offerings out with such buttons attached can result in viral marketing in your favor.


Viral marketing can have powerful repercussions as experienced by one client with an online auto accessories store. Many of his customers frequent online special interest forums related to the model of car they drive where members discuss products they have installed and the source of their purchase, followed by a link to his referenced website. Such referrals are repeated in other ensuing discussions, multiplying the number of links back to his site, increasing the power of his SEO and catapulting him to the tops of Internet searches for what he sells. He paid nothing for this phenomenon of parlayed good fortune except the daily effort he consistently expends to offer top quality merchandise and equally excellent customer service.


Do you need marketing?


If you are in business, of course you do. While you can attempt to do as much of it as you can on your own, it is advised that you begin with a reliable base of professional name, logo, website and search engine optimization to get started on the right foot. From there, you can work on promotion via guerrilla marketing and seek professional marketing services as needed for special needs, like a strong, effective ad to run, the development of professional sales literature to distribute at an upcoming show, or a direct mail promotion to your list of repeat customers, for example. Some business people choose to handle their own taxes to save on the cost of using an accountant for such critical functions at the risk of getting audited. Likewise, you can certainly attempt to produce marketing tools yourself but for long-term branding purposes and best return on investment, it is advisable to leave marketing development to the professionals.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/6818531



Understanding Marketing - An Overview of Strategies, Costs, Dangers and Risks

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Painting Contractors – New Obstacles They Face

Painting contractors face more challenges now then ever. If you open the yellow pages from 5 or 10 years ago it’s inevitable that a majority of the painters listed are out of business, have relocated, or changed their name. These are some of the obstacles facing traditional painting contractors:

New Products:

Siding: More and more homeowners are choosing to install siding on their home to get away from the 5-7 year paint cycle. Vinyl siding and fiber cement siding are the 2 most commonly used products today.

“Lifetime Paints”:

Whether or not these products are too good to be true, which most experts suggest they are, is a discussion for another article. However they are still tapping into the share of customers that used to use traditional house painters. These “lifetime coating” companies rely heavily on the fact that the average homeowner sells and moves in less than 10 years.

Stricter Laws:

VOC Laws: Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC’s) are the additives that produce off-gases released from paint products. They can be harmful to our heath and the environment. Paint manufacturers are consistently changing the formulation of their products to abide by the more stringent state and federal regulations.

Lead Paint Removal:

Over 30 years after paint companies stopped using lead as an ingredient in paint, painting contractors still have to be careful. The state and town governments have very strict laws about how painters can and cannot remove lead paint. Knowing these laws and abiding by them is difficult for painting contractors.

These are just a couple of the obstacles facing the traditional painting contractor today. The important thing is that they be ready to adapt to a constantly changing industry.

united home experts, painting contractors, painters in new york

Turner’s Painting is a five star rated Long Island painting company which offers the best quality interior and exterior painting services, If you need qualified Long Island painters for work at your home, contact Turner’s Painting today.

Painting Contractors – New Obstacles They Face

Painting contractors face more challenges now then ever. If you open the yellow pages from 5 or 10 years ago it’s inevitable that a majority of the painters listed are out of business, have relocated, or changed their name. These are some of the obstacles facing traditional painting contractors:

New Products:

Siding: More and more homeowners are choosing to install siding on their home to get away from the 5-7 year paint cycle. Vinyl siding and fiber cement siding are the 2 most commonly used products today.

“Lifetime Paints”:

Whether or not these products are too good to be true, which most experts suggest they are, is a discussion for another article. However they are still tapping into the share of customers that used to use traditional house painters. These “lifetime coating” companies rely heavily on the fact that the average homeowner sells and moves in less than 10 years.

Stricter Laws:

VOC Laws: Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC’s) are the additives that produce off-gases released from paint products. They can be harmful to our heath and the environment. Paint manufacturers are consistently changing the formulation of their products to abide by the more stringent state and federal regulations.

Lead Paint Removal:

Over 30 years after paint companies stopped using lead as an ingredient in paint, painting contractors still have to be careful. The state and town governments have very strict laws about how painters can and cannot remove lead paint. Knowing these laws and abiding by them is difficult for painting contractors.

These are just a couple of the obstacles facing the traditional painting contractor today. The important thing is that they be ready to adapt to a constantly changing industry.

united home experts, painting contractors, painters in new york

Turner’s Painting is a five star rated Long Island painting company which offers the best quality interior and exterior painting services, If you need qualified Long Island painters for work at your home, contact Turner’s Painting today.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Top Ten Things You Know About Online Marketing


#1 Online Marketing is a Science AND an Art


Marrying the art and science of online marketing with strategy SELLS. Buying expensive tracking is not going to make your online marketing better – How you use it to understand your analytics is what helps us improve, learn, leverage success, etc. Go back to marketing 101 – who is your target audience, what is your GOAL, what are success criteria, what tools can support you, how will you track/optimize ???


Go back to your web analytics and review the sources of your traffic, leads and sales. Look at the numbers, and take the extra step to understand all the variables that influence those numbers. Create a baseline report that you review at least monthly and go one step further and map out your observations, recommendations, optimizations and new channel ideas.


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: There are multiple ways to treat marketing goals. Treat your professional cause (purpose!), don’t just band-aid symptoms.


#2 Online Marketing is a Commitment


Blogs do not run themselves and analytics on your website do not magically optimize marketing…people make online marketing matter if they commit to the process. Online marketing tools, campaigns, strategy, etc require constant attention, optimization, analysis, management and effort.


Put your marketing energy into efforts that count. Your analytics will help you prioritize. Do your email campaigns = sales? (or do they eat up a bunch of time with no return)? Leverage what works, optimize what doesn’t. Create campaigns, execute and monitor. Rinse, repeat…it’s an ongoing process.


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: Online Marketing is the most lucrative medium because if things don’t fly, you can say goodbye. It’s OK to break up and see other people.


More Web Marketing Therapy Advice: Date first before you get married…don’t get into contractual agreements you can’t get out of. Start small with tests; you don’t have to dive in head first!!


#3 Websites Are Now WebSOLUTIONS


Websites are no longer something you build then go off and buy advertising for – sites need to be solutions. Think relationship hubs, service centers, sharing information, communicating…we are solutions via sites that serve and support. Web marketing is just that a WEB of solutions to create awareness, distribute information, create connections, help prospective and current customers connect with your organization, offer customer service and sell….is your web marketing a solution to your organization, current and prospective customers?


Think credibility, usability and visibility – Serve multiple purposes. Marketing can and should MULTI-TASK for you! Everything in “online marketingland” has had its moment – email, pop-ups, paid search, and affiliate – “online marketing soup de jour” is about social media. No matter what, trends will come and go, but the core rules/classics of marketing (to serve, support and sell) need to be respected and a core web foundation will sustain you for the long haul.


Measure how well online marketing acts as a solution. Leverage online surveys, use your data to track bounce rate, length of time on site, leads, and inquiries. Look critically at your online marketing efforts and evaluate how well they serve, support, offer value, solve problems, entertain, connect and get people to come back. (Hint – content is the #1 solution).


Also, look at your web marketing and critically evaluate your efforts (all of them) and make sure they:


1. Boost awareness (are search-optimized, have sites linking to it).

2. Distribute information/educate (blog, press pages, site content, email messages, social media, etc.

3. Connect (message, design, social media, boost the “know, like and trust factors”.

4. Are a customer service tool (FAQ pages, forums, easy contact info, valuable content).

5. Sell (are you funneling people to the actions you want them to take?).


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: Stop thinking SALES, start thinking SERVICE (and get over yourself – it’s not about you, it’s all about your customer and offering value)


#4 Online Marketing = Building Relationships


We invest in online marketing (vs. spending). The real meaning of “marketing” = maximizing exchanges (leads, inquiries, connections, etc. Online marketing is NOT online advertising. Advertising is a tool. Paid search, affiliate marketing, contextual ads, etc drive traffic, but is traffic going to website (s) that serves, supports and sells as well as it can?


Online marketing is about the WHOLE picture. Social media, Online PR, content, video, etc. How these tools work in unison is what will make your marketing click. Think marketing investing not spending.


Add a “Relationship Return on Investment (ROI) piece to your analysis. Step outside of the data and quantify your relationship building into your metrics. Number of testimonials, Number of Blog Subscribers, Email list size, your community #s in social media, tell a friend forwards, etc. It can be tough to measure direct sales, but these people are viral influencers. Include Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) in data


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: Relationships are everything in marketing. Don’t let the recession-depression get you too focused on dollars – relationships make dollars, keep the love alive. Do not discount the power of Relationship ROI. It is tough sometimes to quantify social media work, community building, effort versus return on investment, but remember it is invaluable to build relationships and that is done by creating relationships, serving, selling, etc. Securing relationships lasts the lifetime of your organization.


#5 Great Online Marketing Ideas Are Only Great If They Are Executed Brilliantly


Too many marketers get caught up in the “should’s” of marketing (“I should blog” “I have to use Facebook for marketing”) Think real vs. ideal…Do you have the resources to execute new ideas well? Strategy first – Execution second. Think the whole process through start to finish (and tracking)


Measure twice, cut once. Before you hit launch with an online marketing effort, make sure the execution plan is set; the management is in place and the tracking/optimizations resources are in place.


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: Stop should-ing on yourselves. You “shouldn’t” do anything web-marketing wise, it’s all about the could’s…think smart, think critically.


More Web Marketing Therapy Advice: There is a need for abandoned online marketing shelters for all the people that had the “great” idea (like launching a blog, starting a Facebook page, etc) then ditched it….don’t abandon great ideas!


#6 Online Marketing Can Multi-Task


Multi-channel marketing is now multi-tasking marketing. You have relationships, sites, emails, tools, internal resources, alliances. Use them in multiple ways to reinforce other efforts and attract current/prospective clients!


Repurpose your online marketing efforts. If you have an email newsletter, you can repurpose that into blog content. Your paid search data can show high value ROI key phrases that can become powerful SEO efforts. Your blog can be fed into your LinkedIn profile, auto-populate twitter, sync to your Facebook pages. Popular posts can become podcasts.


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: We are paid equally to how much we are willing to think. Be resourceful, you don’t have to reinvent the wheel. Repurpose, use your online collateral multiple ways.


#7 You have to GIVE to GAIN


Giving away tips, tools, downloads, valuable white papers, free trials, blog content, podcasts, videos, etc all work to build trust, connection, educational empowerment, etc. Find your value and give some away to learn.


Think TRYvertising. Test the ROI of people trying something and see if it pays off. Give it away, learn, optimize and build raving evangelists!


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: Sharing is caring (and in this ick economy, people want to feel cared for, empowered and trust you) Generosity pays!


#8 Use What You’ve Got (To Get What You Want)


You don’t need to go out and buy new tools – you can use what you have (analytics, databases, in-house resources, expertise, etc). Take inventory of your intellectual capital. People, assets like technologies, products, expertise, data and USE IT!


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: The answers to our marketing success are within…we tend to project responsibility onto tools (like analytics, technologies) we have to own our success and be creative (especially when resources are tight).


#9 The only constant in online marketing is change


The rules of online marketing evolve every day. What worked for you a few months ago may not work well now. The wild, wild west of the web will always be uncharted territory, stay educated, test, track and get in there and try new things. Marketing is about taking calculated risks – your biggest risk is not taking a risk.


Monitor what is being said about you (Google alerts, pingbacks, links, etc) and boost your brand by managing it and maintaining it with online marketing.


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: Get to the core of your marketing and focus on what is important – your customer, offering quality and value and doing a good job.


# 10 Have Fun!


The best campaigns are fun! They offer fun activities, share fun news, etc. This is why Facebook, blogs, podcasts and twitter are huge – they are easy and fun.


Weave some fun into your online marketing strategy – it will pay off. People want to play with the fun people; this comes through in blogs, social media, podcasts, Power Points and more. You don’t have to be silly, just a pleasure to partner with or work with!


Web Marketing Therapy Advice: If you aren’t having fun, what’s the point?




Lorrie Thomas, M.A., is a marketing educator, writer, strategist, web marketing expert and speaker. She is the founder of Web Marketing Therapy, a smart, fun, full-service marketing agency and a recession-friendly self-help online marketing educational resource.


Her “wild web woman” team serves small businesses, entrepreneurs and marketers. Their work ensures marketing treats the cause (vs band-aiding symptoms) so all marketing pieces click. She teaches Web Marketing Applications, Social Media Marketing and Search Engine Marketing Applications classes at UCSB Extension and UC Berkeley Extension.


Ms. Thomas was on the founding team at ValueClick Media. She speaks nationally on a number of marketing-related topics and caters her presentations to the business, niche, skill sets and professional concerns of her attendees. She is has been interviewed by the eCommerce Times, DM News and Tech News World and quoted frequently as a nationally recognized marketing expert


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/2735398




Top Ten Things You Know About Online Marketing