Archive for the ‘Web/Internet’ Category

Making Sense Out Of Web Marketing - HubSpot.com

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

When you recognize that well over ninety percent of product and service searches done by business people start on the Web and 98% of those start with Google, the importance of web marketing in the BtB world is beyond obvious. Add to these now old facts about business peoples’ behavior, the increasing role of the social web and you have a mix that calls for new and more disciplined approaches to web marketing.

For startups and small business there are two interrelated tough issues; (1) how to formulate a productive web marketing strategy that reaches my target customers with the right balance of methods, content, and accessibility; and (2) how do I support, sustain, and improve the strategy and tactics over the long haul. Small organizations have a lot of difficulty sorting out the meaningful and effective from the blizzard of action in the web world. And, small organizations can not afford high-priced solutions.

Recently, I became reacquainted with HubSpot, Inc. an internet marketing software company (opens new window). HubSpot provides tools and guidance for how to optimize the chances that your website will pop up in the first page of Google searches for words approrpriate to your business. They do not take the hard work out of achieving this, but they do provide a really quite thorough suite of tools and the metrics to help drive you forward.

To get a flavor of their approach to the web marketing world take advantage of a webinar offerings:

Five Tips to Turn Your Website into a Marketing Machine

Let me know what you think of HubSpot and their approach. It seems very much a high-powered solution to a critical web marketing problem in a very accessible package.

Book Review - Join The Conversation: how to engage marketing-weary consumers with the power of community, dialogue and partnership by Joseph Jaffe

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

In my continuing search to understand more about web-marketing, I have now read through Join the Conversation: How to Engage Marketing-Weary Consumers with the Power of Community, Dialogue and Partnership by Joseph Jaffe (Hoboken, NJ: Joseph Wiley & Sons, 2007). This book is written in a somewhat tiring style of froth, frenzy, and chattiness. Nevertheless, it adds further fuel to the

Six Cs by Jaffe
notion that the traditional marketing categories of the four Ps (in case you have forgotten: Product, Place,

Price, and Promotion) are now quite outmoded. In place of the old tradition, Jaffe introduces the “Six Cs”: Content, Context, Customization, Community, Conversation, Commerce. Unfortunately, Jaffe does not develop the ideas behind Contecxt and Customization with any real vigor and in the end it is not clear even what these Cs mean.

Content is king. Content that is real, meaningful, and fresh in the eyes of the visitors to your website is king. There is a consensus that content is king. And, for most companies generating content is really hard work.

Jaffe spends most of his energies around Conversation, what is it, how to get it started, how to participate (listen), and how to build relationships on it. There are some good lists of characteristics of conversations and Dos and Don’ts.

Book Review - Marketing to the Social Web by Larry Weber

Monday, December 17th, 2007

Marketing and selling over the Web has been a required activity for almost every business I have been involved in for over ten years. In the last couple of years, the web has continued to evolve and now in some undeniably novel ways. The most notable are the appearance and enormous growth of “communities” or “social networks”. It is clear that the existing web marketing paradigm that focuses on pay-for-click advertising and search engine optimization (SEO) is being enormously enriched by the opportunities presented by social or community oriented environments. This later change requires real shifts in the approach and objectives for marketing on the web.

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Just as I have begun to attempt my own synthesis of these changes, I have come upon Marketing to the Social Web: how digital communities build your business by Larry Weber (John Wiley & Sons, New York 2007). The author has extensive experience in the Web world and provides more than enough examples and anecdotes to illustrate his case.

The basic argument of the book is that the interactivity of the web is now producing completely new ways in which companies and customers can interact.

Weber develops seven steps to marketing on the social web:

  1. Observe - see where, what and how your customers do in the social web. Check out blogs, conversations, relevant content, etc.
  2. Recruit - enlist core participants who want to talk about your company, its products and services.
  3. Evaluate platforms - which platforms are best to reach your marketing objectives - blogs, reputation aggregators, social networks?
  4. Engage - this is all about developing and maintaining content - user generated and yours.
  5. Measure - develop metrics relevant to the objectives and measure.
  6. Promote - connect with other communities in the web.
  7. Improve.

Weber provides lots of discussion and anecdotes to illustrate each of these seven steps. Then he adds four strategies to expanding the reach of marketing on the social network - (1) SEO, (2) blogs, (3) e-communities, and (4) social networks.

This book is a solid contribution to understanding and participating in the ongoing development of the web world. This is esepcially so for creating a more productive balance between traditional web marketing, pay-for -click advertising and SEO, and the emerging world of the social web.