Tuesday, 30 June 2015

How Bestselling Author Austin Kleon Writes, Part Two

wf-austin-kleon-file-two

New York Times bestselling author Austin Kleon has been called “one of the most interesting people on the Internet” by The Atlantic magazine, and he stopped by The Writer Files to chat about creativity and the writing life.

Austin is the author of three illustrated books: Steal Like An Artist, Newspaper Blackout, and Show Your Work!. They’re guides The Writer Files host Kelton Reid recommends to all writers seeking insights for tapping into your endless reserves of creativity and innovation.

In addition to being featured on NPR’s Morning Edition, PBS’s Newshour, and The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Kleon speaks about “creativity in the digital age” for organizations as varied as Pixar, Google, SXSW, TEDx, and The Economist.

In the second part of this two-part file, host Kelton Reid and Austin Kleon discuss:

  • Is “imagination” overrated?
  • A simpler definition of creativity
  • Why you should write for just one person
  • How minimizing distractions can help your creativity
  • Why your audience is your most valuable asset
  • Is being boring the key to productivity?
  • The importance of being great at both art and life
  • Why you need to pick your partners carefully

Click Here to Listen to
The Writer Files on iTunes

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About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand business advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post How Bestselling Author Austin Kleon Writes, Part Two appeared first on Copyblogger.

Help Us Improve the Moz Blog: 2015 Reader Survey

Posted by Trevor-Klein

In late 2013, we asked you all about your experience with the Moz Blog. It was the first time we'd collected direct feedback from our readers in more than three years—an eternity in the marketing industry. With the pace of change in our line of work (not to mention your schedules and reading habits) we didn't want to wait that long again, so we're taking this opportunity to ask you how well we're keeping up.

Our mission is to help you all become better marketers, and to do that, we need to know more about you. What challenges do you all face? What are your pain points? Your day-to-day frustrations? If you could learn more about one or two (or three) topics, what would those be?

If you'll help us out by taking this five-minute survey, we can make sure we're offering the most useful and valuable content we possibly can. When we're done looking through the responses, we'll follow up with a post about what we learned.

Thanks, everyone; we're excited to see what you have to say!

Can't see the survey? Click here to take it in a new tab.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Pinterest’s Buyable Pins Now Available on iPhone and iPad by @mattsouthern

Buyable pins are now available to United States iOS users on either the iPhone or iPad app.

The post Pinterest’s Buyable Pins Now Available on iPhone and iPad by @mattsouthern appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

4 ways the Smartwatch will impact email marketers in 2016

Email marketing is still highly effective, but the smartwatch brings with it a new challenge for marketing strategists

I've recently upgraded my watch to a Sony Smartwatch 3, but the Smartwatch 2, depicted below, is often cited by technology bloggers as being one of the devices that kicked off the wearables trend in a big way back in 2013. Life with a smartwatch isn't as difficult to get used to as I thought it might be, instead adding a lot of value to my day in ways I could never have imagined. As a copywriter I've penned many an email for many a marketing campaign, so the way the smartwatch began to change my behaviour as a consumer was of particular interest to me.Smart Watch

The smart watch will impact email marketers

I seldom read full emails or messages on my smartwatch (possible though it is with plain text versions - more on this in a moment), but it does act as a very nifty buffer between me and my phone, allowing me to glance at my wrist whenever an email pops through to see who it's from, what it's about and whether or not it's worth my time. With a swift swipe I can mark it as read or delete it, which means that if the smartwatch does take off (and the new Apple Watch has all but sealed the deal here), email marketers will have a potentially unwelcome challenge on their hands.
Email on smartwatch
The Apple Watch will in all likelihood herald a new age of wearable technology. One look at the how the iPhone kick-started the smartphone revolution and it's hard to disagree, particularly when you've experienced the form, function and sheer convenience of a smartwatch first hand. If you buy anything other than an Apple Watch, the likelihood is that you'll be using Android's rival operating system, Android Wear, which, after its latest update, has won over its critics and become the best of the bunch, for now.
Regardless of which smartwatch dominates the market, here are just 4 ways they're likely to change the way digital marketers think about their email campaigns in the coming year.

Short content will rule

While the smartwatch can already pack some serious punch when it comes to features and usability, tapping on links and browsing web content is a long way off and will probably never be considered practical. So it's important that the content you deliver provides immediate value and a clear indication of what's next. Long form content will most likely get discarded, marked as read and left to gather dust in a user's inbox if they're skimming through their emails while waiting to hop on a train. Make it short, pithy and engaging. Not always easy but always worth the effort.

Plain text will make a surprising comeback

Just because your subject, pre-header and opening message need to be short and concise for viewing on a smartwatch, doesn't mean that you have to dumb your emails down and put creativity back in its box. Plain text versions of emails are still best practice, and they're about to come back in a huge way thanks to wearable tech. Currently all smartwatches, to my knowledge, display plain text alternatives of your emails where possible. This means that pretty images and media content aren't going to make it through to your audience - at least not at the smartwatch 'buffer' stage. So make sure your plain text alternatives are just that - plain text and to the point - and you might just earn some screen time on a user's phone if they deem it relevant enough to reach into their pocket and take a closer look.
Make your emails too 'content rich' without a plain text alternative, and you risk zero engagement and a one way swipe to the junk folder.

smart watch email

Open rates will likely decline, but don't panic!

If the Apple Watch takes off and smartwatches become the new smartphone, open rates are going to take a hit. The problem is, as email marketers we might not know why. The previous two points give some obvious rationale behind the decline of open rates - we're going to have to get through what is essentially an additional 'checkpoint' before we get some serious screen time from the user - but it goes deeper than that. Most email clients tend to track opens with images, and because the smartwatch will only show HTML emails in their plain text alternative, tracking becomes a bit of a problem. Someone could read and digest your content without every 'opening' the email on their phone or computer. Combine that with the fact that you can't tap links or engage with content in any meaningful way on your wrist, and marketers have a real brainteaser on their hands.

So what's the answer? "Visit website | view on your phone" is a start...

view online
We've all seen that at the top of our emails. If an email doesn't render properly in Outlook or Thunderbird or any email client the user happens to be reading on, there's almost always the option to ‘view online’ at the top somewhere. If smartwatches become as ubiquitous as smartphones, then 'view on your phone’ could be the next big thing. If it's something that engages the user they would simply click the link to make it load in their mobile's browser - sort of a rudimentary bookmark to remind themselves to read it later. Either that or some more refined bookmarking system will take hold, perhaps making way for a new wave of apps that filter emails from your watch and queue them up for viewing on your phone at more convenient times.
If smartphones changed the rules for email, then smartwatches will change the game entirely. Watch this space.

A Simple Way to Boost the Credibility of Your Website

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It’s not enough today to merely be trustworthy in your digital business, you have to prove it.

Whether you sell products or services, customers have to trust you before they’ll want to do business with you, and building trust online can be a challenge.

People are much more skeptical and cynical these days about the promises made to them. Unscrupulous organizations have eroded consumer trust, so people are much more wary when believing the claims made by a business. Especially if that business is actually trying to sell them something.

So when you have something valuable to offer, it’s important that customers feel comfortable enough to listen to you, engage with your content, and even do business with you.

There are a number of details, facts, and information that you can use in your online content to bolster the confidence of your audience and make them more receptive to what you have to offer. Hit Publish host Amy Harrison calls these things “Trust Medals.”

Listen to this episode of Hit Publish with host Amy Harrison to discover:

  • What makes a Trust Medal, and why do they help you tell a different, more compelling story about your business?
  • How to do a personal audit of the Trust Medals you already have, and what you should be doing with them
  • Where to find even more Trust Medals for your digital business to build a powerful, persuasive reputation

Click Here to Listen to
Hit Publish on iTunes

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About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand business advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post A Simple Way to Boost the Credibility of Your Website appeared first on Copyblogger.

Facebook Adjusts Algorithm for Videos, Changes How Views Are Counted for Advertisers by @mattsouthern

Facebook's news feed algorithm will be adjusted according to interactions with videos

The post Facebook Adjusts Algorithm for Videos, Changes How Views Are Counted for Advertisers by @mattsouthern appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

KPIs for apps – optimise your Mcommerce Apps and Mobile UX

Which KPIs will help retailers optimise their mobile apps?

Well, you've finally launched your app and like other app makers in the retail space, you are looking to increase engagement with your users and generate income. You are monitoring your downloads and sources, but is that really enough to understand your users and discover what makes them stick? Will you be able to fully optimise your app based on this information alone?Applications and KPIS

The answer is a pretty firm NO. You might be monitoring certain elements or metrics of your app, but is it really giving you the info you need? Going one step further, you need to be monitoring the right KPIs under those metrics. Because when it comes right down to it, KPIs are where the clues are at - these will guide you in optimising your app and increasing conversions.

In this post, I will focus on how you can optimise your Mcommerce apps by diving into some KPIs that matter most.

If you were a retailer, you'd want to be monitoring the metrics under Acquisition, Engagement and Outcome.

Breaking it down even further, there are scores of KPIs you can identify under each one of those umbrella metrics. Apps for retailers are a one of a kind opportunity to engage their audience and the ones that succeed have the sticky factor and deliver experiences to users that are full of value. When it comes down to it, app makers, and this applies to all verticals, need to realize that their apps are in the palms of their users every waking hour, and this opportunity must not be wasted.

This further underscores the need to be monitoring the key metrics and is a great start, to go beyond and identify those KPIs that will be provide you with the opportunity to learn how your audience engages with your app, and to refine as needed.

One powerful way of doing this is via the use of Visual App Analytics, as Appsee provides, which empowers you to take a deep dive into the user experience and behavior to not only understand the what, but also the why behind the KPIs.

Useful KPIs to optimise your App and mobile user experience

Let's take a look at the KPIs that I feel would help retailers optimize their apps and maximize the overall mobile user experience:

Acquisition

The acquisition of new users and how many is a metric of vital importance. By monitoring a few important KPIs in this area, you will have the information you need to optimize the process of User Acquisition. There's no doubt that a mcommerce app maker wants to acquire as many users as possible, but more importantly an app needs to gain users who are actively engaged and use your app. That being said, let's take a look at some KPIs to monitor under this important metric.

  • % of users that converted into active users

The major challenge of app makers everywhere is identifying the number of users that are considered high quality and will provide you with a solid Lifetime Value (LTV-LINK). When all is said and done, it is these users that will bring your app a constant stream of revenue, the key factor in a retailer's survival.

By monitoring the channels (such as referral, social, ad campaign, etc.) where most active users came from, you will also learn what channels you need to focus on and optimize so you can gain more active users and allocate your budget accordingly. You might want to re-target your users with other supporting ads on Facebook with discounts and other offers. The channels you identify as weak, you should consider cutting, and focus elsewhere.

The Onboarding experience is just one way which you can increase the % of active users, since it allows the app to show value and helps users understand how to use the app efficiently.

For example, you do not want to overload your first time users with too much information. Just show them what they need to get to the next step. You can see more best practices for onboarding in this article.

  • Cost per customer acquisition (CAC) of each channel

By monitoring this KPI, retailers can gauge how much they are spending to acquire each customer and allocate their marketing budget to the profitable channels. Decreasing the cost of acquiring customers while maintaining a high level of user activity is also paramount to having a successful app.

In a nutshell, it appears that LTV (Life Time Value) should be about 3 times CAC for a recurring revenue model.  All costs involved in acquiring a customer and converting them should be taken into account. For the CAC calculation, please read this post. 

Engagement

Engagement covers metrics that will tell you what percentage of users stick with your app after downloading, user flow, how much time they spend on each screen, and what actions they take, among others. Below are a few KPIs you should focus on:

  • User Retention -  By Monitoring retention rates, you can determine which groups of users are being retained band can optimize your app accordingly. One way to do this is by personalizing their user experience (UX) to increase engagement.For example, you might see that active users in a group are being retained after delivering more international sporting event related news. You can use those findings to personalize their experience even further by delivering content that is more global and sports related, hence increasing your app's retention rate. When it comes down to it, retaining users will drive more purchases. 
  • Session length - Monitoring session lengths is of vital importance, as you can determine the engagement levels and the interest of your users. If you see active users are converting when being taken to a specific checkout process, after spending a great deal of time on certain screens of your app, then you will want to optimize your app to include the same types of screens on the way to checkout.

Outcomes

These are the areas where users convert in your app. This is where you are actually earning money and includes elements that make an economic impact on your business such as ad revenue, in-app purchases, sign ups or subscriptions. Two KPIs under the outcome metric worth mentioning are:

  • 1. In-app purchases – Say, for example you see a certain group of users from an area of the United States abandoning their carts. You realize that you are delivering a checkout process that requires too much interaction, or if you realize there is a technical problem when adding certain groups of items. You go ahead with optimizing your app, so that it only takes a few steps, while offering a number of different payment methods. You also need to address any technical issues that may be negatively affecting your conversion rates.
  • 2. Average sale for user - Different users have different purchasing patterns, some may buy a lot of low ticket items, some just a few and others might purchase expensive items, a few times a year.By monitoring the average sale per user, you will be able to personalize different offerings to different users. For example, for high ticket purchasers, you might want to offer complementary items for free over a certain purchase prices, or a discounted bulk rate for smaller ticket items. Consequently, by doing so, you will increase the average sale of the user.

Putting it all together

By drilling down into KPIs beyond the key metrics, you will learn more about your audience's...well just about everything. From what they like to buy on Sundays during winter to what type of content they consume around holiday time.

By choosing the right KPI mix for your business and optimizing as needed, you'll find your app always only a stone's throw away from peak success. I say always because app optimization is a constant recurring process that with the right tools should ultimately become a well-oiled optimization machine.

Image/Copyright: Shutterstock

How to Determine if Your Business Idea Sucks

he-andrea-lake

Today’s guest on Hack the Entrepreneur is the founder and CEO of multiple successful businesses, including StickerJunkie.com and Delinquent Distribution.

Most recently — and alongside Dan “Punkass” Caldwell (the founder of Tapout clothing) — she has created Lessons.biz, which offers a six-week course on how to run a successful t-shirt business.

She skipped college and started her first business, Rhythm Sticks, at age 23.

She also appeared in season five of The Apprentice and won two tasks as project manager, before being fired by Donald Trump in week nine.

Now, let’s hack …

Andrea Lake.

In this 34-minute episode of Hack the Entrepreneur, host Jon Nastor and Andrea Lake discuss:

  • How Andrea learned the power of delegation (and the $20 rule)
  • The simple process of determining whether or not an idea is good
  • What you need to know to get better at sales (even if you’re scared of selling)
  • Why today is the worst that your website will ever be
  • That you only fail when you don’t get back up

Click Here to Listen to
Hack the Entrepreneur on iTunes

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About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand business advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post How to Determine if Your Business Idea Sucks appeared first on Copyblogger.

How important is email marketing to retailers?

How does email compare to other channels in driving customer acquisition and sales?

We can see the importance of email marketing by using the excellent Custora Ecommerce Pulse - which is updated monthly to show the impact of different channels on sales across $40 billion of US retail transactions from retailers who are clients of Custora. Here are three data points showing the importance of email marketing:

1.  How many orders does email drive compared to other media?

In 2015 Email remains one of the top three channels driving sales, not far behind organic and PPC. This position is mainly because of sales to existing customers. The latest data from May 2015 shows that email marketing now accounts for 15% of all sales.

Importance-email-marketing-retailers

All of the top 3 have fallen a little compared to 2014 as Affiliate prompted sales have grown.

For all of our interest and attention on social media this accounts for just 2% of retail sales.

2. What percentage of customer acquisition is driven by email marketing?

Although email marketing is mainly seen as a customer communications medium, it has grown in importance as an acquisition technique in retail. It's striking that:

Customer Acquisition via Email has quadrupled over the last 4 years.

This is thanks to prospects signing up to enewsletters or responding to pop-ups offering discounts for the first order if a subscriber signs up to email.

Here the Custora data (from earlier research) shows us that email has increased dramatically as a customer acquisition channel, so that it now rivals search.

CustomeracbychannelEcommerceguide

3. What is the customer lifetime value of email?

To truly understand the value of different acquisition channels you have to assess long-term sales measured as customer lifetime value (CLV or LTV typically measured over a 3 or 5 years). Here email is positive relative to affiliates and social media marketing, but less compared to social media marketing which perhaps can be seen as sparking more 'impulse purchases'.

Custora CLV

Given the continued importance of email marketing for retailers and other businesses, we have recently launched a more detailed guide to using Email marketing to support acquisition and customer onboarding which uses examples from a range of sectors.

Biased Google Search Results Are Hurting Users, Harvard Study Claims by @mattsouthern

A recent study suggests Google is prominently displaying its own content ahead of others in organic search results, at the expense of users.

The post Biased Google Search Results Are Hurting Users, Harvard Study Claims by @mattsouthern appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

How Every Creative Must Think about Marketing and Advertising

rd-creativity-advertising

Albert Lasker. Mel Martin. Eugene Schwartz. Robert Collier. Victor Schwab. David Ogilvy. John Caples. Maxwell Sackheim. Bill Jayme.

Copywriters who wrote beautiful copy. Ads that drove results. As David Ogilvy said, “We sell or else.”

This is the point. Advertising comes in two flavors: artistic and mechanical.

One obscures the message and is judged by its originality. It conforms to the principles of art.

The other clarifies the message and is judged by performance. It conforms to principles of copywriting, of advertising.

One is a monument. The other is a tool. One is meant to attract attention from a distance. The other is meant to absorb traffic. To steer readers into action. To get results.

But this doesn’t mean you throw creativity out the window …

In this 9-minute episode of Rough Draft with Demian Farnworth, you’ll discover:

  • The longest-spanning bridge in Switzerland
  • Rosser Reeves’s great metaphor that perfectly illustrates the relationship between copywriting and creativity
  • Four must-listen episodes of Rough Draft
  • A neuroscientist’s definition of creativity
  • What you can learn about creativity from a sales guide David Ogilvy wrote when he was 25
  • The famous Bill Jayme headline for Psychology Today

Click Here to Listen to
Rough Draft on iTunes

Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM

About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand business advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post How Every Creative Must Think about Marketing and Advertising appeared first on Copyblogger.

SEJ Unveils New #SEJThinkTank Webinar and #MarketingNerds Podcast Pages by @wonderwall7

SEJ recently unveiled the new #SEJThinkTank and #MarketingNerds pages, which aim to provide easy access to our webinar and podcast series for updates.

The post SEJ Unveils New #SEJThinkTank Webinar and #MarketingNerds Podcast Pages by @wonderwall7 appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Steal This Trick: What Confident Content Marketers All Have in Common

man with wide eyes and glasses - stand out by getting weirder

Editor’s note: The original version of this post was published on October 23, 2009.

There are a million techniques that make your content better and more popular.

(Probably a half-million just here on Copyblogger.)

Strong headlines, smart copywriting techniques, storytelling, humor, etc.

But there’s one insider trick that makes the rest of it easy.

It starts from the very beginning, when you’re figuring out what type of content you want to produce.

Start by picking a crowded topic

Copywriter Gary Halbert famously advised copywriters to look for a “starving crowd.”

In other words, if you want to open a restaurant, put it where there are already plenty of people who want exactly what you offer. If you’re creating a digital business, choose a niche that lots and lots of people want to know more about.

Why are there so many blogs about technology, weight loss, marketing, and celebrities?

Because there are millions of people who want to read about those topics every day.

While you may want to find a little niche that you can completely own, there are two problems with making yourself a big fish in a small pond.

  1. You’ll always be looking over your shoulder for some punk kid to come along and beat you at your own game.
  2. When you choose a tiny topic, you set a limit on how big — and profitable — you’ll ever be able to get.

Nobody goes there anymore, it’s too crowded

If just picking a “me-too” topic was enough, everyone would have a successful website.

But it’s hard to stand out.

It’s relatively easy to rank in the search engines for “naked mole rats.” It’s damned hard to get a page-one ranking for “weight loss” or “learn forex trading.”

Instead of being a big fish in a small pond, allow me to suggest another approach.

Be a small, ridiculously evolved, very rare and weird fish in a great big pond.

A weight loss blog is going to be hard to pull off. A weight loss blog for polyamorous computer programmers of color is going to find its audience pretty efficiently — and the community of readers might be bigger than you think.

Stock market education? Insanely overdone. Stock market education for stay-at-home parents? Now you’ve got some kind of chance.

Marketing blogs are as common as houseflies, and nearly as annoying. But a marketing blog for people who hate marketing can develop a very nice following.

(Although that approach, too, is crowded. When you find that even the sub-niches are crowded, move on to the next tip.)

If it’s not working, get weirder

“Weird” is grade-school shorthand for “you’re not like us, are you?”

This is a bummer in the third grade, but it turns out to really pay off down the line.

All the stuff you had to hide to get that crummy day job? Incorporate it into your content.

Your weird hair. Your Tourette’s. Your bad attitude. Your religion. Your sexual orientation. Your morbid fascinations.

The peculiar way you talk or walk or think. The jokes no one else thinks are funny. Your nerdy obsessions. The fact that you are a gigantic dork. Your tragic inability to say the appropriate thing at the appropriate time.

The fact that you care more than anyone you know.

There will be a fair number of people interested in your topic who also resonate with your particular brand of weirdness. And that weirdness will shine like a little beacon to attract them.

Markets are, often as not, defined by who they aren’t.

If you can get weird enough, you’ll find the readers who are longing to be part of your thing.

It’s not about you, and it’s totally about you

If you can learn to keep both of these in your head at the same time, you’ll do brilliantly.

Let us know on LinkedIn how your content reflects your weirdness!

About the author

Sonia Simone


Sonia Simone is co-founder and Chief Content Officer of Copyblogger Media. Get lots more from Sonia on her podcast, Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer, or come hang out with her on Twitter.

The post Steal This Trick: What Confident Content Marketers All Have in Common appeared first on Copyblogger.

12 Important Content Marketing Metrics You Aren’t Measuring by @IAmAaronAgius

As businesses move more of their budget into content marketing, it’s time that we start measure what matters - not just what’s easy to track.

The post 12 Important Content Marketing Metrics You Aren’t Measuring by @IAmAaronAgius appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Google Loses Long-Term Search Partnership With AOL to Microsoft’s Bing by @mattsouthern

Google will be replaced by Bing as the default search engine for AOL’s sites over the next 10 years.

The post Google Loses Long-Term Search Partnership With AOL to Microsoft’s Bing by @mattsouthern appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

10 Marketing Campaigns From Big Brands That Won Over Reddit by @albertcostill

Here are ten campaigns launched by a variety of brands that prove when done correctly, reddit can be a major assist for brands.

The post 10 Marketing Campaigns From Big Brands That Won Over Reddit by @albertcostill appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Monday, 29 June 2015

#SEOSummit2015 Takeaways: The Future of SEO and Beyond by @AkiLiboon

On June 20th, SEO Hacker hosted SEO Summit 2015, a hacker type SEO conference held in Makati City, Philippines. Here are our #SEOSummit2015 takeaways.

The post #SEOSummit2015 Takeaways: The Future of SEO and Beyond by @AkiLiboon appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

What it Takes to Leave the Corporate World (and Not Look Back)

he-bye-bye-corporate

Today’s guest on Hack the Entrepreneur is the founder and CEO of Small Business Trends, an award-winning online publication, which offers breaking news and advice for small business owners.

She is a former corporate attorney that left that corporate life and founded her own company in 2003.

She is considered an authoritative voice on small business issues and has been noted and quoted in respected publications (such as the Wall Street Journal).

Her name has appeared in multiple “top” lists, and she was featured as one of Hubspot’s 100 Most Powerful Women on Twitter.

Now, let’s hack …

Anita Campbell.

In this 35-minute episode of Hack the Entrepreneur, host Jon Nastor and Anita Campbell discuss:

  • How sticking with things can be good for entrepreneurs
  • Why it’s necessary to measure your progress over the long-term
  • If you don’t know how to do something, don’t do it
  • Understanding that we all work for someone, whether we like it or not
  • The hard part of identifying your core competency

Click Here to Listen to
Hack the Entrepreneur on iTunes

Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM

About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand business advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post What it Takes to Leave the Corporate World (and Not Look Back) appeared first on Copyblogger.

Digital marketing in Russia 2015

Russia's current digital landscape: Search and Social

We all know Russia is geographically big, but it is also a big market when it comes to social, search and e-commerce. Russia has 87.5 million active internet users, and 67 million active users of social media accounts. It is estimated that Russian's will make $36 billion worth of purchases online this year. What is more that amount is set to increase considerably to $43 billion next year as shown by this summary from wearesocial.

Digital Marketing in Russia

Russia represents a big opportunity as a vast market with high rates of annual growth in the digital sphere. However it also presents a series of challenges because it is very different to Western markets. The big players with which we are all familiar, such as Facebook and Google, do not dominate in the same way as they do in anglophone markets. So if you want to break into the Russian market via digital it is a good idea to get an overview of the popular search engines and social networks in Russia.

The major search engines in Russia

Since 1997, Yandex has been the number one search engine in Russia, followed by Google, which entered the market in 2006. Third place is occupied by Mail.ru, which for a lengthy period was using third-party search engines. Mail.ru enabled its own search engine in 2013. However, in Russia, Yandex and Google take the lion’s share of the market.

This is the distribution of market share between the search engines as of November 2014, according to the Russian company Liveinternet.

Social networking russia

Social Networking

To understand the Russian Internet audience, we will have a look at social networking in the country.

The most popular social network in Russia is VKontakte, which has over 220 million registered users. With over 60% of its patrons aged 25 or older, VKontakte achieves 47 million visitors per day.

russia social network trends A social network for former classmates, Odnoklassniki has 124 million users. Having just under 60% of its audience in the 20 to 40 year old age bracket, 40 million visits are received daily.age on russian social media

Moi Mir@Mail.ru (My World) is operated by Mail.ru, the largest Internet company in Russia. 18.6 million followers are recorded per month (TNS, June 2011).

Facebook users in Russia were initially more highly educated and with good English skills. Many are businessmen and top managers. Facebook currently has 8.4 million users in Russia.

activity Russian social media

Similar to Facebook, Twitter is not a hit in Russia. As of July 2013 it had only 5.3 million users.

One of the main characteristics of the Russian social networks is that even if their functionality is the same, the audience is not homogeneous. For example, VK and Facebook have a different audience, and even the same people there will behave differently. Thus, you should take into account that the Russian Facebook audience is older than that for VK, usually has a high level of education, and prefers substantive communication.

The following list shows the 20 most popular sites on the Russian Internet, together with time spent viewing these sites. This data is provided by the TNS Gallup Media research agency.

top 20 russian sites

Russian Digital Marketing Success

Local specifics

As well as understanding market analysis and market design, knowing the audience’s lan­guage is very important. Having the advertising campaigns localized by a native speaker is a must.

Russian internet users are extremely diverse. People from all educational, wealth, age and ideological backgrounds are represented. As a result, not only do individuals use different Internet platforms to communicate and stay up to date with the news, but also different search engines. Even though all of the social networks provide essentially the same service, they each have their own specific relationship with customers and host dramatically contrasting content.

The Russian national character must be considered. There are many instances of campaigns which succeeded in North America and Europe, but which failed to attract, or in some cases even repelled Russian consumers. This happened despite having high-quality localisation. Certain techniques will not work in Russia, such as applying aggressive pressure. Trying to convince consumers that there is no option but to buy your product will only result in resentment.

Is there a ready market in Russia?

The amount and frequency of searches for your product or service should be analysed prior to launching a campaign in Russia. As well as using Google Trends, there is the useful Yandex service “Selection of words”: wordstat.yandex.ru.

It can be seen in the below chart that there were 361077 requests per month for the keyword ‘Iphone 6‘. It should be understood that this is not stable data and demand is constantly changing.

i phone 6 yandex

Today, digital marketing tools allow you to get in touch with Russian consumers worldwide. My experience in promotion of international brands on the Russian market indicates that businessmen today are not just interested in the Russian market; they are interestedin the whole Russian-speaking audience, living in CIS countries, Europe and America. As of 2014 the Russian-speaking market as a whole covered more than 270 million people according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia. To ignore this huge market would be mistake.

The above listed analyses are part of White Paper called «Digital marketing in Russia 2015. Finding your customers on the internet in Russia — how to go about this» written by Vadim Tylik, President of RMAA Group – Russian Marketing and Advertising Agency. To find out more about Digital marketing in Russia download the White Paper for free here.

7 Common Mistakes Writers Make When Pitching to Editors

ec-pitching-editors

Do you have pet peeves about human interactions? What types of behavior absolutely drive you nuts?

You could hate when someone doesn’t say “thank you” when you hold a door open for him or become extremely irritated when someone chews gum too loudly.

Editors are humans with pet peeves, as well, so if you’d like an editor to review — and possibly publish — your writing, there are certain actions you should avoid.

In this 32-minute episode of Editor-in-Chief, host Stefanie Flaxman discusses:

  • A common grammar mistake Stefanie recently made
  • 7 common mistakes writers make when emailing editors (and how to fix each mistake)
  • How to tailor your content for a specific publication
  • How to build relationships with editors
  • A bonus tip for ambitious content creators

Click Here to Listen to
Editor-in-Chief on iTunes

Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM

About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand business advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post 7 Common Mistakes Writers Make When Pitching to Editors appeared first on Copyblogger.

Keep It Simple Stupid: A Recap of The Unbounce Conversion Road Show by @ericvanbuskirk

A recap of The Conversion Road Show, put on by the landing page conversion and optimization company Unbounce, in Boston and three other cities.

The post Keep It Simple Stupid: A Recap of The Unbounce Conversion Road Show by @ericvanbuskirk appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

B2B Lead scoring criteria [Infographic]

How does your lead scoring rate against this benchmark?

Integrated 'SMarketing' is more than generating enquiries to pass them onto your sales team; leaving the ball in their court to qualify the leads, identifying if they are serious buyers or just researching. Qualifying these leads with the help of Lead Scoring Tools is proven to support companies not only to be more efficient, but to connect 'with sales-ready leads', so boosting conversion.

By setting scoring criteria for your leads, your Sales team can reach out at the right time in the buying cycle, with relevant information and more likely to convert as they will communicating with serious leads, ready for more information'.

Lead Lizard's lead scoring summary identifies which companies are adopting this process, their objectives for lead scoring and which is the most valuable asset when scoring.

Lead-Lizard_infographic_lead-scoring_0314_v3-r

Read our Marketing Automation Guide to find out how to score your leads and build this into your MA system.

Do Millennials (Really) Hate Long Copy?

rd-millennials-hate-long-copy

Allow Demian Farnworth to tell you a story. A story that you will probably be able to relate to in some sense.

It’s about a stout, whiskered man who thinks sound decisions can come only from a cool head. And that copy should always be short.

“I would never read this. It’s too long.” That’s a pervasive sentiment that will never die. Demian runs into it all the time, most recently with a young man asking for studies, who was suggesting Millennials would not read long copy. That they all have ADHD.

That thought is baloney. Here’s why …

In this 10-minute episode of Rough Draft with Demian Farnworth, you’ll discover:

  • The surprising study about the reading habits of Millennials
  • The people group behind the ever-growing consumption of news
  • A hilarious quote about relativity (you can use to defend long copy)
  • The two things Millennials do differently when it comes to reading

Click Here to Listen to
Rough Draft on iTunes

Click Here to Listen on Rainmaker.FM

About the author

Rainmaker.FM


Rainmaker.FM is the premier digital marketing and sales podcast network. Get on-demand business advice from experts, whenever and wherever you want it.

The post Do Millennials (Really) Hate Long Copy? appeared first on Copyblogger.