The Lonely Marketer

a discussion for the small business marketing manager

April 30th, 2007

Find Out Your Blogging Gender

gender.jpgOkay, another trip outside of the small business marketing realm. But, this is kind of fun so I figured I would pass it on. I came across the Gender Genie while doing some research for an upcoming post on writing styles. The Gender Genie will tell you if you sound like a male or female when you blog. You simply paste in the content of a recent post, select a genre, and the Genie will predict your gender.

I tried out my recent “What Happens If I Stop Doing This” post to see what the Genie would say. Here was my score:

Female Score: 342
Male Score: 426

So, I’m barely male. Not sure what to think of that. But, maybe this means I appeal to both genders with my writing! :)

Check it out and let’s see how accurate the Genie is. Anyone come up with some crazy results?


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April 30th, 2007

What Happens If I Stop Doing This

quitting.jpgWhat happens if I leave my job today? No, I’m not ditching the Lonely Marketer (in fact, I have some milestones coming up…stay tuned). What I am talking about is my “paying” job. The job where I am part of a small marketing group that handles every aspect of marketing for a small tech company. Who would know, understand, and backfill my position?

A few years back I was working in marketing for a larger company. Other than where the going away happy hour would be, there was really no big issues with someone leaving the company. There were enough people that picking up the slack until a new hire came in was no problem.

The small company is a different story. Much different. There are no two people that do the same job in our marketing group…and I doubt we’re alone in that. We all focus on something different and rarely get the time to understand or learn what the other is doing. Plus, we all pick up tasks here and there that we become good at and the company depends on us to do.

No, the end of the world would not be upon us if someone left. In fact, it gives the rest of us a chance to learn. Once everything settles and a new person is hired, the rest of the group has a better understanding for that person’s role.
Now, the trick is to make everyone aware of each other’s role without the departure of a member of the team.

How does your company do that?


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April 26th, 2007

SMB Marketer Tip of the Week: Add Hyperlinks to Your eBooks

I’m going to step out of online marketing (kind of) for a day and throw out a tip for small business marketers who create documentation. We produce a ton of brochures and product data sheets that we use at trade shows and for sending to interested customers. Whenever we produce one of these pieces, we get a bunch printed up, but we also promote the document via email and make it available online for download.

Ever wish those customers who download the PDF or eBook document would have an easy way to get back to the site from which they took the PDF? Well, consider your wish granted. Using Adobe Acrobat Professional Edition, you can embed hyperlinks on important pieces of text or images within your PDF. (I’m kind of sounding like a commercial here :)) Before you jump up and down and think you can start doing that immediately, know that the free Adobe Reader does not have this capability. You have to purchase the Professional Edition to make it work, but I think you’ll find the purchase worthwhile. Adobe Acrobat has tons of functionality worth checking out.

Here’s a quick look at how it works. You first need to open up the Advanced Editing toolbar - it will look like this:

aptoolbar2.jpg

After clicking on the Link Tool icon, you’ll be able to draw a rectangle or square around the image or block of text you’d like to hyperlink. The “Create Link” box will appear and you’ll have multiple options for your link. Go to web page, open file, or another page view within the document are all options. For this example, I’ve chosen to open a web page. The top of the Create Link box contains formatting options for your hyperlink.

aplink.jpg

After selecting your options, hit Next. A simple box comes up that allows you to type or paste in your URL. Very easy! Hit okay and you’re done. Acrobat also allows you to change text so I typically will color my hyperlinked text blue to indicate to the reader that they can click and be taken to the web.

aplinkfinal.jpg

This is a very simple and easy way to drive traffic to your website. As eBooks, White Papers, etc. become more popular as downloadable PDFs, including hyperlinks will become a must. If you want to dig in and give it a try, here are a few tips:

  • Make it obvious that text is hyperlinked. Most people are not used to being able to click on a document and open a web page. Maybe indicate with a side note on the page that images and highlighted text are linked to web sites.
  • Turn hyperlinked text into a blue colored font to indicate a link
  • If your document contains your company logo, be sure to link that up to your home page.
  • Have a catalog you distribute on CD? An interactive PDF can be a great way to give the user navigation - thus making it easier to locate information.

I also did a quick search for some additional resources on the web to learn more about using Acrobat and similar programs:

Any other suggestions on how to use hyperlinks and related functions in PDFs?


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April 25th, 2007

Deleting Keywords as Important as Adding Them

Note to all PPC advertisers: Don’t forget to delete keywords!

I was encouraged to see the Google Inside Adwords Blog putting up a post that included strategy information for deleting keywords. Check it out if you get a minute. I’m a firm believer in deleting keywords that are priced too high or don’t convert with click-throughs well. In the article Stephanie Lim from the Optimization team says:

“If you are CTR focused, you may want to identify and delete keywords with high impression counts but low numbers of clickthroughs. These keywords may be too general or not relevant enough and are garnering many impressions but very few clicks. If you are conversion focused, you may want to identify and delete keywords that garner high costs but very few conversions. These keywords may be too specific and accrue very few impressions over a long period of time because very few people are searching on them.”

This is also a way for small business marketers not to toss away money at poorly performing keywords. My recommendation is to give all your keywords a try and make sure your ads are helping them, but don’t marry yourself to keywords. I’ve also fallen into the trap of wanting a keyword to work so I keep trying to make it work. I’ve stopped that bad trend and you should too!

Good article. There are additional tips apart from deleting keywords that make the article a good read.


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April 24th, 2007

The Technorati Train Stopped Here and Tagged Me

Alot of tagging going on this week! This time the Technorati Favorites post has stopped by my blog. Aaron Weiche of the Prime Advertising and Design blog tagged me. Check out Aaron’s blog - he’s launched the blog for his company and there is always something interesting and worthwhile there! Also, Andy Beard had an interesting post recently about this or a similar meme. It’s worth checking out.

The rules are below and as Aaron recommends, check out some of the blogs on the list. That’s the fun I pull from posts like this.

***Start Copying Here***

Here are the rules:

1) Write a short introduction paragraph about how you found the list and include a link to the blog that referred you to the list.

2) COPY the Rules and ENTIRE List below and post it to your blog. To avoid duplicate content and increase the amount of keywords your site can accessible for, go ahead and change the titles of the blog. Just don’t change the links of the blog.

3) Take “My New Faves” and move them into the “The Original Faves” list.

4) Add 3 Blogs that you’ve just added to your Technorati Favorites to the “My New Faves” section. Remember to also add the “Fave Me” link next to your new blogs (i.e. http://technorati.com/faves?sub=addfavbtn&add=http://www.yourfavesdomain.com)

5) Add Everyone on this list to your Technorati Favorites List by clicking on “Fave the Site.” Those who want good kharma will fave you back. If not, you will for sure get the benefits of faves from the bloggers who continue this list after you.

My New Faves

StickyFigure - Fave the Site
The Marketing Technology Blog - Fave the Site
Modern B2B Marketing - Fave the Site


The Original List

***Stop Copying Here***


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April 24th, 2007

Have You Discovered Google Analytics Navigational Analysis?

I know what you’re thinking…another Google tool and another positive review. Sometimes I feel the same way, but the damn company keeps coming up with useful, FREE tools that I use often and think other small business marketers could use as well.

I’ve written many times on this blog about the importance of landing pages. Well, sometimes even more important than the landing page is where the visitor goes after landing on the landing page. I will sometimes use my landing pages as survey tools. I’ll put a variety of product lines up and see where visitors clicks…thus getting an idea of what is of interest to my customer base at that time.

Buried deep in Google Analytics, my tool of choice to analyze my web traffic, is a useful resource for analyzing user navigation and behavior. Here is where you can find it:

navwhere_500.jpg

Next, select the page you want to view from the area highlighted by the vertical oval. After selecting the page, you’ll have a couple of options for viewing your stats on that page. You can see the top 10 clicks to and from along with percentages after selecting the page. But, you can also get a graphical presentation of these stats by clicking on the overlay page symbol in the middle - highlighted by my smaller horizontal oval.

navpage_450.jpg

I like the overlay page (below) presentation because you can get a feel for what your visitors saw and how they interacted with the page. The blog isn’t a great example because most of the highly clicked links are buried in previous posts, but you can get the overall idea. The area I’ve circled shows how the tool reports clicks on a link. Each hyperlink on the page has a box like this by it that when clicked will show how many clicks to that link as well as the percentage of overall clicks. It really give you an insight into the behavior of your visitor.

overlay-page_450.jpg

I like to think of it as FREE market research. My images show the navigation for The Lonely Marketer as an example, but I find the tool is much more useful for our corporate site than it is my blog.

Are you using this tool or something similar? I’m curious to know if this is as popular with other people who analyze web traffic. Here are a few recent posts talking about Google Analytics and some of the buried features:


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April 23rd, 2007

Tagged: What I Love About Minnesota

Sorry all of you SEO-tagging insiders, this meme is only for us Minnesotans. Aaron Weiche of the Find Buffalo Blog started a fun meme involving the wonderful state of Minnesota in which I live. Paul Jahn of LocalMN tagged me and now I’m supposed to name three things I love about Minnesota. So, here goes:

1. There is a ton of natural beauty here that you really appreciate after you travel around to other cities. Trees, lakes, and alot of green highlight the Spring and Summer. Especially up in northern Minnesota where the landscape is incredible.

2. The value. I’ve been to alot of other cities and always keep an eye on real estate and cost of living. You can’t find a better value than Minnesota. Quality, affordable housing close to a great metropolitan area with tons of niche restaurants, professional sports, and theatre.

3. The open-air Twins stadium opening here in 2010. Like Aaron, I’m a huge Twins fan and I cannot wait to to sit outside and watch baseball. Yes, the stadium is not actually here yet, but I can tell you it will be one of my favorite spots in the state.

I was a little concerned about passing on the meme since I don’t know a ton of other Minnesota bloggers, but Aaron had a useful link in his post to help out with that. So, I’m tagging:

The Sportsman’s Blog

MNBeer

The Remarketer

Technology Evangelist

Twin Cities Daily Photo

David Temple


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April 22nd, 2007

Sunday Afternoon Notable Blog Posts

As I watch the young and dangerous Kansas City Royals beat up my Minnesota Twins, I want to highlight a few posts and articles I came across last week.

  • Driving Traffic to Channel Partners with B2B Search Marketing: I like this post because driving traffic to channel partners has been something we’ve discussed in the past. We have many channel partners so I’m not sure how feasible this is for us, but there are some good ideas in this post.
  • 10 Steps to get Traffic from Yahoo Answers: As I get ready to launch our corporate blog I’ve already started isolating places in Yahoo Answers to participate. What a great way to establish you or your company as an expert. Great post!
  • Using Click Here on Website: Awesome article by Dawud. When I went back and looked I couldn’t believe how many times I use the words, “click here”. Why would I so that?

Some Good Articles…

That’s it for this weekend! See you Monday…


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April 21st, 2007

Age of Conversation eBook is Getting Closer

ageconversation.pngYou may recall seeing the logo to the left on various blogs over the last few weeks. That was the call-for-authors logo that Gavin Heaton and Drew McLellan used to gain interest in writing a chapter for the Age of Conversation eBook. Well, the author list has been set and chapters are due in about a week. I’m happy to say I’m part of the project and have my chapter in the works.

More importantly, all proceeds from the book will be donated to Variety, the Children’s Charity. Check out their website - I’m very excited to be a part of a project that will benefit this organization!

Here’s the roundup of authors who will be contributing to the book:

Gavin Heaton
Drew McLellan
CK
Valeria Maltoni
Emily Reed
Katie Chatfield
Greg Verdino
Mack Collier
Lewis Green
Sacrum
Ann Handley
Mike Sansone
Paul McEnany
Roger von Oech
Anna Farmery
David Armano
Bob Glaza
Mark Goren
Matt Dickman
Scott Monty
Richard Huntington
Cam Beck
David Reich
Mindblob (Luc)
Sean Howard
Tim Jackson
Patrick Schaber
Roberta Rosenberg
Uwe Hook
Tony D. Clark
Todd Andrlik
Toby Bloomberg
Steve Woodruff
Steve Bannister
Steve Roesler
Stanley Johnson
Spike Jones
Nathan Snell
Simon Payn
Ryan Rasmussen
Ron Shevlin
Roger Anderson
Bob Hruzek
Rishi Desai
Phil Gerbyshak
Peter Corbett
Pete Deutschman
Nick Rice
Nick Wright
Mitch Joel
Michael Morton
Mark Earls
Mark Blair
Mario Vellandi
Lori Magno
Kristin Gorski
Krishna De
Kris Hoet
Kofl Annan
Kimberly Dawn Wells
Karl Long
Julie Fleischer
Jordan Behan
John La Grou
Joe Raasch
Jim Kukral
Jessica Hagy
Janet Green
Jamey Shiels
Dr. Graham Hill
Gia Facchini
Geert Desager
Gaurav Mishra
Gary Schoeniger
Gareth Kay
Faris Yakob
Emily Clasper
Ed Cotton
Dustin Jacobsen
Tom Clifford
David Pollinchock
David Koopmans
David Brazeal
David Berkowitz
Carolyn Manning
Craig Wilson
Cord Silverstein
Connie Reece
Colin McKay
Chris Newlan
Chris Corrigan
Cedric Giorgi
Brian Reich
Becky Carroll
Arun Rajagopal
Andy Nulman
Amy Jussel
AJ James
Kim Klaver
Sandy Renshaw
Susan Bird
Ryan Barrett
Troy Worman


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April 20th, 2007

Update to Business Blogging - First Steps - Post

Happy Friday! I just want to point out some updates I made to my post earlier in the week about first steps to consider when starting a business blog. I’ve continued my search for other posts or articles that provide further information on the topic. I’ve found some great content and put an “Updates” section at the bottom of that post.

The additional posts and articles are worth a look!

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