Posted Dec 21 2008 9:50 AM by Matt Zentz
What tools do you use to improve website visibility, engage visitors, and increase conversions? I break successful websites into those three areas of importance: visibility, engagement, and conversion.
Let's say you do some email marketing, have a corporate blog, use search ads, and build up your backlinks in order to increase visibility (see my post about website chauffeurs).
Once visitors arrive, you use a web content management system to keep your site updated with engaging and relevant content.
Then, when converting visitors into leads (or paying customers) you might post a form that gets stored in your CRM database, added to your email marketing database, and then you might send both yourself and the lead an email response.
I calll this cloud marketing. Just like cloud computing, cloud marketing utilizes the power of disparate applications and tools connected on the Internet. This is the "all of us is more powerful than just one of us" mentality.
Cloud marketing is expensive because it still requires developers to programmatically connect all the tools so they talk nicely to each other. Over time, though, more and more tools will be connected easily because of standards. Just like RSS, I envision a day when we can point one application to another and they will auto-discover eachother's features and be able to talk without the need of a contracted programmer. This will not only lower the cost, but also give smaller businesses a better ability to compete with the big guys. Here's one Indianapolis firm that's already doing it - 5Buckets.
NOTE: Here's proof of how fast the Internet moves. I started this article in November and didn't finish it for a variety of reasons. At that time, there wasn't much on cloud marketing and there definitely wasn't a Wikipedia entry. Now, however, there is. Started on December 1st - here it is: cloud marketing. Posted Sep 23 2008 3:40 PM by Colin Clark
I had an awesome meeting today with Tony Scelzo, the founder of Rainmakers, in which he spoke about frequency and universe. Basically your universe is composed of suspects, prospects, and influencers. Frequency is the number of contacts you have with these people each week, month, year, or whatever. This model is consistent with my current marketing philosophy. Frequency and follow-up are extremely important along with the number of people who carry your message.
I've seen so many models and analogies for good marketing, that it blows my mind. Mostly they all mean the same thing. You do research to determine a good market segment. You hit that segment with as many different forms of contact as you can think of. You measure what worked and what didn't. You do more of what worked and less of what didn't. You do this until you own your market. It sound so simple that it's almost crazy that we still talk about it so much!
It's ideas such as this that make a web content management system make so much sense. A CMS with the right features allows you to run several different campaigns at once. For example, Marketpath CMS allows users to search optimize their site (and keep it optimized), create and measure landing pages, create a corporate blogging program, run a viral campaign, and coordinate their site with email marketing. How much more power could you ask for? Posted Sep 11 2008 2:34 PM by Colin Clark
i'd like to wholeheartedly thank Erik Deckers for hosting the bloggers roundtable yesterday at the Brugge in Broadripple. I always get excited when a lot of individuals who I communicate with online get together to talk in person. One of the interesting conversations we had was about the inclusion or exclusion of comments on your blog. Kyle Lacy argued that simply by allowing comments and opening the floor for discussion the blog was a success.
What is so great about blogs? People have been writing down their opinions for hundreds of years. The result of this can be found in most any library. A lot of people find it a little boring. What separates these authors from bloggers is the communal aspect. Comments! How many time have you read a blog post and then scrolled through the comments to find that they were far more insightful and interesting than the original post. That's what happens when people collaborate. Amazing things happen!
Now, Marketpath's CMS software certainly allows for either inclusion, exclusion, or monitoring of comments. We provide this as a choice to customers, because we realize that everyone has different needs (using the blog format for news is one example). Some companies simply blog for SEO. Should they allow comments? Why is it so hard to be transparent!?
This is a corporate blog post. Right now I am writing with the intent that our search ranking will improve and that my customers or future customers will have this content available as a valuable resource AND I DO ALLOW COMMENTS! If I speak about my opinions on my industry they are just that; opinions. I am opening a forum for discussion with whomever might read this. If I'm lucky enough to have a readership, then I owe it to that readership to let its voice be heard. FREEDOM TO THE PEOPLE! Posted Sep 1 2008 8:28 PM by Matt Zentz
Just two days after I post about Microsoft IE8, I get an alert that Google has announced their new web browser, Google Chrome, will be available in beta for download September 2nd. If you're not familiar with the term 'beta', it is basically a testing release before the official '1.0' is added. Read the official notice from Google.
From a consumer perspective, hurray! I do like having a choice..... but not too many. Too many choices and I just get confused and easily cheated by imposters and me-toos (ok, I don't get cheated with software much because I am a developer by trade, but my Grandmother does... and my parents, and my sister, and my cousins.... I hope you get the point). So, now I can use Firefox (the champion of people who dislike Microsoft), or I can use Internet Explorer (the standard built-in browser for Microsoft Windows), or Safari (the Mac OS built-in), or Google Chome (a wonderfully simplistic, yet powerful browser - I'm sure). Of course, there are a couple others, but they barely register as a blip in the browser usage radar.
From a developer/marketer's perspective, I am a little annoyed. Building rich and dynamic cross-browser websites can be a challenge, even though development has improved a lot over the last 5 years. There are still inconsistencies, mostly with Javascript and CSS (style sheets). Developing cross-browser websites is sort of like putting up a billboard that can only be read by people in certain types of cars. If you drive a BMW it appears perfect. If you drive an '84 Chevy Celebrity (like my first car) the billboard shows a big red X. It's challenging to get the message right for everyone.
If your website is not dynamic, i.e. contains no Javascript, then you will likely be fine. The challenge is with rich sites - those websites that have put a lot of time and effort into improving the user experience. There will most likely be compatibility issues and you will need to fix those as soon as you can.
Google has a huge following. To many people, they are still the underling that develops cutting edge software. Once Chrome is released in beta, you can count on a ton of people trying it out - if not adopting it entirely. This means you need to test your corporate websites, landing pages, micro-sites, and customer applications.
Google is pretty good at releasing quality software, but I have seen several applications in beta that were buggy. If Chrome gets adopted by a large number of consumers, I hope they have worked out most of the kinks. Posted Aug 21 2008 3:17 PM by Colin Clark
Well is it? At last weekend's blogINDIANA conference Chris Baggot of Compendium Blogware argued that the blog is the perfect search result. He argued that it is in google's best interest to provide information that people want. Now I love to blog. I find it fun and therepudic and extremely enjoyable, but I don't necessarily believe that a blog entry the most relevant organic result on any given topic.
That's not to say that I'm angry. I'm glad that my old friend google loves blogs so much, beca use it helps me rank for many of the terms that are relevent to my business, but I have to think that if I were searching for 'indianapolis corporate blog software' that I would rather be taken to a page that had definitive information on the topic, not some random blog entry written by someone like me. I know that google's love affair with the corporate blog is good for marketers, but is it good for the consumer?
With that in mind, how long can google's blog obsession last? How long before blogs are relegated to the types of specialty blog searches of the past and what will those who have invested heavily in the blog as a marketing tool do if it someday goes away? I don't have the answers to these questions, but for now I'm glad that my blogs are tops for search. I'll rest easy knowing that a full featured content management system with blog technology is doing its job by positively impacting my marketing stra Posted Aug 8 2008 12:33 PM by Colin Clark
I thought of several titles for today's post. "All my eggs in one SEO basket" "Count your search chickens before they hatch" even "Humpty Dumpty had a great SEO fall" Why? Because I got complacent. I never considered that I was vulnerable. I never considered that the world was plotting against me. Let's face it, I just wasn't smart enough to see what I was up against.
I know that the content in my blog gets indexed by Google. As most people can tell you I'm totally obsessed with my blog right now, so naturally I've been blogging about the importance of corporate blogging and neglecting other keywords like SEO. Consequentially, we no longer rank as high as we used to for SEO. I'm upset. In fact I'm down right mad. I want my ranking. I had it. I worked for it. Now I've lost it. Let me set one thing straight Mr. Google; we are search engine optimizers. We are SEO experts. We have something to say about search marketing. Is that enough key words for you? Can I have my 1st page ranking, please?
Let this be a lesson to all you corporate bloggers out there. Don't put all your eggs in one basket. Spread your topics out over all aspects of your business, or your competitors will gain ground. You will sacrifice all that you've worked for. You'll be forced to whine and cry like I am. You'll end up down on your knees begging for Google's forgiveness. Heed my warning. Posted Jul 22 2008 11:30 AM by Colin Clark
Marketing proffesionals all over the world are scrambling to beat their competition at the web race. Who will finish first? Who's marketing is the best marketing? What techniques will put your company at the top.
Search Engine Optimization is a buzzword that is currently circulating around the marketing world. There are companies that charge tens of thousands of dollars, and still can't guarantee that your name will rank on the first page of the Google organic search.
The truth is that there is no guarantee when it comes to SEO. It is easy to rank for certain terms, because very few people are searching for them. Other terms are nearly impossible to rank for.
A good CMS is an integral part of attaining high organic search rankings. If content has been posted recently, search engines look at it more seriously (would you rather read yesterday's newspaper or today's newspaper?). Another powerful tool is the corporate blog. I have a business associate who was able to significantly increase his search rankings simply by writing in his blog regularly. We the people want new content! Posted May 30 2008 10:39 PM by Matt Zentz
I was just reading a post from Chris Baggott's blog titled Blogging Best Practices about installed vs. hosted software. Compendium Blogware, Chris' company, is a hosted or software-as-a-service (SaaS) solution that requires no IT assistance to setup. This allows corporate bloggers to get right down to the business of blogging.
Marketpath CMS is also software-as-a-service. More often than not, people ask about the difference between our content management solution and installed CMS software like Adobe Contribute or Ektron. Here are a few of the key benefits of our content management solution:
- It's incredibly easy! Requires no knowledge of HTML
- Fast setup and implementation
- 100% browser based so it is accessible from anywhere
- No upgrades to install because software updates are applied automatically
- No IT staff required
- Unlimited, easily accessible support
Here are some of the disadvantages of using installed software like Adobe Contribute:
- Usually requires some HTML coding
- Can only be used on the PC it is installed on
- Requires IT staff to install, implement, train, support, and install upates.
- Per seat license fees
- Limited support options from vendor
In the end, serious Internet marketers will choose a solution that frees them up for valuable Internet marketing and not software configuration.
Posted May 29 2007 7:00 PM by John Kohlmeyer
5/30/2007 - Dominion Group, an Indianapolis-based provider of comfortable and affordable housing, launches a new website designed and built by Marketpath, Inc. The new website incorporates an appealing, modern design with the ability to search for apartments by type and location.
The Dominion Group website also includes a document management application that enables over 30 apartment communities to share business critical forms and other information.
Visit http://www.dominiongroup.net to learn more about Dominion Group.
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