Sunday, February 3, 2013

In Praise of Print Ads, within limits.

Surprisingly Supportive of Print Ads.

Print Ads still have an important niche in the advertising eco-sphere. Consider using print advertising to target key or spot-market opportunities. When used wisely, targeted print ads will bring tangible value to your marketing campaigns. Print ads are useful branding tools when used properly, giving your business more exposure to quality B-to-B influencers and decision-makers, even if just for a few seconds.

Print ads, however, have intrinsic cost and data tracking disadvantages when compared to internet ads. The problem with print ads was identified over 100 years ago by a famous American retailer, John Wanamaker:

"Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted;
                                                               the trouble is I don't know which half."   

Wanamaker, John

Full disclosure: I am a dedicated internet marketer first and foremost. When it comes to generating quality leads for technical business-to-business, nothing I've found in over 10 years beats Search Engine Marketing (SEM), nothing. If you know how to play the SEO game well, both organic and paid search create a powerful fire-hose of quality leads. These leads can be tracked and reviewed with various analytics and CRM data-tools to assess performance data and analytics. SEM gives us both quality and quantity results. The low cost-per-lead with SEM is attractive, and the ROI measurable.

But search engine marketing is not the only way prospective customers will find or remember us. Ignoring other ad options, like print ads, can limit your visibility to potentially key prospective customers.

John Wannamaker was conflicted
 with Print Advertising, too.
Similar to banner ads, the print ad can make a fleeting but favorable impression upon the reader. They may scan the ad and flip the page in a second or two, but the impression has been made. By including unique email addresses, QR tags, landing pages, and phone numbers, you can attempt to better measure direct response and lead quality rates. In most cases those response rates, along with banner ads and display (Adsense), will usually be significantly lower than with Adwords.

But trying to achieve a nearly impossible equivalent "click through rate" as compared to Adwords ads shouldn't be the prime goal with print ads. By carefully placing a print ad in the right place at the right time, with the right message, positive results can occur. Encouraging the reader to take positive actions later on, by positively recognizing your brand and company at trade shows, conferences, during web searches, etc, is a key benefit.

The print ad, if designed correctly, helps alert the target market to your company's existence, amplifies your value message and plants a valuable, latent, call-to-action which can generate a lead and business opportunity later on. We're talking mind-share here!

Opening the mind, Opening the Order Book:
Print ads are like bill-boards, helping to embed your company into the brain of the potential client. I've witnessed this happy result at trade shows and conferences, where key potential customers had learned about us first through print ads, and when we met them they already had a positive recognition of our company and services. Just one such lead turning into regular business will pay for a print advert many, many times over.

When and Where to use Print Ads?
In technical B-to-B marketing, the great news is that we can be very selective. Run a print ad campaign in a niche industry journal or magazine, or run periodic spot ads because that publication will be distributed at an important conference or trade show, or your company is one of the sponsors at an industry event. All of these options are valid, and you can keep your print ad budget costs down and within reason.

For niche B-toB, don't waste limited marketing budgets on lavish print-ads in general interest or mass-market publications. Find and target niche publications, evaluate their audience claims, check the validity with your own internal and external contacts, then test the waters. Cost can be controlled, often a simple classified ad running in a back-section of an industry publication will be enough for consistent lead generation. Running a 1/2 or 1/4 page ad can work and grab attention, if designed well.

"Just say No" to most print media telemarketers... often their print and online offerings can be of dubious value and aren't worth your time - they will devour your entire marketing budget if you let them. If they sound like penny stock brokers or used-car salesmen, end the conversation quickly and get back to real work.

Print ads are a useful advertising weapon in your marketing arsenal. Use print ads wisely and in a limited fashion, and you'll see benefits. Just don't turn off your Adwords any time soon!

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Marketing Expertise Mind Map - January 2013

Erik Holladay's Marketing Expertise Mind Map, January 2013.
Erik Holladay's Global Marketing Skills and Experience, not including Sales Experience.
I've been wanting to post a mind map of this kind for some time. This is a first attempt and I hope to polish it up as time goes on. Mind maps are excellent tools to help gather and understand diverse, complex tasks, projects and responsibilities  If you've ever wondered how to show your management (and yourself) what it is you do 60 to 70 hours a week, a mind map is a great start. Adding a mind map was part of my collection of New Year's Resolutions, the marketing mind map was in the top 10. Only 9 resolutions to go! 

A larger .pdf version of this mind map is available upon request. You can also view my professional profile on Linkedin at: http://www.linkedin.com/in/erikholladay  

May you and your loved ones have a happy, healthy, and prosperous 2013!
Best Regards; Erik Holladay

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Niche Organic Search Can Dominate for Quality Lead Generation

Long-tail search SERP home-runs can be achieved, if you know your target market language. 

I've just achieved one of those relatively rare, enjoyable SEO events where some of my niche technical service webpages dominate the top three organic search spots for one key search term, out of over 3,200,000 indexed pages... along with the number two spot on Adwords. Rarely, some of my webpages even achieved the top four organic SERP results, a "grand slam", beating out millions of other indexed pages.

SEO Niche is Nice:
How did I do this? Long-tail search exploitation is the main answer. Finding service niches and exploiting them. Often, just creating a new, cross-indexed, market-niche, sub-category webpage with relevant content will do the job nicely for top SEO results.

Niche Content Benefits SEO.
Focusing on location is another powerful way to differentiate a webpage and catapult it to the top of the SERPS. With proper research and reflection, this sort of niche long-tail SEO success can be duplicated many times. You'll get less visitors to these niche pages, but visitor quality will be higher. For business-to-business technical web marketing, I'll take quality visitors over quantity any day.

Can I rest on my laurels? Never. SEO is a lead generation contest that never ends.

For every SEO victory, there is another SEO challenge. For example, while building overwhelming success with one long-tail search term, another location-specific search term gave me "good" results, but the page I really expected to be top-ranked is not listed on page one, yet. OK, so is it time to think, analyze and take action? It is a newer page, but to ensure that new page ranks in the top results, I must monitor for it, and if results in a few weeks are not satisfactory I'll have to work on optimizing that new page.
Winning at SEO takes skill, analytical ability, productivity, a search-friendly website, patience, work, and persistence. 

Saturday, November 10, 2012

The History of Search Engine Marketing

The Birth and Evolution of the Search Engine Industry Infographic.

If you are fascinated by and are a fanatic for search engine marketing, which I am, this "history of search" infographic is notable, interesting and entertaining. Markus Allen, the Editor and Publisher of a high quality Search Engine Marketing (SEM) information-rich website called "Search Engine Marketing Roundup", has produced a comprehensive historical overview of the evolution of search, from ancient historical times in 1994 to 2011. From Lycos and Webcrawler to Yahoo and Overture, to Bing and... oh yeah... the elephant in the search engine marketing room..... Google. An update for 2012, with all the anti-spammer algorithm changes made by Matt Cutts et al at Google, is awaited and will be very interesting.

Google algorithm factors
Source: Search Engine Journal | Embed this on your own website (FREE)

Friday, November 9, 2012

SEO Tactics Beyond Content Marketing

Content Marketing Rules. No surprise! I am a huge supporter of Content Marketing driving SEO and lead generation. Great content provides a big competitive advantage in search engine marketing and lead generation in general. With 10 years of laser-like focus on web content marketing + SEO, I usually overwhelm and essentially crush my global and local competition. Yes, Content Marketing really works.
But there are alternative tactics which should not be overlooked. Rand Fishkin with SEOMOZ has produced an informative video on this very topic. Rand is saying don't forget to use all the proven web marketing tools for SEO and web marketing. For those ambushed link-builders burned by the Google Penguin and Panda anti-spam updates, this presentation offers viable alternatives.

See Rand's profile at SEOMOZ. He is CEO + Co-founder of SEOMOZ.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

How to Set Goals for Your Marketing - Matt Bailey

"How to Set Goals for Your Marketing", by Matt Bailey.
Marketing expert Matt Bailey explains how to set marketing goals - by identifying revenue-producing actions and the segments and personas needed to accomplish those goals. "By measuring motivation and revenue, you can better measure success." He gave a similar message during SESSF 2012. This is an excellent presentation.

See Matt Bailey's presentation at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEWoxE5CLAw&feature=share&list=PL981F1D7041031039

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Is Saying SEO is Dead... Dead?

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is not Dead. But don't get too complacent.

SEO extinction doom and gloom tends to come out of hiding whenever Google makes notable changes to its search algorithm. As Google is a quasi-monopoly in search, these dire alarms should be looked at and evaluated. The changes made by Google primarily focus on filtering out spammers and improving SERP quality. Big changes like Panda and Penguin can crush black and grey hat SEO efforts. But white hat SEO rarely is adversely affected. So use white hat tactics. In other words, if you conduct your SEO efforts with your target market needs, website usability, and original content relevancy as top of mind, then you'll have a good chance to succeed with organic search optimization for Google, Bing, Blekko, and other search sites.
The Death of SEO?
Here lie the ancient ruins of SEO,
destroyed by barbarian pandas, penguins,
and SERPs.

Search Engine Land has produced a humorous infographic detailing the failed predictions of SEO disaster and SEO death over the years. Folks have been predicting the death of SEO for as long as SEO became an acronym for search engine optimization.

As someone who has been successfully conducting and managing B-to-B web marketing SEO for over 10 years, I find this infographic amusing and entertaining. We've heard urgent 'SEO is Dead' warnings before, I just didn't realize that SEO downfall predictors have been at this for so long. This infographic pulls all the SEO doom and gloom prognosticators together in one handy guide.

To see this infographic please visit: "The Death Of SEO, Failed Predictions Over The Years"

For anyone who has been at SEO for a few years, predictions that the SEO sky is falling can have a déjà vu feeling. Like other apocalyptic predictions of death and destruction (zombie invasion, thermo-nuclear war, magnetic pole reversal, peak oil, mega-quakes, killer asteroids, alien invasion, supernovas, super-bug pandemics, evil super-computers, mega-solar storms, etc.) this one has not happened, just yet. Given enough time, like a Monte-Carlo probability simulation, the unthinkable could happen, SEO could be squashed like a bug one day. So in this regard we shouldn't mock SEO death predictors, but monitor their early-warning chatter. One day, they could get it right.

Alternatives to Google Analytics 'Not Provided' Organic Search Keywords: Google Closes The Curtain on Organic Keyword Research.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

SEO Ranking Factors as a Periodic Table

Search Engine Land has produced a very useful "Periodic Table" for search engine optimization ranking factors. This is a great at-a-glance graphic which can help anyone involved with SEO the opportunities, dangers, and housekeeping required to produce and maintain superior SERPs in the face of tough and determined competition. It's also fun to look at and impress your coworkers when you post it on a wall.

”Search
See the article on this SEO infographic at http://searchengineland.com/seotable. You can download the .pdf version here, and look at the complete graphic.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

How to do Keyword Research - Infograph

Keyword Research Process Infographics.
Here is a good, simple graphic showing the major steps in keyword research for organic and paid search engine marketing.
Keyword Research Infographic
From: Promodo.com
Learn more about keyword research at:
http://searchengineland.com/infographic-how-to-do-keyword-research-for-seo-134202

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Geo-location and local search video: Bruce Clay discusses at SES San Francisco 2012

Bruce Clay is the owner of Bruce Clay, Inc. a well known internet marketing company. Mr. Clay is another valuable and informative speaker at SES events, and he was once again enlightening and thought-provoking at SES San Francisco 2012. In this interview, Bruce focuses on local search, Google's plans, and what changes to local search are likely over the next 18 months. A great video which reminds us that local search is very important - - and should not be overlooked.