Archive for September, 2011

Lee Clow Redefines Advertising

Sunday, September 25th, 2011

Lee Clow lead the second revolution in advertising.  If you don’t know him, you know his ads:  Adidas, Nike, Sony PlayStation, Energizer bunny, Toco Bell Chihuahua, and Apple just to name a few.  I like his style, too.  He shows up to work in shorts and flip flops.  He’s not cut from the typical “advertising cloth” or cluttered text, endless lists of product features, and boring ads that leads to naps rather than notice.

Listen below as he briefly describes why the best term for advertising is media arts:

In 1997,  Clow, the chief creative officer at Chiat\Day got a call from the newly returned CEO of Apple, Steve Jobs.  He had one week to produce an ad.  Clow did it.  Does “Think Different” ring a bell?  Here is what Clow created in one week:

What about your ads?  Are you creating media art or just mere ads?

Perhaps we all need to “think differently.”

Your thoughtful and different comments are welcome…

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How To Increase Your Website Traffic

Sunday, September 18th, 2011

Since January 2009, Atkins Marketing Solutions’ annual website traffic has grown over one thousand percent.  For 2011 thus far, my site’s had 31,000 visits and over 68,000 page views.  A record?  No.  But for a small business, not bad.  It’s been a journey of both quality and not just quantity.

How can you do this?  Do you need a magic formula?  Must you hire one of those “get to the top of Google’s page rank” SEO companies?  Do you have to pay each visitor one dollar per visit?  No.  It takes a step-by-step, gradual, patient, and learn-as-you-go process.

Here’s how you can do it:

  • Research and use both keywords and phrases that apply to your site’s focus, themes, and content.
  • Include page content that matches these keywords and phrases.
  • List your website URL on as many free external sites as possible.  Not link farming but legitimate link building.
  • Include links on each of your e-mail marketing newsletters that draw readers back to your website.
  • Consistently update and revise site content.
  • Include links back to your site from Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn posts.  Also make sure your site’s URL is included in all your social media profiles.
  • Contribute to other blogs related to your expertise or business.
  • Include a blog on your site.  The most significant change I made was in April of 2010. I integrated a WordPress blog to my site.  My entire website is now converted to WordPress and I love the interface and ease of use. One month after adding a blog, page views increased by almost five-hundred percent.
  • Write at least one blog post per week that directly relates to your business.  Keep writing.  Keep posting.  Provide free, relevant, and value-oriented content.  Think benefits, not promotion.
  • Add a “Share-This” plugin to your blog and e-mail newsletters so visitors can easily share content they like.
  • Add a cache plugin to your blog. This will increase your page load speed, something Google now monitors.
  • Add an SEO plugin to your blog. This will enhance and automate your post content to make it search friendly.
  • Include relevant YouTube videos in your blog posts.
  • Monitor your daily traffic and detailed page activity with a metrics tool such as AWStats and/or Google Analytics.  Ignore hits.  Track page views since they show engaged reading rather than meaningless hit clicks.  Average time per visit also shows engagement trends.
  • Stay patient.
  • Keep writing creative, fun, and practical content.

Much of good SEO and increased website traffic takes time and effort.  You don’t need a high Google page rank to see increases in traffic.  It’s the trend not the rank that matters most.  Growth trends now; rank increases later.

Your comments are welcome…

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Marketing Content Carved In Stone: Hyalite Canyon’s Rock Blog

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Below is a picture History Rock, near Hyalite Canyon, Montana.  This rock was a blog, so to speak, prior to the existence of the internet.  It contains names and notes carved into this rock.  The legacy messages and names go back to the early 1800′s.  People are still carving.

So what’s your history and legacy?  What can you carve into the digital stone of your blog and business?  Will your messages be remembered?  And, better yet, will your content and messages endure?  Will your posts, today, make a difference in the life of a small business?

All comments are welcomed…

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Is a Google Search Market Research?

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

A Google search is not market research. However, this is not to say that search engines such as Google, Yahoo, BING, and Ask are not valuable. They can be a source of quick and easy secondary research. Google Trends can also be a valuable tool to see who and how many are searching about specific topics over a given time frame.

Just because it is on the Internet does not mean it is true, factual, real, or of decision-making substance. “Trust, but verify,” as the Russian proverb says. Use search engines to start and not finish the research process. Use search engines to help educate you on some of the terms and concepts needed to go deeper as you dive into both secondary and primary research.

Search engines cannot give you the critical tool for decision making: primary data. You can only find this from direct, new, fresh, and feet-on-the-street effort.

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Small Business and Psychographic Marketing?

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

Psychographics rocks.  It goes beyond the common demographics we often hear about.  Demographics tells you who buys your product; psychographics tells you why they buy your product.

So “what do you really mean,” you ask?  I mean magazine marketing.  Yes, magazine marketing.  Psychographics pulls from psychology, sociology, and anthropology to help you locate market segments that best fit your product or service.  It’s the beliefs, values, and lifestyles that people embrace.  In short, it’s what people like to do in their spare time.  Lifestyle fits likes.

The perfect metaphor is in Barnes and Noble.  Walk in the door and what’s one of the first big racks you see?  Magazines.  Each magazine category represents a belief, lifestyle, value, passion, and thus a market segment.

Want to know more about consumer behavior?  Magazines.  Magazine marketing and psychographics-a great tool to better understand and find targeted marketing segments.

Your comments are welcome…

Stuart Atkins

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