Natalie Myers

Corporate Blogs: A Mini-Guide For Finding The Best Bloggers

September 22nd, 2008
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When I spoke to Christopher Barger, manager of GM’s FastLane blog, the other day about best practices in managing corporate blogs for a MarketingSherpa article, something that struck me was just how hard it is for these managers to find employees within their companies who are willing to blog on a regular business.

It’s not something we at MarketingSherpa have to worry about too much because most of us are writers. But I’d imagine it’s something many blog managers struggle with.

Read more…

Anne Holland

SherpaBlog: Branded iGoogle Themes: How to Dominate the Desktop in 2008

September 22nd, 2008

Using branded screensavers used to be one of the coolest marketing tactics out there. At its height, 600,000+ fans downloaded Tabasco screensavers each month. Then came desktop apps – my personal favorite was Vail Resort’s – as well as branded IM ‘skins’ offered by marketers, such as Panasonic.

At 6 a.m. ET on Friday, September 12, 2008, handbag and design diva Kate Spade launched her version of the newest tactic to dominate the desktop – a branded iGoogle offering.

So far, results have been outstanding. In the first week, 17,000 fans in the US and UK customized their iGoogle homepages with Kate Spade graphics. (I’ve posted a sample of the email that made it all happen below.) Encouraged, Spade’s marketing team will expand their iGoogle offering promotions to the rest of the world in a campaign that will launch in early October.

The cost has been next to nothing. An in-house design team created the iGoogle programming. It took them about two months, but they were working on other projects at the same time. Then Spade’s marketing team sent an email blast to her house opt-in list and that was it.

I think this test is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of what may be accomplished with branded personalized homepages. Now that Yahoo is launching a new version of their homepage, which increases personalization, opportunities for creative marketers will blossom there as well.

Sherpa will continue to cover this area extensively in coming months. If you’re testing anything interesting, please let us know! Share your experiences in comments or contact News Editor Bill Rupp directly at BillR(at)marketingsherpa(dot)com

Thanks and here is the sample I promised you:

Kate Spade iGoogle Theme Offer:
http://www.marketingsherpa.com/cs/katespade/study.html

Sherpa’s classic Case Studies on:

Tabasco’s Screensavers for consumers and businesses:
https://www.marketingsherpa.com/barrier.html?ident=23584&pop=no

Vail Resort’s desktop app:
https://www.marketingsherpa.com/barrier.html?ident=23631&pop=no

How to advertise on IM skins:
https://www.marketingsherpa.com/barrier.html?ident=23745&pop=no

Phone Number in Order Confirmation Email: Worth the Risk?

September 15th, 2008
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A major eretail player has been using a ‘wow’ tactic. In their order confirmation emails, the brand has offered customers the chance to call a toll-free number that same day if they want to add more products to their order. Read more…

Adam T. Sutton

B-to-B Partnerships Built on Solid Communication

September 15th, 2008
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Partnering with your competition can make for tense relations. You’re supposed to be working together, but you’re going after the same market with the same product. It can get confusing.

Read more…

Natalie Myers

Measuring Reach of Blogs and Influencers Still Difficult

September 15th, 2008
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Measuring influencer reach and blog impressions is probably one of the most challenging aspects of entering a Web 2.0 strategy today. So, you created a social media campaign with outreach to influential bloggers. How do you measure the influence it had? Read more…

Anne Holland

SherpaBlog: Before You Write Copy or Blog, Make a Keyword List

September 15th, 2008

What information do you give your copywriter, creative team or company bloggers to act on now?

You’re probably giving them lists of product and service features, promotional campaign info and, perhaps, a branding memo outlining rules regarding slogans, trademarks, tone and such. But you’re most likely not giving them keywords.

Keywords are the highly specific words that your target audience would use to describe anything that has to do with your offerings, as well as the personal reasons why they’d buy. Initially, keywords mattered because they were the words that people typed into search engines when looking for something on the Internet or on your site.

But, as a copywriter myself, I’ve come to realize that keywords are much, much more powerful for reasons other than just SEO. Because all advertising boils down to “What’s in it for me?”, your job is to convince prospects that their needs will be met. And, nothing is more compelling than speaking in a prospect’s language – describing their own desire or pain to them in exactly the words they would use.

Do they say “bicycle” or “bike”? Do they say “cheapest” or “least expensive”? Do they want a supplier in the “Kansas area” or the “Midwest”? Do they yearn for the excitement of “new” or the safety of “guaranteed”?

You’ll discover these words everywhere the customer is on your own site’s search engine, focus groups, customer hotlines, online customer-written reviews, etc. You *won’t* find them in your competitor’s copy, and don’t bother looking in the media or in analyst reports. Those aren’t typical customers, so they use different words.

Your final goal is to attach a set of keywords, including phrases, to everything your copywriters and internal bloggers may write about – ranging from your product benefits, promotions, customer pain points, features, offers, user conferences, etc.

The most important places to get keywords inserted are:
o Headlines
o Subheads
o First paragraph of body copy
o First bullet point on a list
o Copy immediately next to or included on an action item (click link, button, toll-free number, reply card, etc.)
o Blog categories, topics and tags

If you are the copywriter, my advice is to take a two-fold approach. First, review the keywords list, then write your copy – but don’t let the keywords restrict you too much. Often, the big battle is just getting words onto paper.

Then, when you go back to review copy, look for places where you can plant words from the list. Sometimes, it’s a quick replacement of one term for another; other times, the process involves inserting an extra word or two.

Some copywriters feel they are not being creative if they use the same exact words or phrases multiple times through their copy. They want to switch up the terminology, make a change for change’s sake. Generally, nothing could be more wrong. Rinse, lather, repeat, repeat, repeat. Consumers are not reading every word of your copy! They are glancing and spotting a few words. If you want to be sure your keywords have been seen and have an impact, put them everywhere.

Great copy is less about creative or clever phrasing and more about clarity of message for the skimming eye. So, the next time a marketer hands you a writing assignment, say: “Thanks. Where’s the list of keywords for this?”

Adam T. Sutton

Write Your Ecommerce Copy in Right Language

September 11th, 2008
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The Internet has opened up the entire world to retail marketers. Anyone who can reach a computer to go online can buy your product.

Global ecommerce marketing has a lot of challenges, though, like translation. Unless you have a team of translators on staff, you’re going to need some help localizing your marketing copy.

Here is some advice from Larry Arnold, Manager, Consumer Technology Publications, Garmin, that could help you organize a diverse translation process.

Read more…

Short Subject Lines Revisited

September 10th, 2008
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I browse dozens of eretail newsletters each week. And FreePeople.com’s subject lines stand out the most because they are *routinely* super short.

Thirteen out of their past 20 subject lines have been four words or less. And most of those 13 have employed either two or three words. Further, many of the subject lines have 14 or fewer characters (including spaces).

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Can Newspaper Sticky Ads Drive Web Sales?

September 10th, 2008
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I first noticed them on daily newspapers in Maryland and Pennsylvania and became intrigued. Then on a trip to Omaha, I saw one on a weekly entertainment pub. An increasing number of newspapers now allow smallish ad stickers on their front pages. Yes, the approach makes many journalists shudder. Still, the stickers are being stuck onto newspapers and, to be fair, can be peeled easy enough by the readers to see what’s underneath. Read more…

Adam T. Sutton

Click Fraud Apathy Can Cost You Search Dollars

September 10th, 2008
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I just finished an article on click fraud and found some interesting numbers. A large majority of marketers seem unconcerned with click fraud.

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