Blogging Tips

Maximize Your Blog Power With These Two Magic Words.

11/30/2009
By

ask-who-caresHow do you know when your blog, as well as all your other marketing tools -your website, brochures, sales letters, AdWords ads, email messages, even your letterhead -are on the right track?

Here’s a bit of Mojo I discovered years ago.

Just two words that’ll get you moving in the right direction.
“Who Cares?”

:::

Yes. “Who Cares?”

Let me explain this.

When I was an ad agency creative honcho, I drove more than one art director or designer to the point of madness by asking this question about every headline, every graphic, every subhead, every color choice and every paragraph of copy on our clients’ brochures and marketing collateral.

It got to the point that one Christmas, the bozos in the creative department (and being one myself at that point, I call them that with great respect and fondness) even had a “Who Cares?” rubber stamp made up for me -to save us all the time of my asking them that question over and over.

I didn’t do it to be difficult.

I did it to keep them focused on the task at hand -which, pretty pictures and carefully polished words aside, is to communicate your message to your clients and prospects as clearly as possible.

And it’s not just a rule for newb writers and print designers; I do it to my own stuff constantly, too -even after decades of full-time writing.

:::

“Who Cares?”

If you can’t justify the headline, the picture or the sentence or the graphic…if you can’t figure out its relevance to your target audience…

…it’s the wrong thing.

THEM: “We have digital camcorders!”

ME: “Who Cares?”

THEM: “Well…they’re better cameras.”

ME: “Who Cares?”

THEM: “The clients will care because we are able to capture their presentation with flawless, network-quality equipment.”

ME: “Aha! Now we’re getting somewhere.”

:::

Asking “Who Cares?” as you work on your own promotional materials will keep you focused on the benefits that your clients receive from utilizing your products and services, rather than on the features; which, by themselves, don’t provide much of a compelling reason for people to sign that contract or toss a purchase order (or credit card) on your desktop.

:::

Try it yourself.

Apply the “Who Cares?” question to your own blog posts, your brochures, every page on your website, your AdWords campaigns, even as you develop your business slogan and your letterhead.

Focus on the benefits your clients will reap when they work with you…and you can rest assured that everything you do to promote your business will stay on the right track.

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9 Tips for Going Viral on Twitter

09/25/2009
By

retweeting-secretsViral marketing scientist and author, Dan Zarrella just released his newest report, The Science of Retweeting. Zarrella spent nine months analyzing millions of tweets and tens of millions of retweets (he must be a scientist!) to study how ideas spread from person to person. The fact that anyone would spend so much time analyzing tweets amazes me. I am, however, more than happy to share his findings as posted by Dan Macsai on Fast Company.

Here are Zarrella’s nine ways to get retweeted on Twitter, and my own comments.

1. Link Up (But Don’t use Tiny URLs)

Zarrella found that links were three times more prevalent in retweets (RTs) than in normal tweets. He recommends using URL shorteners such as bit.ly, ow.ly and is.gd.

2. Beggars Can Be Choosers

Tell people what you want them to do. Words and phrases such as “please,” “retweet,” “check out,” “post,” “follow,” “help,” and “how to” make Zarrella’s “Most Retweetable Words & Phrases” list.

3. Avoid Idle Chit-Chat

I agree with Zarrella here. Sometimes I really don’t want to know “what are you doing?”  Words on Zarrella’s least retweetable list include “bored,” “ha-ha,” “tired,” and “sleep.” He strongly suggests avoiding ‘-ing’ verbs such as “going,” “watching,” and “listening.”

4. Don’t be Stupid

Yep – I like this one too. The RTs Zarrella studied had more syllables per word and were more intellectual than normal tweets. Don’t overuse abbreviations and keep those smiley faces and other emoticons in check.

5. Semicolons = Satan

It took a few sips of wine to calm the Mojo Lady down for this one; she really loves her semicolons. According to Zarrella, 98% of RTs contain some form of punctuation. Alas, while there are plenty of colons, commas, hyphens and exclamation points, he calls the semicolon “the only un-retweetable punctuation mark.”

6. Break News

Simply put … share new stuff. Or, old stuff in a new light.

7. Use Proper Nouns Properly

Time to go back to sentence diagrams! Zarrella’s study suggests that headline-style tweets are more likely to be re-tweeted. For instance, “Doc Yankee Stars in new Mojo Video.”

8. Bottle Those Emotions

If you are tweeting about how upset you are with the current state of your job, the economy, your life – don’t. Vent elsewhere. Tweets about religion, money, and media/celebrities are more retweetable than your complaints.

9. Tweet at 4 p.m. on Friday

Sure – we’re all planning our weekend!

By the way, Dan is offering the great report as a downloadable PDF file free on his own website if you sign up for his newsletter. It’s a sure thing. Grab it here.

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Insider Tricks For Creating Great Online Video Content.

04/21/2009
By
Stylish retro TV

"Thanks for watching!"

As the Doctor of Marketing Mojo in these here parts, I see part of my job as providing you with proven tips for using video and multimedia to bring more money into your business.

If you’ve considered hiring a professional company to produce video for your business (and I highly recommend you do so if you can possibly afford it), Brian Clark’s recent post is a must-read. “Persuasive Online Video Strategies that Prompt Action” provides excellent guidelines for creating video content, whether live-action or presentation-style, worth watching until the end. (I, for one, am particularly pleased with Brian’s comment about bullet points.)

Even if you’re not ready to take the video plunge, Brian’s post will certainly help you save money and time when you are.

This is only the tip of the proverbial iceberg. In the next few days, I’ll share some cool Video Marketing Mojo techniques compiled from top-notch video production and multimedia authorities. These are video-based marketing tools and strategies that have generated hundreds of thousands of dollars for companies of all sizes. They’re bound to get you excited about the possibilities of video-based marketing and even spark ideas of your own.

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