• how to spread the word about your businessLearn how to spread the word about your business with press releases and business interviews.
  • spread the word now rss feed subscribe RSS
  • email spread the word nowEmail
  • follow spread the word now on twitterTwitter

Tag Archive for 'how to'

7 Steps to Better Business Promotions Online

Looking for effective ways to promote your business? Look to the internet! With just a little know-how you can advertise your business, use social networks for more business and follow-up effectively with customers and prospects.

Getting started is easier than you think with these 7 steps to better business promotion online. Part 1 of a 2 part series.

1. Build a Website
Having your own website, where you showcase your products and services is the first step to promoting your business online. Establishing your web presence is a 3 step process:

  1. Register a Domain Name
    Every website needs an address, like every home needs an address. Your domain name is that address. When considering a domain name, think first about the name of your business, your location and whether your customers are local, national or international. Then search for a domain name.

    You can register a domain name for a minimum of one year. Or, you can register for multiple years. Prior to the expiration of your domain name, at the end of the registration period, you will receive emails prompting your to renew the name. It is a good idea to use your Calendar (Google Calendar and Outlook are examples) to schedule a time for domain name renewal.

  2. Host the Domain Name
    Hosting is the process of creating the virtual space for your website files. This is not the same as owning a domain name. You can own a domain name but not have a website. But you cannot have a website without having the virtual space for the website files. Part of the hosting process involves creating space for your website on a web server.

    Two companies that register domain names and host websites are:
    Domain Names USA
    Moniker.com

  3. Build the Website
    Building a website involves designing a layout, creating the graphic images and writing the text or ad copy for the site. You can do this yourself if you know HTML, you can hire a freelance Web Designer or you can retain the services of a business promotion company to do this for you.

    If you hire a company or freelance web design person, the cost of building your website will depend on the complexity of the site. How many pages will the developer create? How many images? Does your business need a shopping cart?

    These questions should be asked during an initial meeting. Then you should receive a written proposal based on your conversation. Once agreed upon, most sites can be designed, approved and developed within a few weeks.

2. Start a Blog
Starting a blog is the first step to having an online dialogue with your potential customers. You can use your blog to tell your visitors and customers about your upcoming events, new product launches and community service.

You can create surveys through your blog and get feedback about what your readers care most about. This is an excellent starting place for developing new products or services or improving your current offerings.

You do not have to be a technical guru to start a blog. You can be up and running with your own company blog in 30 minutes with either:
blogger.com, a Google service, or
wordpress.com.

If you are a wee bit technically savvy, WordPress makes their blogging software available to you for download from WordPress.org. Download the files, upload to your hosting account and install. Then find a theme that suits your business and you are ready to blog!

3. Create a Twitter Account
Twitter is the social networking sensation that you can use to build loyalty, establish yourself as an expert in your industry, offer your prospects an online coupon in real time, discover trends, start trends and much, much more.

Twitter is very simple. You join. You Follow. And people, called Tweeple, follow you.

And using 140 characters or less, you text a message from your mobile phone, laptop or office computer.

Setting up a Twitter account is fast and easy. Just go to Twitter.com.

Once your Twitter account is set up, you can hook your blog and your Twitter account together, so all your Tweets appear on your blog and your blog post titles appear on Twitter. Pretty nifty!

This is part 1 of a 2 part series on how to promote your business online. I welcome your comments on these business promotion tools and look forward to showing you 4 more ways to promote your business online!

dupw73qvzs

How to Measure Social Networking ROI

Social Networking is a form of business communication that can support the establishment of a brand, help maintain brand awareness and build relationships that lead to sales.

For an organization looking to build awareness of its products or services through social networking, the cost of social networking can be easily measured.

An employee, contractor or advertising agency, will establish a Twitter page, Facebook account and/or MySpace page. Target blogs, forums and communities (those networks having the Customer demographics the business or organization wants to reach) will be identified and joined. Signatures with links, coupled with backend landing pages and tracking codes will be created. And relationship building begins, consuming time and money on an hourly or per account basis. Since time and money are easily measured, the cost of social networking is also easily measured.

What is the Value of Social Networking to a Business?

What does all of this social networking do for an organization? Does social networking increase sales? For all of the costs involved in establishing and maintaining social networking relationships as business communications, is social networking worth the cost? To answer this question, we must measure the Return on Investment.

How Does a Business Measure Social Marketing ROI?

To answer this question, we must find a metric – a number we can measure before and after some event, something quantitative like traffic, sales volume, number of telephone calls or number of responses to an advertisement.

Brand perception, a qualitative metric, can be measured with surveys, no doubt, but who out there can calculate the length of time and the social networking force required to state, in a statistically relevant manner, that social networking changed or improved an existing brand’s perception in the marketplace? Surely this effort would not be undertaken without using other media, which makes measuring the contribution of social networking to a shift in perception a bit more cumbersome. So the question remains…

How Do You Measure the Value of Social Networking to a Business?

Simon Andrews at Big Picture on Advertising says,

…all our work shows the best way to calculate the ROI on social is to look at the effect on organic search…

Excellent point. We know Google indexes tweets (Twitter posts), LinkedIn, Facebook and Plaxo profile pages. Blog posts are indexed as are comments. What metrics, other than organic search results, do we have to measure the value of online relationships?

Measuring Social Networking ROI and Affiliate Marketing

The Web Development, Advertising and Affiliate Marketing industries developed tracking tools to measure the effectiveness of ad copy and links on sales. Recommendations that result in action can be measured and tracked back to the source or referral. But spur of the moment conversations, especially SMS messages are hindered by the insertion of affiliate links.

Taking this one step further, if your business model is based on an affiliate marketing model, you will maintain a list of cloaked links to your vendors. This list also needs to be maintained in such a way that your affiliate links can be easily dropped into social networking conversation when appropriate. That takes a bit of planning! It is somewhat less-than-natural.

Since a lot of social conversation is occurring within 140 characters or less, and I have to assume these conversations are not stunted by tracking links, how do you measure the value of social networking by any means other than organic search results?

Using Google Analytics and Tracking Codes to Measure ROI

My first metric is traffic to this site. And I use Google Analytics to give me the data I want.

Using Twitter as an example, I create and embed a tracking code in my Twitter profile; just add a slash after the end of your website address, followed by a question mark and the words, “twitterSidebar” like this:

http://www.insertyourdomainhere.com/?twitterSidebar

Any click on my Twitter profile URL will carry that tracking code with it right into Google Analytics. Because that code is unique to my Twitter profile, any traffic that comes to my site using that tracking code can only come from one place: my spreadtheword social networking Twitter profile link.

Log into your Google Analytics account and under “Traffic Sources,” click on “Referring Sites.” If anyone has clicked on the link to your site from Twitter, you will see Twitter.com under the Site Usage tab for the Source dimension. Click on Twitter.com then change the Dimension to Landing Page. If you’ve embedded a tracking code, you will see that tracking code listed. And you will now have one way to measure your social networking return on investment. You now know that people on Twitter do (or don’t) click on the link you put in your profile.

You can embed just about any tracking code into the links you create on Twitter, Facebook and MySpace. Remember to keep your tracking codes unique so you can pinpoint the origin of your site visitors.

Traffic is a very generic metric. So when we talk about Return on Investment, we are usually more interested in a metric that we can associate with an action other than “visited the site.” Converting a site visitor to a Customer, an RSS Feed Subscriber or a Mailing List Subscriber is typically the goal. And we can measure these conversions, and therefore measure our social networking return on investment by creating a funnel through which visitors pass to a pre-determined goal.

For example, when a site visitor makes a purchase, most businesses display a “thank you” page. The only way a site visitor lands on the thank you page is by going through the purchasing funnel. Google Analytics has a way to measure goal conversions. You set up your tracking codes, create your landing pages and configure your goals in Google Analytics, and Google will track the conversions. Then you can measure the return on investment of your social networking activities.

Thank you for reading!

I hope you enjoyed this article about social networking ROI. Please post your comments, questions or suggestions and I will respond quickly.