Thursday, September 30, 2010

Review: Lisa Gansky’s The Mesh: Why the Future of Business Is Sharing | My Favorite Online Business Tools

Seth Godin calls it a “Must read insight for anyone interested in the future of online, of commerce or even culture”

Others agree that it will change the way you think about business.  Gansky leads the market in identifying the new trend in business thinking.

Are the days of cut-throat competitiveness and corporate espionage a thing of the past?  Maybe not, but Gansky pinpoints the monumental shift in the market collectives behavior.

As consumer’s gain control and demand more value and greener products, Gansky looks at industries, small businesses and groups who are looking to combine efforts in a spirit of higher social responsibility.  By sharing resources, less is wasted and everyone benefits.

Read more reviews here.

Keeping abreast of the industry trends is vital.

New ideas are the life force of the universe.

Sharing cuts waste of materials and effort.

Good reading.

Day 18 - A Second Look at Goals

I have decided that maybe my initial goals were not well enough defined or too vague. Today I went back over them and modified my list.  

My new goals are more defined, more measurable and perhaps not as grand.  They are achievements that require specific actions on my part.  

I am still uncomfortable with the idea of listing five goals.  I argue that it would be better to select one at a time and focus on completing one, yet today I can see that my life is not single dimensional.  It is more compartmental.

Sure, some of the goals overlap.  Learning Spanish is necessary to work with the families in Los Arcos.  Writing and blogging is advantageous for promoting online sales of products.  Yet each one has incremental steps needed daily and warrants tracking separately. 

In the past, there have been times when I have been guilty of spending too much time on trying to organize my day.  As a result, I achieve nothing but creating a tracking sheet too complex to keep up.

I am working on finding the balance between random productiveness and bridled creativity.

I am moving forward on the premise that starting each day in meditative prayer will point me in the right direction for that day.

Writing out my goals gives them concreteness, like looking at the end of a line when drawing and cutting.  Seeing where I want to end up will direct my steps in getting there.  I won't always know what the next step is, but I will know where I will end up.

 

Photo of The Shepherd's Steps, Giant's Causeway © Copyright David Hawgood and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Day 17 - Stepping Out Boldly

Wow!  This work has taken me on a new path that I didn't expect.  When I started this blogging adventure I expected to accomplish two things: 1) help my daughter become known as an artist and sell her art and 2) fill my time with writing about the places we traveled and people we met in our retired years.  Both goals have kind of fallen to the wayside.

My daughter has little interest in the blogs I set up for her art and her daily life is now filled with activities necessary to survive, leaving her little time for her art.

I now find that I am content to stay put in our little home south of the border and have no inclination to travel.  I find even our month jaunt to shop a trial.

Yet, I still blog on.

Instead of world travels, I find I am now motivated to follow a more personal adventure.  Today is Day 2 in my journey through the 100 Day Challenge.  The trip has taken a route I hadn't anticipated.  I started it thinking it would be a shortcut to successful marketing but found instead that marketing isn't my goal at all.  A serious introspective look at what I wanted and where I want to go brought me to a new perspective.

The first half of my life was spent running from God.  The second, in taking Him for granted.

Now in my third trimester (as I expect, Lord willing, to live to 90) I have come to the place of re-prioritizing my priorities. 

My lesson today was about boldness.

To switch channels on this blog and talk about personal faith and God takes every ounce of boldness I possess.

I can already hear the critiques and skeptics.  

You don't mixed religion and business.

You are going to offend your readers.

I don't think you or I should squelch our beliefs.  I believe each of my readers should be free to believe what they want. I believe they should also be free to speak about what they believe.

For those that are offended by this, they are also free to not read on.  I don't know where this journey will lead but it is high time I find out.

I believe in a loving God who elects to have a personal relationship with us.

I believe my part of that relationship consist of seeking His guidance daily and following the path laid out before me.

I don't believe that what He tells me to do applies to anyone else.  It is their task to seek their own direction.

Like I said, this journey has taken a new road.  I may have to change the name of my blogs again it this continues.

 

 

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Day 16 Commitments

So if you make a commitment and fail to keep it how do you regain credibility?  Two weeks ago I made myself and my readers a commitment to post to this blog daily for an entire year.  Here I am on Day 16 and I have already missed several days in a row.
There is no way I can travel back in time and retrieve those days lost.  I can only move on from today and vow to do better, yet I am faced with the question, how much weight does my vow hold?
I don't have a great track record.  I made four "vows" of marriage before I learn to really commit to a relationship.  However, I have learned so there is hope.  I learned that failure is a stepping stone if you keep moving foward.
So I am here, Day 16, starting anew and making a new pledge to myself and my readers (assuming that someday I will have readers) to make this daily post a priority.
You may also find that my direction and purpose for this page has changed.  This is a result of another new commitment in my life.
Today I am starting Day One of The 100 Day Challenge.

Yes, I bought into another program.  I know I preached staying with a program and not starting new things, yet in one sence that is just what I have done.  For the last 6 weeks I have been sticking faithfully to Ed Dale's Challenge 2010.  It is a free step-by-step guide for setting up a marketing blog and getting it to the top of Google's search engine.  I have followed all the lessons thus far and I plan on continuing to follow them for the next month until it is finished.
This page is result of that program.  Ed has inspired me to commit to writing daily.  I have chosen this blog as the place to do that.
I have discovered however, that I need a program that has a broader scope.  I am not interested in just building an online business.
I want to redirect my life to be more productive all around.
I signed up for the The 100 Day Challenge to accomplish this.
Yes, I did also sign up as an affiliate, and yes if you choose to sign up from the links above I will get a commission.   That said.  Do as you see fit.
I'll let you know how it is going...

Saturday, September 25, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 13 Decluttering Your Inbox

In my efforts to focus and reach my goals mentioned in Day 11, one of the tasks I have undertaken is to clean out all the clutter in my inbox.  By clutter I mean all the sales pitches I receive as a result of opting into various mailing lists.  Did you know that every time you enter your email into one of those "sign up for your free copy" of whatever you are also signing up for a continuing barrage of emails, some offering free helpful tips but most trying to sell you on yet another product, package, training or mentorship.  When you sign up for one person's mailing list, you will not only get any offers on any new software or programs that he has created but also on all those that his friends or partners are promoting.  This can get daunting and just looking at all these offers takes away from the time you can spend working toward your own goals, so unless one of your goals is to purchase or try EVERY product offered on the internet, I suggest that you open each of your incoming emails and click the unsubscribe option at the bottom of the email.

It seems I need to do this task at least twice a year for in spite of my good intentions to stay focused I somehow still seems to fall prey to an offer or two every month or so.  Even today I find I am fighting off the urge to sign up for a new one, The 100 Day Challenge has caught my eye.  So far I have resisted the temptation but I must admit my resolve is weakening.  I have even signed up as an affiliate for their program but  it doesn't seem right to sell it if I don't buy it myself. 

For those who haven't heard about The 100 Day Challenge, let me expound a bit.  It is first of all NOT related to The Challenge 2010 which is Ed Dale's 8 week program that I have been working through.  The 100 Day Challenge was created and is offered by Gary Ryan Blair and is as stated a 100 day program to accomplish any goal you set out to achieve, whether it be build an online business, lose 50 pounds, or win the love of your life. I guess the thing that is keeping me from signing up at this time is that I am still trying to pinpoint what goal I really want to achieve.

 

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 13 Decluttering Your Inbox

In my efforts to focus and reach my goals mentioned in Day 11, one of the tasks I have undertaken is to clean out all the clutter in my inbox.  By clutter I mean all the sales pitches I receive as a result of opting into various mailing lists.  Did you know that every time you enter your email into one of those "sign up for your free copy" of whatever you are also signing up for a continuing barrage of emails, some offering free helpful tips but most trying to sell you on yet another product, package, training or mentorship.  When you sign up for one person's mailing list, you will not only get any offers on any new software or programs that he has created but also on all those that his friends or partners are promoting.  This can get daunting and just looking at all these offers takes away from the time you can spend working toward your own goals, so unless one of your goals is to purchase or try EVERY product offered on the internet, I suggest that you open each of your incoming emails and click the unsubscribe option at the bottom of the email.

It seems I need to do this task at least twice a year for in spite of my good intentions to stay focused I somehow still seems to fall prey to an offer or two every month or so.  Even today I find I am fighting off the urge to sign up for a new one, The 100 Day Challenge has caught my eye.  So far I have resisted the temptation but I must admit my resolve is weakening.  I have even signed up as an affiliate for their program but  it doesn't seem right to sell it if I don't buy it myself. 

For those who haven't heard about The 100 Day Challenge, let me expound a bit.  It is first of all NOT related to The Challenge 2010 which is Ed Dale's 8 week program that I have been working through.  The 100 Day Challenge was created and is offered by Gary Ryan Blair and is as stated a 100 day program to accomplish any goal you set out to achieve, whether it be build an online business, lose 50 pounds, or win the love of your life. I guess the thing that is keeping me from signing up at this time is that I am still trying to pinpoint what goal I really want to achieve.

 

Friday, September 24, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 12 - Penny Auctions - Another Way to Save or Lose Money?

This morning I came across a blog article about Penny Auctions and was intrigued enough to follow the links to the Swipe Auction.  As a long time fan of yard sales, Ebay and thrift shops, I have real difficulty passing up the opportunity to get a bargain and at first glance, Penny Auctions looked like a great way to get bargain prices on some really cool products.

Who wouldn't be wooed by the possibility of getting a Macbook Pro or a new Toyota Prius for a tenth of the retail price?  So I thought I would go ahead and register with the idea in mind that I could try it out with the "free bid credit coupon" offered in the article.  

Buyer BeWARE!

As soon I clicked through the registration page, a confirmation page came up telling me I had been charged $159.

The registration process is easy but they do require a credit card to complete... THIS SHOULD HAVE BEEN MY FIRST CLUE but I was caught up in the process of entering my coupon code for free credits and I totally missed the small print that indicated the initial "sign up package" was for 300 bids and would cost $159 up front!  Granted, my coupon added 100 bid credits so instead of buying bids at 53 cents a bid, I was getting the for 39 cents a bid.. a bargain right?  However, I wasn't planning on buying anything that would require me to place 400 bids so I was not ready to commit myself to invest $159 at this time.

WHOA!  What happened to the "You are about to be charged...... , do you want to continue?" page?????   Did not happen.  Just "register now.... BOOM you have been charged!

I went immediately to the customer service section and LIVE CHAT box.  The operator who took my inquiry pointed out that the price does appear several times on the promo page (yes it does, in small unobtrusive print) but on my insistence that I didn't not want the package, I was told they would happily cancel my sign up and refund my credit card... in a week or two.

So why can they put a charge on my account in minutes but it takes a week to 10 days for them to reverse that same charge?

At any rate, penny auctions may be a viable way to buy cool things at highly discounted prices but if  you aren't in the market to spend time researching how to win bids and you don't have the initial cash investment to buy into the program... stay clear.  Otherwise, best case scenario, they will have your money in their account for a week or two, gaining them interest!  Hopefully, they we be true to their word and I won't have to fight to get my money back.
 

Photo by Jeff Kubina under creative commons license from Flickr.co/kubina

 

 

Thursday, September 23, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 11 - Just What Are My Goals Anyway

Almost two years ago I decided that blogging was going to be my new career when I retired.  I set off to enter the wonderland of the world wide web with grandiose plans for creating an online persona and was certain that supplementing my retirement income would be a breeze.  I set myself a budget for tools and training and set off on this new adventure of blogging for fun and profit.

I discovered a two critical lessons about making money online.  

  1. Everybody and their brother claim to have the easiest, faster and surest method.
  2. Nothing is ever as easy, fast or sure as they say it is.

The truth of the matter is that internet marketing is a very time consuming industry and if you are not extremely careful, it can also be a very costly one.  It is very common for people new to the business to spend thousands of dollars on software and/or programs that promise to take you step by step through the process of developing a lucrative online marketing business.

Most fail, not because the products they buy are worthless but because they fail to stick with any program long enough to get results.  They jump from one promising program to another without ever finishing one.  Then they wonder why they aren't financial successes, and often blame the program or teacher.

I speak of this from experience.  In the last two years I have bought dozens of programs and started even more free plans.  To date, I have not finished one completely.  

So that is my number one goal: to finish one program all the way through and complete each task assigned in that program.  

The program I have singled out to be my first successfully completed project is Ed Dale's Challenge 2010.  

It is significant that I have chosen this program because Ed's 30 Day Challenge was one of the first programs I started this endeavor with, only that time I did not stick with it, I moved on to something else and left my first efforts floundering.

My second goal to write an article or review someone else's daily.  I am doing this on two fronts:  first I am writing about the Challenge lessons themselves during the weeks they are active, and second I am writing this particular post with the resolve to post a new article everyday for a year, each hopefully an improvement over the last.  This is Day 11 of that resolution.

My third goal to is work on internet social communication with other bloggers.  You can track my progress with this task on the Baja Style Challenge Facebook Page or the Blogging for Fun and Profit Facebook Group.

If you see me falling behind, please jump in and nudge me back to activity. 

Photo provide by Flickr.com lululemonathletica

 

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 10 - What Makes Good Reading

One of the dangers of committing to adding post a day is the temptation to rush the process and publish with purpose.  If these posts are going to truly qualify as "good reading" then they will required time and effort on my part to qualify the material and content before publishing.  I must confess, I haven't done as well at this as I should.  Yesterday for instance, I was busy with tasks around the house and realized last in the evening that I had not put up my Day 9 article.  I did a quick review of my Reader account and through a comment on the first article that caught my attention.  It was okay, but comments were pretty lame.  I apologize to you my readers.  I will make an effort to do better from now on.

Today I am going to let you in one my favorite sources for topics, Open Forum.  Open Forum is site set up by American Express specifically for businesses that have an American Express credit card.  They offer card holders a free membership and allows them to post articles in the Idea Hub.  Here is just a short list of articles you can find there on the topic of blogging:

9 Blogging Mistakes to Avoid

DISCUSSION

9 Blogging Mistakes to Avoid

President (KHERIZE5 LLC) |  Jan 26, 2010  at 7:50 PM

Blogging a way to share your thoughts, knowledge and information like never before. We…

10 Tips for Corporate Blogging

ARTICLE

10 Tips for Corporate Blogging

Erica Swallow  |  Jul 15, 2010

In a world where small businesses with corporate blogs receive 55 percent more traffic…

The Dos and Don'ts of Blogging

ARTICLE

The Dos and Don'ts of Blogging

Starr Hall (Entrepreneur) |  Apr 16, 2010

For those of you who thought an RSS feed was something to eat, you are not alone. With…

British Blogging: The Elements of Guyle

ARTICLE

British Blogging: The Elements of Guyle

Guy Kawasaki (Alltop) |  Jan 27, 2010

There’s something about a British accent. Whenever I hear it, I assume the person…

Sage Social Media and Blogging Advice for SMBs From the Experts

ARTICLE

Sage Social Media and Blogging Advice for SMBs From the Experts

Jennifer Van Grove (Mashable) |  Oct 22, 2009

Every year industry thought leaders and well-respected bloggers converge at …

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 9 -Goals are Good - Business or Not

Goals are Good for Business

Goals are Good for Business

Sep 15, 2010 -

Hello, my name is Nell Merlino and I am thrilled to post my first blog on OPEN Forum. I have the daily privilege of running a not for profit  organization called Count Me In for Women's Economic Independence that inspires, instructs and informs thousands of women on how to get control over their businesses and lives, increase revenues and generate profits. We regularly help women with micro enterprises grow to $million plus businesses. Based on our years of work with this community, Count Me In knows that women entrepreneurs grow exponentially when given access to the right tools, coaching and community.  Count Me In created the Make Mine a Million $ Business program to challenge women entrepreneurs to reach $1 million in revenue and provide the resources they need to get there.

 

Read more of Nell's Open Forum Blog

Oddly enough, just about the time I decide that making money is not my primary goal for blogging, I come across Nell Merlino, CEO of Count Me In for Women's Economic Independence... a "not for profit" organization designed to help women make money. Ironic isn't it? Yet, setting goals are a good thing whether they include a monetary value or not.

I set a goal to share something I found of interest everyday for a year. Merlino's blog on open forum was interesting to me because she identifies it as a "not for profit organization." This warrant further reading.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 8 - Are You Paying Too Much?

How many times have you clicked through to a sales page and found a claim like "If you don't upgrade in the next 12 hours the price is going to go up!" or "Buy now, you will never find a better price!"   Pretty common huh?  What is even weirder is when you try to click off the sales page and you will get a pop up telling you "WAIT!  If you don't leave now you will get an even better price"  Sometimes these last ditch offers go on to lower the price a even second time.  I recently saw one offer that dropped the original "discounted" price of $97 to $67 then to $47 ... may have gone lower but I bought at $47 so I can't  say.  Then the upgrade was offered at $97 and when I attempted to click off that page it was reduced to $27.

The lesson to be learned is NEVER buy at the first price offered.  Shopping on the internet is like browsing a sidewalk or yard sale.  The first price is a starting place, not what the seller expects you to pay.  If you are bound and determined to buy yet another internet get rich quick scheme or just gotta have that new traffic grabbing tool, click off the sales page a couple of times and save yourself a few dollars.  You may even come to your senses and bypass it entirely.  

 

Photo complements of Flickr Newton Free Library

Saturday, September 18, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 7 -Protecting Yourself From Legal Problems

This morning my mailbox is on the light side, only five promotional emails.  I find it really interesting to observe the keywords used in the subject line: cool, instant, URGENT, read NOW, fast, Urgent...(urgent), 'gotchas', Shocking....automated cash! All targeted at getting me (or you) to open their email and be drawn into their sales pitch.

I'm getting pretty good at passing up these offers yet I am still drawn to open at least one of these emails. That is why we as bloggers and internet marketers are taught to use words that trigger an emotional response in the reader. There is something about human nature that makes us believe the written word. We want to believe what we read to be true. So if an advertising can get us to point of opening the email and reading the pitch, we are already half sold on the product.

So here's a link to one I opened: Jeremy Shoemaker's video Kicking Legals Ass. Jeremy offers to share (free) an awesome package of example legal pages you can modify and use for your web sites and in the video explains why you should use them. 

This is the less talked about aspect of internet marketing but one you can't afford to ignore.  New laws have gone into effect which require anyone making money by selling products or representing products on the interest reveal this to the buyer.  I am not a lawyer and I am not an expert on this topic, so I will stop with just a word of caution to the reader... find out for yourself what the law says and do it!

Photo by creative commons licence complements of http://commons.wikimedia.org

Friday, September 17, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 6 -3 Things They Don't Tell You When You Purchase a Work at Home Program

Are You Looking for a Quick & Easy Way to Make Money?
Do You Want to Start a Home Business so you can stay home with your kids?
Are you tired of working for someone else?
Do you want to set your own hours?
Are you looking for a way to supplement your regular income?
Image cc via Flickr.com
All of us have responded to questions like these and have discovered that there IS NO OVERNIGHT solution.  Even though many ads infer that you could be bringing in thousands of dollars overnight, and the FIRST thing they don't tell you in the sales is that making money, even online, takes time and hard work.  To build up an online business takes several hours a day and many weeks or even months to get it off the ground.

The SECOND thing they don't tell you is that one of the most lucrative markets on the internet is folks just like you who are looking for a quick and easy answer to their money problems.  So the bulk of internet marketing programs aim at selling programs on how to make money online.

The THIRD thing they don't tell you is that once you sign up for a "cheap and easy" make money now program, they are going to try and sell you an "upgrade" to that program.  This upgrade may be one of two things (or both):
  1. a membership in a ongoing study/mentoring program that will cost you a monthly membership fee or
  2.  access to a software application to automate the processes they are teaching you.
So you start out with a reasonably priced package (say $27-49), that offers a "free website" and you find that the free program does not let you pick your products, track your traffic or host your site on your own server.  To do this you need to upgrade to the $97 add-on.  Once you have upgraded you will be able to modify your products and put your sites on your own server.  You could also have more instructional videos available and a forum to discuss your problems with others who are working this program.  Often these forums have knowledgeable moderators who will help you work through your problems.

If you have upgraded to a membership program you may at this time have access to weekly or monthly online conferences where you can submit your questions in advance and hear the answers in a live broadcast.  Some of the best of these programs offer you live interactive questions and answers via a chat room or phone conference.

The LAST thing they don't tell you (this is bonus) when you buy one of these packaged marketing programs is that once you have signed up for this program you will be included in their email LIST and from that forwarded you will receive helpful little suggestions in your inbox sometimes several times a week.  Most often these emails will include links to articles they have written or recommend and/or products that will "help" you promote you new business.  When you click on these links you will eventually be directed to what is called "an affiliate link" which will credit the sender with a sale if you purchase the item they are recommending. 

These emails continue until you click on the "unsubscribe" link at the bottom of one of the emails and direct the sender to remove your email from their list.
Every time you sign up for a free report or newsletter  or enter your email in a contest you are volunteering yourself as a recipient of another onslaught of sales promotions and instead of becoming the entrepreneur of your dreams you have become the target of someone else's.

In summary, almost all of the online marketing programs teach the same principles and processes, if you want to try your hand at building an online business pick one that is within your budget and beware of overextending that budget  by signing up for the upgrades.  Remember, that all of the programs will tell your that the key to success it perseverance and consistency, none of the programs will work if you quit in the middle and don't stick with them. 

Last but certainly not least, is don't get caught up in every new pitch you receive in your email.  I highly recommend you unsubscribe immediately to new lists that you see arrive in your inbox.  They are just a distraction and will keep you from completing the program you have started.  They will also lure you into buying another program, and another, and another.  

STOP now and just finished the program you started.
  


Thursday, September 16, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 5 -Blogging Advice for Writers: 6 Myths About Blogging, Glory, and Fame | Spontaneous ∂erivation

[[posterous-content:pid___0]]Of late there have been some insightful rants and comments about the rather naive idea that blogging is a golden goose that lays money, fame, and Amazon rankings overnight; that just having a blog is somehow enough to instantly catapult your career and Be Popular.

So I’m here a little early to debunk six myths people have about blogging. In detail. With quotes from bloggers who are experts specifically about blogging.

Feel free to send this post to anybody who’s getting pushed to blog—and to anybody who’s doing the pushing.

And now, the six myths….

Nope... no previews... read the 6 Myths of Blogging here

One of the purposes of these posts is for me gain knowledge and grow in understanding the ins and outs of my new career as a blogger. This article caught me up short (hummm where does that phrase come from?). I am sure I have been guilty of not only believing some of these myths but also passing them on to others. The one that stood out in the bunch is #6, "it doesn't matter what you blog about." Too often I have been focused just on putting words on the screen rather than offering valuable content. Yet, what right to I have to expect you to spend time reading material that I haven't spent time putting some thought into?

I will work at doing better, I promise.

 

 

Photo complements Creative Commons license by 10ch of Flickr

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading: Day 4 - Say it With Pictures

They say a picture is worth a thousand words... sometimes they include a few.

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 3 (late) 3 Not-So-Obvious Things Your Blog Needs : Marketing :: American Express OPEN Forum

3 Not-So-Obvious Things Your Blog Needs

3 Not-So-Obvious Things Your Blog Needs

Sep 14, 2010 -

Have you noticed a resurgence in blogging lately? I had been, and then eMarketer confirmed it in an article that talks about how more companies are using blogs as marketing tools.

 

One in three companies will maintain a public-facing blog for marketing this year, according to eMarketer, rising to 43 percent by 2012. "Companies are finding that blogs fill a specific niche that other forms of social media do not," said eMarketer senior analyst Paul Verna.

 

"Marketers perceive blogs to have the highest value of any social media in driving site traffic, brand awareness, lead generation and sales -- as well as improving customer service," according to Verna.

 

In other words, it appears that blogging has come of age. They are no longer the domain of nerdy types without friends, loudmouth know-it-alls lounging at home in their pajamas, the too liberal or too conservative, those with no real job other than talk, type, tag, text & Twitter.

 

READ MORE HERE

Quick summary: 1) Point of View 2) Great headlines 3) Call to action
but your really should read the whole article... it's worth the time.

Monday, September 13, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading: Day 2 - Do it Now!

When it comes to marketing gurus, Seth Godin is the guru of gurus.  It is only fitting that I should include a pearl from his collection.

Here's the myth: The novice stage is useful.

If all you're going to do is go through the novice stage before you ship, don't bother. If you're not prepared to put in the grinding work of the expert stage, just do the beginner stuff and stop screwing around. Make it good enough and ship it and move on.

We diddle around in the novice stage because we're afraid. We polish (but not too much) and go to meetings (plenty of them) and look for deniability, spending hours and hours instead of shipping. And the product, in the end, is not so much better.

 

The ShipIt Journal Five Pack

Sunday, September 12, 2010

365 Days of Good Reading - Day 1

We Must All Become Content Creators By Farrell Kramer On September 10, 2010

Once upon a time, it was enough in the communications world to simply distribute information.

Yes, as PR folks we did write up our client’s stories in press releases. But then, our job was simply to distribute them to the media in as compelling a way as possible. The ultimate goal was further distribution of those stories via the media.

That old model is, well, just that … old. In today’s social-media enabled world, simple distribution is not nearly enough. Think about it. What is it that we should be distributing on Facebook and Twitter? Promotional materials telling folks how great our companies are? That’s a fail from the start.

No. Instead, we need to start with the creation of compelling content. Content that tells a story. Content that shares real information. Content that captures the attention. In short, content with value.

Read more here

Tagged as: blogging, content, marketing pr, podcasting, social media, video

I don't always have something to say but someone out there always has something worthwhile to share. Starting today September 12th, I have decided to seek out a pearl of marketing wisdom and share it with you my readers. I can't guarantee that the article won't ever cover the same topic as some topics warrant more depth but I will strive to get a different take on the subject and a different source each day for the next year.

There is no rhyme or reason to order, no is there any effort to cover marketing in any chronological manner. Each article is just the one that caught my attention and was there deemed worthy of passing on.

Today's post is by Farrell Kramer. Before today, I had never heard of Mr Kramer but I like what he has say, I hope you will too and get something from it that will make your venture more rewarding both personally and monetarily.

When you cruise for a hot air balloon your greetings end with the blessing: Gentle breezes and soft landings.... perhaps it is time to coin a blessing for bloggers. Mull it over and submit your recommendation. At the end of the year, we'll take a vote and come up with prize for the winning phrase.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Search Marketing, Twitter-Style!

Two places I think it is essential to keep tabs on if you want to know what your market is talking about is Facebook and Twitter. In this article, Sullivan gives a great overview of using Twitter to find out what questions people are asking in your niche.


From Danny Sullivan:

By now, plenty of businesses get the concept of search marketing: ensuring that customers can find you when they do searches on major search engines like Google or Bing. But you can do search marketing on Twitter, too. You just have to think differently about your approach.

 

“Regular” Search Marketing

 

At the major search engines, people are constantly asking for answers. For example, someone searching at Google is basically saying "Hey Google, do you know the answer to..." whatever they're interested in. Google responds by providing a list of possible answers, a list of search results.

 

How do you get to be one of the answers that Google or Bing provides? If you have a great website, perhaps helped by a little search engine optimization, you might be included in the top results for free. Alternatively, or in addition to free listings, you might also try paid search ads.

 

Twitter Search Marketing

 

Like search engines, people are also constantly asking for answers on Twitter. The difference is that they don't expect Twitter itself to provide those answers, in most cases. Instead, they're asking friends and people they know for help. Sometimes, they're also asking specific companies for help, even if that cry for assistance is hidden within a complaint.

 

The beauty of Twitter is that anyone can "listen in" on the questions that are being asked. This listening, and reaching out with relevant answers, is also search marketing. You're still seeking to be an answer to a question, as with "regular" search marketing. But instead of answering with a web page or a paid ad, you're answering with an honest-to-goodness real response, all contained in 140 characters or less!

 

Be An Easy Answer

 

The easiest way to do Twitter search marketing is simply to listen for when people specifically ask your company for answers. They'll do this naturally, if you're on Twitter. They'll seek you out and call to you by name, using Twitter's "mention" functionality. Here's an example:

 


 

In that, you can see someone calling out to Dunkin' Donuts, using its Twitter name of @dunkindonuts, with a complaint. But that's also a call for help. This person wants the problem solved. Dunkin' Donuts responds a link for the person to submit a formal complaint:

 


 

Here's another example, where someone is asking the Transportation Security Administration for advice on the amount of liquids they can take on a plane:

 


 

The TSA responds with an answer:

 


 

Tapping into this form of search marketing requires nothing more than having an account on Twitter and then checking for your mentions on a regular basis. But it also underscores a crucial point. If you're NOT on Twitter, then you're losing out on an important channel where people will seek you out. It's like not having a web site, email address or telephone number. You need to be there.

 

Beyond The Easy Answers

 

Sometimes people will call out to a company for help but fail to use its official Twitter name. That means their cries for help won't appear as mentions. Instead, finding them requires searching. Search can also be used to find people interested in your products and services but who might not mention your business at all.

 

This is the opposite of what you may be used to with normal search marketing. Instead of people searching for you, you're going to be searching for them. It's still search marketing. You're still trying to be an answer to a question. But now, you're actively seeking out those with questions, rather than passively expecting them to find you in search results.

 

It's more work than regular search marketing, but it's also far more personal. Rather than anonymous people coming to your website and perhaps finding what they want, you can see exactly who is asking for help and can respond with a tailored message of assistance.

 

Searching For Company Mentions

 

There are several ways to find people who mention your business but who do not use your official business name on Twitter. A simple method is to use Twitter's own search engine, Twitter Search.

 

Here's an example. The business Yogurtland has a hard-to-guess-at name on Twitter, @yogurtlandinc. Yogurtland could run a Twitter search for the word "yogurtland" to find people who might not use its official name, like this:

 

 

Some of tweets listed require no response. But notice the last two. The one about when the business closes is easy to answer. Just point the person to a list of locations and hours. The other about not knowing what to do on a first time visit? Perhaps a welcome, or to recommend a flavor, would be good customer relations.

 

Beyond Customer Service

 

Twitter Search is also a powerful way to get beyond the customer service channel that Twitter is so well known for. It's a way to reach out to new customers. For instance, in a

search for the generic term yogurt, I found this:

 


 

She's bored, hungry and wants frozen yogurt. That's a good opportunity for someone like Yogurtland to suggest a cure for her problem, a visit to the local Yogurtland shop – perhaps with a special discount code she can use. Since this person also lists her city in her profile, Yogurtland could even point her to a specific store.

 

The problem with generic searches is that there can be a lot of "noise" in the results. For every person looking for help with some "yogurt-related" question, there might be 10 or 20 others just talking about yogurt in a conversational way.

 

One thing to try is what I call the "anyone know" Twitter search. In this, you search for the exact phrase of "anyone know" along with a word that's relevant to your business.

 

For example, let's say that you sell luggage online. You do a search for:

 

"anyone know" luggage

 

By putting the words "anyone know" surrounded by quotes, you're telling the search engine that you want tweets that have that exact phrase in them, along with the word "luggage" anywhere in the tweet. Here are the results:

 

 

To get those results, I used Google's Twitter Archive Search, which lets me scan through tweets further back than the seven days limit at Twitter Search itself. You can see there are three different tweets where people are asking for good places to buy luggage. While these are related to specific areas (Chicago, New York, Cabo San Lucas), if you're an online retailer, pointing people to your site that can ship anywhere is relevant.

 

Keeping Up

 

Over time, you can build up a list of generic terms, along with filters, that make sense to monitor for your own business. You can also save these terms right within your web-based Twitter account. However, you'll probably find it easier to use a Twitter management tool like the ones offered from TweetDeck, Seesmic, HootSuite or CoTweet, to name only a few good and free tools out there. All allow you to save searches and receive regular alerts to matches.

 

Finally, Twitter is evolving as a way where people also search across all the tweets that others are making, to get results that they click on in the way they do at Google and Bing. That means new opportunities, including ad options, for business. But that's a story for another time.

Image credit: xotoko

 

*****

 

Danny Sullivan is editor-in-chief of Search Engine Land. He’s a widely cited authority on search engines and search marketing issues who has covered the space since 1996. Danny also oversees Search Engine Land’s SMX: Search Marketing Expo conference series. He maintains a personal blog called Daggle, can be found on Facebook, Google Buzz and microblogs on Twitter as @dannysullivan.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Learning to Stay Focused on the Goal

Not sure why it has taken me so long to run into Hochman's channel but I think it is going to be a regular stop from now on. I like the way this lady thinks. Maybe I can get her to do an interview for My Favorite Online Business Tools