Archives: June, 2009
Why Every Wedding Planner Should Have a Blog–and You Should Too!
When your customers have an important need, they need to know the kind of company you are and why they can trust you
I recently had the pleasure of speaking to a combined group of wedding planners from Southwest Florida, the Wedding and Party Planners of Naples and the local National Association of Wedding Planners chapter.
As I was preparing for the talk, the importance of content marketing in general--and of blogging in particular--really hit home.
Because a wedding is so important in so many ways to women of every age and circumstance, each bride needs to feel absolutely confident that it will come off as perfectly as humanly possible.
The current Sprint commercial that imagines a world in which weddings are run by movie crews captures this feeling beautifully.
Read MoreHere’s A Public Agency That Really Understands Content Marketing
AC Transit's Dedicated Site, ACTForMe.org, Paints a Brilliant and Loving Portrait of the Benefits of Public Transit
AC Transit operates a very sophisticated bus transportation system in the San Francisco Bay area, handling more than 65 million passengers annually in an area covering 364 square miles. That's pretty impressive.
But what really impressed me is the fact that they also make excellent use of the web to tell a story that turns taking the bus into the obvious transportation choice.
Read MoreWhy Does this BMW Dealer eNewsletter Talk So Little About Cars?
How To Put the Brakes on Their Five Major Marketing Mistakes
[Please note that I have made a few changes to the initial post based on constructive feedback, particularly to clarify that this is a dealer enewsletter,not a BMW corporate effort ]
If you were to imagine an eNewsletter from your local BMW dealer, you would probably expect it to lead off with a picture something like the one to the right.
As a BMW owner, you tend to be a certain kind of person. The folks at BMW have understood your persona well over decades in the United States. That's why I'm mystified at the June 2009 eNewsletter from Germain BMW of Naples.
I love my BMW. I think Germain BMW is a terrific dealership. But, I hate their eNewsletter. Why? Because it has almost nothing to do with the BMW brand promise: BMW—The Ultimate Driving Machine.
Call me crazy but when I get an eNewsletter that has something to do with BMW, I expect that it would deliver on that ‘ultimate driving machine’ brand promise. Instead here's what the eNewsletter delivers by way of core content after stripping away the header and some dealer specific webpage links:
Read MoreWhat is Your Unique Buying Proposition?
Toss Out the Company-Centric USP and Bring In the Customer-Centric ‘UBP’ to Underlie Your Content Marketing Strategy.
Don't get me wrong. The unique part is critical. But the age old concept of a unique selling proposition views the problem of positioning almost backwards.
The idea of a unique selling proposition is that you need to differentiate yourself from the hundreds or thousands of other vendors with whom you compete. Theoretically, if you have a really good USP, you can stand apart from all the same old same old that everyone else is selling.
I think it's much better to focus on the buyer with a unique buying proposition as the basic foundation for your content marketing strategy. Your UBP is what will get your customers excited about doing business with you and your company
Read MoreHere’s Your Social Media Marketing Tool Cheat Sheet
Thanks to my co-author, Joe Pulizzi, and some helpful contributors for making your search for the right implements a lot easier.
If you are starting from scratch, it's almost impossible to figure out what social media and other related online tools will be genuinely useful for marketing your business. Fortunately, Joe has taken the time to assemble and comment on 42 of the most worthy in his blog.
You'll find that a common thread among many of the 42 is that they involve both inbound and/or outbound communication. In other words, they will help you send a message to your target buyers or listen to what those buyers are saying about you.
My five favorites of the less well known among the 42 that Joe highlights are:
Read MoreWhitepaper Wow Factor: Sharing the Big Ideas of Your Small Business
When you make it obvious to your customers how you can help them, you will grow your revenues.
Some of the smartest people I know run very small companies in the business-to-business market. They are dedicated to helping their customers succeed. In one-on-one discussions with customers and prospects, they make it clear how they can help. That's terrific. And it generates sales. But it's just a start.
I am convinced that white papers--and their first cousins, e-books-- can extend that in-person knowledge sharing and trust building to the entire world. A great example is a compelling white paper from The Result Source, called, Cold-Calling 2.0: The Next Generation of Prospecting.
The Result Source, is a small company based in Toronto, Canada that works closely with businesses who need to generate leads which will translate directly into revenue. Its owner, Marguerite McLeod-Fleming, is a veteran of IBM and other large sophisticated organizations. She is able to apply her understanding of the importance of process to lead generation for small organizations.
What Cold-Calling 2.0 does so well is to explode the myth that cold calling doesn't work anymore while demonstrating a repeatable process that will generate sales cost effectively.
Read MoreHerman Miller: Great Chairs, Great Company, Great Content Marketing
A Company That Gets It on so Many Levels Minimizes Traditional Marketing Expenditures.
I was surprised, but not too surprised, to learn from a friend and colleague, David Drickhamer, that the famous maker of ergonomic chairs spent almost no money on traditional advertising.
Herman Miller tends to be well ahead of the curve on almost every business front. After all, this is a company that was into sustainability before it was cool--and before Al Gore was invented global warming (or was that the Internet?). Back in 1984, they stopped using Rosewood when they determined it was an endangered hardwood.
When they introduced their new, high end and incredibly comfortable chair, the Embody, they relied heavily on the blogosphere to spread the word. Although the traditional press would have been essential to the success of a new product a decade ago, it's the blogosphere that is overwhelmingly influential today.
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