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Quick, easy and effective marketing advice for small business owners.
Facebook is a given. It’s the first social media you should have even if you don’t utilize it. Obviously it depends on where your clients are hanging out online, but pretty much everyone and their grandma is on Facebook so here are a couple easy ways you can use it.
You really should have a facebook page for your business. I don’t think anyone would be taken seriously as a business if they didn’t. You don’t have to go crazy and post all the time, but you should at minimum have your information, hours, etc. on it. (see my post the bare-minimum of what to include in your website for an idea of what information to get together)
When it comes time to write down the information or copy in your website your mind goes blank: “WHO AM I ??? WHAT DO I EVEN DO?!” So here’s the starting point and you can build from here:
(Remember this: it’s like writing out an invitation to a party or event)
Give it a test run in the comments below, and download my welcome packet for a free worksheet
(sample of worksheet below)
TAGLINE & PICTURE:
WHAT YOU DO:
QUICK CONTACT INFO:
BENEFITS OF WORKING WITH YOU
HOW/WHY YOU STARTED:
YOUR STORY:
OFFERINGS, PACKAGES, OR PRODUCTS:
PHONE:
EMAIL:
MAILING ADDRESS IF APPLICABLE:
CONTACT FORM:
SOCIAL MEDIA URLS:
I recently noticed the ‘grabber’ or ‘bribe’ on my site isn’t in my own voice. It’s an honest and fair trade – give me your email, and let’s have a consultation. The problem is that it’s not in my voice. I don’t talk like this:
“start with your FREE consultation”
I talk like this :
Here are another 6 Free online Tools to help your business Grow
Wufoo has really great options for smart forms, conditional responses, adding payment abilities and customized responses. It features a drag and drop interface, so it’s super fast to collect information from your visitors. It integrates with Stripe, authorize.net, MAILCHIMMMPPPP (hello) and all these other partners.
Here’s info on how to send email from your domain rather than @gmail.com, @youremailclient.com. It looks much more professional and it’s not hard. Comment below if you have more questions, these are two separate articles I found on the topic.
see instructions from google here or check it out below.
Gmail or Google Apps user sending from an external address:
- Click the gear in the top right .
- Select Settings.
- Click the Accounts and Import tab.
- Under Send mail as, click Add another email address.
- In the ‘Email address’ field, enter your name and alternate email address you own.
- Enter the SMTP server (e.g. smtp.domain.com), your username on that domain, and your password for that account. You may also need to adjust your port setting or SSL setting (talk to your other ISP if you need this information).
- Click Add account >>
- Open your other account and either click the link in the message Gmail sent or enter the confirmation code in the Accounts and Import section of your Gmail settings.
- If Gmail sent a verification email and you didn’t receive it, try checking your Spam or Bulk Mail folders for a message from account-verification-noreply@google.com to see if the email ended up in there.
Additional information
Your other email provider has to provide authenticated SMTP support for you to use this option. We’ll use TLS by default, or SSL if you enable it. Many email services that provide POP or IMAP support also offer authenticated SMTP support, and you can likely find your SMTP server configuration instructions alongside information about POP or IMAP. Also, this new version of custom ‘From:’ doesn’t work with Yahoo! Mail Plus accounts just yet.
If the address you’re adding is hosted by Google (either a Google Apps account or a @gmail.com address), your original address will still be included in your email header’s sender field to help prevent your mail from being marked as spam. Most email clients don’t display the sender field, though some versions of Microsoft Outlook may display “From yourusername@gmail.com on behalf of customaddress@mydomain.com.”
Here’s information on adding email aliases in mail on OS X and IOS
(below info from six colors)
OS X
On OS X, launch Mail, go to Mail > Preferences, and select the Accounts pane. If you’re using a standard IMAP, POP, or Exchange account, all you should need to do is find the field listed as Email Address, and add a comma followed by the other address.
(Note: If you’re using an iCloud account on OS X Yosemite, you may notice that Email Address is un-editable, showing up as a grayed-out field. Choosing “Custom” from the Alias dropdown above Email Address makes the field editable, but even after adding the aliases, I had no luck sending email from them via iCloud’s outgoing mail server. For more on a workaround, see below.)
Now, when you send an email, place the cursor over the From line and choose from the drop-down menu which address you’d like the email to come from. (On OS X, Mail seems to be smart enough that when you reply to a message it automatically sets the From line to the same address the original message was sent to.)
iOS
On iOS, this feature is hidden a little deeper, but it’s still pretty easy to set up. If you’re running a standard IMAP or POP account, you should be able to add additional email addresses with ease.
Open Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars and select an email account. (Note: As above, iCloud—and also Gmail—accounts won’t work in the same way, but I’ll address those below.) In the following screen tap on Account and then tap on Email. You’ll see a screen listing the primary email address and then an entry for Add Another Email. Tap that and enter the email address you want to use, then hit the Return key on the keyboard (make sure you do that, because if you navigate away from the screen in any other way, it won’t save).
When you’ve done that, you should once again see the Add Another Email entry below your new address. Now you can back all the way back out, making sure to hit the Done button in the top right corner of the previous screen.
As on OS X, when you send an email, you should be able to tap the From address in the compose screen to choose your address—you may actually need to tap it twice: once to expand the full list of headers, and again to choose the address. iOS, in my brief tests, doesn’t seem as good about automatically choosing the appropriate email address for replies, so keep that in mind.
iCloud and Gmail accounts
You’ll probably notice if you try to follow the above instructions that you can’t add any aliases to an iCloud account that aren’t for iCloud.com (and you have to go all the way to the iCloud web interface to do even that). Gmail accounts on iOS, meanwhile, don’t appear to let you add aliases at all.
There are a couple options here. One is to instead re-create your Gmail or iCloud account using the generic IMAP configuration rather than the provider-specific options that iOS and OS X offer. For iCloud, you’ll need this support doc for the correct settings for Google, you’ll have to wade through this interactive tool, or simply look around for instructions on manual IMAP configuration for Gmail. However, as noted above in the OS X section, those addresses may not even work after all those perambulations, since Apple’s outgoing iCloud server is apparently very strict about what addresses you use.
So, before you go down that bleak path, I’ve found a faster, simpler workaround. If you already have any generic IMAP account set up on your Mac or iOS device, follow the instructions above to add the additional email alias to that account. iOS doesn’t directly link addresses to mailboxes, so when you compose a message or a reply you can choose any address or alias that is set up on your iOS device. It’s way easier and doesn’t require you to go through the hassle of reconfiguring your account.
I was just browsing around google’s helpful articles looking for the best practices in website organization/page structure, when I came across ~this~ (heart eyes).
Pretty much every single client I take on asks me how to increase traffic to their website. It’s not something that can be explained in one sentence, but If I had to, that sentence would be:
“Write content that your users value”
In short, Google rewards websites that are honest, and put in effort into their websites. How Google measures these things are: inbound links (this shows that people liked your content enough to share it with their friends); Freshness of content (if you haven’t updated your site in 2 years, you’re not really reliable and google doesn’t want to recommend you), quality of the website (if your website isn’t built well, it will not function well and Google doesn’t want to promote that).
Here’s a video on how Google Search works
Here’s an insane pdf about how google checks out your website and decides if it’s worthy of promoting
Put effort into your website. It’s not magic. It doesn’t happen just because I built a website for you albeit, a website google loves. It’s imperative that you are consistent and provide useful content to the web.
I was just searching for orphan assets in my inbox, but I realized there must be a better way. Especially since it’s google we’re dealing with. A quick google search never lets me down.
I found TWO nuggets of helpful information:
I don’t know if advanced search works for regular gmail inbox or not, but I was searching for images, and “Inbox” actually populates a thumbnail.
Amazing.
I never knew anything about Marie Forleo until my clients started mentioning her. She is a woman who runs an online eSchool/ eCourse which she tells her advice on marketing and business.
— written by Doug Allen // this was removed from the internet, but I found a cached version.
( xoxoxo web archive, you my boo)
Marie Forleo’s Marketing | July 28, 2012 | By Doug Allen
I have no idea if anything Marie Forleo teaches is any good or not. I’ve never bought her products or attended any of her events.
What I can tell you is that her marketing on her website is brilliant. Pure genius. I’m not sure how much she designed it, or if she paid somebody. What I can tell you is that it’s effective.
I can also tell you why.
1) Branding
Marie Forleo created the Rich, Happy, and Hot brand. Those are the three benefits that her target market, young working women, want the most. And she religiously markets within this brand. She doesn’t destroy her brand by trying to expand it.
2) Visual Future Pacing
Future pacing is an NLP term that means getting people to go into a trance and imagine themselves doing something in the future. It’s the tool that Tony Robbins uses every time he gets somebody to make major changes in their lives.
Marie Forleo uses images of women attending her events to not only induce a state, but put people at the events in their heads. When you see photos of people doing something you automatically and subconsciously imagine you are doing the same thing.
Once your mind visualizes that future image you almost subconsciously force yourself to create that future.
As an aside, this works in reverse too. If you don’t visualize good things in your future you probably won’t take actions today to create those good things.
Let’s take this even deeper.
This is why this works. Your mind is like the Mars rover Curiosity that just landed on Mars. There’s a target landing area programmed into the computer, and radar to keep track of where you’re at in relation to the landing area.
There are also little rockets that fire off that constants re-adjust the direction of movement towards the target.
When you visualize a future it’s like you’re programming that future as your target. Your actions are like the little rockets that adjust the direction you’re going. You’ll take actions to create the future you imagine.
Marie Forleo installs those images in your head for you using the photos from the event she’s trying to sell.
Your brain does the rest.
There’s only one obstacle to overcome. To move forward you still need to make sure there are no obstacles that can hurt you.
3) Don’t Trigger Resistance
This is where the next page of Marie Forleo’s site comes in. Instead of a long sales letter or video, there’s a button at the bottom of the page with “13 Reasons to Attend.”
But your brain isn’t necessarily looking for reasons to attend. You’re already emotionally triggered to attend because it’s going to feel good and be fun. Your brain actually feels it’s emotional needs being met in the future by attending the event.
So the only thing that might hold you back at this point are possible problems that could come up. Your mind is looking for possible reasons NOT to attend.
This is where most people totally screw up, and where Marie Forleo totally crushes it.
At this point in the process there is only one outcome: don’t trigger resistance!
Make sure the prospective customer only sees reasons to confirm their feeling to go.
So you know what the #1 reason Marie Forleo says you should attend?
Dancing.
The #3 reason is healthy snacks. Another reason is New York City pretty in the fall. Reason #4 is you get to spend time at a cafe with comfy chairs.
Not only don’t these reasons trigger resistance, they continue to future pace and induce positive states, and anchor those positive states to attending the event.
Some people describe this “sales” page as “vapid.” It’s not. It’s brilliant.
But it doesn’t end there.
There’s another page. This page is for people who are still “on the fence.”
4) Us vs. Them
The “on the fence” page is simple. It’s another NLP strategy called a “double-bind.” This is when you present only two, black and white choices and force somebody to choose between them.
An “Us vs. Them” frame is when the two choices are about a person’s identity.
There are only two types of people: who the event is for, and who it’s not for. Forleo lists bullet points.
In short, her event is FOR super-cool people. It’s not for bitchy whiners.
Instead of making the choice between going to the event or not going to the event, the choice is about WHO YOU are.
Are you super-cool? Then you can attend the event with a lot of other super-cool hot, rich, and happy women.
Or are you a whiny bitch?
If so, then Matrie Forleo doesn’t want you going to her event and screwing it up anyway.
But there’s more. There’s one more page that closes the deal.
5) Wipe Out All Uncertainty
This is so simple but nobody does it. Again, instead of having a long sales page or video, Marie Forleo breaks up the sales process into short pages, each with a specific outcome.
To review, at this point she has already promised an event that will deliver the benefit of being Rich, Happy, and Hot. She’s induced state, future paced the positive states with photos, and anchored those states to attending her event.
She’s tied in the prospect’s identity to the decision, shifting the choice from whether or not to attend to who the person is going to be.
All that’s left is to wipe out and last feelings of negative uncertainty.
Negative uncertainty is the direct result of questions about the future, and not knowing the answer to those questions.
How does Marie Forleo wipe these feelings out?
Simple.
With a FAQ page.
The FAQ page is a series of questions and answers people might have that pertain to their decision whether or not to attend the event. Forleo raises the questions first, then answers them all with total certainty.
When people are done reading the FAQ page they want to attend the event. Forleo puts them in a state of positive anticipation and desire, and leaves them to figure out the logistics.
She even takes care of the logistics to a certain degree by showing people how to get to New York, where to stay, and giving people a 3-payment option for the $2000 ticket.
Brilliant stuff.