Showing posts with label Marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marketing. Show all posts

Email Marketing Tips

Email marketing is a great way to reach your customers where they are without spending a lot of money. But it’s a big responsibility, too—people don’t give their email addresses to just anyone. Thinking about starting a company newsletter? Here are some tips to keep in mind.
Make it easy to subscribe
Post a signup form on your homepage, blog, Facebook page, and wherever else your customers and fans are already active. You might want to collect names and birthdays (for a special offer or gift) or invite readers to join groups, but don’t go crazy with the required fields. A too-long subscribe form might scare people off.
Tell subscribers what to expect
Whether you plan to send company updates, letters from the president, e-commerce sales, daily deals, or weekly tips, it’s important to tell your readers what to expect and how often to expect it. Give them as much information as possible on your signup form, so they can decide whether they want to be on the list or not.
Send a welcome email
It’s always smart to remind people why they’re on your list and reassure them that good things are in store. You might even send new subscribers a special offer or exclusive content, as your way of thanking them for their loyalty.
Design your newsletter to fit your brand
 Your email campaigns should match your brand’s look and feel. If you’re using a template, you might want to customize it to include your company’s colors and logo in the header. If your emails are consistent with the rest of your company’s content, then readers will feel more familiar from the start.
Make it Scannable
Your subscribers are busy people who get a lot of email, so it’s safe to assume you don’t have their undivided attention. Instead of one long block, break up your content into short paragraphs. Include subheadings and images to guide readers through your email and make it easier to scan, and add a teaser to the top of your newsletter to tell subscribers what’s in store. If you’re sending a long article, consider inserting a “read more” link so people can get to the rest when it’s convenient for them. Your subject line should be to-the-point and easy to digest, too. You might even want to a/b test subject lines to see which ones perform best.
Send people content they Want
Email newsletter services offer features like groups and segmentation to help you make your content relevant to the people reading it. If you’re sending different emails for different groups (for example, a nonprofit might send separate emails to volunteers, donors, and the board of directors), then you can ask people to check a box to join a particular group on your signup form. Segmentation allows you to target certain subscribers on your list without assigning them to group. If your store is having a sale, then you could send a campaign only to people near a particular zip code, because subscribers who live in other parts of the world don’t need to know about it. You can also segment by activity, email clients, e-commerce data, and more. Sending relevant content will keep your readers engaged, and engaged readers look forward to your newsletter and share it with friends.
Keep a publishing calendar
 A regular newsletter is a commitment. If you go several months without sending anything, then your subscribers will forget about you, and they’ll be more likely to delete the next email, or worse, mark it as spam. Make time to plan, write, design, and send your newsletters regularly.
Edit - Even editors need editors
When you’re working on your publishing calendar, leave plenty of time for the editing and revision process. Once you send a campaign, it goes straight to the inbox, and you can’t go back and update it. Newsletters contain meaningful content, and sloppy ones reflect poorly on the companies who send them. Grammar and style are just as important for email as they are for websites and blogs.
Test the Mailer
Different email clients and mobile devices display emails differently. Send test emails to colleagues, or use a testing program to make sure your emails are going to look good on screens big and small. Testing reveals design mistakes before it’s too late, and testing programs can predict whether or not a campaign will get caught in a spam filter. You could even set up accounts with a few different email services for easy testing. Avoid sending one big image as a campaign, and cover your bases with a plain-text option for every email.
Think about mobile
If a campaign doesn’t show up on mobile devices, it’s not going to perform very well. Everything you send should be mobile-friendly. Check out ReturnPath’s “Email in Motion” infographic for some data that might affect the way you design your emails. One of the highlights: According to the study, 63 percent of Americans and 41 percent of Europeans would either close or delete an email that’s not optimized for mobile. Might be time to start using a responsive template.
Know your spam rules
A lot of innocent people send spam because they didn’t know any better. Read up on the CAN-SPAM act to avoid any trouble. Put simply, you’re allowed to send bulk email only to people who specifically asked to be on your mailing list. If you collected email addresses for a lunch giveaway or an event invitation, then you don’t have permission to send marketing emails unless you made that clear at signup. Include an obvious unsubscribe link in every email, and don’t forget to remind subscribers how they got on your list in the first place.
Make it shareable
 Send content that people want to share, and make it easy for them to do it. Sure, subscribers can forward your campaign to friends, but that’s a lot to ask. Include a public link to the web version of your campaign so people can read it outside of their email programs, and consider adding Twitter and Facebook links to your newsletter, so readers can share your content where they’re already active. When their friends start sharing and subscribing, you’ll know it’s working.
Keep an eye on your stats
Most email newsletter services offer free reports that contain helpful information. Learn how to read and understand your reports, so you can use the stats to improve your campaigns going forward. Pay attention to your open and click rates, and identify any patterns that make those numbers go up or down. If a campaign receives a high number of unsubscribes, then try something different the next time.
Be friendly
Feel free to use a casual tone in your email newsletters. Since most emails come directly from one person, people expect human voices in their inboxes. There’s a good chance your subscribers are already in a informal frame of mind when they’re checking their email, so an overly formal or stodgy voice might seem out of place. Plus, they’ve given you their email address, so you’re already on a first-name basis. If you collect first names on your signup form, you can dynamically include them in your email greetings.
Only send email if you have something to say
This one seems obvious, but too many companies start email newsletters with no plan and nothing to say. Email is simply a way to publish content—the content itself has to come first. Before starting a newsletter, make sure it’s a sustainable commitment that will help you achieve your business goals. Otherwise, you’ll be wasting your subscribers’ time and your own time. Ask yourself: What’s the goal for this kind of communication? What do we have to say? How will we measure success? Send thoughtful newsletters, and keep the focus on your company’s message.

15 Useful International Internet Marketing Search Terms


A recent conversation with international search marketers recently showed that the range of experience ranged from expert to beginner,despite their influential career positions. By the way, this doesn’t mean they weren’t all highly talented people – their way to get goals/positions were just very different.

The discussion makes us realize the importance of understanding the things – Internet Marketing Search Terms for you -

Page Rank

Created/owned by Larry Page and Sergey Brin and the original basis for the creation of Google Page Rank, the concept of inbound links creating authority and that authority being passed to the next in the chain. PageRank is a numeric value that represents how important a page is on the web.  It alos depends upon the quality of minimum outbount link on that perticul web page.
Calculate the PageRank for a page, all of its inbound links are taken into account. These are links from within the site and links from outside the site.

PR(A) = (1-d) + d(PR(t1)/C(t1) + ... + PR(tn)/C(tn))

That's the equation that calculates a page's PageRank. It's the original one that was published when PageRank was being developed, and it is probable that Google uses a variation of it but they aren't telling us what it is. It doesn't matter though, as this equation is good enough.
In the equation 't1 - tn' are pages linking to page A, 'C' is the number of outbound links that a page has and 'd' is a damping factor, usually set to 0.85.

Page Speed

it’s simply the time it takes for a page to appear to the user. how much time take to loaad on user's computer screen of a webpage. the measurements Google uses are taken from the browser and so take account of the speed of delivery of the page at a local level. we can’t just measure the size of the page and extrapolate what the speed might be !

SEO-Localization

SEO-Localization is a combination of localization or translation with on the web page search engine optimization. That is stating the obvious, but the trick behind the combination of these two processes is that they normally conflict.

Canonical Meta Tag

A meta tag which is included in the page HTML to indicate a single URL for otherwise duplicate content. Useful for global websites especially where they run content in world languages such as English, Spanish or French and where the same content is cascaded to all same language countries.

<link rel="canonical" href="http://www.abc.com/services.php?item=lucknow-blog"/>

CDNs

CDN stands for “Content Delivery Network”. Purpose of these networks to improve the user experience for using websites because they deliver quickly and have high availability. Global websites (.com) are important users of CDNs and this has become more important due to the speed of delivery of content now factoring into search engine algorithms. The downside of CDNs is they typically show search engines URLs not from the country the websites target.

Click Through Rate

A common term for pay per click ads of websites for many years. It means the percentage of users which see an ad and click on adds. Now it has been adopted by the organic search algorithms of search engines including Yandex, Google and Baidu.

Geo-Selector

Every global website needs a geo-selector if users need to be able to navigate to different countries or languages. Geo-selectors which cannot be crawled correctly by search engines are damaging to their owners’ website SEO performance. Geo-selectors need to be fixed or alternative methods of geo-targeting should be adopted.

Geo-Targeting

A range of tactics which ensure that the website pages are shown to users matching the countries and languages in which they search. The geo-targeting options include local domains, webmaster tools geographic settings, canonicals and Hreflang tags, local links, local hosting and languages. Geo-Targeting helps to identifying the geographical localization of that website.

Keyword Research

Finding the right keywords is absolutely key in search marketing and that means researching them rather than translating. Translating keywords to find search opportunities in other markets produces distorted results and poor performance.
Keyword Research always depends upon the theme (travel, web services, seo, shopping, IT or else...) of website, services/products present on the website depends upon the high search volume and less competition.

Local Domains

More technically known as ccTLDs or country codes, local domains have a number of important uses. They produce better conversion with local
users and are a particularly strong signal for geo-targeting. helps to target specific location from the domain. ex. --  .in  .co.in

Local Hosting

Websites served from local servers deliver pages faster and provide search engines with a local IP address to help in the geo-targeting decision-making. Proxies delivered from local servers can also be used for this purpose. so we should try to host our website from local server or server present in our country.

Hreflang Tag

A relative newcomer, the Hreflang tag helps to provide a geo-targeting signal to search engines. It’s a tag in the HTML which indicates a connection between two countries and enables Google to correlate the two.

eg. <a href="http://www.webseoservicesindia.com/" hreflang="en">Web Seo Services India</a>

International SEO

theis term is used by people thats meaning is that the website concerned is targeting several countries – but often they are English-speaking. For SEO in countries speaking different languages, the term “multilingual SEO” is more often used. There is much debate over whether international SEO is really different to domestic SEO, but I argue that it involves not just different languages but also different techniques and a completely different mindset.

Learning the Machine

All of the major search engines use machine learning. Machine learning means that the machine (ie. the computer) check that it has made errors in its selection and corrects the wrong terms, hence the term learning occurs.

Keywords do not translate, so content which has been worked for SEO purposes will lose the SEO benefit the moment they are translated – the keywords do not travel through to the translated content. In SEO-Localization, the keywords do travel !

IP  and User Agent Recognition

The user agent is basically the name of the crawler or browser connection as it accesses/crawl the web page and it’s own location on the web. It is used to determine the location from which the visitor is coming and to re-direct that particular visitor to a particular country based on the original IP address.

This is not to be recommended, by the way, as users should really can able to choose of which country information and language they wish to view. Redirecting “non-local” IP addresses can also result in non-local search engines crawlers (otherwise known as “Google”) being pointed to locations which are not the target or connected.

Your views and comments are welcome to improove this blog.
Thanks .........