Showing posts with label analytics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label analytics. Show all posts
Anonymous

How to STOP Overspending on SEO

By     2 comments:

It's an all too familiar story ... 



Running a small business from home, seems like such a great idea when you're first getting started. Just the option of being able to control the type of work and clients you prefer to deal with, is an exciting step forward. At least until one of your friends offers the kind advice ...

        "You should really have a website."

This piece of advice is then quickly followed up with ...

       "I have a nephew who can make websites."

So you decide to take your friend up on their kind offer, and after 3 months of pestering the nephew, your website finally appears. It's not exactly what you expected, but it's better than nothing, right? As he shows you how to make updates, you start to consider the viability of doing a computer programming course at night school.

Surely having a website doesn't have to be this difficult?


Over the next few months, you tell everyone about the new website, asking them to spread the word. You post it up on facebook, tweet about it, stick a business card up on the community noticeboard, and even send out a newsletter to a handful of clients. But nothing happens. It's not even listed on google.

After reading some of those spam emails that arrive in your mailbox each morning ... Affordable SEO ... #1 Page Listing ... Website Promotion ... SEO Proposal With Authentic Results!! ... and not even being sure what "seeyo"is, you call a company with a reputable looking website. They have a professional and friendly phone manner, seem to use all the right jargon, and are very convincing that their promotional package is all you need. It will only cost you $1000 per month, but you'll get that back 10 fold with the amount of work coming in. You feel pretty proud when you strike a deal for $500 per month on a 6 month contract, and sit back, ready to be inundated with work.

The first month brings in a heap of enquiries, but they're not really related to your business. Apparently this is quite normal to begin with, and next month will be better. But as the months go by, you're spending more than you're making, even though the monthly report shows 100 website hits per day. So you start to wonder if working for yourself is really all it's cracked up to be.

Sadly this is a very common scenario, and while the promotional companies aren't doing anything wrong, they are much better sales people than they are promoters.

And what do you do once you've found yourself in this situation?

  1. Stop pouring good money after bad
  2. Review your website from a customer's perspective. If you need to remake it, then have a look at a DIY WIX website.
  3. Choose a product or service that you wish to promote. Just the one. And focus on it.
  4. Work out the reality of what you are capable of spending on promotion NOW...
    If it's $1 per day, then don't be convinced otherwise.
  5. Work out where your hard earned dollar is best spent. Where is your audience? Facebook? Twitter? or are they searching Google? Then create yourself a small advert but very specifically targeted soas not to overspend on unlikely clients.
You won't get new work in overnight, there is no quick fix. But with regular maintenance, your self promotion will start to build, and the work will follow.

FREE Useful Tools

Read More
Anonymous

Hey Google.... can you see me?

By  
So you have a great new website, but you don't have the budget to pay for a big SEO campaign.
So how do you let Google know you even exist? can it really be as simple as just telling them?

That is exactly how easy it is.

Read More
Unknown

Facebook Marketing - Not as easy as it used to be

When I first started out in Social Media marketing, Facebook was easy to get along with.   All you had to do was get people to notice and like your page, they saw every post that you made and as they were hungry for anything mildly interesting, they would engage with you. Their friends would notice this engagement, would also like your page and so it would grow, easy peasy....  Today, Facebook is a busy metropolis, in fact it is so crowded that they have had to reduce what fans see in their newsfeed.

With these changes, engagement and interaction from fans has noticeably decreased.  While I was struggling with all sorts of tactics to regain the engagement of old, it suddenly dawned on me, it's not all about reach and engagement!  It's what is happening behind the scenes that really matters.

At Askew Vision, we manage all kinds of Facebook pages from Authors to Government Agencies, this gave me a unique opportunity to really look at what was happening within the various target audiences.  As I studied further, I found that people were opening photos and clicking through links but were doing so in silence. Why was this, I wondered?  Then came my second Eureka moment, maybe they don't want everyone to know what they are doing, they were still interested but were avoiding public interaction!   I looked at the pages which we manage like a Breast Cancer network and a Spiritual Healer, both of which have a lot of interest but very little public engagement. This pattern was continued through with pages like Mortgage Brokers, where people most likely wanted to keep their interest private.

So if people aren't saying anything, how can you tell that your Facebook marketing is effective?

Facebook Insights:
Take particular note of the top figure in Post Engagement, this shows how many people were interested enough to click on the content.
Look at the number of Visits, if the numbers are reasonable, this will mean that people are actually coming to your page and looking, even if they take no action.
Click through and browse the People section.   Are the demographics (age, sex, location) a good fit for your product or service?  If not, perhaps you need to change your tactics a little.

Google Analytics:
This excellent free application gives you a wealth of information on what is happening within your website. Take a close look at the Social category taking note of where the traffic is coming from.  Make sure that you are getting visits via Facebook.

Blog Analytics:
If you have a blog, also look through and check where your traffic is coming from and where it is getting shared.

Facebook is constantly changing and if you want to be there, you will have to go with the flow and adjust your marketing to suit.  Most of all remember that Facebook is a happy social space, so have fun and enjoy being there.

You may also enjoy: How to create a Facebook "Call to Action " button





Sue Whittaker
Askew Vision / Poken Australia
Event Technology and Digital Marketing







Need a little help with your Social Media?  Please feel free to drop by Askew Vision.





Read More