Showing posts with label valuable content. Show all posts
Showing posts with label valuable content. Show all posts

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Optimize Your Blog with Calls to Action

A basic inbound marketing rule is to provide valuable content. Make valuable content available everywhere from your website to your lead nurturing campaigns to your customer service and sales cycles. But to get the most out of your content, you have to call attention to it. You need pair your valuable content with a call to action!

A call to action (CTA) is exactly that. It makes your blog reader, applicant, shopper want to do something - and in an ideal situation, do it with a sense of urgency. Your blog is an excellent place to use CTAs. Putting a small CTA at the end of a brief article about related, valuable content will generally be received as helpful, not pushy.

When I post mortgage rate updates on a mortgage broker client's blog, I always include a variation of CTA like this one at the bottom of each article:

Rates for every home loan type listed above are under 4%! Now is a great time to refinance. Request a free home loan consultation to learn more about your mortgage options.

On text-heavy articles, I include graphics to draw attention to the CTA. Fiddle with it. Do some A/B testing. See what works best for different types of articles.

However you do it, dropping a call to action in the bottom of a blog article rich with valuable content is a quick, easy way to helpfully encourage your target audience to take action. Give it a try! And check out Hubspot's recent article 5 Locations You Must Add Your Calls to Action for other great ideas.

Friday, November 6, 2009

The Art of Balance and Gated Content

Champions of content David Meerman Scott and Seth Godin regularly speak and write and blog about creating valuable content - remarkable content is the buzz phrase - for your company's website visitors, clients and prospects. They testify that providing information is one of the best ways to spread the word about a product. And they are right - booming retweets, share widgets and the advent of social sites like StumbleUpon and Digg and Reddit are evidence of this. Online content is shared. A lot.

So what? Where's the issue with the gate? What is a gate? Who cares? Well, to work backwards with this barrage of questions, marketers and web designers care - and sales people. In my experience, sales people probably care a lot more than they know to - they are lead greedy, as they should be. A gate is usually an information gathering form before a piece of online content. It requires that the person who wants to access your company's content give a little - a little info of their own - before passing through the gate to the said content. The most important information gathered is usually an email address and a phone number. People don't generally like giving out their email addresses or phone numbers to companies they are only just learning about, and therefore, ultimately the issue is whether or not a marketer should place a gate strategically in front of a piece of content that would be really helpful and graciously received by a prospective client or lead.

An Over-analysis: Free Love vs. Gate It All

For the most part both Scott and Godin encourage the proposed content - ebooks, whitepapers, videos, articles, and so on - be available for free. Free does not just mean "no money," but requirement-free or subscription-free - payment-by-email-address-free. They believe - especially Scott - website visitors and users and interested parties should be able to access the information without sacrificing their personal information, without fear of being badgered by a sales person. I agree. I also think it works really well for book sales, but I'll get to that.

Gate it all - while I cannot say that this is HubSpot's professional stance as an organization, I did just have an interesting conversation with an unnamed Inbound Marketing Consultant there about landing pages and gating content. The consultant's said that for most businesses - HubSpot works with mostly small ones - content either takes a lot of time or costs a lot of money to produce, so the business should get a lead out of it. As we were having this conversation, this nameless consultant, who was very, very helpful as always, by the way, was showing me a lead nurturing email that was full of links to one landing page after another.

Though I have not tested it and am not sure if I care to, I'm pretty sure sending an email full of forms, essentially, would not work in my industry. If I was a marketing firm targeting other marketers, I think an email full of links to forms would be really efficient. Marketers are generally ready to fill out forms at every turn. However, in the wellness industry - specifically the massage industry - an email full of links to forms would likely seem like an email full of - wait for it - gates. And that's gates with a negative conotation.

In Truth, There are No Hard Lines

If you analyze gating to death, which I am currently doing, there are no hard lines because, in my opinion, the definition of a gate becomes blurry. Really, Scott and Godin do gate, by an expanded definition of the word as I defined it paragraphs ago. Both of them write and sell books, rationing only parts of their content for "free" and literally selling - for dough - the rest. Though they do not gather information through online forms in the same way HubSpot does, they do balance what they gatelessly give to the world for free through their blogs and speeches and book references with the hard boundary of book sales.

It should also be said, and it has not been overlooked, that HubSpot does not really gate everything. Website Grader, which I highly recommend every small business check out immediately, doesn't really even "live" on the company site. And its inbound marketing blog is a wealth of information, and of course, you are not required to subscribe to it before you read on.

The Usual Answer: Balance

Being a one-woman marketing team who has to work closely with a one-woman sales team who wants leads, leads, leads, balance, as always, seems to be the best answer. Not too much unlike the marketing experts and companies above, I find that I have accidentally been gating what I have to and balancing that with freedom.

At Lauterstein-Conway Massage School, a company I provide sales and marketing consulting for, we only gate information that contains pricing - massage school tuition and rates - and we offer pretty much everything else for free. It works because at the end of the day, everyone really wants to know how much something they want costs. That's what they really want. But the hope, of course, is that through our free content and shared knowledge, we will be educating and then guiding our website visitors and leads down the breadcrumb trail to needing, despite any gates, more information - information they will want to pay for with their email addresses and phone numbers.

Thoughts?

Monday, October 26, 2009

HubSpot says CREATE CONTENT!


To anyone who has heard me talk about my job, it's no secret I am a big fan of Hubspot and Hubspot's message - INBOUND MARKETING. See what HubSpot TV has to say about creating content. Fast forward to 3:30 mins to get the bulk of the discussion on content. (Perk: Get HubSpot's scoop on the next hot marketing book).

For the Content Late-comers

For those of you who are not building content and don't know why you should bother, and unfortunately there are quite a few of you still out there, according to Wikipedia, "content marketing is an umbrella term encompassing all marketing formats that involve the creation or sharing of content for the purpose of engaging current and potential consumer bases...Delivering high-quality, relevant and valuable information to prospects and customers drives profitable consumer action." What company bottom line doesn't want that?

Most marketers will tell you that creating valuable content for your clients and web visitors is not a new marketing tactic. Seth Godin, who regularly champion-blogs about the unexpected, often Purple Cow value certain companies create, and David Meerman Scott, who interviews any and every successful by-chance marketer in the world, have been talking about it in their blogs and books for ages. Check them out immediately if you are a late-comer to the concept of creating content. Hey, then get on point. Create something valuable!

For the Content Bandwagon Riders

For everyone else, for my fellow veteran, content-creators, this post just a redundant hooray, a broken-record-pat-on-the-back and an admitted effort to support the awesome marketing gurus at HubSpot.

By the way, HubSpot, good for you!


An inbound marketing pioneer, today Hubspot is the number two fastest growing software company according to Inc Magazine. The founders of HubSpot® met at MIT in 2004. Both were interested in the transformative impacts of the internet on small businesses and were early students of Web 2.0 concepts. And they wrote a book!
Inbound Marketing: Get Found Using Google, Social Media, and Blogs

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Valuable Content: The Everyman/woman/baby Creating It on YouTube

At the 2009 Inbound Marketing Summit today, focus was on creating valuable content to serve a company's community while magnetically drawing prospects to it and/or its product. There are many different ways to provide content - variety is important - but we did specifically discuss YouTube.

I don't get a lot of time to "play" on YouTube often - work, work, work - but a co-worker did sent me a Beyonce link the other day (the dancing baby below), which prompted me to search more "Ring on It" videos.

Conclusion of my YouTube-dancing-music-maven research? Beyonce has got a lot of people creating "valuable" and certainly viral content for her latest hit.



As a side note, I have mixed feelings about her "work:" Beyonce's latest hit is catchy and girl-power defiant and the singer herself is a pretty respectable role model considering her female peers in the music industry these days, but the music video and live performance dance moves are overtly sexual with miles of legs and lots of hip thrusting and bottom smacking.

And while, this baby shaking its butt to this popular jam is certainly cute, babies do become three year-olds and three year-olds become tweens and teenagers and collegiate blonds. What does this say or not say about women? Would you want your three year-old smacking her ass on YouTube?

Enter ethics. Maybe dancing-diaper-baby is not the "valuable content" Beyonce needs, however cute it might be.

Next questions: what is valuable content and where do we draw the line with viral content?