Archive for November, 2009

How to Use Facebook for Marketing Online

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

You may think that Facebook is only good for catching up with old friends if you don’t know that Facebook attracts millions of visitors each month. According to SearchWatch.com, Chitika, which is an on-line advertising network, held a study in September on the most loyal social network visitors. The study showed that Facebook is the only social network site that attracts the most loyal visitors, who visit Facebook four to five times a week.  This makes Facebook a great site for marketing online.

Now that you know Facebook retains the most visitors out of all the popular social networking sites, you may be enticed to market online using Facebook to reach those millions of loyal visitors to try to make them your loyal customers. Here is how you can do it:

Make your Facebook Page Popular

  • Offer a discount or prize drawing for customers who become fans
  • Let your fans know you appreciate their feedback on your products and services

Talk to Your Fans

  • Talk to your fans to keep them interested in your page
  • Use videos, photos, messages, or links to each fan to engage them.
  • Look at the demographics of your fans, since Facebook makes that capable, to properly target your fans
  • Use the Facebook Insights tool, which allows you to see what content is favorable among fans
  • Make fans aware of your blocking policy and use it sparingly so you won’t cause fans to not want to engage in your conversations

Optimize Your Facebook Page

  • Search engines index Facebook updates in their search results, so keep your page updated often
  • Use keywords in your content and titles
  • Use content that is interesting
  • Become a fan of as many people as you can
  • Invite people to share your content

Search Circus can help you optimize your Facebook profile, create business fan pages,  groups and market your business online. Call us about special social network and buzz marketing programs today.

Internet Marketing Service Study: Most Fortune 100 Companies aren’t Using Twitter Effectively

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

internetmarketingserviceIt shouldn’t be a surprise to any Internet marketing service specialist that by now most Fortune 100 companies have registered Twitter accounts. But according to a study released yesterday by PR firm Weber Shandwick, the majority of those companies aren’t using Twitter as effectively as they could. According to their study (PDF), 73 of the 100 companies that sit at the top of the Fortune list use Twitter, but most aren’t tweeting often enough, most aren’t engaging customers, and most aren’t letting their company’s personality come through in their tweets.

This is a case study that all Internet marketing service specialists will want to take a look at, since it seems to highlight the difficulties that all companies, not just the largest, are having with using Twitter. The result is low engagement from followers. In fact, 15 percent of accounts registered by Fortune 100 companies didn’t have any followers at all.

The leading reason for this, as any effective Internet marketing service will tell you, is that there probably isn’t any personality coming through in those tweets. And that’s just what the Weber Shandwick study found. According to the report, 53 percent of the Twitter accounts “did not display personality, tone or voice on their account pages.” That means that the Twitter account didn’t have anything that could be seen as a “real person” behind the it. The way to creare an engaging account is to convince people that the tweets are being produced by an live person, an actual human being.

Another incisive fact from an Internet marketing service perspective is that the companies weren’t tweeting enough. While it’s not necessary for a company to tweet every hour, a troubling 76 percent of Fortune 100 accounts had fewer than 500 posted tweets. If the companies were really trying to engage as many customers as they can, then the tweet count should be much higher. Fewer tweets means less of an online impact.

The Internet marketing service study found that most companies felt comfortable using Twitter as a company news feed. But they haven’t always used the best tactics to gain and keep followers. Only 16 percent of companies use Twitter to alert customers of sales and special offers for Twitter users.

So what’s the solution? A change in strategy will go a long way to remedy these issues. The most important Internet marketing service missing from these accounts is conversation. Twitter works best as a communication application. That means that the best results will be gained from companies that use Twitter to interact with their customers and followers.

Internet Marketing Trends: Is Yahoo Still Relevant?

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

internetmarketingLate last month, Google co-founder Sergey Brin made a rare appearance at the Web 2.0 Summit and answered a few questions. Google’s founding team of Brin and Larry Page don’t really get out much, so Brin’s surprise visit was less of a typical Q-and-A session and more of an event. He answered a range of important questions, commenting on Google’s AdWords structure to his company’s relationship with Twitter. For anyone involved in Internet marketing, it’s required reading. You can find the entire interview at the Washington Post.

The part that created the most buzz online was his comment that it was a “shame” that Yahoo abandoned search. Brin commented that he believes in healthy competition in the Internet search market. “I think it’s a shame that Yahoo has abdicated that area.” He said, “Yahoo had a number of interesting innovations there, and I wish they could have remained in search.”

But the truth is, Yahoo is remaining in search, in a way. Part of the recent Microsoft/Yahoo deal has stipulated that Yahoo will use Microsoft’s new Bing search engine to power searches. So instead of simply giving up on Yahoo, which Brin slyly hinted that people should do, the question for Internet marketing experts is: how will this change the online search landscape?

If you’ve been following the Internet marketing world lately, you may question whether there’s been anything real competition at all. Google has been dominant, and most Internet marketing firms are content to simply concentrate on optimizing their client’s Websites for Google. Because who uses Microsoft or Yahoo? A lot of people, it turns out. While the latest numbers still have Google at a whopping 85% of the search market share, they’ve lost a bit to both Bing and Yahoo.

Why? Part of the explanation could be the huge marketing blitz Microsoft launched with the arrival of Bing. Add that to the fact that Yahoo has now been in the news a lot lately, as a result of it’s deal with Microsoft, and that may have led some to try out Yahoo search.

That could mean big changes for both the Bing and Google search engines. As Google tries to keep its hold on the search market, and as Bing tries to make significant gains, Internet marketing experts can expect to see significant changes in the way both search engines evaluate and organize search results. And that also mean that as the Bing engine reaches upwards of 20% of the search market share, it shouldn’t be ignored by any Internet marketing expert that really wants the best results.