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Actionable Marketing Podcast

You're listening to the Actionable Marketing Podcast, powered by CoSchedule - the only way to organize your marketing in one place. Weekly interviews, strategy, and advice from marketing geniuses delivered right to your earbuds. For the marketing professional ready to make sh*t happen.
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Now displaying: Page 8
Oct 16, 2018

What does marketing look like today? Well, it’s a blend of art and science. It brings together creative visuals and copy with marketing research and analytics. Marketers are now creative creators dressed in lab coats. And, conversion rate optimization (CRO) - a system that increases the percentage of visitors to a Website that are converted into customers - is a perfect example. 

Today, we’re talking to Talia Wolf of GetUplift, which offers businesses and entrepreneurs training on how to increase conversions. Talia tells the truth and dispels myths about CRO. She also explains why CRO needs to be more customer centric and what it’s like when done right. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • CRO is not just about changing elements on a page and hoping for the best; it’s about solving people’s problems and improving the customer’s journey
  • Talia gets into people’s heads because they buy on emotion and then rationalize with different reasons; she focuses on people behind the screen rather than data
  • Emotional Targeting Process: Identifying emotions and getting to know customers better
  • Utilize customer surveys/interviews and competitor analysis; talk to people, ask the right questions, and analyze answers
  • Conversion Psychology: You’re not buying a product, but higher self-esteem and better versions of yourself
  • People browse and search for solutions via Google, then hit Command and open a bunch of tabs; 3 seconds to grab their attention and understand their pain
  • Do groundwork and run meaningful tests on strategies, concepts, or hypothesis
  • Color Psychology: People are influenced by colors in different ways due to their culture, emotions, experience, and more factors

Links: 

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Oct 9, 2018

Do you love podcasts? Of course, you do. And you’re not alone. About 48 million people listen to them each year - up 6 million from last year. One-third of Americans (ages 25-54) listen to podcasts monthly, so they’re not just for nerds anymore. It's not too late to jump in the game. The time is now. Want to start a podcast? How do you it? How much does it cost? What equipment and technology will I need? How do I land the best guests?

If you don't even know where to begin, fear not. Nathan Ellering and Jordan Loftis of CoSchedule are here to talk about the early days of the Actionable Marketing Podcast (AMP) and lessons they learned along the way.  

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • AMP podcast was created as a supplement to CoSchedule’s blog and reach new audiences
  • Smart people use CoSchedule as a tool, so the podcast gave the company an opportunity to build relationships with them
  • Finding guests can be intimidating; start with those around you,then feature customers and their stories and experience using your product and services
  • AMP was initially focused on content marketing; but people who do content marketing, do it as one part of marketing - that's not all they do
  • AMP gives you helpful information, and expect you to act upon it
  • If you want a podcast, start simple with just a microphone, room, and people to talk to; that's all you need - don’t over-complicate it and learn as you go
  • Listening to and looking at yourself at first is weird; may sound like a 12-year-old chipmunk and look like Harry Potter in flannel
  • Ultimately, when it comes to podcasts, it's about the content - whether it gets shared and how it connects with people
  • High-priced and high-tech mics and other equipment are not necessary; keep the cost low when starting a podcast - look around to see what you already have
  • Necessities: Mic, filter for that mic, Internet connection, call recorder, and quiet room; use Libsyn or some other podcast hosting option
  • Interviewing: Can be kind of a nerve-wracking experience - do it to learn it; #1 thing when interviewing is to be the listener's advocate or sit in the listener's seat
  • Build credibility to snag big-name guests; but don’t try to just name-grab, invite people who you think highly of and offer incredible value

Links: 

 

 

Oct 2, 2018

Do you work remotely? A recent Gallup study shows that more than 40% of the American workforce works remotely, at least some of the time.

Today, we’re talking to Sandra Lewis, founder and CEO of Worldwide101. It’s a premium subscription staffing company with virtual assists, expert marketers, and others across the world. Sandra shares six keys you need when working with a remote team to amplify their abilities and make them successful. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Key 1 - Hire for passion: You want them to be interested, passionate, and obsessive in your service and product
  • Key 2 - Analyze skill sets and strengths: Worldwide101 has two pillars that categorize someone's strength - structured or creative
  • Key 3 - Amplify those strengths: Amplifying a strength is having someone do what they do best; also look at what can complement a core strength (soft skills)
  • Key 4 - Provide ongoing learning opportunities: Keep people engaged and provide a path and cross training for them to grow their strengths
  • Key 5 - Provide great tools: Try new tools and build a tool stack that helps workers be more efficient and productive
  • Key 6 - Over communicate: Have face-to-face meetings, acknowledge every email, set check-in times to build trust and get to know someone remotely
  • To lead a successful remote team, keep it personal; do little things that make working remotely less isolated; love the people you work with and celebrate them

Links: 

Sep 25, 2018

The struggle is real for marketers because they are in the midst of a customer trust crisis. And things are only getting worse. Studies show that only 48% of the general population in the United States trust businesses. Earning the trust of customers can be difficult, so deliver what you promise when it comes to your products. 

Writing a case study is a great way to do just that. Today, we’re talking to Whitney Deterding, CoSchedule product marketing specialist, who focuses on the company’s case studies. You’ll learn from her that case studies need to resonate with your prospects and have a purpose. She shares best practices to use when selecting customers and avoiding pitfalls. Discover how to craft case studies that move your prospects down the funnel. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Case studies need to have social proof to build trust; gives people insight into how great your product or service is direct from the customer’s mouth
  • CoSchedule’s Customer Success Team has direct connection to customers; identify which customers should be used in case studies and testimonials
  • Sales Team deals with prospects all the time and become aware of problems they face and trends in various industries
  • Incent is a common tactic used to get customers to be in case studies; both CoSchedule and its customers reap benefits
  • Send personal Thank You messages or gifts to the customers to show how appreciative and grateful you are for their time
  • Questions to Ask: What  is the problem that your service/product solved? What steps were taken relieve a pain pont and generate results?
  • Do research beforehand to help you discover and uncover unique things that a customer might discuss
  • Transcribe and listen to interview recordings to highlight quotes and case studies
  • Present case studies with the customer’s logo, headshot, demographics, and other items to make it authentic and give readers something valuable to pull out
  • Once you’ve done the interview, there’s many ways you can use that information to move prospects through the funnel
  • Measuring the ROI of a case study depends on how it’s being used; include a call to action to measure conversions
  • Common pitfalls include trying to do too many case studies together - they tell the same story; and don’t control the interview - be able to pivot

Links: 

 

 

Sep 18, 2018

For companies that generate $5-$20 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR), marketing typically sources about 42% of an account executive’s leads. For larger revenue-generating companies with $20-$50 million in ARR, marketing sources only 36% of an account executive’s leads. So, if your inbound traffic is flatlining, it’s time to look into new lead sources to grow your business. How? Outbound sales and marketing processes, which diversify lead sources that help grow your business.

Today, we’re talking to Trish Bertuzzi, CEO and founder of The Bridge Group and author of The Sales Development Playbook. The Bridge Group provides services to the B2B technology space in three areas: Sales development, inside sales, and account-based selling. Trish identifies the biggest challenges when companies are getting started with outbound sales or marketing. Best practices include automation and getting past cold processes to drive huge returns from outbound efforts. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Getting to engagement is hardest part of the sales process because we overwhelm buyers spam emails and robo voicemails
  • Different buyer types react to different ways of outreach; figure out your buyer type, analyze their preferences, and build a strategy
  • Effective Outbound Outreach Tactics: If you’re going to use the phone, tell a story with your voicemails; back that up with great emails and valuable content
  • Sales and marketing teams should build stories together and consider implementing a CRM, sequencing tool, and conversational intelligence tools
  • Get a steady stream of outbound leads through a strategy: Who to go after, what to say, how to say it, how message will be delivered, and how to analyze results
  • Get to the point when reaching out to someone for the first time; tell them your objective and what’s in it for them
  • Make voicemails and emails concise; subject lines matter and no attachments
  • The Bridge Group publishes two primary reports: Inside Sales for SaaS Metrics and Comp and Sales Development Metrics and Comp
  • Reports are the #1 lead source for The Bridge Group; they’ve impacted the company’s pipeline and revenues.
  • Look at the right numbers; how many fit your ideal customer profile?

Links: 

Sep 11, 2018

Marketers usually have many goals—sometimes too many. And let's not forget about these Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). As marketers, we can measure so much, but what should we focus on to influence real growth? There are several specific lead indicators that marketers can measure that ultimately influence revenue growth: Website visitors, email subscribers, marketing qualified leads, sales qualified leads, and customers.

Today, we're talking to Lindsey Morando, director of marketing at Hello Bar, which is dedicated to helping marketers build their email list. In this episode, learn why your community of email subscribers is your most valuable asset as a marketer. You’ll get advice on conversion tactics, as well as how to create lead magnets and content upgrades that turn Website visitors into subscribing fans.

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Definition of List Building: Creating, building up, and cultivating a community of people who have a common interest that you can support and offer a solution
  • People are 40% more likely to sign up for your email list than social media; 73% of companies report that email marketing is their top ROI channel
  • Generate traffic to Website to convert visitors into email subscribers; look at SEO efforts, social media, and where your ideal client is to be in front of them
  • Traffic Building Tips: Joint training, tutorial videos, and Webinars get people to know, like, and trust you; speak at events to increase brand awareness
  • Convert traffic into email subscribers by understanding users and what's going to get them to take action; see where people are going on your site using analytics
  • Pop-ups and lead captures sometimes get a bad rap; it's because you're not presenting the right message, at the right time, to the right people
  • Content upgrades are a lead capture within a blog post - it’s a pattern interrupt; quizzes, challenges, and games also work well
  • When building an email list develop a plan and schedule based on why someone would want to join your list; provide content that brings value to your community
  • First email should welcome people, share your story, and introduce you; can include a video or downloadable
  • First Email List: Start with people you know; let them know what to expect, what you're going to share, and what value you're going to provide with a call to action

Links: 

Sep 4, 2018

Does your blog stand out from your competition? Does it provide experiences that make prospects want to come back? If your blog is boring, what does that say about your products and services? But if your blog content is engaging, imagine what your target audience will think about them. 

Today, we’re talking to Barry feldman, mastermind behind Feldman Creative. In this episode, Barry shares some tips on what to do and not do to create standout content, build an audience, and offer awesome experiences through your content marketing. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Biggest impediment for content marketing success is tunnel vision, where companies focus explicitly on a blog but nothing more; expectations are unreal
  • Think about the entire content marketing funnel - capturing emails, building a community, and building a relationships; a blog is just a piece of that process
  • Build an audience; create assets that excite people and don’t depend on one channel
  • Barry’s experience with The Article Factory, a cheap content farm; you get what you pay for
  • Barry’s price for articles is higher because he understands SEO, writing, positioning, and conversion; he can help you reach your objectives
  • Blogs should be educational, entertaining, and inspiring; make customers the stars of your stories and showcase in-house/guest writers with opinions
  • High-quality content is so exciting that you want more of it; the purpose of a blog content is to get someone to subscribe to your Website
  • Invest more time and resources to create quality content; bigger is better
  • Successful content marketers position themselves as experts in their field; communicate authority with your posts
  • Content Marketing: Keep trying, roll with the changes, take it seriously; success isn’t instant and you don’t hit a homerun every time

Links: 

Aug 28, 2018

Our favorite thing about hosting the Actionable Marketing Podcast is picking the brains of  marketing heroes. So, we’re absolutely blown away by the amazing marketers we’ve gotten to learn from over the past two years.

To our listeners, you’re the reason we do this. It’s all about bringing the best of the best to you. To celebrate the 100th episode of AMP, here are some of our favorite guests, takeaways, and thoughts from more than 60 hours of marketing gold!

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Janna Maron: No more frustration by banking content and scheduling it to auto publish; publish less, but at higher quality
  • Michael Brenner: The most compelling way to guide everything you do as a marketer - what’s in it for the customer, colleague, and company?
  • Brian Clark: His biggest marketing mistake was the curse of knowledge - a cognitive bias where you assume the audience knows certain things you know
  • Noah Kagan: Helped Mint scale to its first 100,000 users in less than a year; what’s your goal and timeline?
  • Andrea Fryrear: Marketers are asked to do new projects all the time, but prioritize and simplify backlog of projects to be successful; plan your work, work your plan
  • Joanna Wiebe: Describes how to go deeper than Calls To Action and into Calls To Value; clearly articulate the ultra-specific value on the other side of a click
  • Tim Soulo: You should write 2,000+ word articles to rank in search engines, but people don’t want to read - they want answers to questions to solve problems
  • Nir Eyal: Psychology of habit formation and how marketers can capitalize on it; every product you use is to modulate your mood and alleviate pain
  • Jeff Goins: Four qualities in best-performing posts - piece is well written, contains a compelling promise, keeps that promise, and wows reader with value
  • Rand Fishkin: Remarkable customer research determines TRUE influencer status and who to partner with for co-promotion; share what audience values

If you enjoy AMP, write a review on iTunes and send a screenshot of it to be entered into a drawing to win the 100th episode giveaway, which includes a $100 CoSchedule swag package, bundle of three marketing books, and $50 Amazon gift card!  

Links: 

Aug 21, 2018

What’s the best way to market and grow a business? Do you often lock yourself in a conference room to avoid distractions and answer that question? Does one idea keep coming to mind? Guest writing for influential publications. 

Aaron Orendorff does it. He is the founder and CEO of iconiContent, as well as the editor-in-chief of Shopifyplus. Guest blogging was a foundational ingredient to scaling his personal brand. Aaron’s used guest writing to build clients for his own business and help land a job at Shopify. He shares the importance of writing for such publications, where to start, how to find ideas for articles to be accepted, and how to pitch articles.

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Aaron spent 2 ½ years guest posting, guest blogging, and writing articles for publications that he respected and wanted to be like
  • Aaron began building relationships and cold pitching to editors anywhere and everywhere to get ahold of email addresses
  • He understands that social proof is one of the most powerful levers to convince somebody to enter your funnel or start talking to you online
  • Cold Pitching Process: Reverse engineering of popular topics; speaking language/terminology of audience; using Buzzsumo to find popular social media
  • What are the headline formulas? What’s the word count? How did they use images? How are they interlinking? Did they like a lot of data?
  • Aaron sent publishers a complete article tailored to their publication; he identified topics related to popular posts on their site and discovered competitive holes
  • What gets responses from editors? Behind-the-scenes work, show instead of tell, and sending publishers a brief email with the attached article as a Word doc
  • Go to About or Contact Website pages for the publications or use tools to find email addresses of the editors
  • Rejections: Write an entire article for a specific publication, send it to the editors; wait to get rejected
  • Risk-to-Reward Ratio: Once rejected, tweak it and send to a different publication; work your way down a publication list; risk goes way down
  • After first “yes,” doors open and it’s far easier to write for publications a second, a third, a fourth time; promote articles after published to maximize opportunities
  • Guest writing has helped by getting attention from editors/other writers and building relationships with them through customized, valuable articles
  • To start guest writing: 1) Write complete articles tailored for specific publications; don’t send pitches; 2) Find what’s popular at their and competitors’ sites

Links: 

Aug 14, 2018

As marketers, you’ve probably been told that you have to pay to play. But how do you make the most out of what you put in? People buy from people who they know, like, and trust. 

Today, we’re talking to Amanda Bond, owner of Ad Strategist. She tells us how to get more results from our Facebook ads, how much to spend on ads, and how to scale the use of ads. She shares her “secret sauce” comprised of a 3-step formula that goes from engagement to purchases. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Stop guessing, get results with Facebook ads; manage ads to get a better ROI
  • As Facebook ads gain popularity and attract more advertisers, cost for them will only continue to rise; stay ahead of growth curve and remain competitive
  • The Strategy System: Put people through a customer journey - Connect, Commit, and Close
  • Connect: Amplify content, put the brand out there, and engage your audience; review Facebook Page Insights to identify how your organic content performs
  • Commit: For lead generation, Ad Strategist only targets warm custom audiences; a custom audience is one that has previously interacted with your brands
  • Close: When you set up your Facebook ad, it is the first thing you do; patch up holes of close/sales retargeting ads for them to convert to purchase decisions
  • Take 3 main objections submitted to customer service and turn them into Facebooks ads to overcome those objections and increase sales conversion rate
  • Make sure you can sell an offer before spending lots of money on Facebook ads
  • Continue to fill pipeline with new members and scale sustainably by figuring out what information an audience needs to know to make a future purchase decision
  • Targeting broad audiences can be just as cost-effective; power of Facebook ad tools and optimization
  • If brand new to Facebook ads, don’t start Facebook advertising before you understand your earnings per lead

Links: 

Aug 7, 2018

Want to provide a better experience for your prospects and customers, and make your work life a little more efficient at the same time? That’s the dream behind marketing automation. It’s about delivering the right messages to the right people in the most effective way. 

Today, we’re talking to Chris Davis, director of education at ActiveCampaign. He teaches us that marketing automation goes beyond email marketing and shares ideas on how you can improve your customer experience with automation. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Marketing automation is the process of employing technology to execute a marketing strategy
  • Hire and train each tool that you use in marketing to solve a problem
  • Owners wear many hats; marketing automation lets them do more of what they want to do in their business, than what they have to do
  • Examples of automation include someone filling out a form and your company following up or giving away something for free to obtain email addresses
  • Biggest mindset shift to automation is looking at your platform not as a way to send out emails, but as a way to collect data
  • Sole purpose of marketing automation is to scale personalization and make people feel individualized; automation allows you to sort or segment contacts
  • Before doing anything technical, define segments in your business; who are you going to be talking to? First 2 segments: customers and non-customers
  • Simple things become complex when understanding isn’t in close proximity; most businesses struggle to understand marketing and technology
  • Email can be the channel or means in which a message travels; send a message to customers to break the barrier of technology
  • Marketing automation qualifies customers and determines who should follow-up with them; automation serves as a facilitator
  • People prefer to buy online, rather than going into a store; their guards are down, but everybody still wants to be treated like a human being and individual
  • Outsourcing marketing can be a mistake; you may need someone internal to your business that is involved in the day-to-day to unleash your marketing

Links: 

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Jul 31, 2018

If you are a marketer, then you have probably heard of Rainmaker Digital’s Copyblogger and read some of its articles. Copyblogger is one of the most iconic marketing blogs in the world. It is kind of a big deal, and there’s a good reason for that. The team at Copyblogger works hard to publish specific content that the audience finds extremely useful and valuable.  

Today, we’re talking to Brian Clark, founder and CEO of Rainmaker Digital and creator of Copyblogger. Brian and Copyblogger are recognized by many as the most influential blogging resources. If you haven’t got the hint yet, Brian knows his stuff! So, learn all about audience, value, and generosity from him.  

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Getting back to basics with digital and content marketing automation and personalization; it’s still the human being in the middle of it that matters the most
  • Know your audience for automation and personalization to be a delivery engine that gets better content to people who care about it
  • Learn how to use new tools before applying them in the fundamentals of a sound digital marketing strategy; the tool does not make the strategy
  • Audience First Content: Build your audience by providing them value; then you will understand what products they want and need
  • Publish content first that attracts an audience, and then build a product
  • Copyblogger is considered the Bible of content marketing despite no advertising
  • Rainmakers: Use email marketing principles and have a product to sell to develop authority and clients
  • How much to give away for free with your content marketing - be generous, tell them everything, and share as much as you can, if you are selling something
  • Content Creation to Revenue Generation: Are you getting more business than if you weren’t doing content marketing?
  • Productize content and charge audience for information by knowing the objective and removing all objections that prevent buying
  • Know your audience to determine the right format (audio, video, written, etc.)
  • Internet is the greatest market research environment; it’s no longer about not having enough information, but how to manage and utilize it all
  • Biggest mistake made is trying to appeal to everyone and not turn anyone off

Links: 

Jul 24, 2018

Can a well-researched piece of content from a single URL help bring in millions of views in just one year? The answer is, “Yes.” CoSchedule knows exactly how that feels. Researched content helps you drive 10X results that convert into profitable customer action. 

Today, we’re talking to Michele Linn, who knows everything about research-driven content marketing. She is the co-founder and chief strategy officer at Mantis Research. Michele has amazing advice to offer on how to succeed at content marketing. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Research is crucial for content marketing; people want to find data that supports their thoughts and beliefs; become the authoritative source for some type of topic
  • Examples of research include CoSchedule’s State of Marketing Strategy Report, and research reports from Salesforce and Robert Half
  • Find new ideas for your audience/niche by conducting a survey, or looking for a stat that people believe but is not backed up by data   
  • Audiences that care most about research-based content are those in a new industry to gain justification, and on social media that like to share stats
  • Importance of research-driven content to prove or disprove something
  • Targeting Topics: Is it something that’s interesting to your audience? Does it align with your brand’s story? Is there other research available on this topic?
  • Research can be time consuming, about 4-6 months; but it is worth the effort
  • Research can be a guiding force and the glue that holds your story and editorial strategy together
  • Pitching researched content to justify time spent; what does client care about?
  • Content to produce results; start out small, don’t do too much at once
  • Tools and processes work well to gather research; try surveys and secondary research; determine sample size to be considered representative and valid
  • Metrics to measure for success include media mentions, impressions of research, leads, downloads, email subscribers, and backlinks
  • Research Process: 1) Strategy and planning, 2) Data science, 3) Compile data and turn into story, 4) Incorporate research into blogs, infographs, videos, etc.   

Links: 

Jul 17, 2018

How can you grow your website to become the world’s largest in your niche? Traffic without conversions does not let you influence profitable customer action, which marketing is designed to do. How can you get more results from your Website traffic? Marketing automation with Google provides prospective customers with what they want and when they need it to help influence their purchase decisions.

Today, we’re talking to Mike Danner, vice president of digital marketing at Ancient Nutrition. He helped the company’s Website, Dr. Axe, become the largest natural health Website in the world and generate about 19 million unique visits each month. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Ancient Nutrition and Dr. Axe help educate and provide supplements for those who want a natural approach
  • Ancient Nutrition is progressive and doing things right to grow its Website
  • Every generation requires its own revolution; current generation is focused on sustainable farming and getting rid of big manufacturing lines
  • Ancient Nutrition evolved out of passion and vision to become #1 natural health Website in the world and buy Whole Foods some day
  • Organic and surge approach through success leaving clues; seek the best and biggest to mimic
  • Use automation to help increase conversions; automation through ClickFunnels improved growth for Ancient Nutrition
  • Focus on the return received from training, not the cost of the training
  • Organize, optimize, customize when building automation
  • Funnels that trigger journeys include micro-intense steps (cart abandonment)
  • Review and analyze data to make decisions; phases of data absorption, monitoring, and testing - experimentation and exploitation
  • Shiny objects are fun, but deploy something to earn money
  • Marketing Automation and Integrative/Holistic Approach to Testing Program: How often are you going to test? What are you going to do with the data?
  • If brand new to marketing automation, anchor toward your goals; make as much as you can evergreen, and automation’s only as good as the multiplier

Links: 

Jul 10, 2018

Do you know how to use social media to build an irresistible brand and delight customers? Want to be amazing on Facebook, Instagram, and all the other sites? Need some inspiration for your social media branding? 

Today, we’re talking to Dave Kerpen, chairman of Likeable Media and best-selling author of Likeable Social Media. He shares his advice on what has remained relevant in social media over the past few years and what will continue to help you be successful. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Dave’s favorite ideas/concepts include using social media for listening and storytelling to put ideas into the world
  • Brands that are good at storytelling are Redbox, Ahold, Century 21, and Work It
  • Dave’s #1 social media goal for brands is to make money; have a specific monetary ROI in mind
  • Move people down the sales funnel for awareness to purchase 
  • Social media savagery trend where brands troll the trolls; is it helpful or hurtful? Depends on your brand’s personality and audience
  • Biggest mistakes marketers make include using social media to sell too quickly, not sell at all, and not use advertising to take advantage of paid opportunities
  • Make sure you’re not selling too much and your content is something you would Like, share, or comment on
  • For paid opportunities, focus first on investing dollars into ads on social media
  • Future Social Media Trends: Musical.ly, videos, and messaging apps
  • Stop investing time into a social channel when the reason you joined no longer applies

Links: 

Jul 3, 2018

Every day, consider your marketing career mindset. You can plan all you want, but at some point, you need to get to work, create something your audience will love, and launch it. You’ll probably make mistakes and face roadblocks along the way. But whatever goal you have for your marketing strategy, getting and staying organized will help you on your path to success.

Today, we’re talking to Kelly Napoli, who is the content marketing coordinator at Obermiller Nelson Engineering (ONE). Learn how to collaborate with subject matter experts (SMEs), importance of taking risks with your marketing, and why starting is more important than anything else. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • ONE is trying a bit of everything with its content marketing to see what works and what doesn’t
  • Marketers should pick SMEs’ brains to figure out what clients find interesting
  • It works better and smoother to have a conversation with SMEs vs. asking them to write marketing content
  • Lessons Learned: Once you’ve got a plan, implement it or nothing gets done
  • Personas: Have conversations about your target market
  • Provide audience with content that’s beneficial for them; at the same time, you don’t necessarily want to give away your secret sauce
  • Efficient collaboration with remote teams involves utilizing tools, including phones and video chats
  • Email is not always the most efficient way to communicate
  • CoSchedule advances you through the collaboration and communication process
  • Organization is Key: Find what works for you; for ONE, it’s CoSchedule
  • You pay for software, so use it; focus on what needs to get done
  • If you have multiple projects and tasks, stay organized by using task templates and Excel spreadsheets
  • Going from two to four new blog posts monthly to be consistent and productive; publish content to produce results and influence certain perceptions
  • Get organized in chaos behind marketing management; turn to CoSchedule, learn from your mistakes, and find software to help you stay organized

Links: 

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Jun 26, 2018

Do you open your Inbox only to see several emails asking for the same thing? To link to someone else’s content? Instantly, you move them to the Trash folder. Email outreach can actually work and complement your inbound marketing efforts. But your emails need to not be anything like the random ones that you throw away.

Today, we’re talking to Ian Cleary of RazorSocial and OutreachPlus. He is an amazing inbound marketer, who has discovered that complementing inbound tactics with outbound email outreach can help you build relationships, increase brand authority, and boost your backlink profile. To do it well, you need to think about personalized connections, providing value to them, and starting small. Everything you will learn about email outreach from Ian is pure gold. It works, and it can help you reach your goals. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Definition of Email Outreach: An email outreach tool helps you reach out to subscribers, a new audience, a smaller audience, or a group of influencers
  • Send highly personalized emails to promote content or generate leads
  • Benefits of email outreach include building your brand, driving relevant traffic to your site, promoting your content, and growing your authority
  • Cold email outreach works by with highly personalized, relevant, and very targeted emails
  • Provide something of value; deliver brief, quality content
  • Conduct research to make sure you are reaching out to the right target audience
  • Don’t think about selling, but about starting a conversation
  • Ways to find influencers and build relationships, develop relevancy
  • Following Up: Send two emails and then stop; don’t be annoying or damage relationships
  • Outreach Criteria: Look for opportunities to engage and interact with Websites with a higher authority to get valuable links
  • Tactics that work to complement outreach efforts include getting onto social media, sharing content, and looking for opportunities to interact; when reaching out, reference a conversation, interaction, or piece of content
  • Highest converting outreach for Ian is guest posting; invite people to be a part of the blogs you’re writing
  • When getting started with email outreach - start small, build the skill, and get better at it over time to be successful

Links: 

 

Jun 19, 2018

Exclusive interviews continue from Garrett Moon’s book, 10X-Marketing Formula, which features top marketing professionals who uncover uncommon marketing mindsets, methods, and growth strategies.

In this episode, we’re talking to John T. Meyer, CEO and co-founder of Lemonly, which is a visual marketing firm. John started Lemonly as a way to educate people about how digital media is a way to reach customers, and eventually the business ended up specializing in infographics. Lemonly helped build and pioneer the infographics industry, and it has evolved into visual storytelling - the secret sauce. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Humans are visual creatures bombarded by messages; infographics make the world less noisy and confusing
  • Infographics transitioned from visualizing data to a storytelling formula, where there is a beginning, middle, and end
  • Core types of stories offer familiarity and ability to predict what will happen
  • Lemonly starts with content by creating an outline that features the goal, 3 main points, and summary/call to action
  • Web of Content: Where will content live to connect and hook pieces on mediums
  • Issues related to driving traffic through visuals on various social media mediums
  • Visuals grab people’s attention, but you need a good story for ROI
  • Other options available, but Lemonly offers person-to-person relationships
  • Examples of 10X ROI results from visual content
  • Infographics fail and don’t live up to full potential when delivery is blurry, squished; don’t do all that work, and then stumble at the end

Links: 

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Jun 12, 2018

How are your conversion rates? Are you getting qualified leads? To drive value for your company, you need to convert audience members to customers. If you think you need help, you do. 

Today, we’re talking to Lance Jones, director of marketing at ReCharge, which helps its customers sell subscriptions on their Shopify stores. Lance shares powerful tactics to help you increase conversion rates. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • ReCharge’s biggest marketing challenges; from distractions to lack of patience
  • Combining conversion rate optimization and audience language to communicate effectively
  • Connecting with customers by using their words and phrases in your copywriting
  • Formulas and techniques for successful conversion copywriting, including problem/agitation/solution (PAS)
  • Building partnerships and relationships with niche businesses; knowing your target customer and their pain points to offer solutions
  • Providing value back to partners by understanding their business and offering services/tools to solve problems
  • Building trust by educating and teaching customers how to do something
  • Focusing on a new niche; it’s difficult to commit to going narrow

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Jun 5, 2018

Do you have a product or service that people want? Nothing else matters. Every major company started with a very specific customer, and every business has competition. The easiest way to win is to pick a more specific customer to serve. So, pick a target customer, and be very strict about it.

Garrett Moon, CoSchedule CEO, recently wrote the book, 10X Marketing Formula: Your Blueprint for Creating Competition-Free Content That Stands Out and Gets Results. Fortunately, Garrett recorded the interviews he conducted for the book. In today’s episode, Garrett’s 10x interview is with Noah Kagan of Sumo, AppSumo, and Briefcase. Noah continuously pushes the edges of marketing and growth. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Focusing on eCommerce has positively transformed Noah’s companies
  • Growth Hacking and Marketing: How to find channels that have not been fully utilized or abused
  • What has helped grow your business? Do what works; go back to the basics
  • Favorite Growth Strategies: Determine what new marketing channels will work; and platform marketing
  • Proactive Dashboard: Has to be controllable; you can’t be dependent on anything
  • As a marketer, what is one thing you can stop doing today? What are you wasting your time on?
  • Noah’s companies perform testing and validation on how they can get more traffic and on-site optimization
  • Use content to grow your business; what’s unique about what you’re writing
  • Social vs. search content; one is short-term, and the other is long-term options
  • Process of understanding your target audience: Which customers have the highest lifetime value? Which have been the easiest for the sales team to talk to?
  • Noah’s companies have made two major shifts when focusing on customers: Qualified sign-ups and content related to eCommerce
  • Revisit pricing and customers; contact customers via the phone for feedback
  • Segment your audience to understand them; but don’t do it too early
  • Find a product you love, and let specific people in the world know about it; help people 1 by 1

Links: 

 

 

May 29, 2018

A sales and marketing funnel is when people have an awareness of your brand and move closer to a buying decision. You want them to know, like, and trust you, so there is enough value for them to become your customer. What does your customer’s journey look like? 

Fortunately, today’s episode features Daniel McGaw, the founder of Effin Amazing and creator of UTM.io. Daniel is a conversion rate optimization and sales funnel expert. Find out about the magic you can get from links and how to increase Website and content conversions. What are the superpowers of what can be done with a link when shared online? 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Urchin tracking module (UTM) tags are bits of code you can add to the end of any link; it’s the only universal tracking method available
  • Daniel’s product offers presets for teams to keep tags consistent
  • Most entrepreneurs think about business in the wrong way; they focus on the logo, brand, mission, and other factors before they acquire customers
  • Daniel thinks of business this way: Where is the demand? Do we have a customer? If we have a customer, then we have a business.
  • How Effin Amazing got its name and gets a lot of attention
  • Don’t ask for tons of information; just get an email address to optimize for leads
  • Funnel Anatomy: Awareness, top of funnel (TOFU), middle of funnel (MOFU), bottom of funnel (BOFU), and referrals of the funnel (ROFU)  
  • Daniel’s company uses the Velocity/Impact/Confidence/Easy (VICE) framework to map a funnel, which includes documenting information, developing strategies, and building benchmarks
  • Evaluate your team’s skills and abilities to augment VICE scores
  • Most marketers and businesses go wrong when they expect people to buy too quickly; and do not get enough email addresses - email is king and the lynchpin to success
  • Learn more about your customers during the funnel stages, and try to educate them

Links: 

 

 

May 22, 2018

Successful marketing takes more than just running ads, publishing articles, and designing newsletters. With so many moving parts, running a successful marketing program can be elusive. So, use a thoughtful and simple framework to cut straight to the heart of what it means and what it looks like to get consistent results. 

Today, we’re talking to Michael Brenner, the CEO of Marketing Insider Group and co-author of The Content Formula. He shares his global perspective and the secret to success when it comes to content marketing. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Michael discovered that he had an aptitude for helping customers at scale
  • Counter-intuitive nature of life applies to marketing; there’s a lot more to marketing than just advertising, which we hate and tune out
  • We perceive marketing in the wrong way; it’s a two-way communication between a company and its customers
  • What type of marketing works? Things that are not selfish, promotional, and interruptive, but aligned to what customers are wanting and what helps them
  • Marketing starts with culture, and growth equates to the amount of empathy a company has for its customers, employees, and world
  • Mission Statement: What is your purpose? Meaning? What do you achieve for the people you touch?
  • Step 1: No matter what you are working on or what role you play in the company, always ask: What’s in it for the customers?
  • Do less promotion in advertising and more content marketing or education
  • Identify the amount of integration and interaction that occurs across the company
  • Step 2: What’s in it for your colleagues? Marketing goes beyond the marketing department; it’s a collaborative and magical effort
  • Step 3: What’s in it for the company? Conversions and ROI of content marketing
  • Culture, empathy, and performance lead to effective and successful marketing
  • Michael tries to do 2 things every day: Be thankful and show empathy (T & E)

Links: 

 

 

May 15, 2018

Has your smartphone ever beeped or vibrated to let you know that something, some piece of information or message, is waiting, just for you? Without even thinking, you read, listen to, or watch, and become completely absorbed in it. How have these pieces gained so much power over our behavior and attention? How do software companies hook us, and what can marketers learn from this phenomenon?

Today’s guest is Nir Eyal, who says today’s smartest companies have melded psychology, business, and technology into habit-forming products. Nir is the best-selling author of Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products. He’s an angel investor and expert in behavioral design. He unveils some psychological principles behind some of today’s biggest, most valuable, and most frightening companies. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Skill of the century is the ability to cultivate focus
  • Behavioral Design: Products that are most engaging and habit forming were built with consumer psychology in mind
  • People use the Hooked model to engage with a product or service
  • Step 1: Internal trigger (reason why you use a product - to modulate your mood, to feel something different; products and services cater to emotional discomfort)
  • What’s the user’s itch? What’s their pain point that occurs frequently enough to build a habit around?
  • Step 2: Action (the simplest behavior done in anticipation of a reward and relief from discomfort; technology shortens the distance between the need and reward)
  • Lewin’s Equation: “People act in accordance to their personality and their environment,” which means the easier something is, the more likely people are to do it
  • Step 3: Reward Phase (the itch gets scratched, the customer’s need is satiated, and their problems are solved)
  • Element of Variability: Something of mystery, something of uncertainty
  • Three types of variable rewards are: Rewards of the tribe, rewards of the hunt, and rewards of the self
  • If you can form a habit, you can engage people with your brand through a community/content habit, and monetization is the result of engagement
  • Step 4: Investment Phase (increases likelihood of the next pass through the hook by loading the next trigger and storing value)
  • Content, data, followers, and reputation are ways to get users to invest in your product
  • Companies should make a deliberate effort to understand consumers better; what makes people click and tick, so you can build services that they want

Links: 

May 8, 2018

How do you deliver traffic to your blog? How do you move from chasing an audience to attracting and keeping one? 

Today, we’re talking to Jeff Bullas, an internationally renowned speaker on digital marketing, including social media, blogging, and brand building. His mission is to help people win at business and life in the digital world through the art of storytelling. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Storytelling: If people forget what you told them, they won’t forget how you made them feel
  • Marketers in different countries face the same problems; they all want more traffic and conversions
  • How Jeff took a $10 investment to generate more than 25 million visitors
  • Books and blogs that inspired Jeff
  • Build credibility and create content
  • Description of Jeff’s virtual team; how he avoids the office because it feels like work instead of fun
  • Make your brand memorable
  • Connection between storytelling, social media, and driving traffic to your blog
  • Make your audience the hero of a journey; convince people that they are capable
  • With traffic, you have to earn and own it to convert it to leads and sales
  • Passion and purpose is not a destination, it’s a calling and journey
  • Develop a daily routine that becomes a habit
  • Where to start: Ask yourself, Why am I here? What’s my passionate purpose?

Links: 

May 1, 2018

Does it feel like you are trying to herd cats? Managing your marketing that way is not strategic. Get organized to manage your time, help you predict how long projects will take, and plan ahead to get real results.

Today, we’re talking to Lindsay Scarpello, an organizational mastermind with a background in journalism. Marketers need to think like journalists. Learn organizational and time management skills, as well as how processes and workflows are imperative for success. 

Some of the highlights of the show include: 

  • Lindsay’s role at OBI Creative, a research and communications advertising agency
  • Lindsay’s employment background in journalism and marketing
  • Build trust with customers through education and high-quality content
  • Organizational skills needed for marketers to succeed
  • Time Management: You can’t miss deadlines and must be willing to hustle
  • Decipher and present data in a digestible way
  • Find and implement tools to maximize your time; keep using what works for you
  • Lindsay plans ahead to stay organized with her time
  • Be aware of what’s going on by using To Do list apps, notebook, or other tools
  • Build a foundation of organizational skills to boost results and be an investment
  • Organization becomes a habit in your personal and professional life
  • Spend time defining processes to be able to execute them
  • Content Planning Process: Research, build strategy/create steps, receive feedback, and implement
  • How to plan content ahead of time using rules of marketing
  • Be tech savvy and have working knowledge of all Microsoft Office programs
  • Know how your brain works and your company’s goals   

Links:

 

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