Five Free Web Marketing Resources

1. Web Color Combinations
Need to pick colors for your site? Or give direction to your Web designer? This site lets you pick colors that match (not clash). Color swatches include the Web color numbers so you can easily recreate the combinations you like.

2. HTML code checker
HTML code errors can leave your whole site looking like it’s had a bad accident. All bold, all purple, or just plain wrong. This tool checks your code, makes sure it meets Web standards, and points out any mistakes.

3. HTML help
Stuck on how to create smart quotes, special characters, or an indent? This site has tutorials, cheat sheets, and more.

4. Google Analytics
This free tool gives you easy-to-understand reports showing how many people visit your site, which pages they look at, and how much time they spend. You can also create your own reports showing results for specific keywords, visitor locations, and cash earned from e-commerce.

5. Google Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Starter Guide
Get the scoop on SEO straight from the source. Find out how to make your site more search-engine friendly, how to name your pages, and what not to do.

Thanks to Greg for pointing out the last one.

Don’t Steal This Idea

David Meerman Scott posted about the <a href=”http://www.webinknow.com/2008/09/learning-from-t.html”>3M post-it debacle</a>
a couple of months ago (September 24, 2008). In a nutshell, someone put post-it notes all over a colleague’s car, and posted pictures. It spread virally, 3M found out, and wanted to use the pictures for free. When the creators said no; the company created their own post-it car and stole the idea!

Bottom line, whether it’s online or offline, social media or old media, it’s not OK to steal or lie or cheat. 3M had thousands of dollars worth of publicity, without spending a dime, and they blew it.

Be authentic, share your passion, tell the truth.

Is Your Web Site Search Broken?

broken egg imageTwo weeks ago, I ran out of fax toner. Staples didn’t have what I wanted, so I turned to the Internet. I found a site that sold ink and toner (so far so good).

I plugged the brand and model number into their search tool… and was sent to the main page for that brand.

There were about 20 pages of toner! I couldn’t find the one I needed unless I looked through each and every one. Not good.

So, I emailed them saying I need Brand X, model Y. Do you carry toner for that? I got an automatic message thanking me for my inquiry…. and nothing since. Now, here I’d raised my hand, saying, ‘hello, I’m a prospect, I want to buy from you.” And nobody cared.

Two important marketing lessons:

1) If you build a search tool into your site, make sure it’s easy to use and delivers visitors directly to the information they’re searching for. Don’t make it hard to buy!

2) If you have a contact button (and you should), follow up on the questions. Ignoring customers (or potential customers) is costing you both money and goodwill.

Image thanks to: stevendepolo

Are You Marketing Like McCain or Obama?

And now a few words about the election. This is not about politics, but about marketing. Regardless of who you voted for (or whether you are in the US or elsewhere), there are important marketing lessons to learn from this election.

I noticed during the primaries and the campaign, that Hillary Clinton and John McCain kept talking about themselves. It was a classic marketing mistake. They kept focusing on their years of experience, how they’ve made change, everything they’ve done, rather than the voters. They said things like, “I have experience,” “I know how to fix our economy.” Lots of “I” and “me”, but very little “you” and “we”.

Barack Obama, on the other hand, said “we”: “Yes we can”, we can change, we can hope. He brought people together in a way that the other candidates didn’t. Plus, he made excellent use of his Web site, email, Twitter, and new media tools to keep his followers engaged. He sent (as Seth Godin says) personal, relevant, anticipated messages. No robocalls, no interruptions, just permission marketing. He created a “tribe” of people who were eager to hear from him. And, he sent an email thanking every one of them after the election was over.

So, which kind of campaign are you running? Are you talking about yourself? Or, are you talking about your customers’ problems? Do you give them a reason to talk about you? Are you remarkable or average?

by Ten marketing lessons from the Barack Obama Presidential campaign

Does your site speak plain English? or gobbledygook?

org chartEver visit a web site and feel as if it were written in some other language?  You stare it, knowing that the words you’re reading all are in English, but realizing that you still can’t understand what they’re saying. Why? Because it’s all in gobbledygook rather than in plain English.

I was reviewing a new social networking site recently and found this on the home page. It said the site’s goal was “connecting businesses with overlapping value sets.”

It made me think of a corporate HR flow chart or a bad Venn Diagram rather than a cure for a problem I was having.

And what exactly is “connecting businesses with overlapping values” anyway?

Stick to plain English

When you write the copy for your site, your email, or your brochure, use plain, simple English, not corporate jargon.  Confusing writing and unclear language will just drive people away.  It’s too hard to read, it creates too much friction, and it doesn’t help the reader solve her problem.

It’s not writing, it’s word salad.  If you teach something say that, rather than “facilitate.” You use something, you don’t leverage it.  And if everyone is at “the leading edge” than nobody is.

Spell out what people get from your product.  How it helps gain recognition or make new contacts.

Skip the gobbledygook. It only reduces your sales, makes your site less appealing, and hurts your reputation.

Your customers will thank you.

 

Photo thanks to zerne