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Aligned Marketing Blog

Marketing executive, Steve Hartkopf shares all in this informative yet personable blog.

Are You a Spammer?

Steve Hartkopf - Monday, March 08, 2010
I’m often asked how businesses can use social media. In separate conversations, the National Electrical Supply Association (NAED) and the Industrial Supply Association (ISA), think GE and 3M, respectively, are asking that very question. Collectively the two organizations represent approximately  $300B of our economy. Neither has an answer to the question, so I gave their representatives a glimpse of mine.

Social media is really nothing more than an online reflection of the offline world. The offline process that leads up to a sale; "know me, like me, trust me," also applies to the online world of social media. Sales happen at the end of that process in both worlds.

That sounds simple because it is. What’s striking is how many people get it terribly wrong. Instead of taking the time to get involved in an online community, much as any good business person would if they joined the local Chamber of Commerce, most people rush to the Close. They broadcast their sales pitch out randomly, hoping to hit a target. What a total waste of energy, not to mention the damage done to your brand.

When they don’t hit a target, they blame the medium, the technology. “I tried social media and it didn‘t work.” That’s a crock but it is easier than blaming themselves. It’s easier than doing the hard work involved and dedicating the time to do truly join a community and contribute real value. It’s easier than being a responsible citizen.

Responsibilities are serious business. Avoiding your responsibilities to build trust in the community, which is that you are doing if you just throw out your pitch randomly, means you are a spammer. Spammer is an ugly word in our wired-up world. So ugly that in it’s most literal sense, it’s illegal. Most of us have software installed on our computers to block these cretins.

Opening accounts on social sites such as LinkedIn, Digg, StumbleUpon, Twitter and the others for the single purpose of promoting yourself is a bad strategy. Get involved! Become an active member of the community. Provide value. Give good advice and engage with a servant’s heart. Keep the conversation going on the forum itself, don’t try to divert members to your site, your self-interest. Wait until you’re asked.

Take the time to comment and vote on other people’s content. Visit other people’s blogs and “RT” (retweet) good information, Friend those you know or who have similar interests as you and call-out the spammers. Finally, rather than quantity you should seek quality.

In other words focus your efforts on the social sites you are going to be involved in and sites that contain a group of people who can relate to your content and perspective. Don’t submit an article on postpartum depression to a social network convened around Fantasy Football.

As is always the case, to reap the rewards you must do the work. Everyone, as I taught my two boys, pays List Price for success.

Add value to the community and the community will reciprocate.

Steve

800-707-9150

Storytising

Steve Hartkopf - Monday, March 01, 2010
Getting someone to read your online advertising is not easy. Beyond being memorable, online advertising should create interest in your value proposition and, in its best form, overcome sales objections. That's asking a lot, but it is possible.

Online advertising is different than offline (print) advertising because it is more intimate. Done well, you can get people to read your copy. That's why I believe the long-form (more than 150 words) sales message is not dead.

In fact using well written copy in story form that conveys your value such as a customer testimony, case study or white-paper is a terrific way to deliver your sales message.


The challenge we all face and the reason we usually use short copy, which includes tag-lines, elevator speeches, and anything less than 150 words, is we assume the average reader's attention span is short to the point of being miniscule. Collectively, we've made Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) a national treasure. That's silly, it's an excuse many people use to explain away their lack of seriousness. But no matter, that perception has consequences for those of us who write copy that sells for a living.

Too many of us believe that only the bored or the most desperate buyer will take the time to read the traditional long sales letters we  associate with internet marketing. The problem is not the length of the copy. The problem is most of what we read online is tacky, heavy-handed and just plain uninteresting.

A good way around this dilemma is to use stories. But not just any stories. I'm talking about stories that are interesting and fun to read. Stories that, at the same time, communicate each step of your sales sequence over time without ever being tacky or heavy-handed, “salesy.” Stories spread out over time in a series of emails and blog postings.

The first few emails entice the reader, your prospect, to investigate your services further. Once you get a click through the next series of emails describes your service benefits in more detail and, through stories and testimonials, are designed to overcome objections and encourage a purchase.

You can use a series of interesting stories to attract attention, describe benefits, create desire for your product or service, demonstrate the product in action, overcome objections, promote a strong call to action, and convey every other copywriting purpose just as effectively, perhaps more so, in a story (your content) as you would in a traditional sales message.

The goal is to make your content so interesting, entertaining and valuable that the underlying "advertising" will be read, retained, shared and, ultimately, result in a purchase.

When you combine the best aspects of advertising with quality storytelling, that's what I call Storytising.

Steve
800-707-9150

Tying Social Media to Business Results

Steve Hartkopf - Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Tying Social Media to Business Results

Does your company have specific business goals for your social media activities? If not, you should.

In a November 2009 survey MarketingSherpa discovered that approximately ninety-four percent (see chart below) of those surveyed use social media to increase their website traffic, which is not surprising.

What might surprise you is twenty-one percent don’t actually measure their results and five percent have no specific objectives for their social media activities. So I can only assume that they’re on LinkedIn and Tweeting, for example, because they think it’s the right thing to do.

Doing something for the sake of doing it doesn’t sound like real business to me, does it to you?

The other thing that surprised me was the relatively low number of respondents who use social media to reduce their customer acquisition and customer support costs. I mean, the tools are free!

The bottom line is social media is a free and easy to use platform for promoting your business and communicating directly with your customers and prospect, so use it.

If you’re not sure how, give us a call.

Steve Hartkopf

800-707-9150

Finding Niche Markets & Hot Topics

Steve Hartkopf - Monday, February 08, 2010
If you’re looking for niche markets, hot topics and new ideas there are a bunch of sites that can help you beyond the search engines although, in some cases, they are sub-domains of the search engines.

I check out the hottest search trends at Google Zeitgeist. Since I’m usually targeting the US market, I’ll click on “U.S. Zeitgeist,” otherwise I’ll look at “Zeitgeist Around the World.”


Lycos Top 50 and Yahoo! Buzz are two other sites, like Google Zeitgeist, that I review when I’m looking for the latest trends in digital products and hot topics.


The eBay Pulse site is also an excellent place to start looking at niche markets and topics and is one very few people, from what I can tell, use for research.


If you still can’t find anything to get your creative marketing or writing juices flowing then here are some other sites to investigate:

Nichebot - http://www.nichebot.com

Shopping.com Searches – http://www2.shopping.com/top_searches

AOL Hot Searches - http://hot.aol.com/hot/hot

Google Groups - http://groups.google.com

Craig's List - http://www.craigslist.com

Delicious Popular - http://del.icio.us/popular

Digg - http://www.digg.com

Google Catalogs - http://catalogs.google.com

Google Suggest – http://www.google.com/webhp?complete=1&hl=en

Technorati - http://www.technorati.com

If you want to focus exclusively on what’s selling visit the Clickbank Marketplace (http://marketplace.clickbank.net).

The web is constantly changing so it requires effort to stay current, to remain relevant.

As a marketing consultant it’s my business to stay abreast of web-trends. Feel free to call me if you’re having trouble finding the information you need.

Steve Hartkopf

800-707-9150

 

Should you be able to Borrow an Ebook?

Steve Hartkopf - Monday, January 18, 2010
Ebooks are electronic books. Some are e-versions of hardbound books and some exist solely in an electronic format, typically pdf. Ebooks have become very popular and really proliferated as a marketing tool.


Many are free but most seem to be under $20.00 range. I saw one that was being sold for $2,000.00, which blew me away. I’ve read dozens of ebooks and most are actually very good, despite their free-to-modest cost.

I’m interested in Dave Navarro’s book, “How to Launch The *** Out Of Your Ebook.” For the most part the reviews are very good. I follow Dave’s blogs and articles. He knows his niche and is considered the guy when it comes to launching online products.

But every review is not glowing and, at $100.00, I’ve been slow to pull the trigger and buy his book. That got me to thinking: Can a person borrow an ebook? We certainly borrow hardbound books. I loan out books regularly and don’t think anything about it. So why does it feel different when it’s a pdf file?

Part of the answer is many ebooks contain some kind of legalese prohibiting redistribution. Here’s one example:

This product may not be sold, given away, or redistributed in any way. You may only use this for personal reading.

So do those types of statements legally prohibit redistribution? They probably do. This is probably another area where the online world and the offline world are different but I’m not 100% sure.

I’ve started a discussion on LinkedIn (you'll need to join The Blog Zone group to participate) to poll the writers and lawyers in the group and see if there's a consensus.

In the offline world we lend books openly. Those friendly activities are largely untraceable and that may explain the lack of concern. It’s legal to quote from other people’s books in one’s own writing but there are limits to how much repurposing a writer can do.

Creative Commons (www.creativecommons.org) does a great job of laying out an author’s rights and providing ways for redistribution, sharing and collaboration.

I’ve got 5 ebooks in development and will be launching an information site in a few weeks. Part of me wants to get paid for every download and part of me says, heck, a little redistribution is just another form of advertising, so have at it, boys.

What do you think? Should you be able to borrow an ebook?

Using Testimonials in Your Sales Copy

Steve Hartkopf - Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Sales letters and direct marketing predate the first postage stamp, Shakespeare had children pass out flyers announcing his plays.

The fall of the Berlin Wall (November 9, 1989) signaled an end to the Cold War (see Reagan's speech at Brandenburg gate) but the changes for the “brick and mortar” world were only beginning because The Wall came down about the same time as the Internet, and online marketing, was ramping up.



In the early days of the Internet security and trust were huge issues and, in case you haven’t been paying attention, they still are. To combat that angst many marketers use recommendations, endorsements and testimonials, which for our purposes, are all the same. If you’re going to use testimonials in your sales copy there are a few things you should know.

1. Add names and website addresses (URL) to your photos.


Names and web addresses make your testimonials more believable. Text and names, I’m sorry to say, can be and are faked. Providing additional information such as a name and/or URL gives your  audience enough information to investigate and verify your claims  The verification opportunity increases the credibility of your testimonials.

Photos of those providing your testimonial are great because they carry a hidden message – our customers are so passionate about our products and services that they are willing to share personal information and be accountable for our results.

2. Audio or video.


Audio and video endorsements are even better than text and photo endorsements. Hearing the sound of someone’s voice and/or seeing them deliver a a testimonial, with all the visual cues that come with direct communication, is more personal and, therefore more believable, than words on a page and a static photo.

It’s also easier for your satisfied customers to communicate their wonderful experiences through the spoken word, something they use every day, than it is in writing, which usually takes more time.

3. Highlight your testimonials.


Using a Light Yellow highlight around your copy (or even a photo or video image) is an excellent way to draw attention to them and  make them stand out on the page. If yellow is too in-our-face for your tastes or conflicts with your color scheme, then a Light Blue or Gray highlight also works well. And don't go nuts with the yellow, you'll look like the schlockmeister.

4. If you have lots of testimonials, sprinkle them.


Having a bunch testimonials is fantastic. My recommendation is to sprinkle them around the page to avoid having a “testimonial section.” A testimonial section, where you list 4, 5, 6 or more testimonials, is a bad idea since most people will only read one or two. Testimonials are precious so you’ll want to extract as much value as you can from each one.

A good place to insert them is right below your sub headlines.

5. If you have only one or two testimonials insert them below the mid-point of your sales copy.


Inserting one or two testimonials below the mid-point of your sales copy gives you enough time to make your pitch and, then, have it reinforced by satisfied customers.

Some marketers argue that your testimonials should be inserted right after your first sub-headline, to encourage your audience to keep reading, but I disagree. If you’ve pulled someone into your website they, typically, will read a paragraph or two before they consider leaving. If your copy is well-written that’s enough time to make your strongest points and then use your testimonials for reinforcement.

6. Testimonials need to be results-oriented.


In short, your testimonials shouldn’t be “Yippee, Sam’s the best ever!” Testimonials need to be about the results produced by your product or service. Those results are even more believable if they are qualified (“excellent service”) and quantified (“the work was delivered as promised in 4-hours”).

What do you think? Are testimonials part of your sales arsenal?

Steve

How to Request a Meeting in Writing

Steve Hartkopf - Wednesday, December 09, 2009
A lot has been written about making written requests, such as for a meeting. Based on my inbox, a lot of good advice is being ignored. So, here's my two-cents on the subject:

Good work often starts with research. I recommend that you save the meeting requests and general sales letters you like in a dedicated folder and, before writing your next request letter, review them for tips and inspiration. Pay particular attention to what you like about the wording, layout, flow and tone of your favorite letters.

Staying with research, investigate the companies and people your soliciting. There's an amazing amount of information available today. Google and LinkedIn are two of my primary sources of client research. In 15 minutes you can typically learn a person's professional history, job title, interests, status in their industry  and many even identify some mutual friends. This will help with the style, tone and personalization of your letter.

Create an outline for your letter as follows:
  1. Grab your reader's attention. Begin with an interesting fact, important question, comment on a current event or something personal, such as congratulations for being named Person of the Year.
  2. Then transition your reader into the purpose of your letter - introduce your company, request an appointment, or a free offer, for example. Be sure to connect your request with your grabber from (what will be) paragraph one. Your transition is key, it must be both smooth and brief, people are busy. See next bullet.
  3. In today's hurry-up, get-to-the-point world, many people switch the first two bullets of their outline. they begin letters by coming right out and stating, "The purpose of this letter is to request a 30-minute appointment to..." and then write their grabber. I prefer a subtler approach but will use the direct approach if I know the reader well.
  4. Insert numbers or testimonials that back up your claims next. A list of indented bullets works well for either. People like reading lists of tightly written facts - summaries.
  5. Your fourth section/paragraph is your call-to-action. Tie your attention grabber or your reader's self-interest into the benefits of responding to your solicitation. I don't sell actual products so I often use mutual gain as my call-to-action: "I propose a 30-minute meeting to better understand your business objectives, review our capabilities and determine if we can help one another achieve our  goals..."
  6. Your final outline point let's your reader know that your letter is one of a series of contacts, that there are more to come. Explain that you will be following up by voicemail, email or both. Basically, you're telling them "you're not going away, so let's have our conversation and see where it leads."

Now it's time to fill in the blanks and edit. Go back to each section of your outline and write 2-4 complete sentences. Often this is as easy as writing a topic sentence, inserting your outline copy and, then, writing a closing sentence that introduces your next point (paragraph) and compels the reader to keep reading.

With my writing completed I move onto the editing process. I complete three rounds of edits. My first edit is for grammar, my second is for flow and my third is for appeal. The final edit, for appeal, answers the question, "Would I respond to this letter?" If I would, then I'm done. If, however, there are awkward transitions, facts that don't seem to fit, or anything else that makes my letter weak, then I keep writing and editing until they are corrected.

The person receiving your letter is busy. They are looking for reasons to throw your letter away. It's your job to give them reasons to keep it and respond.

Mail your letter and begin following up within a week.

Final thought:
Some may argue that Bullet #6 above is aggressive. I'll concede that point. However, if you've done your homework and are only contacting people you honestly believe you can help, then why be shy? You're trying to earn a living and help others along the way; what's wrong with that? I'm not looking to waste my time or anyone else's on silly meetings nor am I looking to sell anyone something they don't need or want. I have pride in what I do and so should you.

In summary, this comes down to professionalism and character, use a strong doze of both in everything you do and trust that positive results will follow.

Steve

Copywriting and Storytelling

Steve Hartkopf - Monday, November 30, 2009
The word copywriting is all over the net but it’s often misunderstood. Wikipedia defines copywriting as:

Copywriting is the use of words to promote a person, business, opinion or idea. Although the word copy may be applied to any content intended for printing (as in the body of a newspaper article or book), the term copywriter is generally limited to such promotional situations, regardless of media (as advertisements for print, television, radio or other media). The author of newspaper or magazine copy, for example, is generally called a reporter or writer or a copywriter.

I define copywriting more simply: It’s the act of using words to sell or influence. My expanded definition is still more concise than the Wikipedia version: It’s written persuasion created to make your target audience act in a certain way, such as click, read, buy, or register.

Storytelling is a great copywriting tactic. Stories are entertaining and engage the reader in a more subtle way than the triple-decibel BUY THIS! blast-messages we get hit with everyday.

Long before human beings learned to read and write we used storytelling to transfer knowledge and influence one another. A million years of storytelling has altered our genetic code. It’s now in our DNA to listen to stories, decide what’s important to us and then apply that to our lives.

If you want your audience to associate with your brand, your products and with you, then tell them a story. At a strategic level, it’s not much more complicated than that. 

The best way to get your audience to take action, however, is to include these five key elements in your story:

  1. Measurement
  2. Comparison
  3. Time
  4. Uniqueness and
  5. Compelling

Measurement: Most people grant numbers more credibility than they do general comments. Whatever it is you do for your clients, using numbers to quantify the benefits will make your claims more believable than claims that lacks numbers.

Comparison: Give your audience before and after examples of the benefits of your product or service. Demonstrating results in a before and after scenario gives your claims perspective.

Time: Similarly, providing a timeframe around your results helps your audience understand the true impact of your product or service, especially if the benefits were produced quickly.

Uniqueness: Since you want to stand out from your competition and have your own brand, it’s important to make your claim as unique as possible. That’s really hard in a web-connected world, but that’s also why it is so critical.

Compelling: The compelling element answers the question: “Who cares?” You may be able to clean reading glasses faster than anyone in your city but I doubt many people will pay for that unique skill.

Steve

Bloggers, Don't Act Like One of Joanna Krupa's Boobs

Steve Hartkopf - Monday, November 23, 2009
My wife and I enjoy watching Dancing with the Stars along with 20 million other viewers. The professional dancers are amazing people, stunning and athletic. The "Stars" come from a broad spectrum of celebrity; movies, music, television and sports are typically represented. Each season one or two celebrities showcase their natural talent and jump out as the early favorites. A few weeks later another star inevitably pops up to challenge or even beat the favorites. It's fun to see a stomping-slug, which most of us can identify with, become a hoofin'-hotshot.

Two celebrity favorites, Aaron Carter and Natalie Coughlin, were eliminated early because the decision of who stays and who goes is a combination of the judges' scores and the viewer's votes. Talent, hard work and continued progress lost to popularity and a motivated constituency, to politics. That's probably some of the show's appeal, it's part dance, part celebrity, and part reality.

Donnie Osmond and Kelly Osborne are the latest fan favorites. Donnie is a super showman and everyone loves the guy, it's Donnie. His dancing has improved almost every week but, at 50+, he's not the smoothest cat prowling the alley and his paw-prints are on as many of his partner's costumes as they are on the dance stage. Kelly has transformed herself from a whiny, frumpy, below-average dancer into a sometimes beautiful performer who has acquired some serious skills and surprising maturity. It's been an amazing metamorphosis for Ozzie's little girl but it doesn't change the fact that she'll never be anywhere near as graceful or talented as Joanna Krupa, who was eliminated last week.

Joanna is listed as a Actor and Model. If you know her then you know she's mostly a bikini model, although this month she'll be in Playboy sans bikini. Judge Bruno Tonioli's comments on Joanna's talents are shared by many viewers, "You are a love goddess. A High Definition feast for the eyes." On another occasion he gushed, "It was like watching a butterfly quietly gliding over a pine meadow. Gleaming, beautiful, weightless." She has been second in the judge's scoring all season (Kelly is last) and on more than one instance the judges said to Joanna, "you belong in the finals." Got that audience? This girl is not just a beauty, she can dance. Yet, she was eliminated last week while Donnie and Kelly continue clogging. You're probably wondering, what does clogging have to do with blogging?

Just this, the best and most talented don't always win. There are unique circumstances, chance meetings, good and bad luck, if you will, that play into the final outcome of, well, everything. As I peruse the bloggesphere and my social networks, especially LinkedIn, I see a lot of bloggers bemoaning their lack of readership. Stop whining, it serves no purpose. Joanna knew she was much better than Donnie and Kelly will ever be, you could see it on her face, but she was gracious and accepting in the face of injustice. To those who wrote the show to express your outrage, you need to relax and stop acting like, I almost hate to say it, one of Joanna's boobs.



My advise to those who are suffering under the weight of low-readership is to keep writing. Stop the self-pity and don't try to force the action. Advertising, while it can give you a short-term boost in readership, is not as effective in gaining a loyal audience as having strong opinions delivered through quality writing that is enjoyable to read. Persistence is a virtue. I think I read that somewhere? There are no guarantees in dancing, blogging or life (duh!) so keep doing your best and accept the fact that maybe the masses will love you and maybe they won't. Maybe the stars will align and maybe they won't. That's not important. What is important is that you do your best everyday and not act like one of Joanna's boobs.

Steve

Tools of the Trade

Steve Hartkopf - Wednesday, November 18, 2009

We shall not fail or falter; we shall not weaken or tire…Give us the tools and we will finish the job.   - Sir Winston Churchill

 

In my book Communication Wins, I write about message structure, types of messages, communication strategies, gaining credibility with your audience, audience analysis and many other topics that matter to writers.

 

One of my favorite chapters is Chapter 14 – Tools of the Trade. Below is an updated version of an excerpt from that chapter. Learn to use these tools and I guarantee that your writing and speaking will improve.

 

Compare and contrast: An apple and an orange are both fruits. They are comparable and alike. However, they are also different. They have contrast in their appearance (red versus orange), outer skin (smooth versus rough), texture and taste. You can increase your listeners’ understanding of one feature by highlighting its opposite. For example, we can better understand wisdom by illustrating foolishness.

 

Repetition: Repeating and summarizing concepts can help your audience grasp important concepts, experience emotions, or heed your call to action. Ministers, coaches, and motivational speakers often use this technique to drive home key points.

 

Metaphor: A metaphor is a game of pretend. A metaphor pretends that something is something else. A word or phrase that describes one thing is used to describe something not normally associated with that word or phrase. For example, “Her heart melted with compassion when she saw her tiny son struggling to tie his shoelaces.” Obviously, her heart did not “melt” in the literal sense.

 

Euphemism: An inoffensive or indirect expression replaces words that may be considered offensive, impolite, harsh or shocking. Saying someone “passed away” is a euphemism for “died.”

 

Simile: A figure of speech that makes a direct comparison between two unlike entities using the words “like” or “as.” For example, “She’s smart as a whip.” Similes can create vivid associations in your audience’s mind. Similes are like garlic; they should be used sparingly. The reason to use them sparingly is because they tend to require the audience to pause and think about the comparison and that can interrupt the flow of your message.

 

Symbolism: Symbolism evokes (but does not describe) an emotion, concept or idea. You can use the symbolism of something concrete to represent something abstract, such as a flag to evoke the concepts of duty, loyalty and honor; a light bulb to represent the concept of a brilliant idea; a company logo to represent brand attributes, or a lion to represent bravery and strength. Icons and emoticons are modern-day symbols. Symbols are often more effective than perfectly constructed sentences.

 

Concrete/Abstract: Concrete terms and words refer to things we engage through our senses. Something may be “hot,” “green,” or “loud.” Abstract terms may be just as real but less available to our senses – freedom, love, success and sexism (any ism) are examples of abstract words that have real meaning but are undetectable through our five senses.

Steve


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