B2BMktgHdbk PDF
B2BMktgHdbk PDF
B2BMktgHdbk PDF
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 B2B Marketing: 1978 vs. 2008 .................................................. 5
Chapter 2 10 Tips for Increasing Landing Page Conversion Rates ............ 10
Chapter 3 Are White Papers Dead? ......................................................... 14
Chapter 4 The 6 Key Components of Effective B2B Offers ...................... 19
Chapter 5 Should B2B Copywriters Avoid Jargon? ................................... 24
Chapter 6 5 Steps to Building a Large and Responsive Opt-In E-List
of Qualified B2B Prospects ......................................................................... 29
Chapter 7 5 Modern Myths of B2B Marketing ......................................... 34
Chapter 8 Are Businesspeople Devoid of Emotion When Making
Buying Decisions? ...................................................................................... 39
Chapter 9 Marketing with Case Studies ................................................... 44
Chapter 10 4 Simple Steps to Writing SEO Copy That Both Your
Prospects and the Search Engines Love .................................................... 49
Chapter 11 What Works Best for B2B Lead Generation: Inbound or
Outbound Marketing? ............................................................................... 54
Chapter 12 Using Web Analytics to Drive Online Sales ............................ 59
Chapter 13 5 Ways to Boost B2B Direct Mail Response Rates ................ 64
Chapter 14 A New Copywriting Formula: the 4 Cs .................................. 69
Chapter 15 Whats Working in B2B Marketing ........................................ 74
Chapter 16 7 Rules for Content Marketers .............................................. 78
Chapter 17 Business-to-Business Headline Writing Clinic ........................ 82
Chapter 18 The More You Tell, the More You Sell ................................... 87
Chapter 19 The Trouble with B2B Marketing .......................................... 92
Chapter 1
B2B Marketing: 1978 vs. 2008
I started my career in business-to-business (B2B) marketing in the late 1970s,
and by the early 1980s, I thought I had a pretty good handle on the basics of B2B.
I also didnt see where B2B was likely to change much. So I believed I could
continue to use the methods Id learned during my first few years for the rest of my life.
Boy was I wrong!
First came along the fax machinethen the personal computerthen cell
phonesthen white papersthen the Internetthen search enginesthen
bloggingthen Webinarsthen social networksand suddenly, B2B marketing had
become a brave new world, one that few fully grasped and most of us struggle to keep
up with.
Here, as I see it, are some of the biggest changes that have taken place in B2B
marketing during the past three decadesand also, what has stayed relatively the same.
1The death of industrial marketing. It used to be called industrial
marketing, and the trade publication serving the industry was called Industrial
Marketing.
Gradually, Industrial Marketing changed its name to Business Marketing and then
to BtoB. And today, those of us who market products and services to businesses are
business-to-business marketers.
2From tactical to strategic. Before the Internet, B2B marketing had relatively
few choices. So planning campaigns was simple and straightforward. Youd create a sales
Chapter 2
10 Tips for Increasing Landing Page
Conversion Rates
Theres lots of buzz about blogging, viral marketing, social networking, and other
new methods of generating eyeballs and traffic online. But all that traffic wont make you
any money unless you can convert those unique visitors to leads or customers.
Depending on whether you are selling a product directly from your landing page,
asking visitors to download a free white paper, or promoting a Webinar or
demonstration, conversion rates can range from as low as one percent or less to as much
as 50 percent or more. Here are 10 keys to writing landing pages that maximize online
conversion rates:
1Build credibility early. People have always been skeptical of advertising,
and with the proliferation of SPAM and shady operators, they are even more skeptical of
what they read online. Therefore, your landing page copy must immediately overcome
that skepticism.
One way to do that is to make sure one or more credibility builders are clearly
displayed on the first screen the visitor sees. In the banner at the top of the page, use
your logo and company name if you are well known; universities, associations, and other
institutions can place their official seal in the upper left of the screen.
Within or immediately under the banner, put a strong testimonial or three above
the headline on the first screen. Consider adding a pre-head or subhead which
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Chapter 3
Are White Papers Dead?
Its often the case that when a marketing technique is overused, it gradually loses
its effectiveness over time. When that happens, usage drops off, and prospects are
consequently no longer bombarded by the technique. Example: the AOL CD mailings.
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Chapter 4
The 6 Key Components of Effective
B2B Offers
How important is the offer in business-to-business marketing?
Answer: very. I have seen numerous tests in which a simple change of offer has
increased the response rate by 25% to 900%dramatically improving ROMD (return
on marketing dollars) for the advertiser. The best of these winning B2B offers share six
common characteristicsand to lift your response rates, your offers should, too.
Winning offers:
1Are different or unique. The best offers are fresh and new. When copywriter
Bill Jayme wrote the direct mail packaged that launched New York magazine, he
proposed a sweepstakes. Sweepstakes have long been used to sell magazine
subscriptions, but none has ever offered the prize Jayme dreamed up: dinner at Gracie
Mansion with New York Citys mayor.
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5Are easy to take advantage of. You should make it as easy and convenient as
possible for the prospect to accept your offer.
How? To begin with, offer multiple response mechanisms: toll-free phone
numberfax numbera hyperlink to a landing page (see
www.thelandingpageguru.com)e-mail even (gasp!) a postal address. Different
prospects respond in different ways.
Create response mechanisms. In a direct mail package, enclose a fax-back form or
business reply card (BRC) with your letter. If you want customers to enclose payment
with their order, or privacy is a concern, also include a business reply envelope (BRE).
In a print ad, consider including a coupon or a bind-in BRC opposite the
advertisement. On the Web, landing pages should ask for the minimum information from
the prospect when collecting leads. If you are building your opt-in e-list, ask for name
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
5 Steps to Building a Large and Responsive
Opt-In E-List of Qualified B2B Prospects
Many B2B marketers want to cut marketing costs by shifting more of their
marcom budgets from traditional direct mail and paper newsletters to e-mail marketing
and e-newsletters. But if you want to ramp up your online marketing program, you
should start building a large opt-in e-list of customers and prospects now.
Why? Because without a significant online house file (list of opt-in subscribers),
you can only reach prospects in your niche by renting other marketers opt-in e-lists,
which is hardly cost-effective: each time you want to send another message to your
industry, you have to rent the list againat a cost that can easily reach into the
hundreds of dollars per thousand names.
Some marketers buy databases containing e-mail addresses of business
prospects in their niche market. This can work if you are sending highly targeted e-mails
on extremely relevant topics and offers to narrow vertical e-lists.
But when you send e-mail messages to non opt-in lists, you are mostly asking for
trouble. CAN/SPAM does not prohibit e-mailing to people who have not opted in. But
people on non-opt-in e-lists are much more likely to register SPAM complaints than
those on legitimate opt-in e-listsand far less likely to buy from you.
So the best online strategy for B2B marketers is to build your own opt-in e-list of
subscribers. Doing so eliminates the cost of renting opt-in lists while preventing the
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Chapter 7
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The myth: Social networks are the most important and most widely used B2B
marketing tools of our time, and have overtaken Websites in importance.
The reality: Millions of people have embraced social networksand millions of
others dont use them at all.
Yes, social networkingalong with mobile marketing and SEOis clearly one of
the hot marketing methods, gaining a disproportionate share of media attention.
But the truth is that many of your customers dont participate in these social
sites, and have to be reached through conventional Websites and other traditional B2B
marketing methods.
Social media has yet to prove itself as a medium that can out-monetize a
Website, says copywriter April Parcher. When prospects are searching for something
specific, they dont turn to LinkedIn or MySpace first. They Google it and hunt up the
Websites in that category that seem to be most relevant to their searchand that
provide the most valuable content.
Your Website is your office, the formal place of your business, says copywriter
Susanna K. Hutcheson. Your blog, Facebook, Twitterthese are the water cooler and
the lunch room. Informal places where you make contacts much like the golf courses and
country clubs of the 1950s.
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The myth: E-mail marketing is an old-school online marketing channel and, with
SPAM filters and firewalls, doesnt work anymore.
The reality: It does, despite the challenges of e-mail deliverability.
Marketing theorists dismiss e-mail marketing as outmoded push or interruption
technology. Their belief is that prospects shun communications sent to them, and
instead respond only to communications they initiate and control, like social media,
blogs, and online search.
But research shows that people still pay attention and respond to their e-mail. A
study at Loughorough University found that users take action on average in less than
two minutes upon being notified that a new e-mail is waiting for them.
The most effective e-mail marketing, however, may not be renting outside e-lists
of B2B prospects. Two reasons why it doesnt work so well: its expensive, and people
tend not to buy from strangers online.
A better strategy is to build your own opt-in e-list, typically by offering a free enewsletter subscription or other valuable free content. According to a report by
Forrester Research, opt-in lists (such as e-newsletter subscriber lists) retain 49 percent
of their subscribers over timemore than double the retention rate of compiled or
harvested e-lists.
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Chapter 8
Are Businesspeople Devoid of Emotion
When Making Buying Decisions?
There are two schools of thought concerning marketing to business and technical
buyers.
The first school says, Copy should be as short as possible, direct, and to the
point. Bullet lists are better than sentences and paragraphs. Dont do any selling. Just
give business buyers the facts, data, and specifications they need to make an intelligent
decision about buying your product. No need to state the benefits. They already know
they need the product and why. You just have to convince them that your brand is
superior to other products in the category you compete against, and that your product
satisfies their applications requirements.
Advocates of this rational school of B2B marketing believe that business
prospects, at work, are largely rational beings that make logical decisions based on facts.
They strive to keep written communications as short as possible, in the belief that all
businesspeople are extremely busy with no time to read.
Business-to-business copy should be completely fact-based, says LT, a veteran
B2B marketer. And the less there is to read in your copy, the greater your response
rates will be. Long copy in B2B gets tossed in the trash. LT also advises that copy
written for B2B audiences should sound professional rather than conversational. These
are educated people, he says, and you must talk to them on their own level, which is
high.
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Chapter 9
Marketing with Case Studies
According to copywriter Heather Sloan, case studies are often more effective than
brochures and traditional sales collateral. Why?
Everyone loves a story, explains Heather. An old adage says, A picture is worth
a thousand words. Never did this wisdom ring truer than in sales conversations and
marketing pieces. Stories paint pictures. Stories evoke emotions. Stories are memorable.
Stories give your presentations sticking power. The easiest way to tell a marketing story
is by case study.
A case study is a product success story. It tells how a company solved a problem
using a specific product, process, method, or idea. As with other marketing techniques,
case studies fluctuate in popularity: while almost any company can profitably market
with case studies, an informal survey of B2B Websites shows that most companies dont
take full advantage of the power of case study marketing.
While case studies need not adhere to any one formula, here are some guidelines.
The average case study is relatively brief: one or two sides of an 8 by 11-inch page, or
approximately 800 to 1,500 words. More complex or in-depth case studies can run 2,000
to 2,500 words.
An effective case study makes the reader want to learn more about the product it
features. Its a soft-sell proposition designed to compel your prospects to request more
detailed information. If youve mirrored the readers problem successfully, the case
study will propel them deeper into the sales funnel and closer to buying.
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Chapter 10
4 Simple Steps to Writing SEO Copy
That Both Your Prospects and the
Search Engines Love
Its ironic: SEO/SEM consultants are springing up all over the place, like
dandelions in spring. Yet none of them seem to agree much on the best practices,
methods, and standards for optimizing Websites.
As a result, Ive found that the worst thing about optimizing my Website for
search engines, which I am doing now, is the often conflicting and even contradictory
advice I get from the various SEO specialists I hire or talk with.
For instance, one SEO consultant who looked at the Website for my freelance
copywriting business, www.bly.com, gave me these very specific guidelines for writing a
page about my freelance copywriting services optimized for the keyword phrase
freelance copywriter.
Specifically, his instructions were:
Freelance copywriter should be the first words on the page.
Freelance copywriter should be included near the beginning of the first sentence.
Freelance copywriter should be near the end of the second paragraph.
Freelance copywriter should be in a subhead between the second and third
paragraph.
Freelance copywriter should be near the end of the third paragraph.
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Chapter 11
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Category
Lead quality
ROI
Articles
Inbound
Blogs
Inbound
Books
Inbound
Direct mail
Outbound
E-mail marketing
Outbound
Organic search
Inbound
Pay-per-click
Outbound*
PR
Inbound
Print advertising
Outbound
Seminars, live
Outbound
Social networking
Inbound
advertising
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Category
Lead quality
ROI
Telemarketing,
Inbound
Outbound
Tele-seminars
Outbound
Outbound
Yellow Pages
Outbound
Webinars
Outbound
Websites
Inbound
White papers
Inbound
inbound
Telemarketing,
outbound
*I rank pay per click and other advertising as outbound because you are proactively placing advertisements to attract
new business.
Chapter 12
Using Web Analytics to Drive Online Sales
Here is a conversation I have at least twice a month:
Client: I want you to write copy to generate more orders on my Website.
Me: Whats the conversion rate of the page?
Client: We arent really sure.
Me: Why not?
Client: We dont really measure it.
Me: Then how will you know whether our new copy has improved it?
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Chapter 13
5 Ways to Boost B2B Direct Mail
Response Rates
Im somewhat of an anomaly in the freelance copywriting business. I say this
because I am one of a small group of copywriters who write a significant amount of
direct mail for two distinct and different markets: consumer mail order marketers and
business-to-business lead generation.
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Brand
Content
10%
25%
75%
90%
Offer Content
90%
75%
25%
10%
Approximate Cost
Per Sale
$50 - $100
$200 - $250
$400 - $600
$800 - $1,000
The wisdom of stressing the offer in advertisements has been known for well
over a century. In 1902, three years before he wrote his ground-breaking paper on the
theory of relativity, a young Albert Einstein ran newspaper ads offering his services as a
tutor in math and physics. The ads prominently offered a free trial lessonshowing
that free offers really are a smart marketing tactic.
5. Develop a powerful USP. The idea of the unique selling proposition or USP
was originated by Rosser Reeves in his book Reality in Advertising.
Reeves said that to sell your product, you had to clearly differentiate it from other
products in its category, and the best way to do this was with a strong USP.
According to Reeves, a winning USP has to show how your product is different or
better than the competition, and how this advantage benefits the buyer. In addition, the
advantage and its benefit must be significant, not trivialstrong enough to get
prospects to buy your product over others.
I heard a great story the other day about a USP for auto insurance. An insurance
agent told parents of teen drivers that, if they bought auto insurance from him, he would
give them his home phone number. If the teen ever was too drunk to drive, he could call
the agent at home, and the agent would come pick him up and drive him home to ensure
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Chapter 15
Whats Working in B2B Marketing
At my request, Editor Hallie Mummert conducted an online survey of Target
Marketings readership. The goal: to find out what the best practices are in businessto
business marketing today. Heres what we found
To begin with, 94 percent of Target Marketing (TM) readers are involved with
B2B market. Fiftythree percent do B2B onlingy, while 41 percent do a mix of B2B and
B2C.
** Brochures are not dead. New media pundits like to observe that print is dead in
general and in particular, brochures are an antiquated marketing medium. But 9 out of
10 TM readers use brochures in some form. Seventythree percent still have traditional
printed brochures for their products and services. Eleven percent use white papers
instead of brochures to communicate product information. Six percent have brochures
that are available for download only but are not print documents. Only one in ten TM
readers agreed with the statement brochures are old hat and we dont produce them
much anymore.
What this means is that your competitors more than likely have sales brochures.
These brochures are used in inquiry fulfillment and by salespeople. Without a solid
brochure for your company, product, or service, you are at a disadvantage in your
inquiry fulfillment and sales efforts.
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Chapter 16
7 Rules for Content Marketers
If you asked me to name the two biggest trends in businesstobusiness
marketing today, Id have to say social media and content marketing. And social media
seems to work best when its based on content.
In a recent survey of Target Marketing readers, 83 percent said either that
content marketing compliments and works in tandem with traditional marketing
communications (71 percent) or that content is replacing traditional marketing as the
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Chapter 17
Business-to-Business Headline Writing
Clinic
Its true that consumer direct response headlines can get pretty clever, daring,
and even outrageous. But powerful headline writing is just as important in businessto
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
Which B2B Medium is Right for You?
Today we are faced with a bewildering variety of choices when it comes to
choosing how we will communicate with our prospects. Let me tell you what I know
about making that decision.
Although print advertising has fallen out of favor, it can still be effective,
especially when targeted to niche audiences. So should you consider advertising in a
magazine?
Lets say we were selling valves and our target audience was chemical engineers.
There are at least two major trade publications serving that field, Chemical Engineering
and Chemical Engineering Progress. Most chemical engineers read at least one of these
two publications. So a space ad running in both would make sense.
The rule of thumb is this: if a target market has its own trade publication, thats
probably a cost-efficient and effective way to reach them. So trade publication
advertising is a medium worth testing. Start with a quarter-page ad, and if it works, try a
half or full-page advertisement.
On the other hand, say you wanted to advertise valves for sulfuric acid plants.
Only a tiny fraction of the readers of Chemical Engineering and Chemical Engineering
Progress work in sulfuric acid plants. So advertising in those publications would give us
a huge amount of wasted circulation: most people who read the ad are not prospects.
Whats the solution? See if Chemical Engineering or Chemical Engineering
Progress can identify subscribers by type of plant or operation they work in. If the
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Chapter 22
The Power of Proof
Ive noticed a dangerous trend in business-to-business marketing: a lack of proof
in the copy for product claims made in advertising.
In the IT marketplace, for example, the most pervasive marketing document is
the white paper. Many white papers are great at explaining how products work. But
because they are educational, and not sales oriented, they do not bother to prove the
performance claims made.
Dont make this mistake in your business-to-business marketing
communications. When you say your product is the fastest or most reliable, prospects
are instantly skeptical, because everybody claims the same thing.
All product claims in marketing copy and content should be backed by proof.
Here are some ways to convince wary buyers that what you say is in fact true:
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Chapter 23
Lets Get Physical
In the good old days before CDs, I used to record speeches I gave on marketing
and duplicate them audio cassettes.
Whenever a prospect asked for information on my copywriting services, Id send
a brochure, client list, and samples of my work. But Id also enclose one of the audio
cassettes.
This inquiry fulfillment trick was amazingly effective. Often prospects would
tell me, I listened to your cassette on the way home from work, and it convinced me
to hire you.
Why was enclosing an audio cassette such a powerful marketing technique?
My competitors were all sending potential clients envelopes with nothing but
paper in them. When prospects got my envelope with a 3-dimensional object enclosed,
it got their attention. The audio cassette added bulk to the envelope, which made it
stand out.
Whats my point? Giving the prospect something tangible is a field-tested
marketing technique that we know works. When you go to the pet store to look for a dog
for your kids, for example, the store clerk takes the puppy out of the cage and puts it on
the floor for your children to play with. Why? The salesperson knows that petting,
touching, and handling the product is more likely to result in a sale than just looking at
it in its cage.
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Chapter 24
Whats Working in E-Mail Marketing?
We hear how e-mail is becoming obsolete and social networking is morphing into
the medium of choice for online communication. But in the business-to-business
community, it hasnt happened yet. Seventy one percent of B2B firms use e-mail
marketing.2 And e-mail is the method of commercial communication preferred by 74 percent
of all online adults. 3
What are the best practices in e-mail marketing today? To begin with, instead of
renting lists and sending your e-mails to cold prospects, get people to opt-in to your e-list.
Then concentrate on e-mail marketing to your house file. E-mails to house file lists generate
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Chapter 25
Tactics and Tips for Marketing B2B Services
The best piece of advice I ever got on marketing services was one word from the
head of an IT consulting firm who said: Productize.
Products are tangible and services are intangibles. Tangibles are easier to sell
than intangibles. Therefore, the more you can make your service look like a product, the
more tangible it will seem, and the easier it will be to sell.
If you are a consultant, dont just sell consulting, which seems nebulous and
open ended.
Most likely, you consult on the same 5 or 6 problems over and over again.
Package these as consulting products. For instance, one of my clients offers a service
where he helps facilitate IT retrospectives, a technique used in IT project management.
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Chapter 26
The Evolution of B2B Marketing
One of the worst things about growing older is that you risk becoming obsolete.
Im in that quandary right now.
You would think the older you get, the more experience you have and therefore
the more you know. Its true you do know more about and get better at the things you
already do in my case, copywriting. But at the same time, there is an increasing
number of things you dont do and therefore dont know much about in my case,
mobile marketing and social networking.
I can see this, and perhaps you can too, when you trace the evolution of B2B
selling and marketing over, say, the past 5 decades.
Stage one: features selling. In the early days of advertising, ads concentrated on
the features, the physical facts, about a product. The belief was that the buyer already
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Chapter 27
7 B2B Marketing Myths
Theres a lot of misinformation on many topics, and business-to-business
marketing is no exception. There are two reasons for this.
First, many B2B marketing practitioners prefer to make marketing decisions
based on personal opinion and subjective judgment, rather than tested techniques and
proven principles. The reason most often given: rules interfere with creativity.
Second, many marketing professionals do not have systems in place to measure
web analytics, and those who do often dont know how to interpret the results. Unlike
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http://chiefmarketer.com/direct/news/winterberry-biegel-direct-mail-digital-rise-0126
http://www.the-dma.org/cgi/dispannouncements?article=1590
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http://www.inman.com/news/2011/08/30/number-smartphone-users-jumps-10
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Chapter 28
Networking the Old-fashioned Way
Pinterest. Foursquare. Google Plus. Facebook. Twitter. LinkedIn. Were so
entranced by the possibilities of social networking that we risk forgetting the other kind
of networking that can work so well live, in-the-flesh human contact.
Social networking can reach a wider audience by far. But the impact is not as
memorable as networking with a prospect face-to-face. Rule of thumb: the closer you
can get to the prospect, the better quality the lead. Therefore you should do both
traditional and social networking, and not just the computer kind.
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Chapter 30
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QR codes are effective for engaging customers with your brand. Link the QR
code to a mobile-only discount coupon, relevant video presentation, product
information or other object of value.
Whenever possible, use the recipient's real name in your message so that
it's more personal. Target your message to the known needs and buying habits
of the recipient.
Identify yourself and your brand right up front. It doesnt pay to do anything
else. Transparency in business practices today is the rule, rather than the
exception.
Don't use text abbreviations or all caps for emphasis. But, it seems its not
impolite to use all caps for the call-to-action.
Use text messages without large files like photos whenever possible.
Instead, link to the mobile version of your website, blog or mobile-specific
landing page for images and related information. The Mobile Marketing
Associations Mobile Advertising Guidelines 5.0 states that file sizes should be
less than 15K, and in some cases no larger than 6 kilobytes.
Don't message customers at odd hours of the day or night. No one wants to
lose sleep, or have their dinner interrupted no matter how valuable your offer.
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Avoid Sundays and holiday messaging. Only violate this rule if it's vital to the
marketing strategy and relevant to your target audience.
Never send unsolicited messages (spam) to anybody. Youve simple got to get
their permission first.
Define an objective track your results. Use a mobile-only web analytics service
to track responses. Check out AdMob, Bango or iLoopmobile.
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Chapter 31
Are These Marketing Trends Really New?
With the rapid evolution in marketing technology, todays B2B marketers have
become overly obsessed with finding the next big thing. Unfortunately, the next big thing
often turns out to be nothing. Here are some of todays top marketing trends and my
curmudgeonly take on each.
1.Blogs. A columnist in a computer magazine once wrote that the best thing about
the Internet is that anyone can post to it, and the worst thing about the Internet is that
anyone can post to it.
I used to watch the show Dexters Laboratory on the Cartoon Network with my
kids. In one episode, when Dexters mother is talking incessantly on the phone, his father
rips the phone out of the wall and proclaims, I cant stand another minute of this
mindless gab! That pretty much sums up my feelings about blogs.
There are some blogs that are well thought out and compellingly written. But
those are a minority. Most blogs are, at best, content pollution a lot of jibber jabber.
2.QR codes. Another hot marketing trend today is to plaster QR codes on
everything from postcards to product packaging. I would feel more enthusiastic about
this marketing tactic if I owned a smart phone, which I dont. Certainly I see the
convenience for road warriors. But for those of us who arent mobile and stay at our
desks, Id just as soon enter a URL in my browser or call a toll-free number.
3.Mobile marketing. Again, I dont have the capacity to appreciate any sort of
mobile marketing, because I never go anywhere and therefore dont carry a cell phone.
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