I continually come across people who are adverse to digital marketing! Or more the point, don’t understand the area so pretend its unimportant or not beneficial to business development or marketing strategy, this is especially the case when I mention social media or YouTube! Bit too childs play! but there is no point in putting your head in the sand when it comes to advances in technology, I know your CD collection did look good and you could see what your CD’s had at a glance blah blah blah! but now you own an iPod don’t you? All your music in your pocket, organised in any number of ways! and I bet you even tell your friends about how good it is! You know who you are! I like the feel and smell of a book as well but sorry! They’re next to go!

My point is that people consume mass media in many different ways, so the emphasis should be on content not the platform or device, although you should reach out to as many platforms and devices as possible. Whether it be your YouTube viewing or Facebook account most have an accompanying app on the phone, pad, games console, tv etc, this was just the beginning of the trend, even the most avid newspaper readers are beginning to obtain their news over an iPad, kindle, Samsung Galexy, Blackberry Playbook etc. In order to push marketing messages to our customers we need to be aware of major shifts in media consumption. Unfortunately for some of us this means learning about platforms we don’t yet understand. By identifying or creating good content that relates to our brand or product we start to see where our clients might be. All too often, the only thing someone hears when I talk on the subject is facebook or twitter and then immediately become disinterested, I am talking about a platform, it could be anything and will almost certainly be different for every industry. The major point in the social media arena is that the target has already profiled themselves, they have given you the vitals, there hobbies and interest, where they’ve been on holiday. Yes I did mention social media, sorry, I know a good portion of my readers are now thinking how does that fit into B2B? Linkedin is social media! You can can spend hours and pennies going to conferences, events networking but you also can quickly search a self generated database where employees have already stated who they work for, what their title is and what they do for the company. I agree there’s nothing better than a face to face and that’s where you make sales but in a world where we are continually improving efficiency to save time, we all manage to fill that void with something else and the fact remains that many of us don’t have the time to leave the office.

So lets make this as simple as possible and lets start at the beginning as so many people are attacking the wrong link in the chain. Here’s a short case study, not from an online store, that’s too easy! This is a case study from a job I did for a auto locksmith start up. Firstly ask yourself where are your customers? what are they doing at the time the need your product? what are their needs? A friend of mine had set up as an autolocksmith, his customers were identified as one off users of the service that often would be in an emergency situation, locked out of their car, away from home, lost keys etc. Having this information not only answered a lot of Digital Marketing questions but also design questions enabling them to channel the spend where it would be most effective. The service needed to be found quickly and on the platforms people would turn to when they needed this type of service. For the short term marketing strategy PPC campaigns were essential, the ad needed to be displayed on the first page of search engines, there was a high probability customers would be on a mobile device so the website need to load fast and display the information needed to make contact as well as the services offered. Directories would be important and test were made to see which, if any would produce a return on investment.

Ok, point made, a marketing strategy where I didn’t suggest a facebook page or any form of social media and I might add, one where offline marketing methods such as a yellow pages ad brought in no extra business.

Website Optimisation

RT @seohimanshu Two Powerful ways to reduce bounce rate http://bit.ly/hSc5E0 #bounce #rate #google #analytics
20 Ways to Make Money Blogging in 2011 dotsauce.com/2010/12/21/20-… via @DotSauce
Ultimate list of landing page conversion optimization tools raventools.com/blog/the-ultim… via @RavenTools #CTA
6 tips for an effective ‘call to action’ – Small Business Blog from Microsoft – Site Home – TechNet Blogs : http://bit.ly/houNMG
RT @unbounce Your Landing Page Sucks! Here are 10 Examples That Don’t… http://bit.ly/glRcyl
Ultimate list of conversion optimization tools raventools.com/blog/the-ultim… via @RavenTools
Landing Page Ideas To Explode Business http://shar.es/0zSTV
An introduction to Google Webmaster Tools glennward.co.uk/2010/03/an-int… @glennmward #SEO #glennward posted 17.03.80
7 ways Google Analytics can help when redesigning your website – iCrossing http://bit.ly/dC9TBK

Digital Advertising

6 Predictions for Digital Advertising in 2011 mashable.com/2010/12/21/adv… via @mashbusiness @mashable #DigitalMarketing #DigitalAdvertising
Marketing Strategy Planning managersblog.net/marketing-stra…
Europe’s concerns over behavioural advertising intensify | News | Marketing Week marketingweek.co.uk/disciplines/di…
How to turn consumer inaction into action: five tips econsultancy.com/blog/6673-how-… via @Econsultancy
Integrating marketing activity across all your channels: a #JUMPchallenge post econsultancy.com/blog/6632-why-… via @Econsultancy
Interesting post – 6 Best Practices for Developing a Mobile Marketing App in 30 Days. http://hub.am/avsVok

SEO

The Top 10 Internet & Search Marketing Trends for 2011 | Web SEO Analytics http://bit.ly/eWCxbx
Blog commenting useful for SEO? http://bit.ly/c9L7oP #seo #sem #keywords
RT @sejournal 2011 SEO and Social Media Checklist | Search Engine Journal http://bit.ly/dMFtnT
Web 2.0 : SEO : ERP : CRM : SCM : Software: SEO Via Updated Content – Affect Google Rankings? http://j.mp/fXrv0V
Seven Free SEO Tips to Boost Your Site’s Traffic – http://b2l.me/avfzum
Intoduction to Search Engine Optimisation – SEO Learn at lunch glennward.co.uk/2009/04/intodu… via @glennmward #seo
RT @crearegroup Will Google TV impact SEO? http://bit.ly/9qciER
Currently reading Drive traffic increase conversions http://www.terry-heffernan.info/drive-traffic-increase-conversions/1156/173/
Beyond SEO, getting the right traffic for your product glennward.co.uk/2009/06/beyond… @glennmward glennward.co.uk #SEO

PPC

ppc campaigns organic search results vs the paid ones http://bit.ly/efEpu2 #ppc #search
PPC Blunders- Know, Avoid And Earn http://bit.ly/fWTnV6
Understanding the science of PPC digital marketing – Make Pay Per Click work for your business glennward.co.uk/2009/11/unders… via @glennmward #ppc

Analytics

Text analytics: a key trend to watch over the next three years | Forrester Blogs http://bit.ly/ggdccY
New blog post: Monitoring your B2B online marketing efforts using Custom Reporting in Google Analytics http://bit.ly/eMurEg
Web Analytics – Art or Science? http://bit.ly/DmkuQ via @jonnylongden
Introduction to Google Analytics and other website analytical tools glennward.co.uk/2009/11/introd… via @glennmward #seo #google #analytics
Tracking social media conversions using Google Analytics http://dld.bz/y76R
Tracking HTML5 Video with Google Analytics (and goodbye to Flash) | Elisa DBI http://bit.ly/aRFYz8

Social Media

Revolutionize Your Social Media Strategy In 2011- 39 Useful Tips To Follow http://bit.ly/ftPwDe
Email is dead. Long live email. gfktechtalk.com/2010/12/07/ema… via @GfKTechTalk #facebook #email #gmail #socialmedia
Social Commerce: Active Social Media Users Say Companies Can Do More with Social Networks http://bit.ly/9eJ1hM
RT @infinigraph Fan Value, Customer Loyalty and Social Conversation http://post.ly/15PwB
RT @bulletproofmar: Get your visitors to buy by pressing the right emotional buttons. #B2B social media #Digital http://bit.ly/8tABRR
Currently Browsing: Social Media Exposure: Better Than Ads and Cheaper, Too. http://is.gd/fR2Mg
Good set of simple social media marketing rules! RT @GreenBuzzAgency 8 Rules: Marketing in the Music Industry http://bit.ly/9u1kMv
Why social media needs to learn the marketing basics econsultancy.com/blog/6516-why-… via @Econsultancy
RT @GreenBuzzAgency Using Facebook as a Strategic Marketing Channel http://bit.ly/bJJnD6

Misc

10 Cloud Computing Expectations for 2011 – http://bizcloudnetwork.com/2010/10-cloud-computing-expectations-for-2011/
Consumers are moving to the cloud, time for the music industry to follow gfktechtalk.com/2010/12/10/con… via @GfKTechTalk #music #cloud #download
RIM boss challenges Apple’s HTML5 video claims | NetBenefit Blog http://bit.ly/aAJtuC

I was recently asked to write a piece on Analytics at an intermediate level but this also ties into a stage we have arrived at with some Google AdWords training I’m doing so I’ll explain how analytics can pick up where AdWords left off and also how you can use Custom Reporting to monitor other offline and online marketing efforts.

If you are using AdWords for Business to Business advertising one issue is that data drops off at a certain point as you have no checkout and no price or profit attributed to a click which effectively means no calculation of the Return On Investment. This drop off can be picked up using Analytical software and in particular I shall talk about how we can do this with Google Analytics. The main point to note is that with an end action we can track an entire visitors journey from pre-entry to exit or call to action. With a checkout and a piece of code this purchase price is reported back to your Google Account. The replacement in a B2B case is a call to action and this might be in the form of an email link, request for proposal, click to download etc. As long as the visitor has something to click on then they can be tracked. The long winded process of tracking user journeys if you were using a limited stats package would be to look at the keyword that provided the visitor, tie in the key information that allows you to identify them at different stages of the journey and estimate whether they called to action. With Google Analytics Custom Reporting you are able to do far more. I would recommend using this to track individual marketing efforts and Goals to concentrate on more specific calls to action such as a click on an email link or download. Let’s take your social media efforts for example. You could set up a custom report that tracked all of your social media traffic, the site penetration of each and time on site ie. did they actually stay and read something.

Here’s a step by step guide to such a report,

In the example below I set up a new report, the first Metric I am concerned with is the Pages/Visits, to keep the dimension simple I chose Page Title as I will know exactly the page I am looking at. Once I have established the pages visited I would like to know site penetration so I add Page Views, I next want to establish whether they actually found this page interesting so I add Time On Page, finally I am concerned with where the user left the site so I add Exits.

After creating your report I just want to show you a little hidden extra that gives you a better overview of your traffic. When you look at the report you should see something like this.

This is fine for a top level overview but if you’re keen to delve deeper, click on the Pivot View above the top right hand corner of the table. You will be presented with a chart cross referencing traffic sources, the different Metrics are still available and you can change these with a simple dropdown menu.

You could take this one stage further and apply it to your offline marketing efforts, this is a bit of an eCommerce trick but why not publish an advert in a magazine with a unique URL, a unique landing page that could only be found had the person read the advert.

My good friend Merrin Wake emailed me the other day for some advice on getting traffic through to her blog secretsofmotherhood after reading a few pages I established that identifying the readership in this situation would be slightly different than I am used to as the users are not business users and not consumers. Merrin said that the blog was set up with social media tools, in this situation is key to go an extra mile when talking to your readers. Establish your voice and create conversations with your readers, this way passive absorbers of your information start to become your brand advocates. It only takes a couple of power users of your website pushing your message to feel like you have a mini marketing team working for you and you are laying down the foundations to facilitate some viral marketing.

Remember that no two people browse the Internet in the same way! We all have our favorite platforms, our favorite browser plugins and we all use social media in different ways so make sure your blog caters for as many of these people as possible not just your preferences. Share buttons with limited clicks is essential for the reader to spread the word. Subscribe Fields for those who wish to be sent a email digest.  Follow and Like Buttons for those who passively watch you through social media platforms. RSS feeds (in particular Feedburner) for those who will watch you from their email client.

Link exchange,
Obviously, search engine optimization should be at the for front of your mind not just during site design but on every post, every keyword and every heading. Link exchange is vital to your SEO and I don’t just mean sending out annoying emails to similar sites asking to swap links I mean, where are your potential readers? Are they on Facebook? If so, have they joined a group in which you can start a discussion that links back to your pages, can you get them discussing and spreading the conversation to various other platforms such as digg, delicious, yahoo buzz etc? Inbound links are important not just for traffic but also for search engine bots to find your site. Outbound links have to quality sites have similar effects.

The paid way
If your site is making some money then the quick way is to incorporate some pay per click adverting or direct advertising on websites you would like to be seen. There is an art to this so don’t take it on lightly but here are some starting points to get you thinking. See my Digital Marketing posts.

Is it really that scary? no! the biggest hurdle is convincing others its just a communication tool and a very big one at that! in which case we can just apply conventional marketing practices that are right for that particular industries and push marketing messages (simplified) Did we get this confused when we were introduced to email? or the TV was invented? its just a big online communication that the majority of us are using in some form or another…. not just the kids! and not just the techies! in fact you’re probably using social media and don’t even know it!

Also see,
Understanding the science of PPC Digital Marketing

The other day I did an hour session on the use of Google Adwords and like most of my explanations related it back to conventional marketing practises and thinking about purchase process.

So, it is an extremely large subject and some might say its an art to perfect pay per click for a particular industry, product or brand. For more specifics on keywords and your campaigns see this article. If you break it down to it’s absolute basics and suggest some theory that could be applied to any campaign and in fact could be used to refine or revisit your existing campaign. The aim is to pick up your potential customer from an online space where you know they are specifically looking for something. Your advert should then suggest to them that you have what they are looking for, in as few steps as possible the customer will arrive in front of your product where they will find the right price and enough information to make a purchase decision. Of course it’s not that simple, product awareness often happens way before the online experience, the competing ads on the search engine may grab their attention more, they might feel you have the right price but not enough information to make an informed purchase decision or visa versa, they might research the product on your site but purchase from the cheapest vendor, they might even drop out during the checkout process. The point is that the drop out could occur at any point in the purchase process and so they are many important aspects to consider when designing your pay per click adverting and it’s not just about cleverly chosen key words and advert. You should also be looking at your SEO, landing pages, website content, price reviews, targeting, the list goes on! One is not successful without the other so think of PPC as a small part of your Digital Marketing Strategy.

I’ve written some beginners guides to SEO to here, which should also help with your landing page content.

I have written a guest post on the GfK Techtalk blog on the many ways in which we are using video in a Market Research and what the future might hold. obviously not given away all the juicy bits but hopefully its a good read.
p style=text-align: left;a title=Innovations in video improve business decision making href=http://www.gfktechtalk.com/2010/08/26/innovations-in-video-improve-business-decision-making/ target=_blankRead it here/a/p
p style=text-align: center;
object classid=clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000 width=480 height=385 codebase=http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0param name=allowFullScreen value=true /param name=allowscriptaccess value=always /param name=src value=http://www.youtube.com/v/jH5fmL3sJrg?fs=1hl=en_GB /param name=allowfullscreen value=true /embed type=application/x-shockwave-flash width=480 height=385 src=http://www.youtube.com/v/jH5fmL3sJrg?fs=1hl=en_GB allowscriptaccess=always allowfullscreen=true/embed/object

p style=text-align: left;Also see the a title=GfK FilmWorks Youtube Channel href=http://www.youtube.com/user/GfKFilmWorks target=_blankGfK FilmWorks YouTube Channel/a/p
p style=text-align: center;code /code/p

I have now a couple of times been asked how tweeting using a hashtag can be applied to the event / conference / debate situation. I was at a debate the other month where I experienced this for the first time. A hashtag to the event is given out before hand so that everyone in the audience or even those who are interested in the event could search the keyword and see a stream if you like from the people in the room or as I mentioned those people who could not be in the room but would like to comment on what was going on. The result was a conversation around the conversation / presentation and a commentary for those who couldn’t attend without too many rude interruption to the preceding. Often someone in the audience may have a comment but aren’t quite brave enough to develop this into a question, this provides a harmless way for them to offer their thoughts to those thinking along the same lines.

Also see,
Introduction to Search Engine Optimisation
Beyond SEO – The right traffic to your site
An Introduction to Google Webmaster Tools
Introduction to Google Analytics and other website analytical tools
Introduction to Pay Per Click Campaigns
PPC Pay Per Click Marketing and purchase process
Integrating online video into your digital marketing strategy

One of the biggest issues companies face with their marketing at the moment is the “because I can” attitude. Social media platforms has made it very easy for Joe Bloggs to set up a Facebook Page, Start a Twitter account etc without first considering what you are setting out to achieve or does it really fit into the marketing strategy for that particular brand, product, service or industry.

The aim of this post is to encourage you to stop and think before leaping head first into an arena that is far more complicated than copying and pasting content into online spaces.

I’ll firstly start by simplifying how I see Digital Marketing and please bare in mind this is not taking into account traditional Marketing metrics or an individual companies Marketing strategy which also should be taken into consideration when addressing that should I, shouldn’t I? question.

The above shows my idea of a rough guide to the nuts and bolts that build up your Digital Marketing Strategy. Note, one is nothing without the other supporting it.

A video is merely a file sitting on your computer until you give it a platform and a means to be spread by it’s viewers and this is the case with all your content be it news articles, data or PR. As I mentioned it has become increasingly easy for Joe Bloggs to set up a Facebook page, start a Twitter account or post something to YouTube but pause for a second and ask yourself does this “because I can” attitude to marketing really satisfy your marketing objectives? Ask yourself a few key questions and at the same time refer back to the marketing and branding strategy, business development objectives, PR efforts etc does setting up numerous social media accounts that remain dormant really let your clients know you understand social media? No, not really! Does multiple versions of you companies graphics and variations on messages increase and improve you brand awareness amongst your clients? No, it probably damages your brand!

The message is, understand what it is you are doing and choose the right nuts and bolts that support your pre existing strategies, don’t do things because it’s easy, you can or because everyone else is doing it!

Also see,
Introduction to Search Engine Optimisation

Beyond SEO – The right traffic to your site
An Introduction to Google Webmaster Tools
Introduction to Google Analytics and other website analytical tools
Introduction to Pay Per Click Campaigns
PPC Pay Per Click Marketing and purchase process
Integrating online video into your digital marketing strategy

Webmaster tools provides a window into how google sees your site. Webmaster tools shows you how many pages in your sitemap are indexed in the Google directory, if your site and it’s pages contain errors, internal and external links, site crawls, page rank etc. Use this set of information for constant monitoring of your site especially if your websites information changes on a regular basis. Also use it to continually improve your sites Search Engine Optimization and improve the page rank.

Site Configuration
Sitemaps are your list of sitemaps that you have under that webmaster tools account, URL’s Submitted are all the URL’s in you sitemap that have been submitted to Google and URL’s indexed are the pages that have been submitted by Google to their directory.

Your site on the web
A very powerful tool is the search terms and positions you achieved that didn’t necessarily lead to a hit Top search queries. This adds a new dimension allowing you to see the search terms that are performing well and the pages that might need attention in order to entice visitors. There are other powerful tools on the Internet that provide similar information but webmaster tools are easy and accessible. Links to your site provide a quick snapshot of the links in the Google directory that link to your pages, note: this will not include every site on the Internet as you will see by having a look at you traffic sources in Google Analytics. Keywords is a quick look at what the Google Bot has picked up as your most frequently used words and terms on your site and should reflect the content you wish to promote. Internal links should include the majority of the hyperlinks that link to pages within your site.

For SEO improvements the Diagnostics Crawl errors are useful to identify dead links, page errors, not founds, unreachables etc. Always try and keep these down to zero if it’s possible on your website.

As I mentioned, there are many detailed softwares and sites that perform these functions, see my links page under SEO for more details.

Sitelinks are established by google, you may have seen them under the brief description in search listings. Once established you have the option to remove the irrelevant links, for example, your contact us may be identified as one of your sites most frequently visited page but is not necessarily the landing page you want listed in your sitelinks.