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Jivox Local Marketing Blog

Online Marketing Musts: Email

Every small and medium-sized business should be using email marketing; it’s easy, inexpensive, and extremely effective at boosting sales and nurture client relationships.

According the Direct Marketing Association, email marketing generated an ROI of $43.62 for every dollar spent on it in 2009 – outperforming all other direct marketing channels. And a 2009 Forbes Media study found that email marketing is the second-most effective tool for generating conversion, just behind search engine optimization. Email marketing works well because it’s inexpensive, it builds loyalty and trust with your customers, and can support much targeted messages for certain segments of your email list.

However, there are several rules of “email etiquette” you should follow when launching an email marketing program. Your customers will view the wrong kind emails as spam, while they’ll be happy to receive the right kind.

The right kind of email engages your customers in a relevant dialogue, delivering special offers at just the right times. To make email marketing work, it’s important to remember that most people receive hundreds of promotional emails per month, many with headlines promising “Huge Discounts” or “25% Off Today”, so you need to put some thought into building an email marketing program that will get people’s attention without annoying them. The key to getting your customers to open your emails, instead of just hitting delete, is to start by asking them to “opt-in” to receive your promotional emails.

Build an Opt-In List

As a small business, you can build an opt-in email list by asking every customer to provide his or her email address. If you run a store or local business, ask every customer that comes through your doors to leave their email address, perhaps in exchange for a 10% off coupon or some other incentive. Put up a sign by the cash register explaining this promotion, or ask guests to sign a visitor book on the counter. Online, whenever someone visits, invite them to sign up for “special offers” by leaving their email address. When people complete purchases, always ask them for their email address, and provide a box they can un-check if they do NOT want to receive promotional offers. In every case, make it clear they can opt-out at any time after signing up.

You can also purchase email lists, a popular tactic with B2B businesses seeking to connect with new leads. These lists won’t be as ‘personal’ as one your in-house list, but they can be useful when you don’t have a critical mass of emails in the beginning. Two services that enable small businesses to buy opt-in email lists are Jigsaw, InfoUSA, and DemandBase.

Now that you have your lists in place, it’s time to start sending out marketing emails. Here are five simple steps on the road to more sales.

  • What do you want to say? Start by figuring out the goal of your email campaign. Do you want to present a special offer, such as a discount or coupon? Or, is this more of an informational newsletter describing recent updates and events at your business?
  • Who should receive the email? You can easily segment your lists into groups – current customers, potentially new customers, dormant customers who have not purchased in a long time – and then craft different emails for each group. Any amount of segmentation and targeting you do will boost open rates by as much as 4X – because relevant offers are much more likely to spur people to open emails than generalized ones.
  • Craft your emails. Getting people to open your emails starts with a compelling headline. A time-limited, specific call to action usually works best, such as “20% off This Week Only” or “Friends-and-Family Discount This Week”. Also, make sure your company name appears in the “from” field. If you succeed in getting recipients to open your email, make sure the text is clear and to-the-point (no more than three sentences), and includes clickable links that lead them to your website. Prominently list the details of your offer, as well as a phone number, email address, or other way to contact your company. You can include a small, relevant image – but don’t go crazy with pictures, as some recipients won’t be able to view them. A great way to add pizzazz to your emails is to include a link to a marketing video, inviting people to watch a short, entertaining video about your business.
  • Send your emails. If your list is small enough, you can send out your own emails. Just set up all the emails to go out one-by-one in your draft folder and then hit send all at once. However, it often pays to work with an email service provider for small businesses, such as Constant Contact, iContact, or Vertical Response, which will send out all your emails for you, and then track the results and provide a report on click-through and conversion generated by the campaign. One thing to remember – don’t blitz your email lists, or your emails will lose relevance. Sending out emails twice a month makes sense in the beginning, and certainly no more than once a week.
  • Track the results. Make sure to track how many people opened your emails, and of those, how many then clicked through to your site, viewed your marketing video, downloaded a coupon, or called your 800-number. The best way to get this level of information on your campaign effectiveness is to work with an email marketing service provider, which, aside from click-through and conversion metrics, often provide A/B testing services to find out which specific email headlines and/or offers work the best to drive conversion. If you are sending out the emails yourself, a more rudimentary form of tracking is simply count the number of coupon redemptions or site visits that result from the campaign.

Email is a powerful marketing tool, if you don’t abuse it. Offer your customers relevant offers, interesting information, important updates on your business, and other compelling content via email – and they won’t immediately reach for the delete button.


VideoPages: Add Video to Your Online Listings to Boost Sales

As a small business, you probably already have listings on the main online business directories – Yelp, Whitepages, Yellowpages etc. – and maybe some listings on local or vertically-targeted services like Yahoo Local, Search Local, Angie’s List, OpenTable, or the online business listing service of your local newspaper.

Making sure your business is listed in as many directory services as possible is, of course, a great way to boost your profile. But you don’t have to stop at a text listing with a photo. To really boost engagement and drive more people to your business website, shop, or office, consider adding video content to your directory listings.

Marketing videos work to drive sales. Some 80% of Web users have seen an online video ad, according to a study by the Online Publishers Association. Some 52% of those people took action after viewing the ad, such as visiting the advertiser’s website (31%) or searching online for more information on the product (22%), while 12% went on to make a purchase – giving video ads one of the highest conversion rates in the industry.

Some, but not all, of the business directory services offer the ability to place a short video alongside your listing. Unfortunately, Yelp and Angie’s List don’t yet offer this capability, but hopefully they will soon. Many local newspaper’s websites are beginning to offer businesses the ability to post videos alongside their directory listings for a small fee. Some of the sites offering video directory listings today are Fredericksburg.com, The Star Telegram, and other locally-focused news sites.

On top of driving sales, adding video to your directory listing also helps you build engagement with prospective customers. People are much more likely to watch an entertaining video clip about your business than they are to read a text description of your products or services. (Most people prefer to ’see’ something rather than ‘read’ something.) Whether a consumer is shopping for a new fridge, or an IT professional is looking to purchase a corporate software suite, these potential buyers are highly likely to watch a video about the products they’re interested in before they take the plunge.

Amid the cacophony of directory listings out there today, your company needs to stand out. A video can help you increase positive associations with your brand; people remember funny, engaging, emotional, or entertaining videos long after they’ve forgotten images and text. Video ads provide the opportunity to reach out to potential customers who are ready to buy, giving them a chance to see, hear, and experience your business before calling or stepping out to make a purchase.

What’s more, a marketing video gives you another chance to bring potential customers to the next step in the purchase process through simple direct response “calls to action”. For example, you can embed a URL at the end of your video with a message saying “Click here to buy now!”, or include a link to a downloadable coupon for 20% off. By adding these types of calls-to-action in a video, marketers frequently see a 10-30% increase in sales compared to marketing videos that don’t have them.

Before you add a video to a directory listing, you first have to create a marketing video! You can use a service like Jivox to create a few marketing videos for free. If you need some ideas of content for your videos, try one of these five killer marketing videos you can create on a budget.

Here are a few examples of directory listings from real local businesses that contain videos.

Express Auto Service

Alvarez Construction


Man Cannot Live By PPC Alone. Can He?

by Debra Northart ; featured on Search Engine Land

Almost like being on TV!

Online video is one of the newer ad formats available to advertisers. Advertisers have used video on television for decades, and now video format can be viewed online. If a small business already has a local commercial running on television, the video from that television commercial can be linked to the online campaign for a dynamic means to convey the ad message. If an advertiser website has no video,  Windows Moviemaker and Jivox are just two sources available for creating video for online ad campaigns.  If your ad campaigns are outsourced, have your provider create a video for you! Read the whole story > >


Online Marketing Musts: Online Ads

Online ads are a vital component of any online marketing program. These can take the form of “banner” ads that can contain text, images, animations, and videos – and standalone video ads, which either run before, during, or after online video content. Display and video ads differ from search ads, which are usually text-based and sometimes contain limited images and which are purchased and placed using the online bidding systems on Google, Yahoo, and MSN (Bing).

If you want to purchase some targeted online ad placements, the first step is to create your display and video ads. As a small business, your best bet is to use a free online service to create your online ads. Jivox allows you to create compelling video ads, entirely for free, using easy-to-use editing tools. Services like Google Display Ad Builder or Wave2 help advertisers create banner ads.

 After your ads are ready to go, you’ll need to work with an online advertising network to place them on targeted websites, to make sure your ideal audience sees them. Work with an online ad network that can ensure your ad shows up on locally-, demographically-, and contextually-targeted websites. A few examples of major display ad networks that offer local and contextual targeting include AOL Advertising, Yahoo!, Google Ad Network, ValueClick, 24/7 Real Media, and Burst Media –though these large networks take a bit of expertise to use. (This article offers a comprehensive list of the different display and other ad networks out there today.) A new ad network targeted specifically to small businesses in the B2B space is Inflection Point Media.  Meanwhile, Jivox allows you to place your video ad on a network of over 850 locally-focused websites for as little as pennies per video view – offering precise, zip-code level local targeting. 

The price you pay to run your ad on these ad networks – usually charged on a cost-per-click (CPC), or cost per thousand views (CPM) basis – will vary depending on which ad network you choose, as well as variables such as the level of targeting you want (city-level, zip-code level, behavioral, demographic etc.), as well as the content quality and traffic volumes of the sites where your ad will appear. Whichever ad network you choose, make sure it offers comprehensive reporting; you need to know if your ads are getting clicked on, whether they are driving people to your site or into your store, and whether they are delivering sales. You also want to know which ad creative is working and which isn’t, so you can fine tune offers and ad copy to most effectively engage your audience.

From classic banners to interactive video ads, paid media placements can have a massive impact on sales, especially if your ads include calls-to-action, such as a link to your site, a downloadable coupon, an 800-number, or another way for viewers to reach your business. Online ads are one of the most critical components of a brand-building program. Even if an ad doesn’t drive someone to make a purchase, it still has a lasting impact on them.  When potential customers see your ads, they engage more deeply with your brand and recall it down the line. Try out a few online ads today and see where it leads. You might be surprised at how effective they can be for a small investment.


Online Video Ads Drive Customer Engagement & Interaction

By Diaz Nesamoney, Founder, President & CEO, Jivox

The biggest trend with the Internet is its transition from a passive medium to an active and engaging medium. By that, I mean users can look forward to Internet technologies that deliver much more than static Web pages, search, and blogging to rich media, highly interactive sites, visual, more interesting search (like Bing), and more active media like Twitter. Once this happens, the internet will truly have delivered on its promise of being an interactive medium.

In the online advertising space, ads have been evolving over the last 15 years from the early text to highly interactive video ads. Research has shown that users generally respond better to visual presentations than written text, video is a compelling way to present products and services that are easier to show and harder to describe.

Our industry started with trying to replicate the closest offline medium i.e. TV ads on the Internet. This was a good start, but the results were good but not great as measured by ‘clicks’. The industry has now moved on to make the ads more interesting by introducing interactive elements in the ad. The users actually like interacting with ads rather than just watching them. Advertisers now can actually measure the level of engagement and the response the ad is generating, and if it isn’t generating can perhaps try changing the interactive elements to make it more effective.

Video advertising is a medium for communicating with customers not just the way TV ads did but to become pervasive across the various online ‘channels’ users spend their time on.

For entrepreneurs, this industry is creating a tremendous number of opportunities; however, there are some pitfalls and challenges. Investors have retreated by and large, and so it is hard to come by anyone interested in investing for even the most compelling ideas. Second, the space is evolving very rapidly so entrepreneurs need to be very nimble and opportunistic to take the turns in the industry and rapidly respond with the right solutions. Last but not the least, distribution, i.e. getting a large scale customer base, is critical in order to deliver revenue and profits that the investors require today. This is often challenging, given the small size and footprint of most startups.