Archive for the ‘Lead Generation’ Category

Chief Marketing Officers Want Instant + Effective Reporting on Marketing’s ROI

You can’t manage what you can’t measure.   And, what and how you measure counts most.  Hard metrics vs. soft metrics need to stand out.  The new marketing agenda requires ROI to be measured on short-term payouts and not as part of the overall marketing budget that caters to long term objectives such as product introductions, brand awareness and other umbrella activities.  Since you need  to separate it, we’ve done it for you.

The new JAZD reporting system:

  • Saves you Management Time
  • Gives you Metrics that Matter
  • Provides Lead Nurturing Intelligence at your Fingertips

The dashboard below demonstrates your payout.

jzd-get-results-3-sm

  • You get details on the number of touch points to your potential customers and fine-tuned metrics.
  • We’ve calculated your dollar value for you.  You don’t have to pore through reports.
  • We have categorized your online leads with behavioral data and other elements to help you transition effectively from marketing through the sales cycle.

Posted by on November 15th, 2010 No Comments

Posting Video – 5 Tips to Maximize Your Video Campaign

youtubevid!

Video adds immediate value to any marketing campaign. It’s an engaging means of communication and if done well can enjoy a life long after its initial marketing campaign is completed.

Here a few suggestions where to use a video after its campaign has run its course.

  • Social Media: Don’t forget to update your corporate Facebook or Twitter status to include a link to your video and a quick sentence telling your fans what they’ll get out of watching it. Include it on your company’s LinkedIn page. You could add a link and a call to action in your status or you could create a discussion forum for your customers based on the subject of your video.

  • Newsletters/Emails: What benefit to customers does your video spotlight?  Create a newsletter or an email campaign around this topic and send it to your customers and prospects down the line.

  • Blog: Embed your video in a blog on the same topic. Including video to a blog not only adds content value, it also adds value from a visual standpoint.

  • Other People’s Blogs: Add a google alert on the subject of your video and see if you can find people writing about a similar subject. Leave a thoughtful comment – no dry marketing speak allowed – along with a link to your video.

  • Press Releases:Don’t forget to include your video in a press release! Studies have shown press releases with video included see more views. It’s great for SEO purposes as well.

Have other ideas on where to post video? Let us know in the comment field below – we always love feedback!

Posted by on July 21st, 2010 13 Comments

Corporate Facebook Pages: What Not To Do

facebook-logo

I was an early adopter of Facebook.

Actually – to date myself in Internet terms – I was an early adopter of Friendster. And then MySpace. And then, finally, once it opened up to more than just college students, Facebook.

Now, I’m not bragging about my Social Media savvy here. Rather, I’m admitting that I am an Internet Addict. And because of my addiction I’ve noticed a few things . . . a few things about how companies use Facebook to engage a wider client audience.

Here are a few practices I suggest avoiding.

Posting a Zillion Times a Day

No one is that interested in your company’s goings-on. Not even your mother.

For the most part people don’t use Facebook to find out what’s new with the corporate sites they’ve trusted enough to “Like.” In fact, they have little tolerance for too much interaction with companies.

It’s a personal tool, so when you use it for your company you’ve got to keep that in mind and respect that your fans have let your company into their inner circle.

I suggest updating once or twice a day in pre-determined and thoughtfully spaced out intervals. What does that mean? That means don’t post twice, right in row, at lunch time. It means post once around lunch and a second time as you’re leaving for the day.

Think about how you check your own personal Facebook and take your own habits into consideration. I check mine around lunch and then when I leave for the day. If your corporate Facebook follows suit then I’ll see both of your posts before they’re buried in my news stream. And I won’t be frustrated that I saw your company’s posts when I snuck on to Facebook on my iPhone around 10 a.m., and then again at 3 p.m. You get the idea.

Including a Link and Only a Link in Your Status Updates

Think about it. If you were in a business meeting and someone asked you about what your company has been up to lately, you wouldn’t write down a link to a recent Press Release and mutely pass it over to them, would you? If you would, then we’ve got more to discuss than Facebook practices.

When given a chance to show personality, passion and enthusiasm for your company, TAKE IT.

Sounds like a no-brainer, right? But you have no idea how many corporate Facebook pages I’ve seen that just throw links up, SMACK! in their status updates. No explanations, no engaging text. Just the ugly URL to whatever it is on which they want to direct their audience to click. Avoid this.

No Logo

Now I know internally everyone thinks the picture of a seedling depicts the potential growth your clients companies could see if they just sought out your services. But I can guarantee these potential clients with whom you’d like to engage – as well as a fair share of your current clients with whom you already engage – will have no idea who your company is or what it is your company does.

If you think your logo needs a bit of dressing up to attract Facebook fans, by all means (after discussing it with your marketing team) dress it up a bit. Just don’t forget it.

What are some Facebook tips you suggest?

Posted by on July 15th, 2010 27 Comments

SEO, SEO, SEO

SEOtraffic

Enter any online-online marketing help forum or discussion group and you’re guaranteed to see a myriad of posts about the subject.

“SEO Help!” “Long-Tail Terms, Worth It?” “Five SEO Tips to Drive Traffic.” You get the idea.

Well for those of you who swear by the Three-Word-Rule you can give yourself a big ol’ pat on the back for being right . . . for the most part.

Chitika, an ad network (you may know them from their iPad tracker), recently published results showing that there is a “SEO Sweet Spot.” And according to their findings, most organic search traffic was the result of three-word searches.

Chitika came to this conclusion after looking at a sample of 41,103,403 impressions of search engine traffic coming into their network between June 13th and 19th.

“Within the sample, 10,710,579 impressions – some 26% of all search traffic – came from three-word searches,” Chitika posted. “The next top word counts were two-word (19%), four-word (17%), and finally one-word (14%). “

And if your query is longer than five words you can forget about it being effective. According to Chitika “Any query beyond five words will see dramatically lower traffic, throwing into perspective just how fragmented traffic from long queries really is.”

Chitika also took a deeper look into whether there was a correlation between the word count of a query and a visitor’s intent when it comes to advertising click rates.

Turns out there is.

In the case of advertising click rates; having 5, 6, and 4 word search terms is best.

The conclusion? There is a definitive window for success in search optimization and it lives between three and five word long queries.

Will this change how you about the way you approach SEO terms?

Posted by on July 14th, 2010 82 Comments

On-line Display Advertising & Lead Generation Under Siege at B2B Publishers due to Poor Results

In a recently completed survey of 78 leading B2B advertisers across multiple vertical markets the message was loud and clear. B2B advertising is simply not working for the advertisers. Traditional on-line B2B venues like Trade Publications, Content Portals, On-line Directories and other such destinations are falling well short of expectations and advertisers are tired of empty promises. JAZD’s data shows that the vast majority of B2B advertisers in the study strongly felt that results of on-line programs with traditional venues was well below their expectations. Sentiment among advertisers was strong that traditional venues need to embrace better and more interactive ad functionality, higher volume qualified traffic and guaranteed results if they are going to slow the shift toward general search engines like Google.

B2B Advertisers stating that current on-line programs were NOT meeting their planned expectations along key dimensions:

  • 88.5%  - Cost Per Action (CPA)
  • 54.9%  – Cost per Impression (CPM)
  • 78.2%  – Leads into the Pipeline
  • 75.6%  – Top of the List Priority Display Ad Placement

One of the more interesting feedback points that came through load and clear was that as perceived value rapidly diminishes the cost for advertising was continuing to increase in all traditional venues. B2B Advertisers were very specific in their needs and recommendations for their advertising venue partners.

  1. Guaranteed CPA’s and CPM’s
  2. High qualified traffic volumes
  3. Free listings and offerings for immediate value
  4. Ability to contextually present content with our products
  5. Directory functionality that highlights vendor and product value
  6. Ability to directly measure the results from an investment with a traditional B2B publishers

In general, it is safe to say that little has changed in the world of on-line advertising with B2B content publishers, including improved results. Traditional B2B publishers have been reluctant to invest in developing state of the art interactive ad platforms for their clients. They have failed to embrace technology and traffic generation capabilities and have leaned on the traditional value of their “brand” as the reason for advertisers to spend their tight budget dollars with them. This is simply not working any more as books get thinner and unique visitors and relevant page views diminish. B2B Advertisers are now demanding more and they are getting it in other venues.

In a related study over 53% of the publishers readership no longer looks to them as a viable place to seek out information when they are making a considered purchase. B2B Publisers sole existence is really to bring buyers and sellers together in a trusted environment that has a direct imapct for both parties. B2B Publishing needs a new approach and a new answer for this critical problem. While B2B publishers tangle with the maladies of paper based publishing (if you need any refresher course on this one simply pick up a recent trade publication or newspaper and note how thin it really is) you wonder who if dealing with the growth potential of the future and will the incumbent management size the day or simply yield the market to Google and the industry portals. That topic is for another rant on another day.

JAZD was built simply for the expressed purpose of offering B2B content publishers another option to exceed B2B advertisers increasing expectations.

JAZD operates multiple on-line B2B markets under the brands: jazdchemicals.com, jazdenergy.com, jazdtech.com, jazdfoodandbeverage.com, jazdconstruction.com, jazdtelecom.com, jazdmanufacturing.com, jazdhospitality.com , jazdelectronics.com, jazdoilandgas.com, jazdpackaging.com where buyers can easily find and the right product/service.  JAZD establishes partnerships with B2B content publishers that allow them to focus on their brand while mutually building traffic and revenues.

Posted by on January 22nd, 2009 19 Comments