Traditional Marketing Hurts Your Brand

Think about the kinds of companies you deal with regularly and don’t trust. Who are they? Do they offer these services?

  • Cable & Internet
  • Credit Cards
  • Insurance
  • Car Service
  • Government

Now think about the kinds of companies that regularly send you letters in the mail. Who are they? Are they on this list?

  • Cable companies
  • Internet providers
  • Credit card companies
  • Insurance companies
  • Government agencies
  • College

Is it absurd to think that there is a link between the two? While many organizations are resisting transition to digital marketing, which offers many advantages over traditional marketing, they may be inadvertently affecting their brand image negatively in their customers’ subconscious.

When was the last time you actually called a phone number you saw on a billboard? Those ads are expensive and they offer no method of accurately tracking ROI. Sure, you can ask customers how they heard about you, but only a few will actually trace their interest back to your 36-foot wallpaper advertisement.

In contrast, how often do you make fun of billboards you see? Now if you are the marketing strategist for a brand, why would you want to take that kind of risk with absolutely no measurable return?

Buy an ad on Google Adwords and voila, you know exactly how many people see it, exactly how many people click it, and exactly how many people make a purchase that is traceable back to that investment (aka “conversion”). The percentages will look low (typical conversion rate in my company is less than 3%) but think about your billboard: on a metropolitan freeway it probably boasts more than 1 million viewers in a day. So your exposure is huge and if you get a dozen people to say “I saw your billboard” in a month, well… do the math and your conversion rate is approximately 0.00004%. It would take 900,000 customers saying “I saw your billboard” to match my 3% ROI from a single, targeted Adwords campaign. Does 900k sound realistic?

Let’s use another example. Say you put an ad in the local newspaper. It’s relatively cheap, and with a single new customer it’s more than paid for itself. For example’s sake let’s say you get three new customers that confirm they saw your ad, and you make $200 from each. Still though, a newspaper in a medium-sized city might circulate to 100,000 people. So three new customers is only 0.003% of your exposure. Invest in digital marketing, set your exposure level to 100,000 (because yes, you can do that — you can even define gender, region, age), and if you get a 0.8% return (low-end), that’s 800 new customers. Business is suddenly booming, isn’t it?

Traditional marketing is not worth the money so don’t risk your brand on it.

A Business Writing Sample

Call it bragging. Call it showcasing my talents. Call it self-promotion. Call it arrogant. Whatever you call it, here it is: A writing sample for potential recruiters to see and think to themselves “Gee, we could sure use a guy like this on our team.”

Hello Division Beta,

As you’ve probably already seen if you’re watching Google Analytics (which I’m guessing that you are, based on conversations in Basecamp), your site received a very dramatic spike in user traffic on Christmas and the immediately surrounding days. The entire Organization Alpha site saw a traffic spike from some promotions that we ran, but most impressive were the numbers within Division Beta. In fact, several of your program pages “topped the charts” during this five-day period. Further, visitors weren’t just coming from another part of the Organization Alpha site, they were beginning their journey on these pages (~97% entrances on program pages). This indicates that the marketing that took place just before Christmas certainly brought a lot of eyes specifically to your content.

The attached PDF shows you this trend: six pages in the top 10 from Dec 23-27, five of which are program pages.

I should also draw attention to the average time users spent on these pages: Most were less than a minute – 40 to 50 seconds – and users proceeded to either the Division Beta homepage (~40%), the Organization Alpha homepage (~17%), or they just left the site altogether (~19%) after that time. These are discouraging numbers. However, given ~1000 hits on each program page (just during this five-day period), the ~6.5% going to brochure downloads and ~4.5% going to request more info are still pretty good indicators.

Based on my observations of all this and more data, I’d like to recommend moving the “Download Brochure” and “Request More Info” buttons to the very top of the page for Program Gamma and Program Delta. The reason being: users are not scrolling down and, as a result, are not seeing these buttons on these pages since they are located further down the page than on other programs. Moving them to the top would bump the red “Register Now” button down, but I think it would be a beneficial exchange since visitors are not feeling compelled to register (registration pages saw very little activity during this period), but are willing to take the less-committed step to learn more. You might also consider moving the Organization Alpha/Partner Epsilon logos to the bottom of the Program Gamma page instead of the top.

This is all just FYI – if you’d like any further details/insights, just ask! I won’t take any action on my recommendations above unless given clear instructions to do so.

Attached are a couple of screenshots that depict, based on the average screen resolution of our web traffic, what users are seeing without scrolling.

Thanks!
—————————-
Daniel A Fowler
Strategic Web Consultant
[e] dan.fowler.web@gmail.com
[t] @danielfowler
[w] http://www.fowlertown.com/daniel

Social Media Advice – Direct Sales Pitch

Dear Client,

If you want to make a post to Facebook, Twitter, and/or LinkedIn, please consider revising the two major flaws in your message: (1) It’s way too long by social media standards, and (2) It’s nothing more than a direct sales pitch. If this kind of message was going to succeed, then why do people nowadays skip all the commercials on their TiVo?

You can post a long message if you keep it entertaining, and you can make a direct sales pitch if you keep it very short. But as long as users get to pick & choose what they look at and skip all the rest, any blatant marketing advertisement longer than a simple catch phrase will fail to generate any buzz.

[this blog entry was not recovered in full after the Fowlertown blog crash of 2011]

Facebook Fan Pages Being Misused

“I <3 SLEEP”

The above is an incorrect title of a Facebook Fan Page. There are hundreds of examples of misnamed Fan Pages, this is just one example.

Just look at how Facebook worded the process: “Become a fan.” Put that in a sentence with your Fan Page title:

“Become a fan of [insert Fan Page title here].”
“Daniel Fowler became a fan of [insert Fan Page title here].”

If your Fan Page title does not sound right in these two statements, it is wrong. Unless “I <3 SLEEP” is the name of a t-shirt business or an underground TV show, then “I <3 SLEEP” should be a Group, NOT a Fan Page.

Fan Pages are designed to be for organizations, bands, celebrities, activities, etc. In a word… nouns. When you start titling a Fan Page as a full statement or verbs or anything that isn’t a noun… you should be creating a Facebook Group, not a Fan Page.

Please stop naming your Fan Pages incorrectly. And stop joining incorrectly named Fan Pages. Let’s defeat this epidemic of amateur content.

Facebook Fan Page Fraud

OK, so it’s not fraud EXACTLY… but it’s darn close and it is the single most aggravating thing in the [Facebook] world to me. Fraudulent representation of Fan Pages.

Chick-fil-A has an official Fan Page on Facebook. They advertise it on their website, so you know it’s legit.

Look at their fan count. As of this being written, 582,871 people have become fans of Chick-fil-A. Is that all? Apparently, yes. Actually, no. There is another Fan Page claiming the same title, just with the “F” being capitalized [incorrectly]. This page has an additional 405,618 fans at the time this article is being written. That is a combined total of 988,489 fans of Chick-fil-A. Account for Facebook users that are probably fans of both pages (why would you do that?!), and Chick-fil-A should still have well over 800,00 fans.

Now… Facebook has in place the option to report fan pages. One of the valid reasons for reporting, as listed in the dropdown menu of choices, is “Fake page.” I urge everyone reading this to go to the fake page, report it as such, remove your fan status, and become a fan of the real page. If you love Chick-fil-A, you’ll do this. Benefit from coupon giveaways, store opening announcements, and avoid the lame status updates from the fake page like this one: “Chick-Fil-A wants to wish everyone a HAPPY DAY!” posted May 12 at 8:18pm. GAG.