If you have an online presence, most likely a brochure web site, you’re very likely thinking it’s not really bringing you any new business. In most cases it’s “I built it, but they never came.”
Some years ago I was in a similar situation, but I discovered blogs. When I realised how powerful they are in
I just had to re-build my web site using blogging technology.
But then I discovered social media: Linkedin, Facebook, Twitter, etc. and found a way to connect those external sites to my own blog. Now every time I post on my blog, my Linkedin and Facebook pages are updated, and an automatic “tweet” is sent to my Twitter account.
If you’d like to learn more, please consider joining me for a 3-hour seminar on business blogging, social media and email marketing I am hosting on April 29, in Oakville, at the e-Spot.
Eric Laffoley, a small business owner based in Burlington, is one of my happy clients said about the last session (or play on YouTube):
As if you needed any more reasons to attend one of my highly acclaimed business training seminars, I am adding another one: attend any Contacts2Clients business seminar in April, May or June, and you will be entered into a draw for a chance to win an Apple iPod Nano with video, a value of $190 (with tax included).
My 3-hour seminar will give you tools and knowledge to use the internet to generate leads, build relationships and close more deals using simple online marketing strategies: business blogging, social media networking and opt-in email marketing.
Click here to learn more about the seminar, see testimonials and to register![]()
Contest rules are simple: attend one of my paid training seminars and each time you attend you will be entered to win the grand prize. The grand prize is one Apple iPod Nano in orange. Only one grand prize will be awarded at the final seminar in June when all attendees’ names will be entered into the draw. Your chances of winning the grand prize will depend on: how many times you attend a Contacts2Clients seminar, and on the total number of attendees. The prize will be drawn by computer at Random.org
A few years ago I redesigned my email marketing consulting web site into a blog. Very soon after the rebuild, I started noticing:
If you type in the words “email marketing consultant” into Google, my blog comes up on page one of search results, and it’s been coming up on page one since November of 2008, when I first tested it.
Today, as soon as I publish on this blog or any of my other blogs, I can be sure that Google will index my new page within half an hour. This kind of response from search engines cannot be expected with a regular, “static” or brochure-type web site.
If you’d like to learn more, please consider joining me for a 3-hour seminar on business blogging, social media and email marketing I am hosting on April 29, in Oakville, at the e-Spot.
See and hear what one of my happy clients said about the last session (or play on YouTube):
Today, March 1st, was designated WordPress Plugin Donation Day.
WordPress is the best blogging platform available, and one of the things that makes it so awesome as a tool for developing rich web sites are the plugins. If there’s anything you need you blog site to do and it’s not available in the base WordPress system, there’s a good chance that there’s a plugin available to extend the usability of WP for you.
Best of all, both WordPress itself and most of the plugins are FREE. Thousands of developers donate their time for fame and glory developing these little — and not so little — chunks of code to make our lives easier, so today is the day to give some love back.
I just donated to:
If you donate to your favourite plugin developer, please tweet about it using the #wppdd hash tag, and/or comment on this blog post.
Email marketing permission policies are still a work in progress for many business owners trying to use this powerful marketing channel to get more clients or sell more products. Business blogging adds another layer of complexity to the matter.
I wrote an article on the subject of Cross-Pollinating Your Blog-Subscription List with Your Ezine List, over at my Email Marketing Blog, please check it out and add your comment, or add to the conversation here.
Did you know that 70% of all sales now start as research on the Internet – are your ideal clients finding you?
Invest 3 hours and I guarantee I will teach you how to:
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Attract Contacts (Generate Leads)
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Build Relationships(or, How to Get Prospects to Know, Like and Trust You)
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Close Deals(or, How to Convert “Friends” to “Raving Fans”)
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Please visit the Contacts to Clients page to learn more and to register.
Boris Mahovac is a very efficient and ethical manager of my blog site. He does much for me that I’m not sure he must, but he is a very caring person as well.
He makes sure that I am aware of gatherings and classes that have an impact on my business. He is more that fair with his pricing and helps with all he can – directing me to business opportunities and making sure my website is current — which is not always easy as I have to have a hand in this procedure and he cannot always get me to comply, so I know I am a trial.
All in all, I don’t know what I would do without him.
Thank you for being there for me Boris.
Sincerely,
Ann Reimanis
Ann’s Wellness Works
I must admit I was a reluctant blogger. I knew if I started a blog I would have to publish on it regularly, and being already busy with publishing my award-winning ezine and working with clients, I thought I’d never be able to keep up.
Good thing I found the time!
Now I not only love it, but I recommend it to all my business contacts and especially my clients. As an Email Marketing Coach I love email marketing, which still delivers a great rate of return on investment, but I’m the first to say: Don’t put all your eggs in one basket! If you’re a solo professional, or small business owner, you must publish an email newsletter, have an auto-responder, write on your blog, have a Facebook profile, do live business networking, etc.
Here are just three reasons why I love blogging:
1. It allows me to reach a much wider audience than by just publishing an email newsletter. Blogs have built-in features that basically “push” my content to search engines and blog directories. This would be hard, if not impossible, to accomplish by a “web 1.0″ web site. My blog site now allows me to reach out to my audience in 3 different ways: using RSS, RSS feed delivered by email, and via ezine subscription. This enables my audience to get my articles the way they prefer.
2. Deciding to build my new web site using WordPress, enabled me to create what I call a blog site: a combination of a static, web 1.0 web site, with the power and versatility of the Web 2.0 blog. My blog site is now search engine optimized, and every time I hit “Publish”, soon after, Google, Yahoo! and dozens of other services get “pinged” and my content gets indexed immediately.
3. Having a blog has also enabled me to attract the right type of prospects. Before starting a blog, my whole web presence was a 1-page “squeeze page.” It served its purpose well — it created a lot of subscribers to my e-newsletter — but after a while I realized that I wanted to attract a different type of prospect, one who’d like to get to know me a little bit before considering hiring me. A visitor to my blog site can now read my articles which build my credibility, so I don’t have to “sell” my self, my content does it for me.
Finally, blogging makes it really easy and fun to connect with other great professionals in the wider blogosphere.
Here are five people I’d like to see write a quick blog post on this topic:
Charmaine Idzerda
Sandy McMullen
Dr. Kiya L. Immergluck
Grace Yvonne Attard
Cheryl Scoffield
I invite YOU, the reader, too, to share here by commenting or on your own blog! Please send me the link if you post on your own blog. BTW, this whole thing started on TypePad.com – get the “official” guidelines.
Thank you Patsi Krakoff, for inspiring me to write this entry.
Blogging for your business is not an option anymore, but does it work better that Email Marketing?
How do you make the these two marketing strategies work together to create a powerful tool to boost your small business or professional practice?
On Wednesday, February 11, I will be asking ask Denise Wakeman and Patsi Krakoff, the dynamic duo also know as the BlogSquad, some tough questions:
These are a few of the questions Patsi, Denise and I will answer for you.
This is a FREE tele-seminar, LIVE on Wednesday, February 11, starting at 3pm EST
There will be no pitching or selling on the call, just pure content.
Seating is limited, so register for your chance to jump start your blogging efforts in 2009, or if you’re already blogging, to find out how to make the most of business blogging to promote your business.
If you can’t make the live event, a downloadable MP3 recording of the call will be available, so register now:
http://www.ibizacademy.com/blogsquad/
See you on the call!
Boris Mahovac – Email Marketing Coach
There’s an interesting discussion on the BlogSquad’s blog about how domains are handled by TypePad vs. WordPress.
A TypePad link to Denise’s blogpost “Tom Antion Reveals The Secrets of HIS Success to The Blog Squad” is http://www.buildabetterblog.com/2008/08/tom-antion-reve.html
On a WordPress blog this would be
http://www.buildabetterblog.com/2008/08/tom-antion-reveals-the-secrets-of-his-success-to-the-blog-squad.html
Now, which link has more keywords?
tom-antion-reve.html <-- this truncated post title
or
tom-antion-reveals-the-secrets-of-his-success-to-the-blog-squad.html <-- the full title
And, btw, you can edit these links, if you wish, to get rid of extra words such as "to, and, the" etc.
Another example, from my own blogsite
http://www.yourezinecoach.com/2008/how-to-make-money-with-email-marketing-send-email-promotions.html is also the permalink to this blog post.
On TypePad permalinks are in the form of: http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/145459/32319900
Ask yourself this: do I want to build links to TypePad and building their Google Page Rank, or my own domain?
I don’t like dealing in absolutes, so I won’t say WP is better than TP, but in this particular area it shines.
What do you think?
P.S.
By commenting on this blogpost, I accidentally discovered another weak spot in TypePad, and it has to do with displaying long links in posts. Take a look at how long URLs are displayed here, in my post, then compare the same in TypePad.