A guide to social media trends, tips and ideas to help you attract customers to your business using facebook, squidoo, blogs, twitter and other popular social media sites.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Social Media Marketing Campaigns That Work

If you've read my post 'But They Like Pies..' you'll understand where I'm coming from here. If not, I suggest you take a couple of minutes to read the post and then head back here when you have the time.

Go on!

Okay, here goes;

The two important things Frank understood about marketing campaigns were who his customers were and what his customers wanted. Sounds simple. It is if those customers are right in front of you like Frank's were in their thousands every Saturday afternoon. He had a captive audience right..?

But you don't, right..?

So you have to understand how to target your customers and how to run an effective marketing campaign to attract those customers to view your product or service. Simple..? Not so.

This is the part most people never get and never will. You've only got to spend a few minutes on facebook or Myspace these days and you'll see every other networker selling their perfect lead generating systema and telling you how they know this will work because they spent thousands of dollars and learned the hard way..blah..blah..blah! Turn the record (showing my age here) over!

I recently carried out a very simple marketing campaign on facebook to illustrate this point. If you haven't seen what I did go to the facebook group LET'S TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN..!!!
Here's a brief outline for you to reinforce the strategy loud and clear. I hope this will give you a few ideas for your own campaigns.

LET'S TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN..!!! was put together to target a specific customer looking to make a fast few dollars without too much effort. The reason I targetted this niche was product based. The product was a second division social media site put together to try to steal some of the MySpace and Facebook market share. The site was never going to compete in my opinion so there was no point in me trying to market the product as superior (great functionality, fantastic groups etc etc). what the site had was a three dollar gift to anyone referring friends. A bribe so to speak.

So the campaign was simple;

1. Target customers looking to smash and grab..(Join, tell a few friends to join, make a few hundred dollars in the process and never use the site again.) By the way, the site had FREE sign up and took less than five minutes to enrol so was perfect for this campaign.

2. Teach these customers a simple step by step duplicatable system to follow and get them to pass on the same information to their friends (and do this fast as like most facebook users they were likely to join the group and never come back). I did this with ten simple topics posted on the groups discussion board.

3. Profile the group to make this strategy clear to all. I decided NOT to promote the site at all (even though I would ultimately benefit from anyone signing up beneath me or my enrollees). Visit the group to see how I do this if you haven't already done so.

4. Use facebooks viral marketing platform to market this to a large audience.

Why do this..?

The long term strategy!

The long term strategy here was two-fold;

First, I wanted to see who would follow the simple system I had set up in the group. Who was teachable in short and who wanted to work with me. I decided rather than chase people to work with me on a project with real value and one where I would be investing a lot of time to offer a no risk, simple system which anyone could follow for FREE with a small investment of time and effort. I guided the whole process, produced scripts, action plans and ten very simple steps which I posted within the group to show people how to promote this opportunity at no cost or risk to themselves. I gave them quite a few tools to build a business online in a matter of minutes and then sat back to see who would take them from the bag. And a few did. And many more didn't as you'd expect.

Second, and more importantly, I wanted to see what movement we could get from one social media site to another. Why? because of the long term plan to move customers to ZenZuu (a new social media site which combines facebook, MySpace and some elements of E-Bay all under one roof). I'll talk more about ZenZuu in a later post but for now take it that the site is worthwhile and I needed a strategy to promote it and move socialisers across the web 2.0 pass.

Marketing is as old as Adam and you only have to look in the big book to see that telling someone to do something is the worst possible approach. Tell them to do the opposite and you'll get results; Eve taking the apple, Pandora's box, the list goes on ..wet paint! don't touch!

So, I used a very simple marketing approach within the group LET'S TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN...!!! to move people across to the site by telling them not to go there, in fact don't even follow my link to the site, follow your friend's link and then take the money and run..don't hang around!

Did it work..? what do you think.

But for ZenZuu I needed a different strategy, a long term strategy to take people there, convince them of the value and keep them there for the long haul. So, I needed them to trust me, to understand that what I would show them would have value and that I had the knowledge to be able to teach them how to attract their own followers to the site.

How did I do this..?

You'll have to drop back in to find that out when the campaign us well under way.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The Story Of Peter And Paul

Take a quick look around the vast social media landscape taking over the internet right now and you could soon start to feel just a little bit dizzy. Nineties style internet marketing approaches such as email marketing, hit and run sales strategies and mass market vampire marketing campaigns are thankfully long gone.

But there's a new ugly and equally off putting monster emerging on the horizon and if you've been on Facebook, MySpace, YouTube or Squidoo for a little while you're sure to have come across it at least once already, maybe a thousand times if we're being honest here..

It's what some misinformed networkers seem to believe is successful duplication in network marketing but it's far from it. It's bad replication at best. At worst it's like the return of the dead..

You know what I'm talking about..

Some guy posts a video or sets up a facebook group claiming they can show you how to produce thirty or forty leads per day for your internet marketing system and how they know what it's like to be struggling in MLM because they struggled, in fact they spent thousands of dollars until finally they came across this unique system and now they want to share it with you because they really do care about you and if you just put your name in the form right there at the ..blah..blah..blah

Mike Dillard, Ann Sieg, Randy Gage, the list goes on and the one thing these guys all have in common is their ability to be original. So don't try to replicate them but duplicate what they do.
Still not convinced? Okay, well before you follow in the monster's footsteps maybe you should hear the story of Peter and Paul...

Peter and Paul were brothers who I knew when I was a small boy living in Manchester, England. They were twins in fact. Identical twins. They had red hair, pale, spotty skin and bad teeth from drinking far too much coca cola which they bought by the litre using their mother's rent money. They had few friends and spent most of their time together, like the proverbial pees in the pod. Even so, they hated each other. Being brothers, twins, had done nothing to bring them closer to one another. What others disliked about them as a pair, they despised about each other as individuals and they spent their time together trying relentlessly to get the upper hand.

Peter was the elder of the two by just over three minutes and he used this simple truth to lord over his younger brother wherever and whenever he could, insisting that his name came first in the class register despite it's alphabetical disposition and taking his turn before his brother at the rear of the dinner queue, the bus queue and the queue to kiss Kate West for a pound every Friday behind the school bike sheds.

Paul accepted this fate with increasing bitterness until finally one day the bubble burst and all hell broke...

You see, Paul was greedy. He loved his food and could eat like a shire horse all day and everyday. His favourite food was spaghetti bolognese which was one of two choices every Thursday in the school canteen (the other was cheese pie if you can believe that!). The system suited Paul to be behind Peter on Thursdays. Peter hated pasta as most of the kids seemed to do and so by the time it came to Paul you could be certain there was always a large panful of the stuff left to pile up high on his plate.

And that's the way it was most Thursdays for around a year or so. A pile of spaghetti piled around twelve inches high covered with as much processed parmesan cheese as Paul could shake from the plastic container.

Then one Thursday something fairly ugly happened which conveinced me never to pretend to be something that I'm not...

Peter and Paul took their usual place in the dinner queue, waited their turn with as much or as little patience as they could and when they finally arrived at the pasta dishes, full to the top and brimming with bolognese sauce, Peter turned to Paul and handed him a plate. 'Here brother..' he smiled, as the rest of the school turned from their seats to watch..' I'll help you pile it on high'

'Thanks' Paul nodded, a little bewildered 'don't forget the parmesan'

'I won't' Peter smiled again taking hold of what looked like the parmesan dispenser and shaking it all over the top of the pasta, mountains of it, covering the whole of the pasta with a creamy yellow glow, a fine creamy yellow glow...

The brothers took their usual seats at the back of the hall and placed their plates on the table. Peter took a small bite of his cheese pie and then turned to watch as Paul lifted a huge spoonful of pasta and forced it into his mouth, shoveling more and more down towards the back of his throat the way he always did.

Then suddenly..

Paul began to choke, violently, coughing and spluttering like an old man on his death bed. We found out later that Peter had switched the parmesan and replicated the container at home the evening before, filled it with a mixture mouldy cheese, chillies, ground peppers and seven or eight cloves of ground garlic.

The mixture was so strong and repugnant that it caused Paul's body to go into shock and before being taken away to the nearby hospital he had covered most of the schools teaching staff with a splattering of puke and bolognese sauce.

He recovered a couple of days later but left a lesson for every single person in the room that day. Sometimes, what we think looks like parmesan is something completely different.

So, if you're trying to be something that you're not in social media do it in the comfort of your own living room with the pc turned off...

Be yourself. Be unique. Be entertaining. Be honest. Be the best you can be and learn to be even better.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

But They Like Pies...

If you're trying to use social media like facebook, MySpace, Twitter and YouTube to grow your business there are two simple marketing truths to keep in mind;


Know your product
Know your customer


It's that simple right...?


So why are so many people making the same mistake over and over again and failing to either know their product or know their customer or if they do they just can't seem to match the two together. Need proof..?


Take a look out there on the web 2.0 horizon and you'll see almost every Tom, Dick and Sally trying to sell their next big thing, the pre launch of some never to be missed, once in a lifetime opportunity or the same online marketing system with the same tired, old script to the same tired bunch of sad and sorry networkers. Come on guys, give me a break and try something different.

If you're marketing a product realise what you have and who wants to buy it, then target that profile of person and make your product precious so they'll come banging down your door to get it. If you're selling lots of different products then maybe they don't all suit the same person, so you might need to look around just a little..


Make your own mind up. .. but before you do I guess I should tell you about an old guy I knew back in the 80's called Frank Ramsbottom (his friends referred to him Rams-Arse in a brotherly kind of way, the way they do in this part of the world).


Frank worked as a printer in a factory in the town and had done so for the last thirty five years, five days a week Monday through to Friday at twelve hours a day and had missed less than a handful of days in all those years. Once, when his daughter was born and the second time when his wife had been taken ill and he had been forced to learn how to cook, clean and iron in the space of three days. Quite an achievement for a man back in those days. (Okay, okay..so maybe we still struggle from time to time).


Frank could teach you anything you wanted to know about printing, he was a tried and tested expert, been there, done that. If you were new, they put you to work with Frank. If you were old, you sent people to work with Frank. It was that simple...


But Frank's passion was a small wooden kiosk huddled beside the main stand at the local soccer ground where he spent his Saturday afternoons. It was no bigger than a garden shed with a currugated tin roof that made a sound like a badly tuned steel drum when the rain fell on it in Winter. Even so, Frank had made it his home since the sixties, painting the walls in the team colours and sticking pictures up of his favourite players over the seasons.


It was unique and Frank had made it that way.


So if you really want to understand product marketing you need to understand what Frank Ramsbottom knew about pies...


In 1984 the club had it's most successful season for almost twenty years. They reached the last eight of the FA Cup, sold a couple of young players into the top flight to raise some much needed cash and when the last game of the campaign arrived they needed a draw to secure promotion to the second division for the first time in the clubs history.


In preparation for the new season in the second division, the club decided to appoint a new marketing manager by the name of Roger Rodriguez if I remember right, who rumour had it had helped Chicago Sting and a couple of other US Indoor League clubs mount a massive media campaign and create a huge and fairly wealthy following of supporters at the height of the indoor league's brief exposure to American sporting life.


Roger arrived at the ground a week or so before the final game of the season and quickly put his stamp on the place; changing the colours of the turnstile gates to match the club strip, installing a new state of the art music system that could be heard right around the stadium for the whole ninety minutes and agreeing a three year contract with a local seafood supplier who agreed to supply the club with pre-packaged prawn sandwiches to replace the traditional offering of meat and potato pies sold by Frank Ramsbottom from the small, wooden kiosk at the side of the main stand throughout the game.


Frank made his point as you would expect a man of his years to do, explaining to Roger that his customers liked pies 'I don't think they'll do prawn sandwiches' Frank stated.
But like a lot of marketing experts, Roger went in his own direction and decided not to listen to the man at the coal face.


When the final game of the season arrived, a crowd of almost 12,000 people descended on the ground, packing themselves in like cattle and singing an array of celebratory chants for the first forty five minutes of the game as the home team took an early lead in the game and looked right on track to secure promotion come the second forty five. When the players and referee left the field for their usual break mid way through the game the crowd descended on Frank's kiosk, queuing ten deep in the cold and shouting, singing and cursing the way soccer supporters tend to do when they're huddled together. Things seemed fine at first, there were a couple of grumbles and a few minor comments and complaints but most of the people handing over the cash took the pre packed prawn sandwiches and said very little.


As the players took to the field for the second half of the game a mighty roar reverberated around the stadium. Things were looking good and the club semmed on track for a lucrative future in the elite second division...


Ten minutes from the end of the game the opposition scored an equalising goal and the crowd went a little quieter. Things began to feel just a little tense.


As the final few minutes ticked away the opposition threw everything they had into the game and the ball seemed stuck in the home teams half of the pitch.


Finally, with only seconds remaining, the opposition scored a winning goal and the referee signalled the end of the game. The club had lost its chance of promotion.


The crowd turned towards the main stand where the club's board of directors, management and newly appointed Marketing Manager Roger Rodriguez were seated and as one began to shout their annoyance, hurling abuse as the players left the pitch with their heads down and the teams coaching staff quickly followed down the narrow tunnel into the main stand. Then suddenly, from nowhere, a pre packed prawn sandwich was thrown across the stand hitting Roger in the face and knocking him back into his narrow wooden seat. More sandwiches followed, some still wrapped in plastic, other's without and some half eaten and wet with saliva.


In minutes the main stand and the area where the directors were seated looked like an East coast shipyard with seafood scattered everywhere you looked and covering anyone that happened to be in the way.


After twenty minutes or so the police were called in to rescue the directors from the main stand and a few minutes later Roger Rodriguez was escorted from the ground and taken to the nearby hospital for treatment to a head injury. He was never seen at the ground again.


When asked for a statement by the police later that evening, Frank Ramsbottom said simply 'But They Like Pies..'


So, if you're using social media to build your business and have a following to work with take a lesson from Frank Ramsbottom. If you're customers like pies don't try to sell them prawn sandwiches.


Thursday, December 18, 2008

'Want To Know Something Amazing About This MLM Cat Of Mine?

We have this cat see? She lives with us, like one of the family you understand? We call her MLM and here's why...

MLM landed on our door a couple of years back - the way cats do sometimes. She was a bit rough at the edges and looked like a good meal would be easily lost on her skinny frame. We didn't want a cat. Never wanted a cat (nothing against them but our middle child has allergies and her eyes blow up like Marty Feldman and we've three dogs who like the idea of chasing anything that moves).

So we fed her. Yeh, I know, not the best idea ever but she was hungry.

And we agreed as a family she wouldn't be allowed in the house and would make a bed for her in the shed if she wanted it.

But, as cats do, she didn't see it the same way and spent the first couple of months on the window ledge, looking in when we were eating as a family and tapping on the glass to see if we would open the door and throw her some food. She was just being herself and we liked that so let her stay.

After a while we would leave the window open a little and throw food through it every so often to keep her quiet (she had started to meeow loudly by then and the tapping on the window was almost non stop).

Then one day she made her way in through the window and sat beside us as a family while we ate supper. This was a persistent cat you understand.

So we fed her again. Yeh, I know, not the best idea but she was pretty entertaining to have around and the kids loved her meeowing as we ate.

And we agreed as a family she was only allowed in at meal times and all other times she would be outside.

But as cats do (and great networkers too) she had other ideas. MLM persisted, she made her meeows more amazing and entertaining (she even started to meeow when we were talking as a family at meal times as though she were agreeing or disagreeing) and we were smitten. Smitten with this amazing big MLM kitten if you want to know. She had got through the door and we were hooked!

7.00am this morning and MLM is walking on top of my head to wake me from my slumber beneath the duvet. She wants her breakfast and she's just letting me know. Honest and to the point so I get up and I feed her some fresh salmon from the fridge. I know, not a great idea but this is a long term relationship and you have to make a few sacrifices don't you...?

So, if you're struggling with your network marketing business, or any other home based business in fact, take a few tips from MLM.

Be persistent
Be entertaining
Be amazing
Be focused
Be honest
Be yourself

Follow MLM Cat right here

Neil Ashworth
The NotForProfit Networker

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

How To Lead Your Social Media Marketing Tribe

If you're using social media such as facebook, myspace and YouTube to build your business and wondering how to grow your downline then maybe you should take a closer look in the playground next time you walk past the local kindergarten...

Danny McDermott was a small boy with a square head, buck teeth and ears that turned red in Winter. He was one of those kids who found school tough going. Even so, Danny was the first leader I had ever known.

He was the youngest of three brothers from Belfast who came to our school just before Christmas and took the place by storm. I was six at the time but I can remember it like it was yesterday...

You see Danny had a unique gift which he used to amuse, entertain and intrigue his followers with in the school yard. He could hold a ball on his foot for hours, catch it on the back of his neck and balance it on the end of his nose like a seal to the amusement of all who followed him. Danny was one of the greatest soccer players I have ever seen.

But Danny wasn't naturally gifted, in fact I'd say he was clumsy at most things, but what made him special was his dedication to learning new skills and practising them until they seemed second nature.

Only nobody ever realised this.

He would practise each and every day for hours, improving his knowledge of how the ball should be worked, how to recognise his strengths and focus on them and how to teach others to master the same tricks that had made him popular, so that they could feel good about themselves and not foolish.

Then one day, for no reason, Danny picked up the ball and placed it beneath his arm. Then he began to run. And a strange thing happened...

His followers ran too...

One by one at first, then quickly in small groups racing behind one another like middle distance runners. Within minutes Danny had the whole playground, seventy or eighty kids in total, running behind him while he charged ahead smiling like he'd never smiled before.

Danny's tribe of followers smiled too and you know even today I can remember their faces. They believed in him see and he could have ran out the school yard and away through the fields and they would have ran too, each and every one of them without question, following Danny wherever he went.

Stop trying to work out which marketing system will work for you and start to understand how the tribe works and maybe one day you can run like Danny McDermott.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

The Long And Winding Network Marketing Road

In the mountains of West Cork, a short drive from where I live, there is an old gravel road that winds through the hills for miles like a gigantic snake before coming to a long-forgotten lake the size of a small village. We canoe there in the Spring, swim there in the Summer and camp there if the weather is fine in Autumn. In the Winter we walk the dogs.

We have christened this place 'The Long And Winding Network Marketing Road' and I'll explain why...

I take our three dogs here once a week with the family to blow out a few cobwebs, drag myself away from the social media drug I seem increasingly addicted to and give my wife and three children a few hours of family time with dad (whether they want it or not!)...

The dogs love it. It's wild and rugged with all kinds of distractions along the way and plenty to sniff, smell, roll in and occasionally consume and at the end there is the lake; blue and deep and free for all to take their share.

The dogs know this place well by now of course. They have seen the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow and drank from the lake, swam in it and chased geese across it in the Summer and when we take our walk each week they have the same choices to make.

They can race towards the lake, head down, forcing anyone in their way to either run for cover or follow their frantic lead.
Or..
They can take their time, enjoy what the jorney has to offer them, maybe even see if they can make a few good friends along the way or learn something no other dogs know.

Hey..

They can think about the size of the lake and wonder if there will be anything left for them to drink when they finally get there, racing headlong towards it.
Or..
They can tell a few good friends where the lake is and what a great and wonderful place it is. Maybe there are other lakes and rivers they might find along the way, who knows?

If you hadn't guessed I'll tell you what they do. They stroll, play, roll in the long grass and meander on and off the road like three old friends returning home after a long night on the black stuff. They enjoy each and every second of their journey along 'The Long And Winding Network Marketing Road' and when they reach the lake they take what they need and leave the rest behind, after all there is more than enough to go around.

And every week with every walk I notice how much pleasure they take from the journey. You can race towards the lake, leaving your family and friends wondering where you have gone and who you are or you can take your time, focus on the end but enjoy the ride along the way. Swim in the ocean when you get there but don't forget to dip your toes in the river along the way.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Homer's Odyssey...

The rain is falling across the hills of West Cork. My three young children are sitting by the fire, their faces glowing, filled with laughter as Homer begins his latest adventure...

This is a wild part of Ireland with stray cats who walk the lanes like New York street gangs, rolling hills and great lakes where geese and ducks stop off to drink on warm Summer days.This is home.

The place where I live and work. The place where I belong.

But like Homer, it has taken me a long while and a few network marketing adventures and exploits and many disappointments to realise this is truly where I belong and as my children sit by the fire, warming their skin and bones and wondering what Santa Claus will place on the hearth a few days from now, I begin to wonder what will be my story in 2009 and how will I tell it...

Will it be delivered with humour or sorrow. With love or passion. With hope or fear. With regret or with promise...

I hope my story, and your story, will be delivered with all these things and more. And for that, people will listen.

So, tell your story. It is your unique gift and one which others will share with you like warm bread through laughter, sorrow, hope and promise, taking them to a place far away from where they began.

Tell your story...

Friday, December 12, 2008

Can You Really Blog Your Way To The Bank?

Is it really possible to blog your way to the bank? If you believe everything you hear online these days you might well think so. But, if like most online newcomers you find yourself shouting loudly into space you might just start to wonder what you're doing wrong with your weekly scribbles.

If your blog is failing to generate an income and struggling to attract traffic then listen up...

The truth is that these things take time. You must learn the secrets of effective blog marketing and consistently apply them over time if you want to reap the rewards of google ranking, consistent traffic and a loyal list of blog followers.But there are a few simple things you can do to begin with which will get you on the right track.

Here is my list of ten simple steps to blogging for beginners;

1. Decide what your blog strategy is going to be and make a plan.
2. If you're looking to build your profile then be clear about who you are and what you do from your first post so your readers will know who they are listening to and why.
3. If you're looking to attract business partners then tell them why they should work with you and not every other business builder out there in blogsville.
4. If you're trying to attract sales for your product or income for your company then learn how to market your product effectively. What makes it unique, desirable, and why should your customers buy from you?
5. Learn to understand keywords and the power of blog marketing so that you can drive targetted traffic to your blog.
6. Learn to set up an effective data capture form on your page to allow you to build your profile through emails and autoresponders. Customer relationship management is essential for any business to survive online.
7. Offer value to your followers and they will return. If your blog is based around entertainment then be entertaining. If your aim is to educate your followers about online marketing and build your profile then keep ahead of the game, learn what the latest online techniques are and apply them, talk about them and ask your followers to review them.
8. Write good content and keep to the story. Google will crawl all over your page in milliseconds to see if it looks relevent for your target audience, searching out keywords, monitoring popularity and reviewing originality and will reward you for your effort and relevence so take the time to improve your writing skills and this will pay off.
9. Keep busy. Post every week or twice a week if you have the time. Google will look for activity as well as content coming from your blog so a little and often is the key to improving your google page ranking.
10. Enjoy what you are doing. If you don't enjoy it then it's fair to say that nobody else will either.

If you're looking for more information on online marketing or have a few ideas of your own to add to my list feel free to leave a comment. If you're new to online marketing and looking to generate more sales. Attract more customers or simply build a positive profile for your business maybe this link will help.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Network Marketing In The Twenty First Century

Network Marketing In The Twenty First Century

Network marketing has changed quite a bit over the last fifty years or so from it's door to door beginnings, through the golden age of hotel meetings, the three foot rule, flyers, posters and newspaper ads to the era of online marketing and the power of the internet.
During those years, networkers have gone from peddling vacuum cleaners, delivering catologues door to door and selling cosmetics to making millions in a matter of months with an effective online marketing system. And when the goldrush began the prospectors followed, and then more followed, and more followed until finally the internet was full of networkers looking for customers.
Time went by and the clever guys (and gals) Mike Dillard, Eben Pagan, Ann Seig, and a few others realised it was time to start selling shovels and stop panning for gold. Teach marketers how to market for customers and stop chasing customers and the world's your oyster, at least the network marketing world.
So, magnetic sponsoring was born and attraction marketing followed in many different guises and soon the online marketing world was full of people pretending not to be networkers and doing whatever they could do to avoid telling anyone what they did for a living. Why? Because nobody likes to be sold and the salesman was dead in the street. So we began to coach, mentor, provide valuable content to help others grow and build their business.
The result; a sea of online talent unimaginable five years or maybe even three years ago. Thanks Mike, Eben, Ann your work is much appreciated!
But where does it go from here?
Like most things in life it will go full circle in the twenty first century. The old saying 'customer is king' will, I believe, return to demand a return to the beginning once again. Only this time the customer will be more educated, informed, experienced and demanding.
So, if you're to survive in this new era what will you need to know?
How to target your customers worldwide to build long term, stable income instead of constantly fighting attrition as your team leave to find the next big thing.
How to market your product to offer real value to those customers month after month
How to use the internet to reach millions of potential customers in seconds
How to lead your team to a never ending supply of customers
How to build a massive organisation while hardly being noticed by your competitors, after all if the cat gets out the dogs will follow.
How to identify your niche and maintain your market share without breaking the bank
If you're not able to do these things then you need to learn and if you are unable to understand find yourself a good teacher. Either way, stay in the game, learn how to leverage your time, skills and contacts effectively and be consistent. Not for a day or a week but for months and years until you begin to understand the business and discover the secrets of online customer acquisition.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Five Facebook Essentials You Need To Know

If you think Facebook is just another excuse for grown ups to play around on the internet, think again!

Facebook, MySpace and other social networking sites floating around online for our entertainment offer a powerful business building tool if you know how to put it to work. Web 2.0 is fast becoming the ideal solution for customer relationship management for charities, small businesses and independent business builders looking to stay one step ahead of the competition.

There are a few unwritten rules to be aware of if you're intending to build your business through facebook and a whole skip full of official regulations which the facebook guys are only too happy to impose if they find you breaking the facebook law. I'll leave you to read the official rules page for yourself but here is my list of five facebook essentials to keep you on the right track from the start to the finish line;


  • Facebook is a social networking site, so be sociable, take your time to build relationships with others within your industry or community and work towards a trusting, honest and mutually beneficial online friendship. This might take a little time but will be worth it in the end. Remember, people don't buy the product, they buy you.
  • Don't try to 'sell' your product, service or idea to anyone that comes within earshot or you will quickly become the person others try to avoid and you'll soon start to see your facebook profile losing friends as fast as you add them.
  • First impressions count! Think about what type of face you want people to see when they visit your facebook profile (and they will) so if you want to create a positive impression keep your page simple, clean and uncluttered and leave the games, applications and undesirables to those who have time to play. Remember, this is business so treat it that way.
  • Understand the power of facebook's built in viral marketing system and use it to your advantage. Don't let it be your downfall! If you join a group, post an item, respond to a thread or update your profile, facebook will tell the whole world about it, so make sure you can look yourself in the mirror if you want to build long lasting relationships with the right people.
  • Decide what you want to do and do it. Make a facebook strategy and stick with it. Plan where you want to go and how you want to get there and stick to the plan. Facebook has lots of distractions to take you off the beaten track but start to drift and you will miss out on the true value of social networking sites and end up lost in the playground with all the other fools.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Online Marketing Profits For The Not For Profit Sector

Online marketing is the future of fundraising for charities and the not for profit sector. If your fundraising income strategy does not include online marketing, affiliate marketing or an income stream derived from a network marketing business model then your charity is missing out on a massive income opportunity.

If you're looking for a unique fundraising idea or initiative to leave your competitors on the start line then perhaps online marketing is for you.



Forget the days of product distribution and multi level marketing horror. Today's network marketing models are built on solid ground and offer a variety of low cost options for your charity to introduce its supporters to without fear of a backlash. From product based businesses to online gaming and affiliate sales, there is something for even the smallest charity to benefit from.



Don't get me wrong, there are still online scams out there on the horizon and without a little guidance you can easily come unstuck and lose money, time and reputation but with the right approach and a legitimate business model to promote you and your not for profit will soon start to see a residual revenue making its way into your reserve fund.