Tuesday, January 31, 2017

A Story of How Baseball and Video Helped Create a Winning Sales Development Team

What makes a good salesperson?

No, forget that. What makes a great salesperson? Sure, you can just look at the numbers, at the quotas and accounts and commissions and deals closed…but for Adam Brophy, Manager of the Business Development team at Uberflip, the art of sales is so much more. Recently, I got to chat with Adam  about what he’s passionate about, what he believes in, and what’s next for his team—and his customers.

As we started talking, I expected to hear a fair bit about Uberflip—the company and its product help marketers create, manage, and optimize a “content experience” for buyers at every part of the journey. As a marketer, I could relate; it’s optimal to have incredible content, but also to deliver it in an incredible way to wow your audience. Because, as Uberflip suggests in one of their website videos, a pina colada that you slurp in a dingy, smelly basement just won’t be as enjoyable as a pina colada that you sip while you dig your toes into the sand of a sun-kissed beach. Despite tasting the same, the experience of the pina colada is a hell of a lot different.

But with Uberflip, we’re talking about the marketing world. Adam is a salesman in the sales world. And when he started to describe his work by referencing baseball, I thought, Uh oh. I’m a fish out of water here. Yet as Adam let me into his world, I quickly realized that, just as the realms of marketing and sales are blending more and more together, there is a lot of overlap in what drives and inspires us.

Blue Jays and dogs and people…oh, my!

Adam told me that sales has a reputation for being a ‘dog eat dog’ world: a solo activity where you’re trying to beat everyone else and be the best, biggest, and toughest so you can thrive. Instead, he loves to see the parallel between baseball (go, Blue Jays!) and sales: it’s competitive, and you can be wowed by individual contributions if you work hard and keep trying: “Each conversation with a prospect is like getting up to the plate: you could get a hit, or even hit it out of the park. And, if you strike out, you’ll always have another at-bat.”

Along with the competitive aspect comes the team aspect. The whole experience is much more satisfying when the team works as a whole to strengthen each other and accomplish amazing things together. It’s how Adam manages his team of sales development reps: “We share techniques that work well, and help each other improve when things don’t go the way we hoped. And we celebrate each other’s successes. Because when the team excels, it means more opportunity—quota-wise and career-wise—for everyone.”

As a sales manager, Adam isn’t directly selling anymore; instead he sees himself as the team’s coach. And—like the company he works for—Adam is focused on creating a powerful, incredible, and converting experience. Not just for his team, who benefit from a competitive yet fun and supportive experience, but for their prospects as well: “People want a human experience. It’s why sales exists: it’s the human bridge between a product and the customer.

And that’s exactly why Adam knew that his team was ready to do something different. To leave behind the traditional way to sell.

Marketers are a tough crowd and your Facebook feed is changing.

Uberflip’s target customers are marketers, and marketers, being marketers, have seen everything. They know that just because someone’s first name appears in an email, it doesn’t mean it’s a genuine, personalized message. It’s a challenge to sell to a tough crowd, but that’s also where satisfaction and accomplishment come from: “If you’re just going to send a templated message, you might as well ditch your team and use automation technologies.” Adam was not willing to give in to a robotic approach; Uberflip is all about ‘the experience’, and that same principle drives Adam’s work.

The sales manager found inspiration in his own personal life. He saw that Facebook was massively upping their investment in and commitment to video. And as a consumer, he favored video over other mediums himself: it feels more engaging, more human, more experiential.

Adam was thrilled when he ‘ViewedIt’.

So when Adam heard about ViewedIt, Vidyard’s product that offers anyone the ability to create, send, and track video, he jumped on it. Video felt like a perfect fit for Uberflip, since it’s all about an immersive experience.  

“As a salesperson, I’m never more confident than when I can be in a room with a prospect. But often our work happens over phone or email. With ViewedIt, prospects can see my face and hear my voice. It’s the next best thing to being in the room with them.”

His team adopted the tool, and began recording their own videos for prospects. And of course, Adam made sure to bring the team together for friendly competitions that involved viewing each other’s videos and figuring out which ones worked best. (Want tips on what works well for sales videos? Check out this post.)

They were excited to discover there wasn’t much of a learning curve; it was just about being yourself, and being okay with saying “um” and “ah”. Each video didn’t have to be perfect—that’s what made it more human. Because, “with all the technology and automation out there, it’s so important to show you’re not a robot, and you care and can help your prospect. Just speak from the heart.”

Screen Shot 2017-01-30 at 1.41.39 PM

See how personal video can be?

With ViewedIt, prospects finally felt like they were being seen.

Adam’s sales development team incorporated inside their emails ViewedIt videos that were personalized for each prospect—no longer just for an industry or persona, but specifically for each person, creating an experience more genuine than anything their prospects had seen before.

The results spoke for themselves: “My team came to me constantly with success stories of their ViewedIt video emails. They were working to cut through the noise, and helped us connect with people on a human level.” They kept hearing from their prospects how much they enjoyed the videos. As Adam said, “When a prospect compliments you on your selling technique, you know you’ve got something that works!”

Now, the team could work smarter, not harder.

With ViewedIt, the team could see not only who was watching videos, but when they watched and for how long. With these insights, “We could determine who the most engaged prospects were, so we could focus our efforts on the right people, and create more opportunities in less time!”

Adam, ever looking for new ways to innovate, found more ways to take advantage of ViewedIt’s power, including creating videos to train sales reps on anything from new techniques to changes in their CRM that they need to know about. “I enjoy using ViewedIt. It’s fun. And it’s a great way to demonstrate ideas both internally and externally.” It’s also opened his eyes further to the current state of sales, and what the future might hold: “I’ve realized just how much sales is in flux. We need to keep pushing, changing and innovating to break through the noise, and that’s really exciting to me.”

It’s exciting to Uberflip as well. The successes of Adam’s team have “started to change the idea, at Uberflip and in the sales industry, that sales development teams are only capable of the ‘smile and dial’ approach. There’s a creative and strategic role that SDRs can play, and every success we have helps cement that role.” With rave reviews from prospects and customers, and recognition from leaders and peers, Adam and his team have truly hit it out of the park.

Want to learn more about how other organizations have achieved success with Vidyard? Check out more customer stories.

The post A Story of How Baseball and Video Helped Create a Winning Sales Development Team appeared first on Vidyard.



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Monday, January 30, 2017

The Savage Nation with Michael Savage - January 30 2017 [HOUR 1]

4 Steps To Monetize Your Blog Like A Professional

Content might be king, but bloggers certainly struggle to feel like royalty. Maintaining a profitable blog in a crowded online market is genuinely challenging. Not only do bloggers have to find their niche, create great content, stay up-to-date, and encourage interactions, but they also have to find a way to make money off of their blogs.

Monetization is, no doubt, the biggest challenge any blogger will face. So, here’s a four-step strategy that could help you overcome these issues and monetize your blog like a professional:

Step 1. Understand Your Source of Income

Most bloggers make the fundamental mistake of not recognizing their client. As a blogger your community is your service. Your job is to find an audience that shares your niche interest and then connect that audience to brands that would like to approach them.

Blog’s generate income from digital marketing agencies, so it’s important to understand what they need. Agencies are constantly on the lookout for great content within a specific niche. These agencies are tasked with finding a target audience for their client’s business. Communicating with the right audience is their top priority. Once you understand this you’ll be able to hone your messaging more effectively.

Step 2. Use The Right Tools

After you’ve taken the time to define your target clientele (digital marketing agencies) you need to make sure your blog is meeting their benchmarks. The most logical way to do this is to benchmark the blog using tools most popular with digital marketing agencies. This includes MOZ, SEMrush, MAJESTIC, and sistrix. These tools are commonly used to dissect blogs and rank them on the basis of quality and quantity of their traffic. Digital marketers use them to understand how valuable your blog is, which is why you must use the same tools to track your performance.

Step 3. Benchmark

Once you’ve shortlisted the tools, you need to ensure our blog meets the minimum benchmarks on each of them. MOZ, for example, considers a Domain Authority score of 20 a minimum. Similarly, you can aim for a minimum traffic score of 1,000 on SEMrush and Trust Flow of 20 on Majestic. Meeting these benchmarks is absolutely essential for monetization.

Step 4. Get Discovered

Traditionally, digital marketers would directly email a blogger if they were interested. This helped them create a working relationship but the process is slow, tedious, and inefficient. Professional marketers are now more likely to use content distribution services to find the best blogs. These platforms list blogs alongside crucial test data from tools like MOZ, SEMrush, and Majestic. It makes it easier for quality blogs to get discovered and for digital marketers to find the right fit. Using these services is absolutely essential if you want to get discovered by the top agencies and monetize your blog successfully.

These four simple steps should have a noticeable impact on your blog’s ability to generate revenue. Once your blog meets the basic requirements you can turn your focus on maintain great content.

Original post: 4 Steps To Monetize Your Blog Like A Professional



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Thursday, January 26, 2017

Client-Created Content is Key – Wise Words from Stephanie Totty

Remember taking exams in high school or college? Getting out your scanner cards, filling in the little boxes (number two pencils only!) and piling them all neatly in a box so you can get your marks a week later? Not the most fun process, was it?

Well the kids of today don’t have to go through that rigamarole, thanks to companies like ExamSoft. And Stephanie Totty is in charge of making sure as many students have that privilege as possible.

As the Senior Content Strategy Manager at ExamSoft Worldwide, Totty works tirelessly to generate interest for ExamSoft across their blog, social channels, webinars, and a host of other platforms. “I started mostly as a copywriter and social media person, and just grew from there.” Totty told me in interview, “The focus of my role has morphed into content strategy and creation. Which is great, because I find that a lot more interesting than just creating social posts — this way I get to be hands-on in the process.”

To find out all the marketing secrets Totty has learned in her four years at ExamSoft, we chatted with her over Google Hangout. Here’s what she had to say:

How has content marketing evolved since you started?

I think there’s just a lot more emphasis put on content marketing now. I don’t really feel like a few years ago content marketing was really much of a thing, and now it’s almost a buzzword. Content creation was important, and it was there, but the major focus was elsewhere. Now everyone is starting to take the content creation and strategy process more seriously, and I feel like we’re all in the phase where we’re just churning out content. Which is not necessarily the best strategy to take.

I know I fell into that myself a couple of years ago, and now I’m desperately trying to claw my way out of mounds and masses of blog posts, videos, white papers, and case studies. I’m much more conscientious about what gets created, when, why, and how we can repurpose old pieces of content in new or more effective ways. So I feel like that’s the trend now in Content Marketing is being a lot more strategic about the way the content is created and for what purpose.

What metrics should marketers be paying more attention to in 2017?

Personally, the most important metric for me to be paying attention to is content consumption. What type of content is being consumed, where it is being consumed, who it is being consumed by, and when it is being consumed? I have mounds and mounds of content and it’s all floating around out there, and I want to be much more informed of which parts of that content are actually helping people and that people are interested in

That way I can do two things — first, determine where can I shave off things that are just taking up space and cluttering up my area. And second, for continued content creation. I want to be much more informed about what’s working, what’s not, where to place it, when to place it, and who to push it to. So content consumption in general, and Vidyard is amazing for that as it tells me exactly who is looking at what, where they are looking at it, and for how long. Then we use Uberflip for doing that for all my written content.

What is one content marketing strategy that most companies miss out on?

I feel that client-created content has been a huge part of what has made us so successful in our content creation and content consumption. When I first came on board it was very difficult to get that process started because our clients weren’t used to it. And to be honest, I just hounded people. I called, I knocked on doors, and I wouldn’t take no for an answer, but it’s hard to start that process and have those conversations with your clients.

Saying “Can you help us do this?” and “Would you work on this project even though you have a full-time job and now I’m asking you to do these other things as well?” is sometimes an awkward conversation to have. But four years later I have people knocking on my door — clients I have never heard of — emailing me and saying “Hey I’m doing this thing, and I would love to do a webinar on it. Is that something that is possible?”. And I say “Yes! Absolutely!” I have peers in marketing that say it’s too much work or they don’t know where they would start, ask if we pay them, or what the rules I just tell them that you make the rules up as you go. Do what works for your specific industry and clients. It’s proven invaluable for us.

What’s your favorite campaign that you have been a part of?

We led a Twitter chat last year for those in the educational assessment. We called it #AssessChat, we had an academic lead it, and we gave away tickets to our user conference. It was a great campaign because the whole point of it was to generate buzz around our user conference and get people to show up. But it had the added effect of getting people who were not clients that had never heard of our company and so it was a bit of fuel for the pipeline. Sales got some really great leads out of it, and that was really neat for me because social rarely works in our space. So when it does work, I get really excited about it!

What resources do you turn to in order to get better at your job?

I love the MarketingProfs newsletter! I always feel like their content is really relevant and on-point, and that they’re always on top of relevant topics. I pay attention to what Vidyard and Uberflip post on linked, which puts it right in front of my nose. And I am a part of several B2B marketing groups on LinkedIn, so when I am looking for professional content that’s what I stick to.

Twitter is my jam but its usually flying by during the day when I’m working so I don’t always catch it. I would say whatever type of industry you’re a part of, find some relevant linked groups. I know sometimes they can be spammy but there’s some really good stuff in there was well.

The post Client-Created Content is Key – Wise Words from Stephanie Totty appeared first on Vidyard.



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How to Make Money with Videos Online

Even since fast Internet connections around the world became the standard, video has been a dominating force online. The explosion of smartphones and mobile Internet only reinforced this trend, as people are now able to watch videos on the go and 24 hours per day.

Guess what, if you want to make money online, you certainly need to consider a strategy that involves video. Below you’ll find some tips to help you in this path.

1. Know The Business Models

There are basically two available business models to make money with online video: release the videos for free and earn with advertising, or charge a fee to let users access your videos.

The first model is suitable for videos that will attract a large number of views on platforms like YouTube or Facebook. Funny videos and videos about celebrities, technology, politics or other popular topics tend to do well under this model. Keep in mind that you will need to publish many videos for this model to become profitable. It’s not uncommon to see publishers releasing several videos on the same day!

youtube-screenshot

The second model is suitable for premium and educational content. For instance, educational videos that teach people how to program or build websites, how to earn money through investing, or how to gain skills necessary to make money on some professional field. The advantage of this model is that you will need to produce fewer videos, but it will take some work to produce the videos and to structure the learning platform.

2. Use a Professional Hosting Platform

Especially if you are going with the second model, using a professional platform to host your videos is essential. Online video streaming is complex, and if you try the do-it-yourself approach you might end up causing problems for your paying customers.

If you need a recommendation, check out UScreen. It is one of the most popular platforms around, and it has the advantage of coming with several other services that you might need for your educational or premium video website.

uscreen

For instance, they have tools that will help you build your landing page and video pages. They also have built-in payments for both subscriptions and one-time payment for the videos. This can save you a lot of time if you don’t have technical know-how.

3. Have Your Own Website

If you are going to release videos on YouTube and make money via advertising, you might think that you don’t need to have a website. Even if you are going to charge for premium videos, you might be tempted to use some third party platform instead of hosting your own domain name.

This is a mistake. You need to have your own domain and promote it to your audience. That is because your own domain and site is pretty much the only online presence you control 100%. If your audience get used to visiting your site, subscribing to your email list and so on, you will never risk getting cut out of the business by external circumstances.

Imagine the despair of people who published all their videos on an external platform that went out of business and decided to shut down the website! You could lose everything overnight. If you are not a technical personal, check out SquareSpace, as it is pretty easy to build a website with them.

4. Leverage Social Media

Like it or not, social media is an essential part of any marketing plan these days. You will need to have, at the very least, a presence on Facebook and Twitter. Pinterest, Instagram and LinkedIn are also recommended options, depending on your target audience.

Make sure that you share all your videos on those platforms, as they can drive a lot of views. Facebook, for instance, is already the second largest video platform online, losing only to YouTube.

Original post: How to Make Money with Videos Online



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Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Are Keywords Still Important When it Comes to SEO?

There was a time not too long ago where keywords were the end all be all of SEO. All webmasters had to do was to fill their pages with specific keywords, use optimized anchor text for backlinks, add keyword rich headers and title tags, and voila! You had a fully optimized website. While things may have been more simple from a marketing plan, they completely undermined Google’s product offering. Many people forget that Google’s main goal is to provide the most relevant search engine results to its users and keyword manipulation techniques meant that their algorithm was easy to circumvent. And for this reason, Google hit webmasters with update after update to make sure that things like keyword density would not hold the same weight in future rankings.

However, keywords aren’t completely dead and are still in many ways the backbone of SEO. They just have to be approached differently. Let’s take a look at how the role of keywords has changed when it comes to search engine optimization.

Keyword Placement

Google still needs the use of text, and therefore, keyword placement still plays a major role when it comes to search engine rankings. However, keyword placement will do more for your site than keyword stuffing or keyword rich backlinks.

Placing your main keywords in your title and headers is still an important part of any on page SEO marketing strategy, and this probably will be the case for years to come, unless Google makes a huge change in the way pages are indexed. Title tags play an essential part in search results, and poorly optimized title tags will always yield negative results.

Google still gives priority to key areas, such as meta information and headers, followed by copy and navigation last. It is therefore capital that you optimize these key areas with a variety of keywords so that tags across your site do not become redundant.

Keyword Meaning

Google is doing everything in its power for its algorithm to be more “plastic” and tailor itself to the user’s needs. It is also trying to make its algorithm more human by not only identifying keywords and indexing them, but by deriving meaning from them as well. Google is constantly changing its algorithm so that it can make correlations between keywords on a specific page to allow it to make sense of what the page is truly about.

For instance, different iterations of the same keyword phrase are less likely to rank for different search terms than they were before. So, you should forget about adding specific keyword phrases to your pages and rather focus on a consistent theme throughout your pages that will allow them to rank naturally for certain keywords.

So what does it mean for SEO Marketers?

It simply means that keywords are not completely obsolete, but our approach to them has to be changed. Instead of focusing on keywords, webmasters should focus on the human aspect of search and focus on providing relevant content rather than creating content for machines. As technologies such as machine learning are being introduced, the gap between man and machine is drawing consistently closer, and this should prompt SEO marketers to move towards other facets of SEO such as user experience if they want to be more successful in the future.

Original post: Are Keywords Still Important When it Comes to SEO?



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The Sales Tactics You Need to Know for 2017

When you sell, are you making change?

Last week, we hosted some great sales and marketing expert panelists to chat about the top sales tactics and strategies in 2017. This is a recap of that webinar session, so that we can bring you top insights to help you excel in 2017.

Why might you need these insights, you ask? Well, one of the few constants about business is that it’s always changing. Which can be a good thing—it keeps us from getting overly bored, falling into slumps, and losing our drive. But for salespeople, this also means that if you want to keep achieving success, you have to push yourself to stay on the forefront of that evolution.

It’s a challenge, and sometimes it can feel overwhelming. What are the best strategies? Which tactics will get you noticed? Which philosophies are worth considering and which are tried-and-true classics? These three well-known and successful sales leaders helped answer those questions:

  • Jill Rowley, a self-proclaimed “sales professional trapped in a marketer’s body” who focuses on social selling and the blurring lines between sales and marketing;  
  • Craig Rosenberg, Co-founder and Chief Analyst at TOPO Inc., who focuses on advising and consulting for marketing and sales; and
  • Matt Heinz, President of Heinz Marketing, whose focus is on greater sales, revenue growth, product success, and customer loyalty, facilitated the discussion.

What were some of the biggest takeaways from the webinar?

Takeaway #1: The buyer of today has changed, so sales has to evolve how they sell.

When asked what kind of digital transformations and advancements she has seen in the past year, and what she predicts for 2017, Jill Rowley made clear that digital has really changed the game. The buyer today “has a lot more access to information and to her peers”. The marketing world has evolved to meet the needs of the new digital buyer—marketing now has a plethora of technologies to choose from to help them win. But the sales world has been a bit slower to evolve, and needs to catch up: “Digital sales transformation [involves] really understanding the new way that sales professionals need to work”.  

What does this prediction mean to you?

What does Jill mean that today’s buyer has changed and they have more access to information? Well, we now know that these days, up to 90% of the customer’s decision to purchase is complete before they even reach out to your sales team. Consumers now use websites, blogs, whitepapers, customer testimonials, social, and other channels to glean all kinds of information about you and your product, which is vastly different from how people used to learn about products: mostly, salespeople would reach out and engage someone in a conversation. But these days, as Jill points out, the line between marketing and sales has blurred, and companies are now educating their prospects indirectly, before ever having a face-to-face (or email-to-email) conversation.

So they’re more educated right off the bat. And it turns out, one of the biggest ways they’re educating themselves is through video: did you know that 80% of site visitors will watch a video, while only 20% will read content? It’s true. People are looking for video from you because it’s more interesting, entertaining, and engages their brain on scientific levels. As Jill says, video is “edutaining”.

Takeaway #2: The human need for relationships means there will always be a need for a sales team—if sales teams embrace personalized strategies.

When Craig was asked about engagement and advancements for sales teams, Craig focused on the fact that human beings want the human element in our communications. He was quick to say sales teams would never be replaced by robots because of this need. But what that does mean is we have to be selling in a more personal way, so we can engage more deeply: “All of us are trying to get as close as we can to 1:1 relevant human interaction across all our channels…If I’m going to communicate with someone, how is it going to be most relevant to them? How can I make sure they get it?” His answer: “It’s gotta be personal…The ones that are making it work are trying to figure out how to personalize and customize the majority of those interactions and do it at scale.”

What does this prediction mean to you?

We’re all inundated all the time with brand messages and content and emails…this overwhelming, busy world could be contributing to the fact that now, our attention spans are only 8 seconds long. So we don’t have time for messages that don’t speak to us on a personal level.

While the marketing world has been taking a shine to personalized video and seeing incredible results from it (like a 500% lift in email conversions), sales has been a bit slower to adapt personalized technologies. Think about all the emails you may send and receive—templated, awkward, and a lot of the time, they end up in the trash. Video, however, is the more personal, human medium—we’re seeing, hearing, experiencing, and relating to what we are watching!

What can you do to achieve greater success as a salesperson in 2017?

Now that we know what some of the best and brightest sales leaders are predicting and urging for 2017, how can you put these sales tactics into action?

As a salesperson, just because your audience is a lot more educated than they used to be doesn’t mean that you don’t have to try anymore because your leads are already doing all the legwork themselves. In fact, it means you need to try harder to get their attention and stand out amongst everything else they’re watching and reading and learning about.

As Craig said during the panel discussion, 90% of marketing and sales professionals claim that their biggest issue is engagement. How can they stand out, get noticed, and really engage with audiences on a personal level these days?

The fact that audiences find video the most engaging medium speaks volumes. In fact, prospects who view videos of a product are 85% more likely to buy. Sales teams can use this medium to their advantage with a video platform that provides analytics on which videos each lead is watching, and how deeply they’re engaged. So even before your first contact with the lead, you know a fair bit about them and their interests, helping you to better tailor your conversation, and close deals more quickly and easily.

But sales teams don’t need to rely solely on marketing-made videos. Now, with video recording tools like ViewedIt, sales has the power of video in their own hands. And best of all, sales can make personalized videos!

Imagine sending a prospect an email that includes a video that you recorded just for them. When they see “Video” in the subject line in their email inbox, they’ll be more likely to open your email (8x more likely, in fact!). And then, when they click on the thumbnail image for the video (which you smartly personalized by writing their name on a piece of paper or small whiteboard), they can watch your video as it opens in a browser window. Now, you’ve stood out inside their mailbox, and gotten noticed by speaking to them on a 1:1 level. Because of this, they’re more likely to watch and engage with you. And, because you created that email with them in mind, and personalized it with their name, that video will have significantly increased your chances of closing the deal: in one company, 75% of late-stage prospects that receive a personalized video become a customer!

Standing out with video is just the beginning. You can even get notifications on when your videos are viewed, so you can follow up in the best moment, when you know they’re engaged with your content. Doesn’t that make the conversation so much more personal? Instead of hounding your leads, instead, you’re taking cues from their own interests and actions, and giving them exactly what they’re looking for when they’re looking for it. Now that’s an engaging, personalized experience!

With tech tools and strategies like this, you’ll not only be evolving to give audiences what they expect, but you’ll be surpassing expectations, helping you to not only keep up with change, but lead change for your team and your organization. Welcome to a successful 2017!

If you want to learn more from these sales experts about what they predict and advise for selling in 2017, check out the on-demand webinar now.

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How to Optimize Your Blog for Success

Is your blog accomplishing the goals you’ve set for growing your business?

Do you ever feel like you are just floundering as you work on your blog?

In this episode, I will walk you through a step by step plan for how to optimize your blog for success.

The Problem with Most Blogs

When I first started blogging, it was about freebie websites. Then, I evolved into teaching about blogging.

Blog Problem - Optimize your blog

Number one problem – we don’t think clearly about our business goals

Over the years, I’ve made many changes to the content and structure of this blog. This blog is all about blogging (how meta is that).

With all of that, I’ve come to an interesting realization – My blog is not optimized for success.

This is a problem that I think most bloggers face.

We create content, create more content, add it to previous content, and continue plowing ahead.

The problem is that we don’t think clearly about our business goals. This is reflected in the structure of our blogs.

The end result is that we end up with no clear path. And if there’s no clear path, everyone wastes time and energy.

But from this point on, it’s gonna be different. Because you’re gonna listen to this episode.

Before You Optimize Your Blog

In order to really optimize your blog, you need to answer the following questions first:

  1. What is your primary goal?
  2. What is the clearest path to accomplishing that goal?
  3. What are your secondary goals?
  4. What are the clearest paths to accomplishing those goals?
Determine Goals

Determine Your Business Goals to Have a Clearer Path for Your Business

Generally speaking, if you’re blogging as a business, your primary goal is to make sales.

This may be sales of your own product, an affiliate product, a service etc.

If that is the case, the clearest path is usually some variation of the following:

  1. Someone finds a link to your site. The title is compelling enough that they decide to click through.
  2. They consume your content and find value in it.
  3. While consuming that content (or after), they see that you have a highly-relevant resource freely available.
  4. They opt in to get access to that resource.
  5. You follow up with content that helps them solve a specific, highly relevant problem.
  6. It becomes clear that the next logical step is for them to make a purchase.
  7. They buy.
  8. You say Cha-ching while pumping your fist (and smiling).

ANY distraction from that path makes your goal less likely.

The Distractions

Here are just a few things that tend to be distractions:

  • Your content is hard to find
  • It’s hard to determine what your blog (or content) is about.
  • Irrelevant content on your blog
  • Banner ads
  • They have to work too hard to find the next step

Let’s walk through the steps that will help you minimize the distractions and accomplish your goals faster.

How to Optimize Your Blog for Success

IMPORTANT: Before we go into the steps, there’s something I want you to understand. The things I lay out are what I consider to be ideal. However, no situation is perfect. Don’t beat yourself up if you aren’t doing every step.

Choose a Blog Name That Makes Sense

The name of this blog is Become a Blogger. Before doing anything else, you already have somewhat of an idea of what the blog is about. I teach you how to become a blogger.

Choose Your Title and Tagline

Choose a name that communicates the value of your blog. Make your tagline clear.

If possible, choose a name that communicates the value of your blog. Now, this won’t always be possible, and it’s definitely not a deal-breaker.

There are MANY successful blogs out there with made up names, and even blogs that use the name of the author.

Have a Tagline That Clearly States What Your Blog Is About

Whether or not your blog name communicates the purpose of your blog, you can always do that in your tagline.

Make this clear and your blog visitors will instantly understand your blog’s purpose.

Install the Yoast SEO Plugin and Get Familiar with How to Optimize Each Post

Yoast SEO Plugin

Yoast – Recommended tool for bloggers using WordPress

When Google is your friend, you are a happy camper. The search engine can send you lots of traffic on a daily basis.

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) can be a very tricky thing, but the best tool out there for bloggers who use WordPress is the Yoast SEO plugin.

If you aren’t using it, install it, familiarize yourself with how it works, and use it to optimize all of your content.

You can also use it to optimize some basic social options like adding your Facebook Open Graph data, Twitter card data.

Install a Social Sharing Plugin

Social Media

Social media is a great way for people to discover content

Do you spend time on social media (rhetorical question). Of course you do. And so do most of the people in your audience.

Social media is a great way for people to discover content, including yours.

Make sure your blog is optimized for social sharing using a social sharing plugin. The only one I recommend at the moment is Social Warfare.

I do that because it does a great job of helping you take control of how your content is shared on social media.

You can customize which images show on which social network, the copy in the tweets, and other details.

The have a free basic version and a premium version. If you can afford it, go with the premium.

Choose a Conversion-focused Theme

Conversion-focused theme

Choose a theme that is optimized for getting people to take action.

This is something I’m starting to emphasize more. There are many WordPress themes out there.

However, there are some that are optimized for getting people to take action.

An example of conversion-focused themes is ThriveThemes. It comes with all kinds of built-in features to help you get your blog visitors to opt in to your email list.

Their themes come pre-built with all kinds of fancy forms, call-to-action buttons and other features to get people to take action.

However, even if you don’t have a conversion-focused theme, you can always use tools like OptinMonster or ThriveLeads to add forms, popups, etc to your site.

At a bare minimum, create attractive forms using your email marketing service and add them to strategic locations on your blog (more on this later).

Create a Lead Magnet

Lead Magnet

The lead magnet must be highly relevant to the experience your audience are having while on your blog.

A lead magnet is a resource that you create to incentivize people to join your email list.

In order for it to be effective, it must be highly relevant to the experience they are having while on your blog.

Great lead magnets solve a specific problem. Fortunately, they don’t have to be complicated. It can be a simple one-page PDF.

Make the Opt in a Prominent Feature of Your Blog

Now that you have your awesome lead magnet, it’s time to make it very obvious that getting it is the next logical step. Here are some ways to do that.

  1. Rework your home page. This will probably be the one of the highest trafficked page on your site. Instead of just letting it show your most recent posts, make the opt in the focus. You can also highlight a few other actions they can take that would be most helpful.
  2. Opt In Forms

    Place an opt in form in strategic locations in your blog.

    Place an opt in form in strategic locations like at the top of the sidebar, within your content, at the bottom of your posts, pages, and blog. The psychology here is that if they are consuming your content, they are being primed to take the next logical step. This step must be obvious.

  3. Phrase your resource as a solution to a problem, not a benefit. People will be more likely to take action to solve pain points than to gain some benefit.
  4. If possible, get a nice cover graphic. Visuals matter.

Optimizing the Follow Up

When someone opts in, they are saying “I’m interested”. However, they can easily fall by the wayside or get turned off.

It is important to have a follow up sequence that nurtures them by:

  1. Providing tons of value
  2. Giving quick wins
  3. Exposes them to the next logical step (hint: to buy something)

Dealing with Secondary Goals

Once you’ve made your primary goal clear, it’s time to focus on your secondary goals.

Start by choosing one secondary goal (i.e. joining your Facebook group, making an affiliate sale, etc).

Once you’ve identified that goal, follow a similar procedure to determine the next logical step your blog reader can make to get closer to that goal.

Make that next logical step VERY clear/obvious.

Ruthless Elimination

Once you have determined your goals and are in the process of optimizing your blog, it’s important to do something that may seem painful.

Analyse every element of your blog and ask yourself the following questions: How does this element help my blog reader take the next logical step that brings them closer to the goal.

If it doesn’t, ruthlessly eliminate it. I know it sounds painful, but by making the path more clear, you’ll be doing your visitors a great service.

How to Decide on Exceptions: Cost-benefit Analysis

Ok, so that was the theory behind having a perfectly optimized blog. However, no blog is perfect.

In fact, it can be very beneficial to make exceptions to the guidelines I covered in this episode.

Some distractions can be worth it.

For example, if you have enough traffic, you may be able to justify the distraction of having ads, because it brings in revenue to help you serve your audience better.

Do a cost-benefit analysis and make decisions on a case by case basis.

A Few Miscellaneous Points

There are two other things I want to mention that can help you optimize your blog:

  1. Optimize your about page. This is another high-traffic page on your site and you should not waste the opportunity. Make sure to capture your reader’s attention immediately and then make the next logical step VERY clear (the opt in).
  2. Make it easy to contact you. In some cases, that blog reader may need additional convincing by being able to contact you directly. Make it clear how they can do that.

Let’s end on a question

What ONE thing will you do to optimize your blog a little more? Let me know in the comments area below.

Resources Mentioned

The post How to Optimize Your Blog for Success appeared first on Become A Blogger by Leslie Samuel.



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Tuesday, January 24, 2017

First Video in Business Benchmark Report: How B2B Companies are REALLY Using Video

It’s no secret that marketers are investing more in online video than ever before. From creative video marketing campaigns to explainers, video ads, webinars, video blogs, customer stories and more, video is now a critical asset within the modern marketing toolkit. In fact, the average B2B company within Vidyard’s client base has nearly 300 videos in their library and that number will double within the next 16 months. The largest B2B clients host more than 10,000 videos with no signs of slowing down.

So how, exactly, are B2B companies investing in video and how does that differ from their B2C counterparts? How many videos are they publishing each month and what trends stand out for different industries and company sizes? To help answer these questions and many more, Vidyard has released its 2017 Video in Business Benchmark Report offering unique insights and trend analysis data from across its global customer base.

The new report analyzes live video marketing data from more than 500 B2B businesses, 60 million video streams and nearly 250,000 video assets offering a first-of-its-kind look at industry benchmarks for top performing video marketing programs. While some results help to validate common market assumptions, others are quite interesting and may surprise even the most experienced video pundits.

Here is a glimpse at some of the key findings from the 2017 Video in Business Benchmark Report published by Vidyard:

  • B2B businesses have published 293 videos on average and will double the size of their video libraries within 16 months (Tweet this stat!)
  • Businesses in High Tech and Manufacturing were the most frequent publishers in 2016 averaging more than 20 videos per month (Tweet this stat!)
  • The average video length in B2B is 8 minutes, though 56% of videos published in 2016 were less than 2 minutes (Tweet this stat!)
  • Videos under 90 seconds retain 53% of viewers on average; those over 30 minutes retain only 10% of viewers (Tweet this stat!)
  • 85% of businesses now have internal resources for producing video content to help them meet the growing demand for content (Tweet this stat!)
  • 86% of views of business-related videos take place on desktop browsers; only 14% take place on mobile (Tweet this stat!)
  • Businesses producing 50+ videos per year are far more likely to use advanced video analytics and to be increasing video budgets (Tweet this stat!)
  • Wednesday is not only hump day, it’s also the busiest day of the week for B2B video viewing (Tweet this stat!)

To check out the full report or to see how your business stacks up to industry benchmarks, simply download a complimentary version of the 2017 Video in Business Benchmark Report here! If you’re interested in quoting any portion of the report online or learning more about our research methodology, please contact us at press@vidyard.com.

We would love your feedback on the benchmark report and any comments you have on which insights you’ve found most interesting or useful. Drop us a comment below to let us know what you think!

video business benchmarks

The post First Video in Business Benchmark Report: How B2B Companies are REALLY Using Video appeared first on Vidyard.



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Monday, January 23, 2017

Meet the Vidyard Team, Video Style: Thomas Karthaus

Meet the Team is our monthly chance to introduce you to the fabulous, quirky, talented people who work at Vidyard, using our favorite medium — video! For this episode, we caught up with Thomas Karthaus, Video Specialist here at Vidyard. Discover who the most influential person is in Thomas’ professional life, and the funniest thing his dog has ever done in this video:

What didn’t make the cut

Tom had lots more to share than just his love of baseball, so here’s a few more of his answers:

What brought you to Vidyard?

One of my really good friends from the business world took a job at Vidyard. I learned very quickly how amazing the organization is and how innovative the technology is, so I knew that I had to be a part of something special. And now I am!

What’s your favorite video on the internet right now?

It has to be the new Sick Kids Hospital video. The one about how sick isn’t weak:

The reason why this video is so important, and means so much to me, is that hospital saved my sisters life. Over 20 years ago she was a patient, and experienced everything the staff show in this video. What you see in this commercial is the environment they create for their patients. When you’re at that hospital, you don’t feel like you’re sick. You feel that you’re powerful. And that you can overcome what ails you. That place is truly special, full of amazing people, and the video really captures what Sick Kids is all about.

What’s your favorite place to eat in Orangeville, and why?

My favorite place to eat in Orangeville is… well, it’s Orangeville so selections are kind of limited. But there’s one phenomenal restaurant that my wife and I love to go to. It’s called Rustik. It’s independently owned, and all the food is locally sourced. It’s incredible — I highly recommend the tuna tataki salad as an appetizer, and the duck breast as an entree. You can’t go wrong!

Now let’s look at funny pictures of Jackson!

jackson-table

jackson-couch

Jackson Puppy #2

The post Meet the Vidyard Team, Video Style: Thomas Karthaus appeared first on Vidyard.



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Thursday, January 19, 2017

The Story of a Storyteller Who Became a Vidyard Customer

Have you met someone recently where you thought, “Wow, you’re inspiring! How did you do that? What could I do with if I had your knowledge or passion or skills?” Well I have. And I didn’t have to go far to find her, because her company is a Vidyard customer.

Stephanie Totty works at ExamSoft. The software company creates assessment software for educators and students. Now, exams might dredge up feelings of anxiety and memories of cramming too hard too fast, and drooling on the pages of your textbooks (please tell me I’m not the only one!). But ExamSoft is dedicated to creating a better experience for educators and for their students. Like at TSTC School of Nursing, where the software helped educators connect with students who needed additional help and remediation, bringing their board exam pass rates from a 77% to a 100% within a year. And at Touro College of Medicine New York, where ExamSoft data helped improve student performance and decrease student dropout, saving the school over $2 million in tuition.  

Wowzers.

It’s clear ExamSoft, and Stephanie, were doing amazing things. How do they do it? It turns out, Vidyard has played a big role: Through video, they reach more and more people through the powerful medium, since it’s more engaging than other formats like text. Using Vidyard, they are learning exactly what content their audience is truly interested in, and are having great success delivering the right messages to the right people.

But only a few years ago, video wasn’t even on ExamSoft’s radar.

ExamSoft had no video content to speak of, and no plans to change that. So what happened? Why did ExamSoft make the leap into video with Vidyard? And who was brave enough to strap on ExamSoft’s figurative running shoes, stretch calf muscles, take the risk and clear the hurdle?

Can you guess? Stephanie Totty, Senior Content Strategy Manager at ExamSoft. I was lucky to sit down and chat with her about how she does it all, what drives her success, and why she loves ExamSoft and what she does.

Screen Shot 2017-01-16 at 6.10.24 PM

Stephanie Totty, Senior Content Strategy Manager at ExamSoft

J.K. Rowling should probably never come over for dinner.

I quickly discovered that Stephanie and I shared a passion: storytelling. Stephanie told me she’s always considered herself a storyteller. As a child, she loved learning and writing, and as she grew, Stephanie found inspiration from some of the greatest stories and storytellers, including Star Wars, Tolkien and his epic Lord of the Rings, and Harry Potter, created by J.K. Rowling (who, if Stephanie could host a fantasy dinner party, would be the guest of choice. “I would serve 15 courses just to keep her at my table longer!” Stephanie says unrepentantly during our chat. I could only agree: I would follow suit and maybe even lock my doors.).

Writing and storytelling was never just a pastime or hobby. It helped Stephanie shape her career as a content marketer: “One of the things that struck me about J.K. Rowling is she would drop what seemed like minor details into the first Harry Potter books, and by the time you got to the seventh book, those minor details actually showed themselves to be the basis for the whole story!” It was a vital lesson to a content marketer: “You can’t just put any words down on paper or a screen. You have to put effort into crafting your story and determining what the real point of it is.”

Storytelling is a way to share a powerful message, but you have to know what the right message is. Audiences are different, and good marketers know that the story that works for one person may not work to convince someone else. ExamSoft software means a lot of different things to different users, and Stephanie knows that “one story may go completely over someone’s head or not be applicable to their wants and needs. Content marketers must make sure that they’re NOT telling the story they want to tell.” Sound a bit crazy? She clarifies: “Instead, they need to be telling the story—or stories!—that resonate with whatever audience is currently consuming the content.”

So how can you know what the right story is?

But how could Stephanie and the ExamSoft marketing team know for sure what the right stories were? How could they create a human connection and build relationships with audiences?

Stephanie realized that video could help. As an online video consumer herself and voracious self-learner, Stephanie knew video was a new and powerful marketing trend that could have lasting impact. That’s why she took a closer look at Vidyard, despite not having a video strategy, when the video platform was presented as a good fit for her business.

Vidyard offered analytics that ExamSoft hadn’t known were possible, like who was watching which videos, how long they were staying engaged, and what kind of content was performing the best. If Stephanie could get her hands on insights like that, she could make sure ExamSoft was delivering the content their audience wanted and needed. On top of that: “The Vidyard salesperson we worked with at the time was very hard to say no to. He was enjoyable and kept going the extra distance to make us happy, which is something we try to do ourselves for ExamSoft customers. It felt like Vidyard and ExamSoft valued the same things: building strong relationships, and sharing the right stories with the right people.”

So Stephanie discussed Vidyard with her VP of Marketing, who agreed that the analytics Vidyard could offer, as well as the deep integration with the marketing automation platform and CRM that they were already using, could only help them understand their leads even better.

Video can teach lessons, if you’re willing to learn.

Embracing video felt a bit overwhelming at first—where should they start? How many resources and how much time would it take? But the whole ExamSoft marketing team jumped in, spending much of 2016 focusing on creating video content for every discipline, persona, and pain point—in fact, in 2016 alone, the team created over 200 videos! And when Vidyard’s analytics told them some content wasn’t resonating with their audiences, they tried again. Getting insights on how they could improve really spoke to Stephanie, because again, it seemed Vidyard was in line with ExamSoft’s own value proposition: ExamSoft is dedicated to helping people learn and grow. The exam software itself “gives in-depth analytics to students on their performance, helping them learn what they did and didn’t do well in, and what they can focus on to improve.”

What Stephanie and the ExamSoft marketing team learned from Vidyard was immensely valuable: “We didn’t need to go super-fancy to have major impact.” They created a lot of webinar content, and focused a lot on customer testimonials as well, because this content continued to shine. As these insights from Vidyard showed them, “academics want to hear from academics”. These content types became “low cost/high reward” assets for ExamSoft and their audiences.

One of the most interesting things they learned? “We believed ExamSoft’s software analytics were the strongest part of our story, so we had been focusing on that. But Vidyard data indicated that our audiences also really wanted to hear about our security features, and to date, our second strongest performing video is on ExamSoft’s security!” (The video is outranked only by their general demo video.) You can check out the video yourself:

There’s nothing better than earning your success.

But it’s not about finding out which topic you should or shouldn’t focus on. There was a bigger message, one to be inspired by. Stephanie’s passion for storytelling and drive to keep learning will help her and her company achieve greater success: “Even when you think you know something, there’s still so much you can learn. You can still rewrite your story and become a better, stronger storyteller and marketer.” We can imagine even J.K. Rowling would be proud….

The whole ExamSoft marketing team is behind her. 2017 at ExamSoft has been declared the year to create the right content for the right people. I can’t wait to see what they create next! Have you been inspired by Stephanie and what ExamSoft has achieved? How are you using video to strengthen your own stories and connect with your audiences?

Want to learn more about other organizations’ success with Vidyard? Check out more Customer Success stories.

The post The Story of a Storyteller Who Became a Vidyard Customer appeared first on Vidyard.



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4 of the Best-Paid Blogging Niches

If you haven’t considered niche blogging, maybe you should. It’s the best way to earn top dollar as a freelance writer.

“Assignments get easier and easier to do as you learn where the good sources and statistics are for that niche topic,” Carol Tice explains. “Developing story ideas gets easier too — as sources catch on that you write a lot on their subject, they start tipping you off about breaking news and emerging trends.”

Thousands of bloggers have recognized this and made their fortune from it, writing on all sorts of niches. For example, there are people making money writing about income properties, frugal living and even meditation and mindfulness!

Some niches are more profitable than others; your ultimate goal should be to target an industry or two where there’s real money in writing. Here are some of the best niches for making a profitable living as a blogger.

1. Money-Making Blogs

2015 and 2016 have seen new ways to make money online, either on an individual level or as a business. Blogs in this niche focus on SEO, email marketing, writing and freelancing, money-making tips and tricks, how tos, social media, product development, affiliate marketing, advertising, and other tips for increasing individual or company revenue.

Among the top money-making blogs of the year:

Smart Passive Income
Neil Patel
ProBlogger
Daily Blog Tips
The Nectar Collective

If you write for any of these blogs, or start your own, you have a good shot at building your writing career and bank account at the same time.

2. Health, Fitness, Wellness, and Healthy Foods

Since more than two-thirds of American citizens qualify as overweight or obese, while being thin continues to receive a strong emphasis in the popular media, blogs about overall health and fitness tend to bring in the money. These blogs usually focus on such topics as trending superfoods, tricks for staying on your diet, diet comparison tips, simple workouts and exercises, natural ingredients, and other healthy subjects.

Please note that credibility is crucial in this industry. It’s hard to gain a following if your blogging tips don’t show results. Top blogs in this field include:

NerdFitness
WellnessMama
Simply Living
Healthy Happy Life

3. Technology

There will never be an end to the invention of gadgets, electronics, software, and apps for both consumer and commercial use. As a consequence, we’ll always need publications that cover press releases, reviews, and how-tos for the many new technologies that roll out.

The kind of tech blogs that do particularly well bring authoritative knowledge to the discussion. They understand the specs and applications of new devices or softwares. They also bring a unique perspective to the tech market, by enabling consumers see things through different eyes.

There have been several highly profitable blogs that have made their fortune in the tech sector. They include:

CNET
TechCrunch
The Verge
Gizmodo
Engadget
The Next Web

Entering this market as a blogger isn’t too difficult if you love technology. As long as you have an understanding of the industry and a winning personality or perspective, you could penetrate this high-paying blog market.

4. Fashion

It’s inarguable that the fashion market is oversaturated, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t many bloggers who do very well in this industry. Fashion bloggers make their money partially with a unique perspective on fashion and primarily through advertising and affiliate links.

Style articles tend to generate a lot of traffic simply because people like to look at the photos. You can probably imagine the kind of passive income this will generate through ad traffic.

Top fashion bloggers of 2016 include:

Zanita Studio
Cupcakes and Cashmere
Damsel in Dior
The Blonde Salad
The Man Repeller
Fashion Toast
Bryan Boy

This market is hard for independent bloggers to penetrate, but you can get your name recognized through guest blogging. Some fashion bloggers will pay top dollar for guest blog content that brings a unique, outside perspective to their forum.

Original post: 4 of the Best-Paid Blogging Niches



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Wednesday, January 18, 2017

How to Create Your Blog Editorial Calendar for 2017 (with Spreadsheet)

Blog Editorial Calendar for 2017

How to Create Your Blog Editorial Calendar for 2017

Download my 2017 Blog Editorial Calendar

Do you ever find yourself struggling to come up with content ideas?

When you look back at your content on your blog, does it ever seem kinda random?

In today’s episode, I will walk you through how to create a blog editorial calendar that will help you accomplish your blogging goals.

What is an editorial calendar

An editorial calendar is a calendar where you plan out all of your content for a predefined period of time.

This can be anything from jotting down blog post titles on a sheet of paper and assigning dates to them to creating a complex spreadsheet where you map out your content.

Side note: I took the time to create a 2017 Blog Editorial Calendar spreadsheet. Want it? Sure, no problem!

Click here to get the spreadsheet

Why You Should Create a Blog Editorial Calendar

There are three main reasons I believe that every blogger should consider creating a blog editorial calendar.

An editorial calendar helps you accomplish your business goals.

“A goal without a plan is just a wish.” Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Would you try to build a house without a blueprint? I wouldn’t.

Plan for your goals

You need to have plans to accomplish your business goals.

Yet, so many of us approach blogging that way (myself included). Here’s the thing – if you’re in this blogging thing for real, you’re building a business.

To build a business, you need to have goals. And to accomplish those goals, you need to have a plan.

If one of your goals is to launch a product teaching people how to clean their houses on March 1, you want to create the right kind of content at the right time to prime your audience for buying that product.

A blog editorial calendar will help you do this.

A plan gives you a structure to work within

I know, I know – you’re a rebel blogger. You don’t want structure. Structure is for people who work the 9 to 5. Right?

WRONG!

One of the major misconceptions among creative people is that structure limits creativity. I’ve come to learn over time that this is far from the truth.

When done well, structure can give you a platform on which your creativity can actually flourish.

It doesn’t mean you can go outside of that structure. However, the structure allows you to organize your ideas in ways that can lead to creativity.

Save time and energy coming up with ideas

Plan to save time and energy

Plan to save time and energy

Have you ever found yourself struggling to come up with a topic for your post that’s supposed to go live tomorrow?

I know I have, and that’s wasted energy.

Instead of doing that, spend some concentrated time creating a great editorial calendar and then use your energy to create the content.

Because it’s the content that will move the needle and get people to do what you want them to do.

Before creating your blog editorial calendar

Ok, you’re sold. And you’re ready to run out there and create your editorial calendar.

Before doing so, it’s a good idea to do some basic research. The goal here to to figure out what kind of content your audience (or potential audience) is looking for.

Here are three ways to do that, one of which is applicable even if you don’t have an audience.

Way #1 – ASK your audience

Surveys

Create surveys to ask your audience.

One of the best ways to know what your audience wants is by simply asking them.

I know, it seems simple. It is. And it’s also extremely powerful.

Create a survey and post it on your blog, send it out to your email list, and share it on your social channels.

The most important question to ask on the survey should go something like this:

If you could wave a magic wand and have one problem solved with your [insert niche topic here], what problem would you solve?

This question gets to the heart of the matter. It helps you to understand what your audience is struggling with.

When you understand that, you can step in like superman and save the day. Why?

Because everybody wants to buy from Superman. Duhhh!

Dig into Google Analytics

Google Analytics

Google Analytics is a great tool to find out about your audience’s interests.

Google Analytics is a powerful tool. It’s a great way to spy on your audience. It literally shows you everything they do on your site (and you were worried about the N.S.A?).

Here are some of the things you want to find out in Google Analytics:

  • What pages/posts are people visiting the most?
  • To get to your blog, what are people searching for?
  • Once they’re on your blog, what do they search for?

When you know the answers to those questions, you will be in a better position to create the content that is already working well for you.

Listen to the episode and you’ll find out how to find these details in Google Analytics. It can get a little tricky, but it’s worth figuring it out.

Scout through Social Media

Social Media

Search through Social Media for Blog Topics

A great way to come up with blog topic ideas is by looking at the questions people are asking on social media. This is something you can do even if you don’t have an audience.

Join Facebook groups related to your niche and see what’s being discussed. Do Twitter searches and see what comes up over and over.

Go wherever your audience is and see what the chatter is all about. This will help you come up with content ideas.

How to Create your Blog Editorial Calendar

Once you’ve done your research, putting together your blog editorial calendar is actually not very complicated.

It will take some time, but you’d be surprised to see that you can actually knock it out in one afternoon.

Here are the three steps I recommend:

Step 1: Plan your Themes

When I decided to create an editorial calendar for 2017, I knew I didn’t want to come up with random blog post ideas. I wanted it all to be connected.

In other words, if someone listened to this podcast episode, I want the next episode to be the logical choice to listen to next.

When you sit down to create your editorial calendar, come up with a theme for the year, one for each quarter, and one for each month.

Of course, the monthly themes should make sense in the context of the quarterly themes and the quarterly themes should make sense in the context of the theme for the year.

This will make the next step easier.

Step 2: Brainstorm blog post titles that fit within those themes

Once you know your themes, just start throwing titles out there that fit those themes.

Use ideas that you got from surveying your audience, checking Google Analytics and/or Social Media to come up with those titles.

Once you have your list, arrange them in a order that makes sense to you.

Step 3: Fill out the calendar, one month at a time

This is it. This is where you start plotting things out and giving dates to those content ideas.

It’s where the commitment happens.

When doing this, make sure to pay attention to any holidays that would affect your niche. If valentine’s day is around the corner, my blog post might cover something like “ten ways to show your blog readers that you love them”

Side note: That’s actually a pretty good idea that I just came up with. I’m about to go and revise my editorial calendar 😉

Other things to keep in mind

There are two other points you should keep in mind when creating your editorial calendar.

If there’s a flow to your content, link them to each other strategically.

Link pages

Link connected pages strategically

Because you went through the process of creating an editorial calendar, there will most likely be a logical flow from one piece of content to the next.

If that’s the case (and I encourage you to make that the case), make it obvious that they are connected by linking them to each other strategically.

This will encourage your readers/listeners/viewers to stay around longer. By doing this, they will be more likely to subscribe to your email list and even buy your product.

And yes – that’s a good thing 😉

It’s ok to change things up a little

Just because you have a structure, it doesn’t mean that you can’t ever deviate from that structure.

Come on! We’re bloggers. We are rebels (somewhat).

Just kidding (not really).

It’s important to allow for your creative juices to flow when they flow. If you feel led in a different direction for a specific blog post, feel free to explore that leading.

Remember, it’s important to have fun, and sometimes that fun comes in spontaneous ways.

Get my FREE 2017 Blog Editorial Calendar Spreadsheet

Ok, so you’re ready to go and create an awesome editorial calendar for 2017.

You have all kinds of amazing ideas on how you can create a great spreadsheet that will allow you to track everything.

Hold up. Take a minute and breath. Slow down speed demon.

I already did the hard work for you. Yep, I created an editorial calendar spreadsheet.

It took me weeks to create and refine and it’s ready for you to use it.

Click Here to Download my 2017 Blog Editorial Calendar

My question for you

Let’s end this bad boy with two questions. Do you use an editorial calendar? If not, will you start? Let me know in the comments area below.

Resources Mentioned

  • 2017 Blog Editorial Calendar

Infographic

Blog Editorial Calendar

How to Create Your Blog Editorial Calendar for 2017

The post How to Create Your Blog Editorial Calendar for 2017 (with Spreadsheet) appeared first on Become A Blogger by Leslie Samuel.



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Why Video is a Phenomenal Sales Tool [Infographic]

It was only yesterday that we shared 11 of our favorite free sales tools so it seems timely that today we’re diving into one of the tools with the greatest potential for you to stand out and drive results with your sales outreach.

Video!

From grabbing more attention from the get-go to building stronger relationships throughout call cycles, video is definitely being infused into the modern sales process for all the right reasons. And with good results.

Check out this infographic we created in partnership with SalesLoft to see just how much you need video.

Video As A Killer Sales Tool

Want to spread the word?

Shout it from the rooftops! Or just use these click-to-tweets.

  • Using video in sales emails has boosted open-to-reply rates by 8x (Click-to-tweet!)
  • Prospects who view videos of a product are 85% more likely to buy (Click-to-tweet!)
  • 75% of late-stage prospects that received a personalized video closed (Click-to-tweet!)
  • 65% of executives have visited a vendor’s site after watching a video (Click-to-tweet!)
  • 51% of executives under 40 reported making a purchase decision after watching a video (Click-to-tweet!)

The post Why Video is a Phenomenal Sales Tool [Infographic] appeared first on Vidyard.



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Unleash Your Hidden Millionaire with These 5 Tips

Being a millionaire is a highly coveted status for many entrepreneurs who are constantly striving to be the best in their industry. If you’ve got your eye on this prize, you’re not alone. And while there is no magic pill for success, here are five practical tips you can use to move closer to your goal:

1. Stop judging your success or failure

At first glance, it appears that success and failure are absolute; success is when you get what you want and failure is when you don’t. You may want to consider that these definitions of success and failure are exactly what cause you to fail. Not because you’ve done something wrong, but because the words you use have the power to create what you experience.

What you aren’t aware of is that success and failure do not exist independently of how you perceive them. In other words, the way you define success and failure is exactly what creates your experience of success and failure. And, if you can suspend your current definitions (which likely don’t support success), you’ll make room for a new definition that will support your success.

Your brain is wired to judge

When you want to create something with a specific goal in mind and you don’t reach that goal, the first thing your brain does is tell you that you’ve failed. But defining an unmet goal as failure only does one thing—it makes you feel bad and discourages you from moving forward.

Finding something that doesn’t work is often more valuable than finding something that does work, simply because it prevents you (and others) from making the same mistake and having to reinvent the wheel.

On the subject of failure, Thomas Edison shared his wisdom with the world, “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.”

And failure, no matter how you define it, isn’t a bad thing. Many great successes have been preceded by great failures. Take entrepreneur Sam Ovens for example, who quit his job to build a job recruitment website that ultimately failed. Ovens told the Epoch times, “The big lesson is that you have to sell something that the market actually wants.”

If his business had not completely failed, giving him just a hint of success, he could have easily stuck with it and struggled for years to make it happen. However, the wisdom he gained from his total failure turned out to be more valuable than gold. Not long after his business failed, Ovens created two successful businesses, becoming a millionaire in just a few years.

Millionaires don’t like lemonade

Even the famous statement that says to “make lemonade out of lemons” is misleading. A successful person has no need to make lemonade; they can appreciate a lemon for being a lemon, and if they don’t like the lemon, they’ll adjust their plan and move forward. They don’t need to add sugar just to feel good.

2. Don’t be a whiner

According to Entrepreneur.com, research has shown that people complain once per minute. That’s a lot of complaining.

Because many people don’t have the patience or interest to listen to others complain for very long, chances are, when you share your emotionally negative experiences with others, they’ll start inserting their opinion uninvited and won’t really be listening to you. This can be a frustrating experience.

If you want to share your negative experiences with someone, the best way to do it is by prefacing the conversation with a simple request. Ask the person if you can share your experience with them and make a request that you just want to be heard. The idea is that by creating the context in which your conversation is about to take place, you’re actually getting the other person to switch gears into listening mode.

Change the context of your conversations

Habitually complaining hurts you more than your friends. When you constantly complain, you are actually wiring your brain for negativity. You’ve probably noticed that whenever you complain, your mood tends to go downhill and collects more negative thoughts. The more you allow yourself to think negative thoughts, the worse you will feel. And when you feel really bad, you’re more likely to make poor decisions.

If you change the context of your conversations with people, however, you can quickly change your mood. Doing this requires not giving in when you want to complain, and seeking out friends who will support you by encouraging you, rather than providing you with sympathy.

3. Don’t be afraid to accept responsibility

When you were younger, you may have heard your parents or teachers tell you that you must accept responsibility for something you’ve done wrong. Because of this, you probably grew up with a negative view of responsibility. But responsibility is a powerful component of success that goes beyond the concept of right and wrong.

Responsibility is literally the ability to respond; to be answerable to someone or something within your control. It has nothing to do with blame or fault. In fact, you can be responsible for something you didn’t cause—and being able to do that is what actually makes you successful.

For example, when a website development company is late delivering a project to their client, the CEO of the company is not the person who caused the delay; they’re not writing the code or managing deadlines. Despite their lack of hands on involvement in the project, they can still be fully responsible and accountable to the client for the resolution of any problems. They didn’t cause the problems, but they’re accountable for fixing them.

The mindset of success

The mindset that says “that wasn’t my job, I didn’t do it, I’m not responsible” doesn’t create millionaires. You’re not likely to find any successful entrepreneurs with this mindset. Success comes to those who can look at a situation and accept responsibility, not for what happened in the past, but for creating a resolution in the future.

4. Stop comparing yourself to others

With all of the successful people appearing in magazines and on TV, it’s no wonder entrepreneurs are comparing themselves to what they see. If you’re doing this, although it’s not inherently wrong to look to others as a model of success, don’t allow it to define you.

Someone else’s success is not always going to be indicative of the kind of success you will create. Everyone has unique gifts and talents to share with the world, and if you compare your success to someone who derives their success from a talent you don’t have, you’re going to be disappointed. For example, you may love composing music, but if you compare your success to Mozart, you’re going to be disappointed.

It sounds simple, but the best way to be successful in business is to create and run your own business, and model only what can be applied to your business. Don’t try to stick a round peg in a square hole. Do what you love to do and what you’re great at. Make your success your own. Don’t chase other people’s dreams while sacrificing your own. Forge your own path to greatness.

5. Don’t fake it ‘til you make it

While there can be some benefits to the famous phrase, “fake it ‘til you make it,” that’s not always the case. If you find yourself engaging in this behavior for long periods of time without results, you’re probably just spinning your wheels. The most likely reason you’re spinning your wheels is because you’re modeling the external behavior of someone who derives their success from their inner world.

According to TheIntrovertEntrepreneur.com, when you “fake it ‘til you make it,” you’re not honoring or acknowledging your truth. And studies have shown that when people fake being happy, their mood actually deteriorates faster.

This makes sense when you realize that mindset, not actions, are at the root of success. If you find yourself particularly drawn to someone whose success you want to emulate, you need to discover what their inner thoughts are and find ways to develop that mindset.

Your thoughts determine your results in life

Mahatma Gandhi said:

“Your beliefs become your thoughts,
Your thoughts become your words,
Your words become your actions,
Your actions become your habits,
Your habits become your values,
Your values become your destiny.”

No matter what business you’re in, the best thing you can do to improve your success and feel good about what you do is to work on your inner game—starting with your thoughts.

Original post: Unleash Your Hidden Millionaire with These 5 Tips



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