Curation Revolution
55.1K views | +0 today
Follow
Curation Revolution
Curation the next web revolution.
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Taking Of Google 1,2,3 - Create Your Internet Marketing Destiny

Taking Of Google 1,2,3 - Create Your Internet Marketing Destiny | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

Google can feel like a dungeon master. If your website is mission critical, and whose isn't now, and any traffic source controls more than 30% of your websites traffic and/or conversions you are in trouble.

Diversification is the key to online marketing success. This post is about 3 Giant Steps to creating your own Internet marketing destiny. Following these steps mean Google's moves will hurt less.

If you've just been tagged with a traffic penalty don't rush out and start changing things. Organic change is needed, but you should do so with a plan.

BUT, you can double down on PPC, up your email marketing fequency and increase social. Those moves may close the gap left by a Google algorithm change while you begin to remove links (with RemoveEM.com) and do the other things that will get your Google train back on track.

Here is the piece about how to diversify your traffic sources and build your list:
https://plus.google.com/u/0/102639884404823294558/posts/Maf8cEcEBGu

No comment yet.
Rescooped by Martin (Marty) Smith from Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Scoop.it!

Reading Email In Bed: The Mobile Rethink of Email Marketing [+ Marty Note]

Reading Email In Bed: The Mobile Rethink of Email Marketing [+ Marty Note] | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

Thanks to smartphones and tablets, email marketing has fundamentally changed. Best practices surrounding design and when to send are seeing some of the first major shifts since webmail clients were the dominant email platform. The good news for marketers is that people consume more email now....


Via Jeff Domansky
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Email Marketing Critical & Different Now
35% of people use their tablets in bed. In and of itself that stat isn't all that helpful (lol), but understanding the curation role tablets and smart phones play is becoming critical to successful email marketing.

Here is how mobile is changing email marketing:

* Look and feel changes (less is more and clear CTAs).
* Subject lines = even more critical (7 word rule).

* Delivery timing is changing (see linked article). 

* Speed critical (delivery network is slower, so smaller is better).

* Engagement is harder, so SINK THE HOOK. 

Mobile Email Marketing Rethink 


Mobile email goes in curation steps.

Step 1 REVIEW
First goal s make it past the "trash this" review. Trash this reviews are about who is sending WHAT now. Many people use their mobile devices to decide what gets into their laptop or desktop computers. 

Key in Step 1 = great subject line and a trusted brand (if not trusted yet you can become trusted by only emailing GREAT stuff that is relevant for who you are sending it too - so create segments and personas).

Step 2 OPEN
Opening email marketing on mobile devices is yet another hurdle. If your email takes a long time to open it flunks this test. Small and fast is best. If your email marketing is image heavy it won't work well on mobile.

Key in Step 2 = clear headlines with large Calls To Action (CTAs). 

Step 3 ACTION
If your email isn't easy to tap, swipe or make it move forward then you've failed the most important conversion step. You've worked SO HARD to have your customers arrive here make sure ACTION is easy on a mobile device and remember action steps are different on different devices. 

Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, March 3, 2013 9:00 PM
LOL, plural of Marty is Marty2x I think. Good scoop here that is a critical read for ecom. When I was a Director of Ecom email was our highest margin channel BY FAR. I bet that is still true for those who understand how to modify approach based on this post. Marty2X
Sylvie Mercier's curator insight, March 4, 2013 12:21 AM

New marketing ....

Marty Koenig's comment, March 9, 2013 3:43 PM
LOL Marty2x. It is interesting to see the variations and sameness from the old web to the new mobile.