Send via SMS

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the web, is blogging...

Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the Web, has a new blog. His first post affirms the old saying that, 'the more things change, the more things stay the same.' He opens with an interesting bit of history in describing the purpose of the first browser...
In 1989 one of the main objectives of the WWW was to be a space for sharing information. It seemed evident that it should be a space in which anyone could be creative, to which anyone could contribute. The first browser was actually a browser/editor, which allowed one to edit any page, and save it back to the web if one had access rights.
Hmmmm, sounds familiar.

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Why Do We Blog? A Global Perspective...

According to Technorati (October 2005), less than 5% of us do so to make money. I think that, at least from a business blogging perspective, this is a little misleading. While many of us, I for one, would report that we want the "visibility as an authority" that 34% selected; why we want that visibility is no doubt to make money. Oddly enough, people pay authorities, aka experts, in their field for their expertise. What better way to demonstrate your expertise than through a well-constructed, informative blog?

Here are the reasons reported for blogging. Note that only 54.8% were US respondents to this does provide a bit of a global viewpoint on blogging rationale...
  • Generate Revenue - 4.62%
  • Other - 9.62%
  • Connect with Others - 20.34%
  • Create a Record of my thoughts - 31.54%
  • Visibility as an Authority in my Field - 33.86%
Why do you blog?

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Friday, December 16, 2005

Converting a Snail Mail List to an Email List (for a Bike Shop or Anyone Else!)

I was working with a bike shop recently with an interesting problem. They had a snail mail list of over 10,000 names that they'd acquired over the years they'd been in business. While they periodically mailed the list with a newsletter or a promotion, this occured less than they'd like because of the expense involved. The solution was obvious, email the list instead but, as they'd never collected email addresses, this wasn't possible.

The solution for them, or for you, use snail mail to build your email list. Specifically, use a low cost postcard campaign to drive your snail mail list to your web site and once there capture their email addresses. Tie your campaign to a compelling sweepstakes - a bike giveaway or a top-of-the-line tuneup or new components - something that's going to capture their imagination and their EMAIL addresses. Take an 'everybody's a winner' approach (and insure a higher response) by offering a coupon for dollars off their next purchase or service call that can only be downloaded from the web site. Don't forget your customers who are Internet or computer phobic - give them an opportunity to participate - at least in the drawing portion, by mail.

The result, thousands of email addresses + a cleaned-up list + renewed interest in your business = thousands of dollars in new business as people redeem their coupons, learn, on an on-going basis, about your latest products and services and tell their friends about what a great business you are.

Think about it. Do you have dozens, hundreds, or thousands of names languishing on a snail mail list. Do you dread mailing it because a.) it costs too much and b.) you only have a vague idea if it's effective or not? Then consider tying your next mail campaign to a web site promotion. Use post cards that point people to a unique landing page created solely for the promotion (don't know what a landing page is? ask me...). Provide a compelling offer including a reason to sign-up for your ezine or email alerts. Track the results (a lot easier to do on the web). Rinse. Repeat.

(For more ideas on building your list read my earlier post on "How to Build an Email List...)

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Google's Web Clips Allow You to Add RSS Feeds to Your Gmail Account

...and What it Means for the Internet Marketer...

Googles new web clips service allows you to scroll RSS or Atom feeds above your inbox and messages. With Web Clips you can track your favorite blogs (like this one!!!), news, sports or anything else that has a feed attached to it. (NOTE: Don't know what RSS - Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication - is? Then click here for an easy explanation or here for a little more detail.)

It's easy to do; took 5 minutes to add a feed for my blog. What's the benefit? Not sure yet -- it's a periphery of your conscious type thing. You're checking your mail or composing messages and there's this line of text that maybe catches your attention. Kind of like a highway billboard or a magazine ad that you scan as your reading an article. One of those 8 marketing impressions you need to make before a prospect will do business with you. Anyhow, Web Clips comes pre-populated with a number of prominent feeds and as I said above, it's simple, although not intuitive, to add your own. It's got a nice forward|back button as well so you can easily scroll all of the feeds you subscribe to.

Like most things Google, it's kind of cool and if you RSS and Gmail, check it out...

The Internet Marketer's Challenge?

As always, getting noticed. As a marketer it's neat to see all of these new channels for your content popping up but there's still the issue of how do 'I' get anybody to notice 'my dinghy' in an ocean full of big hummin' cruise ships? How do I get Mr. Prospect to subscribe to 'my blog' let alone trust that he or she is savvy enough to hook 'me' into their Gmail feed. Because unless you're CNN, Yahoo, ESPN or the like, it's not going to happen automagically.

The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind, the answer is.... no, no, no, that's Bob Dylan's answer. Anyway, how? Let them know. Tell everybody and make it easy. Let 'em know it's there and show 'em how to get it.
Here's an idea... In your email signature promote your Blog or other RSS/Atom enabled content and include a link to a tutorial titled, "How to Subscribe to My Blog Feed" that links back to your web site for instructions.
Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Monday, December 12, 2005

The Problem with Your Web Site May Not be a Lack of Search Engine Traffic

Web site owners call me up and ask me to help them get more traffic to their site. But here's the thing. You can generate all the traffic in the world to your site and, if nobody buys, then what good does it do?
  • They come.
  • They look.
  • They say yech!
  • They hit the back button.
Unless what you're peddling is so compelling, unique or of such incredible value, people will leave, and quickly; within 8 seconds if some of the gurus I read are to be believed.

Shop.org reports that the average conversion rate for a commerce web site is 2% or less. Think about it... If 98 out of 100 people walked into a Burger King, a grocery store or Old Navy and left without buying or even browsing don't you think that alarms would be sounding from here to Poughkeepsie? Don't you think that hordes of merchandisers, marketers, corporate bigwigs and product managers would be pulling out their hair looking for a solution to stop the bleeding?

Yet on the web it seems to be accepted as the nature of the beast. That the solution is more traffic or that the problem is that they aren't getting the right kind of traffic. But the real issue, I'm convinced, is that fundamentally their sites are flawed. They don't invite, compel, persuade visitors to transact with them. In fact, they do just the opposite. They confound, confuse and frustrate those ready, willing and able to buy.

The other day, for example, I looked at a site. The owner wants more traffic yet on the home page there was only one tiny picture of a seasonal product displayed, a garble of text composed solely of every possible keyword or phrase they could think of, and a link to an off site eshop with something I've never seen before -- a closed sign. Below the closed sign was an email link that you could click if you wanted "immediate" assistance. No thanks. I'll just click the back button.

The thing of it is that I'm pretty sure if I walked into his bricks & mortar operation I'd find a well-lit, nicely merchandised operation with an attentive staff ready to meet my every need. Why would he think that the web would require anything less?

My advice, fix your site first. Make it welcoming, compelling, inviting, friendly ... an easy and desireable place to do business and then worry about traffic. Here's a quick quiz ... find 5 competing sites on the web and rank them according to their appeal to you as a consumer; then assign your site a ranking against those 5. If you haven't given yourself a 1 or maybe a 2 then you have work to do because trying harder may work for Avis but it's unlikely it will work for you.

The old riddle asks, "If a tree falls in the forest and nobody's there, does it make a sound?" Rephrased for the web the question is, "If a shopper, or 10 thousand, visits my site and does not buy does anybody care?"

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Power Squid -- a Christmas Idea for the Power Strip Challenged

Power squid solves powerstrip crowding
File this under "DOH!Why didn't I think of this and make a million dollars?" Great idea for those of us struggling to plug in all of our brick-style power adapters into one 5 outlet power strip. Yeah, right! Some genius came up with the ingenious Power Squid (available through ThinkGeek.com). I'm ordering mine today.

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Sunday, December 11, 2005

The Website Development Process - Learning from Legos(tm)


Are you visual? Do you like toys? Do you need a website developed or redeveloped? Then check out PingMag's very funky overview of the web site development process from the 3 inch high perspective of little Lego(tm)-like characters.

Friday, December 09, 2005

How to Build an Email List


How do you build an email list? The simplest way is to ask. Ask who? Your existing customers for starters. Oh, and when you ask, offer something of value in return.

The Oven (a great little pizza restaurant in Lakewood, CO) distributes a simple email sign-up form with all their meal checks. It's simple, it stands out and it offers to keep patrons informed of "events, specials and new dishes" if you sign-up. Mmmm; new dishes; mmmm.

A local cigar & tobacco store I patronize (mmmm; cigars; mmmm)- The Tobacco Leaf - uses their email list to promote new cigars, promotions and, most effectively, their bi-monthly 'Big Smoke' at which they provide a free cigar and beverage to everyone who shows up. Believe me, for the $6 they invest in me at each of these events, I generally walk away with $30 in merchandise plus I visit once every week or two to restock. Another benefit to them: When I can, I bring a friend to share a smoke and a brew - viral marketing, dude.

How do they get email addresses? They keep a simple sign-up sheet at the counter.

Both these businesses generate more business through their very simple email strategies. Nothing fancy yet both reap the benefit and more cheaply than if they were to use off-line methods. No printing, no stuffing envelopes or applying postage, no postage. Yeah, they still have to come up with the content and they might have to pay a pro if they want a fancy layout - the extent of the cigar store's creativity is in employing a variety of font sizes and colors - but overall their costs are a fraction of the expense of an off-line mail program plus it's easier to get done and therefore more likely to be done.

So do yourself a favor and start asking your customers for their email addresses. Promise you'll not abuse it or sell it or lend it and that you won't overuse it. Then DO use it to keep in touch with the kind of information, offers and promotions that your customers want to and will appreciate hearing about. Nothing complicated; doesn't have to be fancy; but you'll be surprised at how effective it can be.

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Just What is a Blog?

I've got to admit, I get a little fumble tongued sometimes explaining what I do to a non-geeky audience -- not that I think of myself as a geek, I wouldn't presume to elevate myself to that level, pseudo-geek is more like it (pseudo-geek, pseudo-intellectual...you get the idea) -- so it's always nice when somebody explains something so much better than I can.

That's what I thought when I read Andy Wibbels', blogger extraordinaire, definition of a blog. He states simply that...
"A blog is an easy, instantly and frequently updated website, focused around a topic, industry or personality."
I think it's appropriate to spend a little time on the elements of Andy's definition:

Easy, because anyone can do it with little or no skills beyond opening a web browser and operating a keyboard - hell, touch typing is not even required! Actually, 'anyone' is doing it as evidenced by the sheer volume of blogs out there. Technorati (a popular blog search engine) is tracking over 22 million blogs on a daily basis.

Instantly & Frequently gets a little dicier; not the instantly part because blogging occurs pretty much in real time. As soon as I type the last character in this post and click the publish button, that's it. It's literally seconds before my 'wisdumb' is out on the web for all (hopefully) to see.

Frequently is the part that gets most business bloggers. They need to discipline themselves to establish blogging as a part of their several-times-weekly if not daily routine. Blogging is kind of like the newspaper. Once you subscribe to a blog, you expect it on a regular schedule. If you don't get it, you forget it.

Focused on a... maintaining your focus is also, imho, key. You attract a following based on a common chord that resonates with your readers. Sure it's okay to go 'off topic' periodically but for the most part 75-80% of your blogging should be focused on the topic, industry or personality that attracted your audience to begin with. And the more narrowly you focus, the better. Hey, if you want to talk about something else, start another blog. It's EASY!

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Friday, December 02, 2005

Getting Them to Give a Damn Gets Given a Damn

Kudos to a friend of mine, Eric Chester, who's book, Getting Them to Give a Damn: How to Get Your Front Line to Care About your Bottom Line (Dearborn 2005) has been named the top HR book of 2005 by Quick Service Restaurant magazine - the leading publication for the fast food industry. It's a great read and a well deserved honor. Highly recommended if you employ 16-24 year olds in your business.

Thanks for reading...

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Is Your Web Site Making a Hundred Million Prospects See Red?

MarketingSherpa released a report today* that confirmed something that I've suspected for sometime ... If you ignore how your web site functions in Mozilla's Firefox and other non-IE browsers then you could be ignoring 100 million potential customers -- or worse, irritating, frustrating and driving them away from your site.

Why? Because IE plays fast and loose with Web Development Standards while Firefox adheres to them. What this means is that some of the functionality built into your IE-based and tested site may not work in Firefox. Little things like Contact and Order forms. OOPS!

And with 100,000,000 downloads in the first year it was available and an estimated browser market share of 14% and growing (MarketingSherpa estimates the number of their subscribers who use Firefox is as high as 30%), the Firefox user can't be ignored.

Believe me, Firefox is a cool tool; delivering a vastly superior browsing experience than Internet Explorer but don't take my word for it. Head on over to http://www.mozilla.com/firefox/ and download a copy for yourself. It's free and you don't have to (nor should you) throw out IE when you install Firefox -- although you'll soon want to. Once you've installed it you'll quickly fall in love with the tabbed browsing and oodles of free extensions that add incredible range to your web experience.

Oh yeah, and don't forget to visit your site to make sure that it's fully functional under Firefox. If not, time to call your webmaster (or contact me if you don't have one or he doesn't get it) and put her to work.

Thanks for reading...


*The report is free until about 12/7/05, after that you'll have to buy it.

tom.gray@gemsolv.com
GeMSolv.com