Category Archive: 'Attracting Traffic'

Top-Notch SEO Event

I spent yesterday afternoon speaking at and attending the The Software & Information Industry Association’s (SIIA) ROI of Organic Search event in New York. It was a great few hours—not only was the crowd interested and involved in the content, but the other presenters were fantastic. Byron White, Chief Idea Officer for ideaLaunch; Alex Bennert, chief search strategist for The Wall Street Journal; and Michael Dub, partner at Raspberry Red Marketing—great jobs all around.

Alex, in particular, did a phenomenal job of demystifying SEO and offering practical tips that people can get started with immediately. If you have a chance to hear her speak—do. She was telling us how even her 11-year-old son is getting a handle on SEO—if he can do it, no doubt we all can. Keep an eye on Subscription Site Insider in August for loads of practical information on how to implement a successful SEO strategy.

You can also take a look at the presentation I gave on the “Marketing Tactics” page at www.subscriptionsiteinsider.com.

Posted on: 06/17/2010
By: Kinley Levack
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ECard Holiday Card Campaigns — Great Word of Mouth Traffic Drivers

According to this story in MarketingVox, OfficeMax and Intel are both launching ecard campaigns to drive extra traffic during the holidays.  Although, subscription sites such as AmericanGreetings.com have built multi-million dollar businesses around paid ecards, chances are most subscription sites will use ecards as a traffic driver.

In the past, ad-supported sites such as  ChristianityToday.com and Canadian portal Sympatico.ca have successfully used ecards for traffic driving.  So, why shouldn’t membership and subscription sites try them as well?

eCards are fairly simple and cheap to create.  First, you create a little art that your audience would find particularly humorous or resonant.  Your art could be an image, a video, etc.  It can be static — I once offered a B2B marketing cartoon as an ecard to B2B marketing people.  Or it can be highly interactive — a short online videogame, or even a “create your own” ecard where you provide humorous elements.  (Example of the latter – Sympatico let visitors upload their own photos and then type in scripts to make the images in the photos “talk” –  I used it to send my brother a photo of his own dog mouthing off.)

If you’re very broad in topic, and I mean really uber-broad, then you might want to “go viral” where your ecard is so appealing that a zillion people use it, send it, visit your site. But in my experience, going viral is horribly unpredictable.  It’s like picking an academy award winning movie from a giant pile of printed scripts.  You never know until after you launch.

A better tactic is to come up with creative that is highly niche and targeted in nature.  Something that would really only appeal to your primary audience — the people who already buy subscriptions and stick on your file for months and years on end.  Those best-of customers.  What would they find screamingly funny or deeply special?

Develop the art — do a few different ones they can chose from (I think 3 is enough) — and then post them on the public area of your site.  Let your members and prospects know the cards are available, and sit back and enjoy.  You may not get heaps of traffic, but chances are, it will be the right traffic.  Best customers tend to know other people who would be best customers too.

Posted on: 11/23/2009
By: Anne Holland
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Affiliate Marketers Aren’t Impressed With Long-Lived Cookies

Data from Shawn Collins 2009 AffStat Affiliate Marketing Study (available as a free 40 page report here) shows most affiliates don’t care about your super-duper-365-day-cookie.  They know cookies get wiped or overwritten.   55% are fine with a 30-day cookie or less.  The vast majority of the remainder are cool with a 90-day cookie.

So what do affiliates really want?

  • direct deposit – 62% of them really want it, not a check please!
  • landing pages that convert better, 80% watch their earnings per click and reject sites that don’t do well
  • well copywritten text links that get clicks.  Text links can be better than banners.
  • the flexibility to be an affiliate for a wide variety of products.  Only 3% chose new merchants to work with based on “relevancy to my current web sites” and 30% have more than 10 domains.
Posted on: 11/01/2009
By: Anne Holland
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