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Mobile Marketing and What it Means for Your Businesses?

Posted by kgerards on Sunday, 15 August, 2010

Best Viewing Experience in FULL SCREEN.

Best Viewing Experience in FULL SCREEN.

Mobile marketing is obviously red-hot right now.

The challenge is, learning what to do about it.
And specifically what to do in the local markets.

Mobile Marketing Facts

* There are currently 5 Billion mobile phone users world wide

* Approximately 51 million of those are smart phones

*86% of the U.S. population owns a mobile phone

*75 billion text messages are sent each month

* Text messages cannot be blocked, filtered or ignored

* SMS Mobile marketing is more affordable and quicker than traditional methods of communication and more reliable than email

* SMS text messages are received within seconds of being sent

* SMS Mobile Marketing allows your message recipients to respond to your offers or promos in real time

I’ve been checking out the programs that’s
been coming out on mobile and, frankly,
its been disappointing.

Mobile Marketing Live Leads
Let me give you my 2 cents on it.

First, it has a module on local with mobile.

It shows you how to position what they teach
with local businesses. Then, you use the things
from the rest of the program to deliver new
clients to local businesses.

Things like mobile ads, lead generation, phone
call leads, and more. And you can use the software
that comes with it to create your mobile pages.

It was all straight forward with me.

I don’t recommend many things to my Video Marketing Training subscribers unless I believe it helps you be more successful
with your local marketing business.

This is one, after going through it myself, that
I feel is a great value and fits in with the
Local Video Marketing model.

Mobile Marketing Big Time


“Kelly Gerards, Video Marketing and Social Media Coach…forms Partnership with Nationwide Sales Training Organization.”

Posted by kgerards on Monday, 21 June, 2010

In an exciting business move, Kelly Gerards has accepted a partnership with a major sales training organization, “The Training Center Group“, based out of Atlanta, Georgia. The Training Center offers online and offline training programs to direct sales professionals in 15 different markets such as Real Estate, Mortgage Brokers, etc. They currently have a subscriber base of about 2,000,000 sales professionals and independent businesses and are syndicated in over 2000 offline and online publications.

Kelly was contacted in April 2010 by The Training Center Group, after they had done some extensive research to find an expert in the field of “Video Marketing”, that had verifiable results. They approached Kelly, and his company Blanca Peak Technologies, about the opportunities for a new video marketing training program geared towards Real Estate Professionals. This niche naturally includes Mortgage Brokers, Loan Officers and Appraisers. The Training Center Group felt this was a marketing platform that many sales professionals could benefit from and should be exposed to, so now the initial training series is being launched to 5 other “Sales Professional Niches” such as Human Resource, Inside sales and others.

Kelly says, “This is an excellent opportunity to introduce this marketing platform and my experiences to the small business owner, and direct sales professional in a massive way…. truly, an exciting time for myself and my team!”

For more information and to get on the notification list for upcoming webinar trainings, register here and stay tuned for more updates and educational case studies: Video Marketing Trainings


Is Google’s New Update Costing You?

Posted by kgerards on Tuesday, 8 June, 2010

“High rankings in Google search results are coveted by nearly all webmasters, but Google is constantly making changes to keep them on their toes. Actually, Google is said to make roughly one change per day.”

For those of you that have depended on mainly SEO and PPC to assist in getting the top rankings organically…yeah, it most likely is costing you.

But read the other excerpt below, and you’ll realize the facts that those of us who stepped out into the unknown a year ago or more, into the wild west of the “Social Media”, we are truly starting to reap the rewards of these “Google MayDays”..

“Most savvy webmasters have learned by now that they can’t rely on Google rankings alone to drive traffic. This is why social media opportunities presented by networks like Facebook and Twitter have become so attractive. The way people search and obtain information is becoming more and more diversified, not only spread out around different applications (largely due to increased mobile usage), but also within search engines themselves.”

To Read the Entire Article, click here: Google MayDay Updates Strikes Again!!


Why Google’s Design Revamp Could Be Good for Social Media Marketers?

Posted by kgerards on Thursday, 13 May, 2010

It’s all about the real estate. As I’ve mentioned in many of my case studies…there’s only soo much space on the first page of Google, first one that dominates wins. Google results pages have historically been about simplicity. Any search “options” have been such a little part of the UI that, let’s be honest, hardly anyone knew they were there.

Before now, Google attempted to predict what users wanted by including universal search (such as news, videos, and images) right in the organic results. Most recently, social conversations (blog posts, twitter updates, etc.) have made their way into the SERPS. Today, a clear left navigation gives users quick access to specific vertical search features right from the results pages:

Read more: ‘Why Google’s Redesign….”


Building a Brand on A Budget, 300 Unit Apt. Complex get 14,000 hits per Month on Blog!

Posted by kgerards on Wednesday, 5 May, 2010

By Jason Anthony

To elevate their digital, online profiles and carve out entrepreneurial niches, more businesses are turning to social media and other free digital marketing alternatives.

See the full article here.

This article and case study further verifies that if you aren’t getting the message about your business to the interweb, your competition most likely will…dominating the first page of the search engines. Such as the apartment complex, 300 units, is getting 14,000 hits per month on their blog site…do you think they ever lack finding tenants to fill any vacancies? NOT….DON’T THINK SO!


Email Marketing, Done Correctly, Just For Real Estate Agents.

Posted by kgerards on Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Did you know that a key component of real estate marketing is relationship marketing? A successful real estate professional should focus on customer trust in the same way an internet marketer does.

In both fields, trust and reputation are important. And once both are built, you should have no problem growing your marketing sphere of influence.

Let’s take a look at how you can use AWeber to your advantage in the email marketing and real estate worlds.

Why Build Relationships?

Building a good relationship with your contacts is a must in today’s marketing world. It can take you into the realms of stellar achievement both on the local and global marketplaces.

Also, a home can the biggest investment a family will ever make. It’s very important for people to have a high level of trust in you. This is the place their family is going to come home to; they’ll create many special memories there.

Once you have built this trust, your contacts will always come to you when they need something. In addition to this, your customer’s word-of-mouth business can prove invaluable.
Some Relationship Building Ideas for Realtors

Because of it’s dynamic nature, real estate marketing can lend itself to creative ideas. Building your reputation can be a unique adventure.

Here are a few that you may find helpful for your prospective referrals:
Local Email Newsletter or Blog

Instead of going for a sale every time you send out an email newsletter, why not offer your subscribers interesting information about their area, including:

* Local news and current events
* A historic blog about your local area
* Information about city or township related issues, regulations or laws
* Changes in homeowners association regulations, fees, events and news
* Local school district statistics and events

Broadcast Listings

As a Realtor, there are several events that you can use our email newsletter tool for:

* Getting a new listing
* Putting a listing under contract
* Closing a deal (either on the buyer or seller side)

I highly recommend segmenting your list when sending to these different categories. You can easily notify different types of people, based on which of the above events happened.
Open Houses

AWeber can be used to broadcast open houses as well as broker’s open houses to colleagues. You can have an email list for homeowners, let’s say, and a separate list for agents and brokers in the area.
Periodic CMAs

Why not send a monthly or quarterly Comparative Market Analysis, or CMA, to the people on your list? It will spark their interest and start a dialogue in case they are interested in buying or selling property.
Offer Free and Personal Help

What better way to gain trust as well as a potential client than to offer free information based on their needs? Not only will you learn much more about who they are, but you can develop the type of quality in your relationship that is so important.
Of Realtors and SPAM

It’s very important for Realtors to know which practices are acceptable and which aren’t. There is a bit of a difference between traditional real estate marketing as opposed to what is acceptable in the email marketing world.

Realtors use a technique called farming in order to reach out to people in their area. This can be done in the form of sending unsolicited postal mail to a given area, over long periods of time.

Farming to email addresses is considered SPAM – bottom line. Because SPAM is such a problem worldwide, it is completely unacceptable to send out unsolicited email to those who have never asked you for it. This includes people in your local board of Realtors, NAR, or from any type of directory.

If you have any questions about specific marketing practices, please feel free to contact us. We would be more than happy to answer your questions.
A Realtor Apart

The merger of real estate and email marketing can be a very exciting and lucrative one. If done correctly, it can add a new level to your creative approach and set you apart from the rest.

I invite you to take a look at a couple of previous posts about content for real estate emails, and real estate email tips.

Keeping the points above in mind, how can you use AWeber to establish and strengthen relationships? Share your ideas.

Ron GivensAWeber Affiliate Manager Ron Givens has been practicing real estate for over ten years, and in three different states. He has experience in both residential and commercial sales.


Twitter Reveals Ad Supported Business Model…another revenue game changer in the social media world.

Posted by kgerards on Tuesday, 13 April, 2010

# By John C Abell Email Author wired.com
# April 13, 2010 |
# 7:13 am |

Read More

Twitter announced Tuesday that it will start showing some sponsored Tweets on some search pages, taking a cautious first step into a traditional advertising business model that could provide a steady source of revenue for the four-year-old start-up which doesn’t yet make any serious money yet but is reckoned to be worth a billion dollars.

The so-called Promoted Tweets will put tweets from paying customers at the top of some Twitter search pages, clearly marked as ads, the company said in a blog post. Users would otherwise see these Tweets only if they followed the related accounts, found them by chance in a search or saw them randomly in the Twitter timeline. Including the advertisement Tweets with search results — what might be called the Google model — is less intrusive than putting them, say, on “your” Twitter page when you log onto the site. Promoted Tweets will initially appear on only a small proportion of search pages.

And since they retain the character and length of a Tweet — 140 characters, no in-line images — they have the advantage of not seeming jarringly out of place. The content would be exactly what a Twitter user might expect from a company promoting its message on the service, though this will make ignoring that company and its message more difficult.

“Promoted Tweets will be clearly labeled as ‘promoted’ when an advertiser is paying, but in every other respect, they will first exist as regular Tweets and will be organically sent to the timelines of those who follow a brand. Promoted Tweets will also retain all the functionality of a regular Tweet including replying, Retweeting, and favoriting. Only one Promoted Tweet will be displayed on the search results page.”

Still, Twitter presented this milestone of their young history in cautious terms, possibly anticipating resistance from users who might see any ads an intrusion. In a quick assessment Forrester analyst Josh Bernoff writes in a blog post that “Of all the places Twitter could includes ads, this is the least obtrusive and the most relevant. People will not desert Twitter for this. It’s inevitable — technology services need revenue.”

Also, while Twitter.com is a popular destination, millions of people use desktop and smartphone apps for the service and rarely use the site at all. Some of those apps themselves have ads which Twitter gets no cut from — including Tweetie for the Mac and iPhone, made by a atebits, a company Twitter bought last week. Because Promoted Tweets will appears in search results on Twitter apps too, the company will get a piece of the action on those platforms as well.

The unusually long post, which includes an FAQ, describes Promoted Tweets as “a simple service” and Twitter’s move to this plateau the result of a “stubborn insistence on a slow and thoughtful approach to monetization.”

“Over the years, we’ve resisted introducing a traditional web advertising model because we wanted to optimize for value before profit,” Twitter said. “The open exchange of information creates opportunities for individuals, organizations, and businesses alike. We recognized value in this exchange and planned to amplify it in a meaningful and relevant manner.”

The program answers a question which Twitter has confronted for years now: How are you going to make any money? While it is a very flat organization with fewer than 200 employees (at last unofficial count; as a private company they are not required to disclose anything) private investments have imputed the company a value of $1 billion — and those investors are not exactly putting money into a charity. It does, however, already make millions from licensing its real-time data streams to Microsoft and Google.

Co-founder Biz Stone telegraphed Tuesday’s move last year in news conference in Tel Aviv at which he declared the company would “start making money” in 2010 using “non-traditional” advertising. Even then he stressed they had the luxury of going slow. “There are no dates when we need to break even. We have plenty of money in the bank,” he said, a month after Venture Partner kicked in $100 million, boosting the company’s valuation to $1 billion.

So Twitter knows it must carefully triangulate between a fickle user base which is the reason for its existence; developers whose innovative work on Twitter clients, aggregation and analysis tools have propelled the company into a household world; and backers who as expect not only great things from the company, but great returns.

Hence the timing: Twitter will speak in greater detail about this at the AdAge conference later on Tuesday, and begins a two-day developer’s conference Wednesday called “Chirp.”

Read More http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/04/twitter-unveils-ad-supported-business-model/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+wired%2Findex+%28Wired%3A+Index+3+%28Top+Stories+2%29%29#ixzz0l0Bpnu9c


10 Rules for Social Media Marketing, by Todd Smith

Posted by kgerards on Thursday, 1 April, 2010

If you’re not a business owner, don’t let the title keep you from reading this post. Remember, we are all entrepreneurs marketing our services to the market place. This lesson has application to all of us who communicate online.

While I have been involved in the social media world for only a short time, picking up on its culture has not been hard to do. In my opinion, social media has brought transparency to every person and business.

The people and businesses that really care about their friends and customers are standing out like a lighthouse at night. At the same time those who are solely focused on themselves and promote their own agenda are stinking like three-day-old fish.

Here is the biggest take-a-away in today’s lesson: while the social media world is a new one, it actually serves as an age-old model for everything we do and say in our offline relationships. If you want to succeed personally and professionally, here are some simple rules to follow:

1.  You Better Really Care About People—We have gone from a society where consumers valued price, quality and service to a society where consumers first want to know that you care about them. If deep down inside you only care about yourself and your selfish desires, you can be assured your intentions will be obvious in the transparent online world.

2.  Don’t Wear People Out—The people who have agreed to connect with you, whether they are friends, family or acquaintances don’t want your messages to fill up their news feed. The people who are pounding their followers with tweets, direct messages and Facebook posts are losing their influence, even if their messages have nothing to do with their business.

3.  Do Unto To Others As You Would Have Them Do Unto You—While the golden rule has always been a great ethical code, it is even more important today. As a result of the painful collapse of our economy, people are more skeptical and careful about whom they trust. If you want to enjoy long-term success in the business world, both online and offline, treating others how you want to be treated is an absolute must.

4.  Focus on Service—The people and companies who will be the big winners in the new economy will be those who are “sold out” on customer service. Those who simply say they focus on customer service, but really don’t, are standing there with their pants down and the whole world can see they don’t mean what they say.

At the same time the companies who take great pride in their customer service are building a large loyal following.

5.  Show an interest in others—People have always preferred to do business with people they like and trust, but over the last couple years this sentiment has grown stronger. If you don’t FIRST show an interest in others and the things that are important to them, don’t expect them to show an interest in you or the things that are important to you.

6.  Determine your online brand/culture—If you want to be successful in the social media world, you need to determine how you want the world to see you. If you don’t consciously make this decision, then you will be leaving it up to the world to decide your brand.

I love what Zappos is doing through their social media efforts. You won’t find ONE post from them that discusses anything about their products. While most companies are using social media to dump sales content on their followers, Zappos made the decision to focus on building relationships and communicating their culture; and it’s working!

7.  Don’t Post a Sales Message on Someone’s Page—This is the ultimate of sleazy sales tactics. Everyday I have to remove 5 or more of these types of spam messages from the Little Things Matter Facebook fan page and in most cases I report them to Facebook. Let me also encourage to not include a link to your website as part of any comment you post, unless you are absolutely convinced it is appropriate to do so.

8.  Give Value First—If you want people to do business with you, focus on first giving them something of value. I am certainly more inclined to do business with those who have first given value to me. Do you agree with that principle?

In social media, value may mean content or connection opportunities or a sense of community. What can you do to give value to your target market? If you make providing value a priority, then you can bet you’ll be the first one they think of when they need your products or services.

9.  Be Creative in Your Messages—With respect to product marketing, rather than simply dumping your sales content on people, look for creative ways to share your message and engage your audience. Check out the Little Things Matter fan page as an example of how I am trying to be creative and engage the community. While I don’t market a product or service, I am trying to build a large loyal following of people who have a desire for self-improvement.

10.  It takes time—It’s critical to understand that doing business in the social media world is an art and not a task or set of activities. Building relationships on a foundation of authenticity, mutual trust and respect and great service takes time. If you need to make money this week, do it offline, because it won’t happen in the social media world.

If you fully embrace these 10 simple rules, you can be assured of being one of the winners in the new economy.

You can achieve anything that is important to you if you will focus on the little things that matter.

Click here to visit the site and comment on this post

About the Author: Todd Smith is a successful entrepreneur of 29 years and founder of Little Things Matter. To receive Todd’s daily lessons, subscribe here.


Grow More Than Grapes: Email List Building and Social Media for Wineries

Posted by kgerards on Monday, 29 March, 2010

Wine sales have slumped with the economy, and only slight recovery is predicted for 2010. Wineries are dipping into a vat of ideas to increase sales, and email marketing is bubbling to the top.

As a winery, email marketing lets you reach your regular visitors, area restaurants and retailers and even consumers separated by distributors. And it’s worth noting that millenials, the newest generation of wine drinkers, prefer their wine promotions online.

But to email these groups, you need them to subscribe first. Try these techniques for some creative list building that can make your emails just as popular as your gold-medal merlot.

For the complete article click here.


Video SEO for Your Website: Optimize Your Site’s Search Engine Ranking With Video

Posted by kgerards on Tuesday, 2 February, 2010

Because video has become the new darling of search engines, many startups are rushing to create and post video on their websites. Just run a Google or Bing search on any topic, and links to video clips pop up right on page one. The reason for this is that search engines are tripping over themselves to provide blended search results­–links to news, blog posts, photos, video and other specialized content all mixed together. To ensure video is included in the results, search engines give them preferential treatment.

Do’s and Don’ts
• Do post quality video on your website.

• Don’t post video to YouTube assuming that it will drive traffic to your site.

• Do submit to search engines both your videos and the pages on which they appear.

• Do contact your video platform provider to ensure your content is properly indexed and drives traffic back to your site rather than the platform provider’s.

• Don’t assume your video platform provider will point links from your video back to your site. Ask.
This trend presents startups that are able to produce quality video content with tremendous search engine optimization (SEO) opportunities. In fact, Forrester Research reports that compared with standard SEO techniques, a properly submitted video is 50 times more likely to achieve a first-page Google ranking. And because video is in such short supply, relative to other web-based content, the competition for search engine attention is less fierce.

Many startups and entrepreneurs are not yet taking full advantage of this opportunity. They are not using web-based video, are disregarding video SEO, or are trying but doing it all wrong.

Old-school SEO combines text, meta data, a linking strategy and site maps to raise a page’s search engine profile and ensure proper indexing. These techniques fall short for video, which has no text to index.

Although developers are improving search engine technology for discovering video, search engines need help in identifying and properly indexing video content. You cannot rely on a web crawler or bot to discover your website’s video. Instead, you must submit your video following each search engine’s submission and XML-serialization guidelines.

Carefully research each search engine to determine its requirements, keeping in mind that information provided online may be outdated. Also, avoid packing your video XML feed with meta data. “Most search engines ignore it or may even penalize your feed,” says Benjamin Wayne, CEO of Fliqz, a full-service, plug-and-play video solution provider in Emeryville, Calif. “Focus instead on including a descriptive title for your video in your XML feed.”

For optimum results, Wayne recommends including a permalink site map that reflects your XML feed so that search engines index not only your videos but also the pages on which those videos appear. Using the same title tags to label both the videos and pages tends to improve page ranking.

Mikal E. Belicove is a market positioning, social media and management consultant specializing in website usability and business blogging. When he is not working or ghosting blog entries for clients, Belicove can be found musing about the world on Belicove.com and can be reached atMikal@Belicove.com

On a personal note, the best Video Marketing system on the planet can be taken for a test drive at right here.