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Is 2011 the year of Deviant Marketing?

One of the best things about participating in Twitter chats like #blogchat on Sunday nights at 6 p.m. Pacific Time is meeting new and interesting folks like our next guest blogger, Joshua Duncan. Take it away, Joshua.

Have you ever aspired to be deviant? Surprising as it may be, I have spent the last week thinking hard about it.

Now, before you get the wrong idea, let me be quick to add that this has all been done under the umbrella of marketing strategy (as opposed to many other directions).

A recent AdAge had a lessons learned article from the 2010 IDEA conference and one of the take-always was on fostering a “deviant culture.” The idea being that it takes a deviant culture to foster boundary-busting behavior to standout from all the noise.

So what exactly does this mean?

I have to admit that I am still trying to wrap my head around it. Being deviant in my mind is about crossing the line. It is about going past interesting, past outrageous, and past the point of feeling comfortable.

I spent some time looking for examples of deviant marketing that would expand my definition and the only ideas that I could come up with were guerrilla-marketing stunts. Some of these stunts definitely got people talking, but not always in a good way (see the Light Bright bomb scare of 2007 example).

Is this really what it takes to standout in 2011?

Something about this just doesn’t feel right. Being deviant seems like a firecracker strategy where you get a quick burst of attention and then have to move onto something else. Being deviant doesn’t seem very sustainable.

The challenge still remains that it is becoming tougher and tougher to stand out and get attention in this hyper-media drenched society. Being straight laced is more often than not going to appear to be dull.

Is it possible that what they are really trying to say is to be interesting?

Some of my favorite brands have done an amazing job baking personality into their marketing, products and company culture. Take a look at New Belgium Brewery or Trader Joe’s to see some great examples of companies doing it right.

Just because you are in B2B marketing doesn’t mean you can’t have some fun with it. Check out what Cisco is doing with their social media efforts on the B2B side to liven up their communications (have you seen their rapping intern?).

Marketing legend, David Ogilvy, had this to say about a company’s image,

You now have to decide what image you want for your brand. Image means personality. Products, like people, have personalities and they can make or break them in the marketplace.

My vote is that before you head down the path of trying something outlandish just for the sake of it, spend the time working on your company’s personality and incorporating it into your message. If done right this can become a core differentiator in the marketplace and can be a lot of fun!

So what do you think?

Bio: Josh Duncan is a marketing practitioner currently working at Zenoss, an enterprise software startup. Josh can be found writing about marketing and customer experience on his blog and on Twitter.

Photo credit: Code Arachnid

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Marketing a Paid Membership Site: 6 Strategies for Building Your Audience

Editor’s note: I’m delighted to welcome my personal friend Judy Dunn (@CatsEyeWriter) to my Web site in this guest post. She and husband Bob Dunn are some of the savviest WordPress users I know, great resources you’ll want to add to your contact list. Today Judy shares some of her experiences as she and Bob set up Savvy WordPress (http://www.savvywp.com), a paid WordPress resource membership site, which I heartily recommend.

(P.S. Judy, I have a few friends I need to refer!) And with no further adieu, here’s Judy.

The paid, members-only website — a place where people pay to access password-protected information on high-interest topics — has taken the online business world by storm. It is one of today’s fastest growing Internet business models.

Membership sites are attractive businesses for several reasons. You can focus on a topic you are passionate about. You have a recurring revenue stream from content you create only once. And you don’t have to get thousands of customers to make a decent income (although there’s a good chance you will, if you do it right).

But even when you get everything right — the perfect topic, a laser-focused niche and a high-quality product or service — you can fail if you don’t have the right marketing plan in place.

Writers call it an author platform. I call it audience building. Simply, it’s how you are going to reach your group of buyers — and it’s one of your most important tasks.

6 Marketing Strategies for Developing a Membership Site Audience

1. Start building your email list early.

This, of course, is one of your most important tools for audience building. You need a platform for educating, informing and engaging people around the topic of your niche site. One to two years before launch is not too soon.

We sent out high-quality content weekly to our e-letter subscribers for two years and developed a small, but perfectly targeted list of 400. That allowed us to move those people over to our “3 free WordPress videos” offer and continue with regular emails with more good, free content. It’s all part moving them along the path to purchase.

2. Become a ‘go-to’ expert in your membership site topic.

After you have a base audience, start building credibility in your niche. We used social media platforms to find out where the people we needed to reach were hanging out. For example, on Biznik, the business networking site, we created a group called WordPress Chatter. It isn’t a huge group (402 members), but it’s exactly our target audience: people with frustrations, challenges and questions about creating or maintaining a WordPress blog or website. Through in-person meetups and the discussions in the forum, we learned so much.

On Twitter, we set up an account (@SavvyWordPress) and started sending out regular tweets with tips and links to WordPress resources. We created a column in TweetDeck with the hashtag #wordpresshelp, so we could track the questions and answer them, establishing our credibility and positioning ourselves as experts.

Some other ways to gain expert status are to start a blog, leave comments on other blogs and discuss issues on other social networking sites. For instance, we regularly go into LinkedIn groups and answer relevant questions. You don’t have to be the biggest expert in your field but you want enough people to recognize that you know your stuff.

3. Give freely.

You may be tiring of the advice to “give free stuff,” but all I can say is that it works. Two things happen. The more you give, the more people will see how much you know and how helpful you are. And your audience will think that if you are giving this much away, well, your paid content must be even more amazing.

Giving also kicks in the psychology of reciprocity. (See Joe’s post about reciprocity [opens separate window].) People feel a sense of obligation after someone treats them kindly. It’s why they buy the product they got a free sample of in the grocery store. And it’s why they will try to return the favor by making a purchase after they receive the gift of your time or expertise.

Of course, your product has to be high-value and you need to give consistently over time to develop trust and reciprocity.

4. Use social media wisely.

Social media was a particularly effective tool for keeping current with the needs out there — especially the concerns of WordPress users — for building our audience and for establishing credibility and social proof.

What is not effective — but I see it all the time — is sending out tons of one-way sales messages without any thought to engaging people in conversations and providing value. Don’t do that.

5. Select your partners carefully and develop collaborative relationships with other experts in your niche.

This one made a huge difference for us. It is a key strategy because you will need help from these people when you start promoting your site. If you don’t start building relationships now, you’ll just be another unknown who has created another (yawn) membership site.

We started talking to other WordPress experts early on. When we exchanged ideas on Twitter, our followers could see some of the conversations. We tweeted links to some of the WordPress blogs and websites we had designed and some of the CEOs of the large WordPress theme companies retweeted them so we reached an even larger audience.

We had Skype calls with some marketing people we had met online, who had expressed interest in our site. And we made a point of connecting with as many of these people as possible when we attended WordCamps and other conferences.

6. Don’t ignore your ‘offline’ marketing.

It’s tempting to market an online business totally by email, social media, and your website sales and landing pages. But because that’s the way everybody else does it, you are definitely going to stand out if you reach out to ‘live’ humans in real time.

Get out there and talk to people. Go to industry conferences, present workshops, join social media groups (and attend their events). You are reaching fewer people, but you will need these evangelists to create a buzz around your launch. They will be the ones who go back and talk up your site — online and off.

An outstandingly successful membership is within your reach — if you take the time to develop the right idea, build your audience carefully and apply the right marketing strategies.

Have you thought about creating a membership site? Have you joined a site as a member? Do you have questions about marketing one?

Join us in the comments below. Ask your questions and add your ideas. I’d love to hear from you.

Judy Dunn is a blogging coach, copywriter, and co-owner of Savvy WordPress (http://www.savvywp.com), a WordPress resource membership site. She blogs at CatsEyeWriter (http://www.catseyewriter).

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Top Marketing Strategy Posts on this Blog

These are the marketing strategy posts I recommend on the blog.

1. The First Three Questions is “the most important” marketing piece on the site. Make sure you have solid answers to these three questions before you spend a dime on marketing.

2. The First Three Numbers. When a small business owner or entrepreneur seeks my help, I have three different questions I ask first. They regard personal finances and what it takes to get from “here” to “there.”

3. Six Ways to Persuade People and Grow Your Business. An easy synopsis of Robert Cialdini’s “Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion.”

4. Love in an Elevator. Narrowing your positioning to an elevator pitch.

5. Strong Positioning Paves the Way for Good Copy. Your positioning statement is meant for you, not your customer. A strong positioning statement arms an able copywriter to get your point across without having to spell out the whole thing.

6. Seattle Marketing Strategy according to Google. How I became the #1 rank for “Seattle Marketing Strategy,” and a strategy you can use to help win your keywords. Then the Local Search Secrets Exposed reply from Shannon Evans.

Happy reading. If any of the articles help you out, leave a comment. Thanks!

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Love in an elevator

If you’re interested in blogging, you should discover Darren Rowse at ProBlogger.

Why?

Because ProBlogger Helps Bloggers Build Exceptional Blogs.

Clean. Easy to understand. And, once you visit his site, it’s clear he can substantiate the claim. The 776 comments on one of his posts gives it away: He has something of value to say. (See social proof.)

Yes, Darren has a clear positioning statement:

To bloggers interested in building better blogs, Darren Rowse is the blogging expert who can help you improve your blog because is a full-time blogger who blogs about blogging to a loyal (and vocal) following.

My elevator pitch

I wrote in The First Three Questions that I have a number of positioning statements, depending on the audience I’m serving.

I have the Joe-Hage-as-dad positioning.

The Joe-Hage-as-professional-who-can-help-independent-businesspeople positioning.

The Joe-Hage-as-Cardiac-Science-employee positioning.

Enter ProBlogger.

Darren prepared a free mini-course for his readers: 31 Days to Build a Better Blog (31DBBB for short). His first assignment: “What’s your elevator pitch?”

He writes, “If you’re fuzzy on what your blog is about it’s unlikely than anyone else will have much of an idea either.”

As you know, I’m very comfortable in this space but thought, “What do I want my readers to know about this blog?”

The elevator pitch for the JoeHageOnline blog

Joe Hage is a good guy to know for marketing strategy and communications.

Here’s my thinking:

1. I used my name instead of something that sounds larger than I am. It’s just me (and the people I know who, collectively, make me more resourceful than I am on my own).

2. I chose “good guy to know” to be approachable and friendly. I’m not trying to pass myself off as the definitive marketing resource. Just, well, a good guy to know.

3. My specialties are marketing strategy and marketing communications. Blogged articles on these topics are the most valuable. The other content shows the “good guy” part (the humor, stuff about my family, etc.).

P.S. As I wrote in “Why I blog,” I have a full-time job as Director of Marketing Communications at Cardiac Science and enjoy my job. I’m not looking to move and I know one or more employees are reading this along with you. So I don’t want anything to suggest anything other than what this blog is: Me, doing the marketing strategy and communications I love in an extra-curricular way.

It benefits me and the company. There’s no question building this blog helped me build http://cardiacscience.com, maintain the Cardiac Science blog, and manage its @cardiacscience Twitter account. Invaluable learning. Fun too.

So what’s your elevator pitch?

Give it a try below in the comments.

How’d I do, Darren?

Photo credit: kosso
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Seattle Marketing Strategy: The first three numbers

Photo credit: Mark Coggins

I refer readers to The First Three Questions all the time. The article is probably “the most important” thing I’ve written here. The article seeks the three answers needed before we can develop an effective marketing plan.

However, when a small business owner or entrepreneur seeks my help, I have three different questions I ask first. They regard personal finances.

The answers set some parameters for our plan. How reasonable the objective is. And what’s it gonna take to make the numbers work for the business model. [Read more...]

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TinyURL: The next killer app

TinyURL shortens a long Web address into something smaller, memorable, usable, and marketable. Along with the imitators that followed, the concept is a killer and TinyURL.com is a good place to start.

Enter a long URL to make tiny:

Practical applications

1. Twitter gives you 140 characters.

Twitter makes each character precious. On Twitter you’d use up your entire update with a long URL.

Go to TinyURL, insert the looong URL, and out pops a 24-character one. Makes a big difference when you want to set up the reason why your follower should click on the hyperlink you post.

2. Easier to customize and remember.

If you ask me to help you with marketing, I ask you to read The First Three Questions first. The article features the first three questions I’m going to ask you before we get started. To hyperlink to the story (before TinyURL) I would have to:

* Come to my website

* Use the search feature on the top right hand corner

* Type in “the first three”

* Get all the results (including the ones where the story is linked to)

* Scroll down

* Select the URL

* Copy http://blog.joehageonline.com/2008/05/03/marketing-strategy-the-first-three-questions/

* Paste it into my communication

Eight steps. Tonight I realized that I could go to TinyURL and create a small, memorable string. So I went in and created http://tinyurl.com/First3.

I’ll never forget it. I’ll never have to look it up again. Heck, you may even remember it and recommend it to a friend.

3. No more broken links

I recently did some fundraising for the Seattle Heart Walk, benefiting the American Heart Association.

Here is the string for my donation page: http://www.kintera.org/faf/donorReg/donorPledge.asp?ievent=260789&lis=0&kntae260789=7555D15BA0FB4E269DF03E92C448DD09&supId=184963211

Not all browsers are savvy enough to recognize that the link extends that far. The string is so long that it wraps (as it did here) from one line to the next.

Frustrating.

With TinyURL, that problem goes away.

4. Free Marketing

Back to our fund raising example. Cardiac Science ran a promotion: sponsor any Cardiac Science employee and be eligible to win a free AED defibrillator (click here to learn more about why your child’s school needs one).

So I created a URL to market the benefit:  http://tinyURL.com/WinAED

Which one is a better marketing communication?

Win an AED at http://tinyurl.com/WinAED

- or -

Win an AED at http://www.kintera.org/faf/donorReg/donorPledge.asp?ievent=260789&lis=0&kntae260789=7555D15BA0FB4E269DF03E92C448DD09&supId=184963211

P.S. Sorry, Elizabeth, someone else won.

In a future post, I’ll talk about a TinyURL imitator that, as far as I can tell, has a distinct advantage versus TinyURL.

Are you already using this or a similar application? If so, share with my readers what you use and why.