Archive for August, 2009

Rafting with Wet Planet Whitewater

Published August 30th, 2009 News, SwellPath No Comments

A week or so ago the SwellPath team had the pleasure of going rafting with our good friends (and client) Wet Planet Whitewater. Wet Planet runs trips on the White Salmon, where we rafted, and various other rivers in the Northwest. They also do some cool trips in South America in the spring. They are highly recommended for a good time. Plus, they have an awesome new website you can make your reservations on, checkout video and photos from all their trips, and read up on their seasoned team of whitewater guides.

Anyway, Team SwellPath raged the White Salmon and successfully took on Husum Falls. Thanks to everyone at Wet Planet for an great time. Check out the pics on our Flickr Profile, or below:

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Consider a Niche Network in your Social Media Marketing

Published August 20th, 2009 Social Media No Comments

I often find myself twittering, writing or discussing one constant topic: food. I follow @PDXfoodcarts on twitter, am a fan of bacon on Facebook and my latest tweet was about a new recipe I tried this week. I am not a gourmet cook or would even call myself a foodie, but with the vast amount of online resources devoted to this topic, I have a smorgasbord of social activity to make me feel like a world-class chef.

Software Association of Oregon - Your Local Neighborhood Social Network for the Tech Community

Niche social media networks seem to be popping up everywhere, and with the rate of social media users in general, it is not a surprise. With online platforms like Ning, anyone can create or join an online community, though as a user or a company, how do you know when you should participate in or start a personalized network around your potential clients?

Niche communities allow visitors of the same industry, demographic, area or hobby to interact in an environment based only around those specifics. Of course these users are probably already on Facebook or have their own blog, though instead of sorting through the groups, finding similar followers or Digging a link or post within a pile of pages, users with the same interests are located and communicating in a single, focused place. Due to this undivided attention visitors are more loyal, concentrated, and more likely to convert into a subscriber of your website or better yet, a customer.

While an industry specific site may seem like the golden ticket to an advertiser or marketer, it is important to focus on the niche social sites that are right for you, your business and where your potential customers will be visiting. Here are a few hints to help you venture into a niche network.

Do your research.

There are hundreds of niche sites out there as well as platforms to make your own. Review the ones available as well as where your competitors are socializing. Develop a strategy to help you get started with social media marketing.

Quality is better than quantity.

Be cautious about marketing on networks that are outside your industry or you will lose your trust with users and eventually be considered as spam. If you knit, trade pattern ideas at Ravelry rather than Footbo, a social network all about soccer.

Know your audience, know your content and interact with users.

What can you offer that can’t be found on other sites? If you are promoting a new snack or food, post recipes using your product on Food based sites like Allrecipes.

Try it out!

Choose a site, which is relevant to your interest or business objectives. Register as a member; tour the site and its features. Watch interactions, content and existing users. Submit posts, search for friends and you are on your way!

Popular Corporate Social Media Guidelines & Policies

Published August 11th, 2009 Social Media No Comments

Social media guidelines are becoming a standard for today’s organizations and a way to explicitly set the rules of engagement while trying to mitigate corporate risk. Effective policies outline best practices of engagement and importance of brand rather than restrictions on access or conversation.

However, rather than put social media guidelines in place, some organizations have attempted to attain more control over the conversation by limiting access and pushing mute – most notably, ESPN and the NFL. So why such the Web 2.0 hate from organizations? Most organizations are wrestling with social media because they fear the disclosure of proprietary or sensitive information and their employees are the organizations, thus their comments represent the organization as a whole.

Organizations that “get it” are able to empower their employees to be representatives of the brand and furthermore, foster relationships with customers and diffuse potentially disastrous issues before they explode. Here is a list of savvy organizations that have developed social media policies:

Intel - http://www.intel.com/sites/sitewide/en_US/social-media.htm

IBM - http://www.ibm.com/blogs/zz/en/guidelines.html

Opera - http://my.opera.com/community/blogs/corp-policy/

Cisco - http://blogs.cisco.com/news/comments/ciscos_internet_postings_policy/

GM - http://fastlane.gmblogs.com/about.html

BBC - http://www.bbc.co.uk/guidelines/editorialguidelines/advice/personalweb/blogging.shtml

Sun - http://www.sun.com/communities/guidelines.jsp

Dell - http://www.dell.com/content/topics/global.aspx/policy/en/policy?c=us&l=en&s=corp&~section=019

United States Airforcehttp://www.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-090406-036.pdf

Hewlett Packardhttp://www.hp.com/hpinfo/blogs/codeofconduct.html

So what are SwellPath’s social media guidelines you may be asking? Simple – Tweet long and prosper.*

*But don’t tweet on the weekends, but do tweet about how great we are, but don’t tweet about our secret sauce, but do tweet about how good the secret sauce is, but don’t tweet about Adam’s mom, but do tweet about corporate tweeting…”

My point is, you don’t nor will you ever own the conversation. Corporate social media guidelines can be useful for employees unfamiliar with this medium and possibly unclear about the importance of brand. Rather than focus on the control over a medium where you have no control, focus instead on your culture, product offering, customer service, ect. – things your organization can control.

Alternative Value in Paid Search Traffic

Published August 5th, 2009 Analytics, Ecommerce, Email Marketing, Paid Search, SEO, Social Media No Comments

When analyzing paid search traffic the central focus is obviously on conversions, the sale, lead gen form completion, or whatever the primary conversion event is. But this shouldn’t be the only focus, and you shouldn’t calculate the value of your paid search activity entirely by conversion rate or ROI. Here’s some other ways you may find value in paid search, and some ideas for calculating that value.

Usability & Conversion Improvement

What does paid search traffic have to do with usability? Look at it like this: paid search traffic is a random sampling of visitors that have strong purchase intent, or strong intent to learn about your offering. Those that don’t convert, as a group, provide insight into what is “not working” with your site. You should be able to ask and answer questions like these:

  • Are these visitors bouncing at high rates? If so, you need to start testing out some different landing pages, or take a good look at your offering.
  • If they aren’t bouncing, are you tracking specific events on your landing pages? Implement event tracking on any key potential actions on your page and see if visitors are engaging at all.
  • Beyond the landing page, are they navigating to other pages or areas of your site? Why are they not finding what they came for on the landing page? What are the common paths their taking, and where are they exiting?
  • Are they using your site search field, and if so, what keywords they searching for? Are they getting results? How do these terms and results relate to the original paid search keyword and landing page offering?

Answering these questions will initiate a process focused improving conversion. Use unconverted paid search visitors as a “focus group”, and look into your analytics data for their “responses” and “feedback”. You’ve paid for them to visit your site, get value out of their behavior and actions.

Email Sign-ups, Catalog Sign-ups, & Social Media Follows

Let’s suppose I’m shopping for vitamins. I’ve decided I need to start taking ginko biloba supplements again to combat the lack of sleep that seems to come with running an interactive marketing agency. Disclaimer: I have no idea if ginko would help with this, or of the actual health benefits of this product, it is just a good example. So, I normally buy my vitamins and supplements at VitaminShoppe.com or Trader Joe’s or some other grocery store. But I decide to price it out and buy it on the internet, so I search for “ginko biloba” on Google. I see a paid search ad for Vitamin World and I click through. After researching their products a bit, I decide I’m a little skittish about buying this new addition to my diet on the internet, so I’m just going to buy it at Trader Joe’s the next time I’m there. Failed PPC conversion for Vitamin World right? Maybe not, before I exit, I notice the two links highlighted in the image to the left: Email Specials and Request a FREE Catalog.

Ginko Biloba on Vitamin World

You know how the story ends: I sign up for a catalog, end up visiting a Vitamin World store in my local mall the next time I’m there, and become a lifetime customer worth hundreds and hundreds of dollars to the company. So, that’s best case scenario. But the gist of it is, Vitamin World is making an effort to keep the “conversation” going with me. While I’m not a big fan of the Email Specials link, I love the big call to action on the catalog request link. Beyond catalogs and email, you might also track if visitors are clicking through to your social media profiles. Track these actions specifically for y0ur paid search visitors and develop a value for them. This may be a more complicated equation if you have advanced analytics and direct marketing programs in place, where you can track multiple touch-points and segment customer types based on product categories; or something as simple as calculating the estimated value of an email recipient, then applying that to number of signup conversions you have in your PPC account. Now, obviously you can track these as conversions in your PPC account, but that can muddy up your PPC data. Using analytics to track the goal, and segmenting your PPC traffic out for analysis is usually a better option.

Keyword Testing & Strategy

I’ll tiptoe around this, because I’m definitely not the SEO specialist (or PPC for that matter) around here but the gist of thsi is that you can use your PPC account to test and refine your SEO strategy. If certain PPC keywords are limited in their conversions, but result in high-levels of engagement or some other key performance metric, you may decide to integrate them into your SEO strategy and target some pages for them. This is somewhat of an extension of the usability and conversion improvement section, but with an obvious focus on SEO and the value of certain keywords.

In conclusion, don’t write off your failed PPC conversions. You paid for those clicks – get some value out of them any way you can. This might mean putting in some sweat in the form of analysis, testing, or development, but those costs will likely be recouped over time, because you will never convert 100% of your search traffic.

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