Wednesday, 30 November 2016

5 Ways Your E-Commerce Business Can Recover From A Growth Setback

Facing growth setbacks is part of the risk of doing business.


While most companies may only highlight their successes to the public, it's important to understand that every business has its own group of challenges. The key is to recognize the issues and take the necessary actions to move forward.


“You may be facing your share of woes from financial problems to employee shortages to increased competition. Just because those setbacks are occurring and you are struggling to survive, doesn't mean you can't turn your circumstance around,” says Inc. contributor Carolyn Brown.


Let's explore how your team can bounce back from a growth setback.


1. Reassess Your Business Strategy


When major issues arise, reevaluating your strategy is essential to realizing what happened. Moreover, your team can pinpoint the mistakes that stunted your ecommerce business growth.


So, where do you start? Begin with the problem.


Learn why the setback occurred, when it began, where it originated, and how it flourished into a setback. Dive deep into your analytics to assess your sales and reveal any gaps in your system.


Senior management recognizes that failure isn't caused by a singular event. Instead, it's usually a series of activities that slowly lead up to a business disaster. So, examine your current procedures to set up safeguards.


“The way we win business has changed radically, largely thanks to the internet and social media. Companies that are not up to speed digitally won't exist for much longer, so make sure the business is using all the technological tools it can to build momentum,” states Andrew Morris, CEO of the Academy for Chief Executives.


Nike reworked its international expansion strategy. Rather than spending an exorbitant amount of money on sponsorships to gain a global audience, the athletic apparel company initiated the NikeID co-creation platform. Allowing customers to design their own products helped the business deliver unique products that align with different cultural preferences and styles.


nike-id-inspiration


Upgrade your business strategy. Keep what works well and toss the rest to the side.


2. Deliver Customer Value


Research shows that “for every customer complaint there are 26 other unhappy customers who have remained silent.” In a market full of competitors, it's easy for consumers to try another brand.


To deliver remarkable customer value, start by analyzing your consumers' purchasing habits. Learn what they like and how specific brand interactions make them feel.


For example, if you know consumers prefer assistance via live chat rather than by phone, your team should take steps to be available online.


Collect this data by instructing your sales representatives to jot down notes during customer conversations. Or simply ask consumers to complete a short suggestion form.


Think of customer value as a cycle. You must discover the opportunities, create the offering, deliver the value, and communicate it to your audience. Then, the process starts over again after receiving the customer feedback.


customer-value-delivery-cycle
Image Source


Peepers, an eyewear company, offer shoppers more value by customizing the checkout experience. With personalized messages, customers trusted the brand and believed their credit card information were safe. As a result, Peepers received a 25-30% increase in its organic traffic conversion rate and 15%-20% increase in its average order value.


Offer unprecedented value that your consumers can't receive anywhere else. They'll be happy and your ecommerce company will reap the revenues.


3. Differentiate Your Product


Sometimes, your team must do things differently. And it might just include changing the product.


In today's economy, consumers possess a wide variety of choices. They don't have to settle for products that fail to solve their problems or fall short of satisfying their needs.


Product differentiation is a marketing technique to make your product more attractive than the alternatives in the marketplace. This difference could include customer value, design, price, or even quality.


“Don't focus on features alone, then. Instead, emphasize the benefits of those features. Your advantage lies in how your product or service ties into the emotional needs of your target audience. People make decisions on the basis of either logical reasoning or emotional impulses,” writes Entrepreneur contributor Ray Beharry.


Conduct market research to learn if you should modify your product or change the way you sell your product. To find pertinent data, host a focus group or invest in heatmap tools to monitor website interactions.


Oscar Health Insurance offers customers transparency and only focuses on a small, niche network in four U.S. states. The brand separates itself from the competition by presenting health plans in common language without the jargon.


health-plan-simple-oscar


It may be time for a product change. Find out how to fulfill your customers' desires through differentiation.


4. Hire Employees With Diverse Skill Sets


During tough times, employees are the best assets for your business. And as your company begins to change directions, you will need people invested in your brand values.


In a recovery transition, recruit talented workers with skills that complement your current workforce. Experts claim that future work environments will need people who know how to work with data, understand virtual reality, and can apply the Internet of Things to industries.


Beyond technical skills, interpersonal character traits matter, too. Focus on hiring individuals who know how to develop connections, work on multiple cultural teams, and make creative decisions. Personal finance writer Erika Rawes agrees:


“Your ability to engage in conversation, get to know someone personally, and develop meaningful relationships will provide a competitive edge over the future.”


In addition, retrain your current employees by informing them about new business strategies and expectations. It's a chance re-engage employees and to develop people professionally.


disengaged-employees-stat
Image Source


Revitalize your workforce during growth challenges. Let your business experience new talent with different possibilities.


5. Continue to Seek Growth Opportunities


Whether your company is undergoing a setback or not, your team should always continue to seek ways to expand. A proactive plan prepares your brand to handle challenges better.


Opportunity is a subjective term. What's great for one business may be a disaster for another.


Therefore, before making any hasty decisions, work with your team to know what your business needs to recover. Do you need more qualified traffic to your website? Or more skilled sales reps to close deals?


And refrain from relying only on your own experience. Your company may benefit from building ongoing partnerships with other brands.


“Don't limit yourself by your own knowledge base and expertise when your back is against a wall. Find partners who can help you implement the new strategy that makes the most sense, not the one that's easiest to execute,” writes Fast Company contributor Carson Tate.


Below is a brand partnership example from Adidas and Spotify. The companies teamed up to offer their consumers a new product called Adidas Go. The app lets customers who exercise with their iPhones listen to music through Spotify that is automatically linked to the pace of the workout.


adidas-spotify-partnership

Image Source


Growth is a continuous process for companies. Uncover new opportunities to respond to infrequent difficulties.



Aim to Recover


Challenges are inevitable in business. It's vital to understand how to handle setbacks when they occur.


Reevaluate your strategy to ensure it fits your desired outcomes. Deliver unmatched customer value that competitors can't duplicate. And continue to seek partnership opportunities that will benefit your brand.


Push through setbacks. Grow your business.


About the Author: Shayla Price lives at the intersection of digital marketing, technology and social responsibility. Connect with her on Twitter @shaylaprice.




Data Studio: DoubleClick Campaign Manager Connector

Google Data Studio (beta) allows users to connect, transform, visualize, and share data no matter where it lives. Today we are happy to announce that DoubleClick Campaign Manager (DCM) customers can pull their data into Data Studio dashboards instantly!


With this new connector, DCM customers no longer need to import data into spreadsheets. Users can now quickly create dashboards with over 50 DCM metrics and dimensions. These dashboards are an effective way to track and optimize campaign performance and share reports with client and agency stakeholders.

Creating a new report with DCM data
Ready to get started? The first step is to connect to your DCM network or advertiser through the Data Sources page.



Next you can create a new report from scratch or use our DCM template. With just a few clicks, the dashboard is populated with your data.

Want to learn more? Looking for a new connector in Data Studio?

To learn more about the new DCM connector, please visit our Help Center or post your questions in the Data Studio community forums.

Is there a specific data service you wish to be able to access and visualize through Data Studio? We welcome your feedback via the connector feedback form - we read all responses and use them to prioritize new connectors.

Happy reporting!

The Data Studio team



6 Ways to Celebrate the Holiday Season in Your Social Media Marketing

social-media-marketing-holidays


“On every world, wherever people are, in the deepest part of the winter, at the exact midpoint, everybody stops, and turns, and hugs, as if to say 'Well done. Well done, everyone! We're halfway out of the dark.'” -Doctor Who


Last night, I drove home from work in the dark. I hadn't stayed late putting the finishing touches on another devastatingly brilliant blog post. It was just that, after the long Thanksgiving weekend, the darkness has finally caught up with the end of the work day. And there's plenty more dark to go before the days get longer.


On the bright side, that means the holiday season is here. There are at least four major holidays and plenty of minor ones to go around.


All this festivity offers us unique chances to make a connection with potential customers. 'Tis the season for savvy social media marketing.


You don't have to drape your Facebook page in tinsel or string lights on your Twitter feed to catch the holiday spirit. In fact, the bigger, tackier celebrations are less likely to feel authentic, and more likely to alienate those who don't celebrate a particular holiday.


It's better to celebrate the holidays on social media the same way you do everything: With your audience's needs and wants firmly in mind.


Here are a few ideas for getting your brand into the spirit.


#1: Go Behind the Scenes


Your audience always wants to see the people behind the brand. During the holidays, those who are celebrating will enjoy seeing others celebrating, too. Snap candid shots of decorated desks, bedecked halls, and your annual office party.


Collect memorable holiday stories and favorite recipes from your co-workers, too, and share them with festive holiday portraits. Ugly sweaters and santa hats are optional, but encouraged.


#2: Encourage Your Audience to Share Holiday Photos


During the holiday season, most people's thoughts turn to happy childhood memories. We recall the warm glow of the menorah, or waking up early to see the presents under the tree–these memories are indelible. For kids born in the 70s and 80s, these precious moments were captured in pictures that look pre-Instagrammed.


Encourage your audience to share their favorite memories and photos with your brand. Create a branded hashtag you can use on Instagram to collect cool retro holiday photos and the stories that go with them.


#3: Shine Light on a Worthy Cause


One of the most powerful ways your brand can get noticed this season is to turn the spotlight away from the brand. Instead, highlight a charity that your brand can support, and offer a way for your customers to lend their support, too.


British retail chain John Lewis came up with a great way to support a good cause last year. Their annual holiday ad campaign centered on helping lonely senior citizens. On the campaign's landing page, customers could watch a heartstring-tugging video and donate to the charity.


#4: Focus on What Your Customers Need


This time of year consumers are drowning in a flood of holiday-related advertising. Everything from $500 cell phones to $40,000 cars are positioned as perfect holiday gifts. Every retail outlet is playing some variation of Christmas music non-stop.


It seems brands desperately want to put their customers in a holiday buying mood. But that's not what customers want. They want ways to deal with stress, or help finding the perfect gift, or a moment of silent reflection. B2B companies want help making their budget for next year, closing out 2016, making sure their customers feel appreciated.


Take some time to think about what special wants and needs your specific audience has this time of year. Better yet, ask a few of them. You could end up creating some powerful, useful content instead of more holiday dazzle. For example, last year on this blog we created an online retailer's checklist to help our audience.


#5: Sum up the Year


Not every consumer spins a dreidel or stuffs stockings this time of year. But the vast majority do celebrate the New Year. It's a time to look ahead and to reflect over the past year.


If Christmas carols or Kwanzaa lights don't suit your brand voice, New Year's is still a safe bet. Take the opportunity to tell your current and potential customers about your brand's year. Let them know how the company grew, what you learned, and most importantly how you are planning on treating them even better in 2017.


#6: Highlight What Unites Us


This season is about more than lighting candles and giving gifts. It's a celebration, as the quote up top reminds us, of being alive, being together, and being halfway out of the dark. Your brand can celebrate these ideals–family, togetherness, love–without committing to a single holiday in particular. Instead of singling out a specific group, you can remind everyone we're all in the same group. Regardless of race, creed, gender, or political leaning, we can all agree Nick Offerman is a national treasure:


Click here to view the embedded video.


What is your brand doing to make the holidays special for your customers? Let me know in the comments.


Stay tuned for pictures from TopRank Marketing's upcoming ugly sweater and cookie bake-off events. Sound like fun? We're hiring.




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© Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®, 2016. |
6 Ways to Celebrate the Holiday Season in Your Social Media Marketing | http://www.toprankblog.com

The post 6 Ways to Celebrate the Holiday Season in Your Social Media Marketing appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.




SearchCap: Google drops feature phones, Sitemap file size increases & videos in panels

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

The post SearchCap: Google drops feature phones, Sitemap file size increases & videos in panels appeared first on Search Engine Land.



Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.


Tuesday, 29 November 2016

Rethinking Marketing Measurement from the Ground Up

From the moment smartphones touched human hands, they began to change how people interact with brands. It happened slowly at first … but today 91 percent of smartphone users turn to their phone for ideas while doing a task.1


Consumers expect more of marketers now. They expect brands to answer their questions and deliver the exact experiences they want at the moments they need to know, go, do, or buy things. They expect this across all screens and all touch points, over hundreds of interactions on their journeys.


This means there are three questions marketers should be asking:
  1. Is our brand useful to consumers at every touch point?
  2. How can we measure our usefulness?
  3. How can we be even more useful tomorrow?
To deliver, enterprise marketers need a new approach to measurement that shows them the entire customer journey and lets them see what's working at each step along the way. The problem is that many of our measurement tools and metrics were created for a desktop world at a time when marketing focused on channel performance.


Today we need an understanding of our audiences across devices and channels. That means taking into account the impact of mobile online and offline, quickly spotting insights, and trying new ways to provide better customer experiences.


Breaking Down the Data Silos
A car shopper today can have hundreds of digital interactions - or in this case 900-plus interactions - before buying. Each one of those moments is an opportunity for a brand to be useful. And each one leaves its own data trail.


But companies that look at data channel by channel, in a silo, can miss the forest for the trees. We need to break down measurement and strategy silos and create an integrated view of the consumer's journey. It's likely you have found yourself in a debate with colleagues about metrics and campaign results and thought, “It's not about what matters to channel X - we need to zoom out to see the whole picture and do what's best for our customers.”


The truth is that the future of enterprise measurement depends on people and departments, tools and systems, all talking to each other and sharing insights in real time about what customers want most.


From Silos to Synthesis
So if we know that one session and one click doesn't tell the full story … and if we want to connect consumer behavior dots over time … where do we start? The best place is with the classic question “What outcomes are we trying to achieve?” But then instead of saying “How do we reach our goals?” let's ask: “How do we measure success?”


Key performance indicators (KPIs) have to reflect the new objectives of the mobile-first world. Marketers who link their metrics to business results are three times more likely to hit revenue goals than those who don't, according to a Forrester report.2


And while more data is always great, what marketers really need are more insights. That's why the question “What's working?” is so crucial. If that car buyer sees a TV commercial for a small sedan or pickup truck and searches for reviews and mileage ratings on his or her mobile phone, watches videos about special features, visits a dealer for a test-drive, and then finally buys a month later, marketers must find a way to bridge the gaps between TV airings and search lift, and display ads and video views, to see where the real influence happened.


How much credit should mobile get? How many touch points were there? Marketers need to know. And if the gaps can't be filled perfectly, we should get comfortable with new proxies that will give us a sturdy estimate instead.


Marketers, Mobile, and Tomorrow
Evolution is a good thing, even if measuring in new ways can be awkward at first. Measurement and marketing go hand in hand - both have to keep pace with the vastly rising expectations of mobile-first consumers. Discomfort means you're working to stay ahead.


So, take stock of what you measure and how you measure. Ask if those KPIs account for all the ways consumers may engage with your brand. If not, ask yourself why you're measuring them in the first place. Focus on the outcomes you want and map your new metrics back to your strategy.


Smartphones have already changed how people interact with brands, and they'll surely alter those interactions even more in years to come. We can't predict how. But we can say that the brands that measure the results of those changes first will have a major edge over those that don't. Measurement isn't what happens at the end; it's where the smarter and more successful future begins.


Download “Measuring Marketing Insights,” a collection of Harvard Business Review Insight Center articles, to read more about best practices and case studies on enterprise marketing and analytics.


A version of this article first appeared as sponsor content on HBR.org in August 2016.


1Source: Google/Ipsos, “Consumers in the Micro-Moment” study, March 2015.
2Source: Forrester, “Discover How Marketing Analytics Increases Business Performance,” March 2016




How Fixing Client Analytics Can Help Agencies Sell More

A completely accurate client analytics account is few and far between.


That forces you, brave agency veteran, to roll up your sleeves and try to make sense of the chaos you're looking at for each unique scenario.


You didn't plan for it. You didn't charge for it. And now, if you don't fix it, you'll face an uphill battle in trying to prove the resulted you delivered.


Like it or not, addressing this issue head-on and fixing client analytics can help you sell more, and sell more profitable work.


Here's why.


The Problem with Pricing Digital Services


Most clients have no idea what we do.


They pay us – very well in some cases – despite not truly grasping how we're going to deliver the goods for them.


Sure, they might grock the buzzwords a little bit. They understand the jargon and the high level perspective. But it's mostly a superficial understanding.


When you get down in the weeds, and start describing how exactly to get from A -> B, you start to lose them a little as glazed over eyes stare back at you.


That's not a knock; it's just reality.


In the same way you probably could care less about what's wrong with your car engine and how a mechanic is going to fix it. You just want to know if you're going to be able to make it to Happy Hour in time this afternoon.


More often than not, clients are paying us based on trust. Or a leap of faith. Or our smiles and fashionable clothes.


And when they don't fully grasp the full context of their problem, or the work involved in each painstaking individual step you have to take to fix it, they gravitate towards the one thing that's easy to separate you from everyone else that says they do exactly what you do: price.


Cue competitive bids and escalating downward pricing pressure.


So what do you do the next time around?


You piece together a meager cost plus estimate that rarely includes Profit (and you've undoubtedly underestimated Project Management), double check the marketplace, and rush it out the door.


In contrast, the best, most profitable agencies use value-based pricing. Instead of starting with what their internal costs might be, they start with forecasting:



  1. The new revenue a client can generate, or

  2. The cost savings a client might see as a result of working with them.


For example, you can take a look at their historical averages of traffic and leads. If you're able to come in and bump that conversion rate by 10%, 15%, or even 30% over the course of a few months, what does that look like in new revenue based on their average customer value?


sensitivity-analysis-lead-conversion-rate


Boom. If simple conversion tweaks and changes can lead to $40K-$160K+ in new revenue, there's MORE than enough room to pay you 20-30% of that.


That covers your software, payroll, meetings, and then some. You can actually scale a business on that.


Even better, is if you can show how increases in results – less your agency costs – results in NET gains too.


organic-search-growth-revenue-growth-spreadsheet


But there's a problem.


You can't even begin to forecast potential revenue for clients like this when they're missing a critical piece of the puzzle.


Why Fixing Your Client's Analytics Should be Priority #1


Value-based pricing includes showing a client the outcome and end results of your work in clear-cut business objectives that they can understand (like leads gained or costs saved).


But…


If they don't have a complete view of their marketing and sales funnel – which, like 97.75% of companies are guilty of – you've got a problem.


To make matters worse, these issues can be tough to spot ahead of time, before you dive into their account (which means you probably didn't plan for it in your timeline and you sure as hell didn't charge for it as a line item).


Maybe the conversion-tracking pixel is on the wrong page (or even worse, sitewide). Or perhaps they're using legacy CRM software that doesn't allow you to figure out what happens after someone becomes a lead (like, where's da revenue coming from?!).


Either way, before you even touch a single line of code, fix a broken link, or put together a wireframe, you need to get an accurate benchmark of where a company is at right now.


Here are three reasons why.


Reason #1. Determine Where Results are Currently Coming From


A quick view of a company's Acquisition Channel performance in Google Analytics can give you a snapshot of where they're at, and how they're doing.


Sure, the visits or sessions piece is moderately helpful, cluing you into which campaigns are delivering (or not).


But the real value comes in analyzing which channels specifically are driving leads and customers (and how much each is worth).


Now you start crossing over from raw data to insight. You're able to draw lines between where budget is being spent and where results are coming from.


This helps you figure out what's already working for clients so you can pour on more, and spot what's already been tried that hasn't worked (so you don't make the same mistakes).


Arguably more important though, is that it will provide you with a baseline to compare against after you deliver your services.


revenue-report-tracking-advertising-kissmetrics


Reason #2. Isolate Campaign/Promotion Attribution


You hear that?


The screeching tires. The scent of burning rubber. A loud crash.


That catastrophic train wreck of epic proportions you're about to witness is your new client's analytics.


Their complex, multi-faceted business has taken its toll, with independent systems for each department that don't work well together (and would require a quant-jock, Business Intelligence analyst to figure out).


Instead of relying or messing with existing systems, setting up a third-party analytics solution to isolate how your campaign and promotion is performing might be an easy way to sidestep the nightmare.


fall-promotion-landing-page-new-funnel-report


This Funnel Report will not only show you which promotional efforts are driving awareness, but also give you insight into the funnel performance for each channel, helping you identify patterns and discrepancies between how visitors from each channel (like cold vs. warm traffic) add items to your cart or complete a purchase.


You can dive even deeper into the individual customer profile, taking a look at the specific steps they took prior to purchase. This can help you identify which pages are assisting conversions, and also spot any bottlenecks or gaps that others keep hitting that causes them to bounce.


person-details-kissmetrics


Reason #3. Make Better Marketing Decisions


Leading indicators are helpful. To a point.


They give you a preview or snapshot of what might potentially happen on down the line.


For example, SEO is a lagging indicator. Sure, you can measure new pages built and new links generated, but it's still gonna take some time for Google to reindex, new rankings to fluctuate, traffic to start dribbling, new leads converted from said traffic, and only then do you get some verifiable sales opportunities to start tracking.


That means you've got a waiting game, and in the meantime you're making a bunch of changes and assumptions based on incomplete information.


Things get especially challenging when some of these indicators can lead you astray, like when that high conversion rate might backfire.


Here's how it works: you run some headline A/B tests with generate more initial leads. Numbers go up and you pat yourself on the back. Only problem? Sales – the number that actually matters – go down as a result.


Fortunately, the Kissmetrics A/B Test Report can help you run split tests that will only declare a winner when an event is met further down the funnel, which helps you avoid getting too excited over an increase in clicks (which aren't super helpful) and waiting for the big payoff instead (conversions).


kissmetrics-ab-test-report-on-engage


How to Sell Extra Work with Analytics Insight


Design is subjective. It shouldn't be, but it is.


My favorite thing to witness is a fiftysomething executive who has literally zero knowledge of art and design, or the owner of an old-school insurance brokerage, make specific design critiques and changes (like, “I think that shaded border should be gold instead of gray”).


Which, if I were a designer, would surely cause me to become a statistic you hear about on the Nightly News.


So how can design, something so subjective that every client thinks they can do better than your Creative Director, deliver quantifiable results that will allow you to charge more?


Look for leverage points.


For example, why does someone need that new landing page?


“I need a landing page design for an AdWords campaign,” says the client.


Ok cool – then in reality they don't just want or need one landing page, but they're gonna want (and need) multiple ones. Here's why (and how to sell it).


Landing page design will help dictate Quality Score, which has been proven multiple times to influence your Costs Per Click (and thus, Cost Per Conversions).


cost-per-conversion-quality-score-graph

Image Source


“If your quality score increases by 1 point, your cost-per-conversion decreases by 13%,” according to Jacob from Disruptive Advertising.


Awesome. So in order to increase that quality score as much as possible, you're going to need specific and relevant landing pages for each campaign you're running. Which means you're going to need multiple versions of the same page so that you can align message match to drop your Cost Per Conversion and increase the total conversions you're getting.


Now, that's going to require some extra work.


You, dear client, will also want to make sure that copy and content changes for each page and that you set-up at least basic analytics to make sure we can track all of this and make iterations on-the-fly. That's going to require these new additional line items to our scope.


We recently went through this exact process on a new website redesign and performed a quick analysis after 30 days with the new AdWords landing pages.


The results?


We compared results to the same period, prior year to rule out seasonality. So in 2015, their Cost Per Converted Click was $482.41 and their Conversion Rate was only 4.08%.


cost-per-converted-click-1


During the new 30-day window in 2016, their Cost Per Converted Click dropped to $147.65 and their Conversion Rate jumped to 12.76%.


cost-per-converted-click-2


Total score?



  • Cost/Converted Click: 69.39% cost reduction

  • Conversion Rate: 212.74% conversion rate lift


Now multiply those 'efficiency' metrics against the results (like total leads, or the amount spent for those leads), and you can quickly highlight your financial value.


Think there was enough room in that budget for a few extra landing pages? And now some more work?


Our only job as a consultant is to improve the client's position. (I think that comes from Alan Weiss.)


You're the expert, not them. And as such, you need to fight for the scope (and thus the required resources and budget) it's going to take in order to deliver the results a prospect or client is looking for (whether they understand what it's going to take or not).


Because my hairline is becoming increasingly more like Jason Statham's, and jawline has never resembled Brad Pitt's, the only way I can figure out how to do this is through cold, hard, analytical data.


Conclusion


Clients commonly don't fully understand the scope of what you're being asked to do.


That's OK. It's manageable.


But only if you can translate your value into something they do understand – like marketing KPI's or business objectives like revenue and costs.


The problem is that becomes impossible without a strong foundation for analytics.


There's no way to benchmark past performance, to isolate your individual campaigns, or spot customer bottlenecks along the way.


Fixing or addressing a client's analytics problems then should become priority #1.


Because it will not only help you justify the current work you're doing for them, but also sell the results in the future to them and new ones just like them.


About the Author: Brad Smith is a founding partner at Codeless Interactive, a digital agency specializing in creating personalized customer experiences. Brad's blog also features more marketing thoughts, opinions and the occasional insight.




Five Steps to Integrating Your Blog, Social Media, and Email Marketing

How do you unify efforts with different team members, initiatives, and strategies for your blog, email, and social media marketing? You need a content strategy that accounts for each channel. These five steps will lead you to a cohesive cross-functional marketing plan. Read the full article at MarketingProfs

Over the Irish Moon: Meet the Winner of the Everything Holiday Sweepstakes

Congratulations to the winner of the 2016 Everything Holiday Sweepstakes! Marie Rochele Devenny, the owner of Irish Moon, LLC, in West Chester, Pennsylvania, was randomly selected from nearly 300 entries. Marie will receive a free year of Pro email marketing. 


Irish Moon is an online shop specializing in gifts, apparel, and other specialties imported from Ireland and Scotland, or created by artisans of Irish or Scottish descent. Marie had discovered how fulfilling it was to spend her weekends working at a local Irish import store, in contrast to her banking career. “People would leave with such a smile on their faces. I loved working there,” Marie said.


The sudden deaths of two close friends spurred her to take action. “I had the corner office, the title, everything you want at age 35,” Marie continued. “But if I died the next week, what would I have to show for it?” She was ready for her part-time labor of love to bloom into her full-time passion, and in 2013 she launched Irish Moon. 


“I started very small, taking products to Irish fairs and festivals and selling online. This part of Pennsylvania is like Little Ireland, with so many people of Irish and Scottish descent. People joke about the Irish drinking, but it's really about people laughing and having a good time, enjoying one another. That's what drew me to this connection to my heritage,” Marie said.


Irish Moon still operates primarily online and at heritage festivals in the area. Marie gets help from part-time workers, friends, and family. “My mom is my artistic director!” she said. The hard work has paid off. “My customers' response has been great. They like the unique, one-of-a-kind items I have, which are different from what they can find at other Irish and Scottish shops. I have a lot of repeat customers.”


Marie Devenny Irish Moon LLC

Marie Rochele Devenny sells Irish Moon's merchandise online and at Irish festivals in her area



One area where Marie is excited to expand is her marketing. “When you're working with a small budget, marketing is a huge challenge. You ask yourself, 'I have only this much money to spend - What should I spend it on?'” she said, describing a quandary familiar to countless small business owners.


To stay connected with customers, Irish Moon posts regularly on Facebook, and Marie includes a handwritten thank you note in every order she fulfills - a personal touch that only a small business can do, and one that has gone far in prompting customers to make referrals. But launching email campaigns has always seemed a little out of reach, until now. 


“It's just me doing everything, and sometimes I'm not sure what I should be doing,” she said. “That's why I like VerticalResponse. All the help is right there for me to access. I love free advice - free good advice.” Marie, who was familiar with Deluxe from the checks and banking products she had used in her finance career, entered the sweepstakes when a VR Buzz newsletter prompted her to visit Everything Holiday. She found the 24 days of tips, tools, and festive freebies that make up Everything Holiday to be excellent resources. “Even things I might not need to use right now, it's nice to know they're available to me when I do need them. And the things you don't even think about, like what subject lines to use, are so helpful. You can create a whole campaign from one little trigger.”


Marie's first email campaign will most likely be a welcome message to her customers, a subscriber list that stands at 30 now but is growing every day. “I'll probably include a discount code as an incentive for my readers to open the email and make a purchase. Then I'll start promoting things for the holidays.” And she'll be able to do much more than that - the Pro plan includes a professionally designed email template, delivery rate review, and Advanced Reporting.


Marie's long-term goals for Irish Moon will also sound familiar to many small business owners. “I want to grow my business, introduce more products to people who may not know about them, and build a solid base so when I ultimately open a storefront, I have customers already coming in.” Email marketing is a concrete step in that direction, and one she's excited to jump into. 


“I like to try everything and see what works for Irish Moon. It's just me, so I don't want to set a ridiculous, strict path - 'I need to be at a certain place in five or 10 years.' That's not how life works. The path will open itself up.”


We'll be checking in with Marie over the next few months to see how she's putting her free year of Pro email marketing to work for Irish Moon, LLC. Congratulations again, Marie! 










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© 2016, John Habib. All rights reserved.


The post Over the Irish Moon: Meet the Winner of the Everything Holiday Sweepstakes appeared first on Vertical Response Blog.