| Suggest You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Web Development > Putting Personality into Your Website |
|
Suggest You - Putting Personality into Your Website
30-Minute Marketing e-on-one conversation. Just imagine sitting in a coffee shop talking informally with a customer. That's the starting point for your approach—a more personable and appropriate "human" voice will come naturally. When you picture the coffee shop scenario, you quickly see how inappropriate (not to say ridiculous) some of the more traditional styles of customer communication can sound on a website. Drop the jargon, drop the salMarketing your small business takes tons of time, years of experience, and lots of money, right? WRONG! Anyone can learn effective marketing techniques that are simple, inexpensive, and best of all, quick! This summer, get in the habit of regularly marketing your biz! The following are some marketing techniques that you can accomplish in 30 minutes or less. Pick a few that appeal to your style. Then, write down each one on your calendar on a specific day you so you WILL accomplish this task. Type up a list of your top five favorite seasonal tips related to your business and send it to your local Top 7 Advertising Tip Myths of Marketing Self-Proclaimed Experts People visit your website for the content. So, ideally, you're giving them content that's timely, relevant, and useful (and sometimes even entertaining). Deliver and present that content to readers in a professional manner and you have yourself a winning newsletter. Well, almost. Most of you have competitors. There's no reason why they can't publish valuable content, too. In fact, it takes considerable skill, innovation, and effort to stand out through content alone (just ask those who've managed it). Injecting personality into your publication is one way to give yourself a little edge in the battle for the hearts and minds of the market. You're probably using your newsletter to "build long-term relationships and a better rapport with customers or prospects.” Valuable content is the foundation on which this is based. Personality is the icing on the content cake. A little dose of personality helps build that reader rapport and adds uniqueness to your publication; it's something competitors can't copy so easily.Have you ever bought a book on business marketing to help you in your own business? Well many of us have and we have probably also bought tapes and other helpful materials to help us in our advertising. After reading hundreds and hundreds of marketing books over the 27-years in my business, it became rather obvious that much of what these marketing gurus proclaimed simply was not so.In fact much of their tips were either too obvious to be of any value or completely wrong in my opinion. Then as the years progressed and fMRI brain scanning came about I realized that I had been right all along and the advertisi The right personality can also complement the image of your brand, products, services, or company, essentially reinforcing whatever impression or message you're trying to communicate. This is all well and good, but what is this personality? No doubt there are various dictionary definitions, but I prefer to think of it like this: If content is what you say, then personality is how you say it. It's the sum of all the distinctive characteristics that makes your website’s voice and writing unique: your style, tone, humor, emotion, vocabulary, attitude and more. So how do you give your website the right dose of the right personality? Think of your website as a one-on-one conversation. Just imagine sitting in a coffee shop talking informally with a customer. That's the starting point for your approach—a more personable and appropriate "human" voice will come naturally. When you picture the coffee shop scenario, you quickly see how inappropriate (not to say ridiculous) some of the more traditional styles of customer communication can sound on a website. Drop the jargon, drop the sale Selling for Entrepreneurs - Be Yourself nd effort to stand out through content alone (just ask those who've managed it). Injecting personality into your publication is one way to give yourself a little edge in the battle for the hearts and minds of the market. You're probably using your newsletter to "build long-term relationships and a better rapport with customers or prospects.” Valuable content is the foundation on which this is based. Personality is the icing on the content cake. A little dose of personality helps build that reader rapport and adds uniqueness to your publication; it's something competitors can't copy so easily.An entrepreneur has many things to worry during the start-up process. One of the most common requests I receive from people who are starting a new business is to teach them how to sell. For many new entrepreneurs, this is the scarcest part of the process. While this may be intimidating at first, it doesn’t have to be overwhelming.Entrepreneurs sell themselves at every stage of the start-up process. Entrepreneurs already know how to sell. They sell their ideas to their family first. Betting their future on a new business takes some convincing. After the family comes the people who will finance t The right personality can also complement the image of your brand, products, services, or company, essentially reinforcing whatever impression or message you're trying to communicate. This is all well and good, but what is this personality? No doubt there are various dictionary definitions, but I prefer to think of it like this: If content is what you say, then personality is how you say it. It's the sum of all the distinctive characteristics that makes your website’s voice and writing unique: your style, tone, humor, emotion, vocabulary, attitude and more. So how do you give your website the right dose of the right personality? Think of your website as a one-on-one conversation. Just imagine sitting in a coffee shop talking informally with a customer. That's the starting point for your approach—a more personable and appropriate "human" voice will come naturally. When you picture the coffee shop scenario, you quickly see how inappropriate (not to say ridiculous) some of the more traditional styles of customer communication can sound on a website. Drop the jargon, drop the sal The Sub-Domain in Affiliate Marketing g on the content cake. A little dose of personality helps build that reader rapport and adds uniqueness to your publication; it's something competitors can't copy so easily.A sub-domain is an individual and separate web folder that can be created and attached to the main domain. This sub-domain can have its own FTP password. It can also have its own private CGI-Bin folders, and all other characteristics of an individual domain. But this sub-domain need not be registered as a separate domain and this means that the affiliate need not spend additional money for the setting up of the sub-domain.How can a sub-domain help an entrepreneur achieve success in his affiliate marketing business? A sub-domain can help the affiliate in two ways. These are optimization in search engines The right personality can also complement the image of your brand, products, services, or company, essentially reinforcing whatever impression or message you're trying to communicate. This is all well and good, but what is this personality? No doubt there are various dictionary definitions, but I prefer to think of it like this: If content is what you say, then personality is how you say it. It's the sum of all the distinctive characteristics that makes your website’s voice and writing unique: your style, tone, humor, emotion, vocabulary, attitude and more. So how do you give your website the right dose of the right personality? Think of your website as a one-on-one conversation. Just imagine sitting in a coffee shop talking informally with a customer. That's the starting point for your approach—a more personable and appropriate "human" voice will come naturally. When you picture the coffee shop scenario, you quickly see how inappropriate (not to say ridiculous) some of the more traditional styles of customer communication can sound on a website. Drop the jargon, drop the sal Publish An Ezine To Get Site Visitors To Return ubt there are various dictionary definitions, but I prefer to think of it like this: If content is what you say, then personality is how you say it. It's the sum of all the distinctive characteristics that makes your website’s voice and writing unique: your style, tone, humor, emotion, vocabulary, attitude and more.It's all very well promoting your website, but how many people that do actually visit your site *ever* return?Not as many as you would like, I bet.The thing is, it's a lot easier and less time-consuming to promote your site (and your business) to people who have *already* visited.So how do you do that?Well, there are several ways to encourage people to return to your site. Some of these ways include asking people to bookmark your site, or asking people to make your site their homepage, or by providing a service that they can't do without (like free email, or free blogging, or free sms).< So how do you give your website the right dose of the right personality? Think of your website as a one-on-one conversation. Just imagine sitting in a coffee shop talking informally with a customer. That's the starting point for your approach—a more personable and appropriate "human" voice will come naturally. When you picture the coffee shop scenario, you quickly see how inappropriate (not to say ridiculous) some of the more traditional styles of customer communication can sound on a website. Drop the jargon, drop the sal Customer Service, Italian Style e-on-one conversation. Just imagine sitting in a coffee shop talking informally with a customer. That's the starting point for your approach—a more personable and appropriate "human" voice will come naturally. When you picture the coffee shop scenario, you quickly see how inappropriate (not to say ridiculous) some of the more traditional styles of customer communication can sound on a website. Drop the jargon, drop the sales pitch, be as honest as you can, and talk like a human being. Refreshing idea, isn't it?Nowadays, we complain nearly all of the time about how few businesses remember how to provide quality service to their customers. But a recent trip to Italy not only reminded me that the art of service is not dead, but that providing outstanding service is the key to almost any successful business. Here are a few well-worn but important principles that I was reminded of during that trip:The Customer Always Comes First: When you patronize a retail store or restaurant in Italy, it is almost always the owner of the business that takes care of you. It’s not that there aren’t other employees; other staff memb The personality of the writing itself needs to gel with the other elements of the website, particularly your image, content, audience, design, and objectives. What's appropriate and what isn't? Only you can answer that question. Ideally, have people write the content that fits the required personality naturally, who can write as themselves, subject to a few publication-related constraints. If you need to define specific personality "rules" that people should follow when writing or preparing content, then ensure they're closely defined and easily understood. Then appoint someone to act as guardian, someone who can read the content and spot inconsistencies or aberrations in the personality projected. This kind of defined personality can sometimes better fit the needs, and ensures consistency, even when the writing or production team changes. It also lets you build a personality around some other element of your business (an advertising spokesperson, your product, your CEO, whatever. . .). You can have as much or as little personality as is appropriate. But what if people don't like it? You can be pretty sure some people won't like your tone or style. And that’s a good thing, too. It's hard to get anyone engaged in your website if you're trying to be all things to all people. Most importantly, the potential loss of a few subscribers is well worth the additional rapport you'll have with those who remain. Or you can be very boring, very dry and very safe, and disappear in the morass of your competitors' offerings. I’ve also come across websites where tooting your own horn tu
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Top Three Ways to Stay in Touch with Clients Do You Try Too Hard To Market Your Business? Viral Videos Are Now Here Have You Got Yours Driving Traffic To Your Sites?
|