Website Conversion Tactics
May 14, 2010 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Featured, Life as an Internet Entrpreneur, Website Conversion
Designing a website for conversion is something that every business owner cares about, if they are savvy and have a solid business goal for their sites. Top gun internet marketers sell memberships and consulting services to people who want to get income online. It is a good idea to have a mentor when you are starting out, for sure, but I wonder if there really is a one-size-fits-all approach to building an online business. My instincts say no.
As an Online Branding Consultant and website developer, I’ve been monitoring website tools and trends for years. When my daily research introduced the idea that the color orange converted better than any other color, it seemed like a reasonable thing to try. Within a few months, just about every site that I saw had an orange buy now or add to cart button. Recently, this button has gotten much larger. Does the image below look familar to you and did you feel compelled to press the button? It took me 2 seconds to find one.
One trend that I have no argument with at all is to use WordPress website technology as the basis for a business and sales funnel. The software is remarkable, easy to manage, and delivers great SEO benefits too. Many top guns have migrated their sites to wordpress with good reason and anyone paying attention knows that WordPress is much more than a blogging tool.
Video capture pages are a very good idea and they have been for a long time. However, there has been a disturbing trend with them recently. The latest video marketing tactic is to enforce an opt in before one is granted access to the video. This is a ploy to build a list, which I understand, but if you do this please manage your lists so you aren’t broadcasting the same message multiple times. That is kind of irritating.
Another rising video marketing trend is to put up content with no controls or information about duration. I find to be both inconvenient and rude, and I know I’m not alone. If it is off-putting, why does it convert? Perhaps someone who is doing this and tracking results can enlighten us all.
The OTO (one-time-offer) tactic has taken on new proportions of irritation. When I opt in to something for free, I expect an obligatory up sell but is it really necessary to introduce two, three or more? Newbie or not, I’m betting that I’m not the only person who loses patience and gives up. It would be great to see the split testing results that support the claims of people who say this builds loyalty and increases sales.
Please save us all from the disingenuous “fear of loss” call to action tactic. If you aren’t sure what this means, it is the one that compels you to decide right now and threatens that, if you don’t, the offer will be lost forever. If it really is a limited time offer then using this tactic doesn’t constitute coercion. A high percentage of the time, however, the claim is not true. How many times have you bought something because you were led to believe you needed to decide right away and found that same site months after the fact?
When internet marketers began to sell products that teach how to target local business owners, it intrigued me. I wondered if they really knew what they were talking about. As it turns out, few internet marketers have ever dealt with offline business owners so please don’t expect them to teach you everything you need to know in order to succeed in this niche. I’m not saying it isn’t a good idea but, trust me, it isn’t an automatic gateway to wealth.
If you want to have credibility with a local business owner, you need more than a spiel and a ghost written book to hand to them at your first meeting. You must understand THEIR business and be prepared to explain how you can help them improve their bottom line.
Think about the different businesses that you see in your neighborhood for a moment, excluding chains and franchises. I doubt that the target market for an attorney, accountant, florist, or day spa lends itself to hype, being forced into opting in to view a video that has no controls on it, or the huge orange “add to cart” button. Please let me know if you think I am wrong.
Small busines owners understand their niche and they’re good at sensing deception or they don’t stay in business long.. You won’t know how to help them if you haven’t done your homework. Customer acquisition costs are a factor to small business owners, as well as return on investment. If you want to play in that field, make sure you understand business basics first.
The bottom line is this:
No internet marketing formula is one-size-fits-all.
SEO and Watching Paint Dry
May 11, 2010 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Business Basics, Featured, SEO Strategies
We joke about watching paint dry when time seems to move too slowly but, believe it or not, this is an actual role for which people are paid. Duties include touching the painted item to ensure that it is dry. What does this have to do with businss and online income? Read on…
Many people put up pretty websites and expect immediate results. Very few people get what they desire, unless they have found a particular niche that is in demand and has not already been exploited or they have a well established and responsive list.
As a website consultant, I’ve always recommended beginning with the end in mind. During initial meetings with any new client, I always inquire about their keywords and SEO strategy. Of all the hundreds of sites that I’ve built, only one customer actually had a plan in place. Statistically, those who did not embrace the idea that they needed to identify niche keywords and strategically pursue them experienced less than optimal results.
Once you’ve determined your SEO and linking strategy, you must set about the task of doing the work necessary to accomplish it. This entails tactics that will build relevance based on keywords through on-site and off-site content.
Perhaps the best known method for getting links to your website is writing articles, adding a link to your signature in a forum, or commenting on blogs. But, how do you know which sites have importance from Google’s point of view? Michelle MacPherson recently released a free tool for monitoring top internet properties for your content and links. I don’t know if it is still available but I’ve used it and it is very helpful. The caveat is that each site has different rules so make sure you read the fine print when you register and begin to use them.
Lately, there has been a resurgence in using videos to promote your business or opportunity. This isn’t big news. Video marketing has been a great way to give voice to your brand for years and new video distribution channels are popping up every day. Your videos need to go viral, for them to really provide benefit, and if you don’t use good keywords when posting the video, it is just “out there” waiting to be found. Alternatively, and as I mentioned earlier, you can deploy it to your dedicated and responsive list.
Differentiating yourself online may be the biggest challenge you face. Most of what I observe is a lot of emulation. That isn’t a bad idea. Heck! It worked for me when I wanted to learn to sing like Joni Mitchell.
Still, emulating what everyone else is doing only makes you like everyone else. Your market will choose to buy the offer, if it is something they want or need, and they will buy it from a link that appears in early in their search results. Thus, if you have no SEO strategy, whether or not you’ve done your niche research homework, there will be a lot of people ahead of you in the pile.
Assuming that you’ve are now convinced that learning SEO and keyword research is important to your business success … online or offline … what can you do? Well, you can begin by learning more about SEO and keyword research from an expert. Dan Thies has availed a great ebook entitled Fast Start SEO which you can download at this link. Dan Thies also offers a free membership where people aspiring to learn more, or those who are active in the arena already, can interact and swap ideas. You can choose to outsource the task to someone who knows what they are doing, if you feel you have more important things to do, but I imagine it will be hard to sift the wheat from the chaff when interviewing potential outsourcing partners without any knowledge so learning something about how SEO is done is still advisable.
Building an online brand requires patience, dedication and belief. Once you have your keywords and SEO strategy in place, all that remains to be done is to implement it. However, waiting for the benefits you seek can be difficult if you are impatient. Not much different than watching paint dry, I suppose. But, if you’ve done your homework and selected a good niche and linking strategy, your results will come.
Tools help. I use a product called Micro Niche Finder that is easy to understand and provides a lot of data very quickly. If you don’t want to buy a product, you can also use Google’s free keyword research tool.
If you’d like to know how I can help you, please don’t hesitate to ask. You can complete the contact form at www.VirtuallyMarj.com and I will certainly respond. I’d love to learn more about your business and, if it feels right to us both, help you build your online brand!
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Zoom in on Zettabytes
May 10, 2010 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Communicating for Success, Featured, Marj Wyatt's Musings
Most of us don’t think twice about what is involved in maintaining the platforms the Social Networking and Social Bookmarking potpourri of sites that we use each day in our online businesses. These days, the focus is mostly on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. Other useful sites are LinkedIn, StumbleUpon, Flickr, MySpace, and Last.fm … to name a few. Then there are he multiple free email accounts we have.
When it comes to our home computing environments, we unconsciously manage disk space every day. If we have self-hosted blogs, we look for and choose hosting vendors who permit us to have unlimited storage for our websites. Yet, we take the storage of our Tweets and posts for granted.
Every piece of content must be stored somewhere. In the early days of email, I was part of a group who studied email etiquette with interest. We discussed computing capacity issues, like storage, too. A friend of mine, who worked for EMC, wrote a fascinating white paper about the exponential growth of data storage. Her predictions have been exceeded by mounds and mounds and mounds of data. None of us foresaw the advent of micro-blogging in 1985, let alone text messaging on a cell phone!
Recent research by IDC revealed that our digital universe grew by 62% during the last year alone. The stunning amount of storage online at the time of the study was 800,000 petabytes, a measure better described at this link. In short, it is one million gigabytes. By the end of 2010, it is predicted that there will be 1.2 zettabytes online. A zettabyte, incidentally, is roughly half a million times the entire collections of all the academic libraries in the United States. Whew! And I’m worrying about a few gigabytes around here.
Computers and the internet have made our lives easier, much more public and availed methods to get income online for some of us too. Pages upon pages of material sifted and listed, categorized and presented for our reading pleasure with a few keystrokes and a button click. Since our content is cached and stored online indefinitely, one begins to wonder if our content will outlive our grandchildren. Who can say?
Most Memorable Mother
May 9, 2010 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Marj Wyatt's Musings
It’s Mother’s Day in the United States. This is a holiday reserved for the women who gave us our lives and, if you are as fortunate as me, the person who believed in us so much that we knew we could never fail. Today, I will tell you some of the most memorable stories that I have about a remarkable woman who was my mother, my mentor, and my friend.
My mother was born in 1926, which means she grew up during the depression. She was the oldest in a family of 12 children and, because times were difficult, her father expected her to quit school so she could help earn money to feed the family. Mom didn’t honor that request for she knew it would inhibit her future possibilities. At the age of 15, the same year that World War II began, she left her family and moved into a girl’s home so she could finish high school and make something more of her life. Her courage and focus were quite admirable.
Perhaps one of the bravest things that my mother decided to do was to have a career other than being a homemaker. I know this doesn’t sound amazing at all these days but, during the 50’s, this was not popular. Many of the suburban housewives whispered among themselves about how she was neglecting her duties as a mother and a wife. Some of those women even prohibited their children from being friends with my sister and me but, in my eyes, nothing could have been further from the truth! Mom and Dad explained that she was going to work so we could have greater oppotunities. Her working created income opportunities for me around the house, which taught me to be enterprising, industrious and responsible.
Mom took a job as a secretary, which was about the only position that women were allowed to have at that time. Within a couple of years, she was promoted to the position of Wholesale Buyer which caused a bit of conflict within the secretarial pool. My mother loved what she did, and she was quite good at it too. Twice a year, she would travel to New York City and negotiate large purchases for her company. I got to tag along with her a couple of times. Having the chance to see her at work was nothing short of inspirational. She was well-respected and a tenacious negotiator.
One of the fondest memories that I have of her is a reaction she had to an editorial in the local paper. Some man had written that women should not work outside the home and, if they did, that they should stick to “jobs for women” and stay out of the more challenging business roles because men were better suited for those sorts of positions.
Mom had a fit! She went straight to her typewriter and prepared a response that was published by the paper. This created quite a stir in the family, since she had used her married name on the letter. I will never forget listening in on a debate between my mother and grandfather, who was unhappy that she had used “his” name on such a controversial subject. She stunned him to silence when she retorted, “It’s my name too!” In that moment, she taught me that it was OK to stand up for what you believed in and be who you are, regardless of the circumstances. Remarkable!
I’m chuckling as I write this … and experiencing a little emotion too. I miss my mother very much.
Although Mom didn’t always agree with my ideas as a youth, she never told me I was wrong. In the truest sense of the word, she mentored me by discussing the pros and cons, just as she would with any adult. Those conversations always ended with her telling me that she trusted my judgment, which was empowering. I got to test my strategies and, if something didn’t work out the way I expected, she never said, “I told you so.” She would offer her advise and recommend solutions but it was always up to me to decide what path to choose. That was her greatest gift to me. Over the years, her strength became my will.
Her independent style and tireless encouragements are factors that still motivate me today. Her belief in me allowed me to rely on my good instincts, which has been the basis for every decision that I’ve made in my career. She taught me to disregard the nay-sayers and follow my own path. This is something you will feel in many of my articles and it is one of the primary reasons that GetIncomeBlog.com was launched in 2008.
Whether I am writing about following your passions or shutting out the noise around you so you can try something new, my message is always the same; Believe in Yourself first. It isn’t always comfortable to follow the road less traveled but, if you believe in yourself and your abilities, the pot holes on your path are never so deep that the axle will break on your carriage.
Mom’s resilience never ceased to amaze me. Up until the day she went into a coma, a week before her death, my mother’s mind remained sharp, she never doubted my ability to succeed, and she was a good friend to me. I was blessed to have her in my life.
So, this one is for you, Mom!
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Creativity in Business
May 6, 2010 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Business Basics, Entrepreneur Mindset, Featured
Normally, we associate creativity with artists who apply their craft in written communications, visual arts, or music. But, if we strictly define creativity as artistic talent, we fail to appreciate how it is involved in the apparently mundane aspects of our lives. That is really a shame, for nothing of life is truly mundane.
An acceptable definition for creativity is having the ability to find solutions where none are apparent. This is often seen with children who are learning something new. Less obvious are the toiling movers who manage to fit your heirloom dining room table through a narrow hallway without destroying the furniture or the walls, which is certainly admirable.
In business, creativity is characterized as thinking outside the box, creative problem solving, and maybe even critical thinking. Has your business creativity ever been stifled by colleagues or clients? Have you ever inadvertently stifled them? There are so many ways this can happen, and this article exposes a few of them.
You Want it When?
During my corporate days, I had an image of a person beneath a thumbscrew with a caption that read:
Turn it again you SOB! I work well under pressure!
The poster was irreverent and got many laughs but there really was no truth in it. The fact of the matter is, people don’t perform as creatively when severe deadlines are imposed. While the tasks may be completed on time and satisfactorily, there is kind of a hangover after the fact for those involved that can literally immobilize them for days after the effort is over.
Time pressure disrupts one’s ability to fully engage themselves in the solution. True creativity requires an incubation period. In my business, premium rates are applied to “rush” projects for good reason. When we come to terms on delivery dates and pricing, another dark side can be introduced by anxious people. Folks who are in a panic with a high need to feel in control can upset the creative flow with interruptions. To avoid this possible problem, I’ve learned to suggest a date in advance for status updates.
Please Put Your Weapons Away
With morbid fascination, I’ve observed threats that some people have imposed in an effort to inspire. This was more or less a daily fact of life on the job in the information technology industry. As a Realtor®, a client’s posturing that they would withdraw their listings didn’t motivate me to change anything about the marketing plan we had agreed to at the time we wrote our contract and the listing still sold within the pricing and terms we had set forth at that time.
These days, as an internet entrepreneur, oppressive behavior serves as a signal that it might be time to fire the client. Proceeding with people whose projects are fraught with self-serving drama is rarely worth the effort involved in their high maintenance, although some empathy and discussion can sometimes alleviate the problem. Yet, if someone wants to be a unhappy, they want to be unhappy and it is never worth entering into a battle of wills. Let them be right and move on.
If we enjoy what we’re doing, getting out of bed in the morning is never a chore. Happy liaisons are not only much more fun. Working with joyful people induces higher creativity for everyone involved.
Roles and Responsibilities
Casting a stereotype, based a limited perception about the skills involved in that role, can be limiting for the individual contributor and dangerous for the type-caster. Consider your bookkeeper, for example. The joke associated with creative financing is well known to us all but, when your accountant suggests a financing solution that you’ve never heard of before and it helps you to forward a business goal, their creativity is a huge asset to your business.
Financial Incentives May Not Be The Answer
A study on business creativity suggested that tying compensation to overall team results isn’t necessarily the ticket for inducing higher creativity OR better solutions. In fact, the study’s results demonstrated that people who were focused on bonuses were less productive than those who worked for the love of the effort.
Although there is a somewhat common belief that people will work harder if they are rewarded through performance incentives, concerns about negative compensation effects lead people to risk aversion, which ultimately affects creativity. Ranging outside the norms of what is imagined is an outcome of being truly interested in the effort at hand, knowing that it’s OK to try anything that has potential to work, and believing that one’s suggestions are taken seriously and that their contributions are valued.
How this Relates to VirtuallyMarj.com
As a WordPress website designer, the truth in the tagline at Codex is not lost on me. Even though most people will never truly appreciate the elegance of some of the code they use, which the tagline describes as poetry, one’s ability to envision and develop it certainly requires a special sort of creativity.
Personally, I get much more satisfaction out of consulting with clients, who have come to me for help with their marketing and branding strategies, and seeing the light bulb illuminate. This happens when our discussions unearth something about their pursuits that is not obvious to them because they are too close to the proverbial forest to see the trees. That is fun!
Right Brained or Left Brained … Does It Matter to Creativity?
Our right brains influence our creativity, so science says. Here’s a place for you to take a test, if knowing your brain’s preference is important to you.
I’ve known remarkably creative people whose claim to fame was clearly left brained. The most renowned example is a former real estate client and friend of mine, Leo Hurwicz, who achieved Nobel Laureate status for his Economics Theory at the age of 90. It was a privilege to know him and and memories of our talks are truly treasures for me.
His special skill was mathematics, which is clearly left-brained and analytical. Yet, his creativity allowed him to see beyond the equations and develop a theory that explained financial markets and ultimately garnered world-wide recognition.
So, the moral of the story is to not hold yourself back if you are left-brained by nature. Creativity is the product of what you believe is possible for you to do and it is nurtured by an environment where your ideas can expand to reality … regardless of your brain’s bias or your assigned role.
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Facebook Taking Heat Over Privacy Policy Changes
May 4, 2010 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Featured, How to Succeed with Social Networking, Small Business
Social networking is a great way to connect with prospects and friends. Over the past few months, there have been a lot of internet marketers advising that Facebook is a better advertising spot than Google. When you must advertise, it is good to have choices where your ads will be targeted but has Facebook gone too far to serve up data for their advertisers? It would appear so, if the US Federal Government has gotten involved.
In a nutshell, here is what has changed. Previously, Facebook flushed personal information from their cache each 24-hours. The privacy policy revision states that it will be held infinitely and that advertisers may use it for targeted promotions. Many internet marketers have picked up on this nuance and developed products for sale to help people get more bang for their advertising buck.
Although Facebook users have the privilege of opting out, the user interface is confusing and most folks don’t know where to look for the opt-out. Heck, finding your public profile link can be an absolute chore! I do understand the genesis of Facebook as being sort of an online yearbook for a university. This may explain the unwieldiness of it but it doesn’t forgive the fact that we should be able to easily locate all news and important links by visiting out own profiles. In other words, the obligation to track changes to the privacy policy of any social networking site is not the user’s.
Many Facebook users won’t care one way or the other. Still, there are those among us who don’t enjoy unsolicited advertisements. I’m sure one. When I logged into my account today, I found a dozen ads that were geo-targeted to my location. Local shops, product providers, service providers, Realtors and bars. I’d rather not be bombarded like that. I looked for a method of opting out and I just couldn’t find it!
Facebook is not wrong to sell advertising space. Their on-screen real estate is valuable and they must fund the site support. All things being equal, Facebook ads are less expensive than Google Adwords.
The fact remains that nothing replaces good SEO with a solid keyword strategy. In my online branding business, I never advocate that my clients use paid advertising. I will provide some consulting services to help them learn the SEO ropes. It isn’t a big secret or anything. Most of the information someone needs to learn SEO is available online for free. With interest, the ability to read, and the willingness to monitor results and experiment, perseverance will take your site where you’d like it to be.
Should You Fire Your Client?
May 3, 2010 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Business Basics, Featured, Life as an Internet Entrpreneur
When you decide to work with a client, your business relationship has potential to develop into a friendship. This can be very rewarding, as long as the boundaries between friendship and business are established and maintained.
Very few people understand how awkward it can be when questions they are asking begin to encroach on the time you had set aside to relax. Under most circumstances, gentle reminders that you are “off the clock” will be enough. Conscientious people will never ask you to work for free and there is no reason to feel guilty about accepting compensation in exchange for your expertise.
Here are a few gray areas that you may have encountered:
- Someone expects you to do something for them which is a service for which clients normally pay.
- You’ve earned an affiliate commission because someone clicked on your link and that person treats it as if they are owed services in exchange.
- Sudden demands for a “finder’s fee” months after an introduction.
- Promising future work for reduced fees.
Expecting Free Help
We’ve all hit financial speed bumps. My first response to someone who asks me to work for free so they can preserve their cash is to suggest that they need to adjust their mindset. This sounds brutal but it isn’t. We are what we believe and, if we believe we are broke, we are broke!
Many philosophies, including the Law of Attraction, conceptualize thought as energy that attracts like-kind energy. If your thoughts are trained on what you lack, you will attract more of that. In other words, your lack will increase. This is so stupidly simple, yet so difficult to master!
Placating your associate’s fears by working for free is a choice that you make based on whether or not the time commitment will put your real business obligations at risk. We all like to help people out but, if you do, recognize that it can be a slippery slope. Like silencing your barking dog with a treat reinforces bad behavior, your associate may expect that you will continue to work for them for free.
Leveraging Affiliate Commissions
You’ve taken the time to set up accounts and establish affiliate relationships for products or services that you want to recommend. Affiliate earnings are intended to be passive. Thus, any expectation that you will provide services in exchange for an affiliate commission you’ve earned is flawed logic. All that person did was click a link to buy something of value that they wanted.
In the rare instance that someone insists they could have purchased the same product on their own, it may be their way of inducing guilt. Don’t fall for it. If you are like me, you have not overpriced your services to begin with and you’re worth every penny.
Does this mean you should not offer affiliate links to clients and friends? If you do, ensure that you disclose the fact that you will earn an affiliate commission and that it is their choice to purchase elsewhere.
What Finders Fees?
True Story: A year or so back, a “friend” asserted that he was owed 25% of everything that I had earned since we met. This came out of nowhere so I was stunned when I realized he was serious.
I explained that I would never have agreed to referral fees of that magnitude without having a formal contract in place. This fell on dead ears. His rage and desperation, coupled with some other observations about his online behavior, created an awkwardness that ultimately ended our friendship.
Expecting Immediate and Repeated Help
Most people admire my intuitive grasp of technology. I will always answer quick questions but, if I know that a request will take more time than I have available, it must be postponed. When I find a solution, I take the time to carefully explain exactly what solved the problem, in layman’s terms, so people can more become self-sufficient.
Some folks repeatedly return for help with the same things. I don’t mind re-explaining but, if I can’t drop everything at the moment of their request, enduring unfounded accusations or complaints is unacceptable. My rule is no tolerance for such bad behavior.
Beware of Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing
One client relationship relationship evolved into spending a lot of time exchanging ideas about WordPress website design, CSS and Photoshop techniques. Those sessions always began when they would ask a “quick question.” Since my associate already had some skills, it didn’t occur to me that I was providing information they planned to use to start a new and competing business. When they announced their plans, they invited me to become a resource, with the provision that I could not use my own business name or offer a link to my website. I declined and wished them luck.
The tactic of promising “future work” for a discounted rate is the proverbial Pandora’s Box. In my experience, such requests better serve the requester. In one extreme case, my willingness to work in this way resulted in many delinquent invoice payments and their expectation that the delayed payments would not compromise the development schedule for the project. This particular client also neglected to mention very time-consuming development requirements at the time we settled on price and refused to discuss additional compensation. When their behavior turned into abuse, they were summarily fired with no regrets … at least on my part.
Choose to NOT Diminish the Value of Your Expertise
We all have unique skills to offer in professional liaisons. The confidence you gain through exceeding customer expectations can lead to business expansion. When your clients trust you, they will naturally recommend you who their friends and colleagues. Referrals from such sources are the best kind of business.




















