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The Small Business Guide to Online Marketing #DreamSmallBiz

Catching Up With Trends and Technology That Your Small Business Needs

One of the hardest things about being in business is staying current. Technology changes at an incredible pace. Our Small Business Week Guides will help you catch up with trends and get actionable advice for the coming year.

This Small Business Week Guide examines online marketing, still an area of rapid development. In Asia, marketing and sales have migrated to smartphones to a much higher degree than in Western countries. In the United States and Europe, desktop and portable computers still rule.

The integration between these platforms is so close it is difficult to tell them apart. Today, online marketing is performed using increasingly sophisticated suites of software — or platforms — that deliver content to phones, tablets, computers, personal assistants, and any online device that carries communications.

This Small Business Week Guide to Online Marketing will quickly catch you up on new developments in three important areas: Website Marketing, Email Marketing and Social Marketing. We’ll look at the top issues, the top brands, and our top suggestions for your small business.

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Website Marketing

Do small businesses still need websites to compete in digital marketing? Yes! Your own website is still the center from which all other marketing radiates. For example, 40% of website traffic comes from search. Your position in organic search, map-based search and mobile search is dependent upon your website’s reputation.

The other major reason to maintain your own website is for protection. If all of your marketing is done through someone else’s platform, then they control access to your customers and prospects. Your small business website might not get as much traffic as your Facebook page or Yelp listing, but everything there is yours, and you don’t have to pay anyone to communicate with the prospects who use your website to connect.

Here some web platforms to consider:

When evaluating a website platform for your small business, free trial offers are almost useless. It takes too much work building a site before you can evaluate the program. By then you’re committed. You’re better off reading ratings and reviews at Business.com or tracking down the builders of sites you want to model your site after.

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Email Marketing

Email still rules. It consistently rates as the most effective form of digital communication for marketers and the one that delivers the highest ROI. With many online promotions, you have to wait for someone to find your content, then notice it then share it. With email, you control message timing to a greater degree. Using an opt-in list, you can pierce firewalls, spam filters and ad blockers. You can reach out to someone who forgot completely about you and pull them right back into your circle.

Email is so important that many profitable companies sprang up to help small businesses use email marketing well. Today, those companies have grown up to integrate email, social, and CRM into very muscular messaging platforms. Here’s a quick look at three of the best:

Email is especially effective when combined into a communications platform that includes other forms of messaging such as texting, image transfer, and video. Email lets you speak one-on-one, with a pitch customized to a high degree, although few marketers are yet using it that way. These new platforms allow for automated tailoring based on customer profiling. Email is embedded in almost every other kind of software these days, but often very clumsily. It pays to invest in a messaging platform that can help you actually reach those lead development goals.

Social Marketing

The trend in social marketing is automation. If that doesn’t sound very “social,” it isn’t. It’s practical. Most small businesses recognize the impossibility of maintaining 24/7 personal communications across dozens of social platforms. Just as distance learning works best when it combines personal attention with great canned content, so social marketing works best for small businesses when personal attention is combined with intelligent automation. Here are some examples:

One of the problems with social marketing platforms is that they are intermediaries between you and the social networks. From time to time, the social networks do not play nicely with marketing automation software.

Status updates posted from some platforms are ignored or restricted in reach by some networks. They want your business to visit the site to post your updates so they can market to you, and they are prejudiced against bots. So look for social marketing platforms that are sanctioned by the big networks, have a good working relationship with the big networks, and do not generate a lot of complaints about inability to achieve reach for messages.

Here are some other tips for small businesses using automated social marketing platforms:

  1. Take advantage of free trials! There are so many competitors in this space that platforms are willing to practically give the service away just to get signups. Just be prepared to migrate if they suddenly try to turn on the revenue.
  2. Test your ability to migrate OUT of the platform. It’s often easy to import data into these systems but impossible to export it in a useable format. So test first, with a small sample, your ability to export your content back out of the system in a usable format.
  3. Manage your total costs. Social marketing platforms typically charge subscription fees per user per month. It may be possible to confine your use to one user for a long period of time. It can also be an advantage to contract out for social marketing services with a person or firm that maintains paid subscriptions to expensive automation tools.

Source: Business

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