Ebook - The SMALL Picture
Ebook - The SMALL Picture
2008 by Mark Smiciklas Copyright holder is licensing this under the Creative Commons License, Attribution 2.5 Canada. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ca/ Special thanks to: David Armano for use of his image on page 4. Read Davids great Logic+Emotion Blog at http://darmano.typepad.com/logic_emotion/ Robin Eldred at Apis Design Inc. for use of the iceberg concept on page 8. Check out their website at www.apis.ca David Ian Gray for encouraging me to start blogging and to develop a thought leadership position. This e-book is a culmination of my blogging efforts year to date...now I just need to work on the thought leadership part :) Check out Daves retail consulting website at www.DIG360.ca
Please feel free to share this e-book and/or post it to your website or blog.
Thank you.
Mark Smiciklas
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
eDNA
Have you ever written anything online that might cause someone to question the integrity of your company or brand? Think about all the imprints you've left online over the last few years - emails, blog posts, forum comments, articles, etc., essentially an eDNA trail that leads back to your small business. As I recount the following story, consider what kind of impression your eDNA might have on your brand - will it be positive or negative... A client was alerted to a forum post about one of their products. A prospect was asking for feedback on a popular forum - someone responded with a series of negative comments about the product and proceeded to suggest a competitor (that it appeared they represented) as a better alternative. My client responded accordingly with some actual facts and a few client testimonials and left it at that. A few months later , they received an inquiry from a gentleman expressing interest in re-selling their products in South America. Can you guess who it was? Bingo, the same person that tried to sabotage them a few months prior! Take the ethical high road in all of your online communication and remember that your words are a reflection of your brand. The next time you post something online remember that your eDNA stays out there - use the opportunity to give people a positive insight into your brand as opposed to a reason to stay away.
forums
articles
websites
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
Touch points are all of the communication, human and physical interactions your customers experience during their relationship lifecycle with your organization. Whether an ad, Web site, sales person, store or office, touch points are important because customers form their perceptions of your organization and brand based on their cumulative touch point experiences.
- Hank Brigman -
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
Visible Invisible
Sound Programming Well Planned Framework Goal Driven Design Effective Maintenance Search Engine Optimization Quality Assurance Tested Web Marketing Strategy Usability Accessibility ISP Services
Concept Source: Apis Communication, www.apis.ca.
Many companies are neglecting the important back-end issues that can make their websites search-engine friendly. When we surf the web, we see a lot of the same functionality. But the problem with the average website is that its not optimized to gain top rankings on the major search engines. While all appears to be smooth on the front end, potential problems lurk on the back end. There are a plethora of backend technical connections going on behind the scenes, and if youre lulled into complacency, your site could be missing the road to top rankings that increase your conversions. Paul Bruemmer, Search Engine Guide
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
Trust - The foundation of any great relationship is trust. One of the reasons that people talk about your product, service or company is because they trust your brand. As a small business owner, it's important to earn the trust of your stakeholders with every interaction. The best way to build trust is to deliver on your brand promises. For example, if your small business guarantees a certain level of service, make sure you meet or exceed the expectation level you've created with your customers - meeting brand promises will result in the kind of communication you want...positive Word of Mouth (WOM). Increasing Viral Capacity - As online social networks become common place, the viral capacity of WOM continues to increase. The ability for WOM to spread (at a rapid pace) beyond face to face communication or via other traditional means i.e. telephone creates both opportunities and pitfalls for small business owners. Its important to understand the power of social networks and how quickly they can impact your small business. Individual stakeholders have a voice - if you meet/exceed expectations, consumer empowerment fuelled by technology will have a positive effect on your small business. Enigmatic - WOM is complex and difficult to control - help position successful WOM by: 1. having a great product/service 2.building trust with your stakeholders 3.delivering on your brand promise 4.exceeding expectations. WOM can be so intangible that sometimes it's easy to lose sight of how it can affect your small business. A good way to keep WOM top of mind is to be empathic across all touch points - If you were in your stakeholders shoes, how would you feel about the execution of your brand promise on your website, in your store, on the phone...and who would you tell about it?
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
2. Concise Copy - Avoid the urge to present every detail about your product or service. Approach your content from the perspective of your visitor and (briefly) describe how you can help provide a solution to a problem they might have. When it comes to editing, a good rule of thumb is to take what you've written and cut the word count by 50%! 3. Simple Language - One of the biggest problems with many websites is the amount of jargon that is used. Try to avoid the use of technical language, industry specific lingo and acronyms. 4. Keywords - research the keywords that are applicable to your product/ service before writing or editing your website content. Keywords are the words or phrases web users type into search engines to find information on the internet. Having the right keywords will increase the likelihood of getting found online. Google offers a great tool that will help you come up with keywords and provide you with search statistics.
FREE eBOOK
5. Good Content - It's important to understand the meaning of good content it's not content you think is good, it's content your visitors will find valuable. Write an article that solves a client's problem Write an e-book that helps visitors learn something new Start a blog to share your ideas - and invite people to comment Publish a white-paper on a topic or trend that is important to your visitors
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Having the "the right people on the bus" is one of the business concepts discussed by Jim Collins in his book, Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap...and Others Don't. Collins researched over 1400 companies and discovered a set of ideas that, when embraced and implemented, differentiated great companies from their "good" counterparts.
The right people eliminate the need for your small business to focus on the motivation and management of your team. The right people are driven, selfmotivated and responsible.
Your small business will never maximize its potential with the right strategic direction but the wrong people.
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
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The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
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The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
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The opportunity to get challenged, become accountable for your personal development and to receive candid, constructive feedback
Ongoing one on One attention that promotes thought and stimulates the generation Of ideas, strategies and tactics to help solve problems
Business coaching is a relatively new discipline. As a result, many small business owners are probably not aware of the coaching process and why they might consider coaching as a resource to fuel their business growth and personal leadership development. One might assume that the primary benefit of having a business coach would be an ample supply business advice. Not really - the benefits of a good coach extend beyond management consulting.
Access to a confidential business partner that is focused on the success of your small business and can help test ideas and explore possibilities
Many people start a business without understanding their real motivation and a good business coach can do much more than just work the business process - a good consultant could do that. We ask different kinds of questions and have a different quality of conversation. A coaching relationship is based on skilfully guiding a client through a process of increasing self awareness backed up by solid business acumen. This has the added value of increasing confidence and establishing a better process for making decisions in the long term. - Anne Wilkinson, Executive Playground Ltd -
Increase the level of self awareness including strengths, weaknesses and blind spots
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Is Anybody Home?
How many companies simply ignore inquiries that arrive via the [email protected]" inbox? In an era of technology and connectivity, there should be no excuse for your small business to miss the opportunity to serve a customer. Think about mapping "[email protected]" to a specific email address and having that email account linked to a BlackBerry. This will give you the ability to engage in a conversation with a customer instantly. I think you will be surprised by the positive reaction you will get from your customers - many companies don't deliver on the service promise...set yourself apart by responding to those emails and providing responsive service that will create buzz and word of mouth about your small business.
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Email Marketing
Consistency - be sure to select an email marketing frequency that you can comfortably attain i.e. every two weeks, monthly, etc. and then be sure to stick to the schedule. Build your list - have a newsletter sign up box on your website; register email addresses at tradeshows; ask for permission to send information when networking, etc. Permission Marketing only send emails to prospects, customers, etc. that have requested information and have given you permission to communicate with them.
Permission marketing is the privilege (not the right) of delivering anticipated, personal and relevant messages to people who actually want to get them...It realizes that treating people with respect is the best way to earn their attention. Real permission is different from presumed or legalistic permission. Just because you somehow get my email address doesn't mean you have permission. Just because I don't complain doesn't mean you have permission. Just because it's in the fine print of your privacy policy doesn't mean it's permission either.
Timing - send emails Tuesday to Thursday during business hours. Avoid sending emails in the evening or on weekends.
Content only send content that recipients have requested and dont use permission to bait and switch email content. For example, if a customer has registered for an information type newsletter (articles, tips, advice, etc.) dont send them emails pushing products or services.
Seth Godin
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Documents - Become a resource provider to your target market. Create tools that will attract an audience to your website, expose your brand and create word of mouth.
With gated content, people that do register may not actually be interested in future communication from your small business - they simply want to access your content to see if it of value to them. Any email you send after they are forced to register will likely annoy them and be treated as spam.
FREE Content
Access to Content
"Free" content is becoming more prevalent and is being embraced as a way to share your ideas, assume a thought leadership position, build your brand and generate sales leads.
Benefits
Free - Users should not have to provide personal information or have to register in order to be able to access your free content. Gated - Users should have to perform some call to action in order to access free content i.e. provide contact information such as an email address.
Website Visitors
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Creates brand awareness Builds word of mouth marketing Engagement - facilitates a connection with your audience and helps build relationships Helps develop trust with your target audience visitors accessing your content without having to register won't need to worry about whether they will start receiving spam from your small business Creates a great opportunity to expose your ideas Removes any barrier to your content and results in more downloads. Viral - free content is more likely to spread online through linking on other websites, mentions on blogs and forums, etc than gated content. Free content helps generate sales leads. As your content gains exposure it helps build brand awareness - if your target audience likes what they see, it will lead to relationship building and new business opportunities. Search Engine Optimization - the more pages you have on your site, the better the chance that your small business website will be found by potential customers. More free content helps build search engine rankings. Becomes a business card/brochure for your small business and provides your target market with an insight into who you are.
Mark Smiciklas - Intersection Consulting
The SMALL Picture - A Visual Guide to Marketing & Management Ideas for Small Business
Mark Smiciklas is a Vancouver Marketing Consultant, Entrepreneur and Blogger. Mark uses a casual, no-nonsense approach to help de-mystify the marketing process for small businesses. To schedule a meeting or call to discuss your small business marketing or management challenges (no cost or obligation, of course), please contact him through the Intersection Consulting website at www.intersectionconsulting.com Check out Marks Blog at www.intersectionconsulting.com/blog View Marks LinkedIn profile at http://www.linkedin.com/in/marksmiciklas This is Marks first e-book. Thanks for checking it out!
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