WebProNews

Tag: elit

  • Apple Education Pricing For New Macs – Plus $100 iTunes Card

    Apple Education Pricing For New Macs – Plus $100 iTunes Card

    Apple’s 2012 Back to School promotion also began with yesterday’s launch of new Macs. College students and others that qualify will now get a $100 iTunes gift card with a Mac purchase. Those getting an iPad will get a $50 card for iTunes.

    The promotion runs from June 11 to September 21, 2012, which means, in order to qualify, you must actually make your Mac purchase between those dates. The Back to School gift Card may be used on books, apps, music and videos.

    To qualify for the Back to School Gift Card offer, you must be a college student, a student who has been accepted into a university, a parent buying for a college student, or a faculty member from any grade level. Students and teachers will also qualify for Apple Education Pricing, which could save them a little money on hardware.

    Buy a qualifying Mac from the Apple Online Store for Education, the Apple Retail store, or an Apple Authorized Campus Store to receive the free gift card, which can be used in iTunes or the iOS and Mac App Stores as well as iBookstore.

    Apple also went to the trouble of creating a special section in the Back to School website that highlights Mac and iPad Apps that will useful to students.

    Getting a $100 gift card isn’t much when you are paying 1 and a half or 2 thousand dollars for a new laptop, but for those dedicated to purchasing one, the promotion will be an added bonus. Apple isn’t known to drop prices, so anything they do to sweeten the deal is always welcome.

    [Apple Insider]

  • Moo Offering Facebook Business Cards

    Moo Offering Facebook Business Cards

    In January, Moo, the award-winning online print business that customizes business cards and postcards, was running a promotion offering free business cards based on one’s Facebook Timeline. Now, the print company is at it again, this time offering cards based on business and brand pages.

    During the promotion, a business can get one pack of 50 cards for free, with additional packs being $15 a pop, which includes shipping. Brands can align specific products and images to different packs, and sort of mix and match what they’re specifically trying to promote.

    Richard Moross, CEO and Founder of Moo, states, “As global businesses and brands, large and small, and their agencies seek new ways to catch attention and take advantage of new marketing channels, we believe this free offer will be a much-sought after additional tool to add to their marketing suite.”

    During Moo’s aforementioned promotion earlier in the year, free cards were shipped to over 150 countries, including Greenland and Maldives. Paul Lewis, Head of Marketing for Moo, states, “The response from our first Moo offer was very positive and generated great momentum for our business. We quickly realized that we were filling a very timely niche in the marketplace for users who wanted a more dynamic, buzzworthy and fun social-networking experience. Our new offer is designed to fulfill a further need on the business side and meet the expectations of our loyal customers for other, more versatile ways to use Moo.com cards – and we’re delivering.”

    One can begin building their free cards by visiting the Moo site.

  • Google+ Promotion May Improve Organic Search Ranking

    Although previous studies have concluded that social media really does a shoddy job at driving traffic to your websites, TastyPlacement conducted a short experiment to assess a similar concept. More specifically, the group investigated whether social media engagement can help boost a website’s organic search engine ranking.

    To see if you can really drive up an organic search engine ranking using some social media sites you may have heard of, TastyPlacement created about as controlled of an experiment as you could do within the vast petri dish that is the internet. As it turns out, collecting Google+ followers seems to be the best way to push a site’s ranking up by as much as 14.63%. Facebook and Twitter showed signs of improving organic search results but not nearly to the degree of promoting via Google+ followers (canvasing for +1s on Google+ resulted in a slightly lesser push in search ranking, but still wasn’t too bad). The only promotional strategy that didn’t seem to improve a site’s ranking was by recruiting Twitter followers.

    Have a look at the full infographic detailing the experiment and its results done by TastyPlacement, and feel free to comment with any of your experience or thoughts below.

    Infographic: Testing Social Signals

    [Via AllTwitter.]

  • Quora Currency System Now Includes Promotion

    Quara has announced that users can now spend their credit to promote their content. Spending credits will allow users to broadcast to a larger audience. If it ia a promoted item it will appear with a special icon on the reader’s screens. So if you have something important to share, or a burning question, you can spend some credits and get your word out to a larger audience.

    If you haven’t used Quara before here’s a discretion of what they do from the Quara blog site:

    “Unlike traditional social networks, Quora gives you access to people who haven’t explicitly opted in to follow or friend you. This makes the product powerful, but it means that one person’s actions can affect many other people. Credits mediate the flow of information so that people aren’t overwhelmed by the increasingly vast number of other people who have access to them. This allows us to continue to build features that let you access large audiences and diverse groups of experts, and furthers our goal of connecting you with everything you want to know about.”

    The whole system of currency is based on your reputation. If you answer questions with clear articulate and knowledgable answers you earn credit. If simply mock people and provide no insight or clarification, your reputation will suffer and you will earn very little. I guess it’s social capital at its very finest. Anyhow, it costs capital to post questions and now, to promote questions to larger audiences. But, if it’s a subject or question that you really need addressed, it must be worth it.

    Here are some responses from users on the blog site about the addition of ‘pay for promotion’ at Quora:

    “One tiny thing you might wanna consider: if you’re requiring an expenditure of 50 credits to ask a question, perhaps make the slider cap out so the user is left with 50 credits.”

    Awesome. Thanks, Adam, for the announcement and a big thanks to the Team’s tireless efforts to make Quora a better place.

    “I think this is awesome. Promoting an answer has already got me two upvotes out of the blue. My only concern is that even at 100 credits, that would mean I need 10 upvotes to recuperate my costs and that’s a high number of upvotes for the average answer.”

    “It’s gambling. Spend some to promote a question with the hope or either getting more answers or upvotes. For those that want to play and really enjoy tracking the credits it’s a great feature. It’s going to change the nature of Quora more.”

    “I’m just a little worried that good questions from new (ie not power or “celebrity”) users will get buried by the whole commodity market of credits, and people with influence (ie people with lots and lots of credits) will be able to pack user feeds with posts and questions which are more relevant to them than to everyone else.”

    “Wow, 50 Credit cost to ask a question is HUGE! My gut reaction is that it will do a LOT to improve question quality on the site, as well as help reinforce the idea of questions being reusable.”

    So it sounds like people are generally excited about the addition of the new feature, but there is some concern too. I haven’t used Quora so I wonder if this new ‘pay for promotion’ could drown out some highly relevant or interesting topics or questions. If the whole point is gaining exposure to get feedback or answers, how does a new user gain enough clout, or credit to even make using Quora worth while? I would really be interested to know. I guess I should use Quora to find out.

  • Tips on Promoting Videos

    Tips on Promoting Videos

    Previously, we discussed creating compelling iPhone videos, but what happens now? How do you get the word out about the cool content you single-handedly created? Thanks to some tips and ideas from Michael Terpin’s BlogWorld session, you should have, after reading this, a better understanding of how to promote your video effectively.

    First and foremost, it should be understood that not all video content is viral-worthy. There are millions of great videos on YouTube that haven’t reached atmospheric-levels of popularity, thanks to constant sharing among friends. For further clarification, here are some tips Terpin discussed some general ideas concerning online videos:

    – Educational videos don’t need virality to be effective

    – Video increases engagement on Facebook updates, tweets, Google+ and other social network engagement

    – Universal search means that video will show up higher

    – Videos continue to grow as a percentage of content in the “how to” space

    – video nearly always improves clickthrough for a search result

    As you can see, social platform success doesn’t necessarily mean viral-levels of popularity, but when people do share your video content, it almost forces people to interact with it. How to videos are great for attracting visitors, as well as increasing your perceived level of authority. Of course, there are many different ways to engage the social media side of web users with video, and Terpin discusses a few of them:

    – Webisodes

    – Video catalog with ecommerce links

    – Repurpose live footage

    – Instructional / customer service (keep it short, entertaining)

    – Viral event marketing, tied in with Facebook, email

    – Viral video (or at least videos hoping to become viral)

    The downside to attempts at going viral is you have little-to-no control once the video goes live. You can’t control how people are going to react to your work. What you may perceive as being funny may be viewed as being lame. It’s important to know what your audience is looking for and create accordingly.

    As for people marketing directly to the consumer, with ideas of using YouTube as a platform for your videos, here are some things to consider. First, the good aspects of using YouTube:

    – Free, easy to upload

    – Can be repurposed into many forms of social media and social networks

    – Universal search brings video results gives video a boost in search results

    – Mass virality is possible with the right ingredients and promotion into the blogosphere

    Now, for some things to watch out for:

    – High quality production can be expensive

    – Sound quality and lighting makes or breaks a video

    – Most videos are doomed to have very few views

    – The new ability of filimmakers to monetize both videos and viral videos makes it even tougher to break through the noise

    Granted, some of this isn’t as much on YouTube as it is on the video creator, especially the production aspects. Sound quality, as well as lighting, can be controlled by the producer. Because of YouTube’s viral nature, the benefits clearly outweigh the potential potholes. For those of you wondering whether or not video content is the right avenue of marketing for you to travel down, here are some other ideas to consider:

    – Are you looking for fifteen minutes of fame, a lasting brand, or to drive a specific action (cause/purchase)?

    – Does the video hit the mark? will the viewers get what you’re tring to do?

    – Do you have an obsession for crispness and quality?

    If so, it’s something to consider, plus, the viral nature of videos makes it almost too tempting to pass up. Just remember, go for quality. When shooting for the viral approach with videos, the risk and reward needs to be considered because of all social media efforts, viral video is the hardest to pull off. That being said, if done well, videos can be the most effective viral content on the web.

    Terpin also provided a checklist for viral success, one that contains some good direction:

    – Short, fast-paced: two minutes is the gold standard

    – Videos should be disruptive: funny, shocking, surprising, adorable

    – Celebrities help, including web celebs

    – Editing must be crisp; many good tools abound (including new cloud-based service, WeVideo)

    – Sound quality is paramount. Nothing should distract from the message

    – Key question: would you pass this to a friend?

    Because virality success is based almost solely on the sharing aspect the web now rotates around, if you wouldn’t share it with your friend, it’s doubtful the video has the legs to crossover into the land of viral success. Keep in mind, however, not all videos have to be viral to be considered quality content.

  • 11 Ways to Promote Infographics

    Infographics are a hit with online marketers this year and as more companies hire designers to artfully represent data in creative and engaging ways, many fall short when it comes to infographic promotion. It’s the old “great content will attract it’s own audience” scenario. As I’ve always said, “Content isn’t great until someone shares it.”

    Profile of a twitter user

    While there are many other smart posts about creating compelling infographics to attract attention, links and traffic, the information on promoting that type of content seems a bit light. If you’ve invested in creating great infographic content and need advice on how to promote, here are a few ideas:

    1. Involve credible sources in the data collection and then encourage those sources to help you promote the resulting graphic.

    2. Create a blog post for the infographic and support promotion through the blog’s social channels (Facebook, Twitter, Email, social news & bookmarking sites)

    3. Segment the infographic into screen shots which can be used in blog posts and shared on image hosting sites like Flickr with links back to the main page hosting the full infographic. A week or two after publishing and promoting the infographic, upload the full image and unique description to Flickr with a link back to the original web page.

    4. Schedule tweets of specific data points mentioned in the infographic over time with a link back to the full infographic. 10 data points/statistics = 10 tweets. A similar, but more conservative approach can work with Facebook as well.

    5. Submit the infographic to aggregators and directories. Here is a short list:

    6. Promote the infographic with an article/news release that includes a link to the full infographic and distribute through a news distribution service like our client PRWeb.

    7. Highlight the infographic in an email promotion to your in-house prospect and/or customer list. Include a segment of the graphic and a link for readers to see the full image on your website or blog.

    8. Pitch relevant industry bloggers and media on the story behind the data included in the infographic. Focus on relevant, personalized emails and offer previews or pre-release opportunities for more influential sources.

    9. Share the infographic with influential users of social news & bookmarking sites: StumbleUpon, Delicious, Reddit, or Digg. Or enlist a connected social media marketing service to do it for you.

    10. Create a screencast video version of the infographic and promote through YouTube and other video hosting services.

    11. Deconstruct the infographic into a PowerPoint and PDF document and share on Slideshare, Scribd, Docstoc and other document hosting services.

    Additional tips that can help promotion include: Make sure the file name includes relevant keywords as well as the text on the web page used to describe the infographic. Social sharing buttons on the page that hosts the infographic should be easy to see and use. Include a text area form element with code that users can copy to embed the infographic (with link back to your site) on their own website or blog.

    Obviously there are many other ways to promote and re-purpose great content. I have to say, at TopRank Marketing, we’ve had many opportunities to develop our content marketing and promotion skills as well as content re-purposing. It’s an essential part of an efficient marketing program.

    If you’ve been successful at marketing content through infographics, what promotion tactics worked best? What additional ways do you think infographics could be useful on their own or as part of a coordinated content marketing effort?

    Profile of a twitter user Infographic courtesy by GDS Infographics, on Flickr

    Originally published at TopRank Online Marketing Blog