Tag Archives: advertising

3 Reasons to Use SMS Marketing in Your Ads.

J2 Marketing SMS Marketing

Are you running a TV/Radio/Billboard/Print ad for your business? How are you supposed to know if it’s working? I’m sure the producers will convince you that it’ll work or that somehow it is working. We suggest always making sure your marketing efforts are easily measurable, or else you could just be throwing money into a rat hole in the name of “marketing.”

That’s one of the greatest advantages we’ve seen with text marketing. It’s a simple concept and easily inserted into many different avenues. For example (I’ll use our company); at the end of your commercial Ad or bottom of your print Ad, you can ask the viewers/listeners to text “J2″ to 72727. (Obviously you fill in your own credentials.) When they do, their information is now saved into your database and you can easily measure your Ads return.

Here are some benefits to SMS Marketing:

1. You are giving your viewers/listeners an immediate call to action after hearing/seeing your ad

2. With those collected phone numbers, you have hot leads from your Ad instead of waiting for people to come to you

3. After your Ad campaign is up, you can have a better measure of how many people were reached by counting all the phone numbers you’ve collected. (let’s keep those advertisers honest!)

Bonus: Now that you have those phone numbers from your Ad, you can send follow-up text blasts with coupons or deals to try to secure more customers!

Here’s a link to SMS Marketing if you need it :)

Blessings,

EJ

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Are Facebook Ads Right for You?

Facebook offers so many opportunities to reach customers with specialized advertising that almost every business can benefit from some form of paid advertising on Facebook, even if it spends only a few dollars a week.

However, it is one thing to use paidFacebook advertising sparingly — for example to tell your fans about an event — and quite another to commit to making Facebook a significant source of leads or traffic for your business. Answer the follow questions to find out if Facebook ads can be a significant source of leads for your business.

Are you a local business with a physical location?
Does your business have a doorknob that customers turn? If so, then Facebook is for you. Dentists, doctors, lawyers, veterinarians, physical trainers, gyms, specialty shops, cupcake stores, specialty groceries, beer and wine shops, restaurants, mechanics, theaters and music venues are highly likely to benefit from locally targeted Facebook campaigns, which may cost as little as $100 to $200 a month.

Related: A User’s Guide to Facebook’s New Timeline Feature

Facebook allows you to advertise to people who live within a few miles of your location, to advertise directly to your known customers, and to advertise directly to your customers’ friends who live nearby. Facebook is good for selling locally because Facebook makes it easy to get your message in front of your local market demographic even before your target audience has begun searching for your particular product or service.

 

 

Does your business harmonize with Facebook?
I suspect it is possible to successfully sell almost any product or service on Facebook. However, it is clear that some products sell on Facebook like magic and others are really, really difficult to sell there. The interesting question for your business is “How easy will it be to sell on Facebook?”

Some types of products or services are a natural fit for selling on Facebook — so natural that you can set up a campaign and start finding new customers in a few minutes. Other types of products and services will be a harder sale. And, Facebook may not be a good channel for purchasing clicks until you have exhausted easier channels.

The more the following statements describe your product or service, the more Facebook is for you.

  • Our Stuff Is Unique

Facebook is for you if you sell unique or personalized products. Facebook is the worldwide capital of individual expression. It’s the perfect place to sell customized and personalized products, items that express a person’s own tastes and preferences. It is also a great way to engage potential customers on a human-to-human level.

You will not maximize Facebook’s marketing potential if you are selling products that could be listed in the “commodity” category or if customers can easily find your product at big-box retailers and national chains. Facebook is the place to sell products that don’t carry an expected price. Sell unique products, where the value is determined by the customer’s desire to have something interesting, not by the price.

  • We Sell to Consumers

Facebook is for you if you sell to consumers, not businesses. Facebook is a place for individuals to connect with friends and family. It is best used by businesses as a place to find and connect to individuals and individual consumers. It is not a good place to sell to other businesses. Although corporations have pages on Facebook, they are there as a sales presence to market to consumers, not as a purchasing presence to buy from your business.

  • We Sell Fun Products

Facebook is for you if your products are fun. It is a great place to sell events, memberships, experiences, personal improvement, travel and entertainment. Facebook is fun! It is a place where people go to connect, to play and to socialize. It is a place to feel, express opinions and display emotions.

Related: Facebook Posting Techniques that Really Work

And events, travel, and entertainment are full of fun and positive emotions. These subjects are naturally social, and people love to ask “Where have you been?” “What have you seen?” and “Where do you want to go?”

If you provide personal improvement products, especially anything that’s new, trendy, hip or cool, Facebook is also a great fit. If your product involves some form of training, accent the social advantages more than the academic aspects, such as how learning a new language can make travel more fun.

  • We Harmonize With Identity, Personal Beliefs, and Convictions

Facebook is for you if your business harmonizes with a person’s identity — political affiliations, religious convictions, beliefs or social movements. Regardless of whether your company leans right or left or whatever, there are lots of people who may be predisposed to do business with you for that particular leaning. And you should take advantage of it. There are very simple ways you can target your customers on Facebook and communicate with them in ways that connect to the things they care about.

If you appeal to a variety of such backgrounds, then you can design specific marketing campaigns to cater to each of those preferences. You may have different pockets of people within your customer database, and the better you understand those pockets, the more you can target your ads, and the more you can sell.

Where does your business fall? Visit IsFB4ME.com to help you answer that question. The site asks you 10 short questions about your business and results in a score from 1 to 10 that you can use to better understand how your business fits with Facebook.

Related: Understanding the Value of a Facebook Fan

Excerpted from Ultimate Guide to Facebook Advertising: How to Access 600 Million Customers in 10 Minutes, published by Entrepreneur Press.

 

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New Facebook Ads

Facebook appears ready to launch a new set of premium ad units, and, based on a review of documents which purport to describe them, the social network would seem to be doubling down on two core principles that mark fundamental departures from traditional advertising.

First, Facebook is making the new ads social by default, meaning they will automatically show users when their friends have already Liked the advertiser. And the new formats will draw their content exclusively from posts to brands’ Facebook Pages, rather from advertising copy written independently.

Combined, these features make two statements about where Facebook believes the future of online advertising lies–at least in its particular universe. It is saying that ads based on content, rather than messaging, have a better chance of hitting home, and that ads involving tacit endorsements from the people you know have a better chance of capturing your attention.

“When people hear about you from friends, they listen,” the Facebook materials say. “We’ll expand your ad with stories from friends who have already connected.” (“Stories” is Facebook’s shorthand for a wide varitey of interactions on the site. In the case of ads, it seems to refer to the fact that the ads will display which of a viewer’s friends have Liked the brand.)

Facebook has not commented publicly on the new ads (presumably they will discuss them at a marketing launch event in New York next week). But the materials describing the new units were posted to Scribd earlier this week. The news was first reported on GigaOm.

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Facebook Mobile Ads – to Use or Not to Use

Ahead of Facebook’s IPO, it’s only natural that the social network is looking around for new ways to monetize its usage — and please its new shareholders. Enter Facebook‘s latest revenue generator: Running ads on mobile versions of the site, which currently attract roughly 400 million monthly users.

Earlier this month, Facebook struck a deal with Bango, a United Kingdom-based, mobile-payment service provider that has the technology to enable commerce on mobile devices. And while terms haven’t been disclosed, I’ve heard plenty of speculation that Facebook will unleash mobile advertising beginning as soon as March 1. And supposedly it will be unlike anything we’ve seen before.

Is this a potential boon to small businesses that currently advertise on Facebook or plan to do so? Does this move have the potential to present your business with an additional audience numbering in the hundreds of millions? Hold the wedding. Before you reach deep into your advertising budget, here are a few thoughts I have on the issue:

First off, the notion of mobile advertising strikes me as intrusive, annoying and alienating. For one thing, it’s hard enough to read anything crammed onto a 2-by-3-inch screen, and now you want to crowbar an ad onto that limited real estate? And I’m not even going to go into what that ad might do to the connection speed or lack thereof. When it comes to my mobile device, don’t interrupt my experience — enhance my experience.

In order to do this, Facebook must move beyond traditional digital advertising as such a large percentage of its revenue and instead evolve advertising in unique and compelling ways around user-generated content without being overly intrusive.

About 85 percent of Facebook’s revenue currently comes from advertising, compared to about 95 percent of Google’s. But Google can be forgiven because its marriage of search and advertising is a natural part of its value proposition. Not so for Facebook, which may eventually run into trouble if it continues to rely on revenue from a product that is not inherently part of its value proposition to users.

If Facebook is smart about this thing, they’ll deliver me an ad that’s geo-location specific, interactive and initiated by me. But limiting my News Feed view with a soft drink or automotive ad — something I don’t need at the moment — is likely to prompt me to ditch my FB mobile app.

Of course, I could be wrong. According to eMarketer, two-thirds of mobile phone users say they’re comfortable with mobile ads. And Nielson reports 51 percent of consumers are OK with advertising on their devices if they can access content for free.

So what’s the relevance of all of this to you and your business? Tread lightly where mobile advertising is concerned because you might just alienate users. Worse yet, you might pay for something that no one chooses to see.

How have you used mobile devices to spread the word about your business?

Leave a comment and let us know.

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How To: Make Someone An Admin of Your Facebook Page

Step 1: Sign in to your own personal Facebook account

Step 2: Make sure you are a friend of the person you wish to add as an admin. If not, search them and send them a request

J2 Marketing

Step 3: Go to your Facebook Page

J2 Marketing

Step 4: Click Edit Page at the top of your Facebook Page and select Admin Roles

J2 Marketing

Step 5: Start typing the name of your desired Admin and select them when their name pops up

J2 Marketing

Step 6: Click Save Changes. It will prompt you for a password. Enter your personal Facebook password

J2 Marketing

Your done!

Comment for any questions!

- J2 Team

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Too Much

When the average American watches around 150 hours of tv each month, you would think that tv commercials would be the best form of advertising out there. You would think that the commercials we do see would be absolutely amazing and captivating. You would think that the verbiage would be perfect, the graphics would be new and exciting, the sound would be at the exact volume to capture your attention, and those that could afford to advertise on tv would make millions from every commercial. But, for some reason that doesn’t happen. For some reason the commercials are just all-too-predictable. The commercials are often boring and outdated. The graphics are ‘local-news’ quality. The music is overused. And the most common, the sound is overbearing. The sound is sometimes so loud that we do what… Mute. We can’t even hear ourselves think, so we bypass the volume-down button and go straight for mute, completely disarming the commercial.
And what about those nasty pop-up ads on our favorite websites? When they pop up, we can’t find the close button fast enough. We don’t have time to stop and ask, “what would you like to sell me today?” (click, click).
So, in a day of ‘Too Much,’ how can we get our name out there? Super Bowl commercial? Only if you have a few million to spare (neither do we). Then, billboards and newspaper ads. Maybe, but even those can cost a pretty penny for a small business owner. With. Website being a given these days, and SEO being a complicated mess of title tags and image names, where are we to go?
Is there hope for the small business owner? Is there a chance for us to get a few more leads without spending all of our profit?
We submit to you that there is. When the cash isn’t flowing, small business owners have to get creative. We have to think outside the box, way outside. That looks like gorilla marketing. That looks like serious networking time. But what we’re convinced will work the best for the average small business owner is… Word-of-mouth.
The problem with word-of-mouth is that you actually have to do a good job so that people will want to spread the word for you. You have to have a smile on your face, fix your mistakes, and say thank you. A customer who has a good experience with your business, will more than likely return and hopefully return with a friend.
Word-of-mouth, it works.

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