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Content Marketing

The Difference between Content Marketing and Inbound Marketing

September 30, 2020 by Daniel Laws Leave a Comment

Content Marketing and Inbound Marketing are the same things, right?  It’s a question that I often receive from business owners, marketers, and sales executives.  Content marketing is associated with being an approach while Inbound marketing is identified as a way of doing business. 

Content is an important part of inbound marketing but that doesn’t mean that content always equals content marketing.  There are tactics that exist outside of the scope of content marketing that are specific to inbound marketing such as SEO, social posting, etc..  Limiting your approach will limit the potential impact your marketing efforts will have on revenue growth.  Your approach will also have an impact on the skills, talents, and tools needed to execute. 

What is Content Marketing?

According to the Content Marketing Institute, content marketing is a strategic marketing approach focused on creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and retain a clearly defined audience to drive profitable customer action.  

70% of marketers are actively investing in content marketing. (HubSpot, 2020)

content marketing framework

Source: Content Marketing Institute

This approach takes into account creating and distributing content. It focuses on telling the story, the most effective channel to deliver the story, and engaging in conversations. Often people think of it as brand awareness and good content is the foundation of any marketing campaign.

Types of Content Marketing

 

Content marketing is presented in several types of or formats such as:

  • Blogs
  • Video Content 
  • Ebooks
  • Guides
  • Case Studies 
  • Resources
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts

What is Inbound Marketing?

HubSpot defines inbound marketing as a business methodology that attracts customers by
creating valuable content and experiences tailored to them. While outbound marketing interrupts your audience with content they don’t always want, inbound marketing forms connections they are looking for and solves problems they already have.

This approach takes into account the buyer journey and the overall user experience. It’s not so much about the products or services, rather, it is about solving the challenges potential customers are facing at every stage.

Inbound Marketing Buyers Journey

Source: HubSpot

Types of Inbound Marketing

Inbound Marketing often consists of the following:

  • Blogging
  • Search Engine Optimization
  • Social Media Management (Posting) 
  • Video Marketing 
  • Ad Development & Landing Pages
  • Content Creation
  • Email Marketing



Does the Approach Really Matter?

It’s about creating pieces of content that delivers results for your target audience. Determine your approach and start with a content marketing strategy or inbound marketing strategy. All of your content should conclude with a “call to action”. A call to action is an invitation for the users to take the desired action. For example, “Subscribe to our blog to get the latest in your inbox weekly!”

How to measure the success of the content and inbound marketing?

Before you start with the content or inbound, evaluate your ability to measure the results.  For example, if your content or landing page says “Call Now!”, I recommend that you:

  • Have a method to measure the number of telephone calls received as a result (call tracking).
  •  Determine the goals and objectives for each piece of content associated with your approach.  
  • Create a list of key metrics that you’ll track and record periodically.  

In our experience, keep it simple with engagement metrics and expand from there.  Don’t be afraid to test new ideas and delivery methods.

Try Our Content Planner!

Filed Under: Content Marketing, Inbound Marketing Tagged With: content marketing, digital marketing, Inbound marketing

5 Steps You Can Take Today to Bring More Traffic to Your Website

July 23, 2020 by Daniel Laws Leave a Comment

Website traffic is an important business indicator and a driver for growth. You get to see how your marketing is working while gathering insight about your target audience. More traffic to your website builds your credibility on the web. It’s important to drive quality traffic that will impact lead generation and sales.

Create a Blog Editorial Calendar & Write Your First Blog Post

A blog is a regularly updated web page that is typically run by an individual or small group and is written in an informal or conversational style. Create a blog schedule or an editorial calendar that zeros in on your target audience questions, concerns, and challenges.

I recommend that the blog editorial calendar include who is responsible for writing, idea topics, and due dates.  Start out small with 1 blog per month then make adjustments based on your goals.   Consider how you will distribute the content to increase the likelihood that it will get into the hands of potential customers.  

 

69% of businesses attribute their lead generation success to blogging. (Source: HubSpotⓇ)

 

 

 

Download Calendar

Develop a SEO Plan to Increase Traffic from Google & Bing

Search Engine Optimization, or SEO, is the practice of increasing the quantity and quality of traffic to your website through organic search engine results.  SEO techniques include content creation, linking, site navigation, local business listings, site speed and more.  Develop a SEO plan that is specific to your business situation.  

Start by getting an SEO or website audit.  The website audit will provide information on website issues that are hurting your position in the search engine results. You can get a free evaluation of your website:

 


The local business profiles on Facebook®, Google My Business®, Yelp®, and Bing Places® also attract more local customers.  These business profiles should include reviews, maps, services, a link to your website, and a description of your business.  This information is used to populate local listings and provide directions to your local business.

Try the Yext business listing scan to review your business listings. 

According to consumers, businesses that respond to reviews are 1.7X more trustworthy than businesses who don’t (76% vs. 46%) Source: Google

Start Social Media Posting on Relevant Platforms

Social media enables users to create and share content, career interests, ideas and to  participate in social networking conversations.  What social media networks are your existing customers using?  Share information that is useful to your customers.  Use polls to get their feedback on your products and services.  

Use social media as a distribution channel for your blog editorial calendar.  I recommend adding a post to your Google My Business profile so that it stands out from others.  Use social media management tools such as Hootsuite®, Buffer®, and SproutSocial® to schedule your posts. 

LinkedIn’s number of users in the U.S. reached 160 million, making it the country with the most users in the world. (Statista, 2020)

Social Media Post Calendar

Launch a Paid Search or Social Media Campaign

Paid Search or pay-per-click (PPC), search engine advertising, and sponsored listings are often used to define ad types such as Google Ads (formerly Google AdWords), Google Product Listing Ads, Google Shopping Ads®, and Bing Ads. Paid social media display advertisements or sponsored marketing messages on popular social media platforms and target a specific sub-audience.

Define the goals of the paid search or social media campaign before starting your campaign.  Consider the type of ad campaign that would be most likely to succeed.  For example, if you are selling ecommerce products, I recommend a shopping campaign.  Create the campaign for your target audience that  minimizes cost and improves results. 

If you are already running a campaign, get a free paid search audit to improve your return on investment. 

In 2019 the U.S. was the largest global market based on mobile advertising spending. (Statitsa, 2019)

Create Content for Your Target Audience

Content is high quality, useful information that communicates a story presented in a contextually or visually relevant manner with the goal of soliciting emotion and engagement.  The content can be used as part of social media posts and added to your website for SEO. 

Create content that is useful to your potential customers and target audience.  For example, I recommend video demonstrations, product guides, flyers, and brochures.  These content pieces must be accessible via a mobile device. 

70% of marketers are actively investing in content marketing. (HubSpot, 2020)

Combine Tactics to Increase Your Web Traffic Today

The increase in website traffic provides businesses with more opportunities to sell products or services. A one-size-fits-all model will not achieve your target results. All of these ideas are connected and will have a greater likelihood of achieving success when used in combination with each other

Understand where your business is going and measure if and how you are increasing traffic. Look to understand what is working and the impact that it is having on your sales. If you need any help, give us a call or check out our other blog posts on these topics.

Get an Inbound Marketing Assessment!



Filed Under: Content Marketing, Inbound Marketing, Paid Search (PPC), Search Engine Optimization (SEO), Social Media Tagged With: content marketing, Inbound marketing, Pay Per Click, seo

American Products Gets a New Website

January 29, 2020 by Dabrian Marketing Group Leave a Comment

Contract Manufacturing Specialist & Electronic Design Company Get a Content Upgrade & New Website

American Products, Inc website developed

In August 2019, American Products, Inc (API) of York PA decided to redesign the website for a more modern look and feel. The goal was to aid in the establishment of a strong market presence with a high value web experience for potential buyers that will increase visibility, value, and brand recognition to ultimately yield greater sales. The new website needed to easily guide the target audience through American Products, Inc. website to obtain any information needed for them to get a quote or contact API.

Prior to the web design project, the API website had not updated the programming or content to be current with the organization offerings. The website still utilized flash and was not a responsive website. There were several technical issues that limited American Products ability to appear in the search engine results.

Now, the American Products website is a mobile friendly website that responds with the type of device that customers are using. Most of the technical issues that limited their search engine ranking were resolved, improved the overall site, and enhanced the user experience. In addition to web development, we wrote content to help API communicate what they offer, what they do, what differentiates them from competitors, industries expertise, and the quality assurance elements of contract manufacturing and product development.

Before

After

This was a web development and content writing project, not SEO. You can see the impact that a good site can have on the overall site health. The web design and content improved the site indexing with the search engines, internal linking, page load speed, and site performance.

" DaBrian Marketing produced high-quality web design and used a customer oriented approach from start to finish. I was impressed by the team’s effective communication completed the website before the deadline, and within their agreed-upon budget. Their web design resulted in a web project superior to our expectations. We definitely recommend DaBrian Marketing for website design and development. "
ChrisAmerican Products, Inc

About American Products, Inc.

American Products, Inc. (API) was established in 1983, and has gained a reputation for excellence and professionalism in the industrial electronic industry. API has built a business on customer service, flexibility and the highest quality standards. With their sales, engineering and manufacturing facilities they are able to offer a totally integrated solution to your project. This turn-key approach offers a single source solution for product design from prototyping through production. American Products Inc. specializes in printed circuit board design and manufacturing as well as cable and harness assembly, panel and chassis assembly. American Products, Inc. has been ISO certified since 1997 and currently is ISO 9001-2015 certified. 

If you need help with contract manufacturing, product development, or assembly, contact the American Products, Inc. for a quote. 

Filed Under: Content Marketing, Web Design

What Are Your Digital Marketing Priorities for 2020?

November 21, 2019 by Daniel Laws Leave a Comment

What are the key digital marketing trends for 2020 that your business needs to consider to generate more traffic, leads, and revenue? What should be a priority in your digital marketing strategy? Here are a few digital marketing trends that suggest where savvy managers should invest their time and resources next year:

  • Capture the Zero Position in Google Search to Get Found
  • Content Marketing, Creation, and Distribution like a Rockstar
  • Customer Retention with Marketing Data & Segmentation to save money
  • Use Artificial Intelligence with Digital Marketing for efficiency

Now, let’s dive a little deeper into what we mean and why you should care.

Optimizing for Zero Position on the Search Engine Results Page (SERP)

The zero position refers to the first Google search engine results that appear above the organic search (SEO) listings. It’s sometimes called a featured snippet, rank zero, or P0.  By optimizing for the zero position on the search engine results page (SERP), you can steal relevant traffic from your competition and appear above them in the top SEO results.

Average CTR of Featured Snippets

It sounds really easy, right? Not really, the content you create should be part of a bigger content marketing strategy. You’ll need to consider the intent, keywords, difficult to rank, search volume and customer experience while providing content that dominates the zero position. The most common types are content are:

  1. Answers to Questions (Who, What, When, Where, and Why)
  2. How-tos or instructions
  3. Definitions
  4. Comparisons
  5. Price/Cost Breakdowns
  6. Best of Lists
  7. Frequently Asked Questions

Don’t forget to add a call to action to the content.

Changing of Content Marketing, Creation, and Distribution

Content Marketing will continue to evolve in 2020. User and search intent will drive content creation and development with data being collected to provide better results through machine learning or artificial intelligence. Customers want to receive content tailored to their interests and needs. Your competition is going to focus more on catering to voice searches via mobile and smart speaker devices.

The creation of content should be in different formats to accommodate the user’s intent, personalization, voice search, and to increase your chances to appear in the featured snippets. Use the content that is delivering results and distribute it across platforms in a way that is helpful to your audience.

Improving Customer Retentions with Data & Segmentation

It takes less money to keep your existing customers happy so we recommend more effort into the middle and last stages of the buyer’s journey. Happy customers tend to tell their friends and provide referrals to help increase revenue. They are also more likely to give your direct and honest feedback about issues to improve your brand.

Be sure to keep them informed on your organizational changes or processes that would impact your relationship through email marketing or engage with them on social media. By collecting data and segmenting your customers, you have an opportunity to save costs while delivering on your products and services.

Leveraging of Artificial Intelligence for Digital Marketing

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has been used in digital marketing going back to 2013 with Facebook. Here is a list of the most common uses of AI in digital marketing:

  • Voice Search
  • Programmatic Media Buying
  • Ad Targeting
  • Re-targeting
  • Marketing Automation
  • 1:1 dynamic emails
2020 Digital Marketing Trends - Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Prioritize from the list and develop an action plan to implement. Using one or more of these could help to increase relevant traffic to your website, get more leads, and improve your overall revenue growth.

Don’t have the time or expertise to keep up! We keep up with the digital marketing trends so you don’t have to. Give us a call to learn more about 2020 digital marketing trends that will impact your business. 

Conclusion

The 4 digital marketing trends for 2020 is not a complete list. You will be on the right track if you start by optimizing for zero position, use content marketing more strategically, improve customer retention, and use artificial intelligence with digital marketing when the opportunity is available.

We wanted to identify the trends that would improve your site traffic, help you to generate more leads, and increase your sales within budget. It’s also important to understand the digital marketing trends and how they will impact the competitive landscape.  

Want more information on the top 2020 digital marketing trends?  Check out the list of references:

4 Major Marketing Trends for 2020 and Beyond on Entrepreneur

What’s new? What’s next? 6 essential marketing trends for 2020 – Smart Insights

Top Marketing Trends For 2020 – Forbes

Filed Under: Content Marketing, Digital Analytics, Marketing Strategy, Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

Developing a 2020 Content Marketing Plan for Your Bank or Credit Union

October 16, 2019 by Michael Sanders Leave a Comment

You’ve heard it before: content is king. In 2020, the digital marketing landscape will reinforce this adage more than ever. As Google’s algorithms increasingly rank pages with relevant information higher in its organic search results and users gravitate toward brands they trust, quality content can help savvy marketers stand out from the competition.

Educational content, specifically, is the tool through which banks and credit unions can engage with potential customers. In fact, one study by Powered Inc. suggests that consumers who receive educational content are 29 times more likely to enlist the provider’s services compared to traditional advertising. This means that educational content can help you drive new customers, increase the number of loan applications received, and improve the bottom-line.

But where should you begin with your own content makeover? Though the 2008 financial crisis is now more than a decade behind us, banks and credit unions are still struggling to win back trust. The non-profit Association of Retirement Plan Participants found that only 8% of those surveyed had faith in their financial institutions—down 5% from the previous year. Offering value to your current and prospective account-holders—such as financial education—can help re-establish and build trust, as well as engage consumers in a more lasting way than other marketing approaches.

At DaBrian Marketing Group, we leverage a simple approach that guides our clients through a four-step process for their content makeovers:

  1. Via an initial audit we determine what digital and physical marketing resources the institution currently possesses – and what still needs to be developed.
  2. Second, a careful examination of consumer buying stages helps to prioritize the content materials that will move the needle on larger business objectives in the short-, medium-, and long-term.
  3. Next, we consider the content that has to be revised or created based on our audit and an understanding of potential customers.
  4. Finally, we set the groundwork to distribute existing and new assets to the right people, at the right time, using the right channels.

It can seem overwhelming when first getting started, but what follows will guide your bank or credit union through an effective content audit, creation, and distribution process in 2020. Following this plan will help you generate more traffic, loan applications, and ultimately – revenue.

Starting Your Content Audit

Content Audit - Take a close look at your existing content

Your content audit should start with an inventory of the marketing resources you already possess. To do this, create a checklist of haves and be sure to include the created by and modified by dates. We find that our bank and credit union customers often have resources (especially printed collateral) that is so outdated that it’s more efficient to start afresh. Note: your content audit checklist should include BOTH your digital resources and your in-branch assets! Here are some specific content types to consider to get you started:

In-Branch Assets

Flyers
Brochures
Guides
Worksheets
Screens
Articles
Surveys
Info graphics

Digital Assets

Website
White Papers
eBooks
Apps
Videos
Quizzes
Blogs
Podcasts
Calculators

As you move through the information, consider the kind of content each of your marketing personas might best engage with. Infographics and interactive online and mobile content might resonate better with Millennials, for example, while in-branch editorial content might connect better with older consumers.

Appraise Your Customer Buying Stages

The process where your potential customers become aware of your financial institution, learn about it, and (hopefully!) engage with it is called the buyer’s journey. You’ll need to consider if you have content to help advance prospects through each stage of the buyer journey. Here’s what you need to know about each stage and the types of content that often work well at each step…

Buyer’s Journey - Use content to guide web visitors to become customer

Awareness – The initial stage of the journey begins when someone discovers your bank or credit union. Marketing assets might include blog posts, curated news content, and other fairly general materials that provide value to the prospect without mentioning your particular brand’s products or services.

Consideration – After becoming familiar with your institution, your audience may begin to consider it among other buying choices. Content created for this stage should still focus on financial education but you will want to begin interspersing brand elements so that your audience begins to consider you. Longer, deeper forms of content such as eBooks, videos, and webinars are often used during the consideration phase.

Decision – The final stage of the journey occurs when your audience values what you’re provided, trusts you, and considers your offering appropriate. At this point, your content should directly link to a sale: brochures, vendor comparisons, case studies, and trial offers may all be appropriate.

Revise and Create Appropriate Assets

Content Puzzle - Create/Modify content to fill in the missing pieces

Now that you know what you have and what you need to help prospects progress through the buyer’s journey you can begin revising and creating the assets you will need throughout the year. It is helpful to consider each phase in the journey – if you are short on time, produce some assets for each stage rather than completing all of one category at once. For example, if you intend to do a monthly blog series throughout the year, craft an outline for all 12 blogs but only set-out to immediately publish the 3 blogs needed for Q1. This will give your marketing team time to also produce content suited to later stages of the buyer journey. 

Also, remember that content marketing should be helpful, and not come across that you’re just trying to sell to the reader. Each piece of content should be measured against its ability to educate your audience, grow the value of your financial institution, and point your audience—once they’re ready—to the appropriate products and services. Think about ways to marry your business goals to your marketing goals through the lens of financial education. What can you teach your audience about credit scores, for example, that may later impact their adoption of your products and services?

Create a Content Distribution Plan

Targeted Marketing for Financial Services

After determining and creating your content needs, you’ll also need to begin thinking about how you’ll distribute the assets. You should also consider what assets you intend to “gate” – that is, locked behind a registration form. You trade valuable content (financial education, a tool, etc.) for valuable contact information (the prospect’s phone number or email address).

We recommend to most financial institutions with whom we work to gate content in consideration phase. Locking it in the awareness phase jumps the gun – these assets tend to be too general to have sufficient value to gain usable prospect info. By capturing an email address in the consideration phase, however, it gives you an opportunity to follow-up with tailored, personalized content in the decision phase. This will improve your conversion rate and allow you to better focus limited resources. Other distribution elements to consider:

Distribution Platforms – Select the websites, publications, and social platforms where your target audiences congregate. Which ones make the most sense for your brand? Do you have the marketing resources to appropriately manage interactions?

Distribution Process – Outline exactly what you want to have happen whenever an asset is created. The distribution process will be different for each marketing piece but the overarching principle is to repurpose as much as possible. Your team took the time to develop collateral so make sure it is promoted on as many platforms as possible. Turn a podcast into a blog, email the blog before sharing it on Facebook, and then send out Tweets of various stats and highlights from the blog.

Distribution Schedule – Finally, determine when you will disseminate content and how often you will publish and post it. You want to maintain a steady stream of material without overwhelming your followers. You also want to maintain space in your marketing calendar for news, breaking stories, and other unplanned assets.

Wrapping it Up

Being prepared for 2020, requires an assessment of your current content, both print and digital content. Make sure you have content that helps guide your current and future customers through your funnel from awareness through consideration until they make their decision. After that, you will know what content areas that will need to be created or recreated. Finally, determine how your content, print or digital, will reach your audience.  Going through these steps (as difficult or easy as they are) will ensure you are prepared to make 2020 a year of great content marketing. 

Looking for a bit more help keeping your content organized – try this Free Content Planner. Still have questions, contact DaBrian Marketing Group Today, while there is still time to prepare for 2020.

Filed Under: Content Marketing

[Video] How to Create a Marketing Plan

April 3, 2019 by Daniel Laws Leave a Comment

We publish videos every 4-6 weeks about the latest Digital Marketing news, analytics information, and industry-related topics.

Read Transcript

Good afternoon. This is Danny Laws of DaBrian Marketing Group. We tried to go live earlier this morning. For whatever reason, ran into some technical difficulties, so we kind of want to try this, kind of take two, on Wednesday Wisdom. So for today, for those of you that didn’t catch it earlier today, kind of a follow-up on the last conversation in terms of business plans. So, today what I want to speak to and kind of give some information and some resources on, very much so, marketing plans, which in theory and in practice roll up into … excuse me. The business plan.

So, with that being said we’re going to talk a little bit about marketing plans. I have my notes over to the side here, so if you see me glance over, that’s what I’m looking at. So, with the marketing plan, the whole goal of this is to kind of outline … it’s a document that outlines what marketing channels you’re going to use, your approach to marketing, those types of things. In general, it gives you goals, objectives, your target audience, what is it going to cost you, and what type of marketing you’re going to use in order to acquire new business.

So, one of the classic examples when we talk about what types of channels or tactics or those types of things, we’re talking about social media, we’re talking about direct mail, we’re talking about perhaps a video, those types of things that would help you get in front of that target audience. And as I said to you before, it’s usually something that consists of a time, very specific time period. Some marketing plans are one year, some marketing plans are three years, that roll up into the business plan as I mentioned before.

One of the other things that you want to take into consideration is the marketing plan is not something that is static, that you create and it doesn’t evolve over time. Your marketing plan should evolve over time based upon your products, your services, your geographic footprint, your audience, your competitive landscape, those types of things periodically will have you adjust your marketing plan to the appropriate folks and to see improvement in results. So that’s definitely something you’re going to take into consideration.                       

So the purpose is really to align and give direction to your business goals and objectives, which many of those pieces are going to be inside of or are in the document that is often referred to as the business plan. So, again, forcing that alignment and making sure you’re staying focused on the high-level business goals and objectives, generally around revenue growth, promoting a product, launching a product, those types of things are going to be a part of that and actually flow into the marketing plan as well.

So, the benefits. Clear direction in terms of what kind of customers you’re going after, that new customer acquisition, and direction and guidance in terms of messaging to your target audience. So when you look at your marketing plan at a high level, who, what, when, where, how, why, what products, what service offering, those things, once you identify those elements, you can customize your message to speak to the appropriate folks.

So the same marketing tactics that you use to get in front of a teenager at this point in time are going to be uniquely different than someone who is in the business landscape, who is a business owner entrepreneur, and the way in which you would talk to them are going to be completely different dependent upon the product offering.

So that’s a classic example of how knowing the who, what, when, where, how, why and marketing tactics will allow you to tailor that message to the respective audience. So something you definitely want to take into consideration as you’re going through the process of creating a marketing plan.

So, give you a couple of things on how to create a marketing plan is often one of those questions, and so, with that, I’ll walk through a couple of questions that I have here on my side in terms of things that you want to take into consideration. What are the goals and objectives for 12 months, 24 months, 36 months, what does that look like, right? That’s something you’re going to want to answer.

What types of marketing are going to resonate or connect with your target audience. So, is that social, is that direct mail, is that video, and what are the goals of the marketing pieces? Like, what are you trying to accomplish? Is it simply an awareness piece, is it something around generating leads, is the intent at sales and promotion? Those types of things. What’s that look like? And what kind of challenges are you having getting or acquiring new customers and getting them to purchase or getting them to become involved in a promotional component or something along those lines, right?

And lastly, how are you going to measure it? And measuring that against the cost of what you’re talking about from a marketing perspective. So, what kind of returns are you looking to get and how are you quantifying success? Is that going to be new customers, or is that going to be something that you’re going to speak to in terms of revenue, you just want to have growth and x amount of revenue is what you want to achieve with the marketing plan over the next 12 months, right?

So, these are some of the things that are going to be important to crafting a marketing plan, right?

And then let’s talk about a few resources. So, what I have here is, again, full disclaimer, we don’t have any relationship with any of these folks that I’m about to name. We’re not getting any kickbacks or anything along those lines, but I’ll name them and feel free to use them, and give us some feedback on what you think on them as well. One of which is HubSpot, who has a marketing plan template generator that I’ve looked at in the past and seems to be fairly useful for someone that the marketing plans are not necessarily their area of expertise and walks you through that process, makes it a little bit simpler for you. So, I would definitely take a look at that tool and how it might be able to help you.

The third one is Mplans. So, Mplans is a paid service if I’m not mistaken and it has the same parent company as Live Plans that I mentioned the last time when we were talking about creating business plans. So, that’s something that I personally used in the past when I first started DaBrian Marketing Group and looked at, so I would encourage you to perhaps take a look at that one and whether or not it’s worth the cost, only you would be able to justify that and make that determination, but definitely something I would recommend you take a look at.

The other one is Smart Sheets, which gives you an Excel breakdown and an Excel template for marketing plans, so you can use that piece as well to pull some of those items together to frame your thoughts so that it makes it a little bit easier for you. And take a look at some of those items that it’ll give you an opportunity to kind of clean some of that up.

The last piece here that I’ll get into in terms of actions, you know, actionable tips for marketing plans. Number one, create one, and if you’ve already created one I would allocate some time to review and revisit that marketing plan. Number two is measure success and failure, and on top of that, learn from those successes and failures as far as what works, what doesn’t work, what gets people coming in, what gets people calling, what gets people filling out forms. Those types of things are definitely elements where you’re going to want to take a look at the marketing plan and look at what is working for you, what is successful, what is not successful, and being able to pull those pieces together.

So, that’s one other actionable takeaway that I would have for marketing plans in terms of a recommendation.

The last piece is, in terms of actionable recommendations, actionable tip, is to revisit that marketing plan on a quarterly basis so that you’re able to see what’s happening, make adjustments based upon those successes and failures, and the learnings from those success and failures to be able to sell more products, get in front of the appropriate folks, build up the business, however you see fit in terms of aligning back to the marketing plan and the business goals and objectives.

So, with that being said, wrapping it up, I would say if you’ll give us some feedback in terms of these Wednesday Wisdoms if you will in terms of what your thoughts are and how we might be able to improve upon the videos, it’s definitely new we’re taking a look at. Follow our Facebook page, you’ll get free tips and information there. Subscribe to our blogs, there’s always a whole bunch of information there as well as downloadables, and continue to check us out on social media across Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin, and we’ll be loading some of this stuff up to YouTube as well.

Appreciate your time. Good luck, and don’t hesitate to give us feedback. Have a great day.

Filed Under: Business to Business Marketing, Content Marketing, Marketing Strategy

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