This is Part 3 of my 5-Part Series on Increasing Your Twitter Promotion.
Twitter is my website’s number 1 source of social traffic and an integral part of my digital marketing strategy. It’s well worth the time to watch this brief video series to make sure you’re optimizing this powerful social platform.
Take a quick listen to this episode where I discuss:
How to Create Transactional Tweets For People Who Purchase on Your Site
Getting People To Populate Your Tweets
I hope this gives you more ideas on how to effectively use Twitter.
The next 2 posts in this series will give more easy to use tips to continue to grow your referrals from Twitter. Subscribe now so you won’t miss out.
The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.
It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.
Welcome back to yet another episode, episode 3, number 111 of the BrightIdeas podcast. I am your host Trent Dyrsmid. This is the podcast for we help on entrepreneurs to discover ways to use digital marketing and marketing automation to dramatically increase the growth of their businesses. Who doesn’t want some of that?
If you’re an entrepreneur looking for proven tactics and strategies to help you increase traffic, to increase conversion and ultimately increase profits, well, I’m very happy to say that you are in the right place.
In today’s episode we are going to talk about part 3 of my 5-parts series on 5 ways to increase twitter promotions.
Now if you want to get episode 1 and number 2 its brightideas.co/109 and /110 and will take you to two other episodes.
So in this episode we are going to talk about how to create a transactional tweet. Before we dive into that, I want to cover in case you miss the other two episodes.
Why is it so important to use twitter to get people to help you bring awareness to your brand?
Number one reason is that, it is really really easy to do. For the people who are going to do the clicking for you, you don’t even have to really type anything, they don’t really have to do anything, if you do it the way I instruct these 5 part series. People literally only have to click a mouse button and they are going to send a pre populated tweets and all sorts of other wonderful things for you making it very easy for people to do – that collective power of all those people doing that very simple little thing can translate into very big boost in the buzz for your product or for your event, and obviously that can help you to drive profits.
A couple of quick announcements before we get in to this. If this is your first time listening to the BrightIdeas podcast, and you are on mobile device, go ahead right now and text the word podcast to the number 96000. You’ll see some of my marketing automation trickery in action and ultimately you’ll be able to get a notifications of every episode that we produce from here on in and plus some other special surprises in the store for you. You’re in front of your computer and you’re listening to this on iTunes, just go to brightideas.co and enter your details and you can have the very same thing happen.
And the next thing that I want to tell you about; in the last two things that told you about my digital marketing handbook, this one I want to talk about something a little different.
If you’re a solo entrepreneur and you’re feeling a bit stuck or alone – not an uncommon feeling – I strongly encourage you to check out the BrightIdeas mastermind for you will be able to start spending time around other very motivated entrepreneurs, all dedicated to helping each other succeed and sounds like a very wonderful thing to be a part of that, I can assure you that it is. You can learn more about it at brightideas.co/mastermind.
So with that said lets kind of dive right into this and give you yet another golden nugget.
So a transactional tweet: what’s it for, why did you do it? The purpose is you want to be able to give people a very easy way to share their excitement about a transaction that they have just completed. The reason for that when the people buy something they typically pretty excited they want to tell other people.
Let me give me example. If someone signs up for my mastermind group – which I just mentioned – or they buy my digital marketing handbook or they buy the best buyer formula or they do any other things or buy any other things or register for an event, right on the thank you page, I’m going put a transactional tweet and typically it all say that something like “please click to tweet” and it will be the words that would show up in twitter and they just click it and that’s it! It’s done! They don’t have to type anything, they don’t have to do anything, and they don’t have to put hash tag in. Nothing and it’s all done for them!
The benefit of that is, remember back on episode number 2, I was talking about those widget boxes that you can use to accumulate real time social proof. If you write this tweet and you include hash tags every time someone buys your stuff, you’re going to be sending out these tweets, you’re going to have this constant stream of people saying all these wonderful things and that going to show up in that twitter widget, that you could put that on your page, on the side bar, wherever you want to put it.
So let’s get in how to do this and man, it is so incredibly easy, easy, easy, easy!
Alright, go to clicktotweet.com it’s free, you can pay more if you want to like extra stats and stuff like that. But I find free version is just fine. So here’s the thing, you are going to do number 1. You are going to write your tweet – you want to craft it in a way that it would be something that they would say. So, think about you’re the user that just bought the book or sign up for the course or attended the event or whatever it was.
What would they say? What would they say after that?
So, in my case of the digital marketing handbook – I just bought a digital marketing handbook and recommend you check it out – or something to that effect. So then you’re going to include in that tweet, very important, you going to include a link to the sales page for whatever it was that they just bought because if you forget that pieces really doesn’t do you any good at all. Then the next thing that you really want to put in there if you have enough room and you don’t have too much volume to drown you, you may want to put @your-username, so that you can get a notifications on your mobile device or whatever it is that you used to monitor twitter. Then you are going to reach out to this people say hey thanks. And that’s something I really recommend that you do because it does help you to build relationship with your new customers. And then, the hashtag! Don’t forget the hashtag because if you forget the hashtag then you can’t create the widget later on that’s going to show these wonderful tweets from all these people that have bought this stuff and registered for your events. So, make sure that you get the hashtag, that you hit the create tweet button and it’s going to give you a little URL.
So, now all you do is go over to your wordpress site on your thank you page. You type out – what I typically do – is in bold italics. I go “please click to tweet” and then I put colon and then take off the bold, take off the italics and write out whatever the tweet was.
I don’t need to include the URL. I don’t need to include the @TrentDyrsmid and I don’t need to include the hashtag – hashtag in the words that are shown on the screen – and then I highlight it then I turn it into a hyperlink with the URL that I got from ClickToTweet.
So now, when you’re done, all someone has to do is click that and it will populate up a tweet with a hashtag in the URL. Everything, all in it, cause you crafted it that way and they hit the tweet button and whamo! And that’s it! The tweet is sent and you my friends now are taking advantage of all that excitement that your new customers, or your new subscribers, or whatever it is that they just did whatever transactions they just completed, you give them a way a frictionless way to easily share their excitement with their tribe.
Alright so that is for this episode. If you would like to get to these show notes and I’ll include some links to all this stuff and some screenshots and so forth, just go to brightideas.co/111.
So that’s it and I’m your host Trent Dyrsmid. Thank you so very much for tuning in. If you enjoy this episode, I would love it if you would go to brightideas.co/love where you will see a transactional tweet where you can tweet out and say – “yeah brightideas podcast is pretty bad ass and you should check it out too”! I don’t think that’s exactly what it says but it’s something similar to that.
Okay, thank you so much and I want you to comeback for another episode soon. Take care
This is Part 2 of my 5-Part Series on Increasing Your Twitter Promotion.
Twitter is my website’s number 1 source of social traffic and an integral part of my digital marketing strategy. It’s well worth the time to watch this brief video series to make sure you’re optimizing this powerful social platform.
Take a quick listen to this episode where I discuss:
How to use Hashtags in Pre-Populated Tweets
Including a Customized Tweet Button on Every Page
Twitter Widget For Your WordPress Blog
I hope this gives you more ideas on how to effectively use Twitter.
The next 3 posts in this series will give more easy to use tips to continue to grow your referrals from Twitter. Subscribe now so you won’t miss out.
The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.
It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.
Welcome back to another episode of the BrightIdeas podcast. I am your host Trent Dyrsmid and this is the podcast where we help entrepreneurs to discover ways to use digital marketing and marketing automation to dramatically increase the growth of their businesses, and we all want that don’t we?
If you are an entrepreneur looking for proven tactics and strategies to help you increase traffic, increase conversions and ultimately increase traffic for your profits, well my friends you are in the right place.
In today’s episode we are going to dive into part two of my five part series. The first episode can be found at brightideas.co/109 and its series titled five ways to increase your twitter promotions, in other words, to get other people to help you spread the word on twitter. So, why is it such a big deal? Why should you care about this one of the great things about twitter?
It’s really easy. It’s frictionless. People can pre-populate a tweet or do the things that are talk about in these five part series. So, when you make it really easy for a bunch of people to do stuff, that’s a great way of creating more buzz which is obviously another tool in your toolbox for increasing your opt-in, increasing sales of your products, and so forth.
So, before we get into the how to do this, I have just two quick announcements.
Number one, if this is your very first episode and you would like to make sure that you never miss another one, and you’re listening on your mobile device, please text the word podcast to the number 96000 and just pay attention and see what magic marketing automation happens. If you sit there in the front of your computer and you have already found us, if you found us on ITunes, just go to brightideas.co and you could become a subscriber there.
The second announcement is, if you are looking for a digital marketing/content marketing blueprint to follow to build your business. Well, I’ve written a book and it is called The Digital Marketing handbook that is how I build my business into the success that it is in. You can get the free chapter, if you head over to brightideas.co/book.
Alright that’s it! Let’s dive into the gold nugget for you and this episode so we’re going to talk about how to embed a twitter widget on every page that you used to promote your product or your event or whatever it is that you wanting to draw attention to.
So, to see is in action, if you visit the brightideas.co/blog and looking the right side bar, you’re going to see a widget there that I used to create social proof and awareness for my digital marketing handbook. So, I want to explain to you how you do that, but first lets dive into just a couple more quick little details that are important.
So when you do this, you want to make sure that all the tweets that are shown up in this widget are about the topic that you’re trying to draw attention to. In the episode number 109, I talked about the importance of the use of a hash tag and that hash tag is now going to can become critical in making sure that every tweet that shows up in this widget. I’m about to explain to had a do, is on the topic that you want it to be on so people who come there, they’re going to be able to see everything that people are saying and it’s going to help you to increase social proof for your product to your event of whatever it is you are trying to draw attention to and it’s going to do it in real time, so this is really cool.
So for to create a widget, all you need to do is go to twitter.com/settings/widgets/new/search and you are going to need to be logged in to your twitter account to do that. So once you do that, you are going to see a pretty intuitive interface. The very first thing is, you’re going to see is the box called search query and that’s where you’re going to put in your hash tags. So from my digital marketing handbook with hash tag #DMhandbook – so that means the only tweets that are going to show up in this widgets is tweets that going to contain that hash tag. So, how does that hash tag get applied? Well, on the free chapter download page there is a pre populated tweet that includes that hash tag. So hopefully many or most of the people who download the free chapter – because I ask them to write at the top of the page – will be kind enough to collect that tweet out for me and that’s going to populate this widget. So make sure you’ve got the search type then there’s a check box called “only show top tweets”. Make sure that you click that one. Specify a height that you want. I find that 300 pixels is a very nice height but if you have got a really long sidebar and you feel like filling it up with a bunch of tweets, make it as tall as you want to. Choose a theme, light or dark, and then click the create widget button – and there is also an opt-out tool – I wouldn’t check that but you can read a little there’s a question mark you can click and make your own decision. So click the create widget, it’s going to give a little snippet of code and all you need to do is go into your word press blog (which I’m assuming that most of you are using) and you’re going to look in your sidebar, drag over a text widget and then just paste the code into it, and that’s it! Voila!
The widgets that we have created will show up in your side bar on in every single page of your blog and you will be going a long way to increase, to bring awareness, and increasing the social proof in real time for whatever it is that you are trying to draw attention to. Pretty cool ha!
Alright, so that’s it for this episode. If you want to get to this show notes, I include the screen shot of how to do all of this go to brightideas.co/110. If you enjoy this episode I’d love if you’d take a moment to go to brightideas.co/love where there is a pre populated tweet all you got to do is click on it and I would love it if you do that, so thank you so much in advance.
So that’s it for this episode, I’m your host Trent Dyrsmid, can’t wait to have a tune back in for part three which will be coming out tomorrow.
This is Part 1 of my 5-Part Series on Increasing Your Twitter Promotion.
Honestly, I used to hate Twitter, partly because I never understood how to use the thing. Now, my website’s number 1 source of social traffic is Twitter. It is an integral part of my digital marketing strategy.
I want to touch on a few key points on how to leverage Twitter for your business. Take a quick listen to this episode where I discuss:
Benefits of Using Twitter
Including a Customized Tweet Button on Every Page
How to Add the Share Button to Your Page
What to Tweet
I hope this gives you more ideas on how to effectively use Twitter.
The next 4 posts in this series will give more easy to use tips to continue to grow your referrals from Twitter. Subscribe now so you won’t miss out.
The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.
It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.
Welcome back to another episode of the BrightIdeas podcast. I’m your host Trent Dyrsmid and this is the podcast where we help entrepreneurs to discover ways to use digital marketing and marketing automation to dramatically increase the growth of their business.
If you’re an entrepreneur looking for proven tactics and strategies to help you increase traffic, increase conversions and ultimately increase your profits. Well, my friends, you are in the right place. In this episode we are going to tie–this is actually part one of a five parts series of new episode that I’m doing. These are episodes in bite sized chunks, so we have only 5 minutes but you wanted a pick up a golden nugget these new short episodes are going to help you to do just that. This is part one of five part series on five ways to increase your twitter promotion.
So, why am I talking about this? Well, twitter for me is actually my number one source of social traffic. I use to hate twitter cause I don’t understand how the heck to use the darn thing. That was the long time ago and since then I’ve learned a great deal and I continue to learn a great deal. So, in this episode I’m going to give you a tip, the first of five, on how you can do that.
Now before we get to that, just really one very quick announcement– two announcements I should say, excuse me.
This is your first time listening to the show and your listening on a mobile device and you like to get notifications of future episodes, please make sure and text the word podcast to the number 96000 and something very cool happen on your phone and if you want to know how to do that, I have got just send me an email on what you know and probably will have a post at some point it’ll explain how I do it. Second of all, if you are looking for a blueprint to use digital marketing, it’s a combination of content marketing and marketing automation to improve your business.
I have written a book, and it’s called a digital marketing handbook and you can get a free chapter by going to brightideas.co/book.
Alright so let’s jump in to today’s episode with tip number one: which is to include a customized tweet button on every single page of your products. So, why do you want to do that? First of all, one of the great thing about twitter is, it is super frictionless. I mean by frictionless, is it makes a very, very easy for people to do. So the propensity to do it, of course, goes up and when that happens when you get a whole bunch of people doing something that is really, really easy to do, the aggregate effect of that you can significantly increase the buzz for your product, or your event, or particular posters, whatever it is whatever page you would like to draw more attention to. So, it’s actually very, very easy to do. The very first thing you need to do is create a custom twitter share button and the way that you do that is you go to about.twitter.com/resources/buttons and when you do, you will see that there are 4 types of buttons there. One shares a link, one is follow, one is hash tag and one is mentioned. So in this case you would want to use the share a link button.
So, pick that one and then there’s some button options that you need to configure and I’ll include the screen shot in this episode so when you get there you are going to see there is a share URL. So if you going to spread this button all over your site it will give the page title and the page URL of whatever page that twitter button is on. But in this case we don’t want to do that, we want to promote one particular page. So you need to specify the URL of the particular page that you want to use. Then, the next thing is the tweet text and you can either write something in there or you can choose to use the title of the page – that is entirely up to you.
If you want to have a “@” notification come to you put your username in, and then most importantly you also want to include a hash tag.
Now, in case you don’t know a hash tag is (because I didn’t when I first got on twitter), it’s a way that people search for information. So, one of the topics that I talked about is Infusionsoft.
For example, if I was talking; doing a tweet, composing a tweet about Infusionsoft, I would instead of just writing the word infusionsoft; I would write #Infusionsoft and what that allows people to do is often times more advanced twitter users will be searching for a hash tag. So somebody wants to know about infusionsoft for example, they would see that hash tag. They could search for any tweets that have that hashtags and they would see list of them. Now in this case you want to create your own custom hash tag and there’s a very, very specific reason for that which I’m going to get into in part two of the series.
So that’s it for now like I said it’s just about to tell you how to get to the show notes in the screen shots so will finish up here.
Alright, to get to the show notes for this episode go to brightideas.co/109. If you really enjoy this episode please do me a small favor head over to brightideas.co/love where there is a pre-populated tweet that you can automatically send-out.
That’s it for this episode I’m your host Trent Dyrsmid.
Be sure and tune in to the very next episode and if you want to receive to get part two of this series its five part series and mention at the beginning and if you want to make sure you get email modification at that just go to brightideas.co and go ahead and become a subscriber and you will definitely get notifications of this and future episodes so thank you so much for tuning in its been my pleasure. I’ll see you again soon. Take care.
Weddings are expensive. Most couples accept that and budget for it, or try to keep the cost down by limiting the guest list etc.
Not Dave Kerpen. He wanted a big wedding, and at 500 guests he definitely got that. But, he didn’t pay through the nose.
Instead, Dave and his wife used their marketing smarts to raise $100,000 in corporate sponsorship. Now that’s impressive!
But it doesn’t stop there – the wedding was held in a baseball stadium, and ended up getting a ton of media coverage. The couple estimated they received the equivalent of $20 million in earned media coverage, and they used the momentum from this success to launch their successful marketing agency!
Dave’s also had an Inc 500 fastest growing company for 2 years, and when we spoke he held the title as the #1 LinkedIn Influencer in pageviews. You can imagine that he has some great ideas to share.
Listen now and you’ll hear Dave and I talk about:
(03:05) Introductions
(05:20) What problem does your software solve?
(10:45) How did you go about attracting customers?
(15:45) How did you get started in business?
(18:45) How did you get corporate sponsorship for your wedding?
(21:45) How did sponsorship translate into customer attraction?
(26:15) How did you launch your agency?
(28:45) What would do differently today if you were starting over?
(31:45) What advice would you give the solo-preneur on growing beyond just one?
(32:45) What is your pricing strategy?
(36:15) How did you target your customers?
(39:45) How did you continually increase the size of your customers?
(42:45) What advice would you give to entrepreneurs to succeed with content marketing?
The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.
It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.
Dave Kerpen is the Founder and CEO of Likeable Local, and the Co-Founder and Chairman of Likeable Media. Dave is the NY Times Bestselling author of 3 books and the #1 LinkedIn Influencer of all time in page views, ahead of Bill Gates, Jack Welch, Mark Cuban and President Obama.
https://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/dave.jpg7202200Trent Dyrsmidhttps://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bright-Ideas-logo-1030x255.pngTrent Dyrsmid2014-03-10 06:00:122020-09-11 06:45:51Dave Kerpen on Reality TV, Building a Successful Marketing Agency, and Launching a SaaS Company
If you are one of the kind of people who think Twitter is just for kids to tell each other they had macaroni for dinner (that used to be me), I think you should really take the time to listen to how effective Twitter can be as a marketing tool. Sarah’s team at Hubspot is focused on Lead Generation, and with her different tools and social media platforms, Hubspot finds about 50,000 new leads a month. Wow.
In this podcast we go over the ways Twitter can be effectively utilized, how important content is for a Twitter campaign, and other winning lead generation strategies. I learned a lot in this interview and I think you will too.
Listen now and you’ll hear Sarah and I talk about:
(02:00) Introduction
(05:00) Why use Twitter for lead generation?
(07:20) How to determine a Twitter-Friendly content strategy
(10:20) Has removing the opt-in form ever proved beneficial?
(13:20) How do you get started with paid ads?
(20:20) How to optimize your campaigns
(22:20) What other tips do you have for Twitter campaigns?
The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.
It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.
Trent: Hey there, Bright Idea hunters. Welcome to the “Bright Ideas”
podcast. I am your host,
Trent Dyrsmid. This is the podcast where we feature interviews with
the entrepreneurs behind some of today’s fastest growing companies.If you’re looking for proven tactics and strategies to help you start
a new business or grow an existing one, you are in the right place.The way that we do this is we interview proven experts on the show and
today is no different. My guest today is Sarah Goliger, she is the
head of paid marketing at HubSpot, one of the fastest-growing
marketing software companies on the planet.In this interview, we are going to dive deep into how to use Twitter
and paid traffic on Twitter. Not just paid, but paid and organic, to
generate more leads for your brand.And this was a really enjoyable interview, I learned a whole bunch.
So, in the roughly half hour it takes to listen to it, I guarantee
you, you are going to learn some actionable ideas that you are going
to be able to use in your business.Before we get to that, a quick announcement. If you are looking for
ways to take advantage of digital marketing to attract more interest
to your business, then you’re going to want to check out my recently
published digital marketing handbook. And you get to it and
brightideas.co/book.In the book, I explain everything that I have done to build my
business up in the very first year to a tribe of 10,000-plus
followers. We’ve had a whole lot of success. Also, I have invited a
number of my past guests to contribute to the book. You’ll get their
ideas in there as well.Again, get that at brightideas.co/book. And you can get even get a
free chapter. So, with that said, please join me in welcoming Sarah to
show. Hey, Sarah, welcome to the show.Sarah: Hi, Trent. Thanks so much for having me. I’m excited to be
here.Trent: I am equally excited to have you here. So, thanks for making
the time. There’s obviously
lots of folks in my audience who don’t yet know who you are.Before we get into the meat of our interview on how to leverage
Twitter as a lead generation machine, let’s have you just take a
moment and please introduce yourself on who you are and what you do.Sarah: Sure. I work at HubSpot and we sell marketing software. I
manage our paid
marketing channel, which basically means that I’m responsible for all
of our PPC efforts and also working with some of our partners in the
marketing industry to coordinate opportunities to work together and to
promote our content to their audiences.The focus of all these efforts is lead generation. So, I work closely
with the other folks on our lead gen team who run our organic
channels; social media, e-mail marketing, landing page optimization.
And together, we generate over 50,000 new leads for our sales team
every month.It’s a pretty incredible place to be. We move really fast here and
we’re always trying to stay a step ahead in our marketing, so that we
can not only do marketing well ourselves and keep innovating, but
also, so that we can teach marketing to our readers and ultimately be
able to sell our software.I’ve been with HubSpot for two and a half years now. And I’ve actually
worked on a lot of different parts of our marketing team. So, right
now, I’m focused on PPC and paid marketing. But I’ve also done some
SEO, some blogging. For a while, I was focused on e-mail marketing and
lead nurturing. I did a bit of sales training.It’s been really helpful for sort of getting that full experience
across the board with marketing. But I would say that PPC has
definitely been one of the most interesting channels.It’s so different from the others and I love that there’s so much
flexibility with it. Really, just a ton of opportunity to do it well
and make it work for your marketing, to sort of play around and
experiment and figure out what works.It’s kind of like a big puzzle in a way. So, I’m definitely excited to
get into some detail here and chat about this stuff with you.Trent: I’m equally excited to get into detail. So, before we jump into
this, I’ve always wanted to
ask this one question to a HubSpotter. What do you guys call
yourselves, anyway? A HubSpotter or…Sarah: Yes. A “HubSpotter.” That’s the correct terminology.Trent: Your company is a content-producing machine. How many staff
writers do you guys have?Sarah: We only have a handful on the content team. I have to say,
they’re all incredibly talented
writers. We have probably four or five on our blogging team and then
another three or four who produce our eBooks. It’s a fairly small
team, but they crank out a ton of content every single month.Trent: Do they ever, all right. That was a total side-distraction from
the interview, but I
wanted to find out anyways. Now, we’re going to talk about Twitter
marketing. First off, the first question is why? Why use Twitter to
generate leads?
Sarah: I think that a lot of people still think about Twitter in the
way that individuals use it for
social purposes. They think “No one needs to know what I’m doing right
now. And I don’t really care about what other people are doing. I
didn’t really need to know that you ate macaroni for dinner. Thanks a
lot.”
These are kind of the status update kinds of posts that many people
think of when they think of Twitter. But these people are actually
missing out, because Twitter is hugely valuable for businesses.
And much like the other popular social networks–Facebook, LinkedIn–
you can use Twitter to gain a following, to share messages, to connect
and communicate with your fans and your customers.
The beauty of Twitter compared to the other social networks is that
Tweets are, of course, limited to 140 characters each, meaning that
you have to keep your message concise. But you can also share more
updates, more often because this is the nature of the platform.
So, in a given day, you could easily tweet 20 or 30 times without your
followers so much as batting an eyelash. But if you try that on
Facebook, you’re pretty much bound to watch your fan count tick
downward, right?
Trent: Yeah. That would be an understatement.
Sarah: Yeah. The other thing is that Twitter is such a vibrant space.
It’s a real community.
People go to Twitter to learn more about their fields of interest.
They go to Twitter to learn about brands and find out what their
friends think about those brands and have to say about them.
Really, as a marketer, who wouldn’t want to be on Twitter? Who
wouldn’t want to be active in that space? So, I think it’s really an
absolute must for businesses these days to be there, to be on Twitter.
Trent: I want to echo that statement. I used to really think Twitter
was the dumbest invention
ever before I got it, before the light bulb went on. Because, again, I
didn’t want to know when you were eating your macaroni or what movie
you were watching.
I’m happy to say now that Twitter is my number one social referral
source. So, folks, if you’re listening to this and you haven’t yet
embraced Twitter and you think like I used to think, I encourage you
to keep on listening.
I think, by the end of this, my hope is that the light bulb will come
on for you and you’re going to start to use it.
If you’re going to make Twitter work, you also need to have a strong
content strategy. Because you can’t just be Tweeting nothing, you’ve
got to have something that you’re sharing. Can you talk about how
Twitter and the content strategy go together?
Sarah: Absolutely. Yeah, before you really dive into Twitter
advertising or, for that matter,
any sort of promotional campaign, you really need to figure out what
it is you’re going to promote. You have to have some sort of content
to feed your campaign. Like you said, you can’t just tweet nothing.
And so, as obvious as that may sound, a lot of marketers will really
skip right over this step and just sort of say “Oh, I need to be on
Facebook and I want to set up Twitter campaigns. And I should really
start writing those marketing e-mails.”
But they won’t sit down beforehand and map out the content that
they’re going to use in those campaigns. And that’s when things get
really difficult. Because when you get ahead of yourself like that,
your content really is the backbone of nearly every kind of marketing
campaign that you could possibly run.
And so, it’s so important that you sit down and really make that
effort in advance to figure out what it is you’re going to promote.
And also, the content that you choose to promote on a given platform
is likely going to determine your positioning, your copy, your
targeting, your audience. So, you need to have this part figured out
before you can even begin setting up your campaigns.
I won’t get into too much detail about what types of content you
should be using. Because that’s a whole other topic for another time.
But, basically, you want to figure out what the goal of your campaign
is and then choose content that supports that goal.
If your goal is to generate leads for your business like my goal is,
you’ll want to promote lead generation content. That is, content
that’s behind lead capture form. Whether that’s “Hey, we’ve got this
free eBook for you to download. In order to read it, we just ask that
you give us these few pieces of information about yourself.”
Or it may be “Fill out this form to sign up to join us on this webinar
that we’re hosting. Whatever it may be, you want to be capturing
information. You want to be capturing those leads through that
content.
But, conversely, if your objective is more branding and awareness-
focused, you’ll want to promote content about your business. Content
that conveys your brand message.
Or maybe your goal is actually to turn more of your followers into
customers. In which case, you’ll want to promote more content about
your product or your service. Maybe offer a free trial or demo.
Once you’ve identified your goal, you really want to focus in on
creating high-quality content pieces that you can use to help you
achieve that goal, help you get there.
Trent: Have you guys ever tested, done a split test with a piece of
lead gen content that is
behind an opt-in form? Versus just being freely available? I’ve read
some stuff and I’ve never tested this myself. And so, I’m very curious
if you have.
Some people, they land, they click the tweet, they get through to the
landing page and they’re like “Eh. I don’t want to fill in
information.” So, they don’t interact with that piece of content, they
never see it, they never see how good it is.
Whereas if the content was simply available, granted, you don’t get
their information, per se. But so, potentially, so many more people
could see the content because a person who sees that first tweet gets
the content. They interact with it, they think it’s great, they share
it and so on. Have you guys ever done any testing on that?
Sarah: Yeah, I mean, we definitely find that the longer your forms
are, the more friction there
is, right? People don’t want to spend the time to sit there and fill
out all of their information to give to you and people are also
skeptical of giving companies their information.
As little privacy as we all have these days, it’s still something that
makes people inherently uncomfortable.
We have found that the fewer form fields you use or even just taking
out the form entirely will tend to result in more submissions or more
downloads. But the trade-off is that, what you could do, conversely,
is create content that’s really, truly valuable to your readers.
That’s what we focus on here. Every single piece of content that we
put out, every blog post we write, we audit it for quality before it
goes out.
We make sure that this is something that people would be willing to
sit down and fill out a form in order to read. Our blog posts aren’t
gated but our eBooks, we really make sure that they’re enticing enough
and the content is legitimate and it’s valid, and it’s substantial
enough that people would take that time to go through the form process
in order to get it.
Then, of course, that helps our business because we need to be able to
feed our sales team at the same time.
Trent: You guys don’t happen to have an eBook that explains the
process that you go through
to reveal your eBooks before they get published, do you?
Sarah: You know, we actually have an eBook on how to create eBooks,
believe it or not.
Trent: Could you make sure you send me a link to that so I can include
it in the show notes of
this episode?
Sarah: Sure thing.
Trent: Thank you. All right, so, should you be running paid ads on top
of your organic efforts
on Twitter and if you are going to do that, how do you which one to
focus on?
Sarah: You always want to focus on organic promotion first. For no
other reason than the
obvious that that’s the free one. So, you want to make sure, first,
that you have a solid, organic Twitter strategy in place. That you
have a strong number of followers and that you’re regularly tweeting
valuable content to them.
You should already be working toward your goal, whether it’s lead gen
branding, what have you. You should already be working toward it from
an organic perspective before you consider starting with paid ads.
Then, once you have things running smoothly with your organic
strategy, if you have some budget to work with, paid advertising is
actually a really excellent way to supplement your efforts.
And note, that I chose my words very carefully there. You always want
to use paid advertising to supplement your organic efforts, not
replace them. And this is, of course, true across the board. Not just
with Twitter.
Trent: Okay. How do you go about getting started with paid ads? How do
you set up a
campaign?
Sarah: There are a couple things you need to figure out before you
dive in. So, like I
mentioned earlier, you want to start by deciding what your goal is.
Whether it’s lead gen, brand awareness, lead to customer conversion.
And then, once you have your goal nailed down, the second step is to
decide what type of campaign you want to run. If you’re looking to
increase brand awareness and gain more followers, you can run what’s
called a “promoted account” campaign. Which displays your account in
the “Who to follow” sidebar.
It also allows you to craft messaging about why people should follow
your brand, which is then displayed next to a “follow” button. You
might say something like “Looking to stay updated on the latest
marketing tips and trends? Follow HubSpot to stay in the loop.”
And then, that will appear right next to a “Follow” button so you can
follow the HubSpot account right from there.
Trent: And what did you call that again?
Sarah: That’s promoted accounts. So, that’s better for branding. But
if your goal is lead
generation or really, anything other than brand awareness, you’ll want
to run promoted tweet campaigns.
These put your tweets right in the feeds of the users that you’re
targeting. And if this is the option that you choose, then the next
thing you’re going to want to do is select the content that you’re
going to promote in those tweets. Make sure that the content aligns
with your goals, like we discussed before.
And then, the next step is to choose your targeting. So, this is where
things start to get a little bit complicated, but bear with me. So,
Twitter is actually really good as far as targeting goes. You have a
few different options.
One, is you can target based on keywords, which lets you target users
who search for or tweet about those keywords or engage with them in
some way.
This type of targeting is really great if you’re running an event, if
you’re doing event promotion or if you are running product-specific
campaigns because then you can really zone in on those keywords that
are relevant to that product that you’re promoting.
It’s also really good for going after folks with purchase intent. So,
if you’re looking to sort of narrow in and focus on those people who
are most likely to purchase from you, this is a great option for that
as well.
This option, going based on keywords, will usually give you a
narrower, but more focused and higher-quality audience.
Then, you can also choose to target by interests and followers. And
this option lets you search for interest categories to target. For
example, I can target anyone who’s interested in marketing or home
repair or French cuisine or whatever it is that is most relevant to
you. That’s the interest side of the equation.
And then, it also lets you input any Twitter usernames. And it’ll then
target users who look like those people’s followers. So, for example,
when I run campaigns with this type of targeting, I’ll put in a bunch
of usernames of people who are really well-known in the marketing
industry and have a lot of followers. It’ll find other Twitter users
like those people’s followers.
This option is much better for a less qualified, but much broader
audience. And then, on top of this, you can also target by location,
you can target by gender, you can target by device.
If you only want to reach people who are on desktop or only on mobile,
you can do that, too. To really have a ton of flexibility here to
build an audience based on the criteria that you care the most about.
Then, they also, just last month, actually, released a brand-new
targeting option called “Tailored Audiences,” which lets you directly
target your site visitors. And this option is really great for re-
targeting.
We did the beta testing when they first rolled this out to the beta
users. So, we’ve been in this for a few months now and we’ve been
collecting some data.
We found in our own efforts that our re-targeting campaigns have had
45 percent higher engagement than our regular promoted tweet
campaigns. So, if you’re looking to convert more of your existing
database into customers and sort of focus more on them, then Tailored
Audiences is a really great option to use here.
Trent: Let’s dive into that one a little deeper for a minute. So, I’ll
just use myself as the guinea
pig. I’ve got my 4,000 or so Twitter followers. When you talk about
the Tailored Audiences, am I tweeting more to the people that already
follow me? I’m not sure that I fully get it yet.
Sarah: You’re basically tweeting to the people who are in your
database or who have visited
your site. You could set it up to say “Anyone who has come to my
website, I want to capture them in this audience.” And then I want
them to be in this group of people to whom we’re displaying these
tweets.
Trent: When they come to my site, they’re going to get cookied. And
that cookie is then going
to trigger a re-targeting within their Twitter stream.
Sarah: Yes. So, it’ll build the audience for you. It’ll grab everybody
who has visited your site
and then, that will be the audience that you select for the targeting
purposes.
Trent: Okay, cool. I like that. All right.
Sarah: Just to wrap up here, to finish the building out your campaign,
really, the last thing
that you need to decide on is your budget. And I think this is where a
lot of marketers get stumped or concerned or nervous.
Everyone sort of asks “What’s the right amount to spend on paid
advertising” and “What’s the right amount to start off my campaign”?
The unfortunate fact of the matter is there really is no right amount.
It’s different for everyone, it’s different for every marketer, for
every budget, for every campaign. And if you’re really planning to
spend a lot, I don’t know exactly what the minimum is, but they’ll set
you up with a dedicated account rep who is going to help you on the
best ways to spend that money.
But otherwise, you’ll pretty much have to figure it out on your own.
But I promise, it’s really not as hard as it sounds. So, you want to
just decide how much you’re willing to spend on Twitter ads in a
month. And then break that down, you can divide it out by business
days if you want.
Try spending that much in a day and if it’s too little, if it’s not
working, you’re not seeing any results, you can condense that spend
into maybe a week or two. It’s much better to spend more at once and
see actual results than to drag out your spend in tiny increments.
So as you go, you’ll sort of start to get a feel for how much you need
to spend in order to make your campaigns effective. And that’ll help
you plan your spending going forward. Then, once you have all of this
mapped out, you just set your bids for the campaign. When you choose
your targeting criteria, it’ll give you a recommended bidding range.
I would say go for at least the average of that, if not higher. If you
have more to spend and you can be a little bit more free with your
money, then go ahead and set it maybe even a little bit above the
bidding range.
Once you choose your bid, I think you’ve pretty much filled out the
whole setup process. You just write those tweets and you can go ahead
and launch your campaigns.
Trent: If you had one landing page that was your number one lead
generator that you were
promoting, you could have any number of different tweets that would
all be linking back to that one landing page?
Sarah: Oh, absolutely, yeah. And I would actually recommend that. When
you’re building a
campaign, you want to have more than one tweet running in that
campaign. Because the interface that you’re looking at within the
Twitter ads platform will show you the number of impressions and the
click-through rates by each tweet individually.
You want to be testing more than one so you can figure out what kind
of language resonates the best with your followers and keep optimizing
from there.
Trent: Okay. All right, so far, it’s making sense. So, now, we’ve got
our ads. They’re up and
running. Obviously, they’re not as good yet as they could be. Do we
have to go through some kind of optimization? So, I’m sure you’ve got
some ideas you can share with us on that.
Sarah: Yeah, absolutely. It’s kind of like what I was just saying. You
want to be trying different
things, have those different tweets, be looking at the metrics and see
what’s working. But sort of from a more macro perspective, you want to
keep an eye on these campaigns.
You don’t want to just set them up and let them run and leave them
unattended. You should really be constantly optimizing for your
overall metrics.
So, when you’re choosing what metrics to sell for, you want to align
those with your goals. So, if your goal is lead generation, you want
to be maximizing the number of leads that you generate and also,
minimizing your CPL or cost per lead. And so, these are the two main
metrics that I look at for our campaigns.
It’s also important to look at these metrics across all of your
campaigns, but also, on the individual campaign level. So that that
way, you can see which campaigns are performing well and which ones
are bringing down your averages.
What I do is I use a different tracking token in the links for each of
the campaigns I run, so I can see on a campaign level, which content
pieces are generating how many leads.
Since I’m also able to see how much I’m spending on each campaign
through Twitter, I’m able to very easily calculate the cost per lead
of each individual campaign. And then, if it’s too high and the
campaign is either not generating enough leads or costing too much,
then I’ll pause it and shift its budget over to a higher-performing
campaign.
You want to always be doing this and always be sort of optimizing for
the top performers of the bunch.
Trent: You mentioned the term “tracking token.” Is that using the
Google URL builder, or is
that something that is within the Twitter interface that allows you to
create that?
Sarah: It’s not within the Twitter interface. You can build your own
URL tracking token. I type
ours in myself. It’s fairly simple. You can usually just do little
question mark source equals and type it in. It depends on what sort of
analytics software you’re using to track it.
We use HubSpot. So, I know that I’m able to go into our reporting
tools and very easily see how everything breaks down. And we also run
Salesforce reports, so I’m able to sort of do the campaign by campaign
breakdown there, too.
Trent: Okay. Now, do you guys have any blog posts that you could link
me to that would
provide more information on the tracking tokens and campaign
optimization?
Sarah: Absolutely, sure.
Trent: Make sure that you get me those links, too, please.
Sarah: Okay, will do.
Trent: All right, what’s next on my list? What other tips do you have
for running an effective
Twitter campaign?
Sarah: In terms of the copy, I would say the biggest tip that I have
is don’t be too sales-y.
Your copy should always focused on providing value to your readers. As
is true, of course, in all marketing contacts, not just on Twitter.
But if your tweets come off as pushy and super product-focused, then
chances are, they’re really not going to get much engagement. You want
to really let your brand personality show through. And talk to your
followers as if they’re real human beings and not just leads in your
database.
Trent: So, have you got some phraseology examples that you could give
us? Is it a lot of how-
to-type [inaudible at 00:23:42]?
Sarah: Yeah. People like “How to,” people like “101 examples of
companies that are rocking
social media.” Any way that you can phrase it that very clearly
conveys the value to the readers. Whether it’s because it’s
interesting or because it is a how to or because it’s just very
relevant to them and their industry. You want to make sure that it’s
enticing content.
Trent: Okay. All right, where do I want to go here?
Sarah: So, other tips.
Trent: Yeah, let’s keep going with tips.
Sarah: Another tip would be to spice it up a bit. I think that text
can be great. But it can also get
kind of boring and can blend in with all the other tweets in your
users’ feeds. And we found that images work really well.
We’ve actually found that using images in tweets increases lead gen by
57 percent, which is huge. So, try some images, try some Vine videos.
It never hurts to give your brand some personality. People love that
stuff.
So, go for it. Try crazy things. Be enticing, be engaging. Be fun.
Trent: A Vine video. Can’t say I’m familiar with a Vine video. I’m
probably embarrassed to
say that, but what’s a Vine video?
Sarah: It’s quite all right. Vine is a six-second video platform. It’s
tied into Twitter, so you
can record a six-second video. And it also lets you break it up. I
think you can only do it on your iPhone. I’m also not 100 percent on
top of Vine, so we’re in the same boat there.
You can sort of hold your finger down and then let it go, so you can
break up the six seconds. It doesn’t have to be continuous. But
anyway, you can do very fun things and short videos and include those
in your tweets very easily. It’s sort of a quick way to entice people
to watch something.
Trent: Is Vine a platform that’s owned by Twitter?
Sarah: Yes, yes.
Trent: It is? Okay. All right, so when you’re up and running,
obviously you don’t want to just
keep doing the same thing over and over, because that always gets old.
What are some things that you guys have done which you didn’t
necessarily think you were surprised by the results? Surprised to the
upside. I’m looking for the examples of the best and most successful.
Sarah: Sure. So, like I said, the images were probably our most
surprising test. I had no idea
that they would increase lead gen by 57 percent. I mean, when that
stat came out, we had team meetings about it because it was just so
incredible. So, that was really exciting.
We also started doing promoted accounts recently. So, my main focus
has always been lead generation. So, we’ve pretty much strayed away
from the promoted accounts because that’s obviously focused on growing
your follower base.
I decided to give it a test recently and it’s actually been working
very well. We’ve been able to cut the amount that we have to spend to
gain a follower basically in half from what it used to be.
That’s been really effective as well and I would say that if you have
the budget for it, it’s definitely worth a test.
Trent: Hang on, I want to make sure I understood what you just said.
You decreased your cost
of adding followers by using promoted tweets instead of promoted
accounts?
Sarah: The other way around. So, promoted tweets are what we typically
use for our normal
campaigns. Those are sort of our lead gen tweets, if you will. It’s
where we share our content and we say “Oh, if you want to learn more
about how to use Facebook for marketing, you should download this
eBook.” With better copy, of course, but that’s the general idea.
Whereas promoted accounts, the idea there is that you are just trying
to get more people to follow your account. That’s what I was saying
before about “If you want to stay updated with the latest tips in the
industry, follow Hubspot and we’ll keep you posted on that stuff.”
More of that kind of thing.
So, what you’re paying for is essentially more follower acquisition.
Trent: What did you do that drastically cut the cost of follower
acquisition?
Sarah: Just starting to do that. I’m not actually sure what types of
efforts we were running
before. We may have done promoted accounts in the past before I was
managing this channel. But when I came back to my manager and I said
“Hey, this is the amount we’re paying to acquire a new follower,” he
said “Oh, wow. That’s half of what we used to do.”
So, I’m not sure exactly what we’re comparing apples to apples here.
But it’s been very effective. Not even comparing it, but even just
looking at the numbers as they stand by themselves. It’s been very
good.
Trent: Now, earlier in the interview, you talked about targeting with
keywords. Is there a
keyword research tool within the Twitter campaign builder at all so
that you can figure out search volumes for keywords?
Sarah: Yeah. So, if you enter in a keyword or a few keywords, there’s
a button that allows you
to find similar and related keywords. So, that’s really great for just
sort of thinking of those things that you haven’t thought of.
The other thing is, if you used AdWords, they have a really great
keyword recommendation tool. So, you can always look there. I’m sure
there are other sites that also will find similar keywords. But, yes.
They do have it built in right into Twitter.
Trent: Okay. All right, so let’s wrap up with my lightning round.
These are just a couple of
really quick questions. What’s the most recent business book that
you’ve read?
Sarah: Most recent business book that I read? Well, just this morning,
actually, I was
discussing “Blue Ocean Strategy”. And that is definitely a classic, I
would say, business book. I would definitely recommend that one.
Trent: What’s your favorite blog and you can’t say HubSpot.
Sarah: I can’t say HubSpot. What’s my favorite blog? You know, I
really like Seth Godin. He’s
one of our unsung heroes around here. Or maybe for you, I guess he’s a
sung hero. We definitely love Seth Godin around here and he writes
very short snippets, but they’re great. Very entertaining.
Trent: All right. And if people want to interact with you at all, how
do they do that?
Sarah: I’m on Twitter. @SarahBethGo and you can find me there. Or you
can find me on
my website, sarahgoliger.com.
Trent: All right. Sarah, thank you so much for making some time to
come on to the “Bright
Ideas” podcast and share some insight and tips on how we can all use
Twitter to generate more leads for our businesses. Much appreciated.
Sarah: Absolutely. It was my pleasure. Thanks so much for having me.
Trent: To get to the show notes for this episode, go to
brightideas.co/98. If you enjoyed the
episode, please also take a moment and go to brightideas.com/love
where you’ll find a link and a video to show you how to leave feedback
for this show in the iTunes store.
And if you take a moment to do that, you have my eternal thanks
because every time someone does, we get a little bit more exposure in
the iTunes store. That draws more listeners and then more listeners
get to benefit from hearing all of the bright ideas that are shared by
my guests here on the show.
That’s it for this episode. I am your host Trent Dyrsmid. Thank you so
much for tuning in. And I look forward to producing another episode
for you in the very near future. Take care.
About Sarah Goliger
Sarah Goliger is the Head of Paid Marketing at HubSpot. She is responsible for coordinating marketing campaigns with external vendors and running display and retargeting campaigns through both search and social networks with an ultimate goal of lead generation.
Previously, Sarah managed email marketing and lead nurturing for HubSpot’s mid-sized business segment. Sarah also offers individual email marketing consulting. You can learn more about Sarah on her website and connect with her on Twitter at @sarahbethgo.
https://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Sarah-Goliger.jpg7202200Trent Dyrsmidhttps://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bright-Ideas-logo-1030x255.pngTrent Dyrsmid2014-03-07 06:00:332020-09-18 05:59:31How to Leverage Twitter for Lead Generation with Sarah Goliger
When used properly, LinkedIn can be a very powerful tool for generating leads for your company.
Sadly, most people totally F**K this up.
What I’m about to show you has happened to me at least 100 times, and I have ignored the person who reached out to me every single time.
If you are doing what I’m about to show you, PLEASE STOP! People who use LinkedIn this way are ANNOYING the hell out of people and I don’t want you to be one of them.
Here’s the first offender:
Where in this email does it show that this person knows anything about me? Nowhere that I can see.
I do however, see the words “I” and “We” used too many times. And, to make matters even more offensive, this nitwit has attempted to use a scarcity tactic by saying that he can only take 5 calls a week. Seriously?
Here’s the second offender:
This one is slightly less awful than the prior one. I actually read the entire email, mostly because of the subject line; which made me think (until I read the email) that they were looking for my help.
At no point in this person’s email have they asked me anything about myself or what I might be most interested in. Instead, all she has done is include a link to a video that I am supposed to watch. Really? I don’t know who you are and you expect me to take time out of my day to watch your stupid video without knowing why or what’s in it for me.
Yeah…gonna get right on that just as soon as I finished cutting my grass with a pair of scissors.
Here’s the final offender (I’ve saved the best for last):
Clearly this person doesn’t know a bloody thing about me or my business.
Do I need help with cold calling? Holy crap! I’ve written about how cold calling is dead; I’m a content marketer and I don’t make cold calls.
If she’d taken a few minutes to read even the about page of my blog, that would have been painfully obvious.
After her pathetic attempt at an opening paragraph, the usual thing happens. It’s all about them. “We do this…” and “We can help you with that…” etc…
I don’t care what the hell you do! Why should I? Clearly, you don’t care enough about me to take 60 seconds to learn more about me before you pooped in my inbox.
Buzz off!!
Ok, rant over.
The Right Way to Connect with Others (Who Don’t Yet Know You)
Am I trying to say that you should never use LinkedIn to reach out to a stranger?
No. Definitely not.
What I am trying to say is that whenever you reach out to someone who doesn’t yet know you, if you make the first contact all about YOU, that will be the end of any chance you have of developing a relationship with that person.
The right way to connect with a stranger is to make it about THEM.
Wait. Go read that last sentence again.
It’s all about them….UNTIL, they become interested in YOU.
Only then can the conversation be about you and how you can help them.
Now that you get the concept, I want to show you an example of how to make it happen.
Cold Email Example
In this example, I’m going to assume that a stranger is reaching out to me because (ultimately) they want to sell me their stuff; which in this case, is software that will help me automate my content marketing efforts (pretty sneaky that I’m using content marketing software for my example, eh?).
——– start of email from Bob ——–
Subject: I loved your post about how content marketing changes everything!
Hey Trent,
I just finished reading your post title, “How Content Marketing Has Forever Changed How to Attract Clients and How You Can Take Advantage of This Shift” and I wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed it! In fact, I thought it was so good that I’ve shared it on every social network that I use.
Got any other posts like this one?
Cheers, Bob
——– end of email from Bob ——–
What do you think is going to happen when I see Bob’s email?
Am I likely to ignore it? Uh…hell no.
Bob has stroked my ego…so naturally, I immediately like Bob!
Not only do I like Bob, but I’m going to reply to him…plus, the next time Bob emails me, I’m going to read it.
When I reply to Bob, I’m likely going to tell him thanks for sharing my stuff, supply him with links to a few other articles, and tell him to keep in touch.
The next move is Bob’s to make.
What Should Bob Do Next?
With just a single email, Bob has proven that he’s not a jerk, and he’s got in my good books.
What Bob hasn’t done is try to sell me anything.
So, if I was Bob, here’ s what I’d do next. When I get Trent’s reply, I’m going to reply to that reply like this….
——– start of email from Bob ——–
Subject: Re: I loved your post about how content marketing changes everything!
Hey Trent,
Thanks for the links you sent me. I really enjoyed both posts….especially the part about…x, y, and z. Awesome stuff.
Now that I’ve spent some time on your blog, I can see that you are super passionate about marketing automation. I can also see that you pump out a LOT of content.
How the heck do you produce so much? Do you have a bunch of people helping you? Do you have some systems or automation that helps you to get so much done?
Cheers, Bob
——– end of email from Bob ——–
See what Bob is doing? He’s not yet tried to sell me his software. Instead, he (smartly) is asking me questions about my business processes.
Why is he doing that? Well, the first reason is to build rapport with me. The second reason is because he’s probing for pain.
If Bob shows interest in me, I’m going to like him…and how do you treat people you like? Nicely!
Not only that, but when you like someone, you are going to be more honest with them.
Now that I like Bob and he’s showing interest in my business, he’s earning the right to direct the conversation where he wants/needs it to go if he’s to make a sale at some point.
When to Talk About Your Stuff
So, when should Bob start talking about how his products might help me?
Not before he’s figured out if I have a problem that his products can solve, that’s when!
Remember Bob’s last email to me? He asked me how I pump out so much content. He might also have asked me if I have clients that I product content for (sidebar: if you need that service, let me know), because if I did, I’d likely need his software even more. (second sidebar: if you produce content for your clients, check out my software).
In my next reply to Bob, I would have told him what he wanted to know. I would have told him that it does indeed take a lot of work to produce this volume of content. I would have told him that I also do it for clients.
Knowing this about me, Bob now has a qualified lead for his software, and in his next reply, he could very easily ask me if I’d like to learn more about how his software might be able to help me out.
Or…even better, if Bob had a case study or article about his software, he’d send me that content first with a little note like:
“Hey Trent, given what we’ve been talking about, I have an article or two that I think you’d like to read. Mind if I send them to you?”
Damn, Bob is smart!
Rather than just send me his links, he’s asked for my permission first! (this is why we call it “permission marketing”)
Obviously, when I reply to Bob, I’m going to say yes…and in doing so, I kind of owe it to Bob to actually ready what he sends me.
Let’s Recap What We’ve Learned
Never send someone a cold email that, more or less, says “Buy my stuff!” Doing so is a dick move. Don’t be a dick.
Always make your first contact all about the other person because doing so will be well received and they will like you for it.
Be sure and share their work and tell them you did so. They will like you even more.
Engage in an actual conversation that is about them first until it’s time for it to be about you.
ONLY make the conversation about you if they need what you sell (and you’ve done enough digging to have a very good idea this is likely the case).
Ask their permission to send them information about your stuff before you send it. That way they are much more likely to pay attention to what you’ve sent them.
After you send them information about your stuff, it is totally acceptable to follow up with them to ask their opinion of what they saw. If they had a good opinion, ask them to take another step.
Voila…B2B selling that feels good.
Why everyone doesn’t do this is beyond me.
What To Do Next
If you sell B2B and are having trouble getting your foot in the door, check out my Best Buyer Formula. It is stuffed full of ideas that I have used for my entire career and I have sold tens of millions of dollars worth of products and services to small businesses – using the exact techniques in course.
If you want to really set yourself apart from your competition, you need to integrate content with your sales efforts. If you need help with content marketing, I’ve written a book about it.
If you’d like to grab both products (bless your heart), I’m going to give you a big “I love you” discount!
To get both products, and the 50% discount, you will need to use this order form. (Note: if you want to read the sales pages first, use the links above, but place your order via this link.)
PLEASE NOTE: You must use the following promo code: DMH3BBF.
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https://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/dumbanddumber.jpg388690Trent Dyrsmidhttps://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bright-Ideas-logo-1030x255.pngTrent Dyrsmid2014-03-06 16:14:392015-12-07 20:08:29The Dumbest LinkedIn Mistake I See Over and Over Again
Amber Schultz started posting content to Reddit and saw an increase of nearly 1,500 new visitors to her blog in 10 hours. Chris Morrison added a media analysis of Game of Thrones to the site and saw that 62% of his new traffic was from Reddit alone. This is a powerful online community and could drastically change the number of new people who visit your website.
Here are my ideas on how using a social media site like Reddit can help facilitate growth in your business.
“A social media site?” you ask. “I already use social media sites for my business” you say. “How is this any different?” you might wonder. Don’t worry, I’ll get to that.
I suppose the best way to begin is to explain what Reddit actually is.
The site itself is actually a conglomerate of many sites and ideas called “subreddits”. Essentially, a person gets interested in a particular topic and wants to find discussions on it, so they browse the site. Want to discuss the absence of Oscars on Leonardo DiCaprio’s nightstand? Head on over to “/r/movies” and throw in a post. Need to keep up-to-date on world events? Click “/r/worldnews” and learn about everything from the rising unemployment numbers in Spain to relief-funding efforts for typhoon affected countries.
I think you are starting to get the idea. You can find just about anything on Reddit… including a subreddit devoted entirely to pictures of Joesph-Gordon Levitt’s head on giraffes.
and you thought I was joking
Here are some numbers on Reddit traffic:
*12,000 subreddits with at least 100 followers
*15M unique pageviews per month
*8,000 page subscriptions per day
This is a huge number of people with a wide array of ideas and needs, from all over the world.
So What’s So Good About It?
Perhaps the most important feature is the selectivity of the impressions you gain.
This site automatically segments your market and connects you with like-minded individuals. This isn’t the shock-and-awe blitzkrieg that you might see from billboard or TV ads, looking to get the attention of any onlooker. This is a targeted social media presence, a completely different offering than Facebook or Twitter.
This site is also insanely interactive. Users are always submitting ideas and engaging in detailed discussions about their topics of choice. This allows you to discuss ideas and strategies, get a general public opinion on your idea, and see other peoples efforts and what it took to get to where they are.
Sign-up is free, solicits no emails or spam, and is completely anonymous (if you choose to be). Just register and begin submitting links or reading material by other users.
But what should you check out?
There are already a great number subreddits to choose from. Try checking out /r/business to get macro-level analysis on current market trends and landscapes.
Head on over to /r/entrepreneur to see what over 66,000 new business owners are already excited about.
Want to get a more specific experience? See what other options the site offers. Starting a new brewery and need ideas on how to sell to taps in your market? Subscribe to /r/craftbeer and speak with other enthusiasts. Whatever you choose, you make your own experience.
Here are suggestions on subreddits to get familiar with:
/r/business – An overall community perspective on the business landscape
/r/entrepreneur – A community of self-starters discussing ideas on their projects
/r/startups – Primarily focused on start-up companies and is full of suggestions and questions
/r/growmybusiness – Small business focused, tools for developing leads
And a list of popular subreddits you can utilize (and are fun to read):
/r/todayilearned – Fact sharing subreddit, post trends or analyses here to generate buzz on your research
/r/iama – (Ask Me Anything) this is a great subreddit for information as well as a chance to talk with the community about what you are doing in your business.
/r/askreddit – Post a question and see how the community feels about it
The former list are not necessarily business focused, but you can utilize their hive-mind thinking to gather feedback and suggestions (after a few visits, you’ll know why I chose to use the term “hive-mind”).
Kick Starter Campaigns
Perhaps the most significant tangible effect a crowd sourcing site like Reddit offers is the ability to generate funds.
You probably have heard of Kickstarter, an online market for a large number of users to submit funds to the development of a new business. It’s a great tool for up-and-coming businesses to generate missing funds to get their ideas on track.
Reddit can be a supplementary tool for businesses looking to get off the ground. Used with loans, local business grants, and other avenues, this can be a great way to finalize the financials on your project.
Jasco Games, a board game company looking to finalize their project, raised over $400,000 for their Kick Starter through a combination of social media buzz and investor activity. Much of that influence came from the Reddit community themselves.
The benefit of Reddit is that it can generate buzz for your idea and allow users to discuss the merits of your endeavor. It’s one thing to get a dollar from a random stranger, it’s another to get a dollar and a suggestion.
/r/kickstarter allows users to discuss their opinions on the submissions, to support the efforts towards their particular choice, and to offer feedback on the ideas themselves. Many people post their favorite campaigns as a way to generate more interest. If you’re already utilizing crowdfunding, having an extra forum to generate interest is invaluable.
Touch Point
Start-ups aren’t the only ones who can benefit from an enhanced social media presence. Reddit is another opportunity for people to connect with your company.
Social Media has taken on a sort of necessity for businesses. The absence of a social media presence draws a red flag for users. Connectivity is validation.
As I mentioned earlier, people have used Reddit to gather more interest in their blogs or podcasts, and in effect, more interest in their companies. Amy Schultz, blogger for MythBustingMommy, posts to parenting subreddits and has gotten the interest of thousands of new parents. If you have something to offer the community, they will give you their attention.
But let me be clear: Reddit is not a “golden ticket” to lead generation. The forums on Reddit can be difficult to make headway in, not everything is seen by the people who want to see it, and you may not get completely positive feedback. Matthew Schmoldt makes a good point of this in his blog on SocialMedia Today.
The main take-away is that this is another opportunity to create a touch point for potential clients from a site that has a number of people already congregating and interested in specific topics. Your job is to engage that audience.
Tips For Successful Posting
While Reddit can be a powerful tool to generate interest in your brand, it can be just as powerful at blocking you if you are not careful. Spamming is not permitted and the moderators are quite good at identifying spam and restricting your access if you do things they consider spammy. Here are some guidelines to follow to prevent that from happening:
Choose a catchy title- This should go without saying, but you are limited to a small band of text to hook in readers. If you wouldn’t click it, they won’t click it.
Post to the proper subreddit- As discussed earlier, finding the right platform is as important as finding the right words. Choose from the suggestions above or go searching and find your own niche.
Post material other than your own- Posting from the same URL repeatedly draws red flags. This is an information sharing site, not necessarily an advertising site. Share posts from other blogs you find interesting, facts you would like to share, the works. The wider the variety, the more interest you gain for your future posts.
Do a little bit of everything- When you do want to share your stuff to the world, put some work into it. These are people you’re talking to, and if a person would think you are submitting boring information, Reddit will also. Make podcasts, do a funny blog, share infographics on interesting market trends, just make sure it is engaging. Really sell it. Make comments on similar threads, do an Ask Me Anything and answer questions from strangers.
LEARN- Don’t go in with a blind eye. See what has been done and what the community responds to. Chances are, you might pick up a thing or two in the process.
Matt Silverman makes some strong points in the success of your points as well, so don’t forget to read through his guidelines.
You can also advertise straight to the site. You can buy spots that are displayed throughout the whole site or direct them to specific subreddits. The sheer volume of traffic makes Reddit an appealing opportunity if you just need clicks and are willing to pay for them.
Common Mistakes, and Tips to Make Reddit Work Better For You
Reddit is like any other interactive online medium: it requires work.
Just like Twitter feeds and Facebook updates, you have to keep working on engaging customers. If you want your content to be viewed and reviewed, you have to submit it.
Be careful to follow the rules and requirements. Each subreddit has its own set of rules, and all are against spamming. If you fail to adhere the site will bury you, and they are remarkably good at stopping what they deem spam.
Understand what this site offers most is education. Reddit is first and foremost an information sharing site, so use it as such.
The security of anonymity leads to detailed and open interactions. Discussions between users are one true benefit of the site.
The collective experience of like-minded individuals is an invaluable tool for entrepreneurs. Reddit is another way of getting to that information… as long as you can sort through the cat pictures.
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https://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/How-to-Use-Reddit-to-Grow-Your-Business.jpg600690Trent Dyrsmidhttps://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bright-Ideas-logo-1030x255.pngTrent Dyrsmid2014-02-12 06:00:432014-02-17 10:15:58How To Use Reddit To Grow Your Business: A Digital Marketing Strategy to Make This Popular Site Work for You
How would you like a social media tool that gives you a broad audience reach? Would it be valuable to be able to share your content on a site where users are eager to browse, discover, and learn new things?
That site would be Pinterest, and if you’re not already using it for your business, you’re likely missing out. In this podcast, Pinterest expert Jessica Rhodes shares why Pinterest can be so useful for business, as well as how to best use the site to your advantage.
I got a lot of great tips from my conversation with Jessica and was able to implement a Pinterest sharing strategy immediately after we talked.
(Of course, Pinterest is just one form of social media you can successfully leverage for your business. Check out our past interviews from Twitter expert Mark Schaefer and LinkedIn expert Viveka von Rosen for ideas specific to those sites.)
Listen now and you’ll hear Jessica and I talk about:
(02:30) Introduction
(03:30) Why Pinterest is so important for marketers
(08:00) How to start developing a following on Pinterest
(11:00) How to get started pinning images
(13:00) What makes an image pinnable?
(15:00) How to make your pins stand out
(16:30) How infographics can be leveraged on Pinterest to increase attention
The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.
It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.
Listen Now
Leave some feedback:
What should I talk about next? Please let me know on Facebook or in the comments below.
Trent: Hey there, Bright Idea hunters. Welcome to the Bright Ideas
podcast. I am your host, Trent Dyrsmid, and this is the podcast for
marketing agencies, consultants, freelancers, and entrepreneurs who want to
discover how to use content marketing and marketing automation to massively
boost your business without having to massively boost the number of hours
that you work every week. And the way that we do that is we bring onto the
show proven experts to share with you the specific tactics and strategies
that they have used to build their own successful businesses. So no
theorists or gurus here, just real, live entrepreneurs who have been
generous enough to donate their time, come onto the show, answer my
questions, and provide you with bright ideas that you can immediately
implement into your business.On the show with me today is an entrepreneur by the name of Jessica
Rhodes. I asked Jessica to come onto the show, because she is an absolute
expert at Pinterest, and I am an Pinterest neophyte. Matter of fact, I
barely as of the recording of this episode, I barely even use Pinterest.
However, that is, of course, going to change as a result of what I learned
in this episode, which we’re going to get to in just a second.Before we do that, I just want to very quickly tell you about the
Bright Ideas Mastermind. If you are a marketing consultant, or a
freelancer, or you run a small marketing agency, and you are not satisfied
with how fast your company is growing, or you’re struggling to attract new
clients, or you’re just not sure what you should be doing next to ignite
that next level of growth, go to brightideas.co/mastermind, and you’ll have
the opportunity to apply and join a very select group of people who are all
doing exactly the same thing, and who have that same mindset that by
helping each other, and by sharing ideas, the collective intelligence of
that Mastermind benefits in a big way everybody that is in it. So to get to
that, again, it’s brightideas.co/mastermind.So with that said, please join me in welcoming Jessica to the show.Jessica Rhodes is the founder and president of ESS, Entrepreneur
Support Services, a business providing various admin and marketing support
services to busy entrepreneurs and small business owners. Entrepreneur
Support Services is the parent company to the InterviewConnections.com, the
premier source for booking outstanding guests for your podcast. Jessica is
also highly skilled at social media marketing and specializes in using
Pinterest and specifically, custom infographics to drive tons of traffic to
her clients’ websites. Jessica founded ESS so she could stay at home with
her 7-month old son, Nathan, who she often refers to as her vice-president.
Hey, Jessica, welcome to the show.Jessica: Hey, Trent, thanks so much for having me on. I’m excited to be
here.Trent: And I’m excited to have you here, as well. So you are a
Pinterest marketing expert, and do you know, I’ve got to be honest with
you, I’ve paid less than zero attention to Pinterest, so, and I’m sure
there are some others who are listening to this, so you seem to think it’s
kind of a big deal, and you’re getting some really great results, so I
wanted to have you on, so that you can share your story, what those results
are, why people should be paying attention to it. So with all that said,
for people that don’t know who you are, please introduce yourself, and then
we’re going to dive right into it.Jessica: Yeah. I’m a work at home mom, first and foremost, I started my
business to be at home with my son, Nathan, who I, he’s kind of like my
vice-president, he’s very present in my business. And, yeah, he’s seven
months old now. And I started my business to be at home with him. Started
it before I became a mom, so it was, you know, kind of had that transition
out of my nine to five. I was working a non profit, transition out with
him.So, I am a Pinterest marketer, I do Pinterest marketing for my
clients, and have just seen amazing results from this platform. It’s the
third most popular social media platform online. It’s only a couple years
old, I’m sure you can guess what the first two are. But, it does seem like
not a lot of people are really taking advantage of how amazing this
platform is.As soon as I really started managing my one client’s Pinterest site,
we saw so many people going through to his website, people were staying
longer, so it’s really, with a couple very simple strategies that I know
we’re going to talk about today, Pinterest is a site where you can really
see some massive results on social media. I’ve just personally also in my
own business have seen Pinterest be really powerful and driving traffic to
my website. People are more open, it’s similar to Twitter, in that you can
really gain a lot more followers faster.I think getting people to like a Facebook fan page is kind of like
pulling teeth nowadays. I feel like it’s similar to an email newsletter.
People are very selective of who they’re liking on Facebook, who they want
to see in their news feed. But a place like Pinterest, you’re really able
to really build a big following, and get your content out to a large number
of people. That’s really why people should be using it, it’s just so
powerful in getting your message out.Trent: Absolutely. And you know, the timing of this interview is very,
very good because I’ve really been paying a lot of attention to content
promotion as of late, and so folks in the audience, this is how important
this stuff is. There’s a blog post that’s going to go live, it’ll be live
by the time this show is live, and in it, I reported my traffic since
starting to do more promotional stuff, and I have to confess, Pinterest is
not even a part yet of that promotional stuff. But our traffic has almost
doubled in a month, and we actually looked at the last week, and we are
looking at a level of traffic that, if it just repeats itself over the next
couple of weeks, is four x what it was a month ago.Jessica: Oh, it’s amazing. I mean, Trent, I know you know, content is
king on social media. People don’t want to be sold to on social media. They
are there for interaction, engagement, and information, and the great thing
about Pinterest with promoting your blog post, your podcast, your business,
is that you post that pin-able image, and people just click the pin and it
drives them right to the site.So if you were to post a great image on Facebook, you put in the
description, the link, to the blog post, so I know it works, I’m not a
Facebook marketing expert, so I won’t speak too much about that, but I feel
like on Facebook, there’s that extra step of, they get attracted to the
image, then they’ve got to look over to the description, and then click the
link to get to the site, whereas on Pinterest, it’s just two clicks to get
to your blog post. So I think that’s one of the big reasons you can really
drive a lot of traffic to your website.
Trent: So people like me who are super ill-informed about Pinterest
are going to think it’s like that website that all the chicks go to, you
know, look at shoes.
Jessica: Recipes and wedding pictures.
Trent: Yeah. You’ve got it. So you mentioned you have a client, and
he’s a guy. I’m guessing he’s not selling recipes and wedding pictures.
Jessica: No, not at all. He might have a couple pins with recipes that
he pinned when I wasn’t looking. So, it’s the great thing about Pinterest,
is, sure, if you are pinning recipes and wedding dresses, and you’re
following people who are pinning those things, that’s going to be on your
Pinterest feed. But I manage a couple different client sites, actually,
they’re both male, and they’re both marketers, and entrepreneurs, and their
Pinterest feed is that. It’s marketing content, it’s content for
entrepreneurs.
The reason Pinterest is such a great place, not only to be on for
social media, but it’s a great place to, it’s kind of like a portfolio for
your business. My client has a podcast, a web TV show, a blog, many
different aspects to his business, so there’s boards to kind of show all of
that, whereas you may have different websites for your podcast, a website
for a sales page. On Pinterest you can show all that like a portfolio. And
so it’s a really powerful way to kind of just show who you are to your
clients and prospects without being sales-y.
Trent: Okay. So let’s kind of go through the steps, then, to achieving
success on Pinterest. I’m guessing the first thing you have to do is
probably start growing a following?
Jessica: Yeah, you want to, once you set up a page, and I recommend
everyone set up a business page, assuming you are there as an entrepreneur.
You want to set up a business page, and so if you already have a Pinterest
page, you can simply go business.pinterest.com, and click “Convert Here”,
to just make it a business page, and there’s really no difference from the
outside. If you look at business page, and you look at a personal page, you
wouldn’t be able to tell the difference, but as an entrepreneur on
Pinterest, if you have a business account, you can then utilize Pinterest
Analytics, where you can track which pins are most popular, how often
you’re getting shown on the Pinterest feed, and there’s a lot of other
different features, so, again, you want a Pinterest business page to really
maximize.
You also just want to think a lot about your “About” description,
your profile image. You want to have your website verified. If you’re there
for business purposes and to market yourself and your business, you need to
have a profile that looks like you’re there to show off. I mean, if you’re
there for personal reasons, and again, you’re there to find recipes for
dinner, having your first name and a profile picture is all you need.
But to be there to market yourself and your business, you really want
to have a little “About” description, that’s optimized with keywords that’s
going to drive people, because, remember, Pinterest profiles can show up in
Google search results. Sometimes they show up more than your website if
your SEO isn’t that strong. So, that’s a really great way, again, to drive
people to your website is through your Pinterest profile.
And a little bit on verifying your website on Pinterest. When you go
to your account settings and you put your website in, you want to click
“Verify”. It’s a pretty simple step. If you’re not that tech savvy, I’m
sure you could talk to the person who manages your website, but it’s
essentially putting in some kind of, oh, I am not tech savvy, I think it
says beta code, or meta code, I hope people aren’t cringing if they’re tech
people. But it’s some kind of code that you then put on your website, so it
links your Pinterest page and your website, so that’s how you activate that
analytics feature.
It also shows a little check mark next to your website, and as a
Pinterest user, when I see that check mark on someone’s Pinterest page, I
know they’re there and they’re active. Because people don’t want to follow
you if you’re not pinning, right? So if you are there and you are pinning,
and you want to grow a following, you want to verify your website so people
are attracted to you and they say, okay, he’s got his website verified,
he’s got his boards filled up, this is someone that’s going to be
delivering content to me. So that’s a really important step in attracting a
following.
Trent: Okay. So that’s a good start. And then, once you kind of get
all of that up and running, I’m guessing you’ve got to start pinning stuff.
Is that right?
Jessica: Right, right. So you want to set up boards, you know, to get
started, I would set up, let’s say you’re someone, let’s take you, for
example, Trent. You’ll be our hot seat here. You have a blog, you have a
podcast, you have different aspects to your business. I would recommend for
you, having a board for your podcast, and then as you start out, so you
create the board tonight, you want to have at least five pins on there,
because when you look at someone’s Pinterest page, and you’re looking at
their profile, you’ll see five preview images, right? So you’ll look at a
major pin, and then have four pins underneath. So you want to make sure
that when you’re looking at a Pinterest profile, all those five pins are
there. So at the very minimum, have five boards, five pins on each to get
started, and then you’re going from there.
I actually listened to an interview the other day, on a Pinteresting
podcast, I’ll give a shout out because I really like the podcast, it’s
ohsopinteresting.com. And she interviewed a woman who actually only spends
10 minutes a week on Pinterest, and gets massive results. So it’s not like
Twitter, where you need to be tweeting 30 times a day. If you blog a couple
times a week, or you have a weekly podcast, it’s as simple as taking five
minutes to just showcase your blog and your podcast, and the different
aspects to your business on Pinterest. So, it’s very, very simple, you
know, 10 minutes a week, people are seeing results from.
Trent: So let me, being as I’m on the hot seat, so let’s say when I
publish this particular episode, or the one I recorded earlier today, what
image do I want to pin? Like normally when I get a caricature of my guest
done, so surprise, surprise. You’ve got one coming your way. Is that what I
want to pin?
Jessica: Yeah, that’s a great, and I actually, you really stuck out to
me when we first connected. One of the reasons you stuck out is because of
those caricatures. That’s a great idea. And so I’ll talk a little bit about
what makes an image pin-able. So those caricatures are fantastic, because
they are going to attract attention on the Pinterest feed. When you’re
looking at the Pinterest feed, there’s a lot of square graphics. And if you
go to the Pinterest feed, just look at what your eyes are drawn to.
The one thing that I would add, Trent, to that image is text. So you
can use Photoshop, you know, there’s a lot of different simple software out
there where you can just add text. So I would put on there, “Listen to this
podcast episode with Pinterest marketing expert Jessica Rhodes, for tips
and tricks about Pinterest.” So you’d want to add a little bit of text, so
the people know what they’re going to be clicking through to. Because going
back to what I was talking about on Facebook, where you look at the image
and then you go over to the description, you want to cut out that second
step. So they look at the image, and they, in an instant, just by looking
at the image or reading the image text, people know exactly what they’re
going to get from it.
Trent: Okay. So that’s something I could easily have my VA do, is just
take the title of the episode, put it on top of the image, pin the image.
Jessica: And then you also want to have a call to action, so I think I
already said this, but you want to make sure on your pins you say, click
here for whatever you want them to do. You want to be very direct. Click
here to read this blog post. Click here to listen to this podcast. People
are very simple creatures, if you tell them to do something, they’re going
to do it. I mean, if it’s clicking to get to something that’s going to be
entertaining, you’ll be surprised at how many people do that.
Trent: And so with so many other boards and Pinterest users and so
forth, how the heck is my stuff ever going to stand out?
Jessica: Well, you want to go through, and you want to follow people in
your niche. So a really good way to build the following and get the right
people to follow you, is to who are the “celebrities” in your industry. The
lesson of who are your ideal followers, who are your ideal listeners,
clients and prospects, who are they hanging out with, who are they
following? You want to follow those people.
And you also want to be interactive on Pinterest, so when somebody
repins your pin, go and leave a comment that says, “Hey, thanks for
sharing. Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes so you don’t miss an episode.”
Because when you leave a comment, your name and profile picture is now
showing up on the Pinterest feed below that pin. So doing things like that.
A pretty standard practice is when you follow someone, they usually follow
you back, so very simply, if you go out and follow the people that want to
follow you, that’s a really fast way to build a following. I said
“following” a lot in that sentence.
Trent: But don’t worry, I’m following you. All right. So now we’re
getting a little bit of traction, we’ve figured out how to pin some stuff.
You see a lot of infographics these days, and I will confess, I am actually
not the biggest fan of infographics. I guess my brain is just not wired to
appreciate them. But it seems that I am the exception, that a lot of people
really seem to like infographics. So, in case anyone listening to this
doesn’t know what an infographic is, maybe you should explain that, and
then why do I want to do it.
Jessica: Sure. So, infographics are long, thin images. You see them on
Pinterest, and they kind of capture a lot of information accompanied by
colorful graphics and pictures. And the reason people like them is because
they’re eye candy, and quite frankly, the reason I like them from a
Pinterest marketing perspective, is they just get more attention. So,
obviously, it’s not a one size fits all. There’s going to be the Trents of
the world that don’t like them, and that’s fine, but, from a marketing
perspective, they just take up more real estate on the Pinterest feed, so
they’re going to attract more attention, and that’s why I like them, and
why I use them. It’s because they’re able to get more attention, people
repin them more often.
Because a lot of time on Pinterest, people will repin an image,
because it has information that they don’t really want to read right now,
but they want to save it for later. So, they’re like, “This infographic
looks really interesting, I don’t want to read it right now, but I’m going
to repin it onto my board, and save it for later.” And when that happens,
say they have 300 followers, now 300 other people are now going to see that
infographic that you had pinned originally. So, I mean, that’s another
reason Pinterest is amazing, is because everything goes viral.
Trent: Now I see why I might actually end up liking infographics. If
they get me more traffic . . .
Jessica: Yeah, you don’t have to even look at them all the time, but if
you get them made, or you make them, you’re going to see some nice results.
Trent: And then I would like them a lot, actually.
Jessica: Yeah, exactly.
Trent: All right. I’m sold. So how about mistakes you see people
making on Pinterest? What are some of the things that you don’t want to do?
Jessica: So, a big mistake, a big no-no, is changing the source link on
somebody else’s pin. So, you know, you’re our hot seat today, Trent, so say
for example you get this awesome caricature made of your guest, Jessica
Rhodes, you make this great pin, your VA pins it, it links back to your
website, and I repin it, and then I click edit when it’s on my Pinterest
page, and I change the link to go to my website.
Trent: Oh, you bad person.
Jessica: You would be really mad, right? So, that’s happened to me, it’s
happened before, because people see this awesome pin, they’re like, “I love
that graphic. It kind of fits my website, I’m going to change the link and
go to my website.” And unfortunately, people can do that, but it’s a big
Pinterest no-no. You don’t want to do that, somebody took the time to
create a great image, it links to their website, it’s custom to their
content, so that’s just a big thing you don’t want to do. You want to be
creating content.
So going into my next kind of do and don’t, 80% or more of the pins
on Pinterest are just circulating throughout the site. Not a lot of people
add to the site, not a lot of people are uploading content, or pinning from
their websites or other websites. They’re just kind of hanging out on
Pinterest and repinning. So, one of the things that you really, as a
Pinterest marketer, if you’re on there for your business, you don’t just
want to repin everyone else’s content.
You want to focus on being that 20%, that 15%, that’s adding content
to the site. Because as soon as you do that, it takes you a couple minutes,
months and years down the road, people are still going to be finding it
through their search results, and they’re still going to be repinning it.
And I see that with my clients, I pinned, I made an infographic for a
client back in May, and to this day, people are still finding it, still
repinning it, and it’s still driving traffic to his websites. So, that’s
another reason why infographics are great.
Trent: Well, and infographics are just another form of content
marketing, and anyone who’s been listening to my show for any amount of
time knows that the reason that Bright Ideas is successful is because of
content marketing. We don’t advertise to get people to come and find us. We
just make sure that we have a lot of content and it gets spread all over
the Internet. When I talked at the very beginning of this episode about
this huge boost in traffic that we’ve received, it’s just because we
started to actually do more promotion of the content that we were creating,
and that’s why. And I think this interview is timely, because we are going
to start doing this stuff with Pinterest, even though . . . go ahead.
Jessica: Yeah, and Pinterest, what I’ve really seen with Pinterest is
that people treat is as a search engine. I know I treat it as a search
engine. I mean, I’m there to market myself and my business, and my client’s
business, but I’m also on there, when I want a recipe for dinner, I mean,
we laughed about this, but I will go to Pinterest first. I treat it as a
place to find information. So, sure, as an example, I go on there to find a
great recipe for dinner, but I also go there to find new podcasts to listen
So it’s a great place to be showcasing.
I have a group board that, Trent, once you’re up and going on
Pinterest, I’ll invite you to pin there. It’s a must-listen to podcast
group board, so everyone who’s pinning to that board, there’s maybe like
five to 10 of us pinning to it, and when one of us pins to it, it shows up
on everybody’s feed. So, again, that’s just a way to get your content out
there to a massive amount of people.
Trent: So tell me a little bit more about a group board. So, did you
create this group board? Can anybody create a group board?
Jessica: Yeah. So anyone can create a group board. There’s lots out
there. A group board is essentially a Pinterest board that more than one
person can pin to. So when you go to your Pinterest page and you click
create a board, you name it, you have a description. You create the board,
then you go back to edit it and then add people to pin to it. And I think
they have to be following you to actually be invited to pin on the board,
but they’re really, really great, like I said, to get your content out
there to more people.
Say for example, you, Trent, have 5,000 followers on Pinterest,
which, I don’t think you do yet. But, I invite you to pin to my group
board, and I pin to it, and since you’re also a pinner on that group board,
my pin’s going to now show up on your feed, which has 5,000 followers. So,
anyone can create one, you can join them, a lot of people will put in the
description, if you want to join this group board, I mean, some group
boards have hundreds of people pinning to them. They’ll say, oh, just leave
a comment on this pin, and I’ll add you. So, everyone who has one has their
different way of adding people, but if you ever get invited to pin to one,
I always encourage it, as long as it’s relatively aligned with your niche,
I always recommend joining them.
Trent: Okay. I’m looking at, I actually have an old Pinterest account
from my old blog, and it’s got the name of, so in the top right hand corner
of the browser, there’s a little picture of me, and then the name of my
Pinterest account. Is that changeable?
Jessica: What’s your user name for that, the old page?
Trent: It’s “Online Income”, it’s the old blog. And obviously, I want
to use Bright Ideas, so I’m trying to figure out if I have to create a new
account, or whether I can change that one. I don’t see in settings a place
to change it.
Jessica: So, is “Online Income” the user name that you would put in the
URL, pinterest.com/onlineincome? Because I’m getting Stephan Roth, which
I’m guessing isn’t you.
Trent: Try “Online Income Lab”.
Jessica: Okay.
Trent: That was my old blog. Yeah, that’s . . .
Jessica: Okay. Yep. Canadian thrill seeker. So, what you can do, I’m
trying to think. So what was your question about changing the . . .?
Trent: Can I change the user name of the Pinterest account? Because I
don’t want to be at Pinterest.com/onlineincomelab. I want to be at
Pinterest.com/brightideas. So should I just create a new account, or can I
change this one?
Jessica: Sure. I think that you can change the user name, and I’m
drawing a blank on how to do that. But I think if you go to settings that
you will be able to do that, and it’s actually a good idea to keep this
account, because it doesn’t look like you have a ton of followers, but it’s
nice to not start from scratch if you already have people following you
there. So if you go to settings, I do believe that you would be able to.
But, I can, of course, reconnect it to try to find out.
Trent: Nope, you can, I just figured it out. If you clicked on “Edit
Profile”, you can change anything that you would like. Perfect.
Jessica: Oh, there we go. There we go.
Trent: All right. Terrific. So, I know that you also have an
infographics business, so I want to give you an opportunity to, if people
want to connect with you, if they’ve liked what they’ve heard, but they
just can’t bear the thought of making their infographics, or they can’t
bear the thought of taking on the management, or they don’t have a VA to
take on the management of yet another social network, how do people get in
touch?
Jessica: Sure, thanks. My business is called “Entrepreneur Support
Services”. So, you can connect with me at entrepreneursupportservices.com.
You’ll find my blog there, you’ll find Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter,
connecting with me on social media, and yeah. If you just to my website,
you’ll be able to find, I do design custom infographics, so for a very
reasonable price, more reasonable than I have seen anywhere out there with
any of my competitors, I’ll design a custom infographic for you. And you
can find me on Pinterest at pinterest.com/jessrhodesess, is where you’ll
find me on Pinterest, and you can see all the infographics that I’ve
designed there, as well.
Trent: And, how do you spell Rhodes?
Jessica: R-H-O-D-E-S. Like the state, Rhode Island.
Trent: Okay. And you said very reasonable price. I’m going to put you
on the spot. How reasonable is reasonable?
Jessica: It is. I charge $100 flat for an infographic.
Trent: Okay. And so folks, if you want to see the quality of her
infographics, again, and we’ll link to it from the show notes, this is
episode I believe number 86, so you’ll be able to get, sorry, no, yeah, 86.
You’ll be able to get to these show notes at brightideas.co/86, and there
you will find links to everything we’ve talked about, including Jessica’s
site and Pinterest profile and so forth. So if you’re driving your car
right now, don’t try and write all this stuff down, please.
All right. So any closing thoughts, Jessica on Pinterest marketing
before we wrap up this episode?
Jessica: Yeah. I would just, you know, don’t get into overwhelm mode.
There’s a lot of Pinterest profiles out there where there’s 30 boards, and
a thousand pins. If you go on there and just set up a couple of boards to
capture your blog posts, your podcast episodes, whatever you’ve got as far
as content goes, just doing that for a couple minutes a week, and getting
those pins up there is really going to make a big difference in where your
website traffic is coming from.
Trent: And how do you, you said five boards at the beginning? How do I
decide what five boards? So let’s put me back on the hot seat, I’m assuming
I’m going to have a board for my podcasts.
Jessica: Right. So you can have a board for your podcasts, or you can
have several boards for your podcasts. So if you break up your podcasts,
you could do it by time. So, here are all my interviews from fall of 2013.
So you can categorize your podcasts, as opposed to just having one board
with all of your episodes. And you can do the same thing with your blog,
you can have one board for your blog, but if you’ve been blogging for
several years, and you’ve got hundreds of posts, you can also categorize
it, so social media blog post, marketing blog post. And then I don’t know
all the aspects of your business, but wherever you’re creating content,
create a board to capture that content, create pins, and pin it.
Trent: Okay. And I notice a lot of people, and probably I should do
this on mine, they have the social sharing icons to the left that float up
and down like I do. Pinterest isn’t one of those, if I do that, I can
probably just have my VA click that little pin button right there, and then
choose the image? Now, it will extract an image from the post, or does it
give us choices of which image in the post we want to use?
Jessica: Right. So when you’re at a blog post and you click the pin it
thing that you put in your tool bar, that will then grab the pinnable
images that you would put into the blog post. So I always recommend putting
pinnable images into the blog post, so it will grab it, people can choose
which one they want to pin. And you actually reminded me, I wanted to
recommend that people make their website Pinterest friendly by adding in
Pinterest widgets, which you can get at about.pinterest.com. So, when you
put the actual pin it button on the blog post, you’re actually going to be
encouraging the people that visit your blog to pin your content for you. So
that’s really where you want to get to, is where you have people pinning
your content for you, because why wouldn’t you want that?
Trent: Yeah, no kidding. I like it when the audience, or the site
visitors, do all the promotional work.
Jessica: Exactly. So if you have that pin it button, it’s really going
to help that.
Trent: And you get that at about.pinterest.com.
Jessica: Yep. And they’re free, they’re just simple little plug ins.
Trent: Okay. Well, Jessica, thank you so much for making some time and
enlightening me on what the opportunity that I’m missing by ignoring
Pinterest, which I will put to an end immediately. And I appreciate you
making the time to be on the show.
Jessica: Thank you so much for having me, Trent. I appreciate it.
Trent: You’re welcome. All right, so that wraps up episode number 86
of the Bright Ideas podcast. To get the show notes for this episode, go to
brightideas.co/86. If you enjoyed listening to this episode and found value
in it, I would love it if you would take a moment, and go to
brightideas.co/love. When you do, you’ll find a link to leave feedback for
the show in iTunes, and that is the number one way that the show increases
it’s exposure, and helps us to help more entrepreneurs massively boost
their business by discovering all the bright ideas that are shared here by
my guests, who donate their time to come onto the show. So if you take a
moment to do that, I would really, really appreciate it.
That’s it for this episode. I’m your host, Trent Dyrsmid. Thank you
so much for tuning in. If you are not yet a subscriber, please go to
brightideas.co and become one, and when you do, I will give you a four-part
video training series on how to maximize conversions, both on your website,
and in your marketing funnel. And if you don’t know what a marketing funnel
is, when you go into mine, and you start watching these videos, you are
going to be in for a huge eye opener, and you will probably realize, like
everyone else that goes through, that there is a huge opportunity for you
in your own business to implement strategies like I am teaching you in this
four-part video series. So I absolutely promise you, you will find huge
value in going and watching those videos. And again, you can get them for
free, by going to brightideas.co.
Thank you so much for tuning in, we will see you again in another
episode soon.
About Jessica Rhodes
After graduating from Temple University with a degree in Communications, Jessica spent 3 years leading a team of door to door non-profit fundraisers. With a goal to be a stay at home mom to her son, Nathan, Jessica founded Entrepreneur Support Services, parent company to Interview Connections.com.
Jessica and her team help busy entrepreneurs leverage the power of social media marketing to drive more traffic to their websites. With the launch of Interview Connections.com, Jessica helps motivated podcast hosts book outstanding guests on their shows.
https://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/jessica.jpg7202200Trent Dyrsmidhttps://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bright-Ideas-logo-1030x255.pngTrent Dyrsmid2013-12-16 06:00:482020-09-11 02:38:28Digital Marketing Strategy: Jessica Rhodes on How Marketers Can Leverage Pinterest for Content Promotion
This is a guest post by Michael Gass, whose Fuel Line blog has been ranked one of the top 100 marketing blogs in the world, according to Ad Age’s Power 150.
Twitter allows me to open up and share my personal side to make an emotional connection with my audience.
Sharing personal information helps my audience get to know me beyond my profession. If all of my Tweets or Retweets were business oriented, my Twitter feed would be dry and robotic.
“People want to work with other people that they know, trust and like.”
A lot of people have difficulty with how to be personal on Twitter. Many tend to over-think their tweets. The truth is, “The way you network offline is the same as the way you network online.”
I was just on the phone with one of the partners of a large agency in the midwest. He asked me if I could give him some examples. I came up with the following and thought I would share them in Fuel Lines for others who are having the same problem.
Here are some of the types of personal information that I have shared via Twitter:
1. Showing appreciation
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
When others are nice enough to retweet your posts, you should be willing to acknowledge them and “pay it forward”.
Another way to show appreciation is to have a “two-way” relationship. It shouldn’t be all about you. When people follow me, I reciprocate and follow them back. A couple of years ago, one of the early adopters of social media decided to dump thousands of people he followed. He had over 200,000 followers and unfollowed all but a few hundred. A number of others followed suit. I didn’t do that. I think it is respectful to treat others equally.
@RoxanneJoffe and her husband Sam Stern @mHealthMarketer , two of the nicest people I’ve ever met. A pleasure catching up w/ you both today!
@angelinestacy thanks for the #FF Angeline. I hope you had a great weekend!
@gfb3 thanks Frank. When I worked for Lewis Communications @Lewisideas I visited Mobile often. Hope you are having a great summer.
@mnburgess thank you Mark. Very much appreciated. I hope you had a good weekend.
2. My Personal recommendations and opinions
Such as this recent Tweet: “If you are in retail you should follow @Ball_Brad, former CMO of McDonald’s, Warner Bros Pictures, Nascar Entertainment” or recommending a tool for new business: “I just subscribed to Job Change Alerts from @SalesLoft. 15 second signup here” http://jobchangealerts.com.
Another recommendation: @the_list_online thank you! And Congrats! The List was by far the most popular list service among the 300 agencies in this survey.
I share my likes and dislikes. For instance, I like Southwest Airlines and I greatly dislike US Airways.
A recent rant of mine via Twitter: “B’ham News keeps throwing these free papers onto our driveway. I’m saving them up so that I can dump them all on their doorstep!”
I choose not to share my political or religious views via Twitter. A good rule when sharing personal information in any social media network is to use some common sense. I only share what I would feel comfortable sharing in person when in a mixed setting such as a business meeting, trade show, seminar, etc.
3. Location information and travel
Some people are paranoid about sharing where they are. I’ve never been that way. Since I’m using Twitter as a networking tool for new business, I’ve found it beneficial to share where I am. For instance, I tweeted recently that I was on my way to Nashville. By the time I arrived, I had three additional meetings lined up with prospective clients.
Here is a sampling of my travel and location Tweets:
When I’m relaxing: I’m at Goose Pond Colony Marina (Scottsboro, AL) [pic]: http://4sq.com/16zqmca
Traveling to Cleveland, OH today to conduct a New Business Social Media workshop
Starting the workshop with Quez Media Marketing. A great group! http://fb.me/MdKO5Zlu
Meeting celebrities: @tjholmes it was a pleasure to see you briefly at LaGuardia yesterday. I know you are going to land a big gig soon.
Visiting with industry leaders: @aaaaveep was kind enough to give me a tour of the @4As new office in NYC. Creative space w/ great views pic.twitter.com/R4f1nAC55r
Meeting interesting people along the way: Ms Mae has worked for the Lambert – ST Louis Airport for 34 years. She’s 71 yrs old pic.twitter.com/REimLUmlzm
Great quotes and important statistics always create appeal and often become viral when shared in Twitter. Here are some that I’ve recently tweeted:
RT @GaryVee Guys once and for all – White wine is BETTER than Red Wine ..at least on my palate
Most agencies are in a perpetual state of re-branding or redesigning their websites or both!
By 2014, video as a total of Internet traffic will rise to 90% – souce CISCO
80% of decision makers said they found their vendors not the other way around – MarketingSherpa
Love is more than flowers and a happy ending. True love is making another’s well-being more important than your own http://ow.ly/mCE7y
Advertising Wisdom @LeeClowsBeard No point setting up a client on Twitter if you can’t help them step it up on Twitter.
The first step towards getting somewhere is to decide you’re not going to stay where you are.” — John Pierpont Morgan
Survey: Over 86% of respondents reported using bureaus for recommending and hiring professional speakers http://ow.ly/kTS9F
5. Emotional experiences
I occasionally share my emotions and how I’m feeling. For instance, I wasn’t real happy having to spend the weekend on some major yard work projects. I had a number of guys chime in with some of their own disgruntlements about their “Honey-Do Lists”. I guess it’s true, “Misery loves company!”
Here are a couple of other Tweets of articles that I wrote sharing some very emotional experiences:
I Have Lost My Most Faithful Companion http://dld.bz/cynTf (I had over 1,000 respond in some way to this article)
6. Articles and books that I recommend
Most people rely on word of mouth from trusted friends when it comes to finding good content. I’m often asked to recommend reading for business development, social media or agency presentations. I write a good number of book reviews and share them through Twitter. I recommend and even help promote resources that I feel will be helpful to my target audience.
I just bought: ‘How To Deliver A TED Talk: Secrets Of The World’s Most Inspiring Presentations’ http://ow.ly/kJnLQ
Why Is Facebook Blue? The Science Behind Colors In Marketing By @LeoWid
The All Business “No Bull Crap” Guide to Social Media Marketing http://dld.bz/aymEZ
Free ebook for you: A Field Guide to the Four Types of Content Marketing Metrics. Download it here: http://ar.gy/4AK0
John Jantsch always provides such helpful content “How I Podcast and Why I Think You Should” http://ow.ly/kP0sC via @ducttape
Reading the The Insider’s Guide to Boat Cleaning and Detailing
7. Personal interviews
Interviews are a tremendous tool for personal branding. It builds credibility with your audience and allows you to showcase your specialty. Sharing them through Twitter allow’s your target audience to see, hear and get to know you.
Podcast Interview: Fueling Ad Agency New Business with Michael Gass http://ow.ly/kBYw2
How to Win Agency New Business: Interview | Branding Magazine http://dld.bz/cFGcF
8. Hobbies and projects
All of your communications through Twitter do not have to revolve around business. It’s a place to enlist conversations, helps and resources when you are engaged in a project or want to nurture a hobby.
9. Photos and videos of family, pets, travel, vacations, etc.
Photos and videos are powerful because people are visual. They can help to quickly create an emotional connection with your Twitter audience. Here’s a sampling of photos and videos I’ve shared:
I saw this sculpture in a NYC store front window. It’s carved from bone. Incredible detail. http://ow.ly/i/28PjR
10. Contests and Polls
Conducting polls and engaging in contests provide lots of opportunities for engaging with others and real time feedback via Twitter. Here are some examples:
@bhammag Best Pets Photo Contest – Please vote for my daughter’s pup Brady by clicking “Like” http://ow.ly/ldxLQ Thank you!
Should people be given the freedom to work from home? http://twtpoll.com/glrwjj via @michaelgass (this poll generated over 200 responses)
Are you a Mac or PC person? http://twtpoll.com/1s5hx5 via @michaelgass
Fuel Lines’s ‘Ad Agency Blog of the Year’. Vote for your favorite from among these ‘Blog the Month’ winners: http://twtpoll.com/ifkezk via @michaelgass (Over 3000 responses)
Should Ad Agency Pitches and RFPs Be a Thing of the Past? http://twtpoll.com/3n6yo7 via @michaelgass
11. Causes
47% of Americans learn about causes via social media and online channels.
Liz Strauss is a well known social media strategist who has been battling throat cancer. To fight the cancer, it required extensive chemo and radiation. On top of her treatments, Liz also suffered a fall that broke her hip and shoulder. As a result, Liz was confined to the hospital from December through March. Her friends created an auction fundraiser with all proceeds from the fundraiser going to Liz. Tweets like the following helped spread the word quickly:
Liz Strauss Fundraiser – Liz was recently diagnosed with Stage 4 throat cancer. Help her and her family if you can http://ow.ly/mo3wx
@jasonfalls If there’s anyone in the social media world most of us owe a little something to, it’s @lizstrauss. She needs us: http://buff.ly/14zGGMK
12. Events, TV Shows and Movies
I’ve tweeted television events such as the Oscars and shared my opinions of the Super Bowl ads. I’ve engaged with others via Twitter while watching programs such as AMC’s Mad Men and The Pitch.
Michael Gass is an international new business consultant to advertising, digital, media and PR agencies. Since 2007 he has led in the use of social media and content marketing strategies to make agency new business EASIER.
He is the founder of Fuel Lines, which has been rated among the top 100 marketing blogs in the world, according to Ad Age’s Power 150. You can reach Michael at michael@michaelgass.com.
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https://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/OpenDoor-550x364.jpg364550Trent Dyrsmidhttps://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bright-Ideas-logo-1030x255.pngTrent Dyrsmid2013-11-07 06:00:512015-12-07 20:08:2712 Ways to Get Personal Using Twitter
On this episode of the BrightIdeas podcast, we’re joined by Sean Malarkey, creator of a digital publishing and marketing company, and author of the blog and podcast The Money Pillow. Sean relies heavily on his team to help him run his digital publishing company so that he has plenty of time left to do important things such as surf daily from his home in Santa Barbara.
Do you think that his business might suffer without him spending much time running it each day? Not true. The company continues to return year over year growth of around 30%, and is set to gross approximately $2 million this year.
In other words, Sean has a great business that prospers without requiring much of his presence. You could almost say, it works while he sleeps! And yes, that’s what he was going for in this business, and also the concept he talks about with his guests on The Money Pillow podcast.
In this interview, you’ll hear Sean and I talk about:
(2:00) How his team helps him out
(4:00) An overview of his audience
(5:45) The Money Pillow
(12:20) His podcast launch
(17:00) An explanation of how he’s going to extract the Golden Nuggets from his past episodes
(20:30) How to monetize a podcast
(25:50) How he’s promoting his podcast
(29:00) How to decide if you should have a show
(31:00) How he finds his guests
(36:17) What his team looks like
(44:30) How he’s building his team
(49:20) Team-building advice
(1:00:00) An overview of the publishing company, and how he launched it
(1:08:00) How they are generating traffic and sales
Resources Mentioned
More About This Episode
The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.
It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.
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Trent: Hey there, bright idea hunters. It’s Trent Dyrsmid here. I am
the host of the Bright Ideas Podcast, and this is the podcast
for really whip-smart entrepreneurs who want to know how to use
online marketing and marketing automation to massively boost
their business.On the show with me today is a guy who is definitely a whip-
smart entrepreneur. His name is Sean Malarkey. He’s the guy
behind the Money Pillow, which is a new podcast. He’s also got a
book for it. The Money Pillow is definitely not Sean’s first
rodeo. He actually runs a very successful online digital
publishing business that works with content experts, and takes
their knowledge, and makes it available to business owners like
yourself who want to get better in a specific area of their
business.Now, I am super stoked to have Sean on the show because he is
doing some really cool things with the Money Pillow podcasts and
the guests that he’s unearthing. In particular, we’re going to
talk about how he launched the podcast and made it so incredibly
successful so very quickly. With that said, please join me in
welcoming Sean to the show. Hey, Sean. Welcome to the show.
Sean: Thanks for having me, man. It’s an honor to be here.
Trent: Absolutely. It’s an honor to have you on here. For the folks
who have not had the privilege of speaking with you off the air
for the last 45 minutes, maybe you would be so kind as to
introduce yourself and tell us a little bit about what you’re
doing.
Sean: Sure. My name is Sean Malarkey and GQ just voted me one of the
top 50 most handsome men in the world. No, I’m just kidding. I
have a really boring story, I guess. I don’t where to even
begin, but what I do now is I have a publishing company and a
marketing company. We publish and market digital trainings, so
we find experts that are good with particular things, and we
have them create the content, and then we take that content,
package it up in a pretty UI/UX, and then we push it out to our
audience, and market it, and sell it. We’ve got a handful of
people that we publish. Then we also have a marketing side where
we have our own audience that we market these products to, and
other ones as well.
It’s an all-in marketing or digital publishing business that
I’ve had now, I guess, Trent, for just past four years. I think,
this year, we should cross just over $2 million in sales, and
we’ve been growing at about 30% year over year pretty
consistently.
Trent: That’s not a bad little business to have that you can run from
anywhere in the world and spend quite a bit of time surfing
every day.
Sean: Yeah. It’s funny. I used to live in Columbus, Ohio, and a year
ago we moved out to California, and prior to moving out here,
the move was going to cost me $50,000 to $60,000, I think, in
total, all things considered. I just thought, “I’m going to
hustle, work hard, earn some extra money.” In about 75 days I
worked really hard in the business and did that, but what
happened was I had to rely on my team in ways that I never had
to do a lot of the things that I was doing on a daily basis.
When I got out here, I was busy unpacking and just getting
settled, and doing this, and doing that, and my team would say,
“Well, why don’t you let me do this for you? Why don’t you let
me do that for you?” I was holding them up on the tasks that I
always do. I would say, “Oh, yeah. You did do that once or twice
in the last month. Go ahead and then, when you’re done, let me
know and I’ll review it.”
What I ended up finding within like a month of being here was
that 95% of the things that I was doing on a day to day basis in
my business, I had basically by default trained somebody on my
team how to do during that phase of hustle. I just started
delegating more and more to them and letting them take ownership
more and more. For a good eight months, I just worked about an
hour a day, and some days I didn’t even work at all. Many days I
didn’t work at all, and then some days I’d work for three or
four hours, and then just crushed it. I realized after being out
here and being surrounded by…
Trent: Opulence.
Sean: Opulence is a great word, yes. That I kind of wanted a little
bit more out of life, and wanted to kind of also create more
freedom. For me, money represents freedom, and I wanted more
freedom. I really enjoyed having the ability to do what I want
when I want, and wanted to kind of indulge myself in the finer
things in life, a little bit finer than what I have now, so I
got back to work back in May. I’ve been working about eight to
ten hours a day since then.
One of the big things that got, Trent, is I’ve got a really good
audience, and I feel like I’ve got several different businesses
that I really want to launch and kind of capitalize on that
audience before that audience ages, if you will, and their
attention goes somewhere else. I know I have this window of time
that I really have to sit down and hustle if I want to take
advantage of the opportunity, or later I’m going to have to work
much harder to achieve the same results.
Trent: There are a lot of things, dear audience, that I want to cover
for you guys in this episode with Sean. Just so that you know
what’s coming, because I know that everybody’s time is at a
premium and you’re listening to this going, “What am I going to
get out of this?” Sean has launched a podcast recently called
The Money Pillow, which has been going very well. He’s getting a
ton of downloads, and he’s doing some really interesting things
to promote it. We’re going to talk about that a bunch.
I also want to talk a bit more about the outsourcing. You
referenced your team a lot, Sean, in what you just said, and I
think a lot of people, self included, would love to be able to
have a team that can do more for them, but the stumbling block,
especially for people who don’t yet have a surplus of cash flow,
is how I pay for that. How do I actually make that happen? I
want to come back to talk about that, so I’m going to put that
on my list.
Then, if we have time, for the end, I’d like to actually come
back to your publishing business because it is such a compelling
model that I think anyone who is a reasonably bright internet
marketer… Sorry. I want to erase that. Online marketer. I hate
the term internet marketer because it suggests that you’re
selling snake oil and getting rich quick, and I don’t believe in
any of that crap.
Sean: It has a stigma attached to it, huh?
Trent: It does, so let’s talk about an online marketer, or maybe we
should coin a new term. Let’s call it New Age Marketer. That’s
not going to stick.
Sean: New Media Marketer.
Trent: I like that. That’s much better. New Media Marketer.
Sean: It’s good, isn’t it?
Trent: It is. It doesn’t have any of that negative connotation.
Sean: You heard it here first, folks.
Trent: Absolutely. On the Bright Ideas Podcast. I’m making notes and
then we’re going to talk about the publishing business. I think
that is more than enough conversation to talk us well past the
deadline that I’m sure we both have for this. With all that
said, that’s what you’re going to get in this episode, so stay
tuned because here we go. Sean, what is The Money Pillow, first
of all? People need to know what that is.
Sean: It’s a concept, I guess. It started for me, in my brain, many
years ago, but essentially, it’s just a concept of creating a
great business that prospers without you having to be present at
the time.
I had this idea when I was 18 years old. I worked at a
skateboard shop, and the owner lived in Hawaii and came twice a
year. He drew a salary of $10,000 a month, had an AmEx card that
my managers were always making payments on, and this guy, for
years, would just kind of come and go a couple times a year.
Sometimes he wouldn’t even show up. I just thought, “Man, this
guy is living the dream. He built it, got a couple of post-
college guys to manage it, and he’s gone.” I was really, at an
early age, kind of fascinated by that.
Then I started a real estate company several years ago. Left
that to kind of pursue the business I’m in now and get a little
bit more freedom. Along the way, I’ve just met so many amazing
entrepreneurs who just have these businesses. With the
technology and the way the world is today, it’s a whole lot
easier to build a business with automation and tools and things
that, 10 years ago, it wasn’t possible. Five years ago it wasn’t
possible.
With The Money Pillow, it’s a book that I’m actually going to
write. Starting back in December 2012 I started interviewing a
lot of people that had these kinds of businesses. In fact, the
first interview I did was with Melanie and Devin Duncan. They
own a company called Custom Greek Threads. They live in New York
City. The business is in San Diego. I think they have close to
30 employees. It’s probably 40 by now. They’re growing. They’ve
not been in their office in over a year. Devin, by himself,
manages that company in four to five hours a month in work, and
the company has grown year over year at like 25% to 30%. I think
this year they’ll do $2.5 to $3 million in revenue.
Anyway, I’ve just met all these amazing entrepreneurs and it’s
not people in the new media marketing space, for the most part.
It’s all over the place. People that manufacture products,
people that have services, people that… I interviewed somebody
that has a chain of spas that she lives in Colorado, and her
spas are in Portland. Another guy who had a software company.
You just name it. The business models. Anything you can think of
people have applied The Money Pillow principle to so that
they’re able to kind of live life on their terms, and their
business runs and makes money while they do what they want.
Trent: That’s a nice way to live.
Sean: Yeah, it really is.
Trent: I think, especially for the younger generation who haven’t
grown up with the… I’m going to use the term “brainwashing.”
I’m sure someone will be upset by this, but go to college, get a
good job, work there for a long time mentality. I think that’s
just not part of the psyche of a lot of the younger generation.
I think this opportunity that’s there for us as a result of the
internet, and tools, and automation is absolutely wonderful.
Sean: Yeah. I think, in fact, that mentality is probably a minority.
I don’t know, but it would be interesting to see some high
school exit studies. How many of them feel like their careers
are going to be based on what they learn in college or how many
of them are just going kind of to appease their parents. It’s
definitely a different world that we live in.
Trent: It is indeed. The Money Pillow podcast, you’ve had a lot of
success fairly quickly. Do you want to talk about the results
first so people can know what we’re talking about?
Sean: Sure. These aren’t typical…
Trent: The results that you are about to hear are not typical.
Sean: Just throw a disclaimer out there. That’s so dumb. No,
literally, I launched it back in July. I launched it in, I’m
thinking, late June and then iTunes screwed up my feed. It was
saying the interviews were an hour and a half long. They were
actually only 30 minutes, and all these weird things were
happening. Descriptions weren’t showing, so we ended up having
to delete the feed and resubmit it. I can’t even remember when
that was. I think it was mid-July.
I launched it, and it was generating a couple hundred downloads
a day. I just told some friends, basically, about it on
Facebook, which I’ve got a fairly large Facebook audience, so
that helped a lot, but I have a lot of other assets I didn’t
really tap into. Told some friends about it on Facebook. It was
generating 200, 300, 400 downloads a day. Probably about 250 to
300, somewhere in there.
Then once I kind of felt like I had enough episodes in there…
I launched, I think, with six episodes, and once I got to the 10
episode mark, I decided it was a good time to email my list. I
emailed my list, and that jumped it up, that day, to like 2,100
downloads that day. From that point on, it pretty much has
stayed over 1,000 downloads. I think it was July 11 that I
launched, and we are what? August 19 today, or the 18?
Trent: Nineteenth.
Sean: August 19. I think I’m at 38,000 downloads now with probably
30,000 of those coming in August. Actually, I can tell you.
Thirty-seven thousand five hundred, with 26,878 in August. I had
some good fortune along the way. Stitcher featured me on their
front page, and just some random interesting things happening,
but it’s been growing really well. I feel like I hit number two
in business which was a big boost that day. Introduced me to a
lot of people who had no idea who I was, and created a lot of
new fans.
My goal is to get it to, by the end of September, 100,000
downloads a month, or 3,000 a day. I think I can hit that. It’s
just a matter of figuring this whole game out. For me, I was
doing all these interviews already for the book, and I had this
content. With my marketing business, I brought somebody on who
was a podcasting expert because I thought it was a cool idea.
She had a great presentation, and a good product, so I brought
her on. As I was listening to her thing I was like, “Man, this
is stupid. I’ve got all this content I can repurpose, and with
doing so, I can build an audience for the book that’s focused
exactly on the topic of the book.” Again, I thought I’ll just
give the podcast the same exact name of the book, and blah,
blah, blah. That’s what I did, and that’s what I’m doing.
My hope is that by doing this, I can build a really large
audience that’s interested in the topic. You’ll see, going
forward, I’m going to start structuring the content. Instead of
just doing interviews, now I’m going to start bringing in a lot
of content that will be featured in the book. I’m going to be
taking the past 15 interviews, and I’m going to be doing
highlight moments where the most important, or most valuable
lessons that people need to learn, or more than I think have
been shared so far when it comes to running an automated or
hands-off business, I’ll be highlighting those and talking some
theoretical talk behind what the person shared. Kind of
structuring it a little bit better and prepping the audience for
the book. My hope with doing that is that it will result in a
big push on the book, and I hope to hit the bestseller list when
it launches.
Trent: That’s a good idea that you just mentioned, and it’s something
that I’ve thought of doing because I’m like 65 or 70 episodes
deep now, and there’s so much good stuff in that. When you do
like you and I do, and you have really top-notch entrepreneurs
on your show, there’s what I call golden nuggets. There’s a
bunch of them in every interview. I’ve forgotten more of those
golden nuggets than probably anybody, and I’ve been on every
show. I’ve heard every one of my shows, and I’m still not using
everything that I should have learned. I’ve been thinking about
doing the same thing you have.
How are you going to do that? Are you going to have a person on
your team sort of sit down and listen to them all, or did you
make really incredible show notes? How are you going to go back
through? I guess you probably don’t have 70 episodes yet, but
you’re what? At 16, 17, something like that. Can you talk a
little bit about the process of how you’re going to unearth
those gems, and then how you’re going to repurpose that?
Sean: Yeah. I’m sitting here chuckling because I can’t wait to tell
you. It’s not that I’m lazy, I’m just really busy and I don’t
have time to go back and listen to all of them, and I did not
take good notes. There are key moments for me that I really
remember.
For example, I interviewed this one guy and he talked about a
product idea that he had, but in order to sell this product, he
had to manufacture it. In order to manufacture it, there was a
large investment into manufacturing. Not large, but $2,000,
$3,000, or $4,000 into getting his first batch of products to
sell. The way he decided to test this to see if this was even
going to be a good idea was he spent three, four hours, or paid
somebody to build a simple little sales page and then ran Google
Ads to that sales page. When people clicked the Buy Now button,
people went to a page that just said, “We’re sorry. This product
is actually not available right now. We’ll let you know when it
is.” All he was doing was trying to measure if this was a
successful business. Does that make sense?
Trent: Yeah.
Sean: There are like three or four moments that really stand out like
that for me, but I need more than three or four. Yesterday I
just emailed my email list. It’s a small email list, but what
I’ve built from the website that’s coming there, and just said,
“What was your biggest aha moment?” It said, “I’m putting
together…” I literally am getting responses. I got one after
we started talking.
The email said, and this is all totally true and transparent,
“Yesterday I was at the beach hanging out with some friends. One
of them brought up how you’ve been listening to my podcast. We
started talking about different episodes. He began telling me a
few aha moments that he had while he was listening, things he
could implement into his business right away, and this got me
thinking maybe I should do a highlight episode.” I told, in the
email, the story of Daniel, and his little manufacturing
validation test. I said, “My question to you is what has been
your biggest aha moment? Reply back and let me know, and I will
also give you credit in that episode.”
I thought this was kind of a way to get my audience involved and
do some work for me, and then I can give them credit on the
episode, so 2,000 or 3,000 people will hear me say, “This next
part came from Trent. Trent replied back to the email and said
his biggest aha moment was this. Here you go.” That’s how I did
I’ve gotten about 40 emails. Now I have to decipher which
ones to actually feature and use.
Trent: That was a very good idea. That will be what we call one of the
golden nuggets of this episode.
Sean: There you go.
Trent: From yours truly. I have to say that word good and clear,
golden nuggets, so that when it gets transcribed and a person on
my team is searching for golden nuggets in episodes to do our
compilation post, they’ll find it.
Sean: There you go.
Trent: All right. I want to take a quick sidebar because some people
who are listening to this, there may be many, don’t really
understand the business model of a podcast. There are a number
of reasons why you could do it. In your case, you’re doing it,
it sounds like, to promote your book, maybe build your audience.
Some people do it because they want to get advertiser income,
and then other people do it because they want to build
authority. I’m interested in your take. If there’s either
nuances that I’ve missed, details that I’ve missed, or what have
you, but what is the business model of the podcast?
Sean: You just hit on, really, all the big ones. They’re all
possible, and they’re all totally achievable. I know people that
have hit all those things. For me, I honestly, Trent, didn’t
realize you could monetize it. It was just a way for me… I was
going to monetize this, but not directly. When I say monetize, a
lot of people earn good revenue from show sponsors, and once you
get to 2,000 or 4,000 downloads per episode, it’s pretty easy to
start earning a decent living from sponsors. That’s a lot of
eyeballs, or ears if you will, that these sponsors will get
depending on what you’re talking about. There are probably
people that have products or services that want people to hear
that. I had no idea you could do that.
It was just literally for me just to build an audience for the
book, which I knew I could monetize in the sense that if I could
go to a publisher… When you get a book published, most of the
time you get an advance or often you’ll get an advance. I’ve got
a fairly large social reach. I’ve got a big email list, and I’ve
got a business that sells $100 products and up, so all that
stuff has a lot of value to the publisher. I may be able to
generate $50,000 to $200,000 in advance, $300,000 with good
agents, somewhere in there. I have no idea. This is just what
agents are telling me that I’ve interviewed and talked to.
I thought to myself, “Well, if I had the number one or number
two podcast out there with the exact name and content that’s
going to be in the book, and I build a big audience, I could
show lots of downloads, and subscribers, and build an email list
off that, that would probably be worth as much as everything
else I just mentioned that I have as an asset to the publisher.”
With that said, I thought I could probably double my advance.
For me, getting a big advance represents the fact that the
publisher… Not only will it be great money, it will be cool to
put a big check in the bank, but the publisher will really put
their weight behind the book to make sure they see a return on
their money, which means prominent placement in all the book
shelves in all the airports, and all the book stores that still
remain, and any other kind of marketing you can think of.
They’re going to throw their weight behind it because they want
it to generate a return on their investment.
Which then means it makes it, in my opinion, that much easier to
get to the New York Times bestseller list, which means it makes
it easier to sell more books, and at the end of the day, I
really feel like this topic is going to change people’s lives in
a major way and have a huge impact. It’s something that’s kind
of a personal project for me that I really kind of want to leave
my mark on the world, and this is one way, I think, that I’ll do
that.
Trent: Now, do you thing that you’re actually going to make really
good money from the book, or is the book a means to yet another
end?
Sean: I don’t know. Originally, it was a means to an end. I’ve got an
iPhone app that I’m working on and I thought, “I need about
$100,000 to get this app complete, and if I can get my book, get
an advance, I can get that covered.” I’m fairly confident I can
get $50,000 to $100,000 worth of current asset that I’ve got in
the book topic, and in a number of things. Then, I just started
seeing the potential in this.
I’m not in a hurry to write the book. I’m in a hurry to get the
podcast to find 10,000 downloads an episode because then, at
that point, I will then approach the publishers about signing a
deal. I got the iPhone app part figured out, so I’m not as
motivated by that, but I don’t know.
Trent, it’s one of those things that could totally flop or it
could be the next big book that leads into a whole other line of
things.
Trent: That’s the interesting thing about succeeding in public, or
even demonstrating your expertise in public, by way of a book, a
blog, or a podcast, is the people that you don’t even know exist
know you exist, and some of them will come to you with
opportunities as a result of the exposure you create for
yourself.
Sean: Absolutely. Who knows, man? It could be a total failure, and
hell, I may never even get it done. If the iPhone app gets
completed before the book thing and that takes off, great. Or if
my business takes… You never know, but it will get done at
some point, I’m sure. I feel fairly confident I can get it to
bestseller status. If not, I’ll just have to put my tail between
my legs and walk away from it.
Trent: I have several chapters of my book done, and they’ve been
collecting dust for a while.
Sean: Yeah, I hear you.
Trent: It’s tough to stay focused.
Sean: It’s amazing, too, when somebody gives you a big check of money
and how motivating that can be.
Trent: Well, yeah. Suddenly then you’ve got skin in the game and
you’re also being held accountable times 10.
Back to my first bullet point, then, of this interview is
talking about the podcast. Now, I know that you’ve done some
pretty interesting things to promote it, so not everybody has a
big list. Not everybody has the social reach, so that’s all
great and good for you. For the folks that don’t have that, but
they do have a desire, and anyone can interview people just like
you and I do, so I don’t think that you have to be a rocket
scientist to do that. You just have to have the desire to do it,
but promoting it. You’re doing some cool stuff on Facebook, so
do you want to talk a little bit about what you’re doing there?
Sean: Yeah. I wanted to know that this podcast had kind of reached
every corner of the earth, and I noticed one day that the first
time I looked at the stats, I saw that I had hit like 88 or 95
of the world’s 195 countries. I just thought, “Man, that would
be kind of cool to say that somebody in every country in the
world is listening to my podcast.” I just started running ads. I
just started targeting every country that I hadn’t gotten
downloads from, and that’s been a big boost in subscriptions and
likes on Facebook, on the page.
In just two weeks, I think it’s… Not organically because I’ve
been paying for the traffic, but for 50 bucks a day, I have
gotten… Well, I can just tell you. I’m looking at it right
now. I’ve spent $600 and have 1,227 fans right now, and it’s
probably sent over 3,000 clicks to iTunes, which I don’t know
how many of those become subscribers and download. It’s a
nominal cost. I think I’m paying, on average, including the
United States, I do marketing to the United States, Canada,
U.K., and Australia, which are the big markets for me, including
those and with all the other countries I’m marketing to, I’m
probably at 10 to 15 cents a click right now. I think that’s
been a big push to it.
Then, also, just leveraging my personal network on Facebook has
been really big as well. I haven’t done this yet. I have this
game plan. We talked about it earlier, that we don’t have to get
into now, but as soon as I am ready to kind of just go all out,
I will then go back and ask everybody that I’ve interviewed to
share it. I’m also connected to a lot of influencers over the
last few years. I’ve been earning a lot of reciprocity, or I
hope that I have, by constantly promoting and sharing their
stuff.
I will then, when I’m ready, I want to make an all-out assault
on Dave Ramsey and that number one spot in business. It’s going
to be very coordinated, and I’m going to be bringing in every
weapon that I’ve got, but I’ll be reaching out to all the
influencers, I’ll crank up the ads that day, I’ll email my list,
and basically just abuse all my friends in social media and real
life, and ask them to help with that mission, and we’ll see what
happens.
Trent: This is kind of a piggyback on my question about the business
model. I have a lot of people in my audience who are marketing
consultants, run a marketing agency, or a small business of some
kind, that it may not have occurred to them that they should
have a podcast. Do you think they should?
Sean: I guess it just depends. For me, it’s so easy to generate this
kind of content. I can do two episodes or three episodes a week
in a couple hours a week. Trent, this conversation we’re having
is not like work, if you will. It’s not like traditional work?
For me, this is educational for me to do podcasts. When I
interview these people and they’re sharing with me how they
built their entire business, and their exact model, and what led
to this major increase here, and this and that, I’m getting like
a free education from somebody who has been there and done that,
and at the same time, I’m taking that content and using it for
the podcast.
For me, it’s easy, so if you have the time, and the energy, and
access, or have places you can find people to interview, to
feature, if you want to do interviews, I would say absolutely. I
don’t see any reason why not.
I think iTunes features just about every new podcast that comes
out in new and noteworthy. You got there. I got there. That just
exposes you to an audience that you don’t have currently. I
think with a simple game plan, you can do it, and build a good
audience. I think the audience always equates to value, so
there’s nothing wrong with building an audience. You’re
basically just building your own personal value further, so I
would say yeah. I don’t see any reason why not.
Trent: It really doesn’t take a whole lot of time to do these
interviews, folks. If you think that there’s like a ton of prep
work… I’m going to go on record here. Sean, do you know how
much prep I did for this interview? Zero.
Sean: I can tell from your questions, zero. No, I’m kidding.
Trent: Normally, I do actually put about a half hour into prep, but as
I mentioned to you off-air, my wife and I are moving at the end
of this week up to Boise, and I’ve had no time. I am so far
behind between packing boxes…
Sean: You don’t even need to. That’s the thing, though. We chatted
for 10, 15 minutes. You probably had everything you needed to
know, and we got rolling, and here we are. It’s not difficult.
Trent: Yeah, I agree. Where do you find your guests?
Sean: That’s a good question. A couple of different places, but I’m
in a couple entrepreneur groups on Facebook that are private
groups, so originally I reached out to those guys. I offered
just to interview any of them because everybody in that group is
an entrepreneur. There are 200 guys I’m in this group with, and
everybody in there is an entrepreneur. Most of them have mid-six
figure to mid-seven figure businesses, and some even eight- and
nine-figure businesses. I got about a dozen interviews out of
those guys.
Then that led here, and there, and there, and then I reached
back out to everybody and said, “Hey, I’m looking for new
guests. If you know, great.” Then I have another friend who runs
a big female entrepreneur association. I had her reach out and
got about 10 different females to interview from that.
I just went to where they hung out, and relied on some friends,
or relied on the audience, I guess, just to help me kind of
source that. For me, it’s pretty easy. I can probably just go to
Inc., Fast Company, or Forbes. I haven’t done this yet because I
haven’t needed to, but I could just dig through their issues
online or in print, and find great people. People’s success
stories are…
Trent: Everywhere.
Sean: Exactly.
Trent: There are not too many people who are successful who don’t want
to talk about it.
Sean: Exactly. These guests, people are always like, “I can’t believe
they revealed this information to you,” and this and that. I’m
going through it, I guess, myself right now, and no one ever
takes the time to care how you got to where you got. When you
take an interest in somebody, you want to know their story. It’s
just unbelievable to me the amount that they vomit out.
Trent: It is the best free education going. A case in point about how
easy it is to get guests. Had you heard of me before I sent you
a tweet?
Sean: No, I hadn’t.
Trent: There you go. I got 140 characters to get Sean on the show, and
I suckered him into it.
Sean: You did a good job. It’s been interesting. I’ve been so behind
the scenes for so long that since I started this podcast, I’ve
been getting three or four a week, and I just thought well,
screw it. I’m just going to use that time to make some new
friends and spread the word a little bit further.
Trent: Absolutely.
Sean: Anybody listening could probably shoot me a message. You have
three listeners that will probably jump on to it.
Trent: All right. Did you talk about geotargeting in the Facebook
thing we just talked about?
Sean: Yeah.
Trent: You did? All right, so we talked about monetizing it, we talked
about how you promoted it to your list. Here’s my show prep for
you. Is there anything that I missed with respect to how you
promoted your podcast to get to where you’re at?
Sean: Probably. There’s probably stuff I’ve forgotten. Can I point
people to that post I wrote?
Trent: Yeah.
Sean: Is that lame to do with your audience, or your show?
Trent: No. Hijack away, man.
Sean: I just wrote a post where I sat down one night and I knew it
would get my friends interested, and my community more
interested in it, so I wrote a post where I just revealed
everything. If you go to TheMoneyPillow.com it’s there. I think
I’m going to continue doing that. I would recommend Trent, or
even listeners, doing the same. People are really excited about
the transparency and love it, and as long as this thing
continues to succeed, I’ll do it.
Trent: Yeah, I think it’s a great idea, and it’s something that I
think I’ve mentioned in past episodes. My wife, she’s an
entrepreneur as well, and we’ve decided to start the Bright
Ideas Agency, and she’s going to run it, not me. I’m kind of in
the advisory capacity. We’re going to have an online dialogue,
it’s going to be on the blog, and we’re going to write about
stuff that we’re doing to get customers, and stuff we’re doing
to use marketing automation, and all sorts of stuff. I think
that people love to have the ability to look over someone’s
shoulder who has either had the courage to forge ahead and do
something they haven’t done yet, or maybe do something that
they’ve already done. Doing it again, but for the person looking
over their shoulder, it’s a huge value to be able to do that.
Sean: Huge. Yeah, I’ve gotten so much good feedback. Then what ended
up happening, too, is I got a lot of really important
podcasters, like Libsyn, the hosting company, and a couple other
people just shared that blog post, which drove a bunch of new
traffic. Well, not a bunch, but probably 500 to 1,000 hits to my
site. Not that much. Probably 300 to 500, but I got a bunch of
email and comments that I had never seen before, so I’m going to
keep it going. I’m going to keep just being transparent and
sharing that stuff. Like I said, as long as it’s successful. If
it starts failing, I don’t want to admit that I’ve failed.
Trent: That is the double-edged sword of all that transparency.
Sean: I’m kidding. I will, and I’ll probably have all kinds of great
excuses as to why it happened.
Trent: Oh, of course. My computer broke down. My dog ate my homework,
and stuff like that, yeah. Off the podcast. On to what I talked
about in the beginning. I promised that I would ask you about
the team. Of course, I’m very selfishly interested in this as
well. I have a team, but I want to know what does your team look
like? How many people are on it? Are they full time? Are they
all overseas contractors? Can you walk us through it?
Sean: How it looks now, and it was completely different six months
ago, or not completely, but for the most part… Forever, I had
a virtual team. When I lived in Columbus, for a couple of years
we had an office with people and then we moved to virtual, so
for two years I ran it with a team out of Kentucky of six that
did everything from graphics to copywriting to shopping cart
integrations. They did everything you can think of. Literally
everything, and there wasn’t anything they didn’t know. If they
didn’t know it, they’d learn it, and they were really good.
Trent: Were these full-time people, or were they independent
contractors?
Sean: Everybody I have is independent contractors. Now I have some
employees, but at that point everybody I had was independent
contractors. I had a team of six in Kentucky who did a lot of
stuff, and I’d say out of that six, two worked for me pretty
much full time and four were part time. What I mean by that is
one guy did graphics for 10 to 15 hours a week. Somebody else
did transcription and audio/video stuff for another 10 or 15
hours, etc.
I have a part-time person who has been with me pretty much since
day one. My very first employee, or contractor, and she is in
New York. She does all of our customer support and a lot of kind
of general admin and assistant-type stuff. I have a bookkeeper
that lives in Iowa, and she’s the bookkeeper, but also just does
all of our finances, manages everything.
Trent: I’m sorry. Is she looking for clients? I need a bookkeeper.
Sean: Do you? I might be able to refer you.
Trent: Please do.
Sean: I’d be happy to.
Trent: Thank you.
Sean: We’ll talk off-air about that, but yeah, I would be happy to.
She does everything for me, and then also does a bunch of other
stuff within the business as well. General kind of assistant or
admin stuff as well. Then, outside of that, probably a dozen
contractors that I call on multiple times a year for different
projects. That was it.
Then recently, as I started to get busy again at the end of May,
I got kind of frustrated with some delays that were going on
between customer support, or design, or this or that. The other
thing was I’m in California now and after 2:00 pm, I couldn’t
contact my team on the East Coast, in Kentucky, or in Eastern
Standard Times. That was really frustrating because I would surf
until 11:00 and then get out of the water, have some lunch, and
then I’d have about an hour where I could communicate with them.
An hour or two after I got to work I couldn’t call them anymore,
so I was like this sucks.
Then I started noticing some things. I think I was delegating
too much to them and things were starting to fall by the wayside
here and there. Ninety percent of it got done, and got done
brilliantly, but there was this 10% here or there that just
bothered me. I would be the one clogging the chain, and then
they were so busy they wouldn’t follow up with me on it. They’d
send me an email about something, and I’d never respond. I’d
looked at it and then forgot to mark it as unread, and I had
forgotten about it. A month later I’d be like, “Hey, whatever
happened to this or that?” and they’d be like, “Oh, well we
emailed you and you never responded.” I’m like, “In the past you
would follow up the next day, or the next day, and the next day.
‘Hey, what’s up?'” and they got so busy you stopped doing it.
I got kind of frustrated and said, “I’m going to hire a local
team and I’m going to put a giant white board on the wall where
I can write all these things down and hold them accountable.”
That’s essentially what I did. It’s worked out brilliantly
because, having the same people… I haven’t had this in so
long, where people are in the same room. The customer service
person can complain to the tech guy about a technical issue and
in 10 minutes he can fix something that’s been a frustration for
two years for our customer support staff. It’s been great having
some synergy with the same people in the room.
I think I’ve cut that portion of the employment cost in half,
and I’m probably getting twice the production out of them. I’ve
got people that are more… Literally, the developer and the IT
guy I have are probably five times as skilled as anybody I’ve
ever worked with.
Trent: Oh, that’s nice. Can I give you an idea that I discovered a few
years ago for, I call it, my task management dashboard?
Sean: Sure.
Trent: Everyone I explain this to freaks out, so I’m going to share it
with you because hopefully it will be useful to you. I have a
Google doc I’ve had for years, so it’s shared. Obviously anyone
who is working for me anywhere in the world… I do this for my
wife as well because she runs the business with me. Things fall
through the crack in email. It’s hopeless. It’s color coded, so
every column is…
Like for me, I have episodes. All my shows. Each show is one
column, and then, in the rows on the left are all of the tasks
involved with pre-production, post-production, promotion, blah,
blah, blah, that we have to do over and over with each episode.
Then, it’s divided into whose section, so I’m like the top two
rows, which is like “record episode,” and then my wife has some
stuff, and then our overseas VA has some stuff.
It’s all color coded. Blue square means “hey, there’s a new
thing you’ve got to do.” Yellow means it’s in progress. Red
means there’s a problem, and green means it’s done. Any person
who has access to that visual dashboard can instantly see the
status of kind of everything because the colors really stand
out.
Sean: Wow. That is pretty trippy. You have that in a Google doc, you
said?
Trent: Yeah. Just put it in a Google doc and then what you can do is
get your people to subscribe for updates, so my VA, every time I
do anything, Google doc sends her an email saying something
changed. All she has to do is log on and look for more blue
squares for her because that means more new tasks. Then, I can
see how burdened she is or isn’t by the number of blue squares
relative to the number of green squares, which are tasks that
are done.
If there’s a problem, she changes it to red and puts in the
comments of the cell whatever the issue is, and then I can go
and solve it and change it back to blue or yellow again.
Sean: Did you say it has… Like when you change the doc, it sends an
email notification automatically?
Trent: Yeah, it does. It’s just a built-in notification system that
Google offers.
Sean: Is that something you have to select?
Trent: Yeah.
Sean: We have a bunch of docs that we share, and I never get any
notifications.
Trent: It’s called “subscribe to changes.”
Sean: Oh, is that in there? Very cool. Yeah, that’s pretty smart. I
like that. It’s very sharp.
Trent: Yeah, because a white board is only good if you’re in the room,
right? This is kind of my digital task management dashboard.
Sean: Exactly, yeah. I love it. You know what you ought to do? You
ought to share that doc with your listeners, or share a dummy
doc.
Trent: I have.
Sean: Oh, you have?
Trent: I will do it again in the show notes for this episode, so if
you’re listening to this… What is the URL for this show going
to be? Give me half a second here, and I’ll tell you what number
it is. It’s going to be BrightIdeas.co slash something, and I’ve
just got to see what number I’m on. I’ll put it at the end of
the show as well, but just in case you’re listening right now,
which you are. Nothing like babbling while you’re interviewing.
I’m going to make this one number 71, so BrightIdeas.co/71, and
that will take you directly to the post. In that, I will put a
link to a screenshot of what I’ve just described.
Sean: Awesome.
Trent: I’ve got to make a note to myself. Link’s mentioned, so…
Sean: Yeah, that’s really smart. I did not know about that subscribe
to changes deal, and I can see how that could be powerful.
Trent: Yeah, it’s pretty cool. When the email goes out, it doesn’t say
what the changes are, it just says something… Or does it? I
can’t remember because I barely ever look at it because I’m not
the one receiving the emails. I’m the one that’s making the
changes that cause the emails to go out.
Sean: Got it.
Trent: The great thing is, do you know how much that costs to do?
Nothing. Thanks, Google.
Sean: Yeah, I love Google docs. Absolutely love it.
Trent: Back to the team. Where do you find the people that work for
you? Are you doing what everyone else does? You go and put a job
description, and you’re like super descriptive in what you want,
and you put it on oDesk, or Freelancer, or wherever, or are you
doing something that’s different than that?
Sean: For the virtual people, I just literally relied on referrals
for people that I had, friends that I had in the business
industry. Actually, the guy that ended up eventually creating
the team that I hired was somebody I’d met in a forum somewhere,
and he was just answering really smart responses to everything,
questions that I had, and other people. Then at one point, he
offered some services, and I hired him. He ended up becoming a
mentor for many years. I think I outgrew him as a mentor. That’s
the wrong choice of words, but I got to a level where that
portion wasn’t as valuable, but he always was just a sound guy,
and good advice.
Anyway, I found him through that forum. Everybody else was
mainly through referrals from friends. I would reach out and
say, “Hey, do you know somebody who can do this or that?” and
they’d refer them.
For the local people that I hired, I ran ads on Craigslist and
had a bitch of a time, excuse my language if there are kids
around, had a hard time getting people to even respond to my ad.
Santa Barbara has about a couple hundred thousand people in the
greater area, and when I ran the ad for a customer service
person, I had 50 responses in two days, and I had to take it
down. It was overwhelming. When I started running developer, and
IT, just specific niche job types of ads, I was getting two or
three responses a month. It started making me really nervous.
Then one day I went to run another ad because I’d gotten three
responses in a month, and none of them panned out. I went to the
section that I was going to be running the ad in, and I looked
at it, and I noticed all the ads looked exactly the same, so in
other words, they were like “web developer for tech company,” or
“front-end developer for whatever,” and blah, blah, blah.
I was like, “God, this is a good opportunity,” so I wrote an ad,
and the subject line of the ad was “Do You Build Great Shit?” In
parentheses, I put “WordPress, PHP, HTML, JAVA, etc.,” or
something like that, so that they knew when they saw “do you
build blah, blah, blah,” the stuff that was in parentheses was
the coding languages that they know.
The ad basically just said something along the lines of if you
build great shit, we want you. I think in my ad copy I wrote, “I
can write this whole long description of what we want, but
basically, we need you to be proficient in WordPress, this, and
that, and the other. We’re a four-year-old company. We do seven
figures in revenue. We’ve had a virtual staff forever. We’re
looking to hire on a local team. This is not a nine-to-five job.
We really are just focused on results. You can come and go as
you want as long as you’re getting the job done and keeping us
happy. If you want to work for a fun, cool company, and build
some great stuff together, hit reply.” That got 30 responses, I
think, in a week.
Trent: Nice.
Sean: Yeah, and I found the most amazing guy from that. What ended up
being the funniest thing, Trent, was I already actually knew
him. He was a good friend of mine’s brother, so I didn’t know
that. When he responded, I’m like, “Oh, my God, I know this
guy,” but he saw the ad and didn’t realize it was me posting it.
Trent: What kind of money are you paying for local talent to do
technical work like that?
Sean: He does development work, so he’s $5,000 a month. He’s worth
every penny. A lot of the activities I put him on generate
revenue, and he’s already done a couple things that are
generating more than his salary on autopilot basis by fixing
things and creating some good stuff.
Trent: Very nice. What advice would you give to somebody… I know
there are lots of people that are listening to this show that
are what I call a solo entrepreneur. They go get a client, then
they get immersed in fulfillment of the services that they’re
going to deliver to that client, then they get bogged down in
the bookkeeping because you’ve got to have bookkeeping, and
then, then, then, and then the job’s done, and they’re like,
“Oh, crap, I need another client,” and the cycle starts all over
again. Not a good hamster wheel to be on.
The reason they’re on it, it’s not like they’ve never heard of
this idea of outsourcing or building a team. I think, if I had
to guess, because I used to be that guy like over a decade ago
when I started my first business, you’re limited by this either
perceived or reality of constrained cash flow. “Oh, I can’t
afford it” is generally what the objection is. What advice would
you give to that person? Let’s just say that they’re generating,
I don’t know, $40,000, $50,000, $60,000 a year in billings for
their one-person shop.
Sean: What advice would I give them based on…
Trent: To build a team, yeah.
Sean: Yeah. There are three options, if you will. Number one, you can
keep doing what you’re doing and just hustle your ass off.
Sometimes it’s what you have to do because that’s the only way
you know out, and if that’s all you can do, that’s all you can
You can generally make that work. It’s just a pain in the
ass, and then there’s an opportunity cost from all the time and
energy that you’re spending on that, and then all the mental
energy that you’re expending on that as opposed to revenue-
generating tasks.
Two is you can hire somebody cheap. When I first started, I ran
an ad. It’s a long story, but the person I ended up hiring, I
said, “I can’t pay you what you’re worth. I know you’re worth
more. I just don’t make enough now to pay you. If you’re willing
to come on now and work for less, I’ll take care of you later.”
She said, “I like you a lot, and I’d love to work for you even
it’s for less than what I’m worth. That’s fine.”
The reality is she still works for me to this day, four years
later, and she made my life so much easier so that I could start
focusing on growth and growth-producing tasks as opposed to
those kinds of tasks. To this day, she’s still with me, and she
probably makes three times what she’s worth now. I don’t mind
paying her because she’s incredibly loyal. I can call her at
midnight if I have a crisis. She’ll answer the phone and she’ll
help me out. I don’t do that, but she’s just an amazing person.
I overpay her now, but for years, I underpaid her, so I have no
issue with that.
People that are loyal, I don’t mind taking care of them. It’s
not that I overpay her. She works for what she earns, but I
could probably get somebody for half of what I pay her to do the
same work, but I don’t because she’s been incredibly loyal to me
and made some sacrifices to work for me early on, so I view it
as a good exchange.
Trent: Just in the interest of transparency because I’ve been a CEO
and had a staff and so forth, too, so for the folks to
understand this, it’s not that Sean’s super-duper altruistic.
It’s also there’s a massive pain to changing from someone who is
really good at what they do, and you have a relationship with,
and you know that when you assign them something it gets done to
trying to find someone who can do most of the stuff, and they
can do it, I can pay them half, blah, blah, blah. It sucks.
Sean: You never know what you’re going to get, too. You hire somebody
new and six months later they’re gone, and you have to do the
whole cycle over again, so there is a huge pain.
For me, this type of position that she does is fairly simple
stuff. I could, without much pain, replace her, but I never
would because she was so loyal to me early on, and amazing. My
thing now is I probably need to dedicate some time into getting
her to do some other things outside of what she’s doing because
she’s making more than she should, but in the meantime, I don’t
mind paying her what she gets for that reason.
That was the first two. You can do it yourself. You can pay
somebody. Offer to pay them cheap, and you’d be surprised, if
people like you, that they’ll do it.
The third thing is you can get somebody to do it for free. There
are interns that can do it. Interns are good, but you have that
pain point of losing them after a certain period of time, but if
the tasks are not that challenging, you can have an intern do
Or, some sort of trade or exchange with somebody else.
Right now, for example, I have somebody that is like begging me
to do coaching with them, and I just don’t like doing consulting
or coaching-type work because I feel like I’m obligated and
blah, blah, blah, but she’s been a great customer. She’s been a
good friend in social media, and all this stuff.
I said, “Look, I’ll give you a 20-minute call on me. I’ve
appreciated all your support over the years, but that’s really
all I’ve got.” We start talking, she shared with me her whole
story, and it kind of pulled on some heartstrings. She had some
hardships. I realized I was in a position to kind of help her,
and I think I really, truly can change her life with some of the
direction that I’ll give her on what to do with her business
now.
I said, “I do need somebody to work on TheMoneyPillow.com and
format all this… The website right now, in its form, sucks. It
could be a whole lot better because I don’t have the time and
energy, and I haven’t found somebody to hire to do that, but if
you want to do it, I’ll do it, and I’ll give you a half hour
coaching a month, and we can talk here and there, back and
forth.” She’s just like, “I’d love to.” She’s doing it for me
for free and I’m giving her some value and exchanging some
advice or knowledge with her.
What I told her was, too, I said, “If you want to do this for
free, I’ll be happy to coach you and then, after 60 or 90 days,
if the podcasts are generating revenue, and you want to continue
to do it, I’ll be happy to pay you X amount of dollars to
continue doing it, but I won’t be coaching you at that point. I
don’t want to coach you beyond that point regardless.” She’s
just like, “Awesome. I’d love to do it as long as this isn’t
anything crazy, I’d love to do it, and get paid to do it in the
future,” so I’ll probably start paying her. She’s doing an
amazing job, and she’s going above and beyond, in the first few
days of working on it, beyond my expectations.
Those kind of exchanges work really well, and they work well for
I don’t want to throw $1,000 to $1,500 a month at somebody
to publish the podcasts and do all this stuff on there. I’m not
doing all the video editing, and the audio editing, and all that
stuff now. I’m not taking the blog content and really filling it
out to the level it should be, so she’s willing to do it for
free, and I’m going to give her a half hour a month of my time,
probably an hour in total, I would assume, which is no big deal
because I like helping people. I just hate feeling obligated to
do it.
Trent: Is she doing the post-production editing and the video editing
for you?
Sean: No, I’ve got somebody else doing that. A guy that kind of owes
me some favors, if you will, so he’s been doing that for awhile,
and he’s happy to do it. We’ll end up working on some projects
in the future together, and he knows that, so he’s doing that.
What I’m going to do is the first 30 days she’s doing all of the
on-the-page content, and the second 30 days I’m going to have
him teach her how to do the actual audio and video editing.
Trent: That’s a fantastic idea. If there’s anybody listening to this
episode right now, I am looking for someone to do my post-
production and some of the website work as well. If you are
interested in being coached by me, get a hold of me.
Trent@BrightIdeas.co and we’ll make a similar trade.
Sean: Awesome.
Trent: All right.
Sean: Somebody should respond to that, man, because to be able to
work directly with you has a huge value. The person that’s doing
this stuff for me now, I asked her today how it was going, and
she said she’s loving it. She said she never anticipated
enjoying the work, and for her, listening to all the interviews,
and going through all the content has been extremely educational
and fun for her, so she’s just like, “I’m actually loving it.”
Trent: No kidding. That’s kind of another good point. Just the mere
fact that you would have to listen to all the episodes is like
an advanced marketing degree through your ear buds.
Sean: It is, right?
Trent: It’s not like it’s all my great ideas. I’ve had some pretty
darn smart entrepreneurs on this show who are killing it, and
I’m good at getting them to explain step by step exactly what
they’re doing to get that result. Maybe I should take my own
advice and just listen to more of my own episodes.
It’s funny. I actually did re-listen to one of my own episodes.
As people who listen to my show regularly know, we’re launching
this agency for my wife, and I had interviewed a couple people
who are really doing well with their agencies, so I went and re-
listened to my own interviews. I was there the first time
around, but you can’t take as good notes when you’re the host of
the show as you can when you’re just sitting in a chair with
your ear buds.
Sean: Yeah, it’s a different experience listening to it after you’ve
done it, isn’t it?
Trent: Yeah, it is, very much so. Out of my own episode, I did this
one with Graig Presti, I think I got a solid page of notes of
action items that were built into our launch plan, and it was
really good.
Sean: That’s awesome. Yeah, I do the same. I go back and listen to
every episode mainly just because I want the extra download to
my numbers.
Trent: I don’t believe you.
Sean: Yeah, I’m kidding. I find it educational, man. I do. There’s
always stuff when we do the interviews. For example, you’re
interviewing me and there’s probably been a moment or two where
you kind of drift off in La-La Land in your head because you’re
thinking about something I said, so it’s been a lot like
watching a movie twice, or reading a book a second time for me
to go back and listen to it. I’ve heard things that I must have
just unconsciously just blacked out in thought.
Trent: Yeah, that’s true, because a lot of times when you’re talking,
I’m either writing something down, I should video this one day
so people can see what I’m doing, or I’m looking at the next
question, or I’m thinking about where I want to take the
interview. Sometimes I’m going, “Holy crap, what’s the next
question I’m supposed to ask? I don’t have one written down.”
Sean: The other thing is, too, I’ve noticed a lot of things that have
helped me improve my podcast, Trent, and it’s like geez, dude,
just shut up and let your guest talk. It’s just like when I hear
myself, I’m like, “All right. Next time I’m not going to do
that.”
Trent: Yeah. I am guilty of that, absolutely. I think I’m getting
better. Hopefully some people who are listening to this show are
laughing their butts off now because they’re like, “Yeah, Trent,
you’re on drugs. You’re not getting any better.”
Sean: Oh, that’s great.
Trent: With that said, another question coming your way. How are you
doing for time, by the way?
Sean: I’m good.
Trent: I had mentioned at the beginning of this episode I wanted to
cover three broad topics. The first one was how you launched
your podcast and got so much traction. The second one was
talking about the team. Then, I want to talk more about this
publishing business that you run because I’m super interested in
that business. It’s something that I probably could, or maybe
even should, be doing as well.
Take two minutes and just kind of give us the quick overview of
what the business is, and then I’ve got my first couple of
questions kind of tucked away in my mind that I want to ask you,
but I want people to have context for what those questions are.
Sean: Sure. I have an online, or digital, publishing company, and we
take digital trainings and sell them. I don’t do any of the
content myself. There’s a little bit here and there I do, but
I’m not like the face or the name or anything behind it. What I
focus on is just finding other experts who are really good with
a certain topic or niche, but don’t have the audience that we
have, so we then take them, publish them, take their content,
package it up in a sexy package, and then sell it. They bring
the content, we bring everything they need. Our deals are they
have to be available for some promotional-type stuff here and
there. That, provide the content, and provide updates to the
content should things change, and then we handle all the rest.
Trent: It’s digital publishing promotion at its finest.
Sean: Exactly. It’s pretty much the same as a book publishing company
publishing somebody’s content just from a book perspective.
Trent: Only probably more profitable.
Sean: You got it.
Trent: Let’s go back to the very beginning when this business had not
done its first dollar of revenue. I didn’t know you back then,
so correct me if I’m wrong here, but I’m assuming that nobody
knew who you were. What did you do before this? I guess I should
ask that question.
Sean: I had owned a real estate company. I had a brokerage, an
investment firm. That company, I was in charge of all the
marketing, and managed all the agents as well.
Trent: By chance, was your very first product of this digital
publishing company a real estate training product?
Sean: No, but when I sold that business I thought that’s what I would
Just as a little side project, I started blogging about
Twitter. This was in 2008, and I got a website. It’s now defunct
and you won’t find it, but it was MyTwitterExperiment.com.
I just wrote every day for 30 minutes. I’d spend 20 to 30
minutes writing a blog post about things I’d learned that day
with Twitter. I was really into Twitter, so I just though,
“Well, I’ll just write about Twitter, and do this for a couple
of months, and just see what happens. It will be fun, and it
will get my creative juices flowing,” so that’s literally what I
did.
By the end of 30 days, it like really picked up. It was getting
tons of re-tweets on each post. People all of a sudden started
seeing me as an authority. I was getting over 1,000 visits a day
within a month to that website.
Trent: That’s crazy.
Sean: It is crazy, but if you think about it, I was on Twitter
building a huge audience on Twitter, and then writing about
Twitter and how I was building a huge audience on Twitter. It
really was just something that was really easy for them to
share, and at the time, nobody was doing it. Now, everything has
changed, and it’s not as easy as it was back then.
Anyway, that’s what I did and I just took off, so I thought,
“Wow, I should probably create a opt-in so that people can join
a mailing list.” I knew, with real estate, we had a big annual
list of people that were interested in buying or selling
properties. I knew kind of the value in that, so I thought,
“Well, I know there are some different products I can market
that I’ve been touting on the blog and earn affiliate
commissions.” That’s what I started doing, collecting an email
list, was getting an insane amount of opt-ins every day.
By month three, I think I started monetizing it. My first
attempts at monetizing were just sending out offers to products
and services that I used. They could be software, they could be
all different kinds of things, and I was getting, I think, the
first month or two like $1,000 or $2,000, so three months in I
was earning $1,000 to$2,000 a month by sending out a few emails
a month, and then putting a few in the auto-responders.
Then, I wrote a book on Twitter, about 120-page book, started
selling that, and by month three to six, I was probably earning
$3,000 to $4,000 a month in book sales and affiliate promotions,
and it was going up by a hair every month.
Then I met a business partner that I had at the time, Lewis
Howes. I don’t know if you know him, but he was doing the same
thing with LinkedIn. I said, “Dude, my audience can really use
what you’ve got, and your audience can use what I’ve got. We
should partner up and do some stuff,” and we did. That was kind
of the beginning of everything.
Trent: His course was the first product that your publishing company
brought to market?
Sean: Well, we were business partners for a long time and originally
we created some trainings together, and then we did the LinkedIn
training because it was just this simple little training. We
were selling mainly higher-end products like $500 to $1,000, and
sometimes $2,000.
Trent: People were paying $2,000 to get a LinkedIn course?
Sean: No, it was like a six-week live training, and a bunch of other
things, so they were paying that. They were getting consulting,
and some done-for-you-type stuff, and this, and a lot of stuff,
actually, for the money. We had a whole segment of our audience
that couldn’t afford all that, so we said let’s create this $100
LinkedIn training and we started selling that.
As soon as we did that, I realized there was some really good
revenue coming in from that, and I said, “We should publish one
on YouTube.” I had used YouTube a lot with my real estate
business and had tremendous success with it. I was getting,
literally, like five buyer leads a day from YouTube. If you’re a
realtor listening to this, you’re going to probably think I’m
full of shit, but our videos averaged about 5,000 views a video
because we did some pretty smart stuff with SEO for real estate.
It was really easy to get a property video up to the front of
Google at the time. Anyway, so it just crushed it.
I came up with an idea late one night, and I talked to my
business partner about it at the time. He was just like, “Maybe
we should find somebody else to produce it who is really kind of
an active expert in the field. Let them do all the content and
we’ll just focus on selling it.” I’m like, “Yeah, that’s a good
call.” We both knew James Wedmore. We reached out to him. He was
really receptive and open to do it, so that was our next
product.
As soon as we inked that deal, I said, “Well, why don’t we do
Facebook as well if we’re going to do this and that?” We reached
out to Amy Porterfield that same week and got a commitment from
her to do FB Influence. That was how it all really began.
It was just this funny thing where we created this $100 product
and we did a product launch behind it and anticipated the sales
kind of dying down, and they ended up generating $300 to $400 a
day in revenue. I just thought, “Wow, if we had 10 to 20 legs,
different products generating this kind of revenue, that could
be great.” That was kind of the beginning of it.
Trent: I’m going to guess you’re probably familiar with
EarlyToRise.com?
Sean: Did you say Early To Rise?
Trent: Yeah.
Sean: Yeah.
Trent: They’re doing $20 million a year in information products from
what I have heard. Obviously I’ve never seen their books. Would
you say that your model is similar? Exactly the same?
Sean: Yeah, it’s similar. We’re not doing that kind of revenue.
Trent: Where I’m going with this is they obviously…
Sean: Oh, this is Craig Valentine, yeah. Here are two things. This
space is fitness. If they’re doing $20 million in revenue,
they’re probably keeping about a million of that. This is a
ClickBank product. I’m just kind of giving you some insight. I
would rather have my business at one-tenth of the revenue and
probably similar profits.
Their business model, they have to give away the majority of
their profit. Actually, I shouldn’t be saying any of this. Never
mind. I won’t even go there. It’s just a high revenue, low
margin business. Craig’s a genius and he’s got this thing fully
automated, I think, for the most part.
Anyway, nothing bad to say about those guys. I don’t mean it
like that, but it’s just I chose to grow my business in a
different way. For me, I would rather have a smaller business
where I get to keep the majority of it versus… I have a friend
that has a company with 1,500 employees. Literally, he started
nine years ago, and now has 1,500 employees, and the revenue
they do is astronomical, but his salary, I think, is close to $2
million a year, and I think I can get there with 10 employees.
Trent: Yeah, I wouldn’t want 1,500.
Sean: Can you imagine?
Trent: Can I imagine…
Sean: Managing 1,500 people?
Trent: Well, no, because you’d manage five people that would manage
1,500 people, would be my guess.
Sean: Yeah, but, you still have… Anyway, go ahead. Sorry to derail
that.
Trent: You damn hijacker, you. The reason I brought ETR up was because
my understanding from the interview that I listened to with CEO,
they’re driving paid traffic into the funnel and they convert it
profitably. I was using that as a segue to ask how are you
driving traffic to your various legs on this e-publishing
company? For you, it’s not one site. It’s a whole bunch of
different sites for the different products. How many products is
interesting to me, and you can throw that number out if you want
to, but what I’m really interested in is have you managed to use
paid media to evergreen the funnel profitably?
Sean: I don’t know if this was while we were on the air or off the
air, but remember when we talked, I was telling you how I was
just sitting in the water waiting for waves and thinking how I
had a lot of holes in my business? That’s one of them. The paid
traffic. We don’t do any paid traffic. All of our sales, and I’m
just looking right now to see if there’s any truth in what I’m
about to say, we do about, outside of promotional periods and
everything, probably in the ball park of $3,000 to $4,000 a day
in revenue, all from referral, word of mouth, repeat customers,
affiliate traffic, you name it. It just comes from everything,
so paid traffic is a big opportunity for us.
One of the problems we have with doing paid traffic is we’ve
never sold our products as this will make you rich. That’s the
kind of stuff that sells really well, and converts really well,
but we didn’t want to go that route. We’re not trying to make
anybody rich. We’re just trying to educate you. It’s a challenge
to pay for traffic and get it to convert when you’re not making
all these great and grand promises that send people over the
edge to buy.
That’s the deal. We are now getting into that, and we’ve done a
lot of paid stuff in the past, but we never stuck with anything
for one reason or another. That is a big focus for me.
In May, we started implementing… I needed to work on upsells
and a funnel after people purchased, offering them additional
things should they need it. We’ve got that dialed in at about 90
days that the revenues on the front-end sale are up about 80%.
If somebody pays me $100, the average customer is now paying
$180 within two weeks of buying our products.
Trent: That’s good.
Sean: Yeah, so I wanted to work on that prior to spending money, so
that if I now have to spend $150 to earn $100 back on day one, I
know that by day 14, I’ll generate $180 in theory. It could be
more, it could be less, because the traffic’s a little bit
different, but that’s the idea.
Trent: You’re working on it?
Sean: We just now, literally like the last couple weeks, started
running some small samples, but that, to me, is a way that I can
increase our revenues that we’re not currently doing.
Trent: Are you using Infusionsoft on the backend of your business, or
businesses?
Sean: Yeah, Infusionsoft is one of the tools we use. We use that and
then, also, we do a lot of stuff with ClickBank.
Trent: You’re not using the Infusionsoft shopping cart. You use
ClickBank for payment processing and affiliate?
Sean: We do. With the paid stuff, we’re using Infusion, and with a
lot of our in-house stuff we use Infusion, but probably 60% of
our business goes through ClickBank.
Trent: Not that I’m any ClickBank expert at all, but it seems to me
like their business has also gone through a huge change in the
last 12 to 18 months.
Sean: In what fashion?
Trent: A lot less biz-opp, IM products.
Sean: Oh, yeah. They’re kind of moving away from that, which is good
because there are a lot of great products on there, and they
have a certain stigma attached with it. I couldn’t care less
what else is on there. Ninety percent of my customers have no
idea what ClickBank even is.
For me, it just makes my life easy because I don’t have to worry
about tracking sales, paying affiliates, issuing W9s, collecting
W9s, running reports, blah, blah, blah. All I do is just get a
check, and they handle everything for me. I don’t have to worry
about taxes. I don’t have to worry about European VAT taxes. I
don’t have to worry about state taxes. I don’t have to worry
about all these random things that often in Infusion is not
automated or set up for you. If you are successful, you could
have a government agency knocking on your door saying you owe us
a lot of money and you’re going to jail for not paying your
taxes. I love ClickBank for just that alone.
Trent: That’s a good point. We’re going to nerd out here just for a
moment, but Infusionsoft users will be able to appreciate this.
When you’re using Infusionsoft shopping cart and a purchase
happens that’s a goal in a campaign, you can trigger all sorts
of events off the satisfaction of a goal. Can you plug into the
API at ClickBank to be able to accomplish more or less the same
thing? Do you know?
Sean: Yeah, you can. The only thing we literally use Infusionsoft
anymore for is the shopping cart purposes. We have shifted to
our own email software that’s housed on our servers. There’s a
whole long technical story to get into, but essentially our
emails were going into spam. When your emails get over a certain
size, they start getting looked at differently by Gmail, and
Hotmail, and all that stuff. If you’re not getting 50% open
rates, often times a lot of your email will end up in spam.
Again, it’s really technical. I don’t want to get into it, but
we have our own servers now, so we have the APIs from Infusion
and ClickBank tied into our servers so that when a purchase
happens, it goes into an auto-responder within our own email
provider on our servers.
Trent: You said you still are using Infusionsoft’s shopping cart?
Sean: To process stuff, and we’ll probably change that shortly
because it’s way too costly to be using just for a shopping
cart.
Trent: Yeah. I’m confused because ClickBank is the shopping cart, so
are you…
Sean: There are two reasons for that. ClickBank, at the end of the
day, if I’m selling something with myself, on $100 product, I
see about $88 of it, or on a $97 product, I see $88. With
Infusionsoft, on our merchant fees, on a $97 product, I’ll see
about $94. It gets deposited into my bank account two days
later. With ClickBank, I think we have it set up to be deposited
every two weeks. Sometimes if you’re spending $3,000, $5,000 or
$10,000 a day, it’s nice to have that right back so you can plow
it back into it and not have to wait two weeks.
Trent: Absolutely. Again, I’m just trying to understand. You’re using
Infusionsoft shopping cart to sell your own products…
Sean: Yeah, when we’re driving the sales.
Trent: When affiliates are driving the sales, then… Got it. Light
bulb just went off.
Sean: There are certain circumstances where if we have an affiliate
that will do 100, 200, 300 sales, we’ll run that through our
cart and then we pay the affiliate immediately. They love it
because they get paid right away. These are our friends, so it’s
just like hey, we don’t want to run it through here and lose 5%.
All of that ongoing business, or that daily business, the
referral and all that stuff, that’s all run through ClickBank.
Trent: Do you have someone on your team that’s tasked with reaching
out to promotional partners on a regular basis, affiliates, and
saying, “Hey, let’s do a webinar, let’s do a promotion, let’s do
this, that, and the other thing”?
Sean: We don’t. A lot of guys I know do. We just don’t have that. For
me, that’s not our business model. We do some product launches
here and there, but that’s an easy thing for me to communicate.
I just call people I know that will promote it to their friends,
and then send emails out to… I think we have close to 10,000
affiliates, so we’ll just shoot an email out to those affiliates
and say, “Hey, we have this coming up. Here are some details
about it. Get involved if you want.”
Trent: All right, my friend, we have been an hour and 15, and I’ve
got, in nine minutes, another call I’ve got to get on, so I just
ran out of time. Actually, if you include our off-air talk,
we’ve been talking for two hours straight.
Sean: Oh, my gosh, yeah. I’ve got to get to work. I’ve got an
interview this morning for my podcast. I’ve really not done much
today.
Trent: Well, you contributed a whole bunch onto the Bright Ideas
podcast.
Sean: It was an honor to be on again.
Trent: Yeah, dude, it was a lot of fun. I thank you very much for all
the chit-chat. We’ve just got a couple quick things we’ll cover
off-air once I hit the stop button here, so don’t hang up right
away. Thank you very much. If anyone wants to get a hold of you,
what is the best way to do that?
Sean: I’m on Twitter, so that’s @SeanMalarkey. You can go to the blog
if you want to leave a comment there or anything, I see all
that. On Facebook, I’m kind of at my friend max. If you want to
add me there, I’d be happy to have you, and I’ll remove somebody
that I don’t really know or don’t see active. Just shoot me a
message if you would even if it goes to the other box. I’m
getting in the habit of checking that now because a lot of
people have been reaching out, so that’s very cool. Any which
way you want. Just Google me, you’ll find me.
Trent: Well, I sent you a Facebook friend request way at the beginning
of this, so you better add me, man.
Sean: All right, I will. I think I have to remove one person, but
it’s not too difficult.
Trent: That’s going to be a wrap for this episode with Sean. Thank you
so much for being on the show.
Sean: Again, thanks for having me, man. It was a real honor.
Trent: All right, to get the show notes for today’s episode, head over
to BrightIdeas.co/71. Now, if you really enjoyed this episode,
I’ve got to ask you a little favor. Love it if you would go over
to BrightIdeas.co/love. When you do, you will find a pre-
populated tweet. Would love it if you would share that with your
followers. Even more than that, would love it if you would take
a moment to go over to iTunes and give the show a five star
rating. The more five star ratings we get, the better iTunes
ranks us. The better our ranking, the more people get to listen
to the show, and the more Bright Ideas from proven entrepreneurs
just like Sean we get to spread out in the community.
Thank you so much. That’s it for this episode. I am your host,
Trent Dyrsmid, and I look forward to seeing you in the next one.
Take care and have a wonderful day.
About Sean Malarkey
Sean is the president of Inspired Marketing, a web based Internet Marketing Education company that helps clients achieve their goals online through digital trainings on all things Social Marketing & Online Marketing.
Sean is passionate about marketing and helping individuals better understand how to market themselves online using social media.
Sean is also the host of The Money Pillow, a blog and podcast dedicated to making money while you sleep (and play).
https://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Sean.jpg7202200Trent Dyrsmidhttps://brightideas.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bright-Ideas-logo-1030x255.pngTrent Dyrsmid2013-08-26 06:00:052020-09-24 07:22:54Digital Marketing Strategy: Sean Malarkey on How to Employ Smart Online Marketing to Create a Money Pillow
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