August 2nd, 2005 by Bob Bly
Here?s the situation:
You are the marketing manager of a company selling enterprise software for computer security to IT professionals.
Your marketing plan already includes a Web site, e-mail marketing campaign, and trade show exhibits.
In this hypothetical situation, there are two additional marketing tools you can use to promote your product, but you can only choose ONE.
The choice is either publish a series of white papers — or start a blog.
Which would you opt for? Why?
Category: Blogging, Direct Marketing, General, Online Marketing |
593 Comments »
July 29th, 2005 by Bob Bly
Readers of this blog liked The Copywriter?s Hall of Fame so much, let?s do another.
Below, in no particular order, are my picks for today?s most influential and successful Internet marketers:
1. Corey Rudl (deceased).
2. Yanik Silver.
3. Terry Dean.
4. Jim Edwards.
5. Joe Vitale.
6. Rich Scheffren.
7. Marlon Sanders.
6. Yanik Silver.
7. David Garfinkle.
8. Maria Veloso.
9. Alex Mandossian.
10. Joel Christopher.
11. Marc Stockman.
12. Tom Antion.
13. Fred Gleeck.
14. Peter Schaible.
15. Don Nicholas.
Do you agree? Any you would add to the list or delete from the list?
Category: Online Marketing |
120 Comments »
April 25th, 2005 by Bob Bly
If you publish an e-zine like I do (my Direct Response Letter), and your subscriber list is fairly large (mine is 55,000), you will be inundated with e-mail correspondence from e-book publishers — and other online marketers — asking you to promote their product to your list on an ?affiliate basis.?
In the affiliate arrangement, you ? the e-zine owner — get a commission on every sale generated by the promotion to your list, typically ranging from 25% to 50% of the product price.
The product can be promoted in a solo e-mail marketing message to the e-zine subscriber list or an online ad in the e-zine itself ? or both.
My question is this: is the e-zine publisher obligated to disclose to the reader that he is an affiliate for the product and will receive a cut of the sale? (I should mention that the overwhelming majority of affiliate promotions I receive as a consumer make no mention of this.)
Category: Online Marketing |
185 Comments »
April 11th, 2005 by Bob Bly
In a recent issue of my e-zine, I quoted an article from Catalog Success that advised repeating keywords on your site as often as possible, and in multiple places, so search engine ?spiders? can find them.
Pretty standard advice. But as soon as he read my issue, copywriter Nick Usborne e-mailed me to let me know what he thought of the suggestion.
?This is the worst possible advice you can give to anyone about optimizing their site for the search engines,? says Nick.
?It’s an element of what is referred to as ?keyword stuffing? and is either ignored by the search engine algorithms or, in bad cases, your page and site will be penalized. Worse still, it results in pages that read very strangely to human visitors.?
What about you? Do you try to get your keywords into your Web copy frequently, as Catalog Success advises? Or, like Nick, do you use keywords sparingly?
And more important, have you measured results to see which approach works best?
Category: Online Marketing |
97 Comments »
December 14th, 2004 by Bob Bly
The subject line ?Free Direct Mail Encyclopedia? outpulled ?Boost Sales, Increase Profits, and Expand Market Awareness? by 25%.
Three lessons we can learn from this:
1. Just changing the subject line can dramatically increase e-mail response rates.
2. You never know which subject line or headline is the winner until you test it. (The reasons some of you gave for why A would win seemed to me equally as valid and strong as the reasons others gave for B.)
3. The increase in response from the pulling power of ?free? more than outweighs any decline in response that may occur from ?free? triggering spam filters.
To download your free bonus prize ? my $29 report on improving online marketing results — go to www.bly.com and click on Reports.
By the way, this is a classic example of A/B split testing: test two approaches, and see which works best.
Don?t debate the merits of copy by arguing around a conference table. Test it and learn definitively which headline works best.
This is the basic philosophy that separates direct marketing from general advertising ? and by the way, it?s completely in keeping with the Cluetrain and blogging philosophies of marketing as conversation:
Don?t tell the market what you think sells. The market will tell YOU what they will buy.
P.S. If you guessed B instead of A, don?t feel bad. I often guess wrong on these challenges myself ? which is why I encourage clients to test more than one approach.
Category: Online Marketing |
124 Comments »
December 11th, 2004 by Bob Bly
Edith Roman Associates, a mailing list broker, uses e-mail marketing to promote their services.
In a recent e-mail offering free list recommendations and a free catalog of mailing lists, they split test two subject lines:
A. Free Direct Mail Encyclopedia.
B. Boost Sales, Increase Profits, and Expand Market Awareness.
Which do you think was the winner — and why?
Choose correctly, and you win a FREE special report on how to improve online marketing results (list price: $29).
(I’ll tell you how to get your free prize when I announce the correct answer.)
Category: Online Marketing |
135 Comments »