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Big marketing idea #1: Comment on blogs
A great way to get your website popular is to comment on blogs. For this to work, you have to leave comments on blogs that are related to your website, and the comments you leave have to be insightful.
If people feel that your comments are detailed and insightful, not only will they keep reading your comments, they’ll also head over to your website (when you leave a comment on a blog, you can typically leave your website URL).
Although this tactic seems simple, it is very effective. Just look at Mashable. Pete Cashmore made that blog popular by commenting on competing blogs like TechCrunch when he first launched it. He literally left hundreds of comments, and now he has one of the most popular websites on the Internet.
Big marketing idea #2: Leverage message boards
Message boards may sound boring and dull because they’ve been around for years, but they are still effective. There are millions of message boards on the Internet, and there is one for almost every topic.
If you can leave messages on popular boards like Yahoo Message Boards and give people good advice, you can drive a lot of traffic to your website.
Timothy Sykes is well known for this, and that’s how he made his website popular. Through message boards, he was able to drive over5,000 visitors to his site each month, and this has lead him to create an online business that generates over $150,000 a month in revenue.
Big marketing idea #3: Optimize your website for search engines
Google is the most popular website on the Internet, so why wouldn’t you leverage it? Through search engine optimization, you can rank higher on Google so you can get more visitors to your website.
One way of doing this is to pay a marketing firm, but, as you know, that can be costly. Another way of doing SEO is to learn it yourself. By reading the Beginner’s Guide to SEO and by following these link building tactics, you should be able to rank higher on the search engines.
A few companies that have leveraged SEO fairly well are About.com, Wikipedia, Craigslist, Amazon, and Zappos. An example of a smaller company that has done this is Bargaineering, which was acquired by Bankrate for2.8 million.
Big marketing idea #4: Start a blog
It doesn’t matter what kind of business you are running – you can still have a blog. KISSmetrics‘ blog, for instance, accounts for over70% of our monthly traffic. That traffic is then converting into leads for our sales department to follow up on and then close into customers.
If you are going to create a blog for your company, you should do the following:
Big marketing idea #5: Google local
Search is becoming more and more personalized. When you perform a search on Google, you’ll start noticing that the results are becoming tailored to your location. Because of this, I decided to claim the Hyatt Hotel in Seattle (I live there) as my business location.
When you search for the Hyatt Hotel in Seattle, my business comes up. And although this may sound foolish, it’s actually lead to one enterprise customer for my company. $120,000 isn’t too shabby for claiming a location.
By no means am I saying that you should claim random locations on localized search, but you should claim at least the location of your office or wherever you operate your business from.
Big marketing idea #6: Leverage Social Networks
Facebook, Twitter and Google Plus are all popular sites that you should be leveraging. Create profiles on each of those sites as they are a good source of traffic. They’ll create new opportunities for you to find customers.
We’ve built up our profiles on all of the major social sites for KISSmetrics, and now social sites account for over30% of our monthly traffic. The best part about this is that it didn’t cost us a dime, other than the time we’ve spent.
By sharing good content that you find while surfing the web and participating on the social web, you’ll quickly be able to build up your profiles. The key is to be patient as it can take six months to a year before your social profiles really become popular.
Big marketing idea #7: Become a guest author
An easy way to get your company out there is to write guest blog posts on other blogs. From TechCrunch to Huffington Post, there are thousands of popular blogs on the Internet. One thing all of these blogs want is more content.
If you write guest blog posts on other blogs, not only will you get traffic and more branding, but you’ll also get links, which will help your SEO efforts.
If you are looking to find places to guest blog, you can check out My Blog Guest, or you can approach popular blogs in your field one by one.
One company that leverages this tactic is GRP, which is a venture capital firm in LA. Mark Suster, one of the partners at the firm, is known for guest blogging on sites like TechCrunch on a regular basis. By doing this, GRP is getting its name out there, and it is helping the company to get more deal flow.
Big marketing idea #8: Case Studies
If you already have happy customers, why not create a case study based on their experiences? Get them to talk about your product or service, how they used it, and the results they got.
Case studies can help build credibility of your company and get you new customers. One company that is known for creating case studies is Conversion Rate Experts. Using case studies, they have been able to lock in a handful of customers. And these customers are spending a high five, if not six, figures a year with Conversion Rate Experts.
Big marketing idea #9: Write Beginner’s Guides
Do you remember when companies used to write White Papers? Although they are still effective, the new version of them are “beginner’s guides”. These guides vary in length, but the one thing they have in common is that they are thorough.
By writing good content and giving it away for free, not only will you get a ton of traffic, but you’ll also get a lot of links.
A good example of this is SEOmoz. They wrote the Beginner’s Guide to SEO, which has lead to a lot of business for them. That guide ranks high for “search engine optimization” on Google. Once they get the visitors to the site, they upsell them on their software service, which starts at $99 a month.
Big marketing idea #10: Speak at conferences
With my first company, ACS, we got over80% of our new customers from conferences. We constantly spoke at Internet marketing events and convinced companies to pay us thousands of dollars per year.
I spoke at so many conferences in a given year that during my peak, the company spent $108,402 in one year on flights and hotels for me. Although that may sound like a lot of money, some of the companies I was able to bring in from these speaking engagements were paying us up to 1.2 million dollars a year.
Granted, you don’t have to spend much money to speak because there should be enough events to speak at in your local region. All you have to do is find these events and apply to speak.
Big marketing idea #11: Start an affiliate program
If you don’t have the money to spend on marketing, you can always get people to market for you for free. The only thing you have to do is pay people for each sale they bring to you. Think of it as performance-based marketing.
Through companies like Hasoffers, you can easily set up affiliate programs and start getting people to market your products or services without spending much money.
Remember how Timothy Sykes leverages message boards? He also leverages affiliate programs. He’s let marketers create mini websites that both praise and bash him, which leads to around $13,000 worth of monthly sales for him.
Big marketing idea #12: Answer questions
From forums to question and answer sites, people need help. If you can answer questions related to the products and services your company provides, you can get new customers. You can find these potential customers on forums and on question and answer sites like Yahoo Answers.
One company that uses this tactic on a daily basis is Single Grain. Every day, they go through marketing forums and help out ten companies with free marketing advice. What they’ve found is that3% of the companies they help for free offer them money for consulting services.
Big marketing idea #13: Go to networking events
If you can’t be a speaker at a conference, it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t attend them. Every day there is a new event going on. You just have to find relevant ones to attend. Sooner or later, you’ll realize that people go to these events to meet other people.
Some of the people you will meet will be useless, but a small percentage of the people you meet will turn into business relationships and friendships.
A few years ago, I was attending a BarCamp in Santa Monica, and I met a guy by the name of Francisco Dao. After a few encounters with each other, we both thought it would be a good idea if he ran a conference series that I co-own. If you fast-forward to today, he has now made me hundreds of thousands of dollars, and he is doing so well that he now owns his own conference company.
You’ll be shocked to see what you can get out of an event, so make sure you start networking on a regular basis.
Big marketing idea #14: Talk shit
The good part about having a blog is that it gives you an audience that you can communicate with. When you tell them something controversial, they’ll start spreading it on the web.
My first company, ACS, provided marketing services. When I saw companies that could use our help, I wouldn’t just reach out to them. I would write a blog post on how they are messing up.
In2006, I wrote a blog post on Like.com and what they are missing in their marketing efforts. Quickly after writing the blog post, I got a call from the CEO who then hired me for a consulting engagement. After I realized how effective this strategy was, I also did it with Yahoo and a few other big companies.
Every time I did it, I had over a50% deal closing ratio.
Big marketing idea #15: Give away the farm
Talking shit about a company on a blog is one way to get new customers, but another way is to give away the farm. Similarly to the strategy above, I used to email companies and tell them in a step by step format everything they needed to change on their websites to get more traffic.
Many of the companies I emailed didn’t respond or hire me, but the strategy was effective nonetheless. I was able to lock in companies like TechCrunch and do all of their online marketing.
By helping popular brands like TechCrunch, I was able to leverage their names to get more customers.
Don’t be afraid to email companies and potential customers that you think you can help. What’s the worst thing they can do…ignore your email?
Big marketing idea #16: Ask for referrals
Do you already have customers? If so, have you asked them for referrals? It’s a pretty effective approach as long as your current customers are happy with you.
Look up your current customers on social sites like LinkedIn and see who they’re connected with. If you think someone they know can benefit from your product or service, ask for an introduction.
You’ll be surprised to find out that only a very small percentage of your customers will not be willing to make an introduction. If a large portion tells you no, it means that you could be doing a better job making them happy.
One company that has gotten5 or6 referrals from me is Digital Telepathy. They provided one of my companies, Crazy Egg, with a new design. After they did a good job, they asked if I knew of any other companies that would be interested in their web design services, and I was gladly willing to make introductions for them.
Big marketing idea #17: Leverage YouTube
Not only do videos now appear in search results, but you also can use them to show how good your products actually are. Blendtec has done this for years, and it’s been effective. They don’t just claim that their blenders are powerful, but they also show you by blending things like bricks, iphones, and other cool devices.
Some of their videos have gotten over3 million views, and, more importantly, the company has been able to sell thousands of blenders because of these videos.
If you can come up with something creative like blending iPhones, you can create viral videos. Good content spreads like a wildfire on the web and even television. The Blendtec guys have been on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
Big marketing idea #18: Offer steep discounts
Groupon and Living Social are able to drive thousands of sales for any product or service. It can work for you too, assuming you give a really good deal.
Earlier this year, a buddy of mine launched a concept called Tomato Battle, in which thousands of people get together and throw tomatoes at each other. When he launched the event, he was charging fifty-nine dollars for a ticket, and his goal was to get a bit more than two thousand attendees.
In order to fill the event, he reached out to Groupon and Living Social. The companies promoted the event to their email lists at a price point that was around50% off. Within days, he sold over one thousand tickets on these group buying sites. After the deal closed, the people who bought tickets told their friends, and those friends went directly to the Tomato Battle site and bought tickets at a regular price.
If you can come up with a price point that benefits you as well as the group buying companies, you can make a lot of money and gain access to a whole new set of customers.
Big marketing idea #19: Have exceptionally great customer service
One of the easiest ways to increase the lifetime value of your customers is to offer exceptionally great customer service. For example, Zappos will automatically upgrade your shipping to next day air every once in a while. And it also offers a 1 year return policy with little to no questions asked.
By providing exceptionally great customer service, you will not only make happy customers, but you’ll have customers who will continue to come back. In the short run, this may end up costing your company a bit more money, but in the long run you’ll see the benefit because each customer will not only spend more money with you, but they’ll tell their friends about the great experience they had with your company.
Big marketing idea #20: Get press
The more people talk about your company in a positive way, the more people will come to your website and check out what you are offering. The hard part about press is getting the attention of the major news outlets.
But it is easy to get the attention of blogs. One way that I like to get press is to email bloggers asking if they would like to interview me. Although that sounds silly, a small percentage of the bloggers you email will say yes.
For example, Search Engine Journal interviewed me because I emailed them asking if they would be interested. They said yes and sent over some questions. I answered them and emailed them back. Within days, the interview was published, and it drove a handful of customers to KISSmetrics.
Don’t be shy; ask bloggers if they would be interested in interviewing you. What’s the worst that can happen? They’ll say no.
Big marketing idea #21: Pay with a tweet
If you want more customers, then entice people to promote your company. Simply Measured does a great job of this by letting you sign up for free if you tweet about their product. As more people tweet, more people come to their website and sign up. Once you are in their system, they get you hooked onto their software and they upsell you on their paid plans.
Start thinking outside the box. Free users can market your company for you with a tweet or a plug on Facebook or any other social site. You just have to be willing to ask them for a plug on these social sites, or else you won’t receive them.
My business partner and I did something similar on Crazy Egg recently, and it worked out well. Instead of asking people to pay with a tweet, we asked customers to tweet right after they signed up.
Conclusion
Marketing doesn’t have to cost money. It just requires creativity. If thousands of companies, including me, were able to succeed without having a big budget on marketing, you can too.
The trade off is simple: if you aren’t willing to spend big bucks, you will have to put in your time and energy.
Nowadays we can manage a marketing plan by using our pages on social media and of course sales and marketing departments talents, where they work on door to door techniques, up sales techniques and follow up techniques. Thank You.
Only possible with E-Marketing & Social Media.
Think about so easy ideas but never come in sense ... Like mad and comedy ideas
By indulging in marketing activities on social networking sites and by use of the company's website to the best possible extent in a creative way
The equation for business is simple: (volume x price) – cost = profit. Your goal as a business owner is to increase profit. To increase profit you have three options: reduce costs, increase price or increase volume. Effective marketing is about driving up volume or increasing price.
The following15 marketing tactics provide you with ideas that should enable you to either increase volumes or drive up prices without incurring exorbitant costs. You will never be able to implement all15 ideas, so pick one to start, implement it and monitor the progress…
Sipahh straws are innovative drinking straws that give milk flavour when it passes through the straw. The product was launched in South Africa by Strawtech, a small start-up company with virtually no capital. Strawtech created unprecedented media attention with the launch of its new product by securing a partnership with McDonalds.
Andrew Robinson, the young CEO of Strawtech gave McDonalds the exclusivity of the innovative new product for one month in return for positioning of the Sippah straw on a McDonalds TV and print advertising campaign.
After just one month, the product was known by many of the young target audience and when the straws were ultimately sold in stores, children were already keen to try them out. A number of South African entrepreneurs have created huge awareness for business and themselves by becoming the stars of advertising campaigns for larger corporations.
Nkhensani Manganyi of Stoned Cherrie featured on massive Nokia billboards and the owners of a Joburg City BMW dealership featured in an FNB print, radio and TV advertising campaign. This exposure cost them nothing but was worth a fortune.
Tactic: Identify and partner with a non-competitive company that targets the same customers you do. Do a combined marketing or advertising campaign that benefits both parties.
In October2005, Vespa blanketed Johannesburg and Cape Town motorists with pink parking fines. More than100000 unsuspecting ‘offenders’ received parking fines for driving difficult-to-park, gas guzzling motor vehicles, instead of stylish Vespa Scooters.
On closer inspection of the traffic fine, most ‘offenders’ were relieved to find out that the fine was actually an invitation to experience the freedom of a Vespa Scooter for themselves. But some offenders raced off to their nearest police station to protest the fine, not realising that it was a marketing campaign.
Many newspapers, radio stations and magazines caught wind of this gutsy, cheeky but cheap marketing campaign and discussed it on talk shows and in news bulletins, resulting in media coverage worth hundreds of thousands of rands.
What can you do to create a stir that will garner the attention of the media, without destroying your brand or getting you locked away for illegal activity?
Tactic: Do something extravagant, cheeky or courageous to get radio show hosts and journalists talking about your efforts.
In2003 Ciko Thomas and Litha Nkombisa left their cushy corporate jobs to acquire a BMW dealership in the Joburg City Center. Joburg City Auto was making losses when they acquired it yet over the past four years they have been highly effective in turning the business around by substantially growing the customer base.
They have had some good fortune and made some very clever moves to ensure that they acquired and retained customers. Their good fortune came in the form of FNB print, radio and TV adverts featuring “Litha the family man and Litha the business man” as a customer of FNB. One of their clever moves has been to speak about the business at every opportunity.
Ciko speaks at business schools, on the radio and at conferences about the challenge of acquiring and turning around a business. As a black entrepreneur, his story has wide appeal and he tells it with passion and energy. This feeds on itself because the more people hear him speak, the more they want to visit the dealership and buy cars.
Entrepreneurs can effectively market their business by telling its story in public forums. People love hearing entrepreneurial stories and if you are able to tell the story well, you will get lots of free publicity.
Tactic: Craft the story that outlines the development and growth of your business. Include humour, anecdotes and key lessons learned. Let other people such as conference organisers, lecturers and event managers know that you are happy to share the story with others.
Nougat used to be just nougat before Sally Williams came along. Now you get nougat and Sally Williams nougat. At the core of the brand that has put South African nougat on the map is a product that evolved from a three year quest for the perfect recipe.
The result is nougat that is considered to be amongst the finest in the world and is in huge demand across Southern Africa. Making a great product or offering a valuable service is at the heart of being successful. Many businesses set out to create a world class product or offer top class service but over time get distracted and lazy and end up offering something that is just ok.
If you are operating on a level of mediocrity, no matter how good your advertising, PR or viral marketing people will eventually stop buying. If you constantly innovate to offer a product or service that is the best of the best, you will be amazed at how easy advertising, PR and all other forms of marketing become. What would it take for you to elevate your product or service to be considered the best in the world.
Tactic: Focus on improving the quality of your product and service until it is not only the best in South Africa but the best in the world.
“I want it now” is a standard customer motto in the modern culture of instant gratification. Delivering faster can be the simple marketing strategy on which to build your business. iBurst, a wireless internet provider, has achieved good growth by offering wireless internet in48 hours.
Who would even think of choosing Telkom broadband with a three month waiting list? Scooters pizza has achieved similar success by offering pizza delivery in39 minutes, or it’s free. Scooters have made taste secondary to the speed of delivery.
In the last six years in an already saturated pizza market they have managed to open over100 franchises. If you could offer your service or product with faster delivery or in a more convenient location what would that do for your business?
Tactic: Create the fastest delivery time in your industry then commit to delivering quicker than competitors in your marketing material.
“You can have any colour as long as it is black”, was Henry Ford’s answer to a request for the model T to be sold in different colours. This was probably one of the greatest marketing blunders of all time. It cost Ford its position as the number one car manufacturer in the world, forever.
General Motors (GM) trounced Ford by offering a selection of cars for different segments of the market with customisation in colour and design, thereby building a car to meet customers’ needs. This strategy from the beginning of the last century is being redeployed with great success in the new millennium.
Levi jeans launched a made-to-measure programme with great success in1995. Because every single body is unique in size, proportion and dimension, Levi’s began creating a pair of jeans for specific measurements. All a customer does is visit a designated Levi’s store to be measured by a professional after which they receive a custom-made pair of jeans.
Michael Dell became the youngest CEO of a Fortune500 company by being the first to sell a customisable computer. How could you customise your product to increasingly meet your customers’ needs?
Tactic: Customise your product; make each product so unique that it fits each customer’s needs perfectly.
When I am travelling abroad, I find it intriguing to sit near the counter in Starbucks and hear the combinations of coffee drinks that are ordered: “Tall skinny vanilla latte with soy milk”, “Short, iced, decaf coffee with whipped cream”. Starbucks has turned coffee shops into a global phenomenon and it has done so partly by offering people a very wide choice in a very small area.
Starbucks’ primary focus is coffee, but it offers hundreds of different variations of coffee, which makes its stores a coffee destination. Few people can argue with the success of Starbucks. Local franchises such as The Fudge Factory with25 flavors of fudge and Mozart Ice Cream Classics with38 flavours of ice cream, have succeeded by offering a wide selection as a unique value proposition. You can do the same by focusing your business on offering the largest selection in your industry.
Tactic: Focus on a smaller number of products with a much bigger selection.
Fruit and Veg City has been one of the true entrepreneurial success stories in South Africa in the past10 years. They get customers to purchase more by bundling products with offers such as:3 apples for R3,99. These bundles usually offer minor discounts over single purchases but they drive volumes right up as bundled products usually create the impression of value and customers love feeling like they are getting good value.
Tour companies such as African Encounters and Thompson Tours have made the travel buying process far simpler for customers by bundling flights, hotels and transfers into a single purchase from a single vendor.
This streamlines the process for the buyer and the seller. McDonalds bundles products in the form of McMeals. Instead of purchasing just a burger, McDonalds makes it convenient to purchase chips, a burger and a drink. How could you structure your product packages to serve customers better?
Tactic: Could you bundle your product in larger quantities that might be suitable for customers to purchase more. Could you bundle your product with other logical extensions of the product.
Big marketing idea #1: Comment on blogs
A great way to get your website popular is to comment on blogs. For this to work, you have to leave comments on blogs that are related to your website, and the comments you leave have to be insightful.
If people feel that your comments are detailed and insightful, not only will they keep reading your comments, they’ll also head over to your website (when you leave a comment on a blog, you can typically leave your website URL).
Although this tactic seems simple, it is very effective. Just look at Mashable. Pete Cashmore made that blog popular by commenting on competing blogs like TechCrunch when he first launched it. He literally left hundreds of comments, and now he has one of the most popular websites on the Internet.
Big marketing idea #2: Leverage message boards
Message boards may sound boring and dull because they’ve been around for years, but they are still effective. There are millions of message boards on the Internet, and there is one for almost every topic.
If you can leave messages on popular boards like Yahoo Message Boards and give people good advice, you can drive a lot of traffic to your website.
Timothy Sykes is well known for this, and that’s how he made his website popular. Through message boards, he was able to drive over5,000 visitors to his site each month, and this has lead him to create an online business that generates over $150,000 a month in revenue.
Big marketing idea #3: Optimize your website for search engines
Google is the most popular website on the Internet, so why wouldn’t you leverage it? Through search engine optimization, you can rank higher on Google so you can get more visitors to your website.
One way of doing this is to pay a marketing firm, but, as you know, that can be costly. Another way of doing SEO is to learn it yourself. By reading the Beginner’s Guide to SEO and by following these link building tactics, you should be able to rank higher on the search engines.
A few companies that have leveraged SEO fairly well are About.com, Wikipedia, Craigslist, Amazon, and Zappos. An example of a smaller company that has done this is Bargaineering, which was acquired by Bankrate for2.8 million.
Big marketing idea #4: Start a blog
It doesn’t matter what kind of business you are running – you can still have a blog. KISSmetrics‘ blog, for instance, accounts for over70% of our monthly traffic. That traffic is then converting into leads for our sales department to follow up on and then close into customers.
If you are going to create a blog for your company, you should do the following:
Big marketing idea #5: Google local
Search is becoming more and more personalized. When you perform a search on Google, you’ll start noticing that the results are becoming tailored to your location. Because of this, I decided to claim the Hyatt Hotel in Seattle (I live there) as my business location.
When you search for the Hyatt Hotel in Seattle, my business comes up. And although this may sound foolish, it’s actually lead to one enterprise customer for my company. $120,000 isn’t too shabby for claiming a location.
By no means am I saying that you should claim random locations on localized search, but you should claim at least the location of your office or wherever you operate your business from.
Big marketing idea #6: Leverage Social Networks
Facebook, Twitter and Google Plus are all popular sites that you should be leveraging. Create profiles on each of those sites as they are a good source of traffic. They’ll create new opportunities for you to find customers.
We’ve built up our profiles on all of the major social sites for KISSmetrics, and now social sites account for over30% of our monthly traffic. The best part about this is that it didn’t cost us a dime, other than the time we’ve spent.
By sharing good content that you find while surfing the web and participating on the social web, you’ll quickly be able to build up your profiles. The key is to be patient as it can take six months to a year before your social profiles really become popular.
Big marketing idea #7: Become a guest author
An easy way to get your company out there is to write guest blog posts on other blogs. From TechCrunch to Huffington Post, there are thousands of popular blogs on the Internet. One thing all of these blogs want is more content.
If you write guest blog posts on other blogs, not only will you get traffic and more branding, but you’ll also get links, which will help your SEO efforts.
If you are looking to find places to guest blog, you can check out My Blog Guest, or you can approach popular blogs in your field one by one.
One company that leverages this tactic is GRP, which is a venture capital firm in LA. Mark Suster, one of the partners at the firm, is known for guest blogging on sites like TechCrunch on a regular basis. By doing this, GRP is getting its name out there, and it is helping the company to get more deal flow.
Big marketing idea #8: Case Studies
If you already have happy customers, why not create a case study based on their experiences? Get them to talk about your product or service, how they used it, and the results they got.
Case studies can help build credibility of your company and get you new customers. One company that is known for creating case studies is Conversion Rate Experts. Using case studies, they have been able to lock in a handful of customers. And these customers are spending a high five, if not six, figures a year with Conversion Rate Experts.
Big marketing idea #9: Write Beginner’s Guides
Do you remember when companies used to write White Papers? Although they are still effective, the new version of them are “beginner’s guides”. These guides vary in length, but the one thing they have in common is that they are thorough.
By writing good content and giving it away for free, not only will you get a ton of traffic, but you’ll also get a lot of links.
A good example of this is SEOmoz. They wrote the Beginner’s Guide to SEO, which has lead to a lot of business for them. That guide ranks high for “search engine optimization” on Google. Once they get the visitors to the site, they upsell them on their software service, which starts at $99 a month.
Big marketing idea #10: Speak at conferences
With my first company, ACS, we got over80% of our new customers from conferences. We constantly spoke at Internet marketing events and convinced companies to pay us thousands of dollars per year.
I spoke at so many conferences in a given year that during my peak, the company spent $108,402 in one year on flights and hotels for me. Although that may sound like a lot of money, some of the companies I was able to bring in from these speaking engagements were paying us up to 1.2 million dollars a year.
Granted, you don’t have to spend much money to speak because there should be enough events to speak at in your local region. All you have to do is find these events and apply to speak.
Big marketing idea #11: Start an affiliate program
If you don’t have the money to spend on marketing, you can always get people to market for you for free. The only thing you have to do is pay people for each sale they bring to you. Think of it as performance-based marketing.
Through companies like Hasoffers, you can easily set up affiliate programs and start getting people to market your products or services without spending much money.
Remember how Timothy Sykes leverages message boards? He also leverages affiliate programs. He’s let marketers create mini websites that both praise and bash him, which leads to around $13,000 worth of monthly sales for him.
Big marketing idea #12: Answer questions
From forums to question and answer sites, people need help. If you can answer questions related to the products and services your company provides, you can get new customers. You can find these potential customers on forums and on question and answer sites like Yahoo Answers.
One company that uses this tactic on a daily basis is Single Grain. Every day, they go through marketing forums and help out ten companies with free marketing advice. What they’ve found is that3% of the companies they help for free offer them money for consulting services.
Big marketing idea #13: Go to networking events
If you can’t be a speaker at a conference, it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t attend them. Every day there is a new event going on. You just have to find relevant ones to attend. Sooner or later, you’ll realize that people go to these events to meet other people.
Some of the people you will meet will be useless, but a small percentage of the people you meet will turn into business relationships and friendships.
A few years ago, I was attending a BarCamp in Santa Monica, and I met a guy by the name of Francisco Dao. After a few encounters with each other, we both thought it would be a good idea if he ran a conference series that I co-own. If you fast-forward to today, he has now made me hundreds of thousands of dollars, and he is doing so well that he now owns his own conference company.
You’ll be shocked to see what you can get out of an event, so make sure you start networking on a regular basis.
Big marketing idea #14: Talk shit
The good part about having a blog is that it gives you an audience that you can communicate with. When you tell them something controversial, they’ll start spreading it on the web.
My first company, ACS, provided marketing services. When I saw companies that could use our help, I wouldn’t just reach out to them. I would write a blog post on how they are messing up.
In2006, I wrote a blog post on Like.com and what they are missing in their marketing efforts. Quickly after writing the blog post, I got a call from the CEO who then hired me for a consulting engagement. After I realized how effective this strategy was, I also did it with Yahoo and a few other big companies.
Every time I did it, I had over a50% deal closing ratio.
Big marketing idea #15: Give away the farm
Talking shit about a company on a blog is one way to get new customers, but another way is to give away the farm. Similarly to the strategy above, I used to email companies and tell them in a step by step format everything they needed to change on their websites to get more traffic.
Many of the companies I emailed didn’t respond or hire me, but the strategy was effective nonetheless. I was able to lock in companies like TechCrunch and do all of their online marketing.
By helping popular brands like TechCrunch, I was able to leverage their names to get more customers.
Don’t be afraid to email companies and potential customers that you think you can help. What’s the worst thing they can do…ignore your email?
Big marketing idea #16: Ask for referrals
Do you already have customers? If so, have you asked them for referrals? It’s a pretty effective approach as long as your current customers are happy with you.
Look up your current customers on social sites like LinkedIn and see who they’re connected with. If you think someone they know can benefit from your product or service, ask for an introduction.
You’ll be surprised to find out that only a very small percentage of your customers will not be willing to make an introduction. If a large portion tells you no, it means that you could be doing a better job making them happy.
One company that has gotten5 or6 referrals from me is Digital Telepathy. They provided one of my companies, Crazy Egg, with a new design. After they did a good job, they asked if I knew of any other companies that would be interested in their web design services, and I was gladly willing to make introductions for them.
Big marketing idea #17: Leverage YouTube
Not only do videos now appear in search results, but you also can use them to show how good your products actually are. Blendtec has done this for years, and it’s been effective. They don’t just claim that their blenders are powerful, but they also show you by blending things like bricks, iphones, and other cool devices.
Some of their videos have gotten over3 million views, and, more importantly, the company has been able to sell thousands of blenders because of these videos.
If you can come up with something creative like blending iPhones, you can create viral videos. Good content spreads like a wildfire on the web and even television. The Blendtec guys have been on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
Big marketing idea #18: Offer steep discounts
Groupon and Living Social are able to drive thousands of sales for any product or service. It can work for you too, assuming you give a really good deal.
Earlier this year, a buddy of mine launched a concept called Tomato Battle, in which thousands of people get together and throw tomatoes at each other. When he launched the event, he was charging fifty-nine dollars for a ticket, and his goal was to get a bit more than two thousand attendees.
In order to fill the event, he reached out to Groupon and Living Social. The companies promoted the event to their email lists at a price point that was around50% off. Within days, he sold over one thousand tickets on these group buying sites. After the deal closed, the people who bought tickets told their friends, and those friends went directly to the Tomato Battle site and bought tickets at a regular price.
If you can come up with a price point that benefits you as well as the group buying companies, you can make a lot of money and gain access to a whole new set of customers.
Big marketing idea #19: Have exceptionally great customer service
One of the easiest ways to increase the lifetime value of your customers is to offer exceptionally great customer service. For example, Zappos will automatically upgrade your shipping to next day air every once in a while. And it also offers a 1 year return policy with little to no questions asked.
By providing exceptionally great customer service, you will not only make happy customers, but you’ll have customers who will continue to come back. In the short run, this may end up costing your company a bit more money, but in the long run you’ll see the benefit because each customer will not only spend more money with you, but they’ll tell their friends about the great experience they had with your company.
Big marketing idea #20: Get press
The more people talk about your company in a positive way, the more people will come to your website and check out what you are offering. The hard part about press is getting the attention of the major news outlets.
But it is easy to get the attention of blogs. One way that I like to get press is to email bloggers asking if they would like to interview me. Although that sounds silly, a small percentage of the bloggers you email will say yes.
For example, Search Engine Journal interviewed me because I emailed them asking if they would be interested. They said yes and sent over some questions. I answered them and emailed them back. Within days, the interview was published, and it drove a handful of customers to KISSmetrics.
Don’t be shy; ask bloggers if they would be interested in interviewing you. What’s the worst that can happen? They’ll say no.
Big marketing idea #21: Pay with a tweet
If you want more customers, then entice people to promote your company. Simply Measured does a great job of this by letting you sign up for free if you tweet about their product. As more people tweet, more people come to their website and sign up. Once you are in their system, they get you hooked onto their software and they upsell you on their paid plans.
Start thinking outside the box. Free users can market your company for you with a tweet or a plug on Facebook or any other social site. You just have to be willing to ask them for a plug on these social sites, or else you won’t receive them.
My business partner and I did something similar on Crazy Egg recently, and it worked out well. Instead of asking people to pay with a tweet, we asked customers to tweet right after they signed up.
Conclusion
Marketing doesn’t have to cost money. It just requires creativity. If thousands of companies, including me, were able to succeed without having a big budget on marketing, you can too.
The trade off is simple: if you aren’t willing to spend big bucks, you will have to put in your time and energy.