25 Twitter sized marketing tips every business should know.
I’ve often told people in conferences around the country that marketing on the web is really easy, in fact I believe that most marketing advice can be summed up in just a few simple sentences so let’s take a look at 25 pieces of web based marketing advice that every business should follow, as would appear on Twitter.
- Keep your website as simple and clean as possible. Remember your goal is to communicate with clients and funnel them into your business.
- Analytics only matter if you care about them. How many people come to your website is irrelevant, what matters is how many reach your goal
- Understand the basics of HTML. You can’t race a sports car if you don’t understand the basics of how an engine works, know your vehicle.
- Web traffic is people not statistics, stop trying to collect them like trading cards and respect the people who take time to come visit you
- Provide value to people and help them share your value with their friends, try make every word you type add to the community, not hurt it
- Learn how to use PRWeb, FriendFeed, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, RSS and Google properly if you want to reach the masses.
- Give your time to local charities and share your story on the web, encourage others in your area to be benevolent and watch traffic climb
- It’s OK to be wrong. In fact being wrong is completely amazing, I’ve learnt more from being wrong than I ever managed to learn in school
- Take the time to be interesting in your marketing and on your website, people will not follow or subscribe to you if you’re dull.
- The most successful websites in the world are free but they make millions. Learn to master advertising venues and you’ll be rich forever.
- Stop trying to build websites for Google, start trying to build websites for people who want to open their wallets to you, it’s common sense
- Websites need to be kept fresh and updated, don’t just add a blog to your website instead blog as a way of communicating with your customers
- My father always told me to measure twice, cut once. Avoid the most obvious mistakes but taking some time and thinking before you jump.
- Help people keep in touch with you by adding a link to your Twitter, Facebook page, RSS and email subscriptions on every page of your site
- If you can learn what motivates people and learn how to take away the pain they feel you’ll no longer need to market to them to sell to them
- Find out who the power players in your industry are and spend time watching everything they do online. when you get it, do it too.
- Don’t try to win a web popularity contest, unless you have Megan Fox’s body, the charm of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates money, you’ll lose.
- Don’t just subscribe to marketing blogs that you believe in, there is more than right answer on the web, learn to follow many paths
- Develop a realistic series of goals and work very hard to reach them. If you don’t see the results you hoped for, reevaluate and try harder
- Share in your marketing success by helping others build their businesses. Linking to great content is the best way to build your own.
- Educate your consumer and use the power of social media make your client base smarter, so that they understand the value of your business
- A website is a work in progress, you don’t have to wait until its perfect to launch a new website you just have to know that it will grow
- Share as much with the world as you possibly can and ask for nothing in return, what starts as a visit often turns into a lifelong client.
- Be honest in everything you do online. The web has a long memory so remember the best way to not get caught being underhanded is to not be
- Don’t hire people who tell you they’re good on the web, hire people who are proven on the web … otherwise you’re investing in failures.
Now I have to admit that the inspiration for today’s post came from an absolutely wonderful post called 65 Bite-Sized Web Marketing Tips by Adam Singer and he deserves a lot of credit for my basic philosophy around here. Adam’s linked to a lot of brilliant articles and some that I couldn’t have gotten started with include:








