What Is Content

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Content in digital marketing is any information that is seen, heard, or a combination of the two.

Some examples of content that are seen are articles, infographics, and emails. For content that is heard, these are your podcasts and music. Finally, videos fall under content that is both seen and heard.

Content is king in today’s digital world. Without it, it’s almost impossible to stand out, be noticed, and succeed. If you want to win in digital marketing, start creating content.

3 Categories of Content

1) Seen

Content that is seen can be further broken down into two subcategories:

  1. Written
  2. Visual

Written content is the most common. These are your articles, e-books, and white papers.

Visual content is the ones you don’t normally read or if they have text, there’s not much on it. Some popular examples are simple photos, memes, gifs, and infographics.

2) Heard

Content that is heard is quickly becoming popular nowadays. These would be your music, podcasts, and the “assistants” (like Siri, Alexa, and Google). A traditional form of content that falls under this category is radio.

It’s quickly becoming popular because it allows you to do something else while listening to it.

3) Combination

Lastly, the content that uses both visual and auditory elements are your videos. These can be a simple explainer video to elaborate online courses.

Most marketers claim that video is the type of content that has the highest ROI. Approximately one-third of online activity is spent watching videos.

That’s also the reason why I jumped on this bandwagon and started creating video content.

So, What Are You Going to Do Now

Among all these different types of content, how many are you using in your marketing?

Like I said over and over, if you are not found online, you do not exist. Without content, it is impossible to stand out and get noticed.

Start creating content today!

How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics

Google Analytics 101: How to Create Goals for Your Website

If you don’t know how to create goals for your website, you are not being effective. Creating goals in Google Analytics is one of the basics every marketer should know and implement.

Google Analytics is a free tool that allows you to track visits and behaviors people do on your website.

If you haven’t installed Google Analytics on your website, you can check out my previous post on how to do that exactly.

Preparatory Points

  1. Google Analytics is installed on your site
  2. You know what you want to track

Before we get to the actual guide, there are two preparatory points I’d like to go over.

First, this would only work if you have Google Analytics installed on your website. It’s worth noting this because I’ve encountered a lot of people who still don’t have Google Analytics installed on their websites, especially small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

I also noticed that organizations using Shopify and SquareSpace don’t have this configured as well — despite it being a one-step process.

The second and a very important one that needs to be discussed is you should know beforehand what you want to track.

Step-by-Step Guide on How to Create Goals in Google Analytics

As a quick overview, Google Analytics allows you to track 4 types of goals:

  1. URL
  2. Event
  3. Time
  4. Visit / Page

Among these, the most commonly used are the URL and event goals.

A great activity I strongly recommend you go through to determine this is the Digital Marketing and Measurement Model.

After this exercise, you can easily identify everything you need to focus on your implementation and measurement.

Now, on to the step-by-step guide…

1. Go to the Google Analytics Admin Panel

This part is easy. Simply login to Google Analytics and go to the admin panel by clicking the gear icon at the lower-left portion of the screen.

Google Analytics Dashboard
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 1: Go to the Admin Section

Then, navigate towards the Goals section.

Google Analytics Admin Panel
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 2: Click on Goals

Also, make sure you are creating goals for the right account. You don’t have to worry about this if you only have one, but in my case, I have access to multiple Google Analytics accounts.

2. Create a Goal

For the purpose of this article, we’ll use the most common goal type used — the URL destination goal.

Start by clicking on that big red button…

Google Analytics Goals
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 3: Click on Create Goal

Then, you’ll have to complete 3 steps:

  1. Goal setup. This is where you can choose from one of the templates or custom. I used the custom setup.
  2. Goal description. This is where you include the name of the goal and the type of goal.
  3. Goal Details. This is where you enter the criteria for the goal you chose. Options here differ depending on the goal type chosen in the previous step.
Google Analytics Goals: Setup
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 4: Choose from Template or Custom
Google Analytics Goals: Description
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 5: Choose Goal Type
Google Analytics Goals: Details
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 6: Complete Criteria for Goal

As a refresher, this goal type uses a URL as a goal. What that means is when that URL “loads,” the goal is achieved. Let’s call this a thank you page. In this example, I made up a fake URL. Just replace this with the URL of your thank you page.

There are 3 fields you can tinker here. Only 1 of them is required, and that is the URL itself. The others simply add more data for analysis later on. We’ll tackle this in another post, but for now, just enter the URL then hit Save.

Now, you may be thinking, “what if someone opens the page or URL, won’t that mess my reports later on?”

That is a valid concern. That is why there are four best practices for using this type of goal:

  1. Use a unique page/URL for every thank you page
  2. Add a noindex tag on the thank you page
  3. Don’t link to this thank you page anywhere; except
  4. Have a unique form that redirects to this page after successful submission

Once these 4 conditions are met, it is almost impossible to get to the thank you page (our URL destination goal).

I explained this in detail in another article called the typical online conversion path. With this checks in place, you are almost guaranteed that the only way people get to your thank you page is after a successful form submission. Then, your goal will only trigger after successful form submission.

3. Check if the Goal Is Working Properly

This step is very important. If you do not test your goal/s, don’t complain if it’s not working later on.

Testing your goal is also very easy.

  1. Just open the URL in another tab, then
  2. Check the real-time analytics portion in Google Analytics to see if it triggered the goal you just set up.
Google Analytics Real-Time
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 7: Go to Real-Time Reports

If it did, it should look something like this. You should see numbers pop up here.

Google Analytics Real-Time Conversions
How to Create Goals for Your Website Using Google Analytics Step 8: Check for Conversions

If not, then there’s something wrong.

The usual culprits are these four:

  1. Plug-ins blocking traffic (for example if you’re using Chrome and have the GA output plugin, you can use an incognito mode to test this or use another)
  2. Typo errors in the URLs (/thankyou vs /thank-you vs /thank_you)
  3. URLs not matching (contains /thank-you vs exact /thankyou)
  4. Included the domain/subdomains (ariel-lim.com/thank-you vs just /thank-you)

So it’s really important to test and make sure the goals you set up ate working properly.

So, What Are You Going to Do Now

The last step after you create goals for your website, which should be a given but worth noting, is you have to execute your strategies.

That means creating campaigns with awesome content and making sure you’re targeting the right audience.

One those numbers start coming in, you’ll be able to analyze and improve on it using the goals you just created.

As a word of caution, don’t get stuck in creating the “perfect” content or, in this case, the “perfect” goals.

It is always — I repeat, ALWAYS — better to implement/execute than to spend all your time planning. You get real customer feedback instead of assumptions. You learn what the market actually want and don’t want.

What Is a Call-to-Action in Digital Marketing

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A call-to-action (CTA) in digital marketing is a piece of content designed to prompt an immediate response to the viewer, reader, or listener. Usually, CTAs are a string of words that influence people to do something.

The action you want people to take could be anything: download an ebook, sign up for a webinar, get a coupon, attend an event, etc.

A CTA can be placed anywhere in your marketing — on your website, in an ebook, in an email, or even at the end of a blog post.

The most common call-to-action known to marketers is “click me.” It’s also one of the most ineffective ones because it doesn’t give the reader any context nor reason to perform the action, i.e. do the click.

In this post, I’ll be sharing some tips for writing effective calls-to-action.

8 Tips for Writing Effective Call-to-Action

1. Start with a strong action verb

Use a strong action verb that resonates with the viewer. This makes it easy to understand what you want them to do.

Look at the examples I listed above. They start with action verbs that clearly tells the viewer what to do.

2. Use words that provoke emotion or enthusiasm

Using emotions is something marketers often use, and rightfully so. Emotions are what gets us to decide and move forward.

For example, the simple use of an exclamation point (!) depicts enthusiasm.

3. Include a reason why they should click

This should be obvious to you but it’s worth mentioning it.

Your CTA must have a reason for people to click on it. Like I said above, click me definitely misses the mark.

Another CTA used a lot especially in forms is submit. Again, there’s no reason for them to do so.

A good CTA following this tip could be join our mailing list and receive a coupon for 20% off your next purchase.

Think of benefits for the viewers. What they’ll get if they do the action you want.

4. Take advantage of FOMO

Fear of missing out is part of our culture now thanks to the internet. Use this to your advantage.

Time-sensitive and community-type CTAs follow this tip. Buy now! 3 stocks left! is a great CTA example for an e-commerce store. Another example I see that is often used is the promos with timers on them.

HubSpot uses the same tip to entice marketers to join their mailing list: Join our community of over 300,000 marketers and business owners.

5. Match your message with your promise

What this simply means is your call-to-action should match what the viewer will expect when they click on it. For example, a CTA with a “download this e-book” should lead directly to a landing page with the same message. Otherwise, you’re only adding confusion.

Most people use their website’s homepage as the link for their CTAs.

6. Use devices to your advantage

Depending on the platform you’re using, you can customize the CTAs you display depending on the device they are using.

For example, a click to call message would make no sense on a desktop but would be perfect for a mobile display.

7. Be creative

You can use simple text links, or images, or flowery wordings. Regardless of what you choose, you should always A/B test which one works the best. Here’s how you can do this in Google Optimize.

For example, I can ask you to download a case study on how a B2B company increased its traffic by 618% and leads by 490%. That is an example of a text link.

Or, I can simply use this image below and they both will link back to the same landing page.

Download this free case study on how a B2B organization increased their visits by 619% and leads by 490%

8. Use numbers when possible

People love numbers. Numbers mean specificity. Specificity means concrete results.

Not every marketer can promise concrete results because of two things: (1) they don’t really have a good product/service, or (2) they haven’t tried using their own product/service.

They simply use what the product managers say or what the spec sheets tell.

So, use the products/services first. If it helps you accomplish what it says it will, then that’s great. Use that!

So, What Are You Going to Do Now

Now you know how to write effective calls-to-action. It’s time to reput them to good use.

Go back through all your blog posts (and website pages) and remove all “click me” CTAs that don’t provide any value. Apply the tips listed here.

As an added bonus, you can also use these tips in your ads.

Take note that even if you follow all these tips, but don’t have a dedicated marketing offer, then your work will be futile. Newsletter subscriptions aren’t enough. You need to start creating content that is valuable to your audience.

12 Different Types of Marketing Email to Make Your Email Marketing Effective

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Most organizations think that email marketing is all about sending the newsletter. Did you know that there are 12 different types of marketing email you can send?

In this article, I’ll go through all these 12 email marketing examples and present a way to categorize them:

  1. Product/service update email
  2. Newsletter
  3. New content announcement email
  4. Event invitation
  5. Dedicated email send
  6. Co-marketing email
  7. Social media send
  8. Internal updates
  9. Confirmation email
  10. Thank you email
  11. Welcome email
  12. Lead nurturing emails

But before we get started, I want to go through some preparatory points.

What you call a newsletter is actually one of the most ineffective marketing tactics marketers use today.

In this post, I’ll be sharing 12 different types of marketing email you should be sending from your email marketing software.

Preparatory Points: Email Categorization

There are two broad categories of emails that you can send: one-to-many and one-to-one. This doesn’t include personal/manual emails —like the ones you send to your customer or your boss.

One-to-many emails, sometimes called informational emails or campaign-specific emails, are types of email you send out to a lot of people. It’s what you’re probably most familiar with. Newsletters fall under this category of emails.

One-to-one emails are also called transactional emails. They are only sent after a certain action and/or behavior. A password reset request or an order confirmation from an e-commerce store are examples of transactional emails.

Now that that’s out of the way, let’s get started.

12 Different Types of Marketing Email

One-to-many Emails

1. Product/Service Update Email

A product/service update email is a type of email that 99% of organizations send out.

They (wrongly) call this a newsletter.

It’s an email about their products/services. Most of the time, its main message is a sale or a promo. Sometimes, it’s an update on features.

Here’s a great example from OptimizePress, a WordPress page builder.

product service update

Promos such as Black Friday sale, Christmas and holiday sale, year-end-sales also fall under this category since it talks about your products and services.

Like I said in other posts, there’s nothing wrong with it— unless it’s the only type of email you are sending.

2. Newsletters

The newsletter is a roundup of your blog posts and/or curated content.

It is NOT an email for promotions.

Promotion of your blog posts, maybe. But not sales related.

It is educational in nature.

Newsletters are used to deliver content to your reader’s inbox. For example, I am subscribed to the newsletters of WordStream, HubSpot, Jon Loomer, MailChimp, Copy Blogger, Close.io, and a whole lot more.

I subscribed to them because I want their content, WANT to read it. I look forward to it.

I learn from it.

Below’s a great example from Influence & Co, a content marketing agency. Take note that everything you find inside adds value to the reader. Click on the image to view a larger version.

Influence and Co newsletter adding value to the reader through content

If your readers are not excited about reading your newsletters, then most probably they are not educational content.

So. Please. Stop. Calling. Them. Newsletters.

I talked more about this issue here.

3. New Content Announcement Email

The content announcement email is an email that I have not seen a lot of companies do.

It’s an email you send that invites them to download and/or access the new content you just created.

For example, here’s one from WP Engine, one of the most well-known WordPress hosting.

Content announcement email from WP Engine to download a white paper

The link above is an affiliate link. At no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you decide to make a purchase after clicking through the link.

Content, in this case, is a “big piece” of content. It’s not a regular blog post or article. It is something more significant.

They are examples of marketing offers or lead magnets. Something most companies aren’t using.

4. Event Invitation

As the name suggests, this type of email is an invitation to an event. It’s usually a one-time send; but for those who engaged, i.e. pre-registered to the event, they get sent more information about the event.

For example, you might announce a webinar to your mailing list. From there, those who register get reminder emails on the day of the webinar, 1-hour before, and 15-minutes before the actual webinar.

Here’s how that may look like. This series came from a webinar I recently attended by CopyBlogger.

Example: Webinar invite email

copyblogger webinar 1

Example: Webinar on-the-day reminder email

copyblogger webinar 2

Example: Webinar 1-hour reminder email

copyblogger webinar 3

Example: Webinar 15-minute reminder email

copyblogger webinar 4

These emails doesn’t have to stop here. You can branch out and do more to continue to engage your audience. When you do a webinar, you basically have 3 audiences:

  1. People who registered and attended
  2. People who registered, but didn’t attend
  3. People who didn’t register

So, depending on those segments, you can create your “here’s your replay” email and make it more personalized. For example, to the first group, your messaging can go something like “thanks, here’s the replay to the webinar,” while the second group, you can say something like “sorry you missed the webinar, here’s the replay!”

This will help keep them engaged so they try out your product/service or whatever your offer will be.

5. Dedicated Send

This email is sent to a specific segment in your list about something.

The webinar reminder email I listed above is an example of a series of dedicated send emails.

You can use this for webinars, events, conference attendees, etc.

Here’s a great email from Aweber, an email marketing software.

Aweber's dedicated email send inviting me to a webinar

6. Co-marketing Email

This type of email is when two or more organizations send an email promoting the other one to their respective email lists.

Most of the time, the organizers are related and complementary to each other. For example, a marketing agency and a social media scheduler partnering together to promote a webinar they will be hosting together.

Here’s an example where MobileMonkey is promoting an SEMRush event to his mailing list.

MobileMonkey and SEMRush comarketing email

MobileMonkey is a chatbot software while SEMRush is an all-in-one marketing software.

The link above is an affiliate link. At no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you decide to make a purchase after clicking through the link.

7. Social Media Send

And speaking of MobileMonkey, this type of “email” isn’t exactly an email but it’s done inside any social media that allows messaging.

LinkedIn is where this is most likely to occur. You can also put group messaging apps/channels/chatbots here. For example, Facebook Messenger, Viper, Whatsapp, Telegram, and Slack allows you to send broadcast messages.

In a way, it’s a one-to-many messaging but uses another platform instead of email.

Sample chatbot messaging from MobileMonkey

8. Internal Updates

Email marketing is not limited just your prospects and customers.

Internal update emails are usually used by big organizations for announcements like corporate events, policy changes, etc.

Usually, HR and IT are the groups that send these types of email.

  • For HR, these are usually new employee hires and promotions
  • For IT, it’s mostly maintenance scheduling and/or cyber security best practices

But don’t stop there. It’s best to keep everyone updated on what’s happening around the organization—quarterly sales, new products lined up, what the executives are working on, etc.

For example, here’s a rather-public email from Tim Cook a few years back regarding their $1 trillion milestone.

Email of Tim Cook, Apple's CEO, regarding their  trillion milestone

One-to-one Emails

9. Confirmation Email

A confirmation email is a type of one-to-one email that summarizes a conversation and/or activity that the user just made.

If you bought from any e-commerce stores or signed up for a webinar or tradeshow online, you would have received a confirmation email immediately. That’s a great use of this transactional email.

Another instance this is used is during customer service chats or tickets. Upon finishing the ticket (assuming you provided your email), it will send you the transcript of the conversation.

Here’s an example from NordVPN, one of the most-trusted VPNs out there:

Sample confirmation email from NordVPN

The link above is an affiliate link. At no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you decide to make a purchase after clicking through the link.

10. Thank You Email

A thank you email is a type of email that gets sent right after a user action. Most of the time, this is when a person filled out a form on your landing page to access a marketing offer.

Others call this a form submit kickback email or incentive email.

Here’s an example from close.com, a CRM software, on a guide I downloaded.

Sample Thank You email from Steli of close.io

There are two ways you can use thank you emails:

  1. To deliver the promise or your marketing offer; or,
  2. To give additional information about the marketing offer

For example, if you download the white paper I made, you will receive a thank you email that has a link to the thank you page. That page is where you can access the white paper.

If you’re hosting a webinar or event, of course, you can’t deliver on your promise right away. So, your thank you email should contain information about the webinar or event — date, time, topic, etc.

The confirmation emails are, in a sense, also a form of a thank you email.

11. Welcome Email

A welcome email is exactly what it is— an email (or series of email) that welcomes the new subscriber into the email list or community.

Here’s a great example from Skillshare when I signed up for their service before.

Sample welcome email from SkillShare

The purpose of the welcome email is to be helpful or give added value. It’s not a place to sell.

The Skillshare example fulfills these criteria by being helpful —giving me a free offer — and adding value —they also included a list of their most popular classes.

Take note that this welcome email is for a specific action only. In the example above, it’s for signup to skillshare.com.

In your case, you could set up a separate welcome email for new subscribers to your list, new trial sign-ups, etc. (hint: personalization and segmentation)

12. Lead Nurturing Email

Lead nurturing emails are undoubtedly my favorite among these types of marketing email. Why? Because it’s so easy to do yet so few do it.

Lead nurture emails are designed to supplement your sales process by providing helpful information at the right time. Here’s how you create one from scratch.

If you use some marketing automation tools, you already have access to this. All you need to do is create them.

Think about it this way: your sales process is driven by stages (usually called sales stages or pipeline stages). If you defined what each stage means properly, you’d have identified which information you need at each stage.

For example, if you only have a name and email, they would most likely be only at stage 1 only. But if you know what they want to buy, their budget, and their timeline, they might already be at stage 6 of your sales process.

Lead nurturing emails supplement this sales process by sending these people educational content that will help them decide better (thus, faster) by giving them the information they need even before asking.

I wrote about 3 great examples of lead nurturing campaigns here.

So, What Are You Going to Do Now

Using these 12 examples of email marketing will differentiate you from everyone else.

It’s so easy to follow what everyone else is doing. And, because the bar is so low, a simple change will immediately catapult you to the front.

Start applying these different types and you’ll immediately see results from them.

What Is a Marketing Offer

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A marketing offer is any content of significant value that people are willing to exchange their contact information for.

Other marketers call this a lead magnet or trip wires.

The most common marketing offer is the newsletter subscription. Another one is PDF downloads like industry reports, white papers, and e-books.

A marketing offer that is gaining popularity right now is webinars.

Whatever the offer is, the point here is that it has to be of significant value; otherwise, they won’t give out their contact information.

Two Essential Elements of a Successful Marketing Offer

1) Provide Value

A marketing offer that provides value is one of the things a lot of marketers fail to provide.

Most (foolishly) think that newsletter subscriptions are enough to generate leads for their organizations. That somehow, a magical form asking people to “subscribe” would be enough for them to give up their email addresses without anything in return.

Seriously, think about it. If you visit a website for the first time, would you be willing to give up your email address?

I don’t think so.

Now, what makes you think that these people who visit your site are any much different than you?

A marketing offer needs to provide value. Something that they (not you) think would help them with their problems. Something that would improve their lives.

Think about value from their perspective. Not yours. Not your organization.

2) Deliver on Your Promise

Another important element of a marketing offer is it has to deliver on the promise you made when you asked for their information.

Remember, a marketing offer sits behind a landing page. Then, when the person gets redirected to the thank you page, you should deliver on your promise either through the page itself or through the thank you email.

Typical Online Conversion Path

The mistake marketers also often make is that they use a newsletter subscription (which is a valid marketing offer), but don’t deliver on their promise.

See, a newsletter subscription’s promise is content. Not salesy and promotional messages. This is one of the most ineffective email marketing tactics used by marketers.

Great companies use newsletter subscriptions to offer content. Something that provides value. Buffer with content on productivity. WordStream with content on PPCs. And a whole lot more.

So, What Are You Going to Do Now

A marketing offer needs to provide value and deliver on your promise. As I’ve said over and over, this has to be viewed from the eyes of your prospects and customers, not your organization.

3 Common Problems in Digital Marketing

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Every industry has its own problems and constraints

In this post, I’ll be tackling the most common problems in digital marketing that I often hear from business owners and other marketers.

While these two terms have different meanings, a lot of people use the two interchangeably.

They are either confused about their meanings or don’t know which is a problem and which is a constraint. So, let’s clarify that in this post.

Ready? Let’s dive in!

Common Problems in Digital Marketing

Remember, problems are issues or situations where you have control of. What that means is you can do something about it.

Below are the common problems in digital marketing:

1. Not enough traffic

The first problem marketers encounter is the issue of traffic. This is usually phrased in some form like this:

I don’t have enough visitors to my website.

Traffic is the easiest problem to solve. The answer is content marketing.

A simple definition of content marketing is it’s a marketing tactic where you do two things:

  1. Create content, and
  2. Distribute the content

This is a problem and not a constraint because by now, it’s a proven tactic that blogging and sharing them grow your traffic.

While you cannot “control” how whether people actually visit your site, by making yourself discoverable, you greatly increase your chances of getting more traffic.

Take a look at this case study. After doing 2 small changes, organic traffic grew by 76%.

Just because you have a website, it doesn’t mean people will find you. You have to make them discover you through content creation and distribution.

And when you start building traffic on your website, this brings us to the next problem…

2. Not enough leads

For marketers who are over the hump of vanity metrics, insufficient leads are the next thing they worry about.

Before diving deeper, let’s define a lead first.

At the most basic level, a lead is someone whose contact information is known to your organization.

The most effective way to generate leads today is to create marketing offers that people are willing to give up their contact information.

These marketing offers, often called lead magnets, can be any type of content that provides enough value.

These are PDF downloads like case studies and white papers, webinars, etc.

Newsletter subscriptions are not enough.

How this works is you have several landing pages set up that “gates” your offer. Once people fill-up the form on the landing page, they are redirected to a thank you page where they can access the offer and/or explain what to expect next.

Typical Online Conversion Path

If you don’t have this setup, don’t expect leads to come pouring in.

A proper lead generation strategy is essential.

3. Not enough customers

So, you finally solved your problems with traffic and leads. Now, we can tackle the part where most organizations focus on —getting more customers.

It is important to note that we started with increasing your visits and then your leads. You can’t expect to generate revenue from customers immediately without solving the first two stages — visits and leads. This is the marketing and sales funnel in action. 

The most effective way to get new customers without being too pushy is through lead nurturing.

Without going too much into detail, what that means is you need to have a strategy to group different people into segments according to (1) similar behaviors and/or problems, and (2) stage in the buying cycle.

For example, you’re selling power banks / portable batteries. Using the first criterion, you can group people into reasons they use the power banks.

  • For travel
  • For that extra juice while doing my daily activities
  • My phone battery’s dead and I need to constantly charge

Easily, these groups have different needs, therefore, generic messages won’t work for all of them.

Then, using the buying cycle, they could either be at one of the following stages :

  • Awareness – figuring out if they really need a power back
  • Consideration – looking for the best power banks and which ones are perfect for their devices
  • Decision – already narrowed down the list. Currently looking at reviews, etc.

Again, using a generic message across the entire buying cycle doesn’t work.

The effective way to get these people to buy from you is to create targeted content that addresses their specific needs.

So, What Are You Going to Do Now

The only way to effectively solve these common problems in digital marketing is to approach is phase-by-phase.

Start by increasing your visits by creating content and distributing it.

Once the traffic is there, you now figure out what’s the best way to convert them into leads.

Finally, implement a lead nurturing strategy that will eventually turn these leads into paying customers.

Not enough traffic, leads, and customers are not constraints. They are problems that you can solve and address. Yes, it’s hard. But again, there’s something you can do about it.