Friday, 30 August 2019

The Quest for the Data-Driven Email: How Your Team Can Come Together on a Digital Marketing ...

Creating an effective and engaging email that will garner the results you want, such as higher open and click-through rates, might require the whole marketing team to come together.

You might need your marketing director to help shape the vision for your campaign and drive the team forward. The content manager might work on where the email fits in your content strategy or even write the copy for the email. Your designer will provide the visuals, and a campaign manager well versed in marketing automaton and email marketing might send the email (or emails) out. A social media specialist or director will then use the appropriate platforms to promote the content or offer in the email, and the content manager might also feature the same offer or message in your blog. Of course, someone on your team who works with data management will have to track the results.  

Of course, your entire team would have had to come together in the first place to plan the email and use the appropriate data to make sure that it’s personalized for its target audience to hopefully get the best response possible. Such data-driven emails garner the best results, as they speak more directly to your audience and are tailored to their preferences and interests.

Certainly, today’s digital marketing requires multiple moving parts all coming together with the same vision and goals in mind to shape an email with the right data. It is a game that you play to win ample rewards and also an adventure you go on with your team. Using data to craft an impactful email is truly a quest, and those that succeed are heroes.

In fact, you can use the analogy of a roleplaying game’s campaign to illustrate how all a marketing team’s different members and skillsets come together to solve problems and create an email. RPGs rely on cards that stand in for special abilities and tools, and each marketer on your team will also their own set of talents and tools that they use to play a vital role in winning the day.

You are all digital marketing knights of brave renown, and here are some of the trials you might face on your quest:

Scenario #1: The Rhyming Imp from Corporate Marketing

An imp comes down from Corporate Marketing and claims that they are there to look everything over. They want to see if your emails are working, and if not to instruct you on how to take things slower. As your budget will be cut, your leads will be given to another marketing team who has had better luck.

Rather than despair, your campaign manager mage will conjure visions of numbers from how previous email campaigns with your data and email copy and design did swell. This will show that you are on course to do good with this email as well.

This banishes the imp back to Corporate Marketing, and repeated status reports on your campaign’s success keep him there, and numbers do not lie, so he won’t come back soon, he won’t dare, he'll hide. 

(Having data to back up and justify the decisions you make during campaigns can please your CMOs and other marketing executives and give you more confidence and freedom when planning and executing your campaign.)

Scenario #2: The Content Audit Dragon

To see what content will work well with his magic spells to entice prospects into becoming customers, your content wizard must do an audit of his old spell books to see what worked before and what needs tweaking, revising, a dash of midnight, a four-leaf clover, and other magical ingredients.

This knowledge can help in crafting future emails, as the wizard will have an idea of enchantments his team’s audience likes to fall under. However, it has been an age since the last content audit. The spell books have piled up high and fill an entire cave. The magic has leaked out of them to form a dragon, one your wizard is reluctant to face, as it will take much tedious work to formulate the magic charms needed to tame it and organize the spells (the content) along with the data of how well it all performed.

However, the SEO paladin and the designer bowman both lend a hand, and together with an agency of noble knights and the wizard, they defeat the dragon and organize all the spells into a framework that is readable, understandable, and actionable to use in emails and other spells and content.

(Content audits can be long and tedious work, especially if you leave them go for too long. However, they can provide great insights into your content and help you with you with your strategy and campaigns. A content manager does not have to perform an audit alone. You are part of a team, and your teammates also need to know how well past content has performed, as it might help inform their SEO, design, campaign, and other strategies. Making an audit into a team effort promotes teamwork, invests everyone in its results, and lets everyone have a look at the content in order for them to provide their own feedback. You might also call on an agency you work with to help with the audit, as the information it provides will help them in their projects and the direction everything is going in, too.)

Scenario #3 The Gnome from Sales

A gnome from sales appears in your office. He sits in on all your meetings and looks over everyone’s shoulders at what they’re doing. He appears to have no other purpose but to try to tell everyone how to perform their duties better, with an emphasis on giving the people spread across all the kingdoms a hard sell. About what, pray tell? Well, they need your team to provide them with the lucky charms to send the bothersome trolls packing. He and the other gnomes are always talking with the people, and they think your emails need to reflect what they’re hearing from the traveling minstrels in the taverns about the trolls, while your information comes from the townspeople themselves.

You share what you’ve heard with the gnome, and he describes in better detail what he’s gotten from drinking mead with the minstrels. Once you have shared information and come up with an agreed-upon way to approach your emails that the gnomes can follow up on, your gnome thinks it will work and turns to stone. He only transforms back to check on your open and click-through rates and see if they are turning into revenue.

(Contrary to what some might believe, marketing and sales can work together. In fact marketing can empower sales. You are both on the same side and want the same thing: leads to become customers. By sharing data, you can align on your approaches, so marketing can prime and ready a lead to be turned over to sales.)

Not a Roll of the Dice

Campaigns might experience many other obstacles. If pirates from the competition have beaten you to the punch and are using messaging, themes, and an offer similar to what you were going to do in your email, you might spice up the copy and design, and work with sales on making a different offer—as long as it all aligns with what your data says your customers want.

You might feel that a rival marketing magician has placed a hex on you and that is why your open and click-through rates are low, even though your offer, the copy and design, they’re all good. However, you can overcome that hex by having your team remain in good spirits and come at their approach to email marketing in a different way, by trying to derive different insights from your data and using different topics, themes, writing, and visuals to enchant your audiences. 

Of course, RPG campaigns often count on a roll of the dice to win their battles. Digital marketers do not. What they do is not random but comes from a strategy and plan they all contributed to. Rather than dice and playing cards, they have an array of marketing methods and best practices to utilize. They do not have to draw a sword from a stone but are working off a strong set of data that comes from their customers’ preferences, A/B and multivariate testing, analytics showing the results of their past campaigns, and their own experience and talents. Coming together as a team of digital marketing heroes, they can count on each other and that their approach to marketing draws upon solid numbers and their own ingenuity.

                                              

What are the tools a digital marketer needs on their quest to reach and connect with their customers? Marketing automation can be a great help, but you can also create magic with cross-channel orchestration, data management, testing and personalization, and digital analytics. Find how Oracle Marketing Cloud can make a difference with your campaign.

 

 



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Thursday, 29 August 2019

How to Find Your Why and Get Amazing Testimonials (FS335)

How much of your mission and “why” should you share your audience and customers? Do you need to be crystal clear on your motivation before you are able to do this? How do we collect amazing testimonials from satisfied clients?

Welcome to the first member-focused, Friday episode of the Fizzle Show! These shows will be recorded live with Fizzle members and their questions and will be aired every Friday going forward! If you are not yet a registered member, check out the website so you can be a part of this great community!

In this episode, we focus on two main topics:

The first is getting to grips with your why and whether it is important to include your audience in this journey. The second question we answer is around testimonial collection and the best ways to go about this. We also talk about gauging alignment with customers, non-sleazy marketing and why testimonials are so effective!

We share four great ideas from Sarah Peck on how to elicit meaningful, honest and impactful reviews of your work and offer a few of our own suggestions on the topic too!

For all of this, join the Fizzle Team today for the first of many Fizzle Fridays!

Listen to the episode:

Subscribe to The Fizzle Show in your favorite podcast player:

iTunes | Overcast | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Soundcloud | RSS


Key Points From This Episode:

  • Finding your ‘why’ and how much of it to share with an audience. [0:01:24.5]
  • Balancing the necessities of connecting, authenticity and customer needs. [0:05:35.3]
  • Best practices for testimonial collection after a launch. [0:11:58.1]
  • Using surveys and other easy ways to ask for reviews and testimonials. [0:15:01.8]
  • Why testimonials are important and work so well for small businesses. [0:20:08.2]
  • The 4 questions that Sarah Peck has laid out for getting great testimonials! [0:21:12.9]
  • Especially meaningful components of testimonials you can use [0:23:40.7]
  • And much more!

Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:


Photo by Brooke Cagle on Unsplash

The post How to Find Your Why and Get Amazing Testimonials (FS335) appeared first on Fizzle.



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A Farewell and Some Advice to Keep You Moving Forward

Well, our big news this week is that I’m going to be moving to a more solo career. The ultra...

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Wednesday, 28 August 2019

The Marketer as Philosopher: 3 ways to achieve excellence in yourself and in your marketing

“A great marketer is a customer philosopher.”

— Flint McGlaughlin, Founding Director, MECLABS Institute


(This article was originally published in the MarketingExperiments email newsletter.)

The internet is full of resources trying to help marketers with the mechanics of their job, but very few are focused on the marketer as a person and the unique experience you have every day in your work.

In this session, Flint McGlaughlin aims to help marketers re-envision their role. He wants you to understand what you are capable of doing with your marketing expertise so that you not only produce a new level of results for your organization, but add meaning to your work.

Why? Because we see marketing abused. Many people think marketing is just talking people into buying things, pushing them to do something. But true marketing helps people make the right decision. So the marketer must escape the negative connotation of the role and embrace the power of marketing as a force for positive change in our world.

Watch the video and get inspired to start your day with purpose. And if you’re in a hurry, here are some key points in the video: [

  • The importance of having a methodology over a list of tips (2:12)
  • Headline optimization (7:08)
  • Form optimization (12:35)
  • The power of marketing as a positive force for change in the world (17:19)
  • The marketer as customer philosopher (28:08 )
  • Beware of de-emphasizing people as technology increases in marketing. (35:15)
  • Experience a Quick Win Intensive with MECLABS to become a better marketer (45:25)
  • Live optimization (47:45)

You can follow along with this FREE infographic:

How To Create a Model of Your Customer’s Mind


Related Resources

Landing Page Optimization: How Aetna’s HealthSpire startup generated 638% more leads for its call center

The Zen of Headline Writing

The Marketer as Philosopher: 40 Brief Reflections on the Power of Your Value Proposition

Quick Win Intensive: Get MECLABS scientists to help you find the fastest way to drive a major revenue increase

The post The Marketer as Philosopher: 3 ways to achieve excellence in yourself and in your marketing appeared first on MarketingExperiments.



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Life After Copyblogger for Sonia Simone

I still remember the first time I asked Brian Clark if I could write for Copyblogger. I had been an...

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What Digital Marketers Need to Realize About Demand Generation

In the ever-evolving world of B2B marketing, demand generation is the latest concept that's being touted as a way to fuel what’s in the sales funnel — and keep it topped up over the long term. 

Different from inbound marketing, demand generation can help digital marketers achieve their goals. Here’s why.

Defining Demand Generation

Demand generation is an overriding term for all the marketing programs and tactics in use designed to get customers excited and engaged with what you can offer them.

Beyond branding and funnel marketing tactics, demand generation efforts are specific methods for creating touchpoints for all aspects of the conversion and sales cycles. The goal is to develop long-term customer relationships, leveraging and extending the excitement for continued product or service purchases.

Therefore, demand generation can mean many different things, depending on your offering and your audience. It might involve answering questions or promoting blog posts on social media, utilizing influencer marketing, creating an e-book or newsletter campaign, or hosting a webinar or in-person event. While any type of marketing potential can achieve these tactics, only a demand generation program enacts tactics focused on long-term relationships rather than immediate conversions.

Inbound Marketing Is Demand Generation

While it may at first sound confusing, inbound marketing and demand generation go hand in hand. Again, it goes back to the marketer’s perspective.

If an inbound marketing tactic is for the short term but is focusing on high-quality content that attracts people to your brand, then it remains inbound marketing. But if it’s across the longer term to make connections and create a community around your brand, it becomes part of your demand generation program. 

In this way, inbound marketing and demand generation are one in the same, while also being different enough to work together to produce leads and nurture customers.

Sales Plays a Role in Demand Generation

Like other aspects of today’s digital marketing department, sales has an integral role in developing and managing demand generation. Marketers move prospects through the sales funnel alongside the thought leadership of the sales team to provide insights and direction on content and campaign strategies.

While the sales team directly builds the customer relationship, it’s the work of the marketing team that gives them the materials to do so. It’s the demand generation outlook that bridges the differences between sales and marketing and gives them common ground to collaborate.

Demand Generation Feeds on Data

To deliver on the needs of each long-term customer relationship, demand generation needs a steady diet of data. It’s that data that dictates content and campaign themes, channels, and targeting strategies. And, for any long-term customer relationship to last, each customer wants to know that a brand knows him or her on an individual level and can personalize interactions over time.

This is why demand generation must be a data-driven strategy that includes quantitative analysis, metrics and testing, and marketing automation tools to intuitively interact with each customer. Collect this data as early as possible in your demand generation program and continue doing so throughout the marketing process.

To ensure your demand generation program tracks the right metrics in the long term, it’s important to know why a customer stays with a brand. That means tracking how the customer engages with your content and channels by measuring clicks, impressions, and downloads. Think about identifying all the data points that help you look forward with your customer relationship, rather than backward at what you’ve done.

You’ll Still Need to Segment Your Audience

While some within the marketing world call demand generation a top-of-funnel approach, it involves segmentation, which often happens farther down the funnel. Only through this segmentation can you drill down to develop the necessary personalized approach to your customer relationships, creating demand based upon individual interests and needs.

To segment your audience for demand generation, you need to start with the criteria that fits your industry and value offering, including how your offering helps your audience segment do their jobs better, achieve certain goals, and become further educated. You’ll also need to set criteria that defines where each segment is in the purchase process.

From there, drill down the segmentation further by looking at which audience segment uses what platform and what type of messages motivate them to act. Find out what type of content they need that addresses that criteria, such as information that helps them do their job or complete a project.

Think of Demand Generation as an Ongoing Process

Demand is ongoing and not only about initial excitement. It’s not simply about making an initial effort or investing in a few check-ins over the course of a customer relationship. Instead, it’s about continually looking for ways to maintain magic between you and each of your customers.

Once you engage with customers, the data you’re collecting should be helping you get to know them better. Once you know what interests them, you can move to the next stage of excitement, where you show them you know them.

However, their interests will change over time, so you’ll need to continually regenerate the demand generation process to rediscover them so they can rediscover your brand. This creates a cycle of discovery and delight — the formula for keeping any type of relationship going.

                                                                                                                                       

Data drives all modern marketing strategies. Take a closer look at how you work with data and let it guide you toward marketing success with “Modern Marketers Using Data-Driven Strategies.”

Take a look.

 

 



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Tuesday, 27 August 2019

Ubersuggest 5.0: Generate 1 Million Keyword Suggestions in 7 Seconds (Seriously)

The Art of Finding Ideas

Every writer who has ever lived has lusted after ideas. Where are they, how do I get them, and how...

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How to create high-converting lead magnets

Lead magnets are incentives offered to your website visitors in exchange for their names, email addresses and other contact information. Examples include eBooks, checklists, white papers, discount codes, quizzes and templates. Your visitors get something valuable, and you get their contact information so you can follow up via phone, email or snail mail.

Most commonly, lead magnets are used to entice visitors to subscribe to email lists. They bring prospects into your funnel so you can deploy lead nurturing campaigns that ultimately convince them to make purchases. Here’s how to create high-converting lead magnets that skyrocket subscribers.

What does a good lead magnet include?

The best lead magnet ideas have these things in common:

1. They offer value

Some lead magnets give advice or help people solve problems. Some offer instant discounts. Still others entertain. The common denominator, though, is that they offer value to your visitors.

Let’s say you sell suitcases. One lead magnet idea might be a family vacation checklist. You create a landing page or Pop Up to promote your checklist and collect subscribers’ names as well as email addresses, then automatically deliver the checklist as a PDF to subscribers’ inboxes. Subscribers can print your checklist and keep it handy while they plan and pack for vacation, which increases your brand visibility and makes it easy to follow up with email marketing that’s designed to sell suitcases.

2. They’re targeted

Lead magnets don’t need to be long, comprehensive masterpieces. Instead, they need to offer value to a specific target audience. That means they can be used to segment audiences into different lists, so you can personalize your email marketing and increase conversions. The more specific your lead magnet, the more targeted your marketing.

For example, let’s say you operate a pet store. Your lead magnet could be a guide to finding the perfect pet. However, that’s not very specific and chances are high that your customers already know which types of pets they prefer. A better, more targeted approach would be to create a guide to caring for a new puppy. Sure, it won’t interest cat owners or aquarium buffs (you can create different lead magnets for them), but people who just purchased or are considering a puppy are very likely to download your guide.

3. They demonstrate your capabilities and benefits

Good lead magnets don’t just offer value for subscribers, they show how you’re uniquely positioned to solve their problems or help them achieve their goals.

Let’s say you sell outdoor grilling supplies. You might create a guide to grilling steak. Your lead magnet will offer valuable tips, but you can also pepper it with mentions of how your products can help customers grill the perfect steak.

4. They’re just the beginning

Remember that lead magnets are a means to an end. Though they can certainly work to boost sales, the primary goal is to collect targeted subscribers’ email addresses. That means you should develop an accompanying lead nurturing campaign that’s deployed via an autoresponder. This type of email marketing automation works to convert subscribers into customers.

For example, let’s say you operate a restaurant. Your lead magnet might be simple: a coupon good for 10% off the next meal. Getting that initial business is great, but the real value will be realized through sending targeted emails that promote your weekly specials and motivate multiple visits to your eatery.

How to generate content for a good lead magnet?

Now you know the value of lead magnets, but how can you generate content for a good lead magnet? Here are four ideas.

1. Surveys

Create surveys and send them to your customers. Ask questions about their problems, lifestyles, hobbies and things they wish they knew. You can use that information to craft lead magnets people will want to download.

For example, let’s say you operate a B2B accounting service. Your survey might ask business owners about their biggest bookkeeping challenges. You might discover they struggle to identify which expenses are tax deductible; this could inspire you to create a “tax-deductible checklist” lead magnet.

2. Blog content

If your website has a blog, study your analytics to see which posts are the most popular. Then, create lead magnets based on that content.

You can simply repackage your blog posts into a lead magnet, but a better idea is to take your top titles and expand on them so your lead magnets offer additional value. Then, visitors will share their email addresses to access it.

3. Customer support

Your existing customer base can inform lead magnet content. Study customer support emails to identify common problems, questions and themes. Read through related support forums and take note when customers ask questions on the phone and in your store.

They’re asking these questions because they want the answers. If you can package those answers into a guide, eBook or other resource, you have an excellent lead magnet idea that’s likely to convert visitors to subscribers (and, ultimately help convert subscribers to customers).

4. Competitor websites

Browse your competitors’ websites to see which lead magnets they use. If you notice a given lead magnet or theme used time and again, it probably works. You can model your lead magnet after that or, even better, improve on their idea so your lead magnet is more attractive.

Examples of effective lead magnets

These are some of the most popular and effective lead magnet examples you can use as inspiration for your own marketing.

Guides, eBooks and checklists

Typically delivered as PDF downloads, the above are informative guides that help your audience solve problems or achieve goals. In this example, Book Baby offers a free guide to self-publishing. The guide promises real value, it’s targeted to Book Baby’s audience, it will undoubtedly mention how Book Baby can help and it’s just the beginning of what will likely be a strong lead nurturing campaign.

Book Baby lead magnet

Online and email courses

Courses can be excellent lead magnets. The first lesson is typically available right away, so courses have immediate value, but they also keep subscribers engaged as a new lesson is released every day or week.

In this example found on How To Play Guitar, the author offers 50 beginner guitar video lessons. Your course doesn’t need to have 50 lessons (you could do a four-part or six-part series), but this example illustrates how a targeted online or email course can be a powerful lead magnet.

Guitar lead magnet

Instant discounts

Instant coupon codes are excellent lead magnets. Even if coupons don’t persuade people to buy today, you can use automated email marketing to reach out to subscribers until they do. In this example, 1800 Pet Supplies offers an instant, yet time-limited, coupon code and gives customers the opportunity to subscribe if they want to use the coupon code later.

Pet lead magnet

Other lead magnet ideas

Those are just a few lead magnet examples, but you’re not limited to those ideas. Here are a few more:

  • Quizzes (give results after users submit their email addresses)
  • Downloadable templates
  • Calendars and planners
  • Cheat sheets
  • Infographics
  • White papers
  • Case studies
  • Special reports
  • Sneak peek or sample chapters
  • Free trials
  • Free quotes, estimates and consultations
  • Recipes/cookbooks
  • Contests
  • Webinars
  • Waiting lists (perfect for validating ideas)
  • Audio books
  • Free samples
  • Demos
  • Free shipping
  • Online tools and resources
  • Videos and podcast episodes
  • Workbooks
  • Community membership
  • Swipe files
  • Resource lists
  • Print/snail mail catalogs

Lead magnets are powerful marketing tools employed by large and small businesses alike. Use these tips to determine what information your audience will share their email addresses for, then create a compelling lead magnet that converts visitors to subscribers and subscribers to customers.

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© 2019, Brian Morris. All rights reserved.

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The Future...Delayed: The Forces that Keep Brands from Being Aligned with Consumer Behaviors

The goal of every brand is to be relevant to consumers and aligned with consumer behaviors. That’s why brands launched ecommerce sites as the internet became an increasingly common place to shop. That’s why brands made their emails mobile friendly as smartphones became an increasingly common way to read emails. And that’s why brands created Facebook pages and started running ads on Facebook as that social media site became increasingly popular.

Brands chase audiences.

But the speed at which individual brands pursue consumers and align themselves with consumer behaviors varies wildly. Some are on the bleeding edge. Some wait for a solid critical mass. Some wait as long as they can. And some never get on board—sometimes much to their detriment.

For bigger trends, this whole process of industry adoption can take years—even a decade or more. Mobile-friendly email design is a great case in point. The iPhone kicked off this need when it debuted in 2007 as the first phone able to render HTML emails. By 2012, 36% of emails were opened on mobile devices, which is a clear critical mass of adoption. However, the majority of large B2C brands didn’t adopt mobile-friendly email designs until 2015. 

Today, responsive design and mobile-aware design are the status quo for emails. But consumers endured many years of subpar mobile email experiences from brands that they cared enough about to share their inbox with.

Unfortunately, many brand-loyal consumers will similarly suffer delays around hyper-personalization, automation, and other trends that are gradually re-shaping email experiences, and consumer expectations along with them. 

In this on-demand webinar, we discuss the forces that keep brands from aligning with consumer behaviors more quickly. Plus, you’ll hear advice on how to overcome those forces from some of our more than 500 experts at Oracle Marketing Cloud Consulting, including Clint Kaiser, Cristal Foster, Kim Roman, Autumn Coleman, and Otilia Antipa.

Let’s limit the delay in adapting to consumer behaviors, so we’re serving our customers better and minimizing how much of the future we cede to our competitors.

We hope you enjoyed “The Future...Delayed: The Forces that Keep Brands from Being Aligned with Consumer Expectations,” which is part of Oracle Marketing Cloud Consulting’s on-demand webinar series. Other webinars in the series available for viewing include:

                                                         

Need help with training, change management, or other aspects of your email marketing program? Oracle Marketing Cloud Consulting has more than 500 of the leading marketing minds ready to help you to achieve more with the leading marketing cloud, including strategists, designers, copywriters, trainers, deliverability experts, and more.

Learn more →



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Monday, 26 August 2019

A Few Special Updates from the Fizzle Team! (FS334)

Today’s show is a quick and extra special one! We have just celebrated our 333rd episode and we are taking this opportunity to share a few very important and exciting updates with all of you. That’s right, 333 weekly shows from the Fizzle team, how long have you been a listener for?

We are about to shake things up and we have three big changes that we are implementing right now!

First of these is Corbett Barr taking over as primary host of the podcast. Do not worry, our dear friend and resident loudmouth, Chase will still appear from time to time but as he focusses more of his energy on his YouTube business, he is handing the big responsibility baton over to Corbett.

The second thing on the list is the introduction of regular, member-focused episodes, so we will be having an additional episode every Friday where we will air a mix of questions and live coaching sessions with some of you! We will be sticking to our usual Tuesday show with roundtable discussions and interviews, where you can hear from some of the Fizzle regulars as well as some new voices too!

As we move forward and evolve we really want to keep things fresh, while at the same time keeping the magic of what makes this show so special. So you can still count on us to bring you diverse opinions, actionable and practical tips as well as real-life stories and examples. We aim to keep the delivery honest, transparent and holistic while staying as fun and reliable as always!

All of your feedback is so important to us and we really love to hear from you, so do not hesitate to reach out to us at any point. We want to continue to evolve and tweak things for all of our benefits!

Listen to the episode:

Subscribe to The Fizzle Show in your favorite podcast player:

iTunes | Overcast | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Soundcloud | RSS


Key Points From This Episode:

  • The new primary host of the show! [0:00:45.5]
  • More episodes with members, as requested by you! [0:01:25.2]
  • Big thanks for all of your involvement and feedback. [0:03:01.7]
  • A wonderful review from a listener in South Africa. [0:03:38.8]
  • And much more!

Links Mentioned in Today’s Fizzle Team Episode:

The post A Few Special Updates from the Fizzle Team! (FS334) appeared first on Fizzle.



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How to Wireframe a Landing Page: 6 steps

Why Your Prospect Chooses Your Competitor

You had trouble sleeping again last night. Up until the time you got into bed, you were looking at their...

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5 Vital Considerations for Prioritizing A/B Campaigns

As your A/B testing, optimization, and personalization program begins to grow and gain traction within your organization,  marketers often find themselves faced with this challenge:

  • Narrowing down lists of 100+ campaign ideas

  • Prioritizing them, and

  • Ultimately creating a roadmap out of them. 

How do you determine which tests to run? Prioritization can seem especially daunting when multiple stakeholders are involved and there are multiple departments competing for real estate across your company’s website. In order to simplify this intimidating task, the Oracle Maxymiser Consulting Team devised a simple list of considerations for you to make when evaluating a test campaign and placing it on your testing roadmap:

  1. Does this campaign help me reach my program’s overarching goal?

    • First and foremost, all campaigns you plan on running should be gut-checked against your optimization program’s overarching goal.  If you have been tasked with increasing revenue generated by the sale of ancillary products by 15% over 6 months, then almost every test you run should be focused on driving visitors to purchase those ancillary products.

    • It may make sense to incorporate smaller, more tactical campaigns into your roadmap in order to make smaller tweaks to the user experience.  Campaigns that do not directly correspond with your main goal should be more carefully scrutinized.

  2. Is there data to back up this hypothesis?

    • The most objective way to prioritize your test ideas is to use data to support your test concept.  Your organization already has data points about your customers’ — whether you have site analytics, data management platforms, user experience insights, behavioral data, or any combination of them, your optimization strategy should be leveraging these data points to prioritize, determine potential ROI, and develop a strategic roadmap. 

    • Reviewing your existing site data is a great way to identify pain points and come up with campaign ideas in the first place.

  3. Is there enough traffic volume to test effectively?

    • Depending on your industry and level of traffic to your site, this can be one of the most important questions to ask yourself when building out your testing roadmap and prioritizing campaigns.  Even clients with high traffic volume sometimes want to test low-traffic pages and/or segments of visitors that are too small to reach statistical significance within a reasonable timeframe.

    • Oracle Maxymiser’s Test Duration Calculator (seen below) is a great tool to leverage to estimate how long your campaign will need to run.

  1. Is the potential financial impact greater than other testing ideas?

    • The closer the change you are making is to the main KPI, the greater the odds are that your test will have an impact.  For example, if your main goal for optimization is increasing lead form submissions from enterprise product pages, changing the messaging and/or call to action on enterprise product pages will have a greater impact than testing the hero image on the homepage. 

  2. Do any organizational considerations need to be made?

    • If your test idea is radical, conflicts with brand guidelines, requires timing considerations due to other marketing initiatives, relies on seasonality, etc. then you may need input or approval from other departments before launching.  This question is imperative to ask as waiting for approval from other teams can significantly delay launch dates.

Often times my clients are inundated with test ideas and have multiple stakeholders pushing their goals on the testing team at once.  When these situations arise, it is important to take a step back and review all of the above considerations.

In addition to using the above five points to vet test ideas, you can also use them to create a campaign idea scorecard. You can even create a living document of test ideas with an associated point system for each category.  The campaigns with the highest score can then be moved to the top of the roadmap and ordered based on other marketing initiatives, seasonality, time to develop, etc.  Living campaign roadmaps are a great way to show your organization the thought process behind which tests come to fruition and which ones die on the vine. 

                                                                                                                                                   

Want to learn more about how the Oracle Maxymiser Consulting team can take your optimization program to new heights?  The Oracle Maxymiser Consulting team is made up of passionate strategists, designers, developers, quality assurance professionals,  trainers, analysts, and platform experts. We’re excited to understand your business needs and work with you to drive ROI.

Contact us here or find out more information about Oracle Maxymiser (and the rest of the Oracle Marketing Cloud suite) at our home on the web

 

 

 



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Sunday, 25 August 2019

The Best Kept Secret On Digital Marketing

Our new video series, On the Fly brings you small bites (two mins or less) of marketing advice and training from marketing experts—delivered while they are on the road, at the airport, or traveling somewhere. 

We are thrilled to be partnering with Convince and Convert to bring you this series, and our first episode features, none other than Jay Baer, its founder. Jay is a renowned marketing and customer experience expert, New York Times best-selling author of six books, and in this episode, he talks about B2B content cadence.

Marketers, we have all been there! You have just produced a great piece of content, but you are just not sure when to share it for maximum impact. You have seen the latest articles about a new supposedly optimal time to share content but know that all the other marketers have seen the same exact study. What should you do? 

Jay says maybe you should think about zigging when everybody else zags. What does he mean? Because most B2B content comes out middle of the week, push yours out on Monday, or on Sunday, or even on a Saturday night when most people don't get B2B content. Most importantly, test it for yourself. Just because someone’s data shows that most people do something midweek doesn't necessarily mean that you should do the same thing. Test and experiment with different posting times to see what results in the best response for you.

Watch the full video here:

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As inboxes are getting more crowded and other media channels are competing for your customer’s attention- sending the right content to the right audience at the most optimal time becomes critical. 

Take the guess work out and let AI make the decision. Both Oracle Responsys and Eloqua marketing platforms are Send Time Optimization enabled. Read Send Time Optimization: Let AI Make the Decision for Youto learn more.

 

 

 



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