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Rescooped by Martin (Marty) Smith from Internet Marketing Benefits
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18 Great Tips To Increase Blog Traffic [6 from Marty]

18 Great Tips To Increase Blog Traffic [6 from Marty] | Must Market | Scoop.it
A couple of days ago, I was lamenting to my friend Abbie Fink that Spin Sucks grew only 29 percent in 2012. She rolled her eyes at me as I was finishing my statement. “Only 29 percent,” she said.

Via Damjan Štrekelj
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

I would add:

#13 GAMIFY.

#14 Guest Post (especialy with Google Authorship coming).

#15 Contestify (create cool contests).

#16 Work on blogs navigaiton and keyword silos.

#17 Add "Poeple who Read Also Like...".

#18 Add email subscription and regular persona based emails.


That last tip needs some explanation. Blogs have a hard tie gaining substantial PageRank because they tend to be one and done (people come read the post you just pitched on social media and leave). Fix one and done with a "People who like, also like..." Amazon-like feature sharing relevant content to the post on the page.

The other SEO issue with blogs is calendars make for bad keyword silos. Organize your blog into a series of 2 to 6 keyword "silos" such as "Internet marketing" and develop landing pages to summarize the content. This landing page is where you want rank to go as it is the top of the silo.

Read my Advanced SEO: Bleeding, Bottling and Siloing for more tips on how to organize a keyword silo:
http://scenttrail.blogspot.com/2012/06/seo-advanced-lessons-in-bleeding.html

 

Finally stop treating your blog like a blog and more like a website by adding email subscription forms and developing persona based email marketing. Best guide to how to do this is Managing Content Marketing (book) by Rose and Pulizzi.

SO...there are all kinds of ways to double or triple your blog's read

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20 Reasons Why Your Content Marketing Stinks & What To Do About It - CMI [+Marty Note]

20 Reasons Why Your Content Marketing Stinks & What To Do About It - CMI [+Marty Note] | Must Market | Scoop.it

Review this list of 20 things that make content stink. If you have check marks next to more than two your content marketing is stiinking up the joint. Don't worry, you are not alone. Share a few tips on what to do to stink less and wind your way toward great content marketing.

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Q: Can Gamification Get Hotter? A: Maybe

Q: Can Gamification Get Hotter? A: Maybe | Must Market | Scoop.it

Google's trend chart shows what we sense. Gamification is HOT and getting hotter.


Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Gamification, the art and science of applying game theory to online marketing, is HOT. The world Google Trends graph above confirms interest is high and getting higher. The steepness of the curve maybe its most impressive accomplishment.

Why Is Gamification So Hot
It is hard to think of any Internet marketing that can't be made better with gamification? The curve became very steep as Google began twisting our SEO fates with Panda updates. There is a correlation.

Google's new algorithm cherishes heuristic measures such as time on site, return visitors and pages viewed. Nothing tickles those metrics better than gamification. What is gamification?

Gamification, when applied to Internet marketing contains these components:

* A game with an objective measure, some "material" gains.

* A leaderboard that compares progress in the game.

* Small gains leading to bigger gains.

* A reward system easy to communicate across social nets.

* A game within the game.

* A social horse race.


Material Gain

Klout is a good example of "material" gain. As one's Klout score increases by making waves on the social net "material" gain is realized. For now we will overlook the circular nature of the rewards system (the primary benefit of your Klout score going up is your Klout score going up) and leave an upward swing as "material gain".

Leaderboard
Scoop.it's My Community is a great example of a perfectly conceived and executed leaderboard. Your track isn't against the top of the stack since seeing Robin Good or Michele Smorgon (@maxOz) visitor counts would be de-motivating. In fact, Scoop.it started with My Community that shared the top of the leaderboard before changing to just a Scooper's immediate competitive set (much more motivating).

Small Gains
Small gains are always the stepping-stones to bigger gains. The nature of a well-constructed game is the reward system never stops but does ratchet up the more it is played. This ability to slide rewards with play creates a cocaine-like addiction. It is no mistake that the leading troll on Reddit explained his self-destructive behavior as, "I did it for the points," as if anyone should understand his addiction.

 

The interview, not a Reddit player looked at the man as if he was insane. Reddit's gamification was both means and end and the reinforcement came so fast and furious this man was overwhelmed to the extent his life is in ruins from chasing "points". 


Social Points
Klout and GetGlue are good about prompting sharing of achievement across social network. Sharing reinforces the gain and sells the game.

Game Within The Game
On Scoop.it the daily game is views and the game within the game is views against your immediate competitive set as expressed in My Community. On a workout site the most pushups or greatest weight loss can be games within games. Games within games are wheels that increase engagement. Players who play the game within the game are twice hooked and may be the games greatest advocates.

Social Horse Race
The most valuable competitions are close ones. There is something in human nature that wants to root for the underdog that wants the thrill of victory. We care more about races when they are close, so gamification designers must find ways to insure competition. Scoop.it insured competition when they changed from top of the stack My Community to allowing each player to see their competitive set. If one or a few players run off and leave the pack the game must be reformed to promote competition or it won't endure.

Other Resources
I wrote what may be the first gamification white paper for Atlantic BT last year:

Gamification: Winning Hearts Minds and Loyalty Online

 

Gamification Summit in SF April 2013

Reality is Broken by Jane McGonigal

 

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Q: Is Pizza About To Be Disrupted by Mobile? A: Yes

Q: Is Pizza About To Be Disrupted by Mobile? A: Yes | Must Market | Scoop.it
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Superfans: The Secret Weapon In Marketing #socialmarketing

Superfans: The Secret Weapon In Marketing #socialmarketing | Must Market | Scoop.it

Let’s face it—social media, like any other type of marketing, comes down to results.


Every day, people are asking about better ways to assess the value of social media. When you search for something on Google , you already know what you want, right? On social media it’s hard to track direct and immediate sales, because it is more of a discovery tool that creates a need to buy when the time is right. However, now there is a way you can directly correlate the commercial value of metrics on social media.


According to a recent report, a Facebook friend is worth about $174—a 28% increase over last year — and it is expected to increase exponentially. Wouldn’t you consider a brand suggested by a friend on Facebook over one advertised in a magazine?

Marty Note:
Great post by Brian and @MarketingHits. I shared the long version of the funny "Martin learns to become an Inernet marketer" story on G+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/102639884404823294558/posts/L8cm7eq6mLi Thanks to Brian Yanish for the great share.

BTW, this post is also closely related to why personas and segments are so important to Internet marketers. When you know WHO you are talking to you know how to talk.

Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com's insight:

Brands need to use follower analytic tools and to find Superfans. It is not hard to build a Superfan list. Then give them something special related to your brand. 

Esther Coronel De Iberkleid's comment, June 14, 2013 1:41 PM
Great comment Martin! I believe once we have the FANS the superfans are joining by themselves!! I would never consider a superfan someone I pay for. The concept for me is related with values not with money at all!
Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, June 14, 2013 1:57 PM
Yes Esther, but SuperFans have an agenda too. When we (FoundOjbets.com the specialty gift distributor founded by Janet McKean) worked with Oprah we discovered her magic. Oprah rarely stuck her reputation all the way out there. She would take something that already had momentum and blow it apart. We did see her reach down to an ceramic artist we knew and pluck her from semi-obscurity. That interaction came after big presentations in Elle Decor and Redbook, so there was a shelf of support. Oprah (and my ex Janet McKean) must watch signal creators like those magazine like hawk on a wire. Oprah's touch of this ceramic artist blew them up and then right back down again (they didn't have their process ready for such a HUGE growth spurt). Superfans want to be a powerful second on trends that will add to their reputation as finder of cool things and trends. First is way to risky for most (Oprah included).
Esther Coronel De Iberkleid's comment, June 14, 2013 2:39 PM
Thank you Martin for sharing such a powerful insight and comment at the same time. Yes I agree there are times when things happen and do not flow as expected possibly, always for a reason They may be successful or not, also for a reason. We definitely have to find the lesson to understand the why. I believe we are all messengers delivering messages. Some people are ready and some may not be ready. Still there is a deep lesson for all to learn. This is life!!! This is why we are here. Challenges are just ways to direct us to our final destination. Technology included!
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How Your Unique Greatness Meets Customer Aspirations [Marty Video]

How Your Unique Greatness Meets Customer Aspirations [Marty Video] | Must Market | Scoop.it
Know thyself is great Internet marketing advice and this post helps explain how to define your Unique Selling Propositions and Unique Customer Aspirations.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

NEW Concept - Unique Customer Aspiration
Wrote this piece to introduce a new concept called Unique Customer Aspiration (UCA). Your UCA is what you want your customers to achieve as a result of your interaction or partnership.

I was taught to market based on USP or Unique Selling Proposition. USP seems solipsistic now. USP need to be combined with a UCA to insure your marketing doesn't talk to itself about itself.

We live in a socially engaged "Connection Economy", so combining USP + UCA creates a foundation for great Internet marketing.

What about you? Do you know your USP? What are your thoughts on UCA? Share your thoughts and I will curate them into the post.

 

Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com's curator insight, March 21, 2013 12:07 AM

How are you and your business different?


A quick search on Linkedin for "website designer" shows 300,000+ people who do the same thing I do. So how do you set yourself up as "different"? Try building on your other interests and experiences to strengthen your USP or Unique Selling proposition.

Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, March 21, 2013 12:13 AM
Only ONE Brian Yanish my friend, only one! Marty
Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com's comment, March 21, 2013 12:13 AM
lol
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Ally Greer, The Sales Lion and A Content Marketing Whip, Chair and Gun Mashup For 2013

Ally Greer, The Sales Lion and A Content Marketing Whip, Chair and Gun Mashup For 2013 | Must Market | Scoop.it

Mashup these 4 content marketing posts and your Internet marketing wins in 2013.

Ally Greer's curator insight, January 2, 2013 1:40 AM

A great analysis of 4 posts you should read before starting your online marketing plan for 2013. Thanks for including mine, Marty!

Two Pens's curator insight, January 6, 2013 9:46 PM

I like Ally Greer's post.

Mustapha Barki's curator insight, January 20, 2013 8:00 AM

http://www.scoop.it/t/engineer-betatester/p/3995239686/friendship-page-facebook