STOP, COLLABORATE AND LISTEN: 3 THINGS TO DO ON TWITTER IN 2016


The New Year is a great time to implement a new Twitter strategy. Here are three tips to help you rock Twitter in 2016.

Stop! Stop jumping on bandwagons.
Do this. Do that. Don’t do this. Don’t do that. Twitter is full of talking heads (me included) sharing the latest Twitter marketing tips, tricks and trends. By all means, take in the information, but don’t attempt to implement every piece of advice you hear.

Nobody knows your business like you do. Every business is unique. While I can blog every day with new tricks and sharing the latest social media trends that I suggest you implement, you are the one who knows best if something makes sense to add to your strategy. You can’t implement every tip and trick. The reality is that most of the tips and tricks you hear about won’t work for your brand. Also, remember that consistency is one of the biggest keys to success on Twitter. You want to create a plan for 2016, then consistently work that plan. Some changes may be needed, but for the most part you want to maintain the same strategy.

Stop jumping on bandwagons. The tips and tricks and trends are generally designed for a quick boost to your Twitter marketing game. You’re not in a sprint. You’re running a marathon. Create your 2016 strategy and consistently work the strategy for the full year.

Collaborate: Don’t fight Twitterverse alone.
The Twitterverse is huge. One billion users. An estimated 50 million businesses on Twitter. Everyone fighting the good fight to gain followers and get engagement. Why fight that battle alone? Collaborate with others to increase your marketing power. Here are three ways to collaborate on Twitter.

Influencer Marketing: This is similar to having a celebrity endorse and promote your brand. Find Twitter users who can influence your targeted audience. Provide them with your product and service. Provide a small monthly fee for their services in marketing your product or service. Note that you can find people to be an influencer without paying but you’ll get much better results and a higher quality of influencer if you do provide a fee. You can expect to pay around $300-600 per month (Sometimes more for top influencers).
Tip 1: Don’t think about whom is a big name within your field. Instead, think about whose audience is the most similar to your target audience.
Tip 2: Make sure to get in writing exactly what this influencer will be doing for you on a monthly basis but also realize that you won’t be able to measure the full value of the influencer.
Cross Promotion: We see this lot in more traditional print marketing. If you take a look at the “junk mail” marketing pieces in your mail, you’ll see post cards or flyers with multiple brands. These brands came together, shared costs, shared prospect lists, and put on the marketing piece together. You can implement this same strategy on Twitter. Here is one way to cross promote:
Strategic Partners: Find someone who does not compete directly with you but who has an audience comprised mostly of your same target audience. Contact them. Agree to share each other’s promotional twitter content on a consistent basis. You can extend this partnership to other social networks.
Listen: Listen and Respond to your Audience.
I did a bit of surveying to see what my followers thought brands should do or not do on Twitter in 2016. The vast majority of responses came down to users wanting brands to listen and reply to them. The majority of brands on social media still use social media as a forum to broadcast their own promotions and completely disregard the social part of social media. In years past, brands could get away with that. However, in 2016, brands who don’t listen and respond, who don’t put the social in social media, will struggle.

I know you get it. Listening is important. But how do you implement that as an actionable strategy in 2016? Here are a few ways:

Mindset Shift: Consider Twitter as not just part of your Marketing Department but also make it part of your Customer Service Department and create a system and channel for these two departments to work together with Twitter. Increasingly so, consumers are turning to Twitter for customer service.
Set a response time standard for replying to all mentions and direct messages. Create a system that enables you to hold to that standard. A quick response time is more important on Twitter than it is on Facebook or other social networks. If you find you’re not able to reply to users within your time standard, you may need to make some changes or hire an extra employee to ensure that you can reply in a timely matter.
Search for your brand being mentioned on Twitter. There is a big market of software out there that can help you with these. You don’t want to just sit back and wait for users to contact you directly. You want to also search for what people are saying about you. Not all of these mentions will need a reply from you, but you want to be listening to what people are saying.
Stop. Collaborate. Listen. These three tips will help you rock Twitter in 2016. And yes, mostly I just wanted to write a blog that would get a Vanilla Ice song stuck in your head (You know you started singing it when you read this blog title!).

HOW TO PROMOTE YOUR MOST POPULAR BLOG CONTENT WITH FACEBOOK ADS


Whether we want to admit it or not, some of our content resonates perfectly with our audience… and some falls short.

While it’s vital to continue to develop new content for your website, you should take advantage of content you know works with your audience. In this article, you will learn how you can find your most popular web content and use it to drive new traffic to your website and add names to your email list.

With the new year upon us, now is a great time to promote your most popular blog posts from 2015. Facebook provides a unique format for you to share this type of content in Carousel Ads.

If you haven’t built any ads for 2016, a carousel ad promoting your most popular content should be the first.

Let’s get started.

Finding Your Most popular Content
You don’t need to be an expert in website analytics to find out which of your pieces of content got the most attention. All you need is a Google Analytics!

While there are many layers to Google Analytics, for this exercise we will focus on the content which got the most pageviews.

First, Log into your Google Analytics account.

Near the top of the page, Select the date range you wish to use. In this case we are looking for the whole year of 2015. Click the date bar and then use the calendar or date boxes to adjust the dates in which you data is pulled from and click “Apply”.

Adjusting Dates in Google Analytics

Next, select “Behavior” and “Site Content” from the side navigation bar, then “All Pages”. This will generate a report which displays all of your website content and the total number of pageviews each piece of content has received.

Find Your Most Popular Content in Google Analytics

Your report will look similar to the image below. The metric we will focus on is “Pageviews”. Pageviews are measuring any time your website page has been loaded by a browser and are a very basic way of measuring the popularity of content on your website.

Sorting Your Most Popular Blog Posts In Google Analytics

From this report you will need to identify your top blog posts. Open these blog posts in a new window and save these links to be used later when we are building our ad.

Building Your Facebook Ad
The Carousel Ad format is ideal for promoting multiple pieces of content, such as your most popular website content. When we log into Power Editor or Ads Manager, select the Carousel Ad Format.

Facebook Carousel Ad Format

For a step-by-step guide on how to build a carousel ad, you can read our article “Everything You Need to Know About Carousel Ads”, but for this instance, we will enter the URL’s of our most popular blog posts, that we saved from above, into the destination URL’s of each pane of your carousel ad.

One important thing to note is that under the “Creative Optimization” settings, you should be sure “Automatically select and order images and links” is unchecked. This will ensure that your articles are displayed in the order in which you intended (IE: Your most popular blog post will always be listed first).

Choose copy that resonates with your audience and edit your thumbnails so your message is clear and concise. Be Sure to adjust your targeting and refine it with Retargeting pixels, or Custom and Look-a-like audiences.

Once finished, your ad should look something like this.

Arch carousel

Making It Work For You
Now is the perfect time to be sending out these ads promoting your top blog content from 2015, but this strategy can apply to any time frame you like. For example: If you put out multiple blog posts a month, you can (and should) be promoting your most popular content each month with Facebook ads.

Promoting your top content is great for two reasons: It reinforces your expertise in your niche and it keeps proven content in front of new potential website visitors. By adjusting the time frame of your search in Google Analytics, you can view the most popular blogs quite easily and then develop a promotional strategy that works for you.

Now it’s your turn: What has worked best for you in the past? How do you promote your most popular blog content?

7 COPYWRITING HACKS FOR MORE COMPELLING WRITING IN 2016


Copywriting is an art of persuasion. The best copywriters captivate readers and hook them in all the way to the end… no matter how long the blog post, sales page, or email.

Whether you’re doing content marketing, or actively trying to sell products or services through your writing, copywriting is key…

And that’s especially true in 2016, where there is already so much fluffy writing out there.

So today, I’ll give you a few copywriting hacks to help you quickly boost the quality of your writing in the New Year.

  1. Tell a Story
    Look at the best books and writers of the past decade. What have they been able to do? Tell amazing stories.

Tim Ferriss starts off every chapter in all three of his famous “Four Hour” books with a compelling story. Robert Greene use historical stories to drive his points home. Tucker Max tells hilarious “frattire” stories, which led to getting three of his books on the NY Time Best Seller List – at the same time.

Storytelling works. It draws people in and keeps them reading. Keep your eyes open for stories from your own life, and try to start your emails and blog posts with a story. When you know how to tell a story, you can sell anything.

  1. Use Short Paragraphs
    In today’s writing, with shorter attention spans than ever, scannability is key. Avoid long paragraphs and huge blocks of text as much as possible. Anything over 5-6 lines is probably unnecessary, and you can break it up.

Along with shorter paragraphs, use bolded headlines for new ideas. This adds to the scannability and makes life easier for the reader.

  1. Don’t Always Rely on Conventional Grammar Rules
    In grammar school, you’re told never to start a sentence with “and” and not to end sentences with “of”. Plus, you’re always supposed to write in complete sentences.

A lot of people get attached to grammar rules like these, and it actually hurts their writing. You see, the best writing is written like a real conversation. And people don’t talk according to grammar rules.

If you want your writing to flow and hook people in, write the way you talk, and don’t get attached to grammar rules. It will be much more refreshing to read.

  1. Read Your Copy Aloud When Editing
    Your writing may have some clunky phrases – and you won’t always notice them just by re-reading. This is especially true when you read your own writing.

By reading aloud, the errors will jump out and be more obvious. You’ll notice the places where things don’t flow, and you can move forward and fix them.

Make it a habit to do at least one “read aloud” edit to all of your writing.

  1. Ask Questions
    Questions engage the reader. The key is to ask the reader a question you already have the answer to.

For example, I could ask, “Have you ever wondered what goes into high-converting copywriting? What techniques do the master copywriters use that draw your eyes down the page?”

After reading that, you might think, “I don’t know, but I’d like to keep reading and find out.”

Aim to structure your questions in a way that creates curiosity and also hints at a benefit in the answer.

  1. Use Proof
    Anyone can make a good argument. The question is, can you back it up? This is where proof comes into play.

Whenever you’re trying to convince the reader of something, try to use stories and/or studies as proof. For example, if you have a weight loss product and you’re arguing that sugar causes fat gain, you could back up the claim with a study from Harvard Medical School.

The more proof you have, the more legitimate you are, and the more your reader will trust you. And when they trust you, that’s when they keep reading, and that’s when they buy.

  1. Be Transparent
    Transparency is another essential element when it comes to earning your readers’ trust. If your product isn’t for everyone, be honest about who it is and isn’t for. If you’ve got a problem to solve, ask your readers for help. Be vulnerable.

For a great example of this, check out James Altucher’s blog. He might just be the most transparent and vulnerable guy on the web, and it’s led to an extremely popular blog, podcast, and book career.

If you want to get the most bang for your buck when it comes to writing for your business, you need to infuse it with some copywriting techniques. Try out some of the above copywriting hacks to give your writing a big boost in 2016.

OH CROP! TWITTER PHOTO MISTAKES AND HOW TO FIX THEM


Images are important on Social Media, and especially on Twitter. Whether it is your profile photo, your header image, or a photo you are including within a tweet, you want to make sure that your photo is formatted and cropped properly, that you have the rights to use the photo, and that the photo represents your brand appropriately.

Any of these mistakes, though they may seem inconsequential, can have a much more negative effect than you’d think. If you’re sloppy with your images, people will assume, whether true or not, that your business is sloppy. The good news is that you don’t have to be a social media ninja to correct these mistakes.

Twitter Photo Formatting and Cropping Mistakes:
You can’t simply upload any photo you’d like and hope that it formats correctly. There are countless Twitter profiles with profile pictures in which only part of the logo or face is visible or a significant amount of the image is cropped out. It is also common to see header images that look distorted. These mistakes can be fixed by knowing the proper photo dimensions, and by using tools to help easily format and properly crop. Here are the photo dimensions you need to know.

Twitter Photo Dimensions:
*Note: these are the correct dimensions as of 2/7/16 and may vary if you’re reading this at a later date.

Twitter Profile Photo:
400 x 400 pixels.
Acceptable file formats are: JPG, PNG and non-animated GIFs. 400×400 pixels.
Twitter Header Image:
1500px x 500px.
Image within Tweet:
Photos can be up to 5MB; animated GIFs can be up to 3MB.
Acceptable file formats are: GIF, JPEG, and PNG files.
Photo will be automatically scaled for display in your expanded Tweet and in your user gallery.
I always recommend viewing your uploaded photo immediately after uploading it to ensure it looks how you’d like it to. If you are having issues formatting the photo correctly, or if you need to crop the image, the tool I suggest is Canva.com. It is free. It has templates for the correct sizes and you can easily resize and crop photos.

The Mistake of Using an Image You Don’t Have the Rights to Use:
Photo theft and copyright infringement are a big problem online. You may not think anything is wrong with just grabbing a photo from a Google Image Search and using it on Twitter, but if you do not have the rights to use the photo, you are stealing the photo. While most photo theft and copyright infringement do go unnoticed, people face charges for these crimes every day and the penalties often come with very large fines and in some cases can involve jail time. If you’re a business, the fines can be especially severe because in some cases it can be argued you’re using the stolen image to profit. Don’t take the chance.

How to Ensure You Have the Rights to Use the Photo:
Rule #1: If you aren’t sure if you have the rights to the photo – don’t use the image.
Take and use your own photos.
Use a Stock Image Website.
There are several great ones. Some are free. Two of the most popular are istockphoto.com and shutterstock.com.
Ask for permission
Ask the photographer or the website where you found the image for permission to use the image. Most people will have no issue with allowing you to use the photo. Some may ask you to appropriately credit them for the image. Occasionally, people will ask you not to use the image.
Avoid using other peoples’ meme’s, photos of celebrities, or well known photos. Again, you may not have the rights to use these photos, and the fact that they may have been used by millions of other people does not give you the legal right to use the image. You could still face penalties. Revert to Rule #1.
The Mistake of Using Images that Don’t Represent Your Business Well:
This is subjective. You know best how you’d like to have your business represented. Make sure all images you use represent your business well. A poorly cropped photo; a blurry photo; an inappropriate photo; an image you don’t have the rights to use. All of these types of images will represent you poorly. Here are a few additional tips to help ensure you represent your business well with the images you use on Twitter.

If you’re a business, your profile photo should always be your logo.
If you are an individual or a solopreneur, your image should either be a logo or a professional photo of yourself.
Do not include others in your profile photo.
Photos that clearly show your face, eyes, and in which you are smiling will work best.
Limit changing your profile photo to no more than twice per year. Your header image is one in which you can play around with any change more frequently.
Be aware that when you retweet someone else’s tweet that has an image attached, that image will also show in your retweet within your Twitter timeline. So be careful what you retweet as users will associate that image with you.
Images are GREAT tools on social media and especially on Twitter. People will identify you by your logo or profile photo. Your Twitter header image can be a great branding tool. Tweets with images included get significantly more engagement. However, make sure you’re using images properly; format and crop correctly, and make sure you have the rights to the image and that the image represents your brand well. Most importantly, slow down and be patient. Take a moment to pause, take a look at the image you’re about to use, and make sure that it meets all the guidelines listed in this article.

4 FREE FACEBOOK RESOURCES SMALL BUSINESSES CAN USE TO MAKE BETTER ADS


If you’re like me, you’re always looking for a new tool or trick to help you make any part of your digital marketing easier and more effective. Fortunately, we are not alone, and Facebook realizes that.

Facebook has invested in building a vast library of resources for marketers just like us. These are particularly nice for the small business owner who has a limited budget and time to learn the finer points of what has become a very vast advertising platform.

Below you’ll find a list of four resources that will help you create better visuals, know more about your audience and solve all of your advertising problems, quickly.

  1. Free Shutterstock Photos
    Choosing a stunning image for your Facebook ads is important, and if you’ve ever bought stock photography you know it can be expensive. The perfect photo you are looking for always seems to be of the ‘premium’ variety (aka: the expensive ones). Thankfully Facebook has a solution. Advertisers on Facebook have the opportunity to access Shutterstock’s vast library of stock photos… at no cost.

You can access the Shutterstock library in the same place you normally access your image library, but choose “Stock Images” from the top menu. Enter your keywords in the search box and choose your perfect image!

Shutterstock Library on Facebook

  1. Facebook Grid Tool
    If your business likes to add text or branding to your Facebook ads, you are likely aware of the “20% Rule.”

Facebook’s 20% Rule is that only 20% of your image may include text. In order to help you ensure the ads you have designed are approved, the Facebook Grid Tool was created. You can use this tool to help you determine if your images contain too much text or not based on the 20% rule.

To use the the grid tool, upload your image and use the grid system to highlight your text on the image. The grid tool will calculate the percentage of your image covered by text based on the number of grids you select.

An example of an Acceptable Facebook Ad with Text:
Acceptable Facebook Image with Text

An example of an Unacceptable Facebook Ad with Text:
Unacceptable Facebook Ad Image with Text

  1. Audience Insights
    As a business owner or marketer, you likely have a pretty good idea of who your target audience is. However, sometimes the traits you use to describe your audience might not align perfectly with the targeting options in Facebook.

Enter, Facebook Audience Insights, a great way for you to find common traits among the fans of your page.

Facebook Audience insights will aggregate all of the information from the fans of your Facebook page and compile the information in easy to digest graphs based on different characteristics. While some of this information is available in your Facebook Page Insights, Audience Insights takes this information to the next level.

To start using Audience Insights, enter the name of your page in the dialog box shown below:

Facebook Audience Insights Sidebar

**Please note your page must have 1,000 fans in order to pull audience insights on your page.

Once you have entered your page name, you’ll be able to view:
Enhanced demographic information
Common page likes
Detailed explanation of the locations of your fans
Facebook activity and behavior trends
Details about the household composition and income of your fans
Information about the spending habits of your fans
Some of my favorite reports to include in your Facebook Ad targeting:
Relationship and Education Report
Facebook Audience Insights – Relationship and Education

Job Title & Industry Reports
Facebook Audience Insights – Job Title and Industry Reports

Purchase Behavior Trends
Facebook Audience Insights – Purchase Behavior Trends

Most of the information detailed in this report can be directly used as a targeting metric within Facebook Power Editor. Try adding this information into the Detailed Targeting Options while building your Ad Sets to add more layers into your targeting.

Detailed Facebook Advertising Targeting

  1. Business Support Chat
    Here’s a secret: even the most experienced Facebook Advertisers run into problems. One of my favorite new Facebook Resources is the Advertiser Support Live Chat. This resource will prove invaluable when you run into an issue you cannot fix yourself, or if you have a problem the normal Help Center cannot help you solve on your own.

You can access the Advertiser Support Center from the Tools menu of Ads Manager or Power Editor if you are a Business Manager account user.

Facebook Live Chat

However, if you’re like me, you’ll add the Facebook Advertising Resources to your bookmark bar in your browser to access it quickly and easily!

Staying Ahead of The Game
As you know, Facebook is always updating its platform and it is sometimes hard to stay on top of all the new tools, tricks and insights. Facebook realizes this and while they are updating their features, they are also continually updating their resources.

Fortunately, we are here to help you stay on top of your game as well. Check back with ARCH often to stay up-to-date with all of the new Facebook Ad Features and Resources.

Don’t want to have to worry about managing your ads yourself? ARCH offer’s a variety of different packages that include Facebook Ad Management so you can focus more on running your business and less on keeping up-to-date with Facebook’s platform.

Now it’s your turn: What resources do you use to stay up to date? Are there other Facebook tools you use to stay at the top of your game?

3 ELEMENTS OF A PROFITABLE SALES FUNNEL


Without a profitable funnel, your copywriting and marketing efforts will be mostly wasted.

The purpose of a funnel is basically to lead your prospects to a desired action (usually, a sale). Instead of asking them to take a big step right away (like buy an expensive product or service), you take them through smaller steps that eventually lead to a bigger sale.

To use a dating analogy, you don’t propose to a stranger. Instead, you ask them for a cup of coffee.

And the right funnel will generate exponentially more sales than a typical one-off sale.

So, what goes into a profitable sales funnel that works for your business?

There are three essential elements. Once you have these set up, everything in your business becomes much easier.

The 3 Essential Elements of a Profitable Funnel
Your Flagship Product or Service
This is your main product that defines your business. It’s your core offer – your bread and butter. It’s at the end of your funnel. The price here will be something mid-range ($50-$200).

For example, for a guy like John Lee Dumas of Entrepreneur on Fire, his core offer is “Podcasters Paradise”, where he teaches people how to create a top ranked podcast.

Your core offer should fit well with what your market wants. If you already have a list, you can test this by creating a survey and asking your prospects what their biggest issues are.

Then, you can create a product around those big issues.

If you don’t already have a list, you can do this through Facebook advertising. You can create a different ad for each potential problem, and split test them against each other to see which get the most clicks and engagement. Then, you can take the most popular problems and create a product around those.

The point is to be sure that your market actually wants your product before you create it.

The Tripwire
The tripwire is an extension of your flagship product. The price range is low ($7-$10). The point of this is to be a no-brainer product for your prospects to buy, cover your ad spend (if you’re paying for traffic), and determine who the real buyers are. You also get them on the path of commitment and consistency.

Your tripwire will usually simply be a module from your core product. This makes the sales process simpler. Once prospects buy a “piece” of your core product (the tripwire), they are much more likely (up to 10X) to buy your core product.

It’s best to choose the piece of your core product that most relates to your prospect’s biggest problem. So, choose whichever problem got the most votes on the survey, or most engagement through split-testing, and center your tripwire around that.

The Lead Magnet
The lead magnet is a further extension of your tripwire. It’s a piece of free, digestible content at the beginning of your funnel. The purpose of it is to collect the emails of your prospects.

They key here is to relate your lead magnet to your tripwire product. This, once again, plays on the principle of commitment and consistency.

Think of your tripwire product as the “how” to solving their problem, and your lead magnet as the “what”. You want to tell them what to do, and then give them the tripwire product to show them how to do it.

Here’s an example of what these three elements could look like for a fitness funnel:
Lead Magnet: 5 mistakes every guy makes in the gym

Tripwire: The ultimate chest routine (A set of workouts for building muscle in your chest)

Flagship Product (Core Offer): A full, customized workout routine (whole body workout)

Use these three elements to start constructing a funnel for your business. Each is essential to the success of your funnel.

Want us to help you create these elements and set up a profitable sales funnel for you? Send us an email here!

5 STRATEGIES FOR MORE EFFECTIVE EMAIL CAMPAIGNS


I’ve been doing a lot of experimenting with email campaigns lately.

I’ve been able to consistently increase the open rates and the click-through rates almost immediately for new clients, just by employing a few simple strategies.

The strategies are basic – and you can use them too.

If you use them effectively, you can notice:
Improved open rates and click-through rates for your email campaigns
More replies and engagement from your subscribers
An overall better relationship and more trust with your subscribers
Here are the five strategies:

  1. Focus on One Main Idea
    I recently read The One Thing – The Surprisingly Simple Truth Behind Extraordinary Results. In it, Gary Keller discusses the immense power of focusing on ONE thing. He backs up this claim with proven results and multiple studies.

He also talks about how blogs and emails are more effective when they focus on one main idea.

For example, let’s say you want to write an affiliate email campaign for a meditation app like Headspace. How could you focus each email in the campaign on one main idea? The outline could look something like this:

Email 1: How to Stop Feeling Anxious
How anxiety and the craziness of your day are constantly stressing you out
One key to help you overcome anxiety: meditation
Open loop: In the next email, we’ll talk about all the benefits of meditation
Email 2: The Vast Benefits of Consistent Meditation
Discuss benefits of meditation
Open loop: in the next email, we’ll talk about how to meditate the right way
Email 3: How to Meditate Effectively
The keys to effective meditation
Open loop: Next time, we’ll talk about how to make meditation a daily habit because that’s when it can have the biggest impact on your health and happiness
Email 4: How to Make Meditation a Daily Habit
Tips for making it into a daily habit
The best resource for making meditation a daily habit: headspace
Notice how each email focuses on one main idea about meditation – and leads right into the next email.

  1. Write Like You Talk
    Your emails should sound like a conversation with a friend. To do this, you need to write like you talk. When the email feels like it’s coming for a friend, it will build a better relationship and more trust with your subscribers.

There are a few good ways to develop this skill.

Start journaling every day. When you write in a journal, it’s like you’re having a conversation with yourself. You won’t be tripped up by trying to write too formally or salesy. The more your journal, the better you will develop this skill.
Before you write about a topic, record yourself talking about it. Listen to the recording, and then transcribe it into an email. After you do this a few times, you’ll have a better feel for being able to write like you talk.

  1. Always Have a Call to Action
    This is classic advice, but you should always have a strong call to action at the end of the email. If it’s a basic content email where you aren’t trying to sell something, the call to action can be to reply with your thoughts. Other good calls to action are links and asking for the sale.

But you should only have one call to action – this falls under the scope of the one main idea.

  1. Test, Test, Test
    You should always be testing emails. Otherwise, you’re just relying on guesswork, and you’re probably losing money and missing out on potential.

So, what should you be testing?

Subject lines. Most email software providers make it easy to A/B test subject lines. Try out at least 2 subject lines with different themes, and test them each on 10% of your list. Send the winning line to the other 80%.
Body copy. This is best for affiliate and sales emails. The aim here is to figure out which subject line and body copy pairing gets the most clicks, opens, and revenue.
Send times. Should you send emails in the morning, the weekends, or at night? When is your list most likely to open them? This is why you want to experiment with different send times. You can test this by simply sending emails out at different times and seeing which times get the highest open rates and click rates.

  1. Tell Better Stories
    When you can hook your reader from the beginning of your emails, they’re more likely to read through to the end. One of the best ways to hook them is by telling better stories.

Ask yourself: is there an analogy or story I can use to introduce the main idea of the email?

I have a secret hack for developing better storytelling skills: Read Tim Ferriss’ books.

In all of his books, Tim usually starts each chapter with an enticing story that relates to the message of each chapter. You’re drawn in right from the start and you want to keep reading.

Whenever I’m feeling all “storied out”, I crack open one of his books and read some intros from the chapters. It opens up my creativity and I think it can do the same for you.

Use these strategies to make the most of your email campaigns. They’re simple, but when you implement them, you’ll see how powerful they can be.

What have been your biggest struggles with creating successful email campaigns? Let us know in the comments below!

2 LIES BUSINESS TELL THEMSELVES ABOUT TWITTER

I have managed Twitter and Facebook accounts for a living for over 8 years now. I’ve consulted in a variety of ways with over 100 different companies on either creating or improving their social media marketing strategy. One thing that has always interested me is the number of companies I’ve worked with that are bullish on Facebook and believe it to be vital for their business, yet are bearish on Twitter and question if Twitter adds any value to their business.

How can this be?
I’m concerned when businesses feel that Twitter does not add value. I dove into figuring out why so many businesses are convinced of this. What I found is that the businesses believe two lies:
“My customers aren’t on Twitter,” and
“Twitter does not work for us.”
If you believe that your customers aren’t on Twitter, then of course you’ll think that Twitter does not work for your company. While there are some companies whose customers might not be on Twitter, the reality is that the customers of most businesses are on Twitter. If their customers are actually on Twitter, why are so many businesses convinced that they aren’t – and that Twitter does not work?

The biggest reason I find is that they have a fundamentally flawed strategy for Twitter. The flaw in their strategy is that they are using the same strategy for Twitter that they use on Facebook. Twitter is not Facebook. The strategy that is working for you on Facebook is not likely to work on Twitter. Your Twitter strategy must be different than your Facebook strategy. Here are two key ways in which your Twitter strategy needs to differ from your Facebook strategy.

Frequency of posts:
One to three posts per day is advisable for Facebook. On Twitter, you need to post much more frequently. Whereas the timeline on Facebook operates in an algorithm, the Twitter timeline is in real-time. If you don’t post often on Twitter (I suggest 20 plus times per day), you stand a very low likelihood of your Tweets being seen. Though your customers are on Twitter, if they don’t see your content, Twitter won’t work for you. Tweet valuable content and Tweet often.

Proactive Engagement:
You have to be proactive in your engagement on Twitter. It is not up to your customers to find you on Twitter; it is up to you to find your customers on Twitter. You can’t sit back and wait for people to come to you. Facebook decides who to show your posts to and when to show them.

On Facebook, you spend money on ads and boosts to tell Facebook who your target customers are and Facebook brings your page and posts to those customers timelines.

On Twitter, you need to take more of an initiative. Sure, some customers will proactively engage with your company on Twitter, but if you’re a small business it is more likely that you will have to initiate most engagement. Follow targeted people. Tweet at people. Reply to Tweets. If you don’t proactively engage, if you don’t seek out your customers, you won’t have much success on Twitter.

Time is valuable. A business does not want to, nor should they spend time on a social network that does not work for them.

However, if you are a business who finds yourself saying that your customers are not on Twitter or that Twitter does not work for you, consider the possibility that it is you who is not properly using Twitter.

If your Twitter strategy is the same as your Facebook strategy, you’re not using Twitter effectively. Create a separate strategy for Twitter that includes tweeting often and proactively engaging. Consistently work that strategy. If you then find out Twitter is still not working for you, then focus your attention on other social networks. Though, I am confident that for the vast majority of businesses out there, Twitter can be effective.

FACEBOOK ANNOUNCES INSTANT ARTICLES PROGRAM


by Guest Blogger, Jennifer Everett
On April 12th during Facebook’s F8 conference, they will open the Instant Articles program to all publishers. That’s right – any size and anywhere in the world. Up to this point, Facebook has been working with a few hundred publishers around the world in order to build an incredibly fast and immersive reading experience for people on Facebook. Some of the early users are BuzzFeed, National Geographic and the New York Times. Once Facebook opens up Instant Articles to everyone, they are hoping to grow not only as a leading source of web referral traffic, but also as a first-party home to content itself.

What does Instant Articles do?
It solves the problem of slow loading times on the mobile web. This is a huge problem for publishers, especially ones with audiences where low connectivity is an issue. So, Facebook set out to make it fast and easy for all publishers to reach their audiences on Facebook.

This makes sense for Facebook because media organizations and journalists are an integral part of their platform. With Instant Articles, publishers have full control over the display of their stories, can bring their own direct-sold ads and keep 100% of the revenue. One more thing, they can track data on the ads served through their existing ad measurement systems or they can monetize their content through the Facebook Audience Network. They can even use their existing web-analytics systems to track article traffic or use third-party providers.

How Does It Work?
An Instant Article is a HTML5 document that uses standardized markup language (similar to XML). It can be applied automatically to enable automated publication of an entire content feed at scale or it can be applied manually to create bespoke stories that take full advantage of the Instant Article capabilities.

It is very convenient for publishers because they have the freedom to use the tools they already use while having access to all of the multimedia tools Facebook provides too. It is clear that Facebook’s goal is to connect people to the stories, posts, videos and photos that matter. Now, whether we are in the doctor’s office or sitting waiting for our plane, we won’t have to wait a full minute to read a single news article or blog post from your favorite thought leader.

Do They Get Prioritized Ranking in the News Feed?
Instant Articles are ranked in the News Feed by the same exact criteria that Facebook uses for standard articles on the mobile web. News Feed stories are ranked by numerous factors including the amount of people that interact with them and how much time people spend reading them. That means that Instant Articles won’t impact your organic reach.

Are Analytics Included?
Instant Articles supports the comScore attribution so comScore is notified each time an article view happens on Facebook. However, publishers can also use their existing web-based analytics systems to track article traffic as well as use third-party providers such as Google Analytics or Omniture. Facebook is also in discussion with European attribution and measurement providers in order to have similar solutions for EMEA partners.

Predictions?
There will most likely be a lot of writers who are currently posting for free to Tumblr or Medium that will move to Facebook just to pick up the small amount of revenue that it might provide then. However, that could cause problems of thousands of pages being copied and pasted such as articles, lists and humor pieces.

More Questions?
If you want to find out more details on Instant Articles, check out Facebook’s video on it. Also, they ask that all interested publishers review their documentation and prepare for open availability in April.