Community Discussion - How can we apply the skills we have as marketers in new, creative ways?
-
Hi everyone,
I hope you all had a wonderful week! This week's discussion question comes from Tuesday's (December blog post by John-Henry Scherck, The Step-by-Step Guide to Turning Link Prospectors into Lead Generators. From the post:
"Digital marketing is a pretty introverted industry. This tends to make us a bit hesitant to embrace sales and outbound selling. There’s no beating around the bush: Sales can be difficult, scary, uncomfortable, and awkward — but if you want to grow your client base, it may require getting out of your comfort zone."
John-Henry shows us the opportunity for people who are good at link prospecting to apply those skills to lead generation, improving business opportunities by creatively using the skills they already have. SEOs and marketers wear many hats, and have a diverse skill set at their disposal—how else can we apply the skills we already have in creative ways?
-
For me, I've always had something "on the side" of my marketing/agency life. I want to have personal experience with ecommerce. How does it feel to sell clothing online? What are the concerns? How can I help clients? What are the hiccups with certain sources of traffic (Stumble, Reddit, Pinterest, even Digg back in the day). When does that traffic help?
I like to always have at least a couple side projects so I can keep a bit of "skin in the game." If I'm spending MY money on Adwords, I get better at it. If I'm spending MY time building a site or generating links, I find ways to maximise the resources I have. If you don't have your own site, maybe split/share one with someone. Just a simple side project and always have at least a little stake in the outcomes.
That goes back to how I learned - I learned marketing by owning a business. I learned SEO by ranking #1 for my own keyword. I learned Adwords after wasting thousands & thousands of dollars. I learned CRO after wasting thousands & thousands of website hits. Make it PERSONAL somehow.
-
I love this idea! That "boring industry" mindset can be extremely difficult to break out of, too.
-
One thing you could try is answering questions which your customers are asking and have pages with the questions being the sole content of the page.
e.g. What can get traffic to my page?
Customers ask how we can get traffic to your pages. One idea would be to have page with answers to the most popular searched questions (Found by looking in Google Adwords Keyword Finder) or by starting to type a question about your product in Google and seeing what it suggests.
Then write an amazing page which gives the visitor his perfect answer, what has this achieved? They have seen your brand and they relate it back to the correct answer for their problem. (Ensuring it is the best answer!)
All of this is SEO Structured of course and therefore gets a high rank on Google and more traffic comes your way which Google will notice and also perhaps deter-main your a guru in your field.
This then has a knock on effect to your product pages and get them high ranking too. Of course inter linking between the pages is good too!
-
Good question Matt and a tough one to answer!
In a general sense, good SEOs can become very powerful entrepreneurs if they put the time into it. We already have exposure to a broad number of industries and have a great understanding of just how those clients go about finding various products and services.
Combine this with our well-versed ability to plan, document, communicate and build a powerful network of people we can leverage effectively as well as access to designers and devs and there are few things we can't do well in the online space.
As for how we can apply our skillset within SEO, I completely agree with John-Henry in that the same tactics we use for link prospecting can be fantastic for outbound marketing. Used effectively, they can ultimately turn an outbound campaign into inbound leads; potential clients seeking you out as a result of your demonstrated value and the referral network you've built.
-
A lot of marketers would benefit if they pulled their energies out of the "marketing cloud" a few times a year and invested some time in their content area. Most industries have numerous trade shows, conventions, and other gatherings where you can try out new products, talk with manufacturers, meet retailers, attend presentations and more.
Depending upon your industry, these can ranges from small events that occupy a single building - to enormous events that fill every venue in a good-size city and with courses, boutiques, demonstrations and more filling half of the available hotel space and even parking lots. They are often attended by people from all parts of the world and from every stage of the industry pipeline, from design, materials sourcing, manufacturing, distributing, retailing and even the consumer.
These are the places where you learn about trends, problems and opportunities in the industry. They are where you get the real industry-stuff that you need to be competitive on an intellectual and practical basis. Attending these events should cure your "boring industry" mindset. You should return to your office with a suitcase full of samples, literature, swag and other booty; a camera full of great photos; and a mind full of great ideas for producing creative, current, competitive, content.
Added: This morning's Moz Blog had an article by Ruth Burr Reedy. While reading it I remembered that she wrote an article about "how to build links in person" a short time ago. Attending meetings in your content are is a great opportunity to follow her advice.
-
It’s always important to go outside of your comfort zone and exercise your brain in ways you typically do not. For example, if you are typically using your analytical skills, try working on a creative project that makes you think outside of the numbers. As digital marketers, we have to constantly hone our skills, test them in new ways and evolve with the times.
Do you typically write your PPC ads in a certain tone? As Larry Kim says, try finding a unicorn opportunity, get creative and don’t just write the first ad that naturally comes to mind.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
If someone was brand new at all of marketing, where would you send them to get educated?
If someone had no marketing education, where would you send them to get a thorough education covering all aspects of marketing/advertising? Would you say you have to go to school for that? Would you recommend an online course set from CMI or MarketingProfs? If so, which one? Thank you 🙂
Industry News | | Crystalline_151 -
Anyone recommend a PPC / Lead / Inbound Marketing agency for Belgium and switzerland ?
Hello ! We're moving to new markets and are looking for agencies specialized in Lead Generation in Belgium and Switzerland. Anyone has some contacts to share ? 🙂
Industry News | | JoomGeek0 -
Multiview - Are they worth or can I do it myself?
Hi, I'm new to the Moz Community here although I have visited this site quite a few times. Recently my company has been contacted by MultiView for a B2B marketing strategy to get our business in front of targeted and potential customers - based on behavior of website visitors - basically behavior based marketing and inbound lead summary. Are you all familiar with what Multiview does? If not, I can explain some more. But, I have a couple questions: Are they actually what they claim to be? Are they a trustworthy company? Is there a way I can do everything they are telling me with the getting particular ads in front of people based on behaviors (similar to AdWords, but this seems more in depth) and detailed info for the visitors to my site (actually see who they are)? I realize this may take more work on my part than having them do it. But, is there a way I can collect this info myself and do all this work myself? Behavior based campaigns and this sort of thing are new to me, as I haven't worked with this before for my company. So, any and all info is appreciated! Thanks!
Industry News | | QFish0 -
What's on your ultimate online marketing wish list?
Hi everyone! I'm one of Distilled's new online marketing analysts and will be writing my first blog post for them right before Christmas! I'm thinking about writing a post that combines the holiday spirit with what we all wish Google would give us. So fine people of Moz Q&A, tell me, if you could have anything from Google, no matter how ridiculous, what would it be and why? Any great quotes may even be featured in the blog post itself and attributed to you! Thanks everyone and happy Friday!
Industry News | | MorganChessman0 -
What would an SEO be paid with these skills?
Hello, What would an SEO with these skills be paid (per hour in a larger company in a lower income state): 9 years in the field of SEO
Industry News | | BobGW
Beginning and moderate link building skills
Excellent on-site optimization skills
Moderate Google Analytic skills
Complete HTML skills
Good to advanced CSS
Some PHP
5 years experience as a small business web designer
6 years experience working with eCommerce SEO
beginning to somewhat moderate Social media skills
beginning to moderate PPC, mainly Adwords
A foundation for local SEO
All the platforms that go with the above, like Wordpress, MS Office, Adobe Creative Suite, etc. etc.0 -
Email marketing - ready to get serious about this
Ok, I have my PILE of business cards from Chamber of Commerce meetings and different networking events I have attended. I have 8-10 blogs that are worth sharing on my website - www.sawwebmarketing.com (I realize that's a pathetically low number) I am committing to and excited about blogging MUCH more starting today! I have a huge list of ideas. I am adding a signup to my site and putting up a pop up to collect addresses. I have 15-18 clients that are paying me for ongoing seo / Internet marketing (or simply had my team build a new site for them) AND AN ACCOUNT WITH AWEBER I HAVE USED ONCE! 🙂 Where do I start!? Any advice? I want to start building a LIST of subscribers and grow my list by sharing great advice, strategies and tips to help people put their website to work. A) Send one email to EVERYBODY (ongoing clients, past clients, contacts who subscribe, website visitors, blog subscribers) or customize my messages for different groups? B) Put whatever I want to share on my blog and share it via social media AND send an email to my list inviting them to check out what I posted so I get the most bang for my time? (LINKS BABY!) I feel like an idiot I haven't got on this sooner but truly ANY ADVICE from somebody who has been there and done it would be GREATLY APPRECIATED! 🙂 Thank you! Matthew http://sawwebmarketing.com/internet-marketing-blog/
Industry News | | Mrupp440 -
What are some good organizations an SEO company can join that are strong trust signals?
We are working on a website redesign, and want to prominently include some trust signals that help people feel comfortable with us. We're including logos of a few places we've guest posted, and also the BBB and local chamber of commerce. Do you have any other ideas on logos we can include that are good trust signals? Any associations or organizations we could join? We are a trustworthy company, we just want a way to communicate that visually, and it seems organization seals and logos are the way to go. Thanks!
Industry News | | brianspatterson1 -
Secondshells.com has $3k a month to spend on SEO & marketing. HOW should I spend it & with whom?
We have a Magento based ecommerce site www.secondshells.com and are looking for ways to improve traffic. Our goal is to drive sales of our products. We are in the Android tablet accessory business, since its fairly new the competition is not that great, we would like to get up in organic rankings for our keywords. We have blog updated daily, building backlinks, PR, facebook, twitter, google+, Videos on Youtube, PPC, product feeds to Bing, Google & The Find. The foundation is there but it's a lot to handle in-house. The real question is who to choose to execute the strategy & where to pick them from. There are 1,000's of companies, individuals, Elance & Odesk. Who to choose to execute is more difficult than choosing the direction. We are straightforward and intelligent and want people who can provide a plan of action, execute and report it. All white hat seomoz style of promotion. There are so many choices and avenues to pursue that it is difficult to make a decision as to which way to go. Any guidance or suggestions will be appreciated. SecondShells
Industry News | | BossMike0