Categories
Grow Your Business Online

10 Lessons from 10 Years in Business

10-Lessons-from-My-10-Years-in-Business

 

While I was away frolicking on the beach in Hawaii and wearing copious amounts of SPF 60, a big milestone came and went.

On May 13th, it was my 10th anniversary in business. That means a lot of things, starting with I’ve defied the odds and this is the longest I’ve “worked” anywhere. It feels big and it’s exciting, as I know the next 10 are going to bring some of the best possible things imaginable.

When I set out on this adventure, I just wanted to make enough so that it was a viable plan for me not to head back to work after my year long maternity leave. Armed with a business plan typed up in MS Word and a Staples low rent business card, I systematically put the word out to my network. My husband and I agreed that I had until September to make $4K/month, as that would more than meet our financial needs.

No savings, no parachute, I jumped out of the plane. Thankfully, we did have his income so the mortgage and the bare minimum was covered, but the pressure was on. In under 60 days, that goal was blown out of the water and it’s only grown from there.

There’s a lot of things that have gone into making this all happen, and I’ve reflected a lot on this. (More than is probably normal, because hello, #introvertproblems. There’s a lot of time spent in my head.)

Here’s a quick list of the lessons learned from 10 years in business:

#1. Find Someone Who Believes in You More Than You Believe in Yourself.

Hands down, that was my husband, but I had a whole legion of cheerleaders as I got the ball rolling. No one ever questioned my decision. I’m not sure if that’s because they’re scared of me or my friends and family know that there’s no stopping me when I make a decision. (It’s probably both, because I don’t take kindly to people saying I can’t do things as I discussed in this post.)

Maybe it’s not your partner, but a friend, a cousin, a sister, but you need someone who’s there to help you pick up the pieces when you’re a hot mess and you feel like you can’t go on. And those days are going to happen…

#2. Some Days, Some Weeks Are Going to Suck Hard.

These are the days when you fantasize about of all things, getting a job. Because many days working for someone else would be a million times easier than this thing you’re doing. Until you realize that no matter what, this beats the alternative so you fire up the coffee, wine or vodka and get on with it.

And sometimes, it’s okay to tap out, lie on the couch and watch 8 hours of Lifetime movies. As long as  you pull yourself together the next day – it’s restorative.

#3. I Swear, But You Sure as Shit Can’t Swear About Me.

I’m not exactly delicate about language at times, because sometimes a good cuss word is the best possible way to get your point across. And if you’re the word police, please move along – because it’s not a sign of lack of intelligence or low education. (My sentiments are summed up nicely by S.E. Sinkhorn in this post.)

But there are exceptions. Starting with when the CEO of the company calls you at home during dinner time from overseas and kicks off the call labeling you a fucking idiot. (I maintain this is purely because he’d already ripped the balls off his entire team and killed their spirit, so he had to move on to me.)

In that case, all bets are off. Within minutes I’d turned around, called my day-to-day contact and terminated the contract, effectively immediately. You NEVER have to accept that type of abuse. Even if you are a bitch (which I completely am at times) but no client has the right to tell you that, especially during your dinner.

#4. Find the Good Ones and Hold On.

Take the time upfront to find good clients, and when you find ones you love, hold on for dear life. Seriously. These types of clients where you just get each other, can work in flow and you don’t have weird issues with invoices unpaid at 60 days are a beautiful thing.

So how do you find great clients? Don’t ignore the warning signs. In the consult process, have a checklist you run through looking for indicators that this is NOT going to be a good fit. And then just say no.

Saying no is hard, it’s painful to reject money. But honey, that money is never worth it. If your gut says no, it’s a no. The end.

#5. Hire People Who are Smarter Than You Are.

Hiring is hard. Especially when you’ve been the CEO, the director of marketing and the janitor. I know, because I’ve been a one woman show more years than I care to admit.

But if you hire people who are really good at what they do, giving up control becomes so much easier. Set the systems in place and let them do their thing. But remember they aren’t mind readers.

And always look for people who are committed to what it is you’re building. Because if they are “in” it with you, they’re going to go the extra mile and stick around for the long haul. (Special shoutout to the team who makes things happen behind the scenes here – even this blog post is a team effort.)

#6. Create a Brain Trust.

When I moved into the role of account manager at my old job, my mentor gave me a really important piece of advice “always vent up”. Meaning you shouldn’t use your team to unload all your business baggage.

Yes, you can be honest, but you don’t have to use them as your sounding board for every little thing. Which is where your brain trust comes in.

This is your short list of go-to people for when you need to work out the details, talk through situation, brainstorm or go on a business getaway. They’ve got your back and if you worked in an office together, you’d be going out for drinks together on Friday night to recap the week.

Most of all, they are people who get where you are. The ones you can share your big money goal and they hold that vision for you without rolling their eyes. They make you want to do better, because you’re all growing together.

#7. Fix Your Money Mindset.

Until 2 years ago, I didn’t realize the actual state of my money mindset. I mean, I had money, things were good, but oh my word, I had some major issues that were standing between me and finding flow.

It’s a long list, and it continues to be a work in progress. But I’ve gotten up close and personal with my money, worked with a coach to fix my entire story around money and things are much calmer.  I go much longer between the moments where I’m wondering if the bottom is going to fall out or being anxious about the balance in my bank account.

Handling this has made my business so much simpler as I don’t have issues asking for money, raising my prices or anything else. If you want to make more money. Fix your money mindset. Sounds a bit out there, but it works.

#8. Not All Hustle is Created Equal.

I come from the hustle hard school of business, where if you hustle hard you’re rewarded. But not all hustle is created equal.

There’s busywork like hanging out on Facebook all day “networking” and then there’s hustling. When you’re hustling you’re focusing on getting the highest value activities done. Learn the difference between a to-do list designed to make you look like you’re doing something while you’re avoiding the stuff you should be doing, and the type of hustle that bring in clients and revenue.

#9. Sometimes It’s Just Not That Deep.

In a world that’s driven by passion, purpose and finding your why, you can drive yourself absolutely mad looking for deep meaning in everything you do. My friends, sometimes it’s just not that deep. Not everything you do has to be charged with meaning, sometimes it is what it is.

Show up, do your best and move on. Know where the meaning really is, and what it’s okay to not be reading more into, because I can guarantee that you’ll end up stuck and positively paralyzed by trying to make a mountain out of a molehill.

#10. Want a Competitive Advantage? Do What You Say You’re Going to Do.

Sounds pretty simple right? So how can that be a competitive advantage? It just is here in the wild West of the Internet. Starting with deadlines. If you say Tuesday close of business, don’t deliver it Thursday morning with no reset of expectations.

Don’t over promise and under deliver. Make realistic promises and then over deliver. Because that’s all too rare. If you can to that I fully believe you’ll stand out in a sea of pretty shitty services and dubious results.

Harsh, but 100% true. Do what you say you’re going to do.

(Disclaimer: I’m not perfect, but I do live up to my promises 97.8% of the time.)

And bonus lesson

#11. Math is Your Friend. Even if You’re a Math Dropout.

From your revenue to your conversion rates, you need to make friends with math. Numbers matter in your business and hold magical powers. What you need to grow is likely hiding out right within your business. Instead of chasing unicorns and pots of gold, get your sales and marketing math in order.

What’s the biggest lesson you’ve learned in your business so far? What’s been the most surprising?

[Tweet “10 years, 11 lessons from @magspatterson. New blog post.”]

Categories
The Marketing Moxie Show

Episode #78 – Creating Your Genius Law Strategy with Patrice Perkins

Creating-Your-Genius-Law-Strategy

If you’re a creative, I’m willing to bet that the word legal or lawyer puts your back up because it feels constricting. The reality is that, creatives absolutely need a legal strategy in place. This episode has Chicago-based lawyer to creative Patrice Perkins, breaking it all down.

Items Discussed in this Episode:

  • When you’re a creative, legal stuff can seem boring. Patrice explains how to look at in a different way to get excited about it.
  • Patrice cautions against ‘following the herd’ with legal for your business and what you definitely shouldn’t DIY.
  • We chat about some of the best options for creating a plan to protect your IP.
  • Patrice explains what a trade secret is and why it’s important in your business.
  • The ‘quick and easy’ way to tell the difference between a copyright and a trademark.
  • One of the things that keeps entrepreneurs up at night is someone taking our course or offering, sticking their name on it, and calling it their own. Patrice explains how easy and inexpensive it can be to protect our content.
  • What to include in your terms of service to protect yourself and your process.
  • There are people out there trying to rip us off, but the majority of cases are people who just aren’t thinking or simply don’t know any better. You need to protect against both and Patrice explains how.
  • Patrice breaks down exactly what a copyright is and what it means for your business.
  • The one thing Patrice wishes everyone knew when it came to the law and their business.
  • Why preparing for the worst case scenario can be beneficial to your business (and doesn’t mean you’re being over the top).

[Tweet “Do you know what a trade secret is? You should – @creative_esq tells us in this chat with @magspatterson”]

Top 3 Takeaways for this Episode:

  1. You can’t afford not to protect your IP. And by doing that you’re actually giving yourself more time to expand and do more of what you love.
  2. Hello, trade secrets. This could be just the solution you’re looking for.
  3. Consider starting to submit your copyrighted works as you create them so that you’re fully protected from copycats and would-be rip off artists.

subscribe now button new

Links for this Episode:

Creative Genius Society (Patrice’s Blog)

Creative Genius Law (Patrice’s Website)

Link to Free Marketing Moxie Facebook Group

Categories
Feisty Friday The Marketing Moxie Show

Episode #77 – 10 Years in Biz – A Reflection

FF-77

The month of May marks a major milestone in my biz, as I’m celebrating my 10th anniversary. Back then, I was the mom of a soon to be one-year-old who didn’t want to go back to her amazing, but fast-paced job. So I opted out and decided to do things a whole new way. Here are a few things I’ve been reflecting on that have made this all possible.

Items Discussed in this Episode:

  • I can’t believe I’ve been in business 10 years, but at the same time there wasn’t another option when I left my full time job. (Well there was, but I wasn’t thrilled about those options.)
  • I love the continuous learning aspect of running my own business and in hindsight I even love the bad experiences I’ve had along the way.
  • Not having a website is not an excuse for not growing your business. For 8 years I had no website and still made it all work.
  • Having a really strong personal network and focusing on delivering really great experiences for my clients has been my main strategy for business growth. Not fancy online tactics or anything fancy. The basics work.
  • Your business will never be perfect, don’t wait around for it to get there before getting started.
    When you are the CEO, how you show up in the world is the most important thing in your business. (And newsflash, you’re the CEO whether you realize it or not.)
  • Being myself and being genuine in my business is what has gotten me as far as I’ve come. No excuses or apologies.

[Tweet “Dishing up a few things I’ve learned from 10 years in biz. @magspatterson #feistyfriday”]

subscribe now button new

Links for this Episode:

Link to Free Marketing Moxie Facebook Group

Categories
content marketing strategy conversion rate strategies

Supermarket Psychology Secrets for Your Website

Supermarket-Psychology-Secrets-for-Your-Website

Pre-career, I had a few different jobs, from working in the video store after school rewinding the weekend’s videotapes to merchandising greeting cards for one of the giants in the industry.

When I look back, the job that taught me the very most that applies to what I do today is the 5 years I spent working in supermarkets over high school and college. The two stores I worked at couldn’t have been more different, but let me tell you, it was an education in customer service, human behavior and, most of all, psychology.

And I don’t mean the occasional verbal assault from an unruly customer who was behaving badly, or the woman who so kindly told me I was throwing away my life when little did she know I was in school full-time and working at the store 30 hours a week. (The joke’s on you lady – ha!)

The Supermarket Schools Us On Website Goals and Intentions

While I was a cashier, I loved nothing more than when I got to work in the back on displays, merchandising, stocking and more. Because nothing is left to chance in a supermarket. Which is the exact way our websites should be – we want to be intentional and guide people to the right place so they behave in a certain way.

Before you have a moment and think “Um, isn’t this manipulative?”, yes it is, but you can choose to be smart about your website or you can leave it all up to chance and see what results you get. Every retailer, corporation and business is doing it, so if you want to compete, you’re going to have to play ball.

(That’s not to say you need to turn into a sleaze ball either. You can be thoughtful and apply these ideas while still coming from place of service and ethics.)

Simeon Scamell-Katz, global consumer analyst and author of The Art of Shopping: How We Shop and Why We Buy, cites one of the biggest challenges for supermarkets is the fact that “Shopping is so ritualized that we walk around like zombies. We’re incredibly patterned in what we do.”

Sounds pretty much like the last time you lost yourself on Facebook or watching cat videos on YouTube, doesn’t it?

While Scamell-Katz’s tools of choice are brain scans, footage of volunteer’s eyeballs, live bird’s-eye views of the supermarket and more, on websites we use heatmaps, conversion rates, split tests, A/B tests and Google Analytics to get our data.

Here are a few of the lessons we can learn from supermarket psychology secrets for our own websites.

#1 Range Reduction

We’ve got more choices than ever before, but too much choice is a bad thing. This article shares that the average household uses only 300 products in a year, but a large supermarket stocks over 80,000 products.

An increasing number of brands and stores are dropping the number of products in their line in an effort to simplify. Danone cut their product line by 40% and their sales went up 20%. And in early 2015, UK supermarket giant Tesco announced they were cutting their range by 30% across the board in an bid to simplify the experience for shoppers. After all, do we really need to choose from 98 different brands of rice?

If you think about your site, how many products or services are you offering? Are you providing too much choice? It may be time for you to cull the herd and focus only on your top sellers. While less may seem like you’re going to cut into sales, more focus and simplicity will benefit both you and your potential buyers.

Start by looking at your revenue. It may have the answer of what product or service you may need to eliminate for the sake of a simpler, streamlined experience.

[Tweet “What items do you need to eliminate on your website? @magspatterson breaks it down in this new blog post.”]

#2 Signpost Brands

I’m willing to bet that you frequent the same supermarket week after week and you run off a mental map as you go through and pick things up. As shoppers, studies show that we disregard signage that tells us what’s in an aisle, favoring signpost brands. We concentrate towards the middle of an aisle and look for the recognizable brands, such as Coca-Cola or Nescafé to tell us where we are.

The positioning of signpost brands makes a significant impact on how we shop and have been shown to increase sales of all products in the category. In a study by Scamell-Katz, he advised a firm to place 4ft cardboard Guinness pint glasses at either end of the stout shelves. Overnight sales of all drinks in the category increased by 23%.

Why? It’s simple: People were being guided. Having a clear marker told them exactly where to go. So while we don’t necessarily have signpost brands for our websites, we need to look at how we can tap into the fact that people have a certain set of expectations for a website. Just like in the supermarket, our visitors are looking for the familiar and need to be guided. If you have a site that doesn’t follow a particular format or have a clear path to get them from A to B, you risk losing them. This is why clear will always trump clever, as people don’t want things to be that hard.

#3 Traffic Builder

You’ve probably heard that most supermarkets place essentials like bread and milk at the back of the store to help entice us to buy more along the way.

New studies have shown that these distraction tactics can be a major problem, as forcing the shopper to deviate from their plan can result in negative feelings. One study showed that placing quick-buy items close to the front door made people more apt to return to the store for their weekly shopping.

The message for our websites is clear: don’t make it hard to shop or try to be overly clever. Distracting us along the way means we’re less likely to return and it’s harder to build that know-like-trust factor. When you force your visitor to work too hard for what they want – it’s not creating a positive experience with your brand. And on the web, people have so many choices that in a click of a button your relationship is done and done.

There are so many secrets lurking in the supermarket and anywhere in our day-to-day lives that give us some serious clues about how to tap into the psychology of our visitors and give them what they want.

Just because we’re on the web doesn’t mean we should sacrifice common sense for creativity or a profitable website for something pretty. With the right planning and focus on user experience, we can have both. The key is understanding the psychological principles at play and assuming nothing. (Speaking of assumptions, check out how testing mine turned out in the latest lab report.)

[Tweet “Lessons from the supermarket and why common sense shouldn’t be sacrificed for creativity with @magspatterson”]

Categories
The Marketing Moxie Show

Episode #76 – Impostor Complex and How to Handle It with Tanya Geisler

Impostor-Complex-&-How-to-Handle-It

If you’ve ever thought “I’m not good enough” or “they’re going to find out I’m a fake” – this show is for you. Why? Because you’re likely experiencing impostor complex. Coach Tanya Geisler breaks down the essentials of impostor complex, why it’s actually good news if you have it, and how to live with it.

Items Discussed in this Episode:

  • Tanya explains what the impostor complex is and some signs that you are currently struggling with it
  • When we recognize that we’re experiencing the impostor complex, how can we deal with it and work through it?
  • Why having the impostor complex means you’re actually stronger than most around you
  • How the impostor complex in parenting parallels running your business
  • Why hearing stories of others having the impostor complex can show us we are in excellent company
  • Tanya shares some hallmark concepts of the impostor complex and how to deal with them
  • Knowing we won’t get rid of the impostor complex fully, Tanya gives us pointers on how we can quiet it and learn to live with it on a daily basis
  • Some of the common lies the impostor complex tells us
  • How the impostor complex can actually help us be better in our business and question ourselves in a healthy way

[Tweet “Feeling like a fake? @tanyageisler explains why and what you can do about it”]

Top 3 Takeaways for this Episode:

  1. Remember that if you have impostor complex that it means you’re high performing and that you actually care about being excellent at what you do.
  2. Embrace the fact that impostor complex isn’t something you can defeat, but you can learn how to live with.
  3. Learn the lies of impostor complex so you can quickly identify when you’re going “there” – being aware of it makes a huge difference in managing it.

subscribe now button new

Links for this Episode:

Tanya’s site

Sign up to Tanya’s list to get the 12 Lies of the Impostor Complex

Link to Free Marketing Moxie Facebook Group

Categories
Feisty Friday The Marketing Moxie Show

Episode #75 – Why You May Need a Hiatus

FF-75

When does too much of a good thing become, well, too much of a good thing? As business owners we’ve got freedom, but we’re also able to do whatever we please which means we can get carried away. That’s why I’m a big fan of of going on a hiatus, where you take a break from things in your business.

Items Discussed in this Episode:

  • How my creative and idea hiatus last year came about and the advantages it had for my business.
  • What my Fascinate test results say about my need to take a hiatus sometimes because I’m literally drowning in “good” ideas.
  • Some ideas of what things to take a hiatus from – especially as we go into the Summer months!
  • How your personality and business style can dictate what you should take a hiatus from because sometimes we can be our own worst enemy.
  • How ‘too much of a good thing’ applies to your archetype and your business and what to do about it.

[Tweet “How a break may be exactly what you need says @magspatterson #feistyfriday”]

subscribe now button new

Links for this Episode:

Sign Up to Learn More About the Fascination Advantage System

Link to Free Marketing Moxie Facebook Group

Categories
content marketing strategy conversion rate strategies

April’s Lab Report: Heatmaps and Bounce Rates

Lab-Report-April2015

Here we go – the very first of my lab reports. Back in March I shared that I was going to start giving you some behind-the-scenes scoop about my business.

My approach to business – even after 10 years – is that it’s all a test. We need to be willing to boldly experiment if we’re going to succeed. Which is my true goal with these lab reports: to share what’s working and what’s not so you can take it and run with it.

Before we go any further, I think we should stop to note that I nearly failed math in high school (more than once) and had multiple mishaps in chemistry class with the bunsen burner. Just remember, I am first and foremost a creative, a writer, a marketer…and then an analytics geek, because I love that knowing this stuff lets me get back to the creative stuff.

So right now, apologies to all the science types. This lab report takes some liberties with format and, ahem, word choice. (I’m sure my grade 11 chem teacher would give me an F for this!)

April’s big experiments focused on figuring out what was really happening on my website. I had some ideas, but I wanted to run some tests to figure it out.

Statement of Problem

After attending a two-day course on digital psychology, I was extremely curious about what was happening on my website with an eye on fine-tuning things to drive a higher number of conversions. Then I had a one-on-one conversation with Sally Hogshead from How to Fascinate, who made some very specific branding and marketing suggestions about my site. Time to dig in and see what was happening and what changes I really needed (and not just what I thought I needed to make).

Hypothesis

My initial thought was that removing the three feature boxes from the bottom of the home page will streamline decision making. Also, I thought that more emphasis should be placed on moving people to the about page from home, as it’s traditionally been the most visited page on the site.

Tools

  • WordPress-based Website
  • Crazy Egg
  • Google Analytics
  • Patience
  • One copywriter + one designer

Procedure

To make data-based decisions, I started by looking at my Google Analytics. I wanted to see what my bounce rate was for the home page.

Bounce rate is a way of measuring how many people visit your home page and leave, which is a sign there may possibly be an issue with the copy or design of your home page.

With that out of the way, I then added a heatmap to my website. Heatmaps are a great way to see – visually – where the action is on your website. With a heatmap, you can follow visitor’s journey through the site and see where they are clicking, scrolling, mousing over and much more.

To prepare for the experiment in March, I first used a free plug-in heatmap for WordPress. I then switched to Crazy Egg’s heatmapping tool for more sophisticated data.

[Tweet “Do you really know what’s happening on your website? @magspatterson shares what she learned about hers.”]

Results

On April 1st, I quickly determined my bounce rate for the past 30 days was very good, running at 13.09% and with an average of 3.80 pages being viewed on each visit. At month’s end, my bounce rate had risen to 32.11% with 3.35 pages per visit.

March Bounce Rates
March Bounce Rates
April Bounce Rates
April Bounce Rates

Looking at my referral traffic for April, my traffic coming from organic search rose from 15% to 24% of my total traffic, so this likely impacted my bounce rate. This is good news, but I will monitor bounce rate actively. While the current number is acceptable, if it continues to trend upwards, I may need to intervene.

Heatmaps

Lots of great insight thanks to the heatmap. The first key learning is that people actually do use the three boxes towards the bottom of my home page to route them to other pages on my site.

home-page-heatmap-boxes
Home page heatmaps with click activity

 

However, the click through rates for the boxes were averaging around 1-2%, so I looked closely at them and realized the calls to action were weaker than I’d like, so they were changed. As you can see in the image below, they were blue, meaning they were getting some traffic but there was lots of room for improvement.

new-homepage-boxes
Home page boxes with new calls to action

 

We’ll see how the new calls to action for these three feature boxes work moving ahead, but early testing is positive.

From there, I started to look at where the real action was in my navigation bar, and it was all about services. Services received 16% of clicks on the page, with the blog receiving 13% and my about page 12%.

home-nav-bar-heatmap
Heatmap on home page navigation bar

 

This prompted me to switch gears from examining my about page to my services landing page, so I promptly put a heatmap on it. Because holy shiznit – services pages are critical to my business. How could I not know exactly what was going on??? I knew business was “good,” but I wanted to know what was really happening when they hit that page.

Here’s how clicks on the services landing page breaks down:

  • 13.3% on The Story Distillery
  • 18.2% on Copywriting
  • 10.2% on Ongoing Services
  • 8.6% on Guest Posting

(And yes, I know that’s not 100, but I’ll take 50.3% clicks on services to learn more. And those other 49.7% of clicks are totally random, but interestingly, 5% of them are to my praise page.)

This accurately echoes pretty much how my services break down in terms of revenue split, and it’s no surprise that copywriting is my lead service. With that in mind, I audited the copywriting landing page and subpages with a careful eye, as that group of pages is where a good chunk of my traffic is going, so I want to do everything I can to convert them.

Working with my designer, we made a series of minor tweaks to the copywriting services page, including clearer and more prominent call to action buttons and making the invite to book a consult more visually enticing. You can see the results of those tweaks here.

We’re also fine-tuning the other services pages in an effort to improve conversions for each page and will be setting up a goal for each page  in Google Analytics so we can see how we’re doing. Right now, all post-purchase thank you pages are hosted by Infusionsoft. We’ll be moving those back to WordPress so we can track them as soon as design/development changes are completed for those pages later this month.

If you want to learn more on how to set up a goal in Google Analytics, you can view the process right here:

Conclusions

My gut was totally wrong about what was happening on my home page and seeing the numbers first hand made a significant difference in the actions we took. Instead of enacting major changes, we kept what was working and started to fine tune.

Each of these changes will continue to be tracked via Google Analytics and heatmaps  in the coming months, and the use of Google Analytics goals on each thank you page will let us see how many people go from landing on the site to ultimately purchasing.

Taking Action on the Lab Report

The point of the lab report is for you to get into action and take some of the testing and experimenting used here to see how you can start to use more data and facts to help you shape your marketing.

Here are a few things for you to dig into:

  1. What’s your bounce rate?
  2. What could your heatmap tell you about what visitors are doing?
  3. Do you know what’s happening on your services pages?
  4. Where can you use a goal in Google Analytics?

It’s important to keep in mind that you don’t have to have massive amounts of traffic to start digging into what’s happening. In fact, if you can figure out what’s happening now, you’ll be ready to capitalize on traffic as it rises over time. Because there’s nothing worse than traffic that you aren’t ready to actually convert into action.

That’s it. Lots learned this month about my website and what people are really doing, as well as what we need to change with an eye on improving conversion rates.

From here on out, lab reports will drop early each month and I’ve got some fun experiments planned, including:

  • Can Maggie grow her Pinterest following the same way she did for a crafting business?
  • Your Facebook ads cost what? Breaking down the real cost per lead.
  • Adventures in list building leading up to a launch.
  • And much more…

[Tweet “The first monthly lab report from @magspatterson: breaking down bounce rate and heatmaps”]

Categories
The Marketing Moxie Show

Episode #74 – Designing Your Digital Strategy with Marie Poulin

Designing-Your-Digital-Strategy

If you don’t know today’s guest, you need to. She’s an absolute powerhouse when it comes to digital strategy. Marie breaks down what a digital strategy is, why you need one and why this is something you can’t afford to overlook.

Items Discussed in this Episode:

  • If you think of web design as the ‘what’ then strategy is the ‘how’, digital strategy helps you decide how you’re going to use digital tools to help you reach out business goals
  • Marie shares where we are struggling with our digital strategy and how to fix it
  • The difference between a content strategy and a digital strategy
  • The numbers that Marie looks at to create and analyze a digital strategy
  • Why you shouldn’t be scared to look at your numbers, they can actually empower you!
  • We spend so much time in creation mode that we don’t remember to reuse our content and optimizing all the things we already have
  • Marie explains how to create a long term strategy and not just a short term strategy for your offerings and promotions
  • Sometimes you need someone you trust to tell you what to do with your business, we don’t give ourselves the same advice we would give to our friends
  • Why and how Marie started to obsess and incorporate digital strategy into her business instead of just web design
  • Marie shares some of the biggest mistakes made in planning and designing your site
  • Going through rebranding and changing your website should push you completely out of your comfort zone, then you know you’re not pushing yourself hard enough
  • Marie tells the story of a quick blog she posted to Medium and how it took off unexpectedly. It’s a great example of how testing the waters and stepping outside of your own platform can surprise you with how beneficial it could be
  • Marie and I discuss how much time to set aside to work ‘on’ your business instead of ‘in’ your business

[Tweet “Do you have a #digitalstrategy in place? @Mariepoulin breaks down why you absolutely need one”]

Top 3 Takeaways for this Episode:

  1. Do you have a digital strategy? No – then you probably need on that breaks down all the moving pieces you need to operate your business.
  2. Outside perspective is critical – there’s no need to go this alone. Get people you trust to weigh in on what they think.
  3. Are you blocking out time to work on your business, not just in your business? Time to block out time each week so you’re focused 100% on the things that will drive your future.

subscribe now button new

Links for this Episode:

Marie’s site

Digital Strategy School

Oki Doki

Amy Porterfield’s Episode that covers context switching

Link to Free Marketing Moxie Facebook Group

Categories
The Marketing Moxie Show

Episode #73 – Behaving Badly on Facebook

FF-73

Warning – ranty times ahead. This week, I get super feisty about Facebook and how people forget the whole point is people when building community. Thanks to Michelle and Val for the inspiration for this episode, as I often wonder if how I feel about people behaving badly is, well you know, just me.

Items Discussed in this Episode:

  • If we’re going to all use Facebook for business, please act like a human. If you wouldn’t do it in person, please don’t do it on Facebook! (Official hashtag #notcool)
  • I’m all for selling on Facebook, but it needs to be in an appropriate time and place. Showing up only to sell is not okay and means you’re entirely missing the point of community.
  • Communities are for connecting, not for list building. Think about how stringent you want to be, and how you want to connect with that person.  Sending a PM to say you must give me your email is obnoxious. (Please stop it.)
  • Do not private message people without their permission. You don’t need to solicit, if people want to buy your stuff they will. It’s the online equivalent of telemarketing and it feels desperate.
  • Think about poor citizenship and how you can be of the greatest possible service as it will make you stand out.

[Tweet “Are you doing any of these things on Facebook? Please stop now. @magspatterson #feistyfriday”]

subscribe now button new

Links for this Episode:

Link to Free (No Email Required) Marketing Moxie Facebook Group

Categories
The Marketing Moxie Show

Episode #72 – Paid Traffic to Grow Your List

Paid-Traffic-to-Grow-Your-List (1)

 

Too many times people don’t realize that one of the key things people do to grow their list is using paid traffic – usually Facebook ads – to make it happen. Today’s guest Claire Pelletreau is an absolute Facebook ads genius, and loves all things conversions and math, so we have a lively discussion about traffic, conversions and more.

Items Discussed in this Episode:

  • Facebook ads can be such a pain! Claire gives her top power tips for launching FB ads
  • If you’re overwhelmed by FB ads, just start slowly
  • Claire gives us some of the first steps to running a successful ad campaign
  • If you don’t have conversion tracking in place, you don’t know how much you’re paying per sign up
  • You need to get comfortable with looking at the reports. They look fancy and scary, but the reality is you don’t need to look at most of the numbers FB provides
  • There is a big connection between your ad campaigns’ success and what’s on your landing page
  • Claire shares some of the big mistakes she sees with landing pages that don’t convert
  • A simple and clean landing page will be what converts best
  • Claire gives some other options besides Facebook for ads if maybe Facebook is not where your ‘people’ are at

[Tweet “Facebook ads and paid traffic stressing you out? @clairepells breaks it down with @magspatterson “]

Top 3 Takeaways for this Episode:

  1. If you’re overwhelmed by Facebook ads, just start slowly. Listen to the steps Claire laid out to run a successful campaign.
  2. Look at the reports. They look super scary, but you need to look at certain numbers to find the areas where you can improve. Data is power!
  3. Take a hard look at your landing page. What can you do on this page to improve your conversion?
  4. Bonus Takeaway! If you’re not getting the traffic you want from Facebook, it’s worth taking a look at paid campaigns on other social media platforms.

subscribe now button new

Links for this Episode:

Claire’s site

Join the FREE Conversions Challenge going on this week

Link to Free Marketing Moxie Facebook Group