Monday, 29 June 2015

How to Squeeze Every Drop of Valuable Visitor Data from Your Forms (Without Complicated Programming)

It’s the great marketing catch-22: You need visitor data in order to create value-filled, personalized, highly targeted offers. The more information they provide, the greater your ability to build personas that fit your ideal customers.

But your visitors still aren’t convinced. Like jittery fish, you’ve presented them with the tastiest bait, and they’re hesitant to even take a nibble. So how can you get the information you need without scaring them off?

The answer is…

Progressive profiling.

What is Progressive Profiling?

Progressive profiling uses dynamic form fields to ask for and collect information on prospects based on the information you already have about them. Like a first date, it gets to know new customers in a way that’s gentle and unassuming. What’s your name? What’s the best email address to contact you at? How can I help?

Then, as the customer’s interaction with your product or service continues and greater trust and brand recognition is built, more questions are asked – helping you not just capture leads, but build on the intelligence you’ve gained.

Progressive profiling may start with name, email and question, but can gradually lead to vital details that will help you better understand where your prospect is in the buying cycle: are they evaluating products? Comparing features? Focused on pricing?

Asking questions about their timeframe to purchase and where they are in the decision-making process can help you better understand how and where your product fits according to their needs. Understanding how they plan to use the product can give you valuable insights into tailoring your offer across every stage, leveraging the information you already have about them.

How Does It Work?

Let’s say you sell a product and you have an email newsletter filled with valuable tips and techniques on using it. As is often the case, your prospective customer is asked for their name and email address. Simple enough, right?

1

They subscribe and get their first couple of newsletters. They’re starting to feel comfortable with your brand and enjoy what they’re getting so far. Here’s where the progressive part comes in. You’ve got another freebie for them – you just need a bit more information about how they plan on using your product, when they plan to purchase, and approximately how much they plan to spend.

Since you don’t need their name and email address again, the form simply asks the relevant questions you’ve set up. This information helps you gradually begin to understand this customer based on how much they’re willing to share as your relationship with them progresses.

2

Obviously you’ll want to space these out and give as much as you get – take the time to answer questions, clarify features and options, and so on. Don’t expect the customer to be receptive to answering personal questions by day 2.

Don’t Forget Your Best Practices

In addition, you’re not going to want to throw best form practices out the window when implementing progressive profiling. Things like:

Being Clear about What Information is Needed (And How It Should Be Presented)

credit card threadless

This example from Threadless tells customers precisely how to enter their payment information.

Explaining, if Necessary, Why Certain Information is Needed

The example below, from Money Supermarket tells people why they need the registration number of their car.

money-supermarket

Source: eConsultancy

Make sure your reasoning is reasonable – Money Supermarket could have said, “We need your information to help get you an accurate quote”, but it still wouldn’t answer the prospect’s why? The fact that they need it to find that same exact car and get you a quote is much more sensible.

What Happens After They Subscribe?

And finally, don’t forget to be clear about what happens after the sign up process is complete. How can they download the freebie? How often will they receive email newsletters? Can they unsubscribe or change the frequency? And so on.

expect-buffer

BufferApp sets newsletter expectations before asking for subscribers’ info

How Can You Implement Progressive Profiling?

Progressive profiling is a relatively new function, but there are a variety of solutions on the market that make integrating it into forms easy and hassle-free. Oftentimes, you can do this without any programming knowledge at all. Here are a few services that offer Progressive Profiling as part of their systems:

Salesforce Pardot

progressive-salesforce

Adds a progressive profiling feature that ties in with your existing use of Salesforce Pardot

HubSpot

progressive-hubspot

HubSpot refers to progressive profiling form capabilities as “Smart Forms” and provides a variety of best practices you can follow when implementing them.

Act-On

act-on

As with other services, Act-On lets you define a set of rules for which other form fields will display. The site also provides an example tour through how its Progressive Profiling system works.

JumpLead

jumplead

An example of the JumpLead dashboard

JumpLead is a sort of marketing automation/lead generation platform of which progressive profiling forms play a role. Like many of these other solutions, they offer a full scale of marketing automation tools. For WordPress users, JumpLead also has a plugin that can integrate progressive profiling into their existing WordPress system.

How to Get the Best Possible Results from Your New Progressive Forms

It’s easy to fall into the tempting trap of asking for more and more information through more and more form fields as your relationship with the prospect progresses. However, small bits over time (and depending on the customer’s stage in the product’s overall lifecycle, as well as their buying cycle) will help foster a reciprocal relationship while giving them the personal attention and nurturing they crave.

And don’t forget, progressive profiling is just one tool of many designed to help improve your forms and increase your conversion rates. As with any tool, it’s not a silver bullet – it’s all in how you use it. By making progressive profiling a part of your overall sales and conversion optimization process rather than looking at it as “yet another form component”, you’ll be poised to start forming lucrative customer relationships built on a foundation of mutual trust, understanding and expectations.

Now It’s Your Turn

Are you using progressive profiling in your own lead generation forms? How has it worked out for you so far? Share your success stories and triumphs with us, as well as your thoughts on this unique practice in the comments below!

About the Author: Sherice Jacob helps business owners improve website design and increase conversion rates through compelling copywriting, user-friendly design and smart analytics analysis. Learn more at iElectrify.com and download your free web copy tune-up and conversion checklist today!

Thursday, 25 June 2015

The CMO’s Guide To Mobile Marketing (eBook)

A few months ago we released a guide which we created along with The CMO Club entitled the CMO Solution Guide to Leveraging New Technology and Marketing Platforms. The guide contains results of a survey of over 100 marketing leaders plus the five key solutions we identified to help CMOs and marketing leaders tackle the challenge of providing a seamless customer experience across all marketing channels via the use of technology - the right technology that is.

In our newest guide, The CMO’s Guide To Mobile Marketing - we get right to the point, two as a matter of fact, when it comes to mobile marketing:

  1. Mobile marketing is not reserved for the B2C CMOs of the world only— nor is this guide.
  2. Mobile Internet usage has overtaken desktop as the most used digital platform—and there is no looking back.

We did that for a reason, which was to make abundantly clear to any B2B CMOs out there who may be thinking mobile marketing has no place in their strategic plans and lest anyone forget, ours is a mobile world after all.

The guide covers three critically important aspects when it comes to mobile marketing.

  1. SMS & MMS
  2. Push
  3. Data Management Platforms

For each aspect we delve into the value of each, what may be holding CMOs back and how to go about actually implementing them.

If you're a CMO you owe it to yourself to download The CMO’s Guide To Mobile Marketing today.

And for more on the value of mobile marketing, you will also want to download the Modern Marketing Essentials Guide to Mobile Marketing where marketers can learn how to:

  • Market with cross-channel orchestration
  • Use smart data and signals to inform your mobile communication strategy
  • Create a holistic view of customer interactions
  • Deliver personalized marketing experiences
  • Prove the value of your mobile marketing strategy

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

An Overlooked Email Deliverability Metric

Deliverability, on occasion, is just like real life. "Read the fine print," "the Devil is in the details," and "DO sweat the small stuff" are sayings that are certainly applicable to the world of deliverability. It’s very true that sometimes we are so enamored with the big picture (How often are we sending? How many emails are going out?), we forget about seemingly small details that can make a difference. Don’t forget that sometimes it is small metrics and small details that can cause you big problems.

Let’s talk about complaints. It’s true that complaint rate isn’t exactly an overlooked area for deliverability minded folks, but you may be surprised at how small the number of complaints that cause trouble really is.

First, a quick review of what a complaint is. A complaint is registered when a recipient clicks the “Report Spam,” “This is Spam,” or some flavor of button or check box that implies this is a message they didn’t ask for. Most likely the user did subscribe (let’s hope you have an explicit opt-in), but either can’t recall, or feels like they didn’t sign-up for this type of message.

There are between 15 and 20 global ISPs who offer feedback loops (FBL). What happens when the user clicks the spam button? The ISP sends the message back to the sender and it is processed as an unsubscribe by the email or marketing automation software. An ISP assigns significant importance to their customers who go through the trouble of reporting a message as spam.

Here’s the shocking and often overlooked fact about complaint rates: you can expect to see issues with deliverability when your complaint rate reaches 0.2%. That’s calculated by dividing the number of messages sent to a single ISP by the number of complaint at that ISP. That’s only two messages out of a thousand! It doesn’t take many of these complaints to bring down a great campaign.

Here are some quick tips to avoid these complaint issues:

  • Only mail to customers who explicitly opt-in to receive your email
  • Don’t write spammy subject lines
  • Make your unsubscribe link easy to find and understand
  • Don’t try to trick your recipients into opening or clicking your email
  • Don’t purchase a mailing list to increase your marketing universe

The most common excuse for people who hit the “Report Spam” button is that there is a lack of trust in the sender. Spam is in the eye of the receiver. If they don’t remember signing up for your email, feel like they get way too much email, or don’t recognize the partner message you just sent out; it is easier to report spam rather than hunting around for your unsubscribe button or link.

Remember 2 out of 1,000 is a pretty shockingly low number. Start planning right now for a better experience to avoid a huge impact on your deliverability.

Grab the Modern Marketing Guide to Deliverability and other guides to ensure you achieve maximum deliverability of your email.

Monday, 22 June 2015

Marketing is Changing and Kissmetrics is Here to Help

It’s a great time to be a marketer. Never before have we had access to so much customer and behavioral data. We know which campaigns turn prospects into paying customers. We know the content customers prefer, their buying patterns, and the reasons they stop doing business with us.

But just when we thought we had it all, customers are changing even faster than ever, and the way we market to them must adapt. So, that’s what we’re doing – and we’re making tools to do just that.

Our Big Changes

In a strategic move, Kissmetrics has released a new product called Engage, which fills a huge market need. It gives marketers a powerful new tool to improve their performance. (More on that in a bit).

Also, as you may have noticed, we’ve updated our brand, logo, and website.

km-homepage-june-2015

Our new look is more in line with our market and our company. It’s modern, strong, helpful, committed, smart, confident, and trustworthy. Also, our website is more informative, clear, and concise about the products we provide and the value they bring to the market.

The Market’s Big Changes

The market is changing rapidly. If marketers don’t change their approach, their companies won’t be able to compete or survive. Now that’s an extreme statement, but here’s what I mean and why I truly believe it:

Buyers are in control and have amazing power at their fingertips. They can shop, compare, review, search, and ultimately purchase at any time, from anywhere. Their expectations are high and their attention spans are short. They expect to find answers, information, and guidance quickly and easily. They are going through the buying process on their own, according to their own terms, and in their own time frames.

It’s their journey, and if you’re not on hand to guide them at key moments, you are likely to lose. You may have heard, and even said, all this before. But now, it’s a business requirement to live it.

Change Brings Opportunity

As a result of all these changes, marketing has to go way beyond the top of the funnel to fuel growth. Marketers have to generate interest and be there all the way through the customer lifecycle, providing the information and guidance required to keep buyers on the path to the targeted conversion, be it a sign-up, download, registration, or purchase.

This is easier said than done because every journey is different. So, we need a new approach to marketing. The static, pre-defined campaigns won’t cut it. We must provide continuous, dynamic, behavior-based messaging to a segment of 1 – the holy grail of marketing.

The key ingredients for making this a reality are:

  1. Understand your buyer’s journey and customer lifecycle.
  2. Monitor digital interactions and activity.
  3. Deliver timely, relevant interactions based on behavior.

Kissmetrics is Here to Help

Our flagship product, Kissmetrics Analyze, was built to help marketers understand interactions between people and their companies. It shows marketers how people respond to campaigns and pages and how they move through the buying cycle, from their very first visit, through purchase, and back again.

The next step is to act upon that valuable insight. In order to do exactly that, Kissmetrics has released a new product – Engage.

Engage lets marketers easily create interactions that are timely, relevant, and based on behavior. Marketers can go along on each and every buyer’s journey as they proceed at their own pace, choose their own process, and follow their own rules. The buyer is still in charge, but now you can respond based on their behavior at just the right moment, to a segment of 1.

Analyze + Engage gives you the ability to measure and optimize interactions with your audience. So, to fully understand the buyer’s journey, monitor that journey. Then respond with timely, relevant messages to increase conversions.

Time to Shine

Now marketers can have amazing power at their fingertips, just as buyers do. The buyers are in control, but they’re ready and willing to be won over with timely guidance and information that makes your company shine. Here’s to marketing! It’s awesome.

We invite you to start a free trial of Kissmetrics. You’ll get access to both Engage and Analyze. Our support team will be available during your trial to ensure your setup success. Get started by clicking the button below.

About the Author: Brian Kelly is the CEO of Kissmetrics.

Value Proposition: Lessons from interviews with 50 business leaders

Marketing automation. Programmatic ad buying. Email personalization.

Advancements in marketing technology can power a successful brand, if …

… and it’s a big if …

… they are used to communicate an effective and authentic value proposition.

At Email Summit 2015 I sat down with Jose Palomino, Founder and CEO, Value Prop Interactive, and author of Value Prop — Create Powerful  I3 Value Propositions to Enter and Win New Markets, to discuss what value proposition means to your business.

The value proposition is “the core or central truth about whatever the offer is,” Palomino said. “And, most importantly, [the value proposition] answers this question — ‘why should anyone care?’”

We discussed:

  • Improving the offer for the customer in a way that the customer really cares about
  • What Jose learned from interviewing 50 business leaders about value proposition
  • Creating the right culture to get rid of inconsistencies in how the customer experiences a brand’s value proposition

Watch the above video to learn how to get into your buyer’s head and create value in the world with things that matter to people, while improving your company’s performance.

“It’s no longer selling — it’s engaging in a way that matters,” Palomino said. “And they welcome it. Now you’re answering my questions; you’re helping me understand how to take advantage of this. I actually appreciate even more communication from you.”

You might also like

Watch Full Sessions from Email Summit 2015 – Complimentary access for MarketingSherpa email subscribers to HD video of Jose Palomino’s full featured session, along with 14 others sessions from Email Summit 2015

Customer Value: The four essential levels of value propositions

Writing your value proposition (by Olaf Kowalik)

Value Proposition: A free worksheet to help you win arguments in any meeting

In Business, Nice Guys CAN Finish First (by Jose Palomino)

Value Proposition Development online course (from MarketingExperiments parent research organization, MECLABS Institute)

Sunday, 21 June 2015

Products To Help Keep Your Grass Green

Products To Help Keep Your Grass Green
When people think that they don't need to landscape their home they often overlook things that could actually improve the quality of their home. Even if you feel like the landscape of your home is just fine, you still might want to take a look at this article. You can learn a thing or two that you can apply towards your home.

Sketch out a design before you dig your first hole on a landscaping project. This lets you visualize the space with the correct dimensions, thanks to your careful measurements, so you can estimate the materials needed and costs involved. If you find you need to make adjustments, it will be easier to do to a sketch than to your yard or garden.

Before you buy anything, take the time to draw a detailed sketch of your garden. You should know exactly where things go in addition to which order you will proceed to create your landscape. Give yourself a few weeks to review your sketches and make a few changes, if you need to.

Landscape according to the different seasons. Make sure you include a variety of plants in your garden that are at their best during different seasons. This way you will create a landscape that offers year-round interest. Plant a combination of shrubs, trees and flowers, and make sure that there is always something colorful to catch the eye, no matter what season.

When planning a landscaping project for your house, be sure to go beyond the home-improvement stores and check out online resources. You might just find deals and products that are not carried locally. Due to the lack of a physical store, you might find that selection, and pricing is far superior.

Determine your expected costs before you begin your landscaping project. Many plants are seasonally priced, and could change in cost a good deal in just a few weeks. Know the seasons for plants, and get firm costs on your project. This will also help you to save money, as you can orient your plans towards saving money on seasonal plants.

Before beginning a landscaping project investigate what it might do to your property tax bill. There are a number of projects that can greatly increase the value of your home, which will results in yearly payments via taxes on your landscaped yard. Be sure these costs are something you are willing to incur before you begin.

When planning a landscaping project for your house, be sure to be friendly with your neighbors and build up a relationship. This can be important because you may be able to save quite a bit of money by sharing equipment that you either purchase or rent. You may also be able to obtain or share a vast amount of experience and tips with each other.

When thinking about your new landscape design, you have to consider the amount of available sunlight, and pick the proper plants for this exposure. If you do not do this, you plants will either wither because they receive too much sun, or they will just remain stagnant or die because they do not receive enough.

A great way to improve the visual interest, and flow of your landscape design, is to consider incorporating pathways, and seating areas comprised of paver stones and other media. This way, it will be possible for you, and your guests to peruse the grounds, and take full advantage of the variety of plantings, and design elements you have used to build your outdoor space.

Did you find anything new that you could add to your home? If yes then good, if not, then maybe you just haven't found something you can add yet. There is always something you can change in your home's landscape. Just remember that, although it's up to you to decide how much you want to change. You can be the judge of that and have as much fun as you can, either way.

Friday, 19 June 2015

HVAC Purchase Advice Made Easy To Understand

If you need to replace your HVAC system, you might be confused by all the available choices. Which is the best system to buy? Additionally, there are a wide variety of sizes available. Do you know which features it needs? As these units advance and become more complicated, choosing the right one can be confusing. You may feel overwhelmed, so read on to learn about the HVAC.

Although most people are thinking of their heating systems during the winter months, air conditioning is also important. When installing a new furnace or heating system, make sure the air ducts are also set up to work with your air condition system. Using the ducts for both heating and cooling is the most economical choice.

Clean your permanent air filters or replace disposable ones every single month. If you have the choice, an electrostatic is the best option on the market today. Be sure to turn off your unit before you change the filter as it should never be run without a filter in place.

Make sure the equipment you are buying is ENERGY STAR compliant. It may seem a small thing, but it isn't. Products that are ENERGY STAR compliant can save you a lot of money in energy costs over the year. It can be over $100 easily, sometimes a lot more.

When colder weather arrives, switch off all outdoor condenser units. Once the temperature drops into the 50s, the unit should no longer be on. This will help keep it in good condition for many years.

Sometimes, you may be confused when shopping for an HVAC system. But, with these tips, the choice should be easier. If you've got the time, review the tips above one more time for sake of clarity. Use the tips to make a more informed decision when it counts.

Thursday, 18 June 2015

How to Create Oscar-Worthy Content Marketing: Ann Handley of MarketingProfs #CMWorld

AHandley---interview-header-

My pal Ann Handley has made it her life’s work to, in her words, “wage war on mediocrity in content.” Her best-selling book, Everybody Writes, is a practical guide to writing the kind of content that truly engages an audience.

As the Chief Content Officer of MarketingProfs (the world’s first Chief Content Officer, in fact), Ann advocates quality over quantity in all of her content ventures. She also spreads the gospel of good content at speaking engagements around the world, including the upcoming Content Marketing World conference September 8-11 in Cleveland.

To get a sneak preview of Ann’s Content Marketing World presentation, Good Content Vs. Good Enough Content: A Fight For Sore Eyes, I did my best to catch up with her during some pretty crazy travels. Along the way, she shared her journey on learning to write compelling content, the role of technology in content marketing, and the death of the marketing funnel.

My mission is always to make the complicated way simpler.

As the CCO of MarketingProfs, best-selling author, keynote speaker, lover of Cavalier King Charles Spaniels and the most influential woman in Social Media (according to Forbes), when you look back on your journey throughout your career what are three things you never lost focus on that helped you get to where you are today?

  1. When I was in journalism school, my professor Charlie Ball used to tell me, “Remember: No one has to read this.” That perspective changed my writing from self-indulgent (all about me) to reader-centric (all about the audience). It’s been invaluable as a content-centric marketer and blogger and (frankly) as a person.

(Side note to parents — of either a human, dog, cat, ferret, lizard, llama, or otherwise: Parenting reaffirms this idea. Because nothing is about you. Ever again. And I say that in the best possible way.)

  1. Charlie also told me: “No one will complain that you made things too simple to understand.” Life is complicated. Business is messy. “Solutions” are multi-faceted. If I’m being honest, most things in life confuse me. My mission is always to make the complicated way simpler.
  1. Finally: Deliver. Seth Godin calls this: Ship.

When I was in high school, the Pope visited Boston. I went to Catholic high school, where I was the editor of the school paper. I told the school I’d cover it for us. (The nuns were thrilled!)

But then I changed my mind, and I blew off the Pope’s visit to go hang out with my local public school friends. And when I got home that day, my Mom was unusually annoyed at me. I didn’t understand why — who cares? The Pope’s visit was all over the news anyway.

And my mom said, lips pursed and on the verge of losing it, “Because you had a responsibility to your position, and you ignored it for your own pleasure.”

At the time, I thought she was being ridiculously prissy. (I still feel bad to this day about my eye roll in response.)

But now, I get it. I said I’d do something, and then I didn’t. That’s not cool.

How I internalize that now: If you say you’ll do something, do it. Your word is more important than you might imagine it is.

You can’t code creativity. And you can’t program publishing. And quality definitely trumps quantity.

Your session at Content Marketing World will focus on helping marketers nail the basics of creating good content. What do you anticipate are the primary challenges for marketers today in creating quality content versus a quantity of content?

I’ve been thinking lately about technology. Because increasingly it’s heralded as the savior (or legitimizer?) of marketing.

Robots can write your posts. Tools can optimize them. Solutions can amplify them.

Awesome. I heart technology. I built my career on it, too.

But guess what? Technology is only as good as our story.

You can’t code creativity. And you can’t program publishing. And quality definitely trumps quantity. Always has. Always will.

Your story is the thing that sets your apart. So the question is: What’s your story? And how do you tell it?

There’s a growing rumbling in the marketing industry about the death of the funnel. Yea or nay?

The funnel was never a funnel. It’s always been an ecosystem, because the people who buy (the people at the end of the “funnel”) have always had the capacity to influence the decision of others. Social tools and technology make that information way more accessible, is all.

Which makes your sales and marketing efforts like the song that never ends. It just goes on and on, my friend, to quote Lamb Chop. (Is this the first time Shari Lewis has been quoted in a marketing context?)

What are your favorite examples of B2B or B2C brands that are creating great content for marketing?

B2B

B2C

Nonprofit

Government

  • This was a failed attempt, because the candidate didn’t get elected. But I believe it was groundbreaking storytelling in political marketing – The Best Political Ad Ever

What’s ordinary to you isn’t often ordinary to others.

Incorporating storytelling into content marketing has always been a big focus of yours. What advice would you give to marketers to help uncover these stories, even if they think they might not have any worth sharing?

Every company has a story to tell, if you look at the world from your customer’s point of view. The designer Michael Wolff says, “What already exists is an inspiration.”

Train yourself to look at things differently. What’s ordinary to you isn’t often ordinary to others.

What is the best piece of marketing advice that you’ve ever received personally?

“The best marketing doesn’t feel like marketing.” — Tom Fishburne (Marketoonist.com)

He didn’t say it to me personally — although he’s a friend, so he probably would if I asked him to. Regardless, I’ve internalized it as if he did. I’m not exaggerating when I say that I think of it every day.

Content Marketing World attendees, you are my people.

What do you like best about attending and speaking at Content Marketing World?

Content Marketing World attendees, you are my people. It’s not quite like being with family — but there’s a similar feel of a kind of posse.

“Community” is one of those words that’s overplayed in marketing. But CMW (and a few other select marketing events throughout the year) embody it for me.

Thanks, Ann!

Ready to Create Oscar-Caliber Content Marketing?

Reserve your space at Content Marketing World 2015 for inspiring and informative presentations from 200 superstars of marketing.

For a sneak preview of Ann and 13 other marketing matinee idols’ presentations, grab your popcorn and settle in with our new eBook, Making Content Marketing the Star of Your Marketing.

Stay Tuned For the Thrilling, Final Chapter in Our Triple Content Marketing Feature!

CMWorld 2015 eBooks
On June 22, we will premiere the final chapter in our content marketing triple feature: Measuring Your Content Marketing Box Office Success. Featuring content marketing stars such as Joe Pulizzi, Andrew Davis, Michael Brenner and many more, you’ll be able to connect the content marketing performance dots with the strategy and tactics shared in the first two eBooks.


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© Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®, 2015. | How to Create Oscar-Worthy Content Marketing: Ann Handley of MarketingProfs #CMWorld | http://www.toprankblog.com

The post How to Create Oscar-Worthy Content Marketing: Ann Handley of MarketingProfs #CMWorld appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.

Guest-Posting on Steroids: A 4-Step Blueprint That the Top Guest Posters Use

guest posting

I’ve seen many try and many fail.

Yet time and time again, others (including myself) get wild results from the same tactic.

We’re talking about guest posts, of course.

You’ve, no doubt, read that guest-posting is a tactic that can send you traffic, improve your search engine rankings, and establish you as an authority in your niche.

But most who try guest-posting for any (or all) of those reasons never see any real success. At best, they see a trickle of traffic and deem guest-posting worthless.

You’re on the right track but are missing a few key principles of effective modern guest-posting. But don’t worry, I’m going to show you exactly how I and many others achieve their goals with guest-posting.

What kind of results can you get?

I’ll show you my results throughout this guide, but there’s one case study in particular I’d like to highlight upfront.

Have you ever heard of Danny Iny? He’s the guy behind Firepole Marketing, which is a blog that now generates 7 figures per year. I bring this up because he literally built his business through guest-posting.

image15

He wrote over 80 guest posts in his first year to take the blog from zero visitors per month to over 23,000.

If that doesn’t showcase the power of guest posts to you, I don’t know what will.

If you are interested in learning how the “big guys” guest-blog for success, settle in and take some notes. 

Guest-posting can give you fame and fortune

Traffic is one potential benefit of guest-posting, but not the only one. I still regularly guest-post, despite getting over 500,000 visitors per month already. I’ll tell you a secret: I don’t do it for the few hundred or thousand of additional visitors I get from each post.

Here are the reasons why you should guest-post:

1. Traffic and subscribers: If you’re starting a brand new blog, guest posting is the most important tactic at your disposal. If you’re a good writer already, it won’t even cost you very much.

There’s one thing, however, I need to warn you about. While it is possible to generate a ton of traffic and subscribers with a single post, don’t set unrealistic expectations. In reality, it will take you writing several quality guest posts on a regular basis to generate the kind of traffic needed to build a business.

However, if you take it seriously, you might be able to hit a home run every once in a while.

For example, blogger Giles Thomas was able to get 408 subscribers from a single guest post.

In addition to short-term results, if you do everything right and get a bit lucky, your article might take off and continue to send you tons of targeted traffic over time.

Take a look at the effect one guest post on Hubspot had on Will Blunt’s list over time:

image03

Finally, the guys at Groove were able to get thousands of visits from multiple guest posts on big name blogs:

image14

2. Branding: Call it what you want, but your brand or reputation can be a valuable asset over time. In fact, I’d say that it’s more important than any short term traffic gains.

The main reason I continue to guest-post is to build my personal brand. Every guest post either exposes my work to new potential clients or reinforces my status as a leading marketing expert.

You won’t see the results from building your personal brand overnight. But if you consistently do it for years, you can leverage your reputation to generate revenue and help build 7-figure businesses. Consulting fees, mainly generated from my personal brand, make up approximately half of my income.

3. SEO: Go back 4 or 5 years, and guest-posting purely for SEO benefits was actually a viable tactic. For example, Nigerian blogger Bamidele was able to increase his search engine traffic by 38% by writing 31 guest posts in a week, back in 2011.

First of all, 31 posts in a week is a lot. Even if you could replicate that volume, the link value of a guest post has been devalued significantly. It’s pretty easy for Google to identify the authorship of any given guest post, considering it’s usually in a bio box at the end of an article:

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In January of 2014, Matt Cutts confirmed Google’s attitude toward guest-posting in a post on his personal blog:

“So stick a fork in it: guest blogging is done; it’s just gotten too spammy. In general I wouldn’t recommend accepting a guest blog post unless you are willing to vouch for someone personally or know them well. Likewise, I wouldn’t recommend relying on guest posting, guest blogging sites, or guest blogging SEO as a linkbuilding strategy.”

Here’s where we stand today: guest-posting can have a positive effect on your search engine traffic, but you won’t see huge results from any single post. In addition, links from guest posts on low-traffic and low-authority sites will count for barely anything at all.

Don’t guest-post because you want more search engine traffic—you have far more efficient tactics. But you can expect some SEO side-benefits from guest-posting if you do it right.

The problem with typical guest-posting strategies

Before we dive into how to do guest-posting right, you need to understand why most people get weak results or none at all.

The fundamental problem is that most bloggers want to guest-post on a site to siphon off its traffic and convert those visitors into subscribers.

You might think, “What’s wrong with that?” Didn’t I just say to use guest-posting to generate traffic? Yes, but there’s a difference.

When your only motivation is to take visitors from a site, you approach guest-posting from a selfish angle.

You’ll write an okay post because you don’t want to spend more time or money than you have to. Right?

But think about it from the point of view of a regular reader of that site. Most will see a fairly standard post and might skim it. Very few are going to read the whole thing and then be impressed enough to care about who wrote it and click through.

This is why you barely get any significant traffic or new subscribers from a post. From here, most bloggers either continue this cycle of weak results or give up on guest-blogging all together even though they know it can work.

So, what’s the solution?

You may have already figured it out: provide value.

Your post needs to stand out on a site to such a degree that its readers would feel that they need to read more from you. That’s when they’ll happily share the article (more traffic) and click through at the end to subscribe to you.

That’s the answer in a nutshell. Of course, though, it’s a little more complicated than that.

Next, I’m going to break down the process you need to follow for successful guest-posting, step-by-step.

How to get traffic, subscribers, and rankings from guest posts

In order to get great results from guest-posting, you need to have a system. If you don’t, you’ll end up wasting time and getting inconsistent results.

Here’s what I recommend starting with for anyone who is serious about achieving long-term sustainable traffic and exposure:

  • Step 1: target the right sites. If you don’t guest-post on sites with sufficient targeted traffic, you won’t get great results. Most people do this okay, but I’ll show you how to do it better.
  • Step 2: get approved for a guest post. Gone are the days when you can spam out a templated request to guest-post. I’ll show you what you need to do to convince top editors and site owners to let you post.
  • Step 3: produce epic content. The definition of “epic” is important here, but it’s safe to say that most guest posters don’t know how to do it right.
  • Step 4 (optional, but highly recommended): promote it. There are a few big reasons why promoting your guest post like any other post is a good idea. I’ll show you why and how to do it.

Step 1: Identify high-quality sites for guest-posting

Many low-quality sites look for free content by offering to accept guest posts. Obviously, these are not the sites you want to guest-blog on.

The number one aspect of a good target for a guest post is traffic. Without traffic, there’s really no benefit to posting.

The second aspect is that a significant amount of that traffic must be made of your target audience. Otherwise, no one will care about your post, no matter how good it is.

In general, there are two types of quality sites to target:

  1. Broad authority sites: These sites are often household names (think Forbes, The Huffington Post, or Business Insider). They have tons of traffic, and even if only a small percentage of that traffic is your target audience, it’s worth it. My regular posts on Forbes have generated a lot of business for me.
  2. Leading industry blogs: These blogs are much more niche-specific but are mostly made of your target audience. For me, that includes sites such as Search Engine Journal and Moz. But don’t post too frequently as most of these readers will already know you. I recommend one to three times a month.

Now, let me show you how you can find these sites.

Method 1: Broad search

To find those general massive authority sites, you need to think in broad terms.

For example, while I blog mostly on generating traffic and revenue through blogging, all these topics fall under the main niche of business.

Simply searching Google for “business” will bring up the biggest business authority sites on the Internet:

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Not all of these sites will be suitable targets for guest posts as not all of them will accept guest-posting.

Others may require you to first be a leader in your field before writing for them. To demonstrate your authority, you’ll send them links to your other guest posts on industry leading blogs.

So, while you should start by making this list of the big sites that you eventually want to contribute to on a regular basis, it’s typically best to pursue the more realistic niche blogs first to build up a bit of a reputation.

Method 2: Search strings

This is likely what you’re already doing. It’s a good method to start with. You simply search for “[your niche]” + “[a guest-posting search string]” to bring up topics.

Here are some search strings you could use:

  • “guest post”
  • “contributing writer”
  • “this is a guest post by”
  • “contribute to our site”
  • “guest posting guidelines”
  • “suggest a post”
  • “contributor guidelines”
  • “guest posts wanted”
  • “writers wanted”
  • “write for us”

You can find more here. Your niche or keyword doesn’t need to be in quotations, but the search string does.

For example, I could search for SEO “write for us” to find SEO blogs that accept guest posts.

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Start adding these potential guest-post targets to a spreadsheet, if you haven’t already.

After you have a complete list, it’s time to start trimming out blogs that want your content without providing any value in return. These blogs have little traffic and only want your content to attract search engine traffic to build their sites.

Make a column next to each blog with the heading “Comments.”

What you need to do is go to each blog individually to see what their average comment count is on each recent article. No more than 5-10 is needed. The best blogs for guest posts have 50+ comments per article, but even blogs with an average of 5+ are usually good targets.

Alternatively, you can look at the number of social shares each article gets as a way to measure the traffic and engagement of the blog. Most blogs display the share count on each article with a widget, but you can always use a social share count tool to calculate it.

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Eliminate any blogs with a low number of comments or social shares.

Method 3: “Steal” your competitor’s target list

This might be my favorite way of finding lots of great guest-posting targets quickly.

First, you’ll need to find an influencer in your industry. You probably know many off the top of your head. If not, just search for “top [your niche] blogs”, and you’ll likely find many large lists of them.

Most influencers regularly guest-post. Pick one on your list for this method, but if it doesn’t work, just move on to the next.

So, for SEO, you might think of Brian Dean. He guest-posts a lot.

The idea here is to compile a list of all the places where he has guest-posted. Why? Because they are pre-vetted. Influencers won’t waste their time with low-authority sites.

All the sites you gather here will:

  • have sufficient traffic
  • accept guest posts
  • contain your target audience

To compile your list, search for: “[name of influencer]”.

Really, that’s it.

Note: If there are too many other people with the same name, just add a major keyword to your search (like “SEO” for Brian).

The first few results will bring up personal blogs and social media profiles. Obviously, these aren’t your guest-post targets:

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Once you scroll down, you’ll start seeing guest posts. Keep going through the pages until you have a list of all their guest posts. For many influencers, you’ll be able to compile a list of 50+ blogs in 15 minutes.

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If the influencer is prolific enough, this method will be enough for you to identify good sites to guest-post on for the time being.

Step 2: Don’t let them say no

Now that you have a list of sites that accept guest posts and meet all the conditions we talked about, it’s time to convince them to give you a shot.

Remember, these aren’t your ordinary blogs—they are very picky. If they aren’t convinced by your headline and your article description that your idea is great, they won’t give you a chance.

Here is how to increase your chances of being accepted:

Tactic # 1: Follow guidelines to the letter

Major blogs get dozens, or even hundreds, of requests to guest-post every day. To encourage good submissions, they often post guest-posting guidelines. If you don’t follow these exactly, your email will be automatically trashed in most cases.

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To find out what the submission guidelines of a particular blog are, search for “[your target blog] + [guest post guidelines]” to see if they have any:

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Those guidelines will usually tell you:

  • what the site expects in a post
  • how to pitch a post
  • what you’re allowed/not allowed to put in your post (e.g., links)
  • what you get out of the post

Study them, take notes, and then make sure to follow them for all the rest of the steps in this guide.

Tactic #2: If no guidelines are published, email the site

Not all sites publish guest-posting guidelines, especially if it’s a personal blog. They rarely accept guest posts and don’t want to encourage others to submit pitches.

This is where it gets a bit tricky. These bloggers typically have the mindset that no one else cares about their readers as much as they do (and they are usually right). This is why they only accept guest posts from very big names or friends.

If you contact them with a typical guest-post pitch, it’ll likely get shot down unless you already have a reputable blog.

Instead, if you’re relatively unknown, you’ll need to build a bit of a relationship.

First, you’ll need their email address (contact forms are the last resort).

I recommend signing up for their email list. Look for a signup box in the sidebar or at the top of a page (usually on the home page).

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You will then get emails from that blogger, which you can reply to.

Here are the emails you will need to send:

Email #1: Get personal

The first time you email an influential blogger, try to stand out as much as possible. The simplest way to achieve that is to tell them how much you liked one of their recent posts (and mean it).

Tell them that you took advice from that post and actually applied it. Almost every blogger loves when someone actually uses their advice.

You’ll likely get a response thanking you for the kind words and asking for more specifics about the results of implementing the advice.

Email #2: When you get the results, share them

Yes, this means that you actually have to do some work first! But if you want to land spots on exclusive blogs, this is how you go about it.

At that point, the blogger might offer to write up a case study on you if you had good results. Or you can pitch a case study yourself.

Email #3: Wait a while, and ask if you can guest-post

Sometimes a case study won’t be appropriate. But the good news is that the blogger knows that you not only read their blog but that you also take action.

So a week or two later, you can send an email that looks something like this:

Hey [Blogger],

The [outcome from taking advice] is still producing great results.

I seriously appreciate all the hard work you do to create useful, actionable advice about [topic].

I know it’s difficult to produce top-notch quality consistently, so I was wondering if you’d like a hand with it.

I’ve already brainstormed a few ideas that I think would really resonate with your readers:

  • [Idea 1]
  • [Idea 2]

I’ve written a lot in this niche. Here are some examples of my articles that capture the quality of my writing:

  • [link to a guest post or your own blog article #1]
  • [link to a guest post or your own blog article #2]

I know you don’t accept guest posts often, but I’d be honored if I could contribute to [site name].

If not, no worries—I won’t stop reading your posts :p.

Best Regards,

[your name]

No, you won’t be successful at getting your guest-blogging opportunity 100% of the time, but you’ll get a fair number of responses. Of course, this takes a lot of work and planning upfront, but that’s why it works.

Tactic # 3: Come up with a killer idea

For most guest-post proposals, you’ll only submit one or two ideas. This will include both a headline and a 50-100-word description.

First, you’ll need a topic before you can write a headline or description.

For your post to do well, it needs to resonate with the readers of that particular site. Not only will this maximize your benefits from the post but it will also ensure that the editor or owner of the site will love you, which will allow you to post again in the future.

In order to find out what types of posts resonate with the site’s readers, you need to analyze its most popular posts. Ideally, look for posts that were written in the last year as they’ll reflect the current audience most accurately.

Some sites will have a list of the top posts of all time in the sidebar, but if a site doesn’t, use BuzzSumo to find out which posts have been shared the most.

For example, if I wanted to guest-post on Boost Blog Traffic, I would search the domain name and sort by total social shares:

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This gives me a list of the most popular posts on the site:

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Make note of the types of posts that did best. In this case, it’s big list posts.

You can pick any topic from this list—it’s up to you. But it’s best to pick topics that are related as closely to your blog’s topic as possible in order to attract the right kind of visitors.

The next step is to write a headline that stands out. A great headline can make or break you, so spend as much time as you need on this step. Read The Step-by-Step Guide to Writing Powerful Headlines if you need help.

In the example above, the topics that are closely related to my blogs are traffic generation (the case study) and being mentioned on popular blogs.

Here are a few examples of headlines I could pitch:

  • 101 Networking Resources That’ll Take You From Unknown to an Interview Superstar
  • Case Study: How I Was Able to Get Mentioned by 5 Top Internet Marketing Bloggers
  • 51 Ways to Promote Your Next Blog Post and Get 403% More Traffic
  • Case Study: How to Grow a New Blog to 100,000 Visitors per Month in under 1 Year

See what I’m doing? I’m taking proven headlines and topics and putting my spin on them.

I strongly recommend pitching list posts whenever possible. List posts are the easiest to write and generally perform the best.

Finally, you need a description. While it’s not the most important part, this is where you close the sale, so don’t get lazy.

Your description needs to be long enough for your angle to be clear but not so long that you’re rambling on about important details.

Remember the 5 Ws:

  • Who
  • What
  • Where
  • Why
  • When

Not all of the Ws will be important for every article, but always go through that list. For example, my description for “101 Networking Resources That’ll Take You From Unknown to an Interview Superstar” would be:

  • Who: Newbie bloggers
  • What: Networking resources
  • Where: On blogs and podcasts
  • Why: To get interviews, which will lead to traffic and exposure
  • When: Strategies that can be done within one year

Put it all together, and you get something like this:

I want to put together a comprehensive collection of the best networking resources for newbie bloggers.

These resources will help your readers get interviews on blogs and podcasts, which will lead to exposure and traffic for their sites. To top it off, all of these strategies will be doable in less than one year.

Make it clear and concise. If you picked your topic and headline right, that’s all you’ll need.

Tactic #4: Pitch your idea

With a great headline and description in your arsenal, you just need to present your idea in the right way.

Here’s a template I’ve shared with you before:

Subject: you should blog about [insert your guest blog post topic]

[insert their first name],

As an avid reader of [insert their site name], I would love to read about [insert guest blog post topic], and I think your readers would as well.

Your content on [insert existing post from their website #1, insert existing post from their website #2, and insert existing post from their website #3] is great, but I think you can tie it all together by blogging on [insert guest blog post topic].

I know you are probably busy and won’t blog on it, so I’m going to make you an offer you can’t refuse.;-) How about I write it for you? Don’t worry, I’m a great blogger and have had my posts featured on [insert previous guest post URL #1] and [insert previous guest post URL #2].

Let me know if you are interested. I already know your blogging style, plus I understand what your readers love as I am one of them.;-)

Look forward to hearing from you,

[insert your name]

And here’s another solid pitch by Alex from Groove:

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Note that they are fairly different. Good pitches come in all shapes and sizes. But you’ll notice that they both:

  • are fairly short
  • demonstrate experience (other guest-post samples or big blog names)
  • pitch a specific topic

You can choose to pitch the headline or omit it for now. If you think you have an amazing one, include it.

Don’t just copy these templates; tweak them so that they reflect your personal voice. If you send the same templated pitches as everyone else is sending, you’re more likely to get ignored.

At this point, you might be thinking: “But I have no other guest posts to use as samples.”

Don’t worry, everyone starts somewhere. Omit those parts of the pitch, and instead include a link to your best blog post on your site. Start by pitching to some of the smaller blogs so that you can use those guest posts as samples for the bigger ones. In other words, work your way up.

Step 3: Produce epic content for your guest post

You sent out a few pitches, and one of the sites you approached told you to go ahead and write your post—success!

Now you need to deliver.

Remember I told you that the definition of “epic” is important?

The reason why it’s important is because it changes based on the site you’re pitching to.

An epic post for a particular site is one that is clearly better than 95% of other posts on that site.

In other words, epic is relative.

If you went to a general site like Forbes and posted a short article about 7 things entrepreneurs should do on Twitter, it’ll do well. But if you post it on an industry-leading blog, such as Moz, it’s going to get laughed at for being too basic.

On the flip side, if you wrote a super in-depth post on technical SEO, it’d do well on Moz, but it would go over the heads of most Forbes’ readers and go unnoticed.

Create an epic article for the particular site you’re posting on.

That being said, if you follow Step 2 of this guide to the letter, you’ll already have a great topic and headline.

Now, let’s talk about two parts to writing effective guest posts.

Part 1: Write a great post

Without a really readable and well-written article, you might not even get published. Even then, not many readers will go through the whole post, which you need if you want to see any results. Here are some things you should do:

Part 2: Create an offer for readers

I’ve mentioned content upgrades before. They’re one of the best ways to convert blog post readers into subscribers. While it’s typically used for posts on your own site, you can also use it for your guest posts.

Create a free bonus that is highly relevant to the guest post you write. Offer it at the end of the guest post.

For example, if I wrote a post on 101 networking resources, I could offer a case study on how I used one or more of the strategies in the resources to land a big interview. Anyone interested in that article will be highly interested in that bonus, and I could expect high conversion rates (upwards of 5%).

On top of the offer, you’ll need a simple landing page for it. Use to explain what’s in your bonus and how it will help your visitor.

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If you’ve never created a landing page before, learn how to here.

Finally, you need a call to action. Tell your readers to click through to get their free bonus. Ideally, you will have the call to action at the end of the post itself, but the bio will also do a decent job:

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Step 4: Do everything in your power to make it explode

If you complete the first 3 steps, you’ll get great results.

But you can take the results to the next level by promoting your post.

If you promote your post, it will get more traffic, which will lead to more readers clicking through and subscribing to your blog. It could also lead to better search engine rankings for your guest post (if any of those extra readers link to the post), which will send you consistent, long-term traffic.

I won’t go into advanced promotional strategies here, but I’ll talk about a few simple but effective things you should do:

  1. Post to aggregators sites: Find a relevant subreddit or a niche-specific aggregator like Inbound.org, and submit your post. If your content is really great, it should be able to send at least a few hundred more visitors to your guest post.
  2. Email anyone you mention in the article: It’s one thing to mention someone on your own blog, but it’s even more special if you do it on an authority blog. Send an email to anyone you mention, letting them know you featured them and linked to their site. Ask them to check it out, and invite them to share it or comment.
  3. Email your list: If you have any list at all, no matter how small, email it. Tell your subscribers about the post, and ask them to leave a comment on it.
  4. Share on social media: It won’t drive a ton of traffic, but it could drive some. In addition, every share acts as social proof if it’s shown on a share counter on the post itself.

Finally, respond to every comment. I do this on all my blogs even though it takes time. You’ll have a double benefit: the editor of that blog will appreciate it, and it will make your post look more impressive as it will double the number of comments the post will have.

Conclusion

Guest-posting is still a great strategy to build a blog with, but it takes time.

It is a long-term tactic. You will have to send pitches on a continuous basis so that you can write a couple of guest posts per week. Don’t get frustrated if a few get rejected or ignored as it’s normal.

Once you start getting consistent opportunities, your traffic and subscribers will start to really grow.

It will be slow at first, but over time you will have a flood of traffic generated by all of your guest posts out there:

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Repeat the four steps in this article over and over, and you’ll achieve similar results to those that I, or any other niche influencer, have had.

Leave me a comment below telling me what your goals with guest posts are. How many pitches do you plan on making per week? How long will you commit to pitching and writing guest posts?