Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts

26 February 2007

Having a bla.st


Yesterday night I added my card on the bla.st directory. In case you haven't heard, Bla.st is an experimental visual card directory.

What makes this directory different from Fuelmyblog and other similar advertising sites is that it is not limited to blogs or websites. You can also promote your products and services, events and even make announcements.


This site is the brainchild of Tim Bromhead who also has a blog here.

bla.st cards can be online from 1 day to 10 years and can be placed into any category. Best of all, payment is optional. However, you can go higher up in the listings if you decide to pay. I guess that's only fair.

My listings for the ah ok lah blog is here and for the auto lah blog is here.

I learnt about the site from Larry.

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24 February 2007

Opt in email marketing

Almost everybody I know, hate unsolicited email. Better known as spam, these e-mails can really spoil your mood, when you find that you have hit your e-mail storage limit because of these junk mail.

I don't hate all unsolicited e-mails. I love to hear from other bloggers, sponsors and of course my fans. However, the opposite is true when I get those e-mails trying to sell you something, especially those offering dubious products and services, claiming that they can make a particular organ larger and so on.

If you are a company selling a great product and want to promote it - I implore you, please do not spam potential customers. You may end up alienating the very customers who might have bought the product or service, otherwise.

On the other hand, it is a very good idea if you allow people to opt in - that is, allow interested customers to subscribe to your newsletter. In other words, you are not spamming people. They want you to send them e-mails about your products or services. This is what "opt in" email marketing is all about - what it should be.

However, selecting a software to help you do this can be such a headache and there are several solutions out there.

What do I look for in such a software?


- First of all it must be cost-effective.
- There should be no limit to the newsletters that you can have in your account.
- You can publish also your newsletter as often as you like.
- Past issues of your newsletter are stored in a archive.
- All emails are individually addressed and sent to each subscriber.

I would recommend MyNewsletter Builder is the perfect email marketing tool because it fulfills all the criteria. It enables you to build and manage email lists, create beautiful newsletters, and send interactive newsletters via email.

Visitors to your web page subscribe to your newsletter by filling up a few details on sign up form. For those who prefer RSS feeds instead of emails, MyNewsletter Builder has that option too.

In case you want to give it a test run, you are in luck because they are offering 60 days free trial.

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31 January 2007

Connecting bloggers with sponsors

Blogs are the new marketing medium and Blog Sponsorships are on the rise. There are severla ways that bloggers are earning money through their blogs - text link placement, banner placement, product reviews, etc

BloggingSponsorships.com is a newly launched site that connects bloggers with sponsors, advertisers, and marketers. It has a database of blogs that are interested in receiving marketing and advertising offers. These sponsorship deals are negotiated privately and Bloggers stand to make up to a few thousands of dollars more a year. I guess, the higher your blog popularity, the higher you can demand.

This system also allows sponsors to obtain branding and advertising deals with blogs that fit their specific demographic/niche audience. Thus, it is a win-win situation.

The site also has affiliate incentives, giving out $2.50 - $12.50 for every sign up.

Sponsored

22 January 2007

Amazing marketing speaker

Found it hard to believe it when I first read about this marketing speaker, who convinced Halfway, Oregon to rename itself to Half.com, Oregon and resulted in the number of registered users jumping from zero to 8 million in less than three years.

But it's true. The guy responsible for this was Mark Hughes's, then VP of Marketing for eBay's Half.com.

Mr. Hughes holds an MBA from the Columbia Business School in Marketing & International Business. He is a contributing columnist for the magazine of international advertising, Admap. His is also author of the acclaimed business book, "Buzzmarketing", which has been named as one of "The Ten Best Business Reads of 2005" and one of "the Best Business Books of the Year".

So if you or your company is looking for a marketing speaker, Hughes is the guy.

Sponsored Post

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24 December 2006

Marketing my blog

Lot of people ask me why I blog and to be frank, I don't have a clue. Loved reading other people's blogs and finally decided to start one of my own. It was more of a diary, my observations, my rants and so on. Slowly but steadily, the number of visitors to my blog grew. I guess you really get a nice buzz when people leave comments in your posts.

At that time, making money from my blog was the last thing on my mind. In fact, I didn't know that you could actually make any money from a blog. I started wondering, "Can bloggers actually make money from their blogs?" only after my wife's comment, "its not like you can get any money writing a blog" retort. Read my old post here.

I added Google adsense but the fact is that I am still waiting for my first cheque. There are not enough visitors (or people are simply not clicking the links). I had already joined up with the online Malaysian community, Project Petaling Street, a blog portal of Malaysian maintained blogs. It bought me a fair number of new visitors to my blog but that was not enough and I went out and joined up with other blog portals and directories including Rice Bowl Journals and Blogflux. Claiming my blogs on Technorati was another step.

Going through Internet Marketing sites taught me a lot of new things. I now realise what I have been doing wrong. Wish I had come across it earlier.

So, I have been blogging for more than 3 years now (my first post here on Monday, September 08, 2003). However, I truly started marketing my blog only about a year ago. Now realise that I was not only marketing my blog but also myself and my writing skills. I have recently joined Payperpost and other advertising networks. Though I have started earning a bit, it's not enough to take up blogging as a full time occupation - not yet. I have a lot to learn and a long way to go.

Updated: I deleted a link, which I had recommended earlier. 12 Jan 2007.

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04 April 2006

Malaysian Companies and Marketing

NOTE: This blog post was not meant as a personal attack on accountants and engineers. I too am from a non social-sciences background (I have an educational background in biological sciences) and the first time I heard about the 4 Ps was during my MBA. However, over time I specialised in Marketing and came to understand it's importance. I know a lot of accountants and engineers who are extremely creative, this includes you too Jules. I just wanted to make those people on the top realise the importance of marketing and put it into their head that
MARKETING IS NOT ONLY SELLING!
UPDATED: 3 July '07.

Read on
------------------

I have a theory why many Malaysian companies are not innovative.

It is probably because accountants and engineers run many of them. If you don't believe me, just check.

Both of these professions train people to be methodical, logical and use reasoning, which doesn't leave much room for creativity or artistic expression (unless of course, you count creative accounting). Add to that, the 'budaya suap' or spoon fed culture existing in our educational institutions starting from the primary schools where questioning the teacher/lecturer is frowned upon and students are tested based on how much they have memorized from a few select books.

However, this post is not about accountants and engineers but about marketing.

I remember one time I was discussing what Marketing was all about with some MBA students, which included managers of a few companies. And yes! Many of them had engineering and accounting backgrounds. To gauge their understanding of the topic, I simply asked each of them to define marketing, according to their understanding.

I received so many definitions but I could classify them into two broad categories:
1. Selling the product/ service and
2. Advertising.


It was shocking for me because some of these guys were marketing managers in their respective companies.

Looking at it from the perspective of a marketing historian (is there such a thing), it is clear that the concept of marketing (as practiced by many Malaysian companies) is still in the production or selling era.

From talking with friends and acquaintances in various industries, I learnt that the Research and Development (R&D) guys (mostly composed of engineers) rarely consult with other departments (or customers) before coming out with a product. Many companies don't even have an R&D dept. and it is up to their head guy (often the CEO) who comes up with the ideas.

They would then pass it to the production/ operations people to "build" the product and finally leave it up to the sales and marketing department to "sell" it to the customers.

If the product fails, it is due to bad marketing (blaming the sales and marketing dept.). In a way it's true but not because of the marketing guys (some of whom don't know what marketing is all about). Rather it was doomed right from the start. The customer didn't need it nor do they want it and any amount of marketing won't help.

The concept of marketing has undergone drastic changes over the past three decades, evolving from the production era: produce products fast and cheap.

Remember Henry Ford's “Any customer can have a car painted any color that he wants so long as it is black."

It then moved through the sales and marketing era - the concept that many companies in Malaysia are following now: "If you have a good product, then everyone would buy it. You only have to let the customers know".

The change in marketing focus from the product to the customer occurred during the marketing era, which appeared around the 1960s in the west. Effectiveness and efficiency in meeting customer demands, needs and wants were identified as the key elements in determining companies' long-term success. Now it has moved beyond market segmentation of customers based on their demographics. Researchers are now looking at the attitude or lifestyles of consumers- psychographics. However, this field has been largely unexplored in Malaysia.

Why do companies carry out such studies?
It is because companies need to understand the customers before coming out with a product or service. It would eventually help them in framing their marketing strategies including advertising campaigns (which is actually only a small part of promotion).

Consider that companies have done everything right. Carried out extensive research. Consulted the experts, the customers and the suppliers. Had a grand launch in a expensive hotel with representatives from the media taking down every optimistic forecasts sprouted by the CEO and of course the VIP. This was preceded and followed by attractive promotions including some very memorable and convincing ad campaigns. But is that enough.

I am sure that all of you have at least one personal experience, where you were treated like a King or Queen BEFORE you bought the product are service. And then treated like dirt afterwards.

The relationship era, which emerged during the 1990s in the west, shifted the focus to the establishment and maintenance of mutually beneficial relationships with existing customers and suppliers. Now, we are not talking of just making a sale. We want loyal customers who would come back for more and bring along others with them at the same time. We are now talking about long-term relationships.

Now are Malaysian companies in the relationship era?
I hear people involved in Multi level marketing (MLM) raising their hands. I hate MLMs.

secret_recipe
Can we have the cake and eat it too?

Oh Yeah! What's my definition of Marketing?
I think the best one was that given by the Chartered Institute of Marketing (CIM) in the UK: "management process of anticipating, identifying and satisfying customer requirements profitably".

Other related links:
- 4 Ps of Marketing
- AIDA concept

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