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QR Codes and How They Can Work For You

by Trish

For those of you not familiar with the term QR Code, which stands for quick response, I’m sure you’re still very familiar with seeing them. They’re practically everywhere these days. They’re on the backs of any product you can imagine. They’re on television commercials and print advertisements. Anywhere you can fit a little 1×1 square, you can put a QR Code. Since there are still some of use who haven’t been properly introduced to these little advertising goldmines, it’s no wonder that we also aren’t using them correctly. Joe Barber, who founded Third Screen Media, says we’re not using these codes to their full potential. In a recent article he discussed the renewed interest in these two dimensional codes, which have actually been around for over 20 years. They first showed up in Japan, being used on the automobile manufacturing line. There are good and bad ways to use your little advertisement boxes. First we’ll discuss some of the ways you shouldn’t use these QR Codes before getting into more productive ways of using them. Let’s take a look at a quick list here:

  1. Size: Don’t print a code to where it’s not big enough to be seen and scanned easily with a smartphone.
  2. Safety: Your code square shouldn’t be on billboards or other roadside areas which could cause traffic problems.
  3. Congestion: As with the freeway, don’t place your scanner codes in stairwells or other high foot traffic areas. This may seem counterproductive, since you want high traffic. But keep away from bottleneck situations.
  4. Lame: Don’t be! If customers don’t have a good experience with QR Codes, they’ll stop scanning them.
  5. Don’t Link Back: Resist the urge to just link back to the same place that customers are already at. If your QR Code on your restaurant menu takes customers to your online menu, that’s a complete waste.
  6. Simple: Don’t put the entire ad in the code. This is convoluted and harder to load.

Now that we have a grasp on what not to do, let’s see what Joe Barber says are a few good things to do with your QR Code bar. There are a few simple steps that Joe says will ensure higher traffic to your website and more clicks. Of course, this should eventually lead to more sales.

  1. Short URL: Using a shorter base url with extensions means you can change your ad campaign at a moment’s notice. This leads to more possibilities as your customers know they can keep coming back.
  2. Landing Page: Linking back to your landing page is a great way to track where your clicks are coming from. You can use this information to continue targeting that audience and tweak your ads specifically to them. Or you can determine why you’re not getting clicks from other demographics and chase them harder.
  3. Continue the Game: Even after a contest is over, you can keep those links active. Give some post-contest information or smaller games to keep the links alive.

One thing Joe wanted to remind everyone is that these QR Codes are really flooding today’s market. So much so, consumers are actually hunting out these code boxes. They’re pretty much expecting bonus features and extra content with every purchase. It’s a high demand for ad campaign managers to keep up with. Another warning that has been issued by many marketing analysts in Australia is the lack of creativity in these scanner codes. Australia has one of the highest per capita sales of smartphones and similar technologies. Yet they don’t even rank in the top 50 for QR Code ad campaigns. This is a two-fold problem. One, they’re not marketing the codes well enough to the target demographic. And two, they’re not offering content that will keep consumers clicking. Unless both of these are fixed, Australia will continue to fall farther behind.

Attached Images:
  •  License: Creative Commons image source

The Author Sergeo Young writes about technology and the use of it in film on Edictive blog, a film production site for film and broadcast professionals.




Filed Under: Blogging, Online Business, Promotion and Marketing, Sales and Marketing Tagged With: advertisement boxes, bonus features, lame, landing page, link, market, qr codes, quick response code, safety, simple, size, url

4 Most Common Blogging Mistakes Made by Small Businesses

by Trish

Everywhere you turn it seems like everyone is talking about how important blogging is for small business (and big business) websites. That is true; blogging is good for SEO since adding new posts keeps the website fresh, and more content means that you can get more long tail traffic; blogging is also good for establishing and maintaining good relationship with your customers, and for building your brand. The reasons pro are all good. The cons – there aren’t any. Unless you’re doing it wrong.

The only thing worse than not having a blog on your business website is to attempt to blog without really understanding how it should be done. And that’s the mistake many small businesses make. Are you among them? Before you start defending yourself saying “hey, I’m doing everything by the book, I’m doing my research, I’m interlinking my posts…” – we aren’t talking here about the technical aspect of blogging, and the mistakes listed below are so common that you may not even realize that they shouldn’t be done, since many others are doing them.

Are you talking about yourself a lot?

This is by far the most common one. Without even realizing it, many businesses are creating blog posts that are about them – and not about their customers. Of course, the customers probably do want to know a bit more about the people behind the brand, but that doesn’t involve the topics such as their pets, the fight with the kindergarten teacher, the plumbing issues – would you be telling them about that face to face? No? Then don’t write about these things on your business blog either.

Are you paying too much or too little attention to your post titles?

Crafting a good post title is what often makes a difference between whether people will read your post or not. A good title lets them know what the post is about, and invites them to click on it and read the rest at the same time. If you aren’t paying attention to your titles, you may as well be creating the most engaging content in the post itself – there’s a very good chance that no one will know about it.

On the other hand, if you have mastered the art of crafting the catchy titles that provide a great click through rate, but you aren’t delivering in the content, your visitors will probably feel tricked – and then you can forget about having them leave their email address, or calling for a free consultation. You haven’t delivered the first chance you had, why should they bother with you further.

Are you too much or too little of a perfectionist about your content?

You should be neither. You should be aware of the fact that your content will be seen and read by the people who are very important to your business – your potential customers, so do your best to make it worth them while. But don’t go overboard and polish it over and over again, so that it takes you two weeks to finish one article. Keep in mind that it will probably never be perfect – but it needs to be good enough.

Are you not showing that you value the content you’ve created?

If you don’t care about your content enough to promote it yourself, then why would your readers care to do it? If you don’t think that comments on your posts are worth reading and responding to, then your readers will feel the same. You have to be the first one to show that your latest post is really useful/entertaining/engaging – you are the one person who shouldn’t forget about that piece.

This post was written ba Andrew Handley, from http://www.midislandcollision.com/. If you recognize yourself in one or more of these points, then it’s time to stop and re-think your blogging strategy. Then go back and re-do all the posts on your blog – some of them will probably scream: Delete!

Filed Under: Blogging, Online Business, Promotion and Marketing Tagged With: Blogging, common mistakes, cons, content, customer, fresh, posts, pros, SEO, small businesses, titles, traffic, value, visitors, website

Twitter Dos and Don’ts

by Tricia

Useful Tips for Twitter

These days it seems that you can’t escape stories about the latest social networking phenomenon, Twitter.  With all the hype and celebrity endorsements, lots of people are asking “how do I use Twitter?”.

There are plenty of sites out there that will tell you how to use Twitter, but not so many to warn you of the pitfalls.If you take a minute to learn from this list of handy Twitter tips then you’ll be Twittering away with the best of them.

DO watch what you say.Unless your updates are protected, anyone can see what you are currently Tweeting.Bear in mind the story of the girl who managed to Tweet her way out of a job because a hiring manager read her thoughts on the position she interviewed for.

DON’T use Twitter for a chat client.  No one wants to their screen full of irrelevant Tweets from a conversation they’re forced to eavesdrop on.

DO remember to retweet other people.  This can be a good way to build up a following of likeminded Twitterers.

DON’T endlessly try to sell things.Okay, we get it – you have your own blog.Twitter is by no means one way traffic – tweet back!

DO follow people back, but….

DON’T be offended if someone doesn’t follow you back.Users with tens of thousands of followers are unlikely to see your Tweet through the hundreds of other tweets anyway.

DO try to be funny, entertaining, informative and creative with your tweets.

DON’T auto-DM.This is the Twitter equivalent of spam and a faceless “hi – thanks for following” is impersonal and can be off-putting.

DO use it to ask other people for help.Once you have built up a reasonable following you’ll find it easy to find answers to your questions in no time.

DON’T twit anything if your message is going to exceed 140 characters.  Spreading a message over multiple tweets is just going to confuse and irritate your followers.

These handy hints should be enough to get you started.  If you are likely to spend a significant proportion of your online time on Twitter then there are plenty of guides on the net telling you how to use Twitter effectively.

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: Blogging, internet, New Media, Social Media, Twitter

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