Welcome to Saucy Horse - Video Production & Social Media Marketing.

Visit our websites :

VIDEO PRODUCTION FOR BUSINESS & WEB
http://SaucyHorse.co.uk

SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING http://SaucyHorseSocialMedia.co.uk

Wednesday 14 March 2012

Using a Video Sitemap - does your website need a video sitemap?

Here's what Google says:



"A Video Sitemap uses the Sitemap protocol, with additional Video-specific tags. In its simplest form, a Video Sitemap must include a link to a landing page for a video as well as some essential information required for indexing the video. They provide useful metadata that can improve our ability to include your video in search results. Google may use text available on your video's page rather than the text you supply in the Video Sitemap, if this differs."

So, the answer is yes, because anything you CAN do to help the Search Engines find your website is something that you SHOULD do.

And this is VERY easy to do.

You can read the words from Google themselves in full here - video sitemaps

 

Ways to avoid cold calling and STILL grow your business. Number 3 & 4:

To quote Smart Marketing Blog - "Cold-calling makes you a commodity" .
So here, in part 3 of my blog series on avoiding cold-calling, are their number 3 & 4 tips:
3. Strategic partnerships
"This is one way you can maintain contact with your clients, even when they aren't ready to buy. By establishing a network of professionals in various business sectors, that you trust and to whom you have no problem sending work, you can leverage those respective relationships to increase your brand's value. You can become a connector with the sole purpose of making business easier for your clients. Done right, it's a two-way partnership. Because every time those clients need the services you offer. they are far more likely to refer you. It pays to be thinking about other service providers, not just your own business, when you meet potential clients.
4. Referral rewards
There is nothing more powerful than testimonials and word-of-mouth recommendations. Frankly, they're more effective than any paid-for advertising. If you have a solid product and loyal customers, offering referral rewards to those clients to help spread your brand awareness will work wonders. Empower your current customers to be your advocates. Give them the opportunity to tell their friends and family about your business. And when they do, and when you close that sale, give your customers a percentage of that new sale. Because remember, you wouldn't have had it if they didn't make that referral. When you do this, you're expanding your network so your brand is exposed to new paying clients. And with every client, you're exponentially increasing your revenue potential. Concerned about losing 20 percent of a sale? Don't be. 80 percent is better than zero percent, right? And remember, whatever you are doing on the marketing front, you can engage in social conversations on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Quora, comment on blogs and even interact on YouTube and Flickr with people of the same interests and link them in ways never before possible. Proactively seek conversations between users in your industry, in your region, in your city. These are the people you want to connect with. These are the people that'll help you grow your business by connecting you with new business opportunities."
Which of these, if any, are you currently working on in your business?

Using Video For Websites - Tell Your Story

Stories are fascinating, and people love to share them. Whether it's around a business conference table with colleagues or round a pub table with friends, or the dinner table with family, stories are recounted and shared and carried on from person to person.
We pass them on through letters, emails and blog posts too, and read about them in books. A good story, whether fact or fiction, grabs us and stays with us. We take relevant points from it and can learn from them too.
We all take interest in other people's stories and when we see how they affect them it can affect us too.  My widowed great-granny raised six children in a single-end in Glasgow.  I had heard these stories from when I was young girl; I knew it must have been hard but then watching Jeremy Paxman's episode of "Who Do You Think You Are" I saw how hard it must have been. His great-great grandmother was in a similar situation, and retracing her journey left Jeremy upset and angry and the clip shared that with all those watching.
The video clip, unfortunately not online, brought the story to life. This can be used on your website too. Tell the story on video of how your company came into being. Share the struggles and the successes and why the company was started in the first place. People will react to your interest and passion and no-one can tell your story as well as you can!
Tweet

Wednesday 7 March 2012

Ways to avoid call calling and STILL grow your business. Number 2:

I started a short series of blogs recently on how to avoid cold calling if, like me, you're not convinced it's as effective as many other methods of getting new business - they are based on an article on Smart Marketing Blog which states- "Cold-calling makes you a commodity"

Here's their second tip on better ways to get more business.

2. Establish authority

What's the difference between a sales rep and a trusted consultant? A sales rep asks for business cards, a trusted consultant establishes cordial relationships. The question is how you do that - networking is great for collecting a whole pile of biz cards but the art would be to develop the relationship by taking an interest in what they do - perhaps email relevant links you may have found, recommend a book you think they may like to read, get to know what makes them tick a bit by engaging on Twitter, LinkedIn or whatever Social Media Platforms they may be using... It's not as touchy feely as it sounds. When you know what people are saying, talking about, interested in - you can build a relationship so that you are the "go-to" they think of when they have a need for whatever product or service you provide. There's also a huge value in respecting a prospects' buying cycles. If you are patient and personable, and don't pressure prospects into a quick, price-driven promotion, they'll come to you when they need to, providing you have maintained the relationship. When the client regards you as a trusted advisor — somebody who's invested in their business as much as they are — instead of an easily-replaced commodity, there's no need to lower your prices. Clients will gladly pay extra knowing without a doubt you're the best at what you do and that you have their interest in mind, instead of your invoice. Does this work for you in your business? Are you using social media to build these sort of relationships?

Tuesday 6 March 2012

Don’t be afraid to specialise with video on your website!

If you're using video on your website (and we hope that you are!) you may think that you have to offer a wide range of videos on different subjects in order to keep your viewers attention. This is great, but what if you are operating in a very specific niche? Play to that strength and tailor your videos to that market.

By offering a range of different videos on one subject it marks you at as an expert in your business field. It also offers a massive boost to your SEO which will encourage visitors to your site.

One site that has used this to great effect is The Japan Channel. It has set up a YouTube site which offers videos on different aspects of life in Japan. I found the site when I was trying to explain to a friend about the white seat covers and automatic doors, but this video explains it far better than I ever could.

 

What area would you specialise in? Have you thought of using video in this way?



 

Sunday 4 March 2012

Ways to avoid cold calling and STILL grow your business - Number 1:


To quote Smart Marketing Blog - "Cold-calling makes you a commodity"

Ryan Barton - author of said blog - has 5 tips for us to grow our businesses ethically and with longevity in mind...

Here's number 1:

How to build business - tip number 1

"I've told you what I think about cold-calling, and how it can effectively destroy your brand. So instead of being (too) critical, here's the first of five ways for you to give your business a boost in a responsible and professional manner.

1. Permission-based marketing
This was the soap-box for my initial comment/rant. Under the permission marketing umbrella, we only reach out to those people who expressed an interest in our product. They raised their hand, they said they want to know more. And unless they do that, we consider them off limits.

It may be tempting to take a customer’s email address and drop it into your email blast client, but unless they gave you permission to ping them with follow-up email marketing, we don’t do that. It’s easy, but it’s not right.

Here’s a few blatant examples of both the bad, and the good:

Bad - Buying a list of email addresses and auto-deploying an email
Good - Establishing sequential messaging based on buying cycle status

Bad - Poaching email addresses from web pages
Good - Establishing a list that’s 100% permission-based via submission

Bad - Putting business cards on random front doors and car windshieldsGood - Providing strategic content on request

If you’re concerned with the longevity of your business, if you’re looking for a long-term growth strategy, you need to utilize permission-based marketing. Ignore the overnight shortcuts, keep your business blinders on, and pound the pavement."

So, do you agree with Ryan's points? Are you careful about creating a permission -based culture within your marketing?

Are you using social media to reach out and find your potential customers by listening to what they are talking about and what they are interested in? Do you know what they are saying about your business and are you using  that information in your marketing strategy?

Do you use pinpoint marketing in your business by creating a message and then delivering it to potential customers who want to hear it?

Or do you have trouble seeing the point in all that - are you a scatter gun fan? Leave me a comment below and tell your thoughts...

Ways to avoid cold calling and STILL grow your business - Number 1:


To quote Smart Marketing Blog - "Cold-calling makes you a commodity"

Ryan Barton - author of said blog - has 5 tips for us to grow our businesses ethically and with longevity in mind...

Here's number 1:

How to build business - tip number 1

"I've told you what I think about cold-calling, and how it can effectively destroy your brand. So instead of being (too) critical, here's the first of five ways for you to give your business a boost in a responsible and professional manner.

1. Permission-based marketing
This was the soap-box for my initial comment/rant. Under the permission marketing umbrella, we only reach out to those people who expressed an interest in our product. They raised their hand, they said they want to know more. And unless they do that, we consider them off limits.

It may be tempting to take a customer’s email address and drop it into your email blast client, but unless they gave you permission to ping them with follow-up email marketing, we don’t do that. It’s easy, but it’s not right.

Here’s a few blatant examples of both the bad, and the good:

Bad - Buying a list of email addresses and auto-deploying an email
Good - Establishing sequential messaging based on buying cycle status

Bad - Poaching email addresses from web pages
Good - Establishing a list that’s 100% permission-based via submission

Bad - Putting business cards on random front doors and car windshieldsGood - Providing strategic content on request

If you’re concerned with the longevity of your business, if you’re looking for a long-term growth strategy, you need to utilize permission-based marketing. Ignore the overnight shortcuts, keep your business blinders on, and pound the pavement."

So, do you agree with Ryan's points? Are you careful about creating a permission -based culture within your marketing?

Are you using social media to reach out and find your potential customers by listening to what they are talking about and what they are interested in? Do you know what they are saying about your business and are you using  that information in your marketing strategy?

Do you use pinpoint marketing in your business by creating a message and then delivering it to potential customers who want to hear it?

Or do you have trouble seeing the point in all that - are you a scatter gun fan? Leave me a comment below and tell your thoughts...