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SPAM: How-to Find Loyal Customers with Content Managemen

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vestadigital
vestadigital writes "Your business needs help, fast. Your site isn't getting the traffic you need. You aren't converting that traffic to sales. The tactics you used to rely on aren't working. And the lousy economy means you won't be able to even give up in disgust and just keep (or go get) a day job. You want to find your own village of loyal customers, but you can't seem to capture their attention. And when you do get it, you aren't closing as many sales as you need to. You need to know what works today to find customers and persuade them to buy. And the answer to that question is content marketing. But it takes more than "content is king" to work in this tricky environment. You need to focus your attention on these three key elements to make content marketing work for you. Give your readers a cookie Give your readers a cookieWhat's the smartest way to train a puppy to sit on command? Give him a cookie and a nice pat on the head every time he does what you want. Enough cookies and enough pats on the head and he starts to think that sitting on command was his idea. He likes you, he trusts you, and he sits when you say sit because it's in his best interest to do that. Your content needs to work the same way. High-quality content trains your readers and listeners to keep opening your stuff. It rewards them for doing what you want them to do. That means that every piece of content you write has to either solve a problem your audience cares about or it has to entertain them. Preferably both. Everything they receive from you should make them feel good. Each piece of content is a cookie that rewards your audience for consuming it. When you do this consistently, your content becomes an appealing habit for your readers. When they see your name in their email box or a Twitter retweet, they know there will be something they like on the other side. And they'll click through. Fortunately for us, most people who try content marketing get this wrong. They train their readers to look away, by producing content that doesn't benefit readers, by putting out too much irrelevant fluff, or by overselling. (More about selling in just a few minutes.) Position yourself for success Position yourself for successRemember your mom telling you that you had to be a good friend to get lots of friends? Well if you want to find more customers, you need to be someone worth doing business with. Yes, it's about authority, but not about being a pontificating guru who can never admit any weakness. Some personas work much better than others for content marketing. Your audience wants a smart, cool friend who understands how stuff works. They want someone to share experiences and lead by example. They want a trustworthy person whose word means something. When in doubt, remember Paul Newman's axiom. Always take your work seriously; never take yourself seriously. You definitely want to show that you know your stuff, but that doesn't mean your readers want a college lecture. Sell smart Vote SmartRemember, you're not trying to land a sale in a single shot, like some desperate used-car dealer who wants to put you into a 1994 Pontiac Bonneville TODAY. Instead, you're building a content net that supports this sale and many sales after this one. Use your content to address underlying objections that might keep someone from buying. Use it to tell interesting stories about how others have benefited from your offering. Use proven persuasion techniques to show your reader just how much she needs your product or service. Successful salespeople will tell you that your customer needs to know, trust and like you before she'll buy. That's exactly why content marketing is so effective. Great content buys you the time to build that trusting relationship. So use that time wisely. Yes, you still want to ask for the order with a strong call to action. But keep the balance right. Use your content to build desire for your product, and to create an unshakeable relationship with your audience, then ask for the sale."
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SPAM: 3 Things You MUST Know Before Buying Web Hosting

Submitted by
vestadigital
vestadigital writes "Back in 2005, I purchased shared server space from a well-known hosting company. In an attempt to "save" money, I paid for two years up front, and $268 later, I had my first real home on the Web. Two short months after that, I came to the harsh realization that my server package was completely inadequate for my needs."
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