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Democrats vs. RepublicansNow that all of the madness is over and the election is out of our control, it is time to pick up and move on. For the last year and half we have been completely inundated with political ads and rhetoric. Campaigning for the 2012 presidential election officially starts on November 5th 2008.

One of the last papers I wrote for my political science major was about the effect of the Internet on future elections (including this one). My argument was that the Internet leveled the playing field and would continue to spread videos and political messages even though election laws forbid certain campaigning the day of election.

I think the return on investment of an online video is far greater than that of a paid ad placement on one of the major networks. I talked about a video called Keating Economics released by the Obama campaign about McCain’s ties to Mr. Keating and the S & L scandal. The video was mini-documentary style and garnered 1.7 million views on YouTube. As far as I can tell, the Obama campaign is out the production and website costs. My guess is a couple grand.

I am also sure that the page more than paid for itself by all the donations buttons scattered about. So, technically I am sure the site netted a profit for the Obama campaign as well as shaped opinions about John McCain.

Could websites and YouTube videos be the future of marketing and advertising?

I think it is pretty obvious that the Internet and all online components have a significant effect on the future of marketing and advertising. Now with social networks, emails, newsletters, SEO, internet marketing, videos, Meetup groups and on and on, you can effectively build residual traffic and income for a tiny investment.

People are looking for ideas and other people that are just like them. When they find their community or “tribe” they feel at home and are comfortable. The key is to realize that you can’t just create a community or tribe and expect people to jump on board. They want truth, passion, excitement, entertainment, gossip and whatever else they might be into. If you can attempt to create something like that out of thin air without the full conviction or passion behind it, you’ll be called out and will most likely crash and burn.

Thankfully, starting ideas online is a lot cheaper than starting them offline where overhead costs can run very high. 13 years ago Matt Drudge of Drudgereport.com started posting up-to-date news articles he found online. He runs a single page website that received just under 800,000,000 page views last month. His site is now the 6th most visited news website. He makes his money from ad placements and with 800 million views a month, I am sure he is doing pretty well.

What we online have known for a while and what those outside of the Internet are learning is how effective advertising online can be. When your message has a clear purpose and contains relevant information to your tribe, the message will spread to millions in a very short time, like drudgereport.com or a YouTube video.

It amazes me that every segment of the evening news isn’t broken up and uploaded online to easily distribute like a YouTube video. You would think they would want people to spread their content and video far and wide. Who knows, maybe they would even get views from different countries and states who simply like what they have to offer. Not to mention they could embed advertising into the videos to boost revenue.

How about newspapers allowing their readers to write and add commentary to their online web pages? A news collaborative that builds upon itself like a mini Wikipedia. Simple measures like flagging inappropriate articles and comments could allow discussion to continue without the direct influence of the company or organization. The future involves catering to your readers and subscribers needs to enable them to share and take part in the activities surrounding your community (tribe). If they like what you have to offer they will stay. If they really like it they will share. Be an enabler to your community.

Marketing Ideas: CMF ADS Changing Marketing Forever

Here is an Interview with Turnip of Power | Social Networking marketer on the creation of a new advertising network called CMF ADS. CMF (Changing Marketing Forever) ADS is a widget-based advertising system that allows advertisers to purchase ad space on quality niche blogs on a CPM (cost per thousand views) basis. Currently, there are 20 blogs in the network that have been selectively chosen to participate in the initial launching.

I like discovering new and up and coming products or services and thought CMF ADS would be a great candidate to share with everyone. After you read through the questions below, I encourage you to visit CMF ADS and see what it has to offer. Without further adieu, here you go:

What was your motivation for starting CMF ADS?

My motivation was to implement an idea I had posted several times on both my blog and on the Entrecard Forums. Each time the idea was ignored or given the canned response of “We have limited resources for that.” Then recently I was disappointed with the Performancing Ads Network. Stan from razzball.com approached me and said “Why can’t we do something like that?” That’s how it all started.

What are your short and long-term goals for CMF ADS?

Short term the goal was to get good people involved who wanted to be part of something new. We wanted to test our code, our server, public reaction, and iron out all the little unexpected surprises. Long term we would like to expand our portfolio of blogs and reach out to other social networks. As we are only 3 weeks old today, we are still refining our initial goals. Just yesterday I rewrote the widget code to allow for this expansion.

What is your major selling point for CMF ADS (elevator pitch)?

For publishers: We monetize your social traffic for you. All you have to do is maintain a quality blog. We help promote your blog, help you with your website when help is requested, and at the end of the day provide you with a small paycheck for displaying our widget in previously unused space next to their social networking widget.

For advertisers: We get your message out there on 20 of the best up and coming websites. No need to interact with so many small sites individually. We bundle our members’ page views and sell them to you in a very affordable CPM bundle, providing geotargetting and other advanced features the individual site owner could not easily provide due to a lack of technical expertise.

I could imagine many bloggers will want to utilize your service. Do you have strict quality control admission?

We have quality control on both the publisher and advertiser ends. Nobody wants to advertise on horrible made for adsense splogs. Likewise, no blogger wants scammy ads on their website. We manually approve all blogs and ads, allowing both publisher and advertiser to opt out of any ads or sites they wish. Each blog in our network was discussed in detail before being sent an invitation to join.

If a blog is interested in joining what will be the minimum requirements for joining?

Initially we invited only WordPress blogs. Since then we have allowed blogs using other content management platforms to join. The main requirements are your own domain name, a minimum of a 250 pixel wide sidebar, and maintaining a high-quality blog. Sometimes we work around the sidebar issue in special cases, but generally adhere to these rules.

How does the advertising widget effect the speed and efficiency of a site?

Our widget opens in an i-frame, so won’t ever slow down the rest of a site from loading. In addition, we host the bottom image locally, further speeding up the process.

What has been the overall perception of the widget so far?

Reception has been great. The first day we announced our network we sold 25,000 impressions as well as numerous high-quality blogs looking to join the network. Many curious bloggers have taken notice, along with a few advertisers.

Do you see yourself in competition to Entrecard or merely using some of their ideas to create a stand along advertising network?

We don’t see ourselves in competition with Entrecard or using their ideas. We took twenty well-respected blogs and made an ad network out of them. Now because we are active in the Entrecard community it was only natural that these twenty blogs were discovered through Entrecard. One blog has since left Entrecard and we welcome that, as well. A good blog is a good blog, Entrecard or not.

What measures are you establishing to provide the smoothest growth possible?

To ensure smooth growth, we are only letting in a fraction of the blogs asking to join. Each step of the way we have checked to make sure all issues were addressed before moving on to the next phase.

Conclusion:

I think this network has some great potential to develop into a full service advertising network. I don’t know how often they will be accepting new publishers, but I would make admission highly selective, more on the prestigious side. Say it only has enrollment every two weeks and only X number of new publishers will be allowed in during the beta stage, kind of like Gmail was invite only for the longest time. This would help in the beginning to have controlled growth of all the system resources preserving the quality of the network and service by not having a bunch of down time.

I really enjoy when people go out on their own by mixing and matching various different ideas to produce a worthwhile product. Time will tell how things play out, but I would again encourage you to head over to CMF ADS and check it out for yourself.

Responses to Ask Josh Questions

These are the responses to the first Ask Josh round of questions. I opened up the floor for people to ask whatever they felt like asking. I don’t think there will be any perfect answers, but you asked for my opinion, so I’m giving it ;). Here we go:

BigPappa asks: What it the air speed velocity of an unladen African Swallow? There has been significant discussion but I don’t remember an answer being reached.

Josh: 10 meters per second. Thank you for providing the answer in a follow-up comment http://www.style.org/unladenswallow/.

Sherry asks: Just a question, are you wearing the hat always?

Josh: Sort answer is Yes, I usually wear a hat.

chris asks: I’m tossing up whether to personalize my blog about employment issues, or leave as an anonymous site (which it currently is). So I wanted to ask what difference it makes, marketing wise, on having a personal ‘this is me’ blog vs. an anonymous blog.

Josh: I would personalize the blog. Personalizing helps to enable discussion and communication from visitors. When a site or page is anonymous, it is perceived as a static website. The element of a real-life human being behind the helm goes a long way. People like to relate to a real person.

What type of ‘low cost’ ways can I compete with likes of Monster.com on marketing? Or should I not try?

Josh: From what I can tell looking from at your site, the best angle to go about helping people with their resumes would be to personally ensure success with your service. I like the testimonials and think there should be more of them throughout the blog. If you can guarantee and deliver the promise of the best personal resume service out there, people will naturally talk about it. The lowest cost way to promote your service is to make it the best service possible. As demand grows, so can your pricing structure. Maybe throw in a simple resume editing service or a two-tied slow / fast service.

Metroknow asks: Hey there Josh, my apologies if you’ve answered this before, but I was curious about your thoughts on the benefits of Entrecard. I still use it a little, but I have felt that the time trade off to build credits is not worth the return (very few clickthroughs, for example). What are your thoughts on Entrecard?

Josh: Personally, I see value in Entrecard (EC) or else I would have removed it from my blog. I think you can get out what you put into it at the cost of time. I rarely drop Entrecards anymore because I do not have the time. I do keep EC because I do get a trickle of visitors, comments and subscribers from it. I don’t recommend spending time dropping cards. Spend that 20-40 minutes a day building better content, making comments, building links to your blog and whatever it takes to increase your exposure. Dropping cards on people so they will drop cards back won’t help increase your readership or make more money. But putting the widget into your blog and leaving it there doesn’t cost a thing.

Susie Kleiner asks: As an “unconventional marketer” what are your thoughts on exhibiting at trade shows? With many companies cutting back their marketing budgets, do you feel this is area will be affected or do you foresee people continuing to push product/service through trade show marketing?

Josh: I think trade shows are invaluable simply because of the networking factor. I do believe these shows will and are taking a big hit right now with current economic circumstances. I believe people will start to get more creative with how they market at trade shows. Just this year there were numerous non-tech businesses at the Blog World Expo in Las Vegas. They went there because they knew that is where the talkers are. Believe it or not, bloggers talked about them, go figure.

A new marketing idea that some are starting to run are free workshops. Free workshops aren’t new. But running them for the sole purpose of helping others in order to get them to use your services is a new idea. What if people started opening up free courses on starting a business blog? Do you think businesses would show up? Do you think they might solicit your services after realizing it is something they need but don’t have the capacity to see through? I think so.

Matt Urdan asks: What’s the best way to monetize your blog without it becoming overrun with ad banners with designs you can’t control?

Josh: Use your blog to promote yourself and establish yourself as an authority on a subject. Unless you are receiving 300+ unique visitors a day, I wouldn’t mess with ads. They will only dilute your message. Selling unadvertised paid reviews or links can be another way to monetize your blog. I think having something people want and using your blog to promote that is the best way to monetize it.

You can create a thousand different sites that will produce good income all on their own. If your blog is your flagship site, I would leave it alone and use it as a funnel to recommend products or services to others occasionally but more as a free and open resource tool. The better idea would be if the products or services you recommend were your own.

Matt Richling asks: I see at the bottom of your blog, on the right side, you have some quick monthly goals. I was wondering what some of your more long term goals for the blog are? Or maybe your vision for where you see your blog in the future!?

I started posting goals on my blog about the second month into blogging. I thought they would be a great way to track progress and forward movement. I don’t give them too much thought anymore, just kind of fun to have. I don’t blog because of money. I blog because I like to network and share my passion for marketing in lighthearted, open discussions.

I would like to see this site develop into a community where more than one person posts frequently about the subject at hand. I want people to come, visit and walk away with something of value for free. As this site grows and more people visit it, I hope they get more and more value. I used to think that being an A-list blogger was the way to be and how to make money online. I now know it is better to network and give from your blog than to take. Anything I make from the blog I put back into the blog. I make money through different means online.

So to answer your question in numbers:

  • RSS goal for the next year: 3,000+
  • Newsletter subscribers for the next year 1,500+
  • Frequent posters 3+

If you didn’t get your question is this time, thats ok. I am sure I have have another soon. I had a lot of fun answering these questions and hope that they showed you a little bit more about myself and other readers on the Unconventional Marketing Blog.

Anyone want to buy an ad network?

Entrecard for saleIt looks like our dear old friend Graham at Entrecard is listing his site for sale. Now Entrecard and the community that goes with it can be yours, well that is if you mesh well with Graham’s vision. The site is listed here on Sitepoint.

If you are in the market for an online advertising company that serves over 80 million impressions to its ads monthly, here you go. Currently the site is generating $2,000 monthly from the sales of ads on the site itself, not across the network. I don’t know how it is possible to only make $2,000 per month while severing 80,000,000+ impressions, but it is true. I am sure the next person in line with some deeper development pockets could tap into more than 80 million ad impressions across more than 20,000 blogs for a much bigger return.

There is a huge potential just waiting to get picked up by the right hands. Now that’s a marketing idea, just buy your own blog ad network.

7 Tips for Building Better Business Relationships

This guest post on building better business relationships is by Chelle of itmightbelove.com. If you haven’t visited her blog I would recommend doing so you wont regret it. You can also go to the Guest Posters page and read up on her Bio and see her other links.

One of the things I write frequently about on itmightbelove is building solid relationships. What many people probably don’t realize is that many of the techniques I share on IMBL for dating are actually successful networking and business marketing strategies I’ve picked up through my experience working in the real estate industry.

I started out in real estate thinking typical marketing strategies would help me sell houses: putting ads in the paper, sending direct mail, cold calling…after a few months of failure I realized these things don’t sell houses or gain clients effectively (I could spend $200 on mailers with zero return!). Meanwhile, the breakfast club I met with once a month started bringing me regular customers for the price of a cup of coffee.

It didn’t take me long before I stopped advertising completely and decided to solely focus on building business relationships with the people I met instead. It can take a few months before you start seeing results with this unique marketing strategy – but it will drastically improve your marketing efforts if you keep in mind these tips below:

Start off Small:

You only have to meet 3-4 new people every day for a month and follow up with them before you have over 100 new people referring business to you. It isn’t about the quantity – it’s about the quality. You’re looking for people who like to communicate, may have their own business needs to share with you, and are open minded to possibility. Do this consistently for a few months, and soon you’ll be networking with more people than you can keep track of.

Join Local Organizations:

Your chamber of commerce, nonprofit groups or clubs with similar interests as you are all good places to start. You can volunteer for a good cause, be active in your community or even resort to knocking on doors. If there’s not a group near you – start one.

Be Personable Online:

With blog directories, forums and hundreds of social networking sites, it’s easier to reach out to people online than ever before. But before you start adding friends with wild abandon in all of these places, take some time to send personalized messages and leave thoughtful comments first. Sending copy and pasted messages will turn a lot of people off or worse, they’ll call you a spammer and ban you from the site.

Be Consistent:

You have to regularly follow up with someone in order to build a solid relationship. If you meet someone, make it a point to stay in touch with them every few weeks. Ask them how they are and what they’re doing – they’ll naturally ask the same of you. Visit their blog regularly and set up a system to remind you to stay in touch with them.

Provide Exceptional Service:

Customer service is a dying art. It doesn’t matter where I go anymore – the service is just terrible. When I do meet someone who actually takes time to listen or help, it leaves a long lasting impression. Don’t get so tied up in rules or fighting over a few dollars that it causes you to lose business.

Create a Referral Program:

Once you have business relationships and loyal customers established you can reward those who send more business your way. Offering things like gift cards after a sale, future discounts or other rewards will make people feel appreciated anytime they send you business.

Show Some Pride:

If you’re not confident in your business or stand behind it, nobody else is going to either. Everyone you know and meet should be aware of what you do. Add a signature line to your outgoing emails, hand out business cards (hint: if it’s plastic they will be less likely to lose it/throw it away) and routinely talk about what you do in a positive manner.

Learning to build solid business relationships takes time. You won’t have instant success. But if you do these things you will find within a few months that marketing suddenly became a lot easier and business is growing. More importantly, your clients and others you work with will come to respect and trust you.