Posted by Tyler LeCompte on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 @ 12:52 PM
Original Post: http://tinyurl.com/oqcadq
Inbound Marketing Takes Time and Creativity
Many marketers starting down the path of inbound marketing expect
to find it sprinkled with magic pixie dust -- that they'll be able to
sign up for Twitter and buy a software service, then see the leads come
flooding in.
Guess what? It doesn't work like that.
Inbound
marketing requires time and creativity. In fact, creativity has ALWAYS
been a vital part of marketing and ultimately is the defining
difference between a successful marketing team and an unsuccessful one.
Still, there are four recent changes that you need to understand before jumping into your creative happy place.
1. Different Tool Set
The
tools needed to achieve marketing success today have changed a little.
Am I saying that traditional channels are worthless? Absolutely not!
These new tools are here to stay and are a requirement to understand
and do right.
- A Website -> The 24/7 access is unparalleled and has replaced things like catalogs, phone support, etc.
- Email Marketing -> Replacing what we used to get in our home mailboxes (cheaper and easier to measure)
- SEO -> It’s so important to remember that it’s not about what you call it. It’s about what your audience calls it.
- Online Video -> Slowly replacing certain uses for TV (cheaper and easier to measure)
- Social Media -> It’s still simply word of mouth—except in a one-to-many format
2. You Need to Target Niche Audiences
The
shotgun approach of blasting everyone is a thing of the past. Not only
is it extremely expensive, but it’s practically impossible to measure.
Many of the tools listed above can help you find a target audience, but
once again you are still required to be creative in approaching that
target audience.
3. More Chances to Strike Gold
Everyone
knows that the more you practice something the better you are at it.
It makes complete sense that if you throw 100 darts you are much more
likely to hit the bullseye than if you throw just one.
We believe
that unique content creation (blogging, video content, research, etc.)
is a fundamental pillar of inbound marketing and there are so many
reasons for this.
- Blogging helps SEO.
Larger website footprint, targeting of long-tail keywords, new content
for Google to crawl, and hopefully people will link to interesting blog
posts.
- New content means increased traffic. Why is a visitor going to come back if they have already read your whole website?
- Visitor engagement. Visitors can leave comments, subscribe, and share through social media.
The point is you aren’t going to be great at this the first time you do it, but you don’t have to be.
In HubSpot's case content creation IS the marketing strategy.
The more value we can produce and the more channels we can fit into,
the more likely we are to be found. Therefore, the more brand awareness
and authority we can build with more audiences.
Keep throwing
those creative darts and some will succeed, and then again, some
won’t. Remember, because of the analytics of these tools we can learn
what is successful and do more of that and less of the unsuccessful.
You
didn’t ride like Lance Armstrong the first time you got on a bike, did
you? Of course not! You probably never will be Lance, but you can and
will get much better at content creation the more you do it.
In a Global Recession Budgets Are Smaller
It
is this final point which has helped many of the reasons above be
adopted at such rapid rates. The technology that we have today is
light years above what we had even ten years ago. In today’s tough
economic environment a small business faced with the option of paying
its monthly lease or doing traditional marketing will always chose
paying the lease.
Some of the leading indicators do show that
things are getting better, but we are not out of this recession yet.
If you have made it this far you definitely have proven to be smarter,
more financially savvy, holding better brand awareness, and luckier
than some of your competitors.
The internet isn’t some fad
that will disappear as fast as it established this foothold. Young
generations have adopted the internet at extremely high rates. Finally,
with the ability to do things cheaper, more targeted, and better
analyzed we know the internet is here to stay.
If you are a creative marketer and able to adapt to these straightforward changes, you can and will succeed.