Podcast to Promote Your Small Business and Build Your Profile

podcast

A podcast provides another channel, your voice, to extend your message and your reach.  Through podcasts, you can increase exposure to your small business and build your personal profile and business brand.  They are increasingly an essential element in small business marketing.

What is Podcasting?

The term “Podcast” originated in 2004 by combining two ideas, “iPod” (audio/video player) and “broadcast” (wide transmission of information).  The original concept was that you would create a series of audios/videos (episodes) and broadcast them via the iPod.

Now the term podcast has come to mean, in common language, an audio file (usually MP3) that is made available via the web, iTunes, the iPod or any MP3 player.  It can be a single audio or series (such as a training course or a regular radio broadcast such as Blog Talk Radio).

Podcasts have a four-fold appeal:

  1. personalizes information exchange by adding the sound of your voice
  2. enables people who prefer auditory learning to connect with you
  3. provides flexibility and mobility for your message/information (the ubiquitous iPod or MP3 player, including smart mobile phones)
  4. generates great search engine rankings.

A podcast builds trust and relationships because it is personal – people hear your voice which can convey a lot more than the written word.   If you set up a series of podcasts, you will strengthen these relationships over time.  Melanie Kissell makes the point:

Use a powerful free marketing tool that’s at your disposal twenty-four hours a day – Your Voice! …Having the opportunity to hear your voice makes a REMARKABLE difference in the minds and hearts of your target audience!

Podcasts are popular because they are easy to create and easy to listen to (online or offline via mp3 players).  All you need is some free software and a headset with an inbuilt microphone (usually under $30).

Well, if the discussion so far is not enough to motivate you to have a go or do more podcasting than you are currently doing, just keep in mind that there are currently 5 Million searches per month for ‘podcast’ on Google (as well as 3.3 Million for “podcasting”).  The recent focus of Google has been very much “universal search” – Google likes to have multi-media results on page 1 for any search term (blog, video, podcast, image, Squidoo lens).  So podcasts can improve the ranking of your website or blog.

In the final analysis. a podcast will bring extra traffic to your blog and increase your conversions.

Social Media for Small Business Marketing

social media for small business

 

You have to search really hard to find someone who relates social media to small business marketing and does so in an easy-to-understand way. However, Social Media Today has achieved this sharing by assembling a panel of experts who can guide you through the social media maze.

The YouTube video presented above gives great insights into how to use social media to advance the marketing of your small business. They effectively cover Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube and relate these to small business marketing. The information is really well grounded and focused on “how to” information – it does not go into the technicalities of each of the social media sites.

The video covers the practicalities of social media marketing:

  • How to use social media to build your small business
  • What social media to use for small business marketing
  • How to avoid the risks associated with social media
  • How to connect with your customers (current and future) through social media
  • Ways to measure the effectiveness of social media marketing.

Without this kind of guidnace, you can easily waste time, money and resources on social media and inhibit the success of your small business.

Core messages for small business marketing using social media

After watching the video and related Slideshare presentation, I distilled eight (8) key messages that relate to the use of social media for small business marketing:

  1. Social media are designed to build community, not to offer a platform for direct marketing (overt marketing can result in account deletion)
  2. Social media marketing is a form of indirect marketing (unless you use paid advertising on social media sites)
  3. Your goals should be to build connections and relationships with current and potential customers
  4. Unless you have a specific strategy when you visit social media sites, you will waste a lot of time for no productive outcome
  5. The essence of social media is conversation with others and sharing – about yourself, your small business, your interests and information relevant to your niche
  6. Effective marketing on social media requires content creation on your part – blogging, podcasts, e-books and videos
  7. It’s important to personalise your business and your staff – profiles and videos help greatly here (you have to present as a real person, with real interests and real staff)
  8. Profiles are critical – make sure they are relevant to your business, up-to-date and keyword rich (for SEO purposes).

Small business owners can use social media effectively if they follow some basic principles and develop a marketing strategy.  The potential of social media is enormous but the realization of this potential requires focus, targeting and discipline.

7 Benefits of Focus in Small Business Marketing

 focus - small business marketing

 

Focus is a key component for small business success.  When we write about focus in the context of small business, we are talking about your focus on a target market, on specific offerings for that market (products and services) and on specific marketing strategies. 

Without focus, you are attempting to be all things to everybody, and that is a recipe for failure. 

This article is not about how to decide your focus, that’s another issue.  What I am exploring here are seven (7) benefits of focus in the hope of assisting you to build and maintain your own focus. 

1. Focus builds commitment

When you decide your focus, you are immediately inspired to action.  You suddenly see a way ahead and your goal is seen as achievable.  The act of choice – deciding what to do and what not to do – frees up your creative capacity and enables you to move forward.  The experience of progress builds commitment to your chosen course of action. 

2. Focus saves time

Focus stops you from trying to be everything to everybody.  Trying to fulfil everyone’s needs is both time consuming and exhausting.  Focus saves you time because it enables you to let go of a lot of things and concentrate on the things that are important. 

3. Focus overcomes information overload

In this era of endless information, your focus helps you to decide what to look at and what to avoid.  It becomes a benchmark for deciding relevance.  For example, I used to focus on affiliate marketing and I would read everything I saw about the subject (a massive area).  Now that I have re-focused onto small business marketing, I can let all the affiliate marketing information pass me by.  

4. Focus attracts others

When you are focused you demonstrate commitment, enthusiasm and energy – all personal qualities that attract others.  Think of someone who is really focused and recall the energy they emit and how much easier it is to be attracted to them and their business  In contrast, think of someone who is “all over the place” in their activity. This lack of focus makes it really hard to get on board and get energised by what they do.  In fact, this kind of person can actually repel you because they tend to “suck up” your own energy because their energy is so dissipated. 

5. Focus develops disciplined energy and enhances productivity

You have to have discipline to focus your energy in the first place.  Then, as you grow and maintain your focus, you strengthen your discipline and you begin to develop productive habits.  Your deepening focus enables you to ward off distractions, to set priorities and to choose activities that will lead more directly to your small business goals.  Focus brings into play the power of concentration. 

6. Focus develops expertise and Trusted Authority status

Through your focus, you are better able to increase your knowledge and understanding of your target market and their needs.  You feel more committed to use your expertise and core competence to help your customers solve their real, everyday problems.  Through this assistance with problem resolution you are able to build your status as a Trusted Authority – one who is not just an expert but who has demonstrated the capacity to use their expertise to help customers solve their problems.  So you become the Trusted Authority in your marketplace. 

7. Focus creates wealth

Focus enables you to direct your energy and creativity to identifying and meeting your customers’ needs – the foundation for real small business growth and personal wealth.  As a friend of mine, Jennifer Ledbetter, often states in the context of small business marketing:

If you are willing to do for a year what others won’t,  you can spend a lifetime doing what others CAN’T.

Focus brings multiple rewards.  It builds your commitment and develops your Trusted Authority status.  Through focusing you save time, overcome information overload and attract others.  Focus helps you to develop disciplined energy, to improve your productivity and, in the final analysis, to create wealth.

Small Business Marketing Mistakes (1): Outpacing Your Customers

small business marketing mistakes

 

In a recent webinar, Greg Habstritt, creator of the Trusted Authority Formula, identified a number of mistakes in small business marketing made by entrepreneurs and small business owners.  He went on to describe a fundamental mistake that many small business owners make – a mistake that he called. “The Field of Dreams Marketing”.

This mistake arises when you assume you know what your market wants and then create a product or service based on these untested assumptions.  If you have missed the mark with your assumptions, you find that your sales are poor.  This is a very common mistake in small business marketing and I know I have been guilty of this one.

The core problem for small business marketing is that sometimes your knowledge and understanding of the needs of your customers outpaces their own perceptions.  You have probably spent a lot of time working with customers, analyzing your market and offering a range of products/services.  Out of these interactions, you have identified some recurring, foundational problems.  Then based on this knowledge and understanding, you launched a new product/service – but the market did not buy.

Your customers have not arrived at the same conclusions that you have in relation to possible solutions to their problems.  There is a mismatch between your perception and theirs about their problems (needs) and possible solutions.  Until you demonstrate that you are meeting their needs (as perceived by them), you cannot influence their (buying) behavior.

Sometimes, this mismatch in perception can be addressed by patient re-education – an approach that Greg Habstritt and others adopt for product launches via a progressive series of webinars, videos, workbooks and podcasts.  The goal here is ultimately to have your potential customers share the same perception you have about their core problem(s) and possible solutions (reflected in the program/product being launched).  Donald Schon (1984), in “The Reflective Practitioner”, described this approach as helping people to “re-frame the problem”.

However, this re-education approach can be very time-consuming and costly and you need an expensive product to make it worthwhile and considerable credibility (Trusted Authority status) to be able to pull it off.   More often than not, small business marketers don’t have the funds, patience or time to undertake such re-education.  Instead they expend time, money and effort on creating a new product that very few people see the need for – and hence very few sales result again, if any.

A cheaper and more reliable approach is to find out what your customers want – what they perceive their needs to be.  This can be achieved by surveys or via discussions with customers (by phone, Skype, face-to-face).  The starting point is to find out what their “greatest hurt” is – that is, where they are hurting the most in relation to the potential products and services that you are equipped to offer.

In my studies of organizational psychology (1983 – many years ago), I learned that changes in human behavior are motivated either by a desire for pleasure or desire to reduce pain, the latter being the stronger driver of the two.  If you can tap into what is “hurting” your customers, you are better able to create products or services that meet their perceived needs.

Small business marketing options where you have outpaced your customers

Even if you have created a product that “outpaces your customers”, there are some options you can explore to recover from this mistake.

Here are some small business marketing options you could use:

  • Offer free access to some of your key customers to enable them to gain exposure to what the product has to offer
  • Undertake market research to ascertain the core issues as perceived by the customers (this may lead to re-naming or re-orienting your product or creating an entirely new product)
  • Develop a series of products as a marketing funnel leading to the “outpacing” product as the final offering
  • Develop a re-education program incorporating an e-book, podcasts, workbook and webinars that lead to the “outpacing” product
  • Design an introductory product that focuses on where the customer experiences “hurt” – and on-sell from this new product
  • Break the “outpacing” product into separate components that customers can directly relate to.

The solution to remedying this small business marketing mistake may lie in adopting one or more of these options.  The ultimate choice of a small business marketing strategy should be grounded in the business vision and business goals.

This discussion highlights one of the core mistakes that you can make in small business marketing and suggests some options for redressing the mistake.  It also reinforces the need for market research as a central requirement for small business marketing.

 

How to Use Wizzley to Market Your Small Business Online

Wizzley
Wizzley provides a great platform for you to market your small business, your personal profile and your products and services.

Wizzley is an online writer’s community that incorporates social networking and article writing/article marketing.   The writer’s platform is easy to use with a range of modules that can be plugged into an article with a click – the net result is a potentially, very attractive multi-media presentation:

You can embed videos and images and incorporate the RSS feed from your blog.  The design options (e.g. two-column presentation, different themes and colors) add to the flexibility of the site for small business owners who want to present their business in the best possible light.

Jimmie, a top author on Wizzley, provides a great exemplar of how a small business, Backermann’s Bakery, can be attractively presented on the site:

http://wizzley.com/backermann-bakery-whiteville-tn/

Jimmie has creatively used the two-column presentation, video, variable-sized images, Google Maps, the duel module and the Amazon affiliate module.  Her presentation, with delectable images of baking products, makes you want to visit the Bakery.

Wizzley is a free platform for you to market your small business and present your business and yourself in an attractive light.