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May 24

32 Smart Ways To Drive 3x More Traffic To Your Blog

32 Smart Ways To Drive 3x More Traffic To Your Blo [...]

32 Smart Ways To Drive 3x More Traffic To Your Blog

May 24

4 Simple Ways to Upgrade Creative Content Into Media-Friendly Stories

4 Simple Ways to Upgrade Creative Content Into Med [...]

4 Simple Ways to Upgrade Creative Content Into Media-Friendly Stories

May 24

212 Killer Growth Hacking Articles Published In 2017

The results of reading over 650 growth hacking art [...]

Miles Burke

Thoughts on startups, small business, marketing & more.


I’ve spent dozens of hours, reading over 650 growth hacking articles in my mission of collating the ten best articles every week to send to my growth.email subscribers. Now, with 22 issues in the archives, I have categorised and listed 212 of the best growth articles for you below.

If you’d like to receive ten of the best growth hacking articles like this weekly by email, please sign up for my weekly growth marketing email newsletter.

You can scroll down to see the entire list, or use this index to jump to that section;

Affiliate & Referral Marketing
Analytics
Chatbots & Messaging
Communities
Content Marketing
Copywriting
Conversion Rate Optimisation
Ecommerce
Email Marketing
Engineering
General Growth Marketing
Growth tools
Influencer Marketing
Pay Per Click
Public Relations
Product & Pricing
Sales
Search Engine Optimization
Social Media Marketing
Video Marketing

212 Killer Growth Hacking Articles Published This Year

 

Affiliate & Referral Marketing

“Referral sales means closing your new and current customers on the concept of introducing you to other companies that are likely to need the solution you’ve built.” – Steli Efti.

How To Use Affiliate Marketing to Grow Your eCommerce Business by David Tile

3 Ways To Use Referral Marketing To Generate More Sales For Your e-Commerce Store by George Vasiliadis

The B2B referral sales system: The magical outbound growth engine most startups never use! by Steli Efti

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Analytics

“Analytics not only tells you what is problems you have on your website; it will also tell you what changes you need to make to fix these problems.You just have to examine and analyze the data carefully.” – Khalid Saleh

Excel template for cohort analyses in SaaS by Christoph Janz

12 Google Analytics Custom Reports to Help You Grow Faster by Shanelle Mullin

LinkedIn Analytics: A Guide for Marketers by Kaylynn Chong

You’re Doing It Wrong: A Guide to Mobile Organic Attribution by Alex Austin

How to Setup Google AMP Webpages with Analytics Tracking by Dmytro Spilka

How to Use Google Analytics to Increase Conversions by Khalid Saleh

Marketing Attribution Models: Choosing the Right One (and Mistakes to Avoid) by Referral SaaSquatch

^ Back to Top


 

Chatbots & Messaging

“There are some great applications popping up from brands that genuinely add value to the end consumer, and early signs are showing that consumers are actually responding really well to them.” – Matthew Barby.

Life Beyond Email: Chatbot Marketing by Matthew Barby

7 reasons why messaging should mirror real conversations by Benjamin J Keyser

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Sign up to growth.email and get articles like these, weekly.

 

Communities

“To get traction, implement these ten strategies top writers use to identify questions, drive traffic, build community, and creating a huge, loyal following fast.” – Josh Fechter

How to Get Thousands of Leads from Quora in Five Months by Josh Fechter

Growth Hacking Reddit: 10k+ Visitors Each Month (For Free) by Eddy Azar

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Content Marketing

“A content upgrade plays on the fear of missing out because the reader has already invested a lot of time into the content – they want the full picture, but part of it’s being held back.” – Sujan Patel.

The Best Way to Get More Results From Your Content by Brian Sutter

How To Deliver Large-Scale Projects Using A Content Hub Strategy by Chad Harwood-Jones

7 Traits That REALLY Define High-Quality Content by Larry Kim

How To Promote Your Blog With 107 Content Promotion Tactics by Nathan Ellering

How to Get Your Writing on the Road to Being Read and Spread by Robert Bruce

User-Generated Content May be the Ultimate Conversion Tool (Bonus Download) by Jon MacDonald

10 ways copy can make you more money right now by Annie Maguire

How to Build a High Converting Sales Funnel with Copy Your Customers Will Love by Jen Havice

How to Make Visual Content More Meaningful by Nathan Ellering

How We Scaled a Startup from 0 Organic Traffic to 100,000 Visitors/Mo (In About One Year) by Tyler Hakes

How to Get 100,000 People to See Your Blog Post by Len Markidan

How to Use FOMO to Increase Traffic & Conversions by Sujan Patel

How New SaaS Companies Should Be Using Content Marketing by Sujan Patel

40 Ways to Repurpose Your Blog Content (And Why You Should) by Mary Fernandez

How to Write Phenomenal Blog Posts in a World Full of Average Ones by Lauren Holliday

How 4 Top SaaS Companies Use Content to Strengthen Their Product Marketing by Ben Mulholland

The Subterranean Foundations of Any Good Content Marketing Strategy by Robert Bruce

How to Know Exactly What Content to Deliver to Convert More Prospects by Brian Clark

Online Content: Is Longer Really Better? by Jacob Baadsgaard

These Six Content Marketing Tactics Will Give You 142% More Traffic in Six Months by Neil Patel

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Copywriting

“Put simply, copywriting is writing to persuade, convert, and sell. Good copywriting gets clicks, shares, and opens. Bad copywriting gets swept under the rug.” – Robbie Richards.

13 Killer SEO Copywriting Tips (With Examples and A/B Tests) by Robbie Richards

66 Copywriting Tips that Will Boost Your Conversion Rates by 327% by Cornelia Cozmiuc

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Conversion Rate Optimisation

“According to Econsultancy, “only about 22 percent of businesses are satisfied with their conversion rates.” So, what’s going wrong? – Neil Patel.

There isn’t a way I could include a list of growth hacking articles, without covering conversion rate optimisation (CRO for short). CRO can often make or break a campaign, and these links will explain how.

How to boost your conversion rates with this simple trick by Marcus Karoumi

Split Testing: 7 Tricks to Gain More Sales by Isha Singh

Thank you pages: 7 ways I’ve increased retention and conversion (2016) by Talia Wolf

[Gifographic] Better Website Testing – A Simple Guide to Knowing What to Test by Johnathan Dane

Optimize Your Site for Conversions: Deconstructing Strategies that Work by Bree Chapin

A Roadmap to Creating An Effective Personalization Strategy by Chris Goward

31 Mobile Landing Page Ideas To Help You Fly Above Your Competition by Cynthia Meyer

22 Effective Ways to Use Landing Page Social Proof [Original Research] by Cynthia Meyer

Data-Driven Optimization: How The Moneyball Method Can Deliver Increased Revenues by Jon MacDonald

User Experience Testing: A Conversion-Focused Guide by Alex Birkett

100 Must Read Resources on Conversion Optimization by Sinan Hatahet

The Breadcrumb Technique – Landing Page Test Doubles Conversion Rate by Johnathan Dane

How Hotjar Gained 60+ New Trial Signups a Month with a Single Overlay by Maggie Crowley

10 Ways To Make Your Lead Generation Website Convert On The First Visit by Brad Shorr

Funnel Hacking: More Crucial than Growth Hacking by Audrey Melnik

How To Gather Split-Test Ideas For Your Copy Using Post-Conversion Questionnaires by Nathaniel Cheung

How to Increase the Revenue Value of Your Homepage by 851% by Neil Patel

Beyond A vs. B: How to get better results with better experiment design by Natasha Wahid

Four Principles for Making Experimentation Count by Lindsay M Pettingill

How to Blast Away the Top 15 Conversion Roadblocks on Your Website by Neil Patel

Why 90% of your experiments shouldn’t last longer than 2 weeks by David Arnoux

How to get evergreen results from your landing page optimization by Natasha Wahid

Landing Page Optimization: The Complete DIY Guide to Optimizing Your Landing Pages by Talia Wolf

The Beginner’s Guide to Google Optimize by Shanelle Mullin

How to Use Personality Science to Drive Online Conversions by Vanessa Van Edwards

The great big list of landing page tests to try by Amy Bishop

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Sign up to growth.email and get articles like these, weekly.

 

Ecommerce

Case Study: Nasty Gal is Killing It at ECommerce – Here’s How They Did It by Morgan Brown

2017 eCommerce Conversion Rate Trends That Are Here to Stay by Shivangi

How to Use Email Automation to Boost eCommerce Conversions by Daniel Kohn

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Email Marketing

17 Email Scripts That Have Helped Us Grow Our Business (For You to Steal) by Alex Turnbull

Everything You Need To Know About Email Segmentation And Personalisation by Ankit Prakash

7 Advanced Ways to Reduce Email Unsubscribe Rates (+ Swipe to Steal) by Sam Thomas Davies

How To Increase Your Email Subscribers By 339% In 60 Days [Case Study] by Daniel Ndukwu

7 Advanced Ways to Reduce Email Unsubscribe Rates (+ Swipe to Steal) by Sam Thomas Davies

Email Marketing Hacks: Read This Checklist Before Hitting Send by Ajit Singh

15 Actionable Strategies to Grow Your Email List (Even If You Have No Traffic) by Sarah Peterson

How to Get Your Emails Delivered to the Gmail Primary Tab Easily by Zoran Orak

How I grew my mailing list from 0 to 100,000 in 1 Month by Abdul Hafez

The Email Marketing Psychology Crash Course by Sarah Peterson

Post-Purchase Emails: How to Boost Retention & LTV by Danny Wong

How to Craft the Perfect Outreach email by Sujan Patel

Email List Management Tricks: Pay less and get more out of it by Gabor Koncz

How to Align Email Marketing to The Buyer’s Journey (With Examples) by Sam Thomas Davies

How To Send Better B2B Emails In 2017 by Melanie Kinney

Automated Outbound Sales: How Segment Increased Outbound Email Conversion by 200% by Michael Thomas

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Sign up to growth.email and get articles like these, weekly.

 

Engineering

6 free side projects guaranteed to drive revenue and bring in customers by Yannick Khayati

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General Growth Marketing

“To define the viral loop, you can think of it as the steps a user goes through between entering the site to inviting the next set of new users” – Andrew Chen.

These growth hacking articles are general in nature, covering many facets of how to improve growth in your product, business or service.

Grow your sales by creating urgency—featuring examples of scarcity from Booking.com and Garth Brooks

43 Founders Reveal Growth Hacking Strategies That Landed Their First Customers

Getting to $600k/mo with ConvertKit [Case Study] by Courtland Allen

25 Free Marketing Tricks I Used To Generate a Quarter-Million Page Views For My Startup by Julien Brault

7 biggest marketing strategies for 2017 by Noah Kagan

No More Hacks: Why Tired, Old Boring Processes Can Make You a Better Marketer by Brad Smith

10 lessons I learned from David Hauser’s $0 to $30M B2B SaaS interview by Chris Von Wilpert

11 Ways to Turn Prospects into Customers by Allen Finn

Slimy Marketing Can Hurt Your Business. Learn How to Avoid It. by Meryl Ayres

Why Every Saas Company Should Try Concierge Onboarding by Sujan Patel

9 Activation Secrets You Need to Be Using by Brad Smith

Growth Is Optional: 10 Reasons Why Companies Fail At Growth by Brian Balfour

How to Choose Digital Marketing Channels for Long Term Growth by Alex Birkett

RRF: a framework for building impactful notifications by Andy Carvell

3 Cognitive Biases Stunting Your Growth by Janet Choi

7 Modern Marketing Frameworks Every Startup Needs to Know by Lloyd Alexander

Putting It All Together – How Josh Elman Identified A Growth Driver At Twitter by Sean Ellis

Find the key to app growth without an army of data scientists by Alicia Shiu

How to Hack Growth When Growth Stalls by Sean Ellis

The $0 Marketing Stack – Free Growth Marketing Stack by Juan González

6 Killer Weapons for Growth by Simon Sylvest

35 Lessons from 13 Years of Marketing by Mary Green

Seek Authentic Growth by Brian Balfour

Common Growth Hacking Myths (and How Growth Actually Works) by Shanelle Mullin

The Growth Marketer’s Guide to Aha! Moments by Ty Magnin

From 1k to 10k customers: 4 steps to scale your B2B startup in new markets by Steli Efti

100 Marketing Growth Hacks Learned from 5 Years as a Startup by Kevin Ho

5 Recommendations for Setting Yearly Growth Goals by Brian Balfour

How We Use Google Venture’s 5-Day Sprint to Ship Marketing Campaigns Faster by Jennifer Pepper

How we grew 100% organically every quarter by Mypoolin

50 B2B Lead Generation Ideas from the Experts by Takeshi Young

How to steal customers from your competitors? by Dominik Vacikar

128 High Converting Growth Hacks – The Last Growth Hacking List by Helvijs Smoteks

Growth Hacking explained in 12 simple steps by Yannick Khayati

Monkey Business: The Story Behind MailChimp’s Wild Growth by Erik Devaney

101 Lead Magnet Ideas For Every Stage Of Your Marketing Funnel by Danavir Sarria

Growth Mindset: 10 Principles to Growth by Pierre Lechelle

Structure Your Marketing Team for Growth by Kipp Bodnar

The 2 Best Online Marketing Strategies for Businesses on a Tight Budget by Jacob McMillen

Not Sure Which Marketing Funnel Stage to Target? Start Here: by Stefan Mancevski

50 B2B Lead Generation Ideas from the Experts by Takeshi Young

The Three Main Strategies For Creating Sustainable Growth by Growtheus

How To Prioritize Your SaaS Marketing Tactics For Maximum ROI [Free Template Included] by Nicholas Mullen

4 of the Best Growth Hacking Experiments to Try in 2017 by Katherine Boyarsky

What’s your viral loop? Understanding the engine of adoption. by Andrew Chen

Cheap data: You are about to get so much better at marketing by Brian Massey

How to Capture Attention in a Cluttered World by Nick Kolenda

Can You ‘Feel’ It? How to Use Emotional Decision-Making in Marketing by Nathan Chan

A Dozen Lessons on Growth by Tren Griffin

The Five Types of Virality by Josh Elman

2016 Year In Review – Double Your Freelancing by Brennan Dunn

Climbing the charts: 4 tips to get to #1 on Product Hunt by Jordan Woods

Top 3 Growth Hacking Examples Of 2016 by Lee Gladish

How KlientBoost scaled from $0 to $1M in 12 months by Devesh Khanal

How To Engage And Retain App Users Like The Big Players (Facebook & Snapchat) by Paul Kemp

How I Made $10,000 in Four Hours With an Online Course That Doesn’t Yet Exist by Julien Brault

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Growth hacking results. Source: Pexels.


 

Growth tools

27 Growth hacking tools you should use in 2017 by Abdul Hafez

The Mobile Growth Stack: 2017 Edition by Andy Carvell

Growth Marketing Tools: Techniques & Secrets for 2017 by Dara Strutt

27 Dream Marketing Stack Tools You Can’t Afford to Miss by Brad Smith

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Sign up to growth.email and get articles like these, weekly.

 

Influencer Marketing

A 3-Step Guide to Media and Influencer Outreach Targeting Inspired by 1,300 Publishers by Ashley Carlisle

Songwriter Accidently Does Influencer Marketing Perfectly, Gets 40k Views Overnight by Benji Hyam

^ Back to Top

 

Pay Per Click

“Power words are so named because they leap off the page (or screen). They arrest attention. Which is exactly what you need when your ads are competing with people’s families and friends for attention on Facebook.” – Brad Smith.

If you need advice on AdWords, FB Advertising or more, these growth hacking articles will give you a great kick start.

Boosting B2B Leads by 9x with PPC and Landing Page Best Practices [Case Study] by Andy Beohar

10 Brilliant B2B Facebook Ads Deconstructed by Jack

PPC Ad Testing Tips From Our Top 10 Experts by Cynthia Meyer

Case Study: 1,057 leads in 7 days with £5 ad spend by Tim Felmingham

7 Power Words & Phrases to Test in Your Facebook Ads by Brad Smith

We Spent $100k On Facebook Ads. Here’s What We Learned. by Jonathan Taylor

LinkedIn Ads: How to target your ideal prospect every time by AJ Wilcox

The Top 10 Most Common AdWords Mistakes (And How To Fix Them) by CrazyEgg

Branding Success: How to Use PPC to Amplify Your Brand by Purna Virji

Facebook Ads Bidding – 54 Tips, Hacks & Methods to Know by Karola Karlson

LinkedIn’s New Lead Gen Forms vs. Facebook Lead Ads by Allen Finn

10 Lesser-Known Facebook Ad Features (and Why You Should Use Them) by Jay Shemenski

LinkedIn’s new Matched Audiences feature just blew Facebook Custom Audiences out of the water for B2B by AJ Wilcox

10 Lesser-Known Facebook Ad Features (and Why You Should Use Them) by Jay Shemenski

3 Reasons You Need to Try Pinterest Ads by Ivan Kreimer

AdWords Account Expansion: Scaling & Growing Successfully by Melissa Mackey

6 Little Steps to Create a Killer PPC Landing Page by Michael Fitterer

Facebook Ads Manager: A 125-Point Guide To Make You A Superhero by Johnathan Dane

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Public Relations

How To Pitch Press – The Definitive Guide by Dmitry Dragilev

Here’s How We Get Featured in the LA Times (and Other Top Tier Publications) by Thomas Mcloughlin

Best Pre Launch Tips For Your Product by Shivam Sharma

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Product & Pricing

9 Psychology-Based Pricing Strategies You Can Use Today (+ Swipe File) by Sleeknote

^ Back to Top

 

Sales

Often ignored in lists of growth hacking articles, sales is yet another driver for growth, and can’t be ignored.

We Analyzed 25,537 Sales Calls. Here’s What We Learned by Chris Orlob

4 Sales Lessons From InVision’s SVP of Sales Ryan Burke by Erik Devaney

39 sales statistics that will change the way you sell by Ramin Assemi

25 proven sales strategies from top entrepreneurs and startups by Ryan Robinson

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Search Engine Optimization

“For many startups, SEO is viewed in the same vein as Tarot cards and palm readings. The whole process seems like a sham, and its reputation isn’t helped by genuinely spammy “SEO outreach emails” where some automated message tells you that your site needs optimization. Yeah, okay.” – Gregory Ciotti.

SEO isn’t a short term solution, however for the medium to long term, these growth hacking articles will show you how to win at getting great rankings.

A Thirty-Day Plan for Gaining 100 Authoritative and Relevant Backlinks to Your New Website by Neil Patel

Simple SEO Wins for Startups with One Page, One Term by Gregory Ciotti

Rethinking Long Tail Keywords: how to get TONS of traffic from ‘unpopular’ search queries by David McSweeney

15 Meta Description Examples & How To Master Them by Dan Shure

How to Create Keyword Maps and Avoid Cannibalization (The SEO Variety) by Tyler Thursby

Resist Old On-Page SEO Tactics With These 5 Tricks by Rand Fishkin

Strategic SEO Decisions to Make Before Website Design and Build by Maryna Samokhina

The Wise Content Marketer’s Guide to Sensible SEO by Sonia Simone

42 Hacks to Score White Hat Backlinks for an Online Business in 2017 by Kaloyan Yankulov

How to monitor Google Knowledge Graph changes and performance by Tony Edward

Link Building for Your Startup by Meri Chobanyan

Tips on Finding Website Optimization Opportunities for Your Business by Vahe Arabian

What we learned about “Long Tail” by analyzing 1.4 Billion keywords by Tim Soulo

Site speed tactics in a mobile-first world: Why you need to step up your site speed game by Pete Campbell

Link building: Preliminary research and analysis by Andrew Dennis

How to do server-side testing for SPA optimization by Natasha Wahid

How to use Search Console for quick SEO wins by Tereza Litsa

[Case Study] How We Ranked #1 for a High-Volume Keyword in Under 3 Months by Dmitry Dragilev

Cracking Facebook SEO – Optimization Tips That Win Higher Page Rankings by Cornelia Cozmiuc

How I Got 22 Follow Links In Half a Day by Abi Travers

19-Step On-Page SEO Checklist (with FREE Automation Template) by Robbie Richards

Top SEO tips for 2017 by Christopher Jan Benitez

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Sign up to growth.email and get articles like these, weekly.

 

Social Media Marketing

“When you’re struggling to come up with new, exciting social content, it’s helpful to look back at your “North Star”—a past post that was really successful. By understanding what went well and why, you can set guidelines that will help you consistently produce high-performing content.” – Emily Copp.

These growth hacking articles show you how to build growth using various social media strategies, across a number of platforms.

How to Grow Your Audience on Snapchat According to Data From 217,000 Snaps by Sophia Bernazzani

The Crazy Egg Pinterest Marketing Guide by Sharon Hurley Hall

10 Ways to Maximize Your Chances at Getting Verified on Twitter by Kevan Lee

The 20 Best New Social Media Tools to Try in 2017 (And How to Use Them) by Alfred Lua

20 Twitter Growth Hacking Tools for Startups by Pressfarm

YouTube Video Optimization: Blowing Up Your Rankings and Revenue by Kevin Espiritu

What I’ve learned from growing and unfollowing over 250,000 followers on Twitter by Travis Wright

How to Do an Instagram Audit in 60 Minutes or Less by Dominique Jackson

How to Design Facebook Images That Get More Clicks by Ryan McCready

7-Step Facebook Marketing Strategy to Dominate 2017 by Alex York

The Best Way To Get 3000 Instagram Followers in 4 Months by Jordan O’Connor

How to Use Social Media to Hype Your Product Pre-Launch by Kaylynn Chong

What We Learned from Our Top-Performing Social Media Posts by Emily Copp

Social Media Copywriting: How to Compose Text for 5 Different Channels by Amanda Zantal-Wiener

^ Back to Top


 

Video Marketing

The 4 Pillars of Stellar Video Marketing by Mitch Meyerson

The 3 Most Powerful Ways to use Videos for Retargeting by Growth Tribe

Video SEO: The Definitive Guide by Brian Dean

^ Back to Top

Summary

My sincere gratitude to every one of the writers whose work I feature above; your commitment to sharing your knowledge and lessons are inspiring for all to learn from. I trust you find this hand-curated list of 212 growth hacking articles worth reading, and trust that you’ll join my growth.email weekly growth list.

Every week I share the ten best articles across a wide range of topics, and welcome suggestions to my @thegrowthemail Twitter account as well.

All the best with moving the needle in your business with the many great tips, found in the links above!

Be a friend and share:
  1. Hi Miles

    Thanks for putting this awesome resource together! I have been a subscriber since day one and utilise a number of tips and tricks I have picked up from the articles you share. I highly recommend anyone involved in a startup subscribe because you can definitely uncover new strategies that will move the needle for your business.

    I’ll also make sure I share the article in today’s Startup Soda newsletter (http://www.startupsoda.com.au)

    Talk soon

    Paul

  2. Thank you for your kind words and support, Paul. I really appreciate your testimonial and helping get the word out, thanks!

    Miles

Words & Images © 2005-2016, Miles Burke. All rights reserved.

May 24

101 marketing tools and tips for 2017 - Practical tips!

Looking for a list of the best marketing tools and [...]

101 Marketing Tools and Technology Tips for 2017

Are you tired of all the fluff you read on marketing?

Want a list of tried and tested marketing technology tools and tactics you can immediately implement in your business?

I’m sure you’ll pick off a couple of tips from the list below.

Social Media

The successful people on social media build relationships and add value. They are there for their community and make them feel appreciated and connected to a brand on a more personal level. The key to social media success is consistency, but achieving it is incredibly time-consuming.

Luckily, there are so many great tools on the market now to help you build your audience, analyze results to see what’s working (or not working), and save time on the tasks you really don’t have time for.

  1. Use a social media management tool. Social media management tools can help you streamline all your day to day activity on social media. With the right tool, you’ll not only save time but also get better results over time and maximize your social media ROI.
    Ideally, you’ll find a tool that allows you to manage all your social accounts from a single dashboard. Agorapulse is an excellent management tool that supports a broad range of platforms with a lot of great functionality, including in-depth analytics, scheduling, and reporting.
  2. Optimize your website content for sharing on social media. When people share your content from your website to social platforms, you need to make sure that it’s shared in the best possible way. Use know.em social media optimization tool to check how well your website is optimized for sharing via social media. You’ll get a rating out of 100% for each social network with recommendations on how to fix the issues.
  3. Automate sharing of evergreen content. Evergreen content is content that is always relevant to your audience and never goes out of date. When you have valuable content with no expiration date, why not share it continually? Use Agorapulse or a similar tool to set this up.
  4. Use automated Twitter DM’s strategically. Last year I ran a content marketing conference with my buddy Mark Schaefer and over 25% of the ticket sales were from Twitter. I targeted a very relevant group of followers on Twitter and sent a personalized DM. DM’s are only useful if they are personalized and highly targeted. You can use a tool such as Audiense to run automated DM campaigns.
  5. Analyze your results. Unfortunately, the vast majority of people don’t analyze the results they get on social media. There are great platform tools and third-party tools that can help you analyze and optimize your social media efforts. Here is a link to our top article about social media analytics tools: http://www.razorsocial.com/social-media-analytics-tools/
  6. Implement a monitoring solution. Using a tool such as Talkwalker will help you track social conversations across social media channels and the Web. We need to listen to our audience to understand their needs and to inform our decision-making with relevant customer insights.
  7. Create Facebook Ads with a warm audience. A warm audience is an audience that is already familiar with your brand. They are less expensive to target with ads, and since they already shown an interest in your content/product, it’s easier to get engagement. More engagement equals cheaper ad costs. Set up a tracking pixel from Facebook on your site and track your visitors. Then create a custom audience to target some of these visitors.
  8. Use SocialQuant to grow your Twitter following. SocialQuants lets you specify the keywords that are relevant to your brand/industry and then searches Twitter based on those words for the most relevant accounts for you to connect with. It follows those users on your behalf, and if they follow back – you make a new connection! If not, Social Quant will unfollow those accounts for you. This is a really effective and targeted way to get more Twitter followers
  9. Use Rival IQ to track your web and social media activity. Rival IQ is a great tool to compare your social media presence with your competitor’s. You can monitor your performance across Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn, Instagram and YouTube, track important SEO metrics, and understand what type of content drives the most engagement.
  10. Scale up your Facebook ads with AdEspresso. This is a great tool to help you manage larger Facebook ad campaigns and get more value from them. AdEspresso allows you to create multiple A/B tests (you can test ad headlines, images, and audiences), and more importantly, it lets you create campaign rules so you spend less time managing your campaigns. This capability will also minimize the risk of spending your money on non-performing campaigns. You can read our detailed article on how to use AdEspresso here.
  11. Use UTM tracking on social media campaigns. The success of any social campaign relies on tracking and measuring. UTM tracking enables you to track social campaigns or ads in Google Analytics and understand which ones are driving traffic to your website based on specific parameters. You can add 5 UTM parameters to your website links: campaign name, source, medium, term, and content. By setting up these parameters, you can determine how specific campaigns perform in terms of driving site traffic and conversions.
  12. Implement Social Warfare on your website. Social Warfare is an excellent social sharing WordPress plugin that will help you get your content shared by more people. The plugin lets you customize the look of your social share buttons, and with its Custom Tweets feature, it allows you to share a unique message on Twitter.
  13. Use Feedly to track blogs you want to read on a regular basis. Want to collect and read content from all your favorite blogs in one place? No problem! With Feedly, you can subscribe to multiple RSS feeds, categorize content, and then curate for sharing on social media. It’s awesome on both desktop and mobile.
  14. Participate in Twitter Chats. If you’re getting involved in Twitter chats (which I highly recommend), then Tweetchat is a great tool that will help you manage your Twitter chats. It lets you filter a Twitter chat conversation by hashtag, and provides a share button that allows people to promote the chat directly from the app. It also enables you to pause Tweets so you have a chance to read and respond.
  15. Create a pinned post on Twitter and Facebook. A pinned post is a post that appears on the top of your feed for a longer period of time. By pinning a specific post, you’ll drive traffic and customers to your website.This is the first post that new fans/followers see, so make the most of it!

Marketing Automation / Email Marketing

Smart marketers and business owners use marketing automation to improve customization, relevance, conversions and revenue from their marketing campaigns. According to Emailmonday, roughly 49% of companies use some type of marketing automation, and this is an upward trend.
If you still haven’t implemented the tech, it’s time to get on board!

  1. Find a tool that suits your needs. If you are selling products and services online, then the chances are you need a marketing automation tool instead of an email marketing tool. We currently use Ontraport to automate a variety of marketing tasks. It’s a great tool and it’s relatively easy to use. But there are plenty of others, such as Convertkit, ActiveCampaign, InfusionSoft, and Marketo which are better suited for larger businesses.
  2. Create an automated welcome series for new subscribers. When someone joins your email list, it is a clear signal that they’re interested in your company’s products or services. You want to give them a warm welcome, which means you’ll want to help them get to know you better, share your best recent content with them, and let them know what they can expect to receive from you in the future. This is a really important sequence and you can set it up with a tool such as MailChimp.
  3. Leverage Facebook custom audiences. Find a tool that supports automatic creation of Facebook custom audiences that you can target. Imagine if you could automatically create an audience of people who visited your checkout page but didn’t buy so you can target them with the right advertisements. Ontraport automatically creates these audiences and keeps them in sync, but there are also other tools that can help.
  4. Create an exit intent popup on your site to build email subscribers. Optinmonster is the best tool for getting more emails on your website. The exit intent popup is a popup that only appears when someone is going to exit your website – and conversion rates are very good! Optinmonster also supports a wide range of optins, split testing, reporting, targeting based on referring site, and so much more.
  5. Create marketing automation sequences. When you want to create your marketing automation sequences or the emails you’ll send to drive people towards the action you want them to take, use a tool such as Lucidchart to map them out.
  6. Set up trigger email campaigns. Set up your marketing automation tool to trigger an email to a subscriber that visits an important page. For example, if a subscriber visits your product page but doesn’t buy it, that would be a good time to generate an email.
  7. Show optins only to people who are not your email subscribers. When your existing subscribers land on your website, it is pointless to show them an option to subscribe via email. You can use Optinmonster (mentioned already) to display something different for your email subscribers.
  8. Set up click tracking to see who clicked links in your emails. When you send a promotional offer via email, check to see who clicked on the link and showed interest in your product. You can create an email specifically for people who clicked on this link. They have shown an interest in your product so it’s worth following up. This can typically be automated in most email automation tools.
  9. Implement content upgrades. A content upgrade is a bonus content created specifically for a particular blog post or page. This content is directly related to the topic of the post and your readers can access it in exchange for their email address. For example, if you write a blog post on marketing tools, the optin could be a PDF download of the marketing tools. These optins typically achieve a 10% plus conversion rate.
  10. Segment your email list. I got an email from Steve Dotto recently ( a friend and a marketing expert) and he asked me as a subscriber what kind of content/emails I’d like to receive. Based on the responses he collected from his subscribers, he was able to segment his email list based on their specific interests. Segmented email lists mean higher open rates and happier subscribers!
  11. Don’t forget the about us page. This is a great page for building optins. When someone visits the about us page on your website, they are interested enough to read more information about you. This means that they are a good potential email subscriber.
  12. Retarget people who visited your website and didn’t optin with Facebook ads. When you spend all that money to drive visitors to your website, you need to make the most of them! Facebook retargeting ads give you another chance to turn those visitors into subscribers. Since these are the people who already visited your site, you can target them with highly relevant ads that drive more engagement and higher conversion rates.
  13. Be more concerned about click through rates rather than open rates. It’s great if people open your emails, but if they don’t click on the links you provide, then the email was not interesting or relevant to them so they are less likely to open up the next week. Use the analytics provided by your email marketing or marketing automation tool to analyze opens, clicks, and unsubscribes.
  14. Check your email deliverability. You need to be aware of how successfully you’re delivering emails to your subscribers’ inboxes. There are many factors that impact your email deliverability, but one of the most important ones revolves around sending relevant emails to the right subscribers, at the right time. If you keep sending emails that result in no opens or poor open rates, eventually you won’t get into their inbox. You can monitor your sender reputation with a tool such as SenderScore.
  15. Give unsubscribers different options. When someone asks to unsubscribe from your list, you can give them an option to stay subscribed to particular categories of content. Another option is letting them adjust the frequency of emails instead of unsubscribing completely.

Web Analytics

Digital marketing is all about testing, analyzing, and optimizing your activities to achieve better results. Without analytics, you are simply wandering around in the dark. Thankfully, there are some great tools out there that can help shine some light on your marketing performance.

  1. Set Up Google Search Console. Google Search Console is a free service that lets you identify and fix website problems. When Google crawls through your website and finds errors, it reports them in Google search console.  If you haven’t set this up already, you really need to.
  2. Use Google Tag Manager. Google tag manager provides a much easier way of managing all the marketing and analytics tags (snippets of Java code) that you have to add to your website from companies such as Facebook, Google, and others. It’s a great tool and you should definitely consider using it.
  3. Identify your most popular posts. Use Google Analytics to find your top performing posts and make sure they are regularly updated and frequently shared. To do this, you need to create the Landing Pages report to see which of your blog posts have the highest page views over a specified time period.
  4. Identify your Bounce Pages. Finding your top posts is important, but so is figuring out which pages on your website are bleeding visitors so you can do something about it. If your bounce rate on a certain page goes over 50%, something is definitely wrong. Once you identified the bounce pages, it’s time to start working on them to improve your website’s ability to retain visitors.
  5. Study Engaged Traffic. It’s important to look at the visitors who stay more than 10 minutes on your website and visit more than one page. This data is important because it shows you the most engaged visitors. You can find this information in GA under Audience Engagement.
  6. Track Mobile Visitors. More and more people are accessing the Web on their mobile devices, which means more opportunities for visits and conversions. This is why it’s important to track mobile traffic. You can access this data in GA under Audience > Mobile > Devices. Here you’ll be able to see which visitors are using which mobile devices to access your site, plus you’ll get the data on their average page views, time spent on the website, etc. This data will give you insight into mobile users interests and preferences, you’ll be able to compare mobile vs. desktop conversions, and much more.
  7. Create custom dashboards in Google analytics. Custom dashboards are really helpful if you want to filter out information to only see those metrics and statistics that are most relevant to you. For example, you can create a dashboard that monitors your users’ behavior on your website. You can easily set up your custom dashboards from the Reporting section of your GA account.
  8. Keep tabs on your website speed. The speed of your website is very important. A lower speed means a higher bounce rate and reduced conversion rate. Google provides a speed test and rates both desktop and mobile version of your site out of 100%. If Google gives you a low score, you can be sure that they will take this into account in search results. Click here to test it out!
  9. Create Segments in Google Analytics. Google Analytics allows you to create segments which are basically individual filters that you configure and apply to your reports so you can see specific data. This can be very useful for ad-hoc analysis or ongoing analysis of data. For example, you could create a segment for traffic that was generated from a social media platform.
  10. Add annotations to the Google Analytics chart. Let’s say you are running a campaign and you start seeing some massive spikes in traffic. In a year’s time, you won’t remember what caused it. This is where adding annotations to your traffic chart in GA comes in handy. In the future when you look at your reports, you’ll understand why there was a spike in traffic on a certain day.
  11. Set up conversion funnels. A funnel on your website is a sales process which consists of multiple pages or steps that your visitors must take to fulfill your goal. When you set up your funnel, you can track the traffic that goes through your funnel and analyze where people are dropping out to correct any possible issues.
  12. Set up Intelligence Events. Imagine if you got a sudden spike or drop in traffic, would you like to know about it? Google Analytics Intelligence Events Reports allow you to set up alerts to get notified when unusual or important things happen on your website, e.g. a huge increase in sales on a particular product page.
  13. Real-time Google Analytics. Google is tracking your visitors’ activity as it happens on your site, and you may want to take advantage of this and really dig into their interactions, check goal conversions on the website, etc. A common use of real-time analytics is for monitoring the immediate effects on traffic from a new blog, social media post, ad campaign, etc.
  14. Compare Historical Traffic Trends. Being aware of what’s happening now is important, but so is looking back at your traffic reports to identify historical trends. Doing this can help you identify patterns and understand how traffic can change over time.
  15. Filter out your IP address – When you are browsing your own website this is recorded in GA as a visitor on your site, so it’s recommended to exclude your IP address. Check out the admin -> filters section.

Conversion Rate Optimization

Conversion rate optimization (CRO) refers to using analytics and visitor feedback to increase the percentage of your website visitors that convert into paying customers or take any other action you want them to take on a certain page. It is immensely important and, you’ve guessed it, there are tools to help you with that!

  1. Use heat map tools. Use a tool such as Hotjar to do heat map analysis, form analysis, and to monitor visitors as they scroll through your website. This type of analysis helps understand the behavior of your users so you can adjust your site accordingly.
  2. Always run split tests on your email optins. When you create an email optin you really don’t know how well it will convert, so you’ll need to try multiple variations. Optinmonster and similar tools allow you to easily create and test multiple versions.
  3. Use a proven landing page tool. We use LeadPages to create landing pages, and although the pages may not be the prettiest, they do convert very well. LeadPages tracks conversion rates of their pages on all their customer sites, so you can apply a filter to find the highest converting ones.
  4. Set up goal tracking in Google analytics. Let’s say you have an optin on your website and you bring people to a thankyou page after they optin – that can be set up as a goal in Google Analytics. Now you can check to see how many people converted and where they came from (e.g. Twitter,Facebook, other referred site etc).
  5. Implement Tawk.io or a similar tool on your checkout pages. This is a tool that allows your website visitors to interact with you via chat message. My friend Jason Swenk recently implemented this on his checkout pages and saw a significant increase in conversion rate.
  6. Use Visual Website Optimizer for A/B and multivariate testing. This tool makes it a lot easier to test the changes you want to make to your website – you can set up and run tests in minutes without any coding experience. With VWO you can easily track revenue, signups, clicks, or any other conversion goal.
  7. Drive traffic to the page you want to do an A/B test on. Make sure you send enough visitors to your site to work out which variation of any page/form is working. If you are running tests comparing 2 different pages, the number of people you need to send to the page depends on the difference in conversion rates between the pages. If the conversion rate is very similar, then you need to send a lot more people to the page. Use this tool provided by Visual Website Optimizer to understand how many visitors you need to send to your pages – Click here
  8. Use a survey tool to get feedback from visitors to your site. Surveys are one of the best ways to get into your website visitor’s minds. The feedback you get from them will be invaluable to informing your CRO strategy. You can use a tool such as Qualaroo to create different surveys and gather feedback from specific groups of website visitors.
  9. Don’t forget to test the CTAs on your landing pages. When creating your landing pages, you want to make sure that your CTAs are actually doing the job of driving people to the action you want them to take. Your A/B testing tool (such as VWO mentioned earlier) should allow you to personalize, test, and optimize your CTAs for maximum conversions.
  10. Use compelling images on your landing pages. Great images that are relevant to your message and that can spark an emotional buying response from your visitors are one of the best ways to increase conversion on your landing pages. We already mentioned LeadPages, and this tool offers an image widget that lets you easily add photos, logo, and other graphics to your pages.
  11. Track All Your Conversions. The goal of your CRO strategy should be improving both macro conversions and micro conversions. Macro conversions, such as a product sale, should be your main goal, but it is also important to track the performance of your micro conversions, such as eBook downloads, product demo requests, etc.
  12. Test upsells and cross-sells. This is a CRO must if you are in the e-commerce business. When someone is ready to buy one item from you, they’re much more likely to make an additional purchase. E-commerce platforms, such as Magento or Shopify, offer plugins you can use to add upselling/cross-selling to your e-commerce store.
  13. Perform usability tests to get live feedback from your users. Usability testing is a great way of finding out which features on your website are confusing or difficult to use. It provides you with much-needed clarity so you know where to focus your conversion optimization efforts. A tool like UserTesting.com can help you with this.
  14. Monitor and test news features on social media platforms. If you are using social media to drive traffic and leads to your website, pay attention to the new features that the platforms you’re using are launching. You can use split testing tactics to optimize your social media campaigns, taking into account all the features that are available to you.
  15. Don’t Forget To Monitor For Impact. This one goes without saying – you need to measure, test and monitor the performance of your CRO efforts to learn what’s working and what’s not, and why. Regular monitoring allows you to change course and improve your CRO strategy if it is not helping you achieve your goals.

Content Marketing

Yes, there is a technical side to content marketing. And the sooner you get a handle of it, the sooner you can start creating a high-performing content marketing program. Here are some handy tips for getting started.

  1. Update older posts. Do you have content on your site that is a little out of date but was very popular with your audience? Update the content, change the publish date, and re-release the post. You’ll get more links, shares, traffic and a new post that won’t take you too much time to do.
  2. Optimize your content. SEO hasn’t actually changed that much over the last couple of years. Create great content, promote it, build your network, and get some good links. Of course, you still need to optimize your content so Google can index it correctly. I use Yoast SEO plugin for content optimization and although it’s not perfect, it’s the best that’s out there that I’m aware of.
  3. Include internal links to your content. When you create blog content make sure to link to at least three posts on your own site. Also, find some older related posts on your site and link them to the new posts. Spread the link juice around!
  4. Linking to external sites. You may be hesitant to link out to any external sources because people may leave your site. However, Google expects you to link to other relevant, high authority sites, so you need to do it!
  5. Use Google Search Console to check the ranking for your blog content. Find articles that get a lot of impressions/clicks but are outside the top 10 in Google search results. You can do a little bit of optimization to creep onto page 1 of Google. Revisit how you optimized the content and improve it, and also try and generate a couple of good links to it.
  6. Find best performing content with BuzzSumo. You can use BuzzSumo to discover content that performs best/is shared most for any topic related to your business, both on your website and your competitors’ websites. This can be a good way of finding content ideas for the types of content that have already proven to be popular.
  7. Build on your competition’s success. SEMRush allows you to analyze your competitor’s site to find out what keywords are bringing them the most traffic. You can then create content that targets those keywords to drive more traffic to your website.
  8. Use KWFinder for keyword research. KWFinder is a great tool to help you identify the best long tail keywords to target for your blog posts. In addition to providing keyword suggestions, it will also give you a difficulty score to show you how difficult/easy it will be to rank for those keywords.
  9. Check Domain Authority of your website. It is useful to know your Domain Authority as well as Page Authority for certain pages, both for your website and your competitors’ sites. DA and PA are scores (on a 100-point scale) developed by Moz that predict how well a website, or a specific page, will rank on search engines.The higher the number, the easier it is to rank.  Read this post which explains domain/page authority.
  10. Create compelling Infographics. Infographics are great for getting your content shared and also for getting valuable links. The good thing is, you don’t have to be a designer nor spend a lot of money to create them. Use a tool such as Piktochart to create engaging infographics with just a few clicks by choosing a template and then customizing it with specific text, fonts, and colors.
  11. Create interactive content. Interactive content is one of the best content types that you can create to get more engagement, and consequently more conversions, from your customers. Use a tool such as Qzzr (it’s free!) to make nicely looking customizable quizzes, or if you are looking for a more advanced solution, check out Ceros for creating high quality, interactive e-books, infographics, microsites, and more.
  12. Use a Content Idea Generator. After producing content for a while, you will find it more difficult to come up with new blog post topics or content ideas. Fear not, there are a couple of free tools that can help you beat the writer’s block quickly. Hubspot’s Blog Topic Generator is a very useful tool that returns 5 blog post ideas based on a few nouns that you previously specify. Or, you can enter your keyword in Portent’s Content Idea Generator to get some interesting title suggestions.
  13. Syndicate your content. Content syndication will allow you to reach new audiences, increase the exposure of your brand, and drive referral traffic back to your site. There is a growing number of content syndication platforms, most popular being Outbrain, Zemanta and Taboola, which allow you to use their existing network of sites to syndicate your content to.
  14. Promote your content through outreach. Outreach campaigns, if done correctly, can deliver impactful results in terms of inbound links from influential sites, as well as an increase in relevant traffic. With a tool such as BuzzStream, you can find influencers, websites, and blogs for your content based on the keywords or topics relevant to your business/industry, and perform organized outreach campaigns.
  15. Create an Editorial Calendar. Without a plan and a structured process, content creation can become a messy business. This is why every good content marketer keeps an editorial or content calendar to centralize their planning efforts. CoSchedule is a feature-rich tool that you can use to build an amazingly useful content calendar (they offer a 14-day free trial), or you can get your hands on one of the many available Editorial Calendar Templates, such as this one from the Content Marketing Institute.
  16. Write like Hemingway. Hemingway Editor, a proofreading tool for content writers, clears your copy of all unnecessary fluff. Just paste your text into the editor and you’ll get an analysis that highlights lengthy, complex sentences, adverbs, passive voice, and common errors.

WordPress

WordPress is the world’s most popular content management system, and for the obvious reasons. It is easy to setup, manage, and update, and it’s completely free to use. Here we’re going to share some lesser known tricks to help you get the most out of it.

  1. Uninstall plugins you are not using. How many plugins do you have on your site that you never use? More plugins equal higher security risk and lower performance.
  2. Set up a good WordPress backup facility. Creating regular WordPress backups is the best thing you can do for your website, and for your own peace of mind. There are several backup plugins for WordPress, but we recommend Vaultpress. It is fairly easy to use, provides some great security features and backup, and it comes at a reasonable price.
  3. Use a staging server when you’re making changes. A staging server is an environment where you have an exact copy of your website for testing purposes. When you are installing a new functionality, plugin, etc. it’s much better to add it on a staging server to verify it doesn’t break anything before you copy over. Any good hosting provider  will provide staging e.g.
  4. Create WordPress contact forms with WPForms. If you need to create a really good contact form for WordPress, I highly recommend that you use WPForms. It is probably the easiest way to add a contact form to your site, and there is a free Lite version that offers all the basic functionality you’ll need.
  5. Use Pingdom to check your website speed. You need a fast website and Pingdom will help you analyze the load speed of your website, as well as show you how you can make it faster.
  6. Install a caching plugin. WordPress pages are built on the fly (dynamic) which can cause performance issues. Using a caching plugin like WPSuperCache can significantly speed up your website.
  7. Keep your website updated. It is crucial that you always use the latest version of WordPress to keep your site secure and never miss out on any new features or important bug fixes. However, make sure to test out the new release on your staging server first!

E-commerce

Here’s our six simple eCommerce tips to help you boost your conversion rates.

  1. Focus on conversions at checkout. Use a marketing tool that was created specifically to optimize conversions at checkout. We use ThriveCart, but you can also check out the more expensive alternative Samcart to compare available features.
  2. Analyze the performance of your website forms. If you have some forms on your e-commerce website such as order form or a contact form (and you certainly do), you need to analyze their performance. Use a tool like Hotjar to analyze how people interact with your forms and to understand things like user abandonment, user hesitation, and skipped fields so you can learn and improve.
  3. When someone is filling out a form on your website, you can automatically capture their email address before they hit submit. This is really useful if they have not paid for your product and abandoned after they entered the email address. You can then follow up with some relevant automated emails to help improve conversion.
  4. Build out your sales funnels with a tool like ClickFunnels. ClickFunnels is an online service that allows you to create sales funnels complete with upsells, cross-sells, down-sells, etc.
  5. Create tailored offers in follow-up emails. SalesManago is a really smart marketing automation tool and here’s one of the reasons why. If a potential customer was checking out a certain product in your e-commerce store, this tool will include details of that product in a follow-up newsletter. This part of the newsletter is dynamically created based on how the users were interacting with the site.
  6. Building a mobile responsive website is not always the best way of generating high conversions. Quite often, a responsive page will have too much content that’s not laid out in the best possible way. Consider building a mobile compatible page focused on conversions on mobile devices.

Visual Marketing

With the help of the right visual marketing tools, you’ll be able to create stunning visuals for your marketing campaigns that your audience will love.

  1. Use Canva for creating your imagery. Canva is an amazing free tool that you can use to create your own images for your website, blog posts and social media. Even if you have no design skills whatsoever, you’ll find image creation with Canva super easy. The tool offers a variety of templates, custom image sizes for every social media platform, drag and drop editing, and much more.
  2. Use Recite to create images from quotes. Quote images are one of the most popular types of content on social media, and Recite is a perfect tool to help you capture your audience’s attention. The beauty of this tool is in its simplicity – simply enter your quote into the editor on the homepage, and then select a layout from a gallery of templates.
  3. Create animated posts from multiple images with a tool like Ripl. Riple is an iPhone app that allows you to create images with animated features. You can upload several images to combine into one design and then share it on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram as a GIF or a video.
  4. Create your own memes. Memes are everywhere, and online marketers are predominantly using them to entertain and engage their audience on social channels. Memes are a great way to generate an immediate reaction from your followers, and you can create them easily with one of the many available meme generators.
  5. Use Keywords in Image Alt Tags. When you are uploading images to your blog, make sure you use relevant keywords in your ‘Alt tag’. This helps Google understand what the image is about so it can index it.
  6. Use Wordswag for creating visually appealing images with text overlaid on top. Have something clever, funny or important to say to your audience? Use a tool like WordSwag to add a fancy text overlay to your images and draw their attention to your message.

Video Marketing and Live Streaming

Videos are all the rage in marketing today, and here we’re going to introduce you to some very useful tools to help you create live/recorded videos to educate, inform, and engage your audiences.

  1. Use a tool such as OBS for Facebook live. OBS is a free software that allows you to get fancy with your Facebook live events. You can add a lower third (i.e banner at the bottom of your recording), swap between live and recorded, do demo’s on your PC, and much more.
  2. Buy good microphones. You’ll get away with poor video quality, but you won’t get away with a poor sound. Check out our post on Facebook live tools for more tips.
  3. Use Animato to create animated videos. You don’t have to spend a fortune on animation when there are affordable tools like Animoto that you can use to create videos from photos, video clips, and music.
  4. Use Screenflow or Camtasia for Screen Recording. Screenflow is a screen recording and video editing tool for Mac. It is quite user-friendly, which means you don’t have to be a video production professional to use it. Camtasia (available both for PC and Mac) on the other hand offers more video editing features, but also comes with a higher price.
  5. Upload your videos to Wistia. Wistia is perfect for marketing videos because it keeps visitors on your page. When you upload a video, you can add CTA buttons or optin forms at the end of the video. The tool also has some powerful video analytics features to show you how your videos are performing in terms of viewer engagement.
  6. Use TubeBuddy for YouTube marketing. TubeBuddy is a browser extension that loads when you log into your YouTube account. It comes with a powerful set of features to help you optimize your videos and keep your audiences engaged. It’s definitely worth checking out, and you can start using it for free.

Summary

I hope this list gave you some useful tools and tactics you can implement in your business.

Do you have any marketing tools to add to this list? Feel free to write your thoughts and ideas in the comments below.

 

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