Your cart is currently empty!
Author: Franz Malten Buemann
-
How to Distribute Your Content Effectively
Oftentimes, content creation is such a complex process that marketers breathe a sigh of relief when they press publish, thinking the job is done. In reality, that’s when the real work just begins. For the content to take off, deliver results, and contribute to more brand awareness, you have to promote and amplify it. In…
The post How to Distribute Your Content Effectively appeared first on Benchmark Email. -
Where do you search for new marketing ideas?
It is obvious that somewhere on the internet, but what are the resources/websites? I am particularly interested in PPC, remarketing, and email marketing. submitted by /u/personaje_me [link] [comments]
-
The Only Guide You’ll Ever Need For Content Creation
Content is a cornerstone of effective marketing. And when you combine your content marketing efforts with the utility of marketing automation, a lot of good things can happen. But, before you go creating content without any real idea of how it matters or where to use it, think about your customers and your ideal audience. The better you know…
The post The Only Guide You’ll Ever Need For Content Creation appeared first on Benchmark Email. -
Using Buffer to Grow a Paid Newsletter’s Traffic by 2.5x
Dave grew his newsletter traffic by 2.5x using one simple (and fast) tactic. Here’s how. 👇Dave Anderson is a senior technology leader with a diverse background. He spent 12 years at Amazon, leading organizations as a general manager and technology director. Then he became CTO at Bezos Academy, a non-profit organization founded by Jeff Bezos. After leaving Bezos Academy, he decided to start a paid newsletter focused on career development, organization design, and hiring. He wanted to see if he could create a source of revenue through a combination of subscriptions and corporate training services.One of the biggest challenges Dave’s newsletter faced was the growing his subscriber list. He knew posting consistently on social media could help but struggled with the time-consuming nature of social media management. In order to grow his business, it was necessary to continually engage with followers on LinkedIn and Twitter, but Dave found it difficult to allocate time for this task on a daily basis. He wanted to invest as little time as possible to get the most value, and was constantly searching for ways to optimize his time.“I want to invest as little as possible to get 80% of the value. I’m not trying to grow my business as much as possible, but I’m also not retired. So I’m constantly searching for ways to optimize how I spend my time, and stop doing things which don’t appear to give me a lot of value.”To help, Dave turned to Buffer, a social media scheduling tool, to queue up posts and streamline the process. By using Buffer, he was able to sit down and write all his social media content in one sitting, rather than having to spend time on it throughout the day and week. This allowed him to treat social media writing more like article writing, where he could sit down weekly or even monthly, spend a few hours writing, and then not think about social media for awhile.The decision to use Buffer was not without its challenges. Initially Dave was hesitant to pay for a service, and searched for a free alternative. However, he ultimately realized that the paid features and flexibility of Buffer were worth the investment, and that just a couple of new newsletter subscriptions would cover the cost of the recurring fees. Dave signed up for Buffer and has not looked back since.How Dave grew his audienceSince implementing Buffer, Dave has been able to more effectively manage his social media presence and grow his business through increased visibility on LinkedIn and Twitter. He has found it to be one of his best business decisions, and continues to use it as a key tool in his work.“I have a daily posting schedule for Twitter and LinkedIn. My goal is to ensure that my queue of upcoming posts is never empty. I keep an eye on how many upcoming posts I have queued up (at this moment, exactly 34 days), to ensure that I sit down and write more posts before I run low.”His process with Buffer is fairly simple. Here’s Dave describing it in his own words.“When my queued posts are running low, or I feel particularly inspired to write, I’ll sit down with Buffer open. I use the Calendar view, and create a new post.I’ll often open up my newsletter article archive, and pull up a large number of my articles.I’ll read through those articles, and pull out insights. Each insight becomes a Buffer post. I’ll make the post approximately a tweet length, and put a link to my article (usually).Once written, I add it to my queue, and keep reading and writing new posts.When I’m done for the day, I’ll go into the settings for each channel (LinkedIn and Twitter), and hit the “Shuffle queue” button.This randomizes the order of my social media posts, so that I don’t have to worry about being stuck on the same topic for days in a row.”Here’s a breakdown of Dave’s process: Open Buffer in the Caledar view and create a new post Open up his newsletter article archive and pull up articles Read through his articles and pull out insights Turn each insight into a Buffer post and link back to his article Add the posts to his queue Repeat with the rest of his articles Once he’s through all of his articles, he hits “Shuffle queue” (in the settings for each of his connected channels) to randomize the order of his social posts And that’s it! In addition to Buffer, Dave also uses Ghost, an open-source platform for writing his newsletter, and Obsidian for taking notes on coaching engagements, writing draft articles, and organizing his thoughts on new business ideas.The 2.5x improvementDave’s results are impressive. Implementing Buffer led to significant growth on LinkedIn and Twitter.Both LinkedIn and Twitter have been growing significantly faster than they were before Dave started using Buffer. In fact, site traffic from social media has gone from 19 percent pre-Buffer to a whopping 46 percent post-Buffer—a 2.5x increase.Dave’s performance on LinkedIn over time (he started using Buffer in early October)But it’s not just social media that’s benefited from Buffer. Dave’s newsletter has continued to grow at an impressive rate of over 10 percent per month, and it’s likely that the increased visibility on social media has played a role in that growth. Here’s Dave’s stats (which he shared in his brilliant round-up blog): Pre-Buffer, 19% of traffic came from social media,Post-Buffer, 46% of traffic came from social media.Pre-Buffer, ~100% of my social media traffic was from LinkedIn,Post-Buffer, 90% LinkedIn, 10% Twitter.One more output metric from Dave: I had around 10,000 LinkedIn followers a year ago, and I’m now north of 27,000. I had ~350 Twitter followers a year ago, and now I passed 2,700.My LinkedIn and Twitter engagement has drastically increased because I’m posting regularly. I’m posting regularly because the process has been simplified with Buffer.All in all, we’d say that implementing Buffer has been a pretty great decision for Dave’s business. So, if you’re struggling to manage your social media presence and want to free up some time to focus on other things, it might be worth giving Buffer a try.
-
AdSense Loading Method
submitted by /u/KKJA102 [link] [comments]
-
Reklam Sektörü ve Yapay Zeka – Ted Innovation
submitted by /u/tedinnovation [link] [comments]
-
Population and big innovations
It’s tempting to embrace the meme that the best way for humans to solve the big problems in front of us is to increase the population, perhaps dramatically. The thinking goes that people are the ones who can solve problems, and more people give us more problem-solvers.
This doesn’t hold up to a reductio ad absurdum analysis: clearly, a population of 10 people isn’t as good at solving problems as one with a billion, but at the same time, if there were a trillion people on Earth, that wouldn’t last long. There must be a number that’s optimal, but it’s probably not the biggest number we can possibly create.
And reviewing the data on Nobel prizes per capita, or patents per capita, we see that there isn’t a correlation between population density and productive breakthrough innovation. It looks like innovations are more likely the result of a civil society, sufficient resources, enough productivity to enable spending on R&D and a culture of research and engineering.
We also see geographic hotbeds of innovation over time (physics in Germany a hundred years ago, or network innovations in Silicon Valley a decade ago) that are the result of information exchange and cultural expectations, not population density.
We don’t get these results by stretching the carrying capacity of our one and only planet. We can’t shrink our way to possibility, but we probably can’t get there via exponential expansion either.
-
Just launched a new marketing automation software. Need help testing to see what we can improve for marketing and sales teams (link below)
It’s been in the works for the last couple of months. We wanted to work on an affordable marketing automation software for small and midsized companies. I would be glad if you could give me some reviews simply by responding to this thread. Access the automation software via https://monkeypesa.com/automation submitted by /u/ntendek1 [link] [comments]
-
5 Steps to Deliver an Awesome Salesforce Demo
Have you ever seen somebody give a demonstration and walk away amazed? We’ve all been there, and we can all judge whether the demo was a success or not, but it’s harder to pin down exactly what the factors were that gave the demo that… Read More
-
Salesforce Low-Code Security Risks in 2023
When the Clouds emerged as a new way to avoid upfront hardware costs and rapidly adjust resources to meet fluctuating demands, the assumption was that security would be the same as traditional software and networking. We quickly realized that cloud security wasn’t going to be… Read More