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Tag Archives: events
7 Essential Components of an Unforgettable Blog Post
The post 7 Essential Components of an Unforgettable Blog Post appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . Everyone loves a party trick; those quirky little displays of skill that captivate us momentarily. But in the challenging world of online marketing, the clever, or “viral” rarely have much longevity to show for their efforts. Being memorable doesn’t take tricks, only a judicious application of some writing acumen, human psychology, and a pinch of humanity. In this post, we’re outlining seven essential components of an unforgettable blog post. A Goal If your writing doesn’t accomplish something, then it won’t have an impact. Flowery language and eloquent phrasing can drive a point home, but only if there’s a point to communicate. Determine what action you hope to inspire from your readers, and what value you’ll deliver to inspire that action, and better copy will flow from that focus. A Narrative Talking points, abstract or backed by concrete evidence, resonate with readers better when presented in a story. At our core, we are hardwired to respond to stories , more easily constructing meaning and drawing conclusions from information presented with a coherent narrative. Tap into that side of human nature, take the reader on a journey, and let your goal plan the route. A Hook The brain won’t venture down the path you’ve laid without a little gas in the tank, and it’s your responsibility to provide the fuel. A strong opening statement that promises value and piques interest will provide the motivation needed to keep readers following the story. Your writing is like a novel on a smaller scale: the length of a book seems much greater when the opening paragraphs fail to grab your attention. A Promise Internet readers visit websites for answers, and writing that fails to promise just that will see the digital waste bin before it even has a chance to impress. Be matter of fact about what you’re offering. “12 Tips to Make You a Better Salesperson” will see a great deal more views than “Ways to Try and Improve Your Sales Pitch”, because the latter makes no promise that the information presented will be of value. Structure Beneath the magic of every home run blog post are strong writing fundamentals. This includes, and relies upon, a strong structure to break complex information into understandable chunks. To this end, bulleted and numbered lists are particularly beneficial when conveying your point, as both formats clearly define the substance of the piece and enable scanning. Flow But good writing isn’t comprised of rote recitation. Memorable pieces don’t permit the mental downtime that leads to distractions and, consequently, failed conversions. Connect each section of your piece with elegant transitions that keep interests piqued and tie separate points seamlessly to one another. Next to boring copy, nothing turns readers off like a jarring transition, and attention is a precious commodity. Voice In order to obtain “unforgettable” status, you’ll need to be, ipso facto, memorable. As a business blog, one of the most powerful ways to achieve this is through voice . Your writing should lend a human face to your business and letting your idiosyncrasies shine through is an excellent way to prove that you’re a human being, writing a post for other human beings. Don’t be afraid to let your personality show and remember the value of a little integrity. With a tidal wave of content hitting readers’ eyes every day, standing out is a worthwhile goal. The backbone of an unforgettable post is solid writing and an understanding of reader needs and attention spans. Follow that up with quality writing and a little expression, and your next post can be, as we promised, unforgettable. After all, the top performers in any field aren’t the thrive on novelty, they’re the ones with the strongest fundamentals and a dash of personal flare. web hosting Continue reading
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Infographic: Digital Tech Triumphs
The post Infographic: Digital Tech Triumphs appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . We’ve come a long way, from Super Nintendo to Google Glass, in a short amount of time. Who remembers before everyone had cell phones in their pockets, that they had pagers clipped on their belts? Before iPods, there was the Walkman. Before compact disks, the mighty 8-track tape. TEchnology is moving so quickly, that if you blink you could miss an entire generation of communication or portable music device. The following infographic outlines the highlights of technological triumphs in recent history: Digital Tech Triumphs via HostGator Register a cheap domain name at HostGator.com Continue reading
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8 New Year’s Marketing and Web Design Resolutions For 2014
The post 8 New Year’s Marketing and Web Design Resolutions For 2014 appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . For many, New Year’s means a new start; a chance to make things even better than the year before. But your body and your mentality aren’t the only things that can benefit from this outlook. Around the world, businesses are looking for opportunities to shape up and ring in the New Year with positive change, and setting the right resolutions can mean big returns in 2014. Here are eight ways to usher in a New Year, and new potential, for your business. Know Your Goals Success on the Internet is a nebulous thing. For some, it’s 5 million YouTube hits that ultimately translate into no material gain or following. For others, it’s understanding the aims of your content and website and gearing efforts toward fulfilling analytics that indicate success. The latter are the ones you should listen to. Google Analytics, Facebook likes, Twitter retweets, and myriad other Internet kudos can give the impression of accomplishment, but without knowing what your ultimate aim is, little will come of these digital atta-boys. If your goal is retention, focus on the percentage of new visitors versus returning visitors. If engaging content is your goal, focus on bounce rate and time spent on page. Know what you want and watch your barometers to determine whether it’s happening instead of chasing vanity metrics to nowhere. Produce Content Welcome to the new world order. The marketing wisdom of the past simply does not cut it anymore. New users, bombarded by information and cheap sales pitches every day, are becoming wise to the tactics of salesmen and want something more substantial from their brands and their browsing. What do they want in their place? Content . This means informative articles, slideshows, presentations, and infographics that enrich their lives and demonstrate an understanding of their needs in a real way. With more businesses adopting this innovative new strategy every day, it’s clear that content is here to stay, so plan on engaging your customers and leveraging your know-how to great effect. Build User Profiles These same users demanding greater value from the firms that supply their needs are doing so with increasingly high standards for personalization. With social networking, news feeds, and browsing experiences tailored to individual needs, it’s no wonder why customers are driving this paradigm shift. But while you can’t cater to the highly specific whims of every member of your consumer base, you can develop an understanding of their personalities. Intelligent businesses are creating buyer personas that drill down to the circumstances, interests, and mentality of the types of users that frequent their site in order to help fulfill their specific needs. This not only helps guide content, but also can shed light on why particular products, methods, and sentiments are, or are not, increasing sales. Go Multi-Channel The modern customer sees the world through a multitude of lenses. Tablets, mobile phones, television, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest are just a few of the channels through which content is delivered. Behind us is an era when a single ad spot on a prominent TV program meant sales and here is a greater challenge: grabbing the attention of the perpetually distracted. The solution, as it turns out, lies not in shining a spotlight on one piece or another, but in creating a coherent and intelligently tailored brand experience on all channels. Your organization should have profiles on all major social networks with content optimized for the particular platform. The aesthetic and messaging between them should be uniform in order to imbue the same sentiments consistently. Doing so builds brand perception and association by working with customer habits instead of against them. Tap Into Video With mobile phones, tablets, and even laptops connected to televisions, video has become more available than ever. But the medium’s potential isn’t fulfilled simply by its ubiquity. Showing your organization in motion quickly conveys information, emotion, and a human appeal. A well-crafted YouTube channel can house everything from product demonstrations to documentaries to quick, viral clips, presenting effective marketing without the arduous task of reading lines of text on a small screen. Furthermore, posting video enables comments, feedback, and video replies that get the conversation going and engage customers in the process. Be Responsive Tablets and mobile phones have been mentioned multiple times already, and for good reason. According to research, mobile Internet usage is surpassing desktop Internet usage as we speak. And while pinch-and-zoom browsing capabilities are available on phones, the more elegant approach to addressing mobile needs lies in responsive web design. Responsive web design uses media queries to determine the size of the browser viewing the page and adjusts the layout to optimize the experience on respective platforms. Why make the change? Simple. Mobile customers have a distinctly limited interface and form factor context that makes viewing of desktop sites difficult. By creating large-format text for easier reading, large navigation buttons for more accurate selection, and a layout optimized for vertical scrolling, customers are not only more likely to view content, but build a positive brand association in the process. Location, Location, Location As our understanding of mobile increases, the capabilities of mobile devices follow suit. Mobile applications have already put deals and product catalogs in user pockets, but the next wave in commercial innovation is being ushered in by location services. By implementing new technologies at brick-and-mortar stores, customers passing by or entering businesses can receive coupon codes and information about special deals. Not only does this take the bargain hunting out of their hands, it adds extra incentive for in-person and post-visit sales conversion. Offering the right deals remains your responsibility, but these new solutions will make distribution much easier. Focus on the Customer With evolving technologies, increasing demands, and new challenges for meeting consumers’ changing lives, it’s a buyer’s market. With the ubiquity of firms vying for attention (and money) and the ease with which customers can find other shops offering similar wares, the onus lies with you, the business owner, to fulfill their wishes. Savvy shoppers are no longer interested in cheap ploys for attention or sales, but instead want real deals, real communication, and a real relationship with the establishments they patronize. Above and throughout all things listed here, make the customer priority number 1, and rest assured that the New Year will be a happy one indeed. After hitting the gym and pledging to drink more water in 2014, focus on improving your business with a little know-how and elbow grease. Know what you wish to accomplish in the New Year and develop enriching content that helps facilitate those goals. Focus on your customer and know who they are and what they want. Tap into new technologies through responsive web design, location services, and video, and make your presence known everywhere that customer attention is directed. Much like a gym membership, it takes time to see results, so prioritize your business’ success and enjoy the dividends in turn. Register a cheap domain name at HostGator.com Continue reading
Bee Cave and The West Pole
The post Bee Cave and The West Pole appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . It’s been quite a while since we shared private conversations from our internal Instant Message conference rooms . It is often true that, as we diligently work throughout the day on our many initiates and projects, hilarity is often ensuing in the various conference rooms. This particular conversation was initiated by an employee in the Austin office innocently mentioning their desire for certain cookies that would necessitate a trip to Trader Joe’s in the neighboring town of Bee Cave, Texas. This resulted in the following conversation taking place. Before we proceed, for anyone unfamiliar, “TIL” is an acronym for “Today I learned”: (10:08:04 AM) Isaac: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_Cave,_Texas (10:08:11 AM) Isaac: TIL there is such a thing as a west pole (10:08:17 AM) Isaac: And it’s Bee Cave 0_o While just about everyone is familiar with the North and South Poles, none of us knew that there was such thing as a West Pole. However, the Wikipedia page does state: “In 2007, the Texas Legislature declared the West Pole of the Earth to be located in Bee Cave, TX.” (10:09:39 AM) Neil: TIL that the Texas Legislature is Science-illiterate. (10:11:38 AM) Austin: Um…Their logic is really off here: “As there are recognized and generally accepted North and South Poles on Planet Earth, there too must be East and West Poles.” …They are negating the Earth is three dimensions… (10:12:01 AM) Isaac: Austin, you and I both know it’s flat, cause Texas. (10:12:08 AM) Austin: ‘Merica (10:28:00 AM) Austin: Think there is a physical pole up yet? (10:28:29 AM) Davon: I think I’ll put one out there with an HG flag when I go out there for cookies. So far, so good, however things then got exceptionally weird when the actual piece of legislation was located: http://www.legis.state.tx.us/tlodocs/80R/billtext/pdf/HR02933F.pdf#navpanes=0 Adopted by the House of Representatives on May 28th, 2007, this legislation states that Texas has all of the following (and we’re not even joking, please go read the exact text at the above link): bluer skies, redder sunsets, faster horses, more unique animals, the most beautiful wildflowers, fatter deer, oranger longhorns, more beautiful women, smarter children, and kinder men. Now, as Texans we most certainly love our great state of Texas, but how is it even remotely possible to put some of these grandiose claims into an actual piece of legislation? For example: (10:31:30 AM) Muntek: Rofl, oranger longhorns (10:32:18 AM) Isaac: Wow (10:32:24 AM) Isaac: Just reading the first paragraph (10:33:17 AM) Davon: So I can literally say, I’m gonna have to drive to the West Pole for cookies. And drive to the West Pole for cookies, he did. Register a cheap domain name at HostGator.com Continue reading
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How to Write Irresistible Email Subject Lines
The post How to Write Irresistible Email Subject Lines appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . Everyone remembers the class clown. The guy who happened to be just loud enough to be heard. The problem is, no one remembers his jokes. What they remember his how annoying he became when his jokes failed to land. In an odd way, email follows the same trend. Powerful information has its place, but presenting it in an abrasive fashion is more likely to turn readers off than encourage future views. The secret lies in the mind of the reader and your responsibility in crafting headlines that baby their short attention spans. The Tired Reader In order to effectively address email customers, it’s important to first understand their plight. There are a lot of businesses, people, applications, events, and products, all vying for customer attention every day. Between pop-up messages, brightly colored ads, Facebook notifications, text messages, tweets, and, yes, emails, it’s a wonder that consumers have any time to sleep. Users are tired, burned out, and jaded. This, however, does not mean that they aren’t paying attention. What it does mean, is that users have their own way of processing all of the information. Instead of vetting each individual piece (as you hope they would), the focus is on quick judgments based on surface characteristics. For websites, this means ignoring unattractive designs. For companies, this means ignoring those with poor reviews. And for email marketers, this means rapidly determining whether the information presented is informative, timely, and of trustworthy origin. Reaching customers is no longer a matter of having the biggest megaphone. Those who used to run TV ads now have to compete with equally visible local search results, and customers are getting smarter in sorting the signal from the noise. Cheap Tricks The first thing to fall in this process of discernment is the cheap trick. Before email communications were readily available and messages flooded consumer inboxes, marketers, scammers, and relatives could get away with all-caps subject lines adorned with lots of question marks. Cheap ploys for attention, such as purposely vague headlines and humorous email addresses have taken a hit, and for good reason. The underlying motive behind users’ quick identification methods is a search for use and trust. With email phishing and Nigerian Prince-esque scams invading inboxes daily, humorous email addresses look fishy and trigger alarm bells. Even if your registered address is clever and legitimate, the quick reaction of a viewer will be to hit the delete key. De-sensitized by fluorescent banner ads and over-the-top declarations have trained users to ignore these “too good to be true” offers and obnoxious practices. Finally, as mentioned, users wish to sort the wheat from the chaff quickly, and headlines that intrigue, but require investigation, are likely to get the boot. With poor practices falling in quick succession, what is left for a marketer to do? Obviously the task of grabbing a reader’s eye and communicating your message gets no less challenging each day, so something has to work. The key, as it turns out, lies in leveling with your subscribers, and relating your information effectively and honestly. Leaning on Data In order to determine best practices, we turn to a comprehensive study conducted by prolific email service MailChimp. Their work, analyzing over 200 million emails , ranging in open-rate (percentage of recipients that opened the message) from 93% to 0.5%, sheds light on some fascinating trends that can greatly benefit your email marketing efforts. Three trends from this study stick out in particular: the importance of subject length, the failure of solicitation, and the value of “telling over selling”. The subject length followed a rather coherent and consistent trend. Subject lines of over 50 characters result in considerably lower open rates than those within this threshold. Again, the focus is on quick judgments, and offering a lengthy read in the first line of an email is a great way to turn people off. Next, asking for help or pandering sales is as unattractive as it is ineffective, and proven methods exist that will greatly improve reader satisfaction. Requests for donations, pleas for word of mouth, and the aforementioned vague ploy for attention, all reduce open rates to dismal levels. In their place, MailChimp suggests offering timely, relevant, information plainly and simply, with a little emotional appeal if appropriate. For subscribers to a clothier’s email marketing, for example, an appropriate subject line may be “Summer’s Hottest Looks Available Now”. The line lets customers know what is inside, provides an emotional appeal, and establishes some immediacy that encourages a look. Ultimately, the study reveals the importance of a tidy little axiom: “tell, don’t sell”. Readers are tired of the constant pull of desperate marketers and simply want information. That’s not to say that your email design shouldn’t be attractive, but getting viewers into the message itself takes some focused delivery. Provide information, set reasonable expectations, and then fulfill those. Don’t promise what you can’t fulfill and never treat customers like they’re stupid. Writing great subject lines is not only easy, it’s simple. Understanding the challenges facing tired consumers and the tendency to make snap decisions greatly simplifies the picture and guides your efforts. Avoid cheap attempts at attention and stay away from promotional offers or lengthy subject lines. Instead, deliver plain information honestly and effectively. It may be challenging at first, but you’ll save a boatload on your exclamation point budget. Register a cheap domain name at HostGator.com Continue reading
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