Tag Archives: tips and tricks

Infographic: Famous Gators

The post Infographic: Famous Gators appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . When it comes to gators that are in the public eye, it turns out that Snappy is in some pretty good company.  From video games, comic books, cartoons and more; turns out, there’s quite a few well-known gators out there.  Enjoy our new infographic, Famous Gators: web hosting Continue reading

Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost, vps | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A Beginner’s Guide to Using Psychographics to Improve Your Marketing Efforts

The post A Beginner’s Guide to Using Psychographics to Improve Your Marketing Efforts appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . In marketing practice, buzzwords are as ubiquitous as copy. Some come, and some go, but the ones that stay are of far-reaching, intrinsic value that better your efforts and customer satisfaction in some way. With this in mind, it’s a fair bet that psychographics are about to demonstrate some impressive longevity. Through a more comprehensive understanding of what drives customer actions, using research and analytics to fuel the endeavor, your materials and distribution can see greater permeation than ever before.   What They Are Despite the curious title, psychographics are not as bewildering as their name might imply, and understanding their nature, use, and acquisition can breed a great deal of success in marketing efforts. At their core, psychographics are profiles of individuals that focus on lifestyle, habits, and tendencies, reaching beyond traditional demographic information and seeking more valuable data from user behavior. For a better understanding of exactly what comprises one of these profiles, let’s look at a hypothetical user and see what we can learn from them. We’ll begin with John, a 32-year old office worker from Los Angeles, California. For the sake of thoroughness, let’s assume that he’s married with two children, has an income of approximately $60K per year, and owns his own home. While all of this information has some kind of use, it doesn’t tell us much about him outside of raw data. What we want is information about interests and habits in order to better understand his motivations. A look at John’s Facebook page shows likes on pages related to fantasy football and an application that tracks player injury status. His Twitter page shows pictures of his family in a snowy location, holding ski poles and wearing goggles. Each of these social channels has some kind of activity, but a look at his Google+ page shows that most of his time is spent there. What we have now is a wealth of information regarding John. He lives in Los Angeles and probably commutes. He enjoys fantasy football and skiing. He has a wife and two kids, all of whom are also active and athletic. He spends most of his time on Google+, and is young enough that he probably uses multiple devices to access information on the Internet through various media channels.   How They Work The power of this profile is manifold. As marketers and business owners, you want to understand where to put what information and when, so that the right people see the right things and think better of your brand or purchase product. To this end, John’s psychographic is a boon to our work. First of all, as a working commuter with multiple channels of access, we have a better understanding of John’s browsing habits. He likely checks social networks and news channels in the morning and at night, before and after work, possibly stopping during the day to check his mobile phone during breaks. He uses Facebook and Twitter but is mostly found on Google+. Therefore, assuming John is the type of customer we want to recruit, our marketing is best published across multiple social networking channels, preferably Google+, during the morning (before 8 AM), afternoon (around lunch time), and evening (after 5 PM). But logistics aren’t the only use of psychographics. A better understanding of user behavior gives us the added benefit of what kind of content should be published. As we noted, John likes to travel, ski, and play fantasy football. In terms of sales deals, airlines could offer discount tickets around wintertime, restaurants can offer deals for customers with a valid lift ticket, and sports magazines can offer price cuts on subscriptions around fantasy draft season. In terms of content, a travel magazine could create a review of the best ski slopes in Colorado, a sports website could offer insider information on sleeper picks, and an eCards website could offer templates for email postcards incorporating winter sports. The incredible thing is, all of this came from a better understanding of customer behavior. Multiple industries, multiple businesses, and multiple aspects of marketing all arose from discerning the interests and habits of a target customer. With this kind of information available from only a judicious application of research, the last question that remains is how to obtain it.   How to Get Them Start by leveraging the information you already have. Website analytics, past purchases, and social networking activity provide a sort of “back end” approach to customer research. Pay attention to what articles or offers performed well, what channel has seen the most success, and what kind of engagement your current topics are seeing. By looking at past successes and drawing some ideas from them, you can save money and build a decent bank of knowledge. But customer behavior isn’t limited to online engagement. A thorough understanding of user interests and habits requires a great deal more insight; insight straight from the source. Customer surveys are a good place to start since they offer a large sample size. The key is to ask the right questions, looking specifically for behavior and interests, offering the chance for open-ended answers where applicable. In your approach, be honest about your intent. Personal information is more guarded than ever in an increasingly privacy-aware society, but explaining your intent is an excellent way of disarming respondents through trust. Furthermore, most customers are more than happy to share this kind of information if it improves the relevance of information and product offerings. Reinforce this broad-base data collection with customer interviews and focus groups. By inviting customers to meet or offering to converse with them over the phone, you’re providing an opportunity to ask responsive questions and delve further into fruitful areas, instead of relying on rote questionnaires. In addition, putting a human face on your efforts (and including refreshments if the meetings happen in person) is an excellent way to show customers that you care, increase engagement, and build relationships in the process. Between these methods of research and an intelligent understanding of the worth of the data obtained, your business stands to expand its reach and its relevancy through psychographics. Focus on the characteristic behaviors, habits, and methods of communication that drive customers’ day-to-day lives and use that information to better craft content and logistics of publication. With an open ear and an aim toward seeing people instead of numbers, your content, relationships, and bottom-line, will all benefit. Register a cheap domain name at HostGator.com Continue reading

Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost, vps | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A Pocket Guide to Small Business Content Marketing

The post A Pocket Guide to Small Business Content Marketing appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . Marketing is a fickle animal. The multi-headed hydra of analytics, theory, and outright instincts leverages our understanding of human perception to the betterment of brand perception. With an explanation like this, it’s easy to understand why copious, dense volumes of information and thousands of pages of research exist to help explain the science of crafting sentiment and currying favor. But as a small business, you probably don’t have time for this kind of in-depth reading. You need answers that will positively affect your business and you need them now. With content marketing demonstrating its potency as one of the most effective methods of appealing to customers, here’s a quick reference that should get you marketing faster than you can say “multi-platform brand identity integration”.   Know Your Value Content marketing is, at its core, the delivery of your unique value in multiple formats in order to dynamically engage customers and shape brand perception. The linchpin of any good content marketing strategy involves understanding what you have to offer; what you give to your customers that no one else can. If you haven’t identified this yet, the process is actually quite simple. For B2B businesses, your value likely lies in your authority as a center of knowledge and know-how to your industry. For B2C businesses, your value lives-and-dies with your ability to fulfill a particular lifestyle that resonates with your customer base. If you feel that you don’t, at present, offer a significant value in either of these sectors, do some research and look for space in the market to fill with your expertise or unique identity.   Know Who You’re Writing For Once you have this value established, you’re ready to take the first steps in creating content. But before you begin, it’s important to understand how content marketing works. The act of putting out valuable information or photos that enshrine some lifestyle or ideology engages customers based on fulfillment of their wishes. The key is to deliver the value you identified initially to your customers in real and tangible ways. To this end, it is essential to always remember who you are creating for: the customer. For a B2B business, self-aggrandizing posts or rote description of your current practices focuses far too heavily on yourself. Try branching out by offering industry insight and case studies on successful members of the industry community. For a B2C business, any content you release that doesn’t somehow enable the lifestyle you prescribe is wasted space. For clothiers, for example, effective content marketing may include style showcases incorporating your pieces alongside items from other retailers. Doing so not only enables the creativity of your customers, but demonstrates your desire to help them, not simply push product.   Format Matters Now that you understand what your content should contain, the next step is understanding how to express it. For many, it may be tempting to simply start a blog and push helpful and knowledgeable pieces of information or fun posts about trends and news. Unfortunately, while all of this may be enjoyable to write, or even engaging to view, the Internet reader is extremely fickle, distracted, and picky. Knowing how to play the game is vital to making good content stick. A simple rule of thumb can help guide your decision: video and photos rule. This rule is comprised of two facts. The first is that video has an  immense impact on sales , driving engagement and fueling customer sentiment due to its digestible format and capacity for expression. The second is that photos, both by themselves and used in tandem with text pieces, resonate. Since browsing eyes tend to skim, photos offer a quick infusion of communication that can rapidly lead to engagement. In fact, photos receive  53% more Likes, 104% more comments, and 84% more click-throughs  than any other format, both by themselves and as a hook for a text post with the link in the caption.   Building Volume The bustling din of the Internet poses a real challenge for businesses trying to make their voice heard. Creating unique content with specific promised and fulfilled value are a start, but the visibility is not simply determined by quality. To a large degree, what determines the visibility of items on the Internet is a sort of game. When someone types something into Google, results are returned based on a number of factors, including popularity, number of inbound links, and relevance based on keywords on the page. Blogs and YouTube channels function through organic traffic, which comes from search queries that ping terms contained therein. In order to appear in the top part of Google’s page rankings, blogs and YouTube channels must build a sufficient volume of content, reinforced by strong keywords, so that the search engine values them as relevant. The topics of search engine optimization and search algorithms could span volumes. For the sake of your endeavor simply understand that building a following for your business blog or video content takes time. Constructing a volume of work sufficient to garner organic traffic is the name of the game so keep chugging away with this in mind.   Understanding Metrics Finally, once all of your hard work is out in the universe, it’s essential to identify hits, busts, areas for improvement, and so on in order to tailor more successful content in the future. The problem is that most analytics don’t offer the kind of insight we think they do. In general, site traffic and specific page views are seen as the holy grails of metrics, but knowing the value of other, more nuanced statistics can steer your ship to greater effect. For the sake of brevity, we’ll highlight three particular metrics of note: bounce rate, average time spent on page, and click-through rate. Bounce rate is a percentage that indicates what fraction of total visitors to a particular page viewed the content and then immediately left the site. You want this metric as low as possible, since consequent visits to other parts of your site means that your content was engaging enough to inspire further exploration. Average time spent on page is pretty self-explanatory, demonstrating whether or not visitors actually viewed the content or simply made a snap decision based on an element they didn’t like and left. Finally, click-through rate relates to your requests that customers check out product information, subscribe to your YouTube channel and so on. In order to encourage engagement, good content should inspire action, and this metric demonstrates whether or not that call was heeded. And that, as they say, is that. Content marketing’s capabilities are astounding, provided that the concept is leveraged correctly. Identifying your unique value and delivering it to customers will help build your image as an involved, human, resource. Using attractive formats can help motivate content views while building a volume of work will help drive organic traffic. Finally, understanding the value of particular metrics will help formulate strategies more effectively moving forward. While more in-depth resources exist that help enlighten the concept further, knowing even the basic framework of content marketing can get your efforts moving and your business growing in dynamic and exciting new ways. Register a cheap domain name at HostGator.com Continue reading

Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost, vps | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

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

Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost, vps | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The 101 Guide to Data-Driven Design

The post The 101 Guide to Data-Driven Design appeared first on HostGator Web Hosting Blog | Gator Crossing . The web is constantly changing. It isn’t magic; there are thousands, if not millions, of individuals out there who continue to work on their website until it’s reached “optimization”. It either has something to do with the culture of innovation, motivating even good solutions to always push forward, or it’s related to the accessibility of websites and the fact that changing one line of code takes less time than a drink of a cup of coffee. But intrinsic to tech culture is the desire to move forward the right way. There’s improvement for improvement’s sake and then there’s clear, defined, intelligent design decisions that make a product, and a business, better. This, again, is not magic. It’s a matter of understanding your data and applying it, intelligently, for the betterment of product and consumer understanding.   The Concept This is what the industry likes to call “data-driven design”. The idea is that numerical and non-numerical information can be used to change the configuration of a product or website in order to improve sales conversion and revenue. Does it work? The short answer is yes. According to Extractable,  71%  of businesses surveyed experienced site improvements from the use of data and data-driven design. This is, obviously, fairly compelling evidence. The problem is that people are utilizing the wrong data. 66% tracked impressions, which indicate traffic, but not intent. 46% track time on site, which suggests engagement, but in a very loose way. Are customers sticking around because they’re interested, or because they can’t find what they want? So what are businesses doing wrong? According to web authority  Smashing Magazine , marketers and web designers need to understand the core of data-driven design in order to reap its very real potential.   Be Specific There are two types of data at work. Quantitative, which includes numerical data, demonstrating the “who, what, when, and where”, and qualitative, which includes all non-numerical data that demonstrates the “why or how”. Data is collected in multiple ways, quantitative from platforms like Google Analytics and qualitative from user testing and surveys, but understanding what data delivers value requires a little focus. As attractive as all metrics are, and as tempting as it may be to draw conclusions from them, if only to give your efforts direction, good data is both empirical and specific. Empirical data refers to any gathered through observation or experimentation. This means that what was gathered came from a purposeful effort. “Specific” data means that it is isolated to a particular page, piece, or idea. This is because each page, subpage, type of content, and call-to-action has a specific goal in mind. A high bounce rate on a page may seem bad, but when you realize that it’s intended to direct people to a vendor or sponsor, suddenly that looks pretty good. The key is to look at each page, understand its intent and purpose, and focus on relevant metrics in order to determine whether or not the goal was achieved. The reason this approach is valuable is because, unlike aggregate data, specific data guides action. If a page fails to achieve a particular goal, then it’s time to do some user testing. This is where qualitative data comes in. Focus groups, surveys, and comments allow you to determine why a page didn’t hit its target and make smart design decisions as a result.   An Example Some of this may not be so simple, so let’s take a look at a hypothetical that should help clarify things. In this scenario, we’ll examine the website of a cleaning service business who encourages appointment bookings through an online form. In addition, the site has a blog where it publishes cleaning tips, and a page full of cleaning product recommendations. Each page has a specific goal. For the appointments page, we want form completions, a relatively low “time on page” metric, and, a mid-range bounce rate. This is because new customers will hopefully check out their more informative content, while returning customers will likely just book an appointment and leave. On the blog, we want a low bounce rate, due to the fact that our content is intended to convert viewers into customers, and a decent “time on page” metric to indicate that our content is being read. Finally, the product page should see a high bounce rate as customers stop by and then head out to Amazon to purchase our recommendations. Each of their metrics appears to be okay, except two. The “time on page” metric on their appointments page is high and their form completion rate is low. It’s easy to assume that this means that people are getting frustrated with the form and leaving, but jumping on this assumption would be to ignore the qualitative aspect of the approach. They take the time to do some focus testing, interviewing current customers and brand new customers, and discover that many of the fields on the form are irrelevant or the information is hard to attain. They change accordingly and with this change, the time drops, but not too low, and the form completion rate rises, reinforced by follow-up interviews that indicate that customers are much happier with the new configuration. Diligently applying both human and analytical insights in order to improve products, websites , and services is an intelligent way to advance your business. Understanding that both qualitative and quantitative data play a part and using them in tandem will help make the most out of your approach. Be specific in what you measure and always back up design choices with data of both kinds. The combination will not only solve some headaches from an organizational standpoint, but quickly clear up customers’ pain points as well, meaning more revenue and a better relationship with the people who keep you in business. Register a cheap domain name at HostGator.com Continue reading

Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost, vps | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment