Posts archived in Marketing

nashville

Signal is partnering with the Society for Marketing Professional Services to create promotional materials for their upcoming regional conference in Music City, USA – Nashville, Tennessee.

The conference is March 24-26 at the Doubletree Hotel in downtown Nashville.  The conference will bring together marketing professionals from service businesses in the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee.  There will be many opportunities to learn the latest techniques in service marketing, including branding, social media marketing, and winning the pitch.

Signal will also be attending the conference.  We’re excited to be attending sessions, manning our booth, and giving out fabulous door prizes.

Come on down!

Everybody loves online video. Incorporating video into your web site can enhance the user experience and increase the rate of visitors turned into customers, but did you realize how dramatically the presence of video content could increase your exposure in Google?

Google has pioneered the principle of “blended search,” or “universal search,” which means that search results from a variety of content categories – including video, news, images, shopping results and more – are brought together on a results page in an attempt to bring the user the most relevant possible matches.

A search for something like “landscaping” in Google will return not only regular web pages, but also images of landscaping ideas, local business listings pinpointed on a map, related news articles and more.

If you search for something more specific like “growing a pumpkin patch” videos will appear as thumbnails directly in the results page. See how it stands out on a results page otherwise dominated by your basic blue links and black preview text.

Blended Search Results

Although it is possible to earn a thumbnail spot like this from any online video service, you’re likely to see better results if you host your videos on YouTube. Google tends to rank YouTube videos more favorably over Hulu, Metacafe, etc. Google also tends to favorably rank web pages with embedded video content. Notice the top results for our search for “landscaping” all have embedded video content on their page.

Signal has found excellent results from adding and optimizing online video for numerous clients. YouTube specifically outperforms the rest. It’s easy to use, it offers cool ways to embed and share your videos online, and it greatly amplifies your chances of being found by web searchers. Not too shabby a deal.

By John Gibson, VP Creative Services

Twitter is a great resource for companies to further market themselves, post company news, drive traffic to their web site and much more. Although tweets are typically viewed as simple text messages, there’s opportunity to create a memorable Twitter landing page that can tie in with an existing web site design or corporate standards.

Backgrounds
Twitter allows you to customize the look of a Twitter homepage by either selecting a provided theme or uploading a custom background image. The latter option gives you the ability to make the Twitter homepage communicate a company’s brand identity, culture or graphic style.

But Twitter backgrounds are a tricky canvas for designing on, because the entire central area of the page will be taken up by Twitter content. In effect, you’re only designing around the edges of the page. The Twitter content area floats on top of the background and remains centered at a width of 763 pixels. In the case of a smaller monitor, the content area could cover up a rather large percent of the background. The most failsafe practice is to create a layout that covers a 1920 x 1200 pixel area. This will accommodate most screen sizes and the design will appear seamless. You also have the ability to tile a smaller background image. Don’t forget that visitors are there for the purpose of sorting and reading the content that dominates the page, so make sure the background is not so loud and distracting that it competes for attention.

One good practice is to work in a company logo, mission statement and contact info into the left side of the background image. See sample below. Bear in mind that these elements could be covered up or cropped when the page is viewed on smaller monitors.

Twitter background example

You can find more examples of creative and compelling Twitter backgrounds at the Smashing Magazine site.

Customizing Colors
Within the settings menu you are allowed to make some simple adjustments to change colors in the page layout. Twitter gives you the options to set colors for the background, text, links, sidebar and the sidebar border. This is helpful if you’re trying to match an existing web site, and you can also view these changes instantly.

Picture
The last item I would like to discuss is the personal picture, the thumbnail image that identifies a user on Twitter pages. This is another opportunity to get the corporate branding displayed. The picture image is always square, so make sure when uploading the image or logo that it’s in a square format. Otherwise, the corporate identity may be arbitrarily cropped. The maximum size is 700k and can be a jpg, gif or png file. If a complex or oddly proportioned logo doesn’t work when reduced down to this size and shape, use your judgment to find a tasteful solution — even if that means tweaking the prescribed corporate identity standards just a touch. You might zoom into or isolate a distinctive part of the logomark in a way that that works well and stands out in this format.

Got a Favorite?
We want to hear about your favorite Twitter profile backgrounds – send us a tweet! We’re @signalinc on Twitter.

By John Gibson, VP Creative Services

Often when designing a site I find myself spending a good deal of time organizing content and thinking through how the end user can best absorb the information displayed on a page. Recently many companies are beginning to include social media as another method for viewers to become engaged with their site and their company. This becomes another level of content that needs to be well planned before the site moves to the design phase. Below are a few important considerations.

Level of Presence
The first step is to determine which forms of social media the client wants to be involved in. For instance, do they want or have a Facebook, Twitter or YouTube page? Then you need to find out the degree to which this media will feature on their main site. Would they like a simple link or something more attention-getting? You also need to determine whether this needs to be integrated into the landing page or located within a news page.

Adding Social Media Icons
The easiest and most understated approach to show that a company is involved with social media is to include a simple link or icon to the site. This can be placed easily within in a footer or strategically within the main content. Each social media has its own distinctive icon available as a download. Many sites also offer a wide variety of free icon styles from buttons to hand-sketched looks. One good source for finding unique social media icons is Smashing Magazine.

Using Social Media Widgets
As discussed in a previous blog post, social media widgets provide an easy way for a web site to display a few lines of recent news, drive more site traffic and generate a higher level of awareness of their social media involvement. When including a widget within a site design, it’s important to know how much you can customize these small applications. For instance, can you change the size, background color, text color, etc. to fit your design. Some widgets are more customizable than others, which can help determine which style of widget to use or whether to include one at all. Take the time to show the client how it will appear on the site and what the widget can do. Each method of social media offers its own type of widgets and there’s also opportunity to use third party widgets.

For example: a YouTube Video Bar widget allows users to watch the selected video channels without leaving the site.

YouTube widget

Twitter offers a Profile widget that displays recent Twitter updates on the site.

Twitter Profile Widget

And Facebook offers a Fan Box widget which invites site visitors to become the company’s Facebook fans.

Facebook Fan Box Widget

One last thing to note as you begin the site design process is to be aware of and understand this growing form of communication. As designers we need to continually seek out fresh ways to incorporate this media into our layout and adapt our design to fit the customer’s social media needs.

Coming up next: Tips for Designing Twitter Pages

Companies all around are getting connected to the social media world. You may be on Twitter, or your might prefer Facebook, but the question is, do people know about your presence? It’s simple to take one more step and make it easy for your targeted customers to find all of your social media connections using widgets.

What are widgets? They’re cool, customizable mini-applications that can be embedded directly into to a web page, bringing live feeds, games and user specific information to your visitors. Popular social media sites offer simple chunks of code you can insert on your site to create instant widgets.

For example, by adding a Facebook widget to your company’s site, you immediately have a visually attractive and customized entry point readily available for visitors to connect with you. Via your Facebook widget, visitors can see up-to-the-minute wall postings and become your fan with a click. And of course the widget links directly to your Facebook page.

There is a vast and growing range of widgets available. Below is an example showing how Signal has combined three widgets (including YouTube, Twitter and Facebook) on one “connect with us” page. Visit the Alma Lasers Connect page and see the widgets in action!

Alma_Connect

I read a good analogy of social media the other day, and I like to use it when I compare social media to traditional advertising. Think of it as if you were walking into a party. Traditional advertising would have you wearing a big sign saying, “I’m really great, you’ll like me, we should hang out,” etc.

Social media, on the other hand, is the more natural way to go about entering the party. You would meet people and engage in conversation, learning about them and telling them about yourself. Hopefully you find common ground and become friends. Then, maybe that person will tell their friends about you, and they’ll come up to you and start talking with you. Or maybe they’ll talk amongst themselves about you.

It all starts by building a relationship with a conversation.

So, don’t be the guy holding the big goofy sign. Act naturally and start the conversations with people.

- Jim Ellis

So now that we’ve invited a lot of people to our blog, we thought we might share a good how to video on how to subscribe, to make sure you don’t miss anything. Take a look and learn how to subscribe to the Signal Blog using RSS, Really Simple Syndication.

RSS Video

RSS Video

By the way this “In Plain English” video series is a fun and informative series that has segments on social media, blogs, wikis, etc. Enjoy.

Before you say to yourself, “My company needs to be on Facebook” or “How can I get my organization on Twitter,” you need to ask yourself the more fundamental question of WHY? What do you hope to do with it? This seems obvious, but I see too many companies that just jump in without really figuring out the basic question “What is my objective?” And before figuring that out, you really need to figure out who your audience is, and decide whether or not they will take to what you’re trying to do using social media.

First things first, and when it comes to social media, remember this acronym: P-O-S-T.

  • People
  • Objectives
  • Strategy
  • Technology

This acronym comes from an excellent book on social media entitled Groundswell, and I recommend it to anyone interested in learning more about social media (and you should be interested in it, because it’s not going anywhere). The book shares some very good strategies and case studies, and is a relatively quick read.

You see, just saying you want to be on Facebook or Twitter is jumping straight to the “T” (technology), but knowing your audience, your objectives and strategy to meet the objectives should truly dictate the technology.

So, start with PEOPLE. As in any marketing strategy, you need to have a clear picture of who your audience is. Is your target market even engaged in social media? Are they more likely to “talk” or “listen”? Will they write reviews? Do they even join groups like Facebook?

The book Groundswell is written by people who work for Forrester Research, and market research is their forte. You can view a presentation of how they break down people’s social media behavior.

What’s more, they give you a pretty cool tool that you can use to gauge what your target market is doing within social media.

Forrester Profile Tool

Forrester Profile Tool

Check it out, and know your audience. Next time, we’ll talk about the “O”–Objectives. More to come.