Transforming Pixels to Gold

Spending too much time looking at screens, a good digital strategy could be about getting everyone some fresh air. And there's some truth in that - because there's nothing appealing about the decomposition process that begins with long hours glued to a chair orchestrating some devious marketing plan to deceive a potential tribe of money throwing masses?

An interview with Robin Dickinson: Sharewords, Radsmarts and Centurions?

David Wall - Thursday, September 02, 2010

This is part 2 of a 3 post series.

An extract from Sonja Falvo's new eBook: http://www.sonjafalvo.com/books.html


[View part 1]

Great tribal leadership on social media – an interview on Facebook


David


Hi Robin, thanks again for being able to do this Facebook interview / conversation. As you know I think Sharewords is a brilliant concept. I see it as a great example of how connecting with people in a meaningful way has a reach far beyond the platform of social media. Was this the intention and how did the whole Sharewords concept come about?


Robin


Thank you, David. I appreciate your kind encouragement.

Sharewords is part of a much longer term strategy that I have been gently unfolding online for the past year. My diamond focus is to 'Help you succeed in business' and I commit full resources to enabling this.

An important part of helping businesses succeed is to facilitate the strongest possible word-ofmouth recommendation. It's highly profitable and it works wonders. Ask any business owner or solopreneur what will help them grow and you get an almost reflex response is "Spread the word!"

i.e. tell others about my business so that I get more customers.

Sharewords is a proactive response from business people to take control and craft the words *they* want spread! Think about how you share recommendations with your friends and colleagues. You use 4-5 words -quickly and effortlessly delivered. It's not a clunky sentence, nor the old-fashioned elevator pitch.

So, as a professional business development facilitator, I've been running a "live" workshop on RADSMARTS to show people how to develop their sharewords. The response has been massive. It's how we met, David.


David


The response is without doubt massive -I don't think I've seen as many responses to one blog post and it's still growing. The growth has also moved strongly into Twitter, Facebook and I believe a collaborative online newspaper.

I first became interested in sharewords after seeing perhaps 3 or 4 tweets about it from a couple of people I follow. What hooked me was the value of what you're offering – you provide a phrase (sharewords) that succinctly captures what a particular business is all about. This is done only after becoming very informed about what’s unique to the business and all free of charge. It goes beyond the usual free ebook or webinar and that’s what I believe really sets you apart – it directly shows that you are exactly what you say you’re about – interested and capable in helping a wide variety of business succeed. Your authenticity is easy to see.

A lot of companies interested in moving in similar direction might see this as a huge hurdle. The concern would be that if they offer so much value without monetising it, they’ll be taken for a ride

– their potential customers will just take what they need and move on.

What are your thoughts on this?


Robin


These are important observations you make, David. Things I have given much consideration to.

Think of the Sharewords post as part of the roll-out of a long-term strategy. Before publishing anything online, I thought long and hard about the hows and whys of my online participation, especially from a commercial perspective.

A key element of my online strategy is to attract and help a relatively small group of highly motivated 'like-minds' who also want to succeed commercially online. This value-based approach is very different from the volume-based approach that many businesses take i.e. get huge lists of large numbers of followers, subscribers and try and convert a tiny % into sales.

If I can find and help 100 succeed, who in turn can find and help 100 succeed, the leverage is enormous and highly sustainable. (This is called the Centurion project). Compare this with volume approaches that are resource hungry at a rate proportional to growth.

Implementing this value-plan effectively will take several years, and relies on attracting the right people.

Enter, the Sharewords post. The purpose of this post is to help me identify potential collaborators for the long-term plan. So far 24 people have joined the Centurion project as a direct result of their strong participation in this post. It has proven to be a vastly efficient way of helping strong people find me.

Outside of the context of this strategy, the Sharewords-style post -or online workshop as is probably a more apt description -wouldn't make any sense to me. To this point, I see many people blowing large amounts of their time, effort, money and intellectual property outside of any commercially solid plan.

How can that be sustainable?


David


I think you’ve hit the nail on the head. A lot of projects / businesses tend to take two contradicting approaches with social media. One is what's closer to a campaign style that builds a whole lot of attention in a short space of time. There’s usually a big enough carrot (like a 10k prize) and in this sense it’s about buying an audience's engagement. At the same time there’s the hope that community continues to contribute and be engaged. One has an extrinsic value and is often short lived because it doesn’t always turn into an intrinsic value.

That’s the hard one – how do we create just being a part of that particular community as a value in itself – without the need for a succession of big enough carrots?

Personally, I’ve been a part of various social media communities and often ‘drop out’. I believe at that point it’s a question of motivation; people tend to be much more motivated in a group when there’s a sense of working towards a greater good. I see inklings of that in your project – perhaps that’s a part of your bigger picture?


Robin


Sustained motivation is something I think about a lot.

For me, the drivers of sustained motivation in a community like the Centurions are a combination of a) attracting people who are naturally self-motivated and 'lower maintenance'; b) providing a regular scoreboard or feedback mechanism that tracks results; c) having a forum for regular, honest communication d) knowing that you are part of something big and bold and e) me being available to support members during their 'hour of need'.

Your point about 'working towards the greater good' is part of the fabric of the community spirit. That said, I make it very clear that this is a commercial venture aimed at generating more and more money for less and less work.

People have said that my approach is somewhat altruistic. For example, the many hours of sustained, high quality input I have invested into helping people craft their sharewords.

I don't think of myself as altruistic at all. I help people because I like helping people AND because it's commercially effective. It's been my offline business model for 20 years because it works so well to generate sustained profits -and I make absolutely no secret about it.

Does that make sense to you, David?


David


Certainly does. I actually think the idea that giving high value and receiving nothing in return won't happen in most cases. It's more likely people give the same value back or sometimes even more. People call it reciprocity but really value exchanges are what we've been doing for eons.

If we take the example of Sharewords I'd understand your return as being:

  1. Quality referrals / recommendations
  2. Active contributions / involvement
  3. Monetary Those things sustain each other and as you say make it commercially viable (online / offline).

Comparing the two though, I'd imagine point 1 has huge implications for this model in terms of

the exponential reach available online. I've lost count of how many times I've eagerly referred

Sharewords online / word of mouth and I'm just one of many. This reach must make it far easier to source the right community members (Centurions) who I imagine are key to taking this project even further.

What has been the result so far for yourself and the Centurions?


Robin


The results so far are:

  1. Clear feedback that a value-based model can work. Until I launched Centurions, it was purely theoretical;
  2. Better online metrics for less work. For example, blog views and engagement remain strong for vastly less work;
  3. Increased sales: it's early days, but members are reporting positive sales boosts.

Being based on a geometric progression, the results and returns from the early phases of the Centurion model will be modest and barely visible i.e initially the graph is asymptotic. The mid-later stages become much more interesting as the results compound. I think it was Albert

Einstein who said "The most powerful force in the universe is compound interest". We shall see. I must say that I find a model based on the notion of earning more and more money for less and

less work fascinating.


David


You're in a sense creating a tribe of tribal leaders around a shared set of values. That's got to grow your connections around your value approach exponentially (and it has). The effort of finding and directing connections gets distributed across all those involved so I imagine it must lessen the effort load.

So as you say, less work for greater outcomes!

It's indeed a very fascinating area and it’s great to watch it unfold for you.

Reed's law (like Einstein's words ) is a good example for how growth compounds on networks. Social media is an apt example.

2(to the power of N) – N – 1 = potential connections

N are participants, so 100 participants has the value of 1,267,650,600,228,229,401,496,703,205,376 possible connections!

I came across it on George Beckenstein's blog: http://www.benckenstein.com/digital-media/swine-flu-susan-boyle-and-the-network-multiplier effect/

By the way before we wrap this up, where's the best place to find out more about the Centurions? And do you have any other quick tips to share for those wanting to do something like Sharewords and the Centurions on social media?


Robin


Thank you, David. I really appreciate the opportunity to discuss these ideas with you.

If readers would like help creating their sharewords, simply come to the article and start participating. It's that easy.

For more information about the Centurions, simply email me at robin@radsmarts.com.

Wishing you and your readers every success in business and in life.

Robin :)


David


I'll extend that wish too and thanks again, it's been a very enlightening discussion :-)

David


View part 3 - What is your deeper business intent?

And why is this relevant to social media?




16,000 hits using Google adwords

David Wall - Monday, September 07, 2009
Winning the search game with a lot of hits

I'm just illustration the point with this title on the potential of using the right long-tail keyword even on paid search. I go on about this long-tail stuff all the time because it really is the untapped market that is available to us right now online.

In fact, niche markets as well as keywords will always be here. If you think about how people will always be doing or searching for something new - new and unique terms will always come into play. I guess those who find them first can capitalise on an early advantage... 

But before I get too esoteric, let me get to the point.

The 4 EASY steps, paid-search formula

  1. First focus on just a few good performing long-tail (niche) keywords. In the example below I'm using: "read novels online" (read this to find out how to determine strong long-tail keywords).
  2. Write a Google ad that solves a problem - i.e. the potential customer is usually searching on Google for a solution - bug them with irrelevance and they won't click on your ad!
  3. With a good ad, you'll need to be getting over at least 1.2% click through rate (CTR) for Google to start lowering the cost for each clicks your ad gets (cost per click - CPC). If it's under that change the ad copy or try a different keyword (unless you want to pay Google more than you have to).
  4. Google tells you the adverage daily cost per click - all you need to do is match this by manually capping your CPC everyday. Eventually you can get your keyword down to about 4 - 6 cents (if you're using good long-tail keywords).

So say you had a monthly budget of $1000 - at 6 cents a click if you do this right you'd expect 16,000 targeted visits to your website. This also means that on a small budget, say $15 - expect to get about 200 clicks!

Here's some proof

Check what difference lowering you CPC over a few weeks does to your clicks

The above was a launch campaign for Photos to GO stock photo site. I had a 3k montly budget for a limited time and was using a whole host of keywords - some long-tail others very competitive like "stock photography". On the 2nd month running I had a few competitive keywords dropped to focus on the long-tail words while lowing the cost per click for each. You can see the results - close to 3 times the amount.

Small budget for an up-and-coming author - I got 208 clicks for less than $13

The campaign above was done with 1 keyword only - "read books online". The last I checked that was a hot keyword (a lot of searches and low Google cost). I managed reduce the cost from about 30 cents to 2-3 cents a click with a couple of hundred impressions a day (average over period total was 7 cents). Quite nice when you think I was using a $20 free Google voucher!

Number 1 Google result in 17 Minutes

David Wall - Wednesday, August 26, 2009

That's a grand claim and I bet you think it's not achievable. Don't people pay search companies big $$$ to do this sort of thing and isn't it supposed to take a hell ot a lot longer? Well yes and yes but I'll explain all that later. First take a look at the the proof and marvel over how the internet still allows us to do such things, all FREE of charge.

pudding yumPudding, hmmmm

The proof's in the pudding

The trick is in finding the right longtail keywords that produce results. Check Google trends to see if your keyword/s are climbers or a falling out of style searches (the below example: "most professional stock photo sites" was the former case).

You'll notice the 17 minutes marked by Google (under result 1) and the amount of web sites Google finds for this very phrase: over 30 MILLION! You'll also see the site is actually a social video site, namely MY SPACE - so what's the deal there?

Well that's the power of social media marketing....

Bad quality image? Blame MS outlook!

Nice, but is this stuff really legal?

It's legal alright, but this technique isn't as good as it used to be. Basically its all part of Google's new search formula that values novel content from sites with a high page rank (Google's website scorecard). Combined with the priority video get on search engines, we have a powerful SEO tool, if used in the right way. It isn't as good as it used to be because up until recently, ranks like this stuck a lot longer.

The good news is that quality content distributed over various avenues, like social media channels will have the net benefit of increasing your search presence in a short amount of time - but it's all about consistency, good content (we'll it helps) and distribution.

OK, but if its so good why don't I do for my own site?

Below's the pudding and that's one of the long-tail keywords mentioned in my last post - this one also brought up 78.8 Million sites for this search (not really as long-tail as I'd like)

"Automate your revenue" NOT "Automatic your revenue" - sounds like a washing machine!

So how can I do the same?

You'll need to sign up to a number of social video sites such as Viddler, YouTube, BlipTV, Revver, MySpace etc. Get your video ready, make sure you title the video using the longtail keyword you wish to target, add a link to your website in the description and hit upload. Grab a coffee, wait, enjoy your coffee, wait some more - then query Google...

If your not getting first page number 1, make sure you read the previous post: How to get 1000 hits per day with niche keywords. Try another longtail keyword.

How to get 1000 hits per day with niche keywords

David Wall - Monday, August 17, 2009

Focus on 10 highly searched low competition keywords

But why 10?

To focus your efforts on a small and manageable amount of quality keywords – not a lot of keywords with inherent problems like:

1. Wrong audience: if people get to your site and get off straight away (called a bounce), these keywords don’t reflect your site content

2. Too competitive: keywords that everyone is targeting, so you’ll need to be very patient to get on the first page of Google

3. No one searches on this keyword: that’s a no brainer

In this example, I’ll search for “online marketing” (one of the most highly competitive search engine terms around!), see who’s performing well, take their keywords (view source and check meta keywords on the top of the source code) and use this as a base.

The number 1 site for this search gave me these meta keywords:

Web Development, Online Marketing, Web Design, SEO, Web Developer, Website Design, Website Services, Website Developers, Search Engine Optimisation, Web Designer, Web Development Company, SEM, SEO Company, Website Designers, Web Services, Internet Marketing, Web Solutions, Web Development Services, SEO Services, Web Design Company, Web Marketing, Search Engine Marketing, Web Design Services

These are very general terms but to make this work, I’ll need to find niches to capture some of those quality long tail searches. So first thing is to eliminate this by taking out all the irrelevant terms and industry related terms (that only people in the industry will use).

The cut down list:

Online Marketing,
Internet Marketing,
Web Marketing,
Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Optimisation,

Now check search volumes and look for niche versions of these terms using http://tools.seobook.com/keyword-tools/seobook/ - it’s good and free (great combination).

We need to be on the look out for strange long tail terms that get searched but not yet capitalized on - example: “online marketing web page copywriting” gets a good daily volume and is not that competitive – you can find this out by clicking on the Google traffic estimator link for each keyword (if Google tells you: “Not enough data to give estimates”, you know few people bid on that keyword on paid search and it’s also likely not capitalized on in organic search either).

So here’s the 10 keywords / phrases that get average 30-100 searches a day and has nothing on the Google estimates – that means low competition, so getting to page 1 on these will be relatively painless:

online marketing web page copywriting
business home internet marketing online
free report on internet marketing tips for more
the best business model for internet marketing
holistic web page marketing
low cost web marketing
web marketing mystro
search engine marketing ardan michael blum
search engine marketing political website design
list of search engine marketing

To sum up, after following other techniques I’ll be posting about here about exactly how to implement and distribute your 10 terms (including on page tricks and easy social media distribution) - you’ve got a potential of up to 1000 hits per day (10 keywords X 100 daily searches = 1000). Stay tuned

Images courtesy of Photolibrary - Get creative with stock photos, stock footage & production music from photolibrary.com