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Showing posts with label Stephen Covey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen Covey. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Don't just aim for different

By Ariella Brown


Learn to distinguish differentiation from merely different

Don't wallpaper the ceiling.

What do I mean?

When you revise your site content, don't just make changes to make it different. Make changes to make it better.

You improve the title, sentence structure, coherence, consistency, and make sure to hit all those SEO best practices. You can also find better images to catch the eye that are optimized for web view and identified with alt text for both ADA compliance and search engine reads.

But you don't need to change the general order of things if what was there makes sense. In other words, you don't have to make a point of putting wallpaper on the ceiling while painting the walls just to switch around the way you had it before.

That's not to say your can never put wallpaper on the ceiling, but it's a design choice that has to have more of a reason behind it than change. The key thing to remember is what you're trying to do: make the content more appealing to the reader. 

Some of that entails making changes but they shouldn't be made just to arrive at a different result. They should all be made with the end in mind, as Stephen Covey would say, and that end is not just being different but better.

Thursday, June 29, 2023

Speaking of gifts





by Ariella Brown

Subject line: Don’t Forget Your Gift by June 30!

When you read that in an email on June 29th, your assumption would be...?


That you'll get a gift with some offer that ends on June 30th. So you may click out of curiosity or out of a feeling of FOMO, two strong incentives to open an email. ( See 7 ways to grab customer attention in subject lines)


What would be your reaction, though, when you discover that the gift referred to is not for you but one that the sender is demanding you send by June 30th?


That's what the New-York Historical Society did for its email campaign as you can see from this screenshot of the email:

Would you be inclined to feel generous and hasten to make this arbitrary cutoff that the organization says is the end of its fiscal year?



Are you using the right KPIs for your campaign?


I have no doubt this subject line generated more than the usual number of opens. Perhaps whoever was tasked with this email campaign was told that's the primary KPI and so resorted to clickbait that turns into a bait-and-switch.

As Stephen Covey said, "Have the end in mind."

It's important to lose sight of the real end goal -- putting people in the frame of mind to want to donate to the organization.


Tricking them into clicking is not likely to do that.

False urgency


Neither is attempting to create a sense of urgency by declaring you're one day away from your fiscal year. If the donation comes in July. it's not going to make much of a difference.


The only end of year the donors care about is the calendar year if they are able to take a tax deduction for the donation. Remember, when you're asking something of someone else, you have to make it center around them and their needs -- not your own timeline.


If you want to use content marketing effectively, you should always be thinking about what is the likely reaction of your target audience to your communication. Failing to do so leads to major fiascos like the one currently experienced by Budweiser and other missteps described in Major Marketing Missteps from Adidas, M&M's and Coke.


Don't lose the goodwill you've built up over years to a thoughtless marketing message, get a seasoned pro to craft the right message for your organization and your demographics. Learn more here and book a free consultation call.







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