Saturday, July 22, 2017

Survay Review : Bonus

Survay – what is it? I’m sure you familiar with Survey Monkey and other similiar tools out there online. If you are familiar, then you know how complicated these programs can be.

Well what if I told you there is a new sheriff in town, and people are going nuts because it combines syrveys with appointments. You can send your leads to an appointment form where they can schedule an appointment with you!

Not only that, it also makes an application for you at the same time. So with a few clicks of the mouse you are going to get 3 different types of surveys and applications. It’s the coolest thing I have ever seen. Here’s just a few of the amazing things Survay is going to do for you :

  1. With the click of a mouse you’re able to create 3 different types of surveys and applications
  2. You’re able to completely customize those survays with your own images, branding and colors! So your survays look good no matter your design skill!
  3. You can qualify your leads based on how they answer your questions. So depending on how they answer, determines what action you will take. So you can send them a message,  redirect them to another URL
  4. You can have them make an appointment with you! YES! Survay has a built in appointment scheduler as well. It’s one of the most powerful Appointment Schedulers I’ve ever seen!
  5. Survay is smart enough to know that once you have a application or survey linked to each other, then it creates what we call a “Linked Campaign” and this is where the real POWER happens!

Now that you have your surveys and appointments setup on autopilot, you need to get traffic to them! Well, what if I told you Survay will product a code that you can apply to all your sales pages, landing pages, blog pages, shopping cart pages…. pretty much any page you have in exisitence and it is COOL!

You can also embed your surveys and appointments on other pages as well. This thing is a beast of a system… and you’ll see why the creators are calling it “The World’s Greatest Survey Platform”.

Survay Review

is available on : Survay Review : Bonus



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/23/survay-review-bonus/

Friday, July 21, 2017

Newbie List Building Blueprint Review

The following post was first published to : Newbie List Building Blueprint Review

Newbie List Building Blueprint is a 7 day course which teaches you how to build a list with a free traffic source that Reed Floren is using to add thousands of subscribers to our lists. It is very newbie friendly and includes DFY tools so you can start profiting immediately.

Over the last few months Reed Floren and Lance Groom have discovered a newbie friendly list building strategy that has allowed us to add hungry buyers to their lists using 100% free traffic.

The best part is… it doesn’t even require you to learn any SEO or use any paid traffic. This is a 100% free traffic strategy and it is extremely POWERFUL because the only people who will see your FREE offer already BUY products online.

The beautiful thing about this is you don’t need to learn SEO, you don’t need to drive traffic, you don’t need to have a blog, you don’t need to use social media. They`re only going to let a few people in on this secret because we doesn’t want too many people doing it.

Newbie List Building Blueprint



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/22/newbie-list-building-blueprint-review/

Backlink Machine Review | WP Backlink Machine Bonus

You can watch the video on Youtube here : https://youtu.be/gPeBm6eVzfs

Via Review And Bonus Channel



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/21/backlink-machine-review-wp-backlink-machine-bonus/

Thursday, July 20, 2017

6 Ideas You Can Try Today to Boost Your SaaS Growth and Retention

Growing a wildly successful software as a service (SaaS) business is a game of numbers.

More new customers than canceling customers? You’ll grow.

If not, you’ll stagnate, and the competition will gobble up market share right in front of you.

At the same time, not every new idea for boosting growth and retention will be feasible with the resources you have.

Your product team is busy working on ideas to build a SaaS product that is 10x better than what’s on the market. Your engineering team is building next generation technology that will give a crucial edge of the competition.

It’s not always strategic to pull them off core functions to work on the latest growth idea.

So, while they are busy working on the product, there’s still room for low-cost, easy-to-implement techniques to improve the growth and retention of your SaaS product today.

Think of these ideas as low hanging fruit you can get started on today to see results in the coming months.

1. Call New Prospects Immediately When They Sign Up

This is an idea that I first heard from Steli Efti. He makes the bold claim that if you’re a B2B SaaS startup you need to be calling all your free trial signups within the first 5 minutes.

You might be thinking whether spending time on the phone is a good use of your team’s time. It’s definitively not scalable once you’re getting hundreds of new trials per day.

The benefit is that as an early stage company, every phone call is an opportunity for customer development. Because the person on the other side just went through your marketing funnel, you’ll get feedback on whether your website is performing well.

It can also act as an “early warning system” for poorly targeted ads. You’ll potentially save a lot of money if you realize that your AdWords are attracting the entirely wrong set of audience based on the conversions you’re having with new signups.

The downside is that you’ll have to add a phone number input to your form, which may reduce your sign up rate slightly. You can make it optional so people can self-select whether they want to hear from you via the phone or not.

In my experience, people are generally happy to hear to from you if you call within minutes of signing up to welcome to the service and let them know if they have any questions you’re happy to talk.

The insights you learn from these calls can be turned directly into hypotheses for experiments to run on your SaaS onboarding funnel. For example, you might find out that many of the signups are using a specific piece of legacy software, so you can adjust the funnel to highlight how easy it is to move over to your product.

2. Offer a Weekly Webinar

Some of the best, “stickiest” SaaS products will be become deeply woven into the fabric of your customers’ lives, saving them countless hours or helping them generate more revenue.

But it’s often hard for people to “see” the improvements your product will bring when they are looking at the empty state of your app after they’ve just signed up.

In Elements of User Onboarding, Samuel Hulick refers to this concept as helping your users envision their improvement.

Webinars are an opportunity to give them a glimpse of how your product will look in action after they’ve been fully onboarded.

Once they’ve seen with their own eyes how easy your product makes it to get a specific job done, they’ll have a reason for why they’re going through the hard process of trying something new and investing in learning your product.

At the same time, webinars can be operationally challenging. Live webinars, in particular, pose problems. You’ll need a soundproof studio with someone to keep an eye on the chat box while another person walks people through the product demo.

And then the problems start: the wifi is patchy, your product doesn’t respond as expected while live on air or your mic suddenly stops working.

It’s tough to stay calm on camera!

Therefore, Intercom took a hybrid approach to product demos. They showed pre-recorded demos interspersed with live Q&A and discussion.

They automated the part that could be automated, such as showing how to do a particular job in their app, while they kept that part that couldn’t be automated: live feedback from a product expert.

Personally, I was skeptical when I first heard of this “hybrid” approach, but I decided to give it a whirl.

For the first version, you can use something like Screenflow or Camtasia to quickly record your screen coupled with a decent mic such as the Samson Meteor Mic to get good audio.

I was worried that webinar attendees would be disappointed that the video wasn’t live. However, those fears turned out to be unfounded. In fact, because I could concentrate on the questions coming in via chat, I could give better answers to questions and quickly pull up the relevant documentation to send to them right there.

I’d particularly recommend this approach if you want to offer multiple webinars a week for different time zones.

3. Try Out a Win-Back Offer for Expired Trials

When you first launch your product, users may like your MVP product, but not pull the trigger on moving over to you, just yet. However, as you develop your product into a more fully featured solution, those initial prospects might just be ready to move over.

I’ve noticed that several SaaS providers send out “win back” emails to dormant trial accounts after a year, offering them another 30-day trial while highlighting what’s changed in the meantime.

Here’s an example from Front:

winback email

The great thing about this tactic is that it’s so easy to implement. You can manually pull a list of these accounts every month to start. If the tactic works well for you, you can move to an automated email.

4. Send a Summary of “What Happened This Week in Your SaaS” via Email

I first heard this idea put into words by Patrick McKenzie, a serial SaaS entrepreneur:

//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

Many SaaS products work day in, day out on your behalf. For example, monitoring services such as StatusPage test your services every minute to make sure all services are operating as expected. Other examples include connecting services such as Zapier, which let you link up data from various services.

These services work for you in the background. In best case scenarios, you might not log into these products for months on end.

A monthly “report card” listing what the app did for you each month will clearly demonstrate the value you’re getting from that particular SaaS. In the next financial meetings when ongoing subscriptions are put under a magnifying glass, your customers will be able to defend their monthly subscription to your service to the accountants.

An even better approach is to put a dollar number to the value you provide, as Nickelled does:

summary email from seas company

Depending on what your application does, you can send out emails highlighting number of issues closed, number of conversions tracked or leads generated. The closer you can get to a metric that managers care deeply about, the better this tactic works.

5. Retarget SaaS Trials with Customer Success Content

Retargeting is a powerful way to reach out to your past visitors to get them to come back to visit your site. In fact, there’s nothing right now that can work as well as retargeting (for your non-identified users).

Often, SaaS companies use retargeting to get past visitors back to their site so they sign up.

But you can also use retargeting in a myriad of ways to drive better retention of users.

For instance, you can target people within your free trial period with an ad for your webinar. Facebook Lead adverts make it so easy to sign up to the webinar with pre-filled fields. Just two touches and you are signed up, even on a mobile device.

Facebook lead ad exampleMocked Up Example of a Facebook Lead Generation Ad

Alternatively, you can advertise customer success stories that highlight the type of value that people can expect to get from your product.

Once customers have activated and are paying customers, you can even take retargeting a step further and start targeting customers that look like they might be in danger of churning based on the data you see in Kissmetrics.

You can export a monthly segment of users that are danger of churning and target them with ads on more advanced features they are missing out on or strategies for getting more value from your product.

6. Offer a “Done for You” Data Onboarding Package

Depending on your SaaS, your customers may need to move a lot of data over to your app before they can get started. Particularly if you’re starting out, this roadblock may get in the way of many of your customers using your product.

Offering a “done for them” data onboarding package to new customers can be a way to smooth the path.

In many cases, this data will have to be moved over from one of your competitors. Other times you’ll be faced with a collection of excel sheets, CSV files, or SQL dumps. The result is that you’ll be faced with importing data from a myriad of different software, including custom in-house solutions.

This diversity of data sources makes it difficult to offer an entirely automated import flow that your customers can carry out themselves. Even importing something as “simple” as a CSV file can be fraught with issues, as Patrick McKenzie points out.

Typically, enterprise customers won’t bat an eyelid at paying for this service, whereas an upfront charge can be a barrier for many SMB customers.

Test Out New Ideas On a Regular Basis

Small improvements in your growth rates and churn rates can have a big impact on your bottom line. Each optimization in your funnel results in more customers using your product, more word-of-mouth referrals and higher customer lifetime value. The revenue this generates means you can invest more back into product development and growth, accelerating the growth loop.

Do you have some ideas on how to boost growth and cut churn? Let me know in the comments!

About the Author: Thomas Carney has worked for tech companies in Munich, Paris, and now Berlin. When not on a computer, he’s at CrossFit or trying to brew the perfect coffee with an Aeropress coffee maker. He writes about marketing for SaaS at ThomasCarney.org.



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/20/6-ideas-you-can-try-today-to-boost-your-saas-growth-and-retention/

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Don’t Interrupt Me! How to Engage Your Customers Without Annoying Them

Are you annoying your customers?

Probably so.

Inundating your audience with multiple messages at inconvenient times isn’t helpful. Therefore, it’s important to know when and how to engage with consumers.

“Marketing is your way of connecting with your customers as well as a way to convey your business’ personality and values – it’s an essential channel…Even companies with the best of intentions can often manage to annoy their target market,” writes Jennifer Warr, former engagement and awareness cell leader at Klood.

Let’s explore what you can do to market your brand without being a nuisance. Here are five strategies to stop your annoying behavior:

1. Prioritize Your Customers’ Needs

Customers are the primary asset of your company. If you don’t prioritize their needs, everything else falls apart.

This principle is especially true when engaging customers. People can easily recognize when your intentions aren’t authentic.

If you’re not focused on what matters to them, your brand comes off like a car salesman pushing the purchase of an unwanted product. Then, the customer reacts by ignoring your messages and possibly going to your competitors.

Start approaching the customer relationship with respect. As a trusted advisor, you want to communicate the most relevant information.

To avoid the common myths around customer needs, analyze your behavioral data, including website and email activity, to learn your customers’ habits, priorities, and desires. Their actions will help you identify how to craft the conversation.

what customers don't needImage Source

If your data shows that your customers love matching your blue T-shirts with green shorts, you could send a post-purchase email with a discount for the shorts. In this case, you’re not annoying your customers. You’re providing valuable content.

There’s no good reason to annoy your customers. Learn their needs to become a trusted resource, not a recurring burden.

2. Stay Away from Information Overload

It’s important to educate your customer. However, don’t overload your audience with too much information at once.

When people see lots of text, a couple of questions pop into their minds: How long will it take to read this? Is this even worth my time? These are the initial hurdles facing companies producing content.

To address the first question, you need to be mindful of the customer’s time. She’s juggling multiple tasks and wants you to get straight to the point.

For instance, when visitors land on your website, they should know immediately how your product benefits them. That means decluttering your website by removing the multiple pop-up screens and sidebars.

When arriving to Instapage’s site, it’s easy for consumers to figure out that this brand offers landing page software that increases conversion rates.

instapage guarantees to increase conversion rates

The second question is where some companies struggle. For any content to be worth your customer’s time, it must offer some type of instant value to the person. It should directly highlight their pain points or lead them to a specific solution.

Let’s say you’re writing a case study about how a customer achieved success with your product. It isn’t good enough to just talk about the outcome. The value in a case study comes from emphasizing the problem, the process, and the result.

Customer engagement is effective when you leave out the unnecessary information. Try producing straightforward content that offers a solution.

3. Convey Every Message Differently

As an experienced marketer, it’s likely that you’ve heard about the rule of seven. It’s the assumption that consumers need to see your offer at least seven times before taking action.

It’s not an exact science, but the rule gives you a foundation on how many times to engage with your customers.

What’s frightening is how companies implement this principle. For some companies, it’s sending the same email multiple times to a subscriber until the person clicks the link in the message. Or it’s copying and pasting the words in a blog post into a SlideShare.

Repeating the same message over and over isn’t useful. It becomes noise to the customer, and that noise becomes annoying.

Instead, every piece of content should not center around the sale. Here’s Susanna Tarrant, a digital marketing coordinator for Marketing Copilot, thoughts on the topic:

“Rather than trying to close the deal too early, you should create content filled with information for your audience. A useful content marketing strategy changes the conversation. It makes it about your customer and not about you or the sale.”

For example, if you’re planning a five-day email campaign, introduce your brand in Email #1, talk about the problem in Email #2, highlight a case study in Email #3, discuss the negative consequences of inaction in Email #4, and present your product solution in Email #5.

Every message doesn’t need to talk about your product. Craft your content around the customers’ needs and the sales journey.

4. Avoid Inconvenient Surprises

Somewhere between rewards and hidden fees, marketers got confused on what types of surprises customers desire. It’s becoming the norm to not tell consumers the whole truth until checkout.

This practice is not healthy for the brand-customer relationship. Hiding the fine print about upcharges or credit card fees only builds a barrier.

Your customer will have one more reason to not trust you. Plus, these unexpected markups can lead to more abandoned shopping carts, negatively affecting your sales.

customer surprises to avoidImage Source

But it doesn’t stop there. Other less known surprises include a 404 page to a critical resource, slow response times with customer support, and payment processing errors.

While your team may see these as minor glitches, your customers perceive them as another reason not to do business with you. Your customers want you to live up to your brand promise.

“Somewhere between best intentions and actual staffing, budgets, and IT limitations lies the real world of customer interactions. Don’t tell your customers you value them and then banish them to an automated system or place them on hold for 30 minutes while they wait for a rep,” states Samuel Greengard, contributing writer at CMO.com.

Unwanted surprises shouldn’t interrupt the customer experience. Work with your team to identify which ones annoy your target audience.

5. Engage in a Timely Manner

When you engage with customers is just as important as how you engage. The right message at the wrong time still equals an interruption to the recipient.

Most content splits into two categories: evergreen and seasonal. Evergreen content is information that continually remains relevant. Seasonal content is information with a finite endpoint.

You’ll notice lots of businesses posting evergreen content at random times with a mix of seasonal content, like newsjacking pieces. Their strategy is well-founded, but not necessarily results-driven.

The alternative is to send timely content that fits the customer’s current needs. An evergreen blog post isn’t timely if it doesn’t solve the present problem. A seasonal message doesn’t help the customer if he wants his year-round issues solved today.

To send timely content, you must understand your customers’ behaviors. You’re aware of what type of lead magnets they download, how many times they visit certain pages, and the purchasing history with your company.

Triggered email marketing campaigns are one solution to sending timely and relevant content to your audience. With automation and if-then logic, customers can receive messages based on their behaviors.

For example, if a customer doesn’t repurchase a product in 60 days, you can send a retention email. Kissmetrics Campaigns makes it easy to create these behavior-based messages.

Are you engaging with timely content, or just interrupting? Reevaluate when you communicate with your audience.

Stop Annoying, Start Engaging

It’s definitely possible to irk your customers with unfavorable marketing habits. Engagement is a better method for connecting with your audience.

Start by learning and prioritizing your customers’ needs. Deliver different messages based on the customer journey. Also, don’t surprise your customers with hidden charges.

Treat your customers well. Start engaging with them.



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/19/dont-interrupt-me-how-to-engage-your-customers-without-annoying-them/

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

What a Baby Clothes Blog Can Teach You About a 991% YoY Growth Using Paid Acquisition

Spearmint LOVE started off as a baby clothes blog less than five years ago.

Founder Shari Lott had already built up a strong online presence with her popular mommy blog of a similar name, SpearmintBaby.

The premise was simple.

She’d feature and share products she thought other moms would like.

One day, in search of the perfect Swiss Cross blanket for her daughter’s room, she was inspired to expand her vision into a little ecommerce site.

Now, just four years later, it’s the only baby and children’s clothing online store that was picked to be a part of Facebook’s 2017 U.S. Small Business Council.

Shari had an excellent eye for design.

And it didn’t hurt that she also had an excellent husband, John Lott, who just so happened to previously run a $23B dollar hedge fund.

Together, they’ve masterminded a 991% YoY growth with a 33.8x return on Instagram ad spend, 47% decrease in cost per purchase, and an incredible $0.11 average cost per conversion.

Here’s how.

1. Multi-Channel Expansion

“Marketing” used to mean something.

Before PR and prior to advertising, it also meant Product, Pricing, and… Place.

That last one, known better by Distribution today, is about making products available for people where they already shop (roughly speaking). Practically speaking, that means convenience.

Spearmint LOVE went from two SKUs to over 5,000 SKUs in just three years.

When did Spearmint start hitting the big numbers? You guessed it– when they started to give customers more ways to buy.

“We feel really good about how we’re positioned in the market,” John said. “We’ve given our customers nearly every conceivable way to buy from us. They can do Buyable pins. They can buy on a Facebook page. They can buy on their mobile phone. They can use their computer. They can buy however they want to.”

spearmint ventures pinterest

But scaling to multiple channels takes some finesse and strategy.

Getting a handle on one channel can be difficult enough. Then adding more to the mix means extreme coordination and resource management. Spearmint had to evaluate its readiness for that kind of growth and make sure it was even the right time to scale.

Here are the four biggies to consider when you want to expand to multi-channels:

1. Do you have the manpower for customer service?

More channels means more sales means more questions from more customers. And more customers might even be coming from different timezones around the world.

A retooling of current customer service practices could be in order, like adding more people to the team, switching up or extending hours, retraining on the product and businesses, and even considering outsourcing the customer service operation.

2. Do you have enough inventory?

Remember those increased sales? That means you have to have enough inventory to cover them. And you have to get the delivery time under control, too.

You can stock and/or drop ship your inventory, but you need to make sure products are getting to the customer as quickly and efficiently as possible. Management of the product means keeping accurate tabs on counts, sources, and allocation.

3. Can you fulfill the orders?

Are you currently handling all fulfillment in-house? When expanding to multi-channels working with a fulfillment house might be the way to go to handle the increased orders.

4. Is your tech ready?

You’ve now got more channels, more customers, and more staff. That means you now need better software to communicate with everyone, manage inventory, and all your outsourced operations.

Figure out what you’re gonna need here: sorting and routing orders to and from multiple suppliers? Product ID coordination on all your channels? Proper integrations? Reporting?

And what’s your budget?

With some software, the price goes up with every additional SKU or number of processed orders.

So keep in mind you’re often going to be outlaying cost — for increased labor, inventory, promotion, and technology — before ever seeing a dime on these new sales.

2. Intimately understand your cost per acquisition

John came on board to work with his wife, Shari, in 2016.

It just so happens that his hedge fund expertise complements her design eye and customer-intel.

Being a numbers guy, he went straight for the data, and immediately started focusing on their cost of acquisition as the accelerator (or roadblock) to scale.

For him, this is where to build the company’s success. Driving down the cost of customer acquisition first buys you more time to focus on the other side of the equation: Increasing the lifetime value of each customer via upsells and cross-sells.

For Spearmint, less than $10 per customer is the goal. The closer they get to $5, the happier they are (more on that below).

John refers to this as the tip of the spear in understanding business success.

“We decided very early on that we weren’t going to raise any outside money at all,” John said. “I pay very close attention to what the self-funding growth rate of the company is. If I get customer acquisition costs right, then I’m making sure I’m doing the right thing from a cash perspective.”

The $5 platform for Spearmint? Facebook.

And how does he keep costs so low? John reportedly checks this metric every.single.day.

So on a daily basis he’s scrutinizing: What’s the cost of acquisition of the active campaigns?

Then he’ll switch gears on longer intervals to ask:

  • What’s the audience growth across channels? (Weekly)
  • What’s the aggregate return rate of customer acquisitions? (Monthly)

He takes all of this data to see if they are growing… if their growth has slowed… why either is happening… what’s causing it… etc, etc, etc.

In other words, they intimately understand the math behind each and every conversion.

They know when A/B tests are lying. They know when new customer data is ‘leaking’ outside of their funnel.

And if something’s not working? They’re not afraid to pivot.

3. Be prepared to change course

“Everybody has a plan until you get punched in the mouth.”

Sage advice from a wise old man.

mike tyson meme

See, scrutinizing data and reading every blog post imaginable is nice. But things will never play out like you think they will. Like, never ever.

So you gotta adapt.

In 2016, Spearmint LOVE’s revenue grew by 1,100%. Sounds impressive now, after the fact.

But hindsight’s 20/20 they say.

The picture wasn’t so rosy in the Spring of 2016. ROI kept dropping. Nobody could figure out why.

First, John assumed that their ad wasn’t fresh any more, and that Facebook’s algorithm meant it wasn’t being shown as much. Ad fatigue is a thing.

more ads fewer ctrImage Source

So they updated their ads, giving them new photos and copy. Still, the ROI didn’t budge. No sign of the up-and-to-the-right picture it is today.

About six months into freshening up the ads, the answer hit John while on a walk.

It wasn’t the ad at all. Rather, it was the audience.

They weren’t in the market for the same thing anymore.

It’s like this:

Six months after an ad goes live, Spearmint LOVE’s target audience (new moms), now have a baby/toddler/child that is six months older. They aren’t looking for that product anymore.

Babies, apparently, don’t stay babies forever.

So Spearmint LOVE now tailors its ads to the different stages of a mom shopper:

  • Pregnancy,
  • Birth,
  • 1st birthday, etc.

At every stage, shopping habits shift. And at every stage, Spearmint LOVE now has a different ad.

So it wasn’t the ad creative after all. It was the ad targeting that was influencing their ROI.

4. Targeting Ads, Then Targeting Even More

“What was happening was the people were changing,” John said.

“The mom who was buying that product was no longer in the same life stage. I had to adjust my custom audiences to be attentive.”

The ROI dropoff was simply a reality of Spearmint LOVE’s ever-changing audience and industry. To combat the problem, John realized they needed more dynamic ads to continue attracting their evolving audience.

This is where Facebook’s Custom Audiences come into play. You can group audiences based on their levels of product awareness and intent to buy based on a number of criteria, like:

  • Website visits
  • Product views
  • Page engagements
  • Video views
  • Products added to cart
  • And more

Facebook custom audience ad setting

Custom Audiences give an upclose view of customers by dividing them up into segments, and giving them the message that is right for them.

Depending on where the customer is in their buying journey (are they brand new, cold prospects? Or are they on fire and ready to buy?), you are looking at three different things here: (1) separate ads/offers for (2) separate groups of people in (3) separate groups of custom audiences.

Like this:

klientboost channel temperatureImage Source

Here’s how that looks as you go down the sales funnel.

Ice cold (top of the funnel)

You can’t do custom audiences for these newbies, but you can get to know them better to eventually place them into a group. And, you can’t start moving them through the funnel to get them into custom groups.

Entice them with an ad and get them to your website to learn more, for instance.

ecommerce advertising on FacebookImage Source

You can even create custom audiences based on Facebook engagement (if you don’t have a site that typically generates high-traffic). If a customer likes or comments, clicks on a CTA, or saves a post, they can be added to this list.

Lukewarm (middle of the funnel)

After making people more aware of the product through web visits and Facebook engagement, you can move them down the funnel into action territory.

This means, opting-in and handing over some of their contact info. Dangle a little lead magnet, why don’t ya?

lead magnet paid advertisement

Offer a “free course.” How about some actionable items for the customer to take to let them know just how useful the product is?

Each separate opt-in option has its own custom audience. You can break these down even further by what the opt-in service offers, or by simply creating a custom audience for each lead magnet.

Fire hot lava (bottom of the funnel)

The chilly customers are getting the new lead offers like the freebies. Once you have them converted, you can continue to engage them with additional email campaigns or webinars to get them primed to buy.

Now, you can combine Dynamic Product Ads to target customers who have viewed specific site pages or products with custom event combinations.

Make rules for your custom audiences that will allow for an additional set of options. What was the dollar amount of their abandoned shopping cart, for instance? Did they select hundreds of dollars worth of goods? That might be warrant its own audience group.

During Thanksgiving, for example, Spearmint Love focused on users who had been to the website in the last two months, but hadn’t made a buy. They took the ads right from the product catalog, showing users what they had already look at on the website, and nudging them to make the purchase with Dynamic Product ads.

onesie facebook ad

And this level of granularity allowed Spearmint LOVE to generate a 14.2x return on their ad spend.

5. Focus on Retaining Old Clients Rather Than Getting New Ones

Shari ran her Spearmint LOVE blog for three years to successful results, building the brand, and building her customers — before expanding into all of these multiple channels.

This blogging background also allowed Shair to connect with wholesalers and distributors to expand Spearmint’s inventory and product.

She used her photography skills to create high-quality pictures featuring her product and drawing in nearly half a million followers. Because she had been the voice behind the brand for so long, she was able to connect with customers in a way that matched what they were looking for.

“I sell a feeling in a photo –– and make it easy for every customer to make that photo her family reality,” Shari said. “I put up a photo of not just a shirt or shoes, but of an entire outfit. And moms will come back to the site and buy everything in that picture.”

Ok. Cool. But why is any of this soft, intangible crap worth mentioning?!

Because your existing customers — not your new ones — are the most profitable.

John put his previous financial expertise to good use by creating a vintage analysis of Spearmint’s customers to help the company identify any trends or potential success of additions to the brand. Spearmint uses this to evaluate their customers’ lifetime values in a fancy table like this:

cohort for ecommerce storeImage Source

The end goal is a cohort analysis, where they’re essentially:

  1. Tracking each customer using their order ID.
  2. Then separating them into groups, or cohorts, based on the month of their first purchase.
  3. From there, analyze how each cohort acts over time (i.e. What are the patterns of when they made their first purchase, and then their next purchase?).

“We know on average our typical customer will convert again in X months,” John said. “We can predict when that next order might be and we can time our marketing based upon those types of insights.”

You can use this information to target each cohort based on their buying habits and timelines. For Spearmint, this looks like a personalized shopping experience through “custom windows” that adapt based on the different behaviors of moms as they go through the stages of pregnancy through birth and beyond (see point #3 above).

  • Window 1 is the period of time that includes six months before the baby is born until six months after.
  • Then, Window 2 is for when the baby is 6-18 months old. Spending for moms remains high in this window, but not as high as in Window 1.
  • Window 3 captures 18-30 months, and
  • Window 4 is anything beyond 30 months. Each of these windows, or cohorts, gets their own engagement, ads, and interactions to match their interests at that time.

This is important because even a (relatively minor) customer retention rate bump of just 5%, you can increase your profits by 25% to 95%.

By shifting focus to current customers by just a teeny bit, you’re finding a bigger payoff long term. (Which then allows you to spend less on new customer acquisition as well.)

What’s more, online companies have to spend even more (20-40%) than brick and mortar stores. What’s that mean for online stores? They have to keep a customer around for longer just to get back their original ad spend.

Image Source

For Spearmint, this means they focus on keeping ad spend as low as possible.

“If you’re selling things at 25% margins, you’re going to need a higher return to make that make sense,” John said. “For us, we’re looking at ad spends where we’re getting at least $5 of revenue or more, preferably closer to the $10 mark for every dollar of ads spent.”

They put to use all of those tips we talked about: targeting, custom audiences, etc, and then they recoup their money spent on the ad buy.

Conclusion

It’s not every day a mommy blogger can turn her site into a business and find 991% YoY growth. In 2015, sales stood at $150,000. In 2016, that number skyrocketed to $1.5M.

Combining clever distribution (i.e. multiple channels) and capitalizing on social media engagement helped Spearmint LOVE to grow (its already sizable customer base) 38% YoY conversion.

Then with uber-targeted ads and custom audiences to meet the evolving needs of their customers, they pull in 94% of their total sales from Facebook and Instagram alone.

They say that necessity is the mother of invention.

Years ago, before all of this, Shari Lott was a mother then in need a blanket. And she just so happened to have found a booming company in the process.

About the Author: Brad Smith is the founder of Codeless, a B2B content creation company. Frequent contributor to Kissmetrics, Unbounce, WordStream, AdEspresso, Search Engine Journal, Autopilot, and more.



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/18/what-a-baby-clothes-blog-can-teach-you-about-a-991-yoy-growth-using-paid-acquisition/

OmniEngine Review | Demo Plus OmniEngine Bonus

You can watch the video on Youtube here : https://youtu.be/XbYOY4trRHw

Via Review And Bonus Channel



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/18/omniengine-review-demo-plus-omniengine-bonus/

OmniEngine Review : Bonus

The following article was first published on : OmniEngine Review : Bonus

OmniEngine is the worlds 1st all-in-one wordpress theme that build a viral news website at the click of few buttons in less than 10 min, curate content and create and track powerful facebook ads campaigns and generates revenue in 3 simple steps!

Thsi wordpress theme curate viral contents from close to 100 top news website, 250 niche article categories and create powerful fb ads campaign that generate loads of traffic with inbuilt converting headline templates used by top viral content sites like Buzzfeed, ViralNova e.t.c

Why OmniEngine when there are already 100s of site builders out there? Most site builders out there may look beautiful, but they are not tested, they are not optimised for high conversions, high clicks and left the user to figure it out on their own. They don’t know how to get high quality and engaging content to these sites, how to drive traffic that actually profit them.

Here’re some of omniengine wordpress theme awesome features :

  • First 3 in1 Theme that allow you to build a Viral website with inbuilt viral website templates, curates contents and create powerful FB ads Campaign in minutes.
  • Build Professional Looking Viral websites using our Elegant Templates that is designed to Increase your CTR and Earnings.
  • Get the most viral News Content from over 70 top news website in the world. (ABC News, Al Jazeera, BBC News, BBC Sport, Bloomberg, Buzzfeed, Associated Press, Bild, Business Insider UK, CNN, CNBC, Daily News, Entertainment Weekly, Financial Times, Fox, Google News, Mashable, New Scientist, Reddit, TechCrunch, The Guardian, The Huffinton Post, Wired.de, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today….)
  • Curation Page, Privacy Policy and Terms and condition page generated automatically for your website.
  • One-place- Ads Dashboard Manager –Manage all your ads code in one place.
  • Get content from over 250 Niche Articles Categories.
  • Ability to Search Content Based on Categories and Search Videos and Images based on Keywords.
  • Get the most viral and trending Images from Flickr and Pixabay.
  • Get the most Viral GIFs from giphy.com
  • Get the most Viral and trending Videos from Youtube, Dailymotion and Vimeo
    Multipost Feature – It Allows to post multiple content at the click on a button.

OmniEngine Review



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/18/omniengine-review-bonus/

Monday, July 17, 2017

VideoBuilder Review | Huge VideoBuilder Bonus

You can watch the video on Youtube here : https://youtu.be/_goMoLc1t_M

Via Review And Bonus Channel



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/17/videobuilder-review-huge-videobuilder-bonus/

Activity Report: Drill Down to See What is Actually Happening With Your Site or Product

A part of using analytics is knowing what user behavior is driving what action. Most tools only give you surface-level data. For example, you’re aware that signups decreased last week, but you won’t know which segments are behind any trends in your KPIs. And that makes it pretty useless.

Activity Report is our approach to solving this. With this report, you’ll look at specific events (say, user signups) over a period of time (week, month, etc) and then drill down to see what’s driving the trends. This helps you understand the “why” behind any meaningful trends.

Let’s see how this report works.

Product Marketers: See Which User Segments Are Driving Product Adoption

As product marketers, we’ll want to make sure our users are using product features, new and old, and staying engaged with the product. We can track this engagement and what’s driving it in the Activity Report.

You can set up an event to trigger anytime someone users a feature in your product. For simplicity in this post, we’ll have an event that triggers when someone uses feature “A”. We’ll set the date range to the last 30 days.

product adoption graph

793 people have used the feature in the last 30 days. We see our usual dips that occur during the weekends, but quickly recover on Mondays.

To see who is using this feature, we’ll drill down by selecting account status. This will show us how many are current, paying users and how many are trial users.

segmentation first level activity report

This shows us very clearly that the bulk of people using this feature are paying users. Our trial users are significantly fewer, and they use it less times than our paying users. Our free users have low engagement, about 2 times per person, far fewer than the 18 and 25 we have for paying and trial users.

Let’s look at the plan tier for our paying users. This will help us answer the question – are our enterprise users using the app more? Or is it the small or medium users?

account status propertyproperty values table in kissmetrics activity report

This shows us that users on the medium plan type are the ones who are, by far, using this feature the most. They’re driving the engagement, or lack thereof, of the feature.

So now that we know this, what’s the next step? What can we do with this information?

We know the user behavior – our enterprise and small customers aren’t engaging with this feature as much as we’d like. Wouldn’t it be nice to send an email to these users to get them familiar with the feature and to give it a try?

Good news – we can do this quite easily. And we won’t have to leave Kissmetrics to do it.

With Kissmetrics Campaigns, we can send email messages to anyone in our user base. We’ll simply set the criteria for the users in the small and enterprise plan who haven’t used the feature and send them a message giving the background on this feature and the primary benefits.

https://fast.wistia.net/assets/external/E-v1.js

Marketers: Understand What’s Influencing Signups

You sit down on Friday afternoon to write your weekly report, and pull up the Activity Report to see that signups have been plummeting all week.

We went from 36 signups on Sunday down to just 7 on Thursday.

What’s causing this drop? Let’s drill down to see.

We’ve been running a lot of ad campaigns lately, so let’s split these signups by marketing channel : origin. This will show us the original marketing channel they come from (ie organic, paid, social, etc) and then origin will display the referring URL or the Campaign Name that was used in the UTM parameter.

channel origin kissmetrics

Here’s where our customers are coming from:

where customers are channels

To visualize this data, we’ll scroll up to the graph:

visualization activity report graph

We can see what’s driving the slump in signups. The blue line, representing our adwords traffic, is almost perfectly correlated with our drop in signups for all channels. Now we know the channel that’s causing the drop, but to investigate further, let’s drill down into our adwords channel to see what ads are specifically leading the drop.

We’ll select the UTM Campaign Terms to see which ad group is responsible for the drop.

And we have our answer. Adwords-group-3 is the primary driver of the poor performance. We’ll have to turn this ad group and create new ads that convert better.

So to recap – we saw our signups plummet in one week, we drilled down by the marketing channel, and the origin. We saw that AdWords was responsible for the drop, but because we have multiple ad groups we didn’t know which segment was responsible. So we drilled another level down into Campaign Terms and got our answer. And we did this all with a single report, and we got the insight in a couple minutes.

Growth Teams: See Which Segments Are Outperforming and Underperforming in A/B Tests

Growth teams rely on constant experimentation and learning to drive growth for their companies.

What we’ll do here is look at a conversion event, signed up, then drill down into which a/b test they were in, then see what referrer they originated from.

So we’ll select our event, signed up and see how it’s performed over the last 30 days:

activity report metric 30 days

Looks like it’s holding steady. Now let’s drill down to our recent a/b test and view the variants in this group:

activity report and ab tests

Wow – it looks like variant group 1 received significantly more signups than original and the people that weren’t in the a/b test. Let’s look further at our winning variation by seeing who referred them to our site:

activity report km referrer drill down

We have 70 different referrers, but let’s focus on the top 3.

Looks like our social media mentions and views on Hacker News and Inbound received the most views and brought the targeted traffic that ended up converting to signing up.

What can we learn from this? Our traffic coming from these sources is targeted towards the right audience that is interested in our product. We should to get more traffic coming from these channels.

While we can’t advertise on Hacker News or Inbound, we can on Facebook and other places where our audience frequently visits. To get on Hacker News, Inbound, and other places we’ll have to release features that capture that audience’s attention or write influential, thought-provoking pieces that are worth sharing. Easier said than done, but now we know what brings qualified traffic.

Conclusion

Often times in analytics you’ll need to drill down to see exactly what’s driving what. That’s what Activity Report does. Pick a KPI, and drill down to see what’s driving the growth or contraction. Request a demo to see how it will work for your company.



from WordPress https://reviewandbonuss.wordpress.com/2017/07/17/activity-report-drill-down-to-see-what-is-actually-happening-with-your-site-or-product/