Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Digital Marketing Programme
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Rangers from the South West
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Social Media - DON'T Just do it!
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Future of Rural Asset Debate
This important event in the 2009 calendar is targeted at members of the local, regional and national policy and practice community with an interest in rural affairs.
The conference will be opened by Sir Don Curry, Chair of the Sustainable Farming and Food Delivery Group and author of the influential Curry Report.
Several rural research and policy papers will be presented throughout the day, cohering around the themes of Localism in the 21st Century, the Future of Rural Policy in the UK and Europe and Rural Assets: What’s the interest?
The conference is being held in the prestigious Queens Hotel in central Cheltenham on October 21st 2009.The delegate day rate is £100.00, which includes lunch and refreshments. You can secure your place at the conference now by booking online via the University of Gloucestershire Online Store
To find out more http://www.ccri.ac.uk/Events/PolicyConference2009.htm
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Got an iPhone? Try Marketing Apps
Marketing Apps on the Apple iPhone are the latest craze in keeping up to date with news, views and latest trends in the world of marketing. It’s simple, you just pick up your iPhone, go to App Store and search ‘Marketing’. Here are some Apps you might like to try out…
Marketing Forecast (Ad-ology Research) = FREE
Designed for strategic advertisers and marketers, Marketing Forecast provides a continuous stream of forward-looking marketing and consumer insights from Ad-ology Research and other top research firms. Four distinct channels collect the latest forecasts, news and recent Tweets targeted to those responsible for: Advertising, Brand Marketing, Digital Marketing and Consumer Spending. Video podcasts highlight the latest marketing research and consumer surveys from Ad-ology Research
Marketing Master (Simpaddico) = £0.59
A basic jargon and terminology flash card toolkit. Learn over 150 terms and parlance for Marketers. Search, shuffle and test yourself. Ideal for those new to marketing or taking Introductory Certificate
PRWeb Breaking News (PR Web) = FREE
Stay on top of breaking news from companies and organisations around the world with this leading online newswire focusing on marketing and advertising. 30,000 companies release news through PRWeb and this App aggregates them all on your iPhone
Mashable - The Social Media Guide (Mashable) - FREE
A place for tips, how-tos and the latest information about social media for web users, brands, news organisations, marketers and charities. Well respected and well informed
iNews (GDIPlus) - £1.19
Technically more of a news reader than a specific marketing feed but helpful and fully featured news reader with adjustable fonts. Tag news wires, favourite broadcasters, blogs and more in one integrated App
MarketingProfs (MarketingProfs) - FREE
Skim mini articles in 60 seconds in this marketing digest covering topics as broad as B2B Marketing, Buyer Insight, Email, Marketing Inspiration, SEO and Small Business
That’s your starter for 10…. are you using an App we haven’t covered? Please post it here and share it with everyone… And if you don’t have an iPhone…. well, what are you waiting for!?
Best way to think about your website
Change your way of thinking about your website. Treat it like an employee:
- It has a specific set of tasks to perform, writing a job spec for your website is no bad idea!
- It needs a development plan if it is to continue to perform at its best
- It needs regular updates to stay current – like a training plan
- It relies on input from various other team members to do its job
- Not everyone will like it all of the time
A website has a permanent, full time, role in your business: many treat it as a self-contained project – with beginning, a middle and (even more worryingly) an end. You wouldn’t recruit someone and think that, once they’d signed the contract, their job was complete or that they’d stay exactly the same as the day they walked through the door. You shouldn’t think the same of your website.
A person comes to your company with some skills and knowledge, but over time they will gain more specific knowledge about your company, and become more skilled as they learn on the job or undergo formal training and development. A website is just the same – however well conceived and delivered, it is only when real people start to interact with it that you’ll know what really works, and what doesn’t, on your site. Through reviewing analytics and undertaking user testing and feedback, you will be able to constantly refine and improve your website’s performance. Which brings me to performance… you’re likely to set of minimum performance standards for your staff, have you done the same for your website? And, do you have the tools to measure against those standards.
And of course, things change. Think also of a scenario in which your employee’s area of the business is subject to some sort of change (legal, environmental, new product, etc.) – they’ll need to adapt and respond. Your website is no different. Just because it was beautiful when you launched it, it may not be in a new context. What’s more, this is technology we’re talking about. The tech big boys work to a circa 6 month product development cycle – the pace of change is fast and furious. If your website is to stay current, you’ll need to keep an eye out for the new trends, like Twitter, Tag Clouds, etc… and whatever is just around the corner.
But, it many ways it is even better than an employee:
- It never sleeps
- It doesn’t take holiday.
- It won’t sue you if you change its role or replace it with a new one
Useful people management techniques you can apply to your website:
- Write it a job specSet a basic salary (hosting, support, regular updates)
- Set a commission plan (invest a percentage of the revenue it delivers back into traffic generation and improvements)
- Have a weekly one-to-one (update content, check stats)
- Conduct a monthly review (stats, performance targets, etc)
- Conduct a quarterly appraisal – consider a 360 appraisal where you get feedback from all usersSet a ‘training’ budget – essential updates, spring cleaning, new features
