Writing does not start from the time you press the first key on your keyboard, it starts long before that. It starts from the time you starts thinking about your writing. An article starts in the writer’s mind and ends it journey in the reader’s mind. Blog, website, or paper is just a medium though which the idea inherited in article is conveyed. Therefore, in order to make your article interesting you need to work on your thought process. And asking the following questions will help you in that.
What your audience what?
Do not just write what you feel is right because the chances are quite fair that most of the time it is not right. You need to ask your audience what they need. You can take help of occasional surveys, or visit forums in your niche or read other blogs in your niche to understand your audience’s need. This is very important.
What tone do they like?
Not only what you write is important, but how you write is equally important. You should not use just any tone of voice, rather you should ask your audience how they want to be communicated. Some people need authority-like guidance, while other wants to read blogs that treat them equal, while other wants to feel superior. Use the tone your audience wants you to use.
When do they want to hear it?
Timing is equally important. If everyone in your niche is publishing its article at 10 AM then there is a good reason to that. May be it’s the audience who want that! You should research in this as well. Observe when you see spikes in viewership. And also ask your audience if they want you to post daily, or posting on alternate day will do? Should you write on weekends?
These are the decisions you need to make, and these along with creative use of words and sentences will make your blog interesting to read.
Tags: Audience, blog, blogs, Decisions, forums, Good Reason, Guidance, Journey, Keyboard, Niche, Occasional Surveys, Sentences, Spikes, Thought Process, Tone Of Voice, Viewership
No. It is not, if your all your audience knows who you are, what you do, and what you stand for, which I think is not possible. And till the time it is not possible, you need to use Marketing to inform them.
Marketing is nothing just a medium for-profit and not-for-profit organization uses to inform its stake holders —customers, employees, and investors—about the product, services, decisions, and actions of an organization.
What marketing cannot do?
In the above definition, we saw what marketing can do. Now, we will see what it cannot do. Marketing cannot do the following:
- It cannot sell products. Yes, no one and nothing can sell a crappy product. Marketing, at best, can create demand for your product by building interest, but it cannot sell your product, not at least for long.
- It cannot create need. This is another thing that marketing cannot do. It may influence decision, but it cannot sell any product, no matter how great it is, to someone who doesn’t need it. If I do not need a pair of sports shoes then no matter how hard Nike tries, it cannot make me buy.
- Marketing cannot create need. Marketing cannot create need. At best, it can fuel the latent need and bring it on surface (in consciousness) but it cannot create a need which has never been there.
And no marketer tries to do that. When I say this I mean ethical marketer. For dupers, no rule applies. A marketer only tries to convince you that his product can meet your need more effectively than the one you are using it, or it can make you realize your latent need.
When all consumers all all-knowing, and have reached the level of self-actualization then marketing will become useless, but we need marketing till the time this doesn’t happen, which I am afraid never will happen.
Tags: Audience, Consciousness, Consumers, Crappy Product, Decisions, Investors, Marketer, Marketing Success, Nike, Product Marketing, Profit Organization, Self Actualization, Sports Shoes, Stake Holders
In the last three articles on keywords, we have talked about every aspect of keywords and key phrases, about its nature, its length and its uses. As the background is now prepared, we should take our discussion on keywords forward, and finish this four-article long discussion with keyword research, and the art and science of finding keywords suitable for your website.
Before going to the science part of the keyword research, let’s first talk about the art part. As discussed in the last article, competition and volume of searches per day are two major criteria on which the keywords related decisions should be based. But how to find which keyword will be related to which field? Well, the answer my friend is common sense, and common knowledge.
We get common knowledge from the everyday experiences that we have. If you are not some alien visiting earth for the first time then you will not enter physics or anything other than terms related to marketing, if you are looking for websites that deals with marketing books, and other marketing related resources. We start by entering one generic keyword related to the field in which we are planning to build our business. For continuity sake, let’s take “Marketing books” as the keyword around which we want to make a website. But before going further with the search, we should talk about the science part, about the tools that we need to use in order to conduct the keyword research. There are many tools, paid as well as free, available on the Internet that will assist you in finding the right keyword for your website. In this article, I will give you a brief list of five good free keyword research tools. The five free keyword tools that will come handy in your research are:
- Google Adword Keyword’s tool
- SEO Book Keyword Suggestion Tool
- KeywordTracker Keywords (Free Version available)
- VRE (Virtual Real Estate) Tool bar (Gives Overture output. Overture is Yahoo’s property)
- Keyword Discovery (Free Version available)
My personal favourite among all is Google Adword Keyword tool. For this article, we will use Google Adword keyword tool to help us find keywords related to “Marketing books.”
If we enter “Marketing books” in the designated area of Google Adword keyword tool then we will get a list of keywords like “marketing books,” “marketing management book,” “marketing book,” “internet marketing book,” “marketing textbook,”, “marketing ebooks,” etc.
As you can see all the keywords and related suggestions in the result are relevant to the “marketing books” niche. Now, the second step in the process of finalizing keywords is to find out which keyword is better for us. To attain this goal, let’s choose one keyword and see what result Google search is producing for that keyword. I chose “marketing ebooks” for the purpose, and upon search in phrase match mode, Google produces 222,000 results. Hence, the keyword has qualified the competition benchmark test. Now, it’s time to see how it fares on the number of daily searches test. The keyword “marketing ebooks” with the Google Adwrod Keyword tool returns 2900 as a result against average search volume of last 12 months, whereas it says 4400 people searched for the keyword “marketing ebooks” in the month of March. This is confusing, isn’t it? To get a better idea about the search volume, you can also study the search volume trends. This feature can be activated from the drop-down menu beneath the label “Choose columns to display.” Once you are confident with the tool, you can also start digging deeper to get more precise results.
As found, the keyword “marketing ebooks” has around 100 searches per day, and the competition for this niche is also just 222,000. Hence, this keyword qualifies for the future website. We should choose not more than 3 keywords for your website. There are more to keywords, like keyword placing, keyword ranking, etc., and we also need to know the proper way in which the selected keywords or key phrases can be used within the content.
Tags: Art And Science, Common Knowledge, Common Sense, Continuity, Decisions, Discovery, Everyday Experiences, Free Keyword Research, Free Version, google, Keyword Research Tools, Keyword Suggestion Tool, Marketing Books, Phrases, Physics, Related Resources, Sake, Tool Bar, Virtual Real Estate, Visiting Earth