Allstate Insurance Marketing Failure11.05.10

I spent some time at Adtech NYC last week. We had a table set up for OfferMobi (#1356), and I got to talk to literally hundreds of advertisers, affiliate managers from CPA networks, affiliates, cool people…

One of the highlights for me was meeting Jonathan Mizel. My buddy Donovan told me he was a cool guy, but hearing about it & experiencing it are two different things. (Translation: he’s a really awesome guy).

I’ll upload a pic of us in front of the OfferMobi sign once I snag it from his facebook…

Oh, who am I kidding. I update this blog maybe once every 3 months…You’d better just go check it out on facebook.

Anyway, as the title of this post states, someone in the Allstate marketing department really should be fired.

Was taking the BART from SFO to OAK to pick up the car (wife flew out after me from a different airport & gets back later tonight), when I saw this advertisement.

(If you’re not familiar with the BART, it’s the “Bay Area Rapid Transit” – the train system that connects San Francisco with the East Bay).





Really? Philadelphia? WTF?

I don’t want to get anyone in trouble, but COME ON!

I think I’ll create a facebook page for marketing failures. This will be my first post there. I invite you to post your own marketing failures. It’ll be fun.

(Will let you know when it’s all set up).

Looking forward to your comments on this one…
:-)

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Why Ryan Lee’s Continuity Summit II Was Different03.10.10

So…I went to Ryan Lee’s Continuity Summit.  Despite my wife’s complaints that I’ve been traveling too much lately, I got in the car and drove the whole…2 1/2  hours to Stamford, CT.

Now, Donna (my wife) had a couple of other issues she was worried about (other than me being away when she’s actually home).  So when she called me on the first day of the event, she said something along the lines of…

“I don’t want you getting into yet another thing when you haven’t even finished working on X.”
Translation: “you’d better not lose focus!”

And I couldn’t agree with her more.

See, if you’ve been to enough events, you’ve probably experienced something similar.  It seems like every single speaker tries to pull you in a different direction, sell you something else.  One says you’ve got to be doing video and need her product to learn social media the right way.  Another says that without his course you’ll never get your website up…sound familiar?

ConfusedYou come out of those events not knowing which way is up.  You even start to question yourself…”Have I been doing it wrong this whole time??”  Sometimes, you lose sight of what you were actually trying to accomplish in the first place, and you get scattered.  Or worse, you come out with 4 expensive products you probably didn’t need in the first place, and there’s no time left to study the materials, much less put them into action!

Then, there’s the blatant competition amongst participants.  Either a bunch of people who want to talk you into joining their business opportunity, or a bunch of people in your opportunity who are doing their best to keep secrets to themselves.

See, the problem with these events is that most people there are there because they’re looking for a way to “make money online.”

But Ryan Lee’s event was pleasantly different.

Sure…there were the speakers who came on stage with the intention of selling.  And many used pressure tactics (“…only for the next 10 minutes, then the price goes up…”).  But the difference was that they gave REAL content.  The juicy stuff you can take home and work with.  AND…

Get this.

The entire 1000+ person crowd was most interested in something like this:

(drumroll, please….)

1. “how can we work together?”
2. “what can I do to help you move your business forward?”

…and at a deeper level:

3. “how can I take my passion and turn it into a profitable online business while helping others?”

And that’s why, for the first time in the history of me attending live events, rather than coming out with products I didn’t need, or a feeling of failure, I came out empowered.  I came out with new clients.  New skills to use.  I came out with incredible ideas that I have already started putting into use (and that aren’t taking me away from my focus).  And I came out with potential JV partners, and new friends in the industry.  A new understanding of what it means to run an online business.

I learned from people like Yanik Silver and Tim Paulson how to charge more for my products and services.  I learned how to take one information product and turn it into at least 6 or 7 other info products (thanks, Jerry Clark).  And I learned all about the psychology of sales pages, and how to increase conversions (thanks to Chris Haddad).  With the training of Ryan Lee himself, I came out with a 24-hour blueprint to creating a continuity site (it’s easier than you think!).  Finally, I actually learned 4 new powerful traffic tactics.  Yep, ME, the traffic queen.  Tactics from Chris Farrell I had never heard of before.  (Now THAT is unheard of!).

And I actually found increased focus, thanks to Ryan Lee’s “idea joggers.”  These were a group of coaches who sat in the back of the room and spent time with as many people as they could helping them get a clearer picture of what they were passionate about…and how they could turn those passions into a business.

(A special thanks to Jillian, even though she did call me a “plastic face.”) ;-)

By the way, I especially enjoyed the 1-hour “speed networking,” even though I did just about lose my voice towards the end.  I would recommend making 300-or-so copies of your “calling card” rather than the 1,000 I made, though.

(Here’s the one I used)

About Me

So…would I recommend Ryan Lee’s Continuity Summit next year?  You betcha.  I’ll be there, notebook and pen in hand.

And until then?  Howie Schwartz’s Sustainable Traffic Workshop is coming up next week.  I’m looking forward to hanging out with the other project managers, and especially to presenting.

We’ll be talking about Mobile Marketing (which is quite possibly the hottest thing for local businesses right now), and about many other money-making marketing tactics.

I hope to see you there :-)

But if not…check back here for an update.

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10 Things I Learned In The ‘DK is a Street Performer’ SEO Challenge05.27.09

It’s Wednesday night, and tomorrow Dennis Karganilla will log into Google and type in the phrase “DK is a Street Performer,” at which point he’ll pick the winner of the dkisastreetperformer contest.

A few weeks ago, Howie Schwartz decided to challenge the members of Dennis Karganilla and Jimmy Davis’ “90 Day Challenge” marketing group.  The question was, who can rank on the first page of Google multiple times – as many times as possible – for the long keyword phrase.

Personally, I took massive action, and remained consistent throughout the month of the competition.  Here are 10 things I learned about SEO, challenges, and what it takes to rank on the first page of Google multiple times.

1. Quick action gets you on page one fast.
When the challenge began, there were no results for the given keyword phrase in Google.  Acting quickly got me on page one, where I immediately owned at least six of the 10 sites.

2. A good blueprint is essential.
I used a marketing strategy I learned from Howie Schwartz.  Without this strategy, the competition would have been a big game of “who just posted last.”  But using a specific link-building trick, I was able to give my websites authority that helped them stay high on page one.

3. Consistency is a must.
Because I promoted consistently for 3 weeks, I was able to monopolize page one, getting as many as 9 out of 10 choices on the first page of Google, but more often getting 8 out of 10. Even when my competitors tried to catch up after taking a break, they couldn’t.

4. No automation = time suck.
I managed to automate a few of my processes.  Had I not, I would have spent at least 10 more hours each week trying to promote my sites.  Or I would have had less substantial results.

5. Outsourcing is a necessity in the real world.
One keyword phrase is easy.  But when it comes to really ranking on Google – in normal situations – you need to rank for multiple keywords.  That’s why you need more than automation.  You need someone – or a group of people – who you’ve trained and can take over the day-to-day tasks.

6. In a new niche like this one, Google lets you decide.
Yep – that’s right.  YOU decide what goes in Google.  But it’s more complicated than that.  Google consistently optimizes its search pages.  And it wants to know, what are people clicking on, and what are the media related to this new niche.  In the beginning, many competitors were using blogs and videos.  So for a long time, Google placed two videos, side-by-side, on the first page of search.  Towards the end, most of the marketers leaned towards press releases, and today, as I write this, there are 3 press releases on the first page of Google.

7. Google gives new sites the benefit of the doubt.
So when you create a new webpage, Google throws it on the first page of results – just to see if people like it.  It’s a good way to get quick rankings.  Follow this up with a good marketing campaign, and you can stay on top of the results.

8. Social marketing has a strong influence in several ways.
Tweets on twitter actually can rank on the first page of Google.  But that’s not the really important part.  What’s really incredible is how much social media – twitter, facebook, etc., can influence success in a new market.  When videos were on the first page of search results, the videos shown were ones that had been visited the most and had some ratings.  Someone with a good following on any networking site can post a link and have immediate rankings on YouTube or other video sites.

9. Challenges help people take action – especially when there’s a prize.
You may be wondering what the point of this challenge was.  Other than bragging rights, the winner gets an Amazon Kindle from Howie Schwartz.  The possibility of receiving a prize gets people in motion.  Good thing to remember if you’re trying to motivate a team.

10. The only way to really learn about something is to do it.
I thought I knew a lot about ranking on Google.  And I did.  But now, after being “intimate” with Google for one keyword phrase, I know even more.  And when Google introduced a new tool, I was one of the first people to see it.

So…

That’s what I learned in the DK is a Street Performer SEO Challenge.

Do you think you could use some of these tips to help you in your marketing?

Leave a comment below – I’m curious to know what you think!

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