Friday, April 29, 2016

Online Marketing News: Short Attention Spans, Google Feed Rules, Starbucks Emojis

shortening human attention span

shortening human attention span

The Shortening Human Attention Span (And What it Means for Marketers) [Infographic]
Down from 12 seconds in 2000, the average human attention span is now 8.25 seconds. That leaves marketers with very little time to make a meaningful impression. But, don't sweat it too much. This infographic has some solid tips on how to capture and hold the attention of your audience, like using clear and brief messaging and telling your audience a story. Social Media Today



Google adds Merchant Center Feed Rules to make formatting shopping feeds easier
For a long time, Google shopping feeds have been a bump in the road for digital advertisers. So much so that there's a whole industry dedicated to helping advertisers manage their shopping feeds. On Tuesday, Google announced a new feature in the Merchant Center -- Merchant Center Feed Rules, that will help advertisers fix errors themselves in a simple way. Search Engine Land

Starbucks launched its own keyboard app so you can text emojis of unicorns drinking coffee
Starbucks is now allowing users to send unicorn and coffee emojis to their contacts. That's it folks, the world is complete. The app was released under a partnership with Snaps Media, and is Starbucks' first consumer app that is focused on entertaining their audience. What could this mean for other brands? I'm willing to bet we'll see more custom emoji keyboards in the near future. TechCrunch

Facebook's mobile ad revenue grew by 76% to $4.26 billion in Q1 2016
Facebook reportedly grew revenue in Q1 of 2016, which is a contrast to reports issued by Twitter and Apple with revenue reportedly being less than expected. Not only is mobile ad revenue up, but Facebook's daily audience grew by 16%, with money made from each audience member increasing by 33%. This post is full of useful information from that report, and some highly entertaining gifs to boot. Marketing Land

64% of enterprise marketers DON'T have a documented content marketing strategy

Twitter Q1 2016 Revenue Falls Short of Analysts' Projections
Twitter reported that while revenue was up 36% YOY for Q1, the $595 million fell short of analysts predictions. According to SocialTimes, "Twitter reported a GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) net loss of $80 million, or 12 cents per share, less than one-half the company's net loss in the first quarter of 2015." SocialTimes

Marketers Choose Responsive Email Templates Over Fluid Hybrid Design
New research shows that marketing professionals worldwide are overwhelmingly choosing to use responsive email templates (56.9%) over fluid hybrid design (7.9%). Interestingly, 19.9% are using both types of templates, and 15.2% aren't using either. Designing for mobile first may sound like a trendy marketing idea, but smart marketers know that if your emails don't look great on mobile, they aren't nearly as effective. eMarketer

What were your top online marketing news stories this week?

I'll be back next week with more online marketing news! In the meantime, send your thoughts and ideas to me @Tiffani_Allen or @toprank!

The post Online Marketing News: Short Attention Spans, Google Feed Rules, Starbucks Emojis appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.




The $100,000 Challenge: March Update

march update


We finally finished the last month of the $100,000 challenge. March was an awesome month for Nutrition Secrets. Not only did the traffic grow to 218,811 visitors, but revenue did too-it went up to $121,492.65.


It wasn't hard to hit the revenue goals as we had enough fish oil in stock, plus we started to generate money from affiliate sales.


So let's dive right in…


Traffic


Compared to February, the traffic went up to 218,811 visitors and 269,814 pageviews. The increase was only 18,102, which isn't much.


But considering that the popularity of nutrition and fitness sites is cyclical (January and February are most popular) and that Mike didn't blog much on NutritionSecrets.com in March, it wasn't too bad.


Overall, Mike has slowed down on the blogging front. Over the next few months, he wants to try a few fun content formats such as infographics and wants to see what happens if we were to dump a few hundred grand into the blog. It won't be much of an experiment at that point, but we are just curious to see if we can get the blog to a million visitors a month.


traffic sources


Nonetheless, the traffic isn't performing too badly. Even in April, the traffic has been on an upward trend while little to no effort has been put into the blog since the challenge has been over.


Revenue


The revenue is a bit more complicated to breakdown as it is coming from two sources now: Amazon and affiliates.


In March, revenue from Amazon hit $112,573.30.


amazon revenue


There are a few key elements to growing Amazon sales:



  1. Reviews – the more people you can get to leave a review, the better off you are. Most people don't even read the reviews, but if they are high in ratings and you have tons in quantity, you are in good shape. If you have a blog that's driving sales, a great way to get more reviews is through marketing automation. You can promote the product to your email list, and then after a few weeks of promoting your product to those people, you would send an automated email asking them to leave a review. You won't really know who bought the product, but you would still put the review email-applicable to a portion of your list-in your sequence.

  2. Keywords – with Amazon, you can add keywords. Most people add basic ones like “fish oil,” but as you know, it is all about the long tail. Amazon opened it up so you can stuff hundreds of keywords now, and with the use of Google Keyword Planner, you can come up with popular variations. You'll then start ranking for tons of keywords on Amazon.

  3. Combating negative Amazon reviews – similarly to what happens when people employ negative SEO, competitors sabotage your Amazon listing by taking up your front page with terrible reviews. They do this to tank your sales so they can generate more income. You fight this by building up your email list on your blog and continually blasting out to your list when you have bad reviews, asking your readers to up-vote the positive ones.

  4. Ads – Amazon allows ads on its platform. Whether it is profitable or not, ads help you generate more sales. And if you can increase your sales velocity, you'll find that your listing climbs up higher and starts to stick-it stays up there even after your ads stop showing. Sure, other people can do the same thing, but most don't.


As for affiliate income, we started to push stuff by the Truth About Abs guys. We started doing email blasts to our list in order to generate the sales, and it has been working out well. The copy isn't too bad, but there are two reasons it's working out well.


aweber



  1. We collect a lot more emails – we are generating 300 to 400 email sign-ups a day. It's much larger than our previous numbers for one reason: we turned off double opt-in. Aweber usually requires double opt-in when you use third-party software to collect emails, but Mike called Aweber and got them to disable double opt-ins.

  2. Good copy – our copy converts well. You can see an example email below. And we have many more emails like this in the sequence. So, we continually send you affiliate offers over time, which helps.


Here is the email copy we have been testing:


Email – This plant food HARMS your metabolism & heart


Hi {!firstname_fix}


Sometimes it's not the enemy you know that's the problem, but the friend you think you know.


In this case, I'm talking about nutrition in foods. It's common knowledge that stuff like sugary drinks are just plain bad for you. The best you can say is that your body can absorb the bad effects if you only have them occasionally.


But what about foods you thought weren't bad, and you heard were actually good for you?


I have some bad news, and some good news. The bad: some so-called “healthy” foods may be the cause of why you work so hard to eat healthy and haven't seen the results you expected. The good news: There's a solution I read about from best selling author Mike Geary.  Read on… (removed affiliate link)


Email – 2 Simple steps to REMOVE visceral belly fat (the DEADLIEST type)


Hi {!firstname_fix}


People often refer to past times as “the good old days” with a nostalgic tone. At least when it comes to many nutritional and health practices, I think of them more like the “bad old days.”


For example, people thought the wonders of science had delivered new, healthy products called “trans fats” that were featured in margarine, to replace that nasty butter. We now know that trans fats are about the worst thing you can coat your innards with.


People also thought they could do “spot reducing” of unattractive belly fat by using those jiggling-belt machines, or some other gimmick.


Well, belly fat certainly is still unattractive, and research says it's also a danger sign. But research has also identified more-effective ways of getting rid of that spare tire. Here's how. (removed affiliate link)


Email – 7 “fatty” foods for a flat stomach


Hi {!firstname_fix}


I spend full time on nutrition- and health-related activities. That's the business I'm in.


I'm also an improvement junkie, always looking for the latest, best information. So you can imagine that I've pretty much seen it all: Every product, every supplement, every type of exercise.


Most of them are underwhelming. Yawn.


I'm writing you today because I recently came across something that made me sit up and pay attention. It's a short-term blueprint for eating the right foods to burn substantial fat, and it's all explained here… (removed affiliate link)


You can find high converting offers on sites such as Clickbank. They even sort the offers by popularity. I need to get a screenshot of our Clickbank revenue and our other affiliate income sources from Mike as he created the accounts and has the logins. Once I do, I will update the post with a screenshot (we use three networks).


The total affiliate revenue was $8,919.35.


Profit


As for monthly profit, it was high…but for a different reason than you might think. When you sell tangible products, you buy tons of inventory and then sell it over the following few months. We didn't want to be out for our last month, so we spent a good chunk of money in the previous month, and, of course, we bought more in March.


Here is a breakdown of the expenses:



  • Fish oil – $68,492.52 (including Amazon fees, shipping to Amazon for Prime, coupon-related expenses, and producing more inventory)

  • Aweber – $149

  • Designer – $375 (continually tweaking the site)

  • Hosting – $249

  • Mike – free (Mike doesn't get paid, but he owns a percentage of the blog)

  • Accounting – $290 (we are now paying a bookkeeper to help out with the books)


Total expenses came out to $69,555.52.


That brings the total profit to $51,937.13.


Of course, to maintain the growth, we would have to keep buying fish oil, but after awhile, we would cap out on sales, and our margins should be a healthy 30% plus. As for March, I didn't spend much on buying tons more inventory as I wanted to show that selling supplements can be profitable.


Conclusion


Overall, the $100,000 challenge was fun, but I wouldn't do it again. It's just too much work with everything I have going on.


It was still a good learning experience. One thing I realized is how much harder it is to rank on Google today compared to 5 years ago. Almost all of my sites are old, so it is much easier for them to rank.


And although NutritionSecrets.com generated good traffic, if it were 5 years ago, the blog would have been at a million visitors a month with the same amount of effort.


So, what do you think of the $100,000 challenge?




Marketing Day: IAB's LEAN scoring, Echo/Alexa sales & LinkedIn's earnings report

Here's our recap of what happened in online marketing today, as reported on Marketing Land and other places across the web.



Please visit Marketing Land for the full article.


Thursday, April 28, 2016

The Long Goodbye: 7 Sites That Make It Hard to Unsubscribe

featured-image-de-optimization-friction-650

De-optimizing your cancellation process: You can check out any time you'd like, but you can never leave.

Easy is better. Simplify every process. Reduce friction. Help visitors take action quickly. The easier the website or landing page is to use, the more profitable it will be.


But there are exceptions.


Some of your visitors want to act in ways that don't make money for your business. Some actions cause you to lose traffic, lose subscribers and lose money. Making these actions easier actually reduces profits.


These are the conversion rates you don't want to optimize:



  • Cancel service

  • Unsubscribe

  • Downgrade your account


Sometimes, it pays to be difficult - but not if you're sacrificing delightful user experience.


Here are seven de-optimized processes for ending subscriptions and cancelling service.


Are they profitable? Probably. Delightful? You be the judge.


1. Hidden help files: Cancelling Verizon


Verizon has a page about cancelling service, but people don't like it much. The average rating of 1000 users is one out of five stars. And Verizon doesn't seem to mind telling us this.


deoptimizing-opt-out-verizon-friction-example


The page is really about moving, changing or disconnecting service. But most likely, most visitors to this page aren't moving. They're trying to cancel.


But the page doesn't actually tell you how to do that.


If you want that information, you'll have to ask their automated agent, which is the robot head on the right. Here's what the robot will tell you…


deoptimizing-opt-out-verizon-friction-example2


That's right, you have to call. And this isn't a direct line - you'll have to wait as you're transferred. Make sure it's during business hours.


No wonder visitors gave this page one star.


2. Ending your free trial: Downgrading Hootsuite


I love Hootsuite. I use it all the time. I once tried their pro features, but after a few days, I decided it wasn't for me. So I decided to switch back to the free version. This began a very long process.


You start by going to “billing” which doesn't quite describe what I want to do, but close enough. Next, you'll need to look very closely to find the “change plan type” link.


It's the smallest text on the page. Gray on white text. See it?


deoptimizing-opt-out-hootsuite-friction-example

It's the tiny, tiny text under the “Current plan” header on the right.

Now you have three options. The least profitable option for Hootsuite is on the right. It's the least prominent, grayed out box. And the call to action doesn't sound very appealing: “Downgrade.”


deoptimizing-opt-out-hootsuite-friction-example2


Click, and now you've made them sad. There's a little owl crying somewhere at Hootsuite Headquarters.


But wait! There's a special offer. And it's free! But if you really want to break that owl's heart, there's another downgrade link at the bottom.


deoptimizing-opt-out-hootsuite-friction-example3


Now it gets real. There's a red x next to the specific feature that we'll lose if we downgrade. The specificity triggers loss aversion. And it's not just the feature, I'm going to lose points!


To proceed, we have to really commit and click “Remove Everything” which sounds like a more extreme action that I'd intended.


deoptimizing-opt-out-hootsuite-friction-example4


One more message box with a reminder of what I'm losing. This must be to make sure I hadn't clicked those last four tiny links by accident.


deoptimizing-opt-out-hootsuite-friction-example5


And finally, success! But it's not over yet. There's a continue button…


deoptimizing-opt-out-hootsuite-friction-example6


…which brings me to a survey. It's smart to remove every dead end from your website, right?


Why not take the opportunity to gather a little information? One question asks about the reason for downgrading. Clever.


deoptimizing-opt-out-hootsuite-friction-example7


It was a long road of seven clicks, not including the survey. But we made it.


3. A very long dead end: Cancelling cable


I couldn't find any information about cancelling cable on my local cable company's website, so I looked in the knowledge center.


Looks like “cancel service” is #1 on the list of top searches.


deoptimizing-opt-out-RCN-friction-example


If it's the top search, they must have a page on this topic, right? Let's try searching for the most popular keyphrase on this website:


deoptimizing-opt-out-RCN-friction-example2


Nope! There is no page about cancelling. But the top search result might be helpful. It's about “making a change.” Let's try that.


deoptimizing-opt-out-RCN-friction-example3

This “making a change” page, by the way, was at the top of the list of “hot topics” on the previous page.

This page doesn't actually mention cancelling, although that appears to be the main reason people are coming to this “knowledge center.”


It's a dead end with a phone number at the top.


You know what happens next. It's a 30 minute phone call to an operator who first offers you a lower rate. Eventually, you learn that you can cancel, but you have to bring your cable box back to their office first. They are open from 10am to 3pm Monday through Thursday.


The final step? Get in the car and drive several miles to the cable company to return the cable box. How's that for user friction?


deoptimizing-opt-out-RCN-friction-example4


4. Instant regret: Opting out of a political newsletter


I'm on a lot of lists. Some of them are fundraising lists for political causes. These people send a lot of email, and although I might support the cause, enough is enough. Time to unsub.


Here's the opt-out “thank you” page for a left-leaning campaign finance reform movement:


deoptimizing-opt-out-end-citizens-united-friction-example


Oh no! Because of me, the bad guys won!


The regret trigger is accompanied by an offer to resubscribe. It's tempting.


5. Opt-out? Or update? Another unsubscribe process


Here is an unsubscribe page that doesn't use the word unsubscribe.


It's an offer to select from a list of newsletters with one option: “special subscription offers.” It looks exactly like a signup page.


deoptimizing-opt-out-crains-friction-example


Of course, you came to this page because you're trying to stop receiving those offers. But there is no option to unsubscribe, only an option to update preferences. You unsubscribe by unchecking the “yes” box.


If this newsletter was a relationship, you wouldn't be breaking up, you'd be declining the first date.


6. Cancelling premium service: Cutting ties with Spotify


Here's another break up story that will leave you in tears. Spotify is a great service, but if you upgraded to the premium version through iTunes, you're in a relationship that's hard to get out of. By the time you're done, you'll need some counselling.


Imaging you're trying to cancel Spotify Premium. You go to your account page. Now what do you click on?


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example1


The correct answer is “Subscription” which makes sense.


Step two in the process has a simple, clear link for cancelling:


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example2


Great. Let's click that…


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example3


We've hit a dead end. It's a notification telling us that we need to go to iTunes to cancel. You can't cancel Spotify from within Spotify.


So we head over to iTunes, and of course, we start at the beginning. As before, we'll go to “Account Info.”


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example4


Even though we're already logged in, we need to log in again…


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example5


At the bottom of this page is a small “Subscriptions” label. To the right of it is a “Manage” link. Let's try that. This was step seven in the process. But who's counting?


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example6


Found it! This is where your Spotify subscription is managed. But where's the cancel option? There isn't one. But we can turn off “Automatic Renewal.”


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example7


Next up: a confirmation message. But this doesn't actually cancel anything, it just lets it expire sometime within the next month.


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example8


I've endured this long process not because I don't want Spotify, but because I need to cancel premium so I can sign up for the family plan. So I really don't want to wait a month. Isn't there a way to cancel now? Let's chat with the support team.


deoptimizing-opt-out-spotify-friction-example9

In the end, you actually can't cancel. You can only turn off automatic renewal and then wait.


So the last step in this nine step in the process? Wait a month.


7. The endless funnel: The long road away from Audible


We've seen tough-to-quit services, hidden opt-outs, and post-cancellation surveys. Here's one final breakup service that combines them all into a masterpiece of deoptimization.


It's Audible.


Rather than having to purchase audiobooks, they sell a subscription to an endless stream of audiobooks. If you don't use them, the credits pile up. Eventually, you'll wonder why you're paying that monthly fee.


Let's see what it takes to cancel.


First, we go to our account details page. There are a lot of options here, including one clearly marked “Cancel my membership.”


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example

On the left, in the middle box.

Although we just told the site we want to cancel, we're presented with benefits and selling points.


Where's the cancel option?


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example2


Scroll down. It's below the fold.


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example3


Before we proceed, we need to name our reason.


This is a smart way for them to force the data collection. So we'll pick an option and click “Continue.”


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example4


After selecting that we're taken here:


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-example-5


Wait - we wanted to cancel, but the highlighted option here is to put the account “on hold!”


The “Continue Canceling” button is here but it's less prominent. The site is saying, “Let's not break up. Let's just take a break for a while.”


But determined to move on, we continue.


Next we land on an offer to keep our account at a lower cost. Rather than $180 per year, the price is reduced to $10:


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example6


But stay focused! We click “Continue Canceling.”


One last pitch to talk through things on the phone:


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example7


Or finish our (eighth?) step and click “Finish Canceling.”


We made it. Here, finally, is the confirmation page:


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example8


But of course, this isn't goodbye. We are told that although we've cancelled, we are “still a valued customer.” Once a customer, always a customer.


And the site wants to have one last conversation: Select a rating or leave additional comments.


The last screen? A list of reasons to renew.


Make that remorse disappear by choosing a plan and running back into the arms of Audible:


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example9


Of course, there's a confirmation email, which is another chance for reconciliation - back at the site, through email or over the phone.


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example10


And although we've cancelled, we're still subscribed. Minutes later we get another email, offering us a free book.


It's just a click away!


deoptimizing-opt-out-audible-friction-example11


Remember, that one-click relapse is easy, but to get clean again, you'll need to go back through that 12-step program.


It all reminds me of that lyric from the Eagles song Hotel California.


You can checkout any time you'd like. But you can never leave…


This is not marketing advice


Marketing is about promoting a product or service. It's about showing prospects that you understand their pain points and that you've got a tailored solution.


What you've witnessed here is entrapment. The goal is to retain customers at any cost. So before you consider these tactics, ask yourself:



  • If we keep them, will they still be happy?

  • Will there be a backlash against us?

  • Do these tactics violate our brand values?

  • How far are we willing to go to keep a customer?


Great websites are empathetic. They care, they help and they work with the visitor for mutual success.