Social media tips week: Get selling

When it comes to social media, you are NOT allowed to sell anywhere other than your own website, unless of course you have paid for the right to do so with FaceBook Ads or Google Ads.

So be careful not to promote your goods as For Sale in the social cloud. A better strategy is to talk about the benefits of your product offering and then provide links to a sales or landing page within the article. You can do this on other websites as well in their comments. But be careful not to offend or ruin a relationship. It could destroy that access point for life.

Selling online is a lot harder than in person, so my strategy has always been to get the person on the phone or in front of me as soon as possible to convert and close the deal. Do not keep a person hanging online by providing them with lots of emails and links with all your product features and pricelists. Chat to them directly and list to their needs, then propose a solution that will satisfy them.

Just to recap the weeks tips:

  • Get Online – Register yourself and your business
  • Get Profiled – Load good quality images and descriptions
  • Get Linked – Link up all the platforms so they work together
  • Get Landed – Create landing pages to convert sales
  • Get Selling – run campaigns that attract clients back to your website
By |2016-11-01T10:20:32+02:00July 11th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship|0 Comments

Social media tips week: Get selling

When it comes to social media, you are NOT allowed to sell anywhere other than your own website, unless of course you have paid for the right to do so with FaceBook Ads or Google Ads.

So be careful not to promote your goods as For Sale in the social cloud. A better strategy is to talk about the benefits of your product offering and then provide links to a sales or landing page within the article. You can do this on other websites as well in their comments. But be careful not to offend or ruin a relationship. It could destroy that access point for life.

Selling online is a lot harder than in person, so my strategy has always been to get the person on the phone or in front of me as soon as possible to convert and close the deal. Do not keep a person hanging online by providing them with lots of emails and links with all your product features and pricelists. Chat to them directly and list to their needs, then propose a solution that will satisfy them.

Just to recap the weeks tips:

  • Get Online – Register yourself and your business
  • Get Profiled – Load good quality images and descriptions
  • Get Linked – Link up all the platforms so they work together
  • Get Landed – Create landing pages to convert sales
  • Get Selling – run campaigns that attract clients back to your website

All set, ready, go

By |2016-11-01T10:20:32+02:00July 11th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship, Social Media|0 Comments

Social media tips week: Get landed

Social media is just that: social. So start being social and make new friends, link to groups and people who could be potential customers or Brand Champions. Having all your platforms linkedwill greatly assist you in this process. Ask questions, answers questions, make comments, repost cool relevant items and be nice.

Ok, not nice all the time. Nice people online are boring and often forgotten. Ruffle the feather every so often with a personal opinion on some topic or a short editorial on a hot issue. This will get people talking and sharing a little about what you say.

The main rule for chatting is to lead people back to your website to get them to engage with your product or service. To make this effective, make sure you have a ‘landing page’ for people to click through to. A landing page is a web page specially designed for a specific task, such as selling, promoting, gathering information and the like. Design a landing page that will promote a specific product offering, add a capture form and then blog about it. Add links to the blog to take people direct to the page and not your home page. Add to this by posting shorter posts on FaceBook and Twitter with the same link. Give people some incentive to capture their details and then sit back and see what happens.

It may not work well the first time you try it, but keep at it, change a few things and try again. Keep promoting the page until you have gotten enough response, and then do something else.

Your strategy here is to collect people’s details who have found your offerings appealing. This is what we call your Sales Pipeline. Keep their interest peaked by following up with emails, phone calls and personal visits.

By |2016-11-01T10:20:33+02:00July 10th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship, Social Media|0 Comments

Social media tips week: Get linked.

By this stage you should be online on a number of platforms each with their required profiles fully completed. Working online can be very time consuming and become a huge time thief for you in the day. What you need to do is to use some of the tools that exist to ensure that your social media is consistently updated and run well. You also need to know when people comment and reply on any of the platforms. Gulp! I hear you say, but this is not that complicated. Just a few tools and a few minutes each day will keep you in the driving seat.

So here are some of my all time favorite saving tools for you to use:

  • RSS feeds. This is a bit technical, so if you are not a techie, ask your web guys for help here. If you want to give it a shot, useFeedburner from Google, it makes it a whole lot easier to set up and use. What this does is to replicate your blog posts to subscribers and to a number of publishing platforms automatically every time you publish a new blog.
  • IFTTT – stands for IF This Then That. This has to be the best tool invented since forever. Register an account and then set up a number of recipes to use on your platforms. Essentially it will post on your FaceBook page or Twitter each time you blog. Or the other way around or both. Look at some examples and just do what others have done to learn before you start designing your own recipes. Be careful not to create loops and fill your profiles with junk.
  • Hootsuite – A simple way to keep track of replies and new comments. Take some time to learn all the features and once set up it will work for you forever.Get these up and working for you and your life will be just that little easier with regard to your social media management. This will then allow you more time to run some campaigns and marketing strategies.
By |2016-11-01T10:20:33+02:00July 9th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship, Social Media|0 Comments

Social media tips week: Get profiled

Once you have all the required platforms registered, ensure that your personal and business brands are properly represented on each of them. Here is a short check list:

Get a professional pic of yourself. Head and shoulders or waist up os good. Make sure it is clear and edited if required. DO NOT use your logo for your personal pic. And never use your dog, baby scans or children as substitutes. People want to get to know you as a person, not as a picture of someone else.

Put your brand logo as the profile pic on FaceBook page, Twitter and YouTube. This will give your brand an identity when your post on these platforms.

Create a cool banner that can be used for both FaceBook Page and YouTube. The sizes are slightly different but they should look the same. Twitter allows for w full wall paper backing as well as a banner. Get a designer to do these for you if you do not have the right tools, but PowerPoint works well for most. Create a design, group it, right click and save as a pic. Then just upload the pic to the required platform. For a more professional look, pay someone. Remember to save your logos with your business name, this helps Google to get to know you

Enter in a business profile in each platform. It is best to write these out in Word first, then just copy and paste them to ensure a consistent brand identity. Keep them short and to the point. Most people want to read these in less than 5 seconds, so work on them to get them right before posting them.

Ok we are getting there, more tomorrow.

 

By |2016-11-01T10:20:33+02:00July 8th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship, Social Media|0 Comments

Social media tips week: Get online

This week we will publish a social media tip each day to assist you in developing a more focused strategy for your business using low cost ideas that work.Today’s strategy is simple: get online. So many of our clients have not yet gotten themselves or their business online. Here is a short list of must haves for any small business owner and their business:

Get a personal FaceBook profile Click here

Get and complete a LinkedIn profile Click here

Register your company domain name: Click here

Put up a website and a blog for your business Click here

Register a FaceBook Business Page, set this up with a logo, header banner and business info Click here

Register a business Twitter account, add your business info and a logoClick here

Get a business Gmail account. This is not for receiving mail but gives you access to all the Google tools and platforms though a single access point, more on this later in the week Click here

Register a Youtube account and set it up with a channel banner and info Click here

Enough now? These will form the basics for what we will share later this week. These we see as the essential requirements to start getting your business and personal profile out into the web and to attract new customers.

By |2016-11-01T10:20:33+02:00July 7th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship, Social Media|0 Comments

Thunderclap creating a storm in Social Media

What if you had an idea? What if the idea was so good that you just had to share it with everyone, not just everyone you know but everyone everyone?

Problem: Your social network is just 0.000001% of the everyone who needs to hear what you have to say.

Solution: Thunderclap: a very awesome platform that gives voice and penetration to causes, messages and new innovation. This is just simple maths of exponential marketing and explosive messaging.

Need to know more: check out the video, it explains it far better than we could.

By |2016-11-01T10:20:33+02:00July 4th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship, Social Media|0 Comments

Business values need to be valued

We do a lot of workshops with people from all sectors of business. One thing that is common to all our workshops is the discussion around values. We do a very interesting exercise where everyone gets to define or discover their personal values and then share them with the others in the room: always a tense but revealing time for all.

We go on to discuss the difference between personal values and our business values. This almost always seems to provoke a discussion about how values change when money is involved. Comments such as” we must be honest at all times, but when there is a way to make extra profit we always take it” come to surface.

Why do we allow our personal values to be set aside when doing business deals? I do not buy into the fact that “everyone is corrupt” so we can do it too. We need to stand firm on how we do business and ensure that our personal and business values are entrenched in throughout the whole business and visible in all deals.

How well would you stand up to a Moral Audit in your business?

Never ever ever allow your personal value to be compromised in order to secure a sale, this is the beginning of moral decay in both your business and your life.

By |2016-11-01T10:20:34+02:00June 30th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship|0 Comments

Compete in the ‘Olympics’ for startups

New Picture (7)

Are you a startup looking for funding? Do you want to compete against the world’s best start-ups and stand a chance of securing up to €1 000 000 (R 15 000 000.00) in investments into your start-up business?

Interested yet?
Get in the Ring: The Investment Battle is a worldwide competition for the most promising start-ups to secure their investment of up to €1,000,000. The competition is selected by the Kauffman Foundation as one of the ten featured events of the Global Entrepreneurship Week. In 2014 this competition will be organized in over 50 countries with over 2,000 participating start-ups. Through 50 National Finals, 8 Regional Finals 8 start-ups will be selected for the International Final which will take place on the 21st of November in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

This year, Get in the Ring (GITR) will be hosted in South Africa for the very first time. The hosts of the South African National Final event of GITR will be Silicon Cape in partnership with the bhive EDC an initiative of the Faculty of Economic Sciences & IT on the North-West University Vaal Triangle Campus and Silicon Cape.  Find out more

 

By |2016-11-01T10:20:34+02:00June 20th, 2014|Business Resources, EI Clients, Entrepreneurship|0 Comments

What if Entrepreneurs played in a World Cup

If we had a world cup for Entrepreneurs, what would it look like? Would we get a bunch of high tech graduates from MIT, Yale or Oxford all showing off their new mobile apps or flying quadchoppers with micro spy equipment? Or would be see a bunch of people in white coats with microscope slides detailing the latest in GMO foods or grow-in-a-lab babies? Or the latest in financial investment schemes where your $1 could be turned into $5 by the end of the week.

Where would Africa feature? Would any of our team make the grade to play in the finals? Would the people who are faced with a daily experience of having to fix things themselves, using only what they have, some innovation and imagination, make the team?

Entrepreneurship in Africa is not on the big stage. Yes, we have our handful of inventions, but we can’t yet compete with the big innovation hubs at the business schools. Most Entrepreneurs in Africa operate as survivalists not finalists. Each day is a battle fought against red tape, government corruption, poor laws, uncooperative banks and non-paying customers. This daily battle just to keep your business open for another day is sometimes the only goal that entrepreneurs have.

This compared to the incubators, schools and Angel funds that offer fast tracking of any viable idea through the stages of development to sustainability, partnered with experienced coaches, professors and investors. Raising money for ideas seems to be a bit easier elsewhere in the world, than here in Africa.

I can count on my hand the number of high quality investments made to entrepreneurs here in South Africa. Some of these will never make it to IPO. We just do not have the foundation and backing of solid organisations or governments willing to put money and effort into the right people with ideas. Money and effort is always directed at political gain targets, trying to buy votes rather than sustainable job creation.

If we showed up at the Entrepreneurs World Cup, we would win first prize for innovative ideas and survival creativity, but be knocked out in the first round for lack of support, poor coaching and not enough funds to buy team jerseys.

Sad but true.

By |2016-11-01T10:20:34+02:00June 18th, 2014|Business Resources, Entrepreneurship|0 Comments
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