Friday, November 4, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


ZEAL INFORMATICS- The portal to the world of conversation

Posted: 02 Sep 2011 06:38 AM PDT

The conversation on your business is always on . . .  at Zeal Informatics.

We speak for you in the virtual market and convert the readers to your  clients. As a matter of fact, American on a study has proved that more than 90% of the people are convinced by the online promotion than by the Sales executives.

Right said by the English author Edward Bulwer-Lytton, ‘Pen is mightier than the sword’. It really shows!

Welcome to What Valerie Writes

Posted: 30 Aug 2011 10:30 AM PDT

What Valerie Writes is a specialised copy and content-writing service for all businesses, large and small. Services include web content, articles, blogs, copy-writing and more. If you’re interested in these or any other writing services, please contact Valerie.

Marketing Content for Brochures

Posted: 29 Aug 2011 03:00 AM PDT

by Marni, My Web Writers Team Member

Oftentimes, companies take great pride in christening their emergence in the business world with printed brochures. Unfortunately, unless the premise and objective of the brochure is clearly identified, the brochure turns into an informational treaty instead of a persuasive marketing tool. For that reason, great care should be placed in well-thought out, and well-designed content that addresses each of the following aspects of the brochure.

Objective and Role
A brochure is not a stand-alone piece in a company’s marketing strategy. Take the time to know

  • how the brochure fits into the sales process (are you introducing your company or selling a product?),
  • the desired outcome of the brochure (will it establish credibility or make people aware of your website?),
  • and what action you want the reader to take (do you want the reader to request more information or take advantage of a promotion?).

Answering these questions establishes the framework necessary for effective marketing content.

A major concern which paralyzes anyone marketing a service or project in a brochure is whether or not to add prices. The creator of marketing content can easily put that debate to rest by simply defining the brochure’s objective. If you are generating interest in your company then don’t include prices. If the brochure comes into play near the close of a sale, include prices. Having established the objective and role of the brochure, all questions concerning marketing content should be easily resolved.

Know and Hook the Audience
Equally important to identifying the brochure’s objective is the need to define and understand your audience. What concerns your target audience? What is your relationship with the audience? A successful brochure contains effective hooks.  Just like a fisherman studies the appetite of the fish he hopes to reel in in order to choose the right hook, those creating marketing content for brochures must understand the appetites of the target audience, identify the hooks that appeal to those appetites and incorporate them into the brochure. Don’t put all of your hooks at the beginning of the brochure, spread your hooks throughout the brochure’s content so as to not lose the interest of your reader. What creates a hook?

  • a free report,
  • a discount,
  • a pre-order option,
  • an articulation of the target audiences concerns, etc.

Nature of the Content
Content isn’t just about vocabulary. It’s about voice, credibility, and atmosphere. Address the reader in an authoritative yet engaging voice. The tone of the brochure needs to inspire confidence in your reader’s mind as to your expertise and approachability. Address your target audience directly so that they feel as if you are engaging in a one-on-one conversation with them. Add atmosphere and warmth to your brochure content by painting a scenario in which the reader can imagine himself or herself reaping the benefits of using the products or services affiliated with that brochure. Avoid any potential monotony and substantiate your credibility by adding customer testimonials or third-party verification to the brochure’s content.

Simple Yet Intriguing Content
Resist the urge to sacrifice the persuasive nature of your brochure with too much information. With so many great features associated with your innovative product or top-notch service, it is easy to fill the brochure with paragraphs that talk all about you and forget the audience. This is not to say that a thorough discussion of your product or service’s features or technology can’t be included. Highlight these aspects in easy-to-read graphs, charts, diagrams, bulleted lists, or photographs. Write captions for these more visual components of your brochure because they carry a lot of value. In fact, captions rank as some of the most read and remembered text because of the simultaneous transmission of meaning through both language and image.

Make the Brochure a Keeper
The most effective brochures are those that the reader finds value in holding on to. How does one encourage the reader to keep the brochure even after having gone through it in its entirety?

  • Add how-to’s, tips, recipes, or useful information.
  • Include a calendar highlighting important dates.
  • Put sweepstakes or promotional event information on it.
  • Provide all of your contact information with maps and directions if appropriate.
  • Print discount coupons in the brochure.

Call to Action
A brochure loses the potential of fantastic marketing content if it doesn’t end with a call to action. After having gone to such herculean efforts to engage your target audience at every level, don’t forget to invite them to act. Leaving a call to act out of the marketing content would be akin to spending countless hours making and displaying the perfect cake only to never let anyone taste it. Without the invitation to act, you risk having done nothing more than present your target audience with a creative, well-designed, and well-written brochure that ultimately misses the mark of generating a lead or a sale.

Effective marketing content for brochures doesn’t come together by happenstance. It entails a very deliberate and researched process. Remember the adage that if it isn’t worth doing right it isn’t worth doing at all. Businesses who want to succeed want and must create a winning brochure. If the effort required into creating effective content for winning brochures stretches your resources too thin, then outsource your content writing to content providers like My Web Writers.

Why Your Business Needs a Website

Posted: 03 Nov 2011 10:00 PM PDT

A website is very essential for a business to grow in the current business environment. Many small business owners still doubt its importance. Here are some of the reasons to justify that having a website is very crucial for a business.

Working For Yourself

Posted: 02 Nov 2011 10:00 PM PDT

If you are interested to work for yourself, these tips can help you get your new business off the ground.

How to be Employment Ready

Posted: 02 Nov 2011 10:00 PM PDT

What is more important for a job seeker - holding a degree from the best university, or having great work skills but a poor GPA? There are in fact, plenty of factors that determine your employment readiness. Find it all here.

Don’t Miss Out: Get Your Free Content from Teaching Sells

Posted: 04 Nov 2011 08:00 AM PDT

You may have noticed the name of our flagship course, Teaching Sells, coming up quite a bit recently.

That’s because we’ll be launching our 2011 enrollment period very shortly, opening our doors to a new group of students who want a comprehensive, proven approach to building a real online business.

And it just wouldn’t be a Teaching Sells launch without lots of great free education.

So instead of wasting your weekend raking leaves or test-baking your Thanksgiving pies, why not put your time to productive use and dive into all the great content we’ve cooked up for you?

Just drop your email in the form over at Teaching Sells, confirm that you really do want to receive email from us, and you’ll have instant access to:

  • All-new articles with business tips you can put into practice right away
  • A special report by Brian Clark on Building a Profitable Online Business: What Works (And What Doesn’t) in 2011
  • The Teaching Sells 20-Step Road Map to a Successful Online Business

And early next week, I’ll be holding a live webinar with Robert Bruce that takes you through the Teaching Sells process step-by-step, so you can see how it would work for your own project.

People have built successful businesses just from what they’ve learned in our free launch content — and we think that’s awesome.

And if you decide you’re ready to go further and join us for the complete course, that’s great too.

Either way, once we close enrollment for 2011, all the free content goes away too. So don’t put this off — get over to Teaching Sells, leave us your primary email, and start benefiting from the best advice we have to offer about creating a sustainable, profitable, enjoyable online business.

Catch you there!

About the Author: Sonia Simone is CMO of Copyblogger Media and co-creator of Teaching Sells.

P.S.

No kidding, the clock is ticking. We’ll be opening the course to new students some time next week, and the enrollment period is always brief. Rather than putting it off, go ahead and click on over to Teaching Sells. Leave us your email address, click the link to confirm that you want to hear from us, and we’ll take care of the rest.

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Warning: If You’re Not a Privacy Nut, You’re Losing Sales

Posted: 04 Nov 2011 04:00 AM PDT

Internet Marketing for Smart People Radio Logo

I have a few things in common with Gene Hackman’s character in Enemy of The State.

If you want to build a loyal following and make more sales in the next ten years, so should you.

Get your tin foil hats on and pull the battery out of your cell phone, today we’re talking privacy-as-marketing.

Hey, who’s that behind you?

Also, Sonia exercises monumental self-control and allows me to live for one more week.

In this episode Sonia Simone and I discuss:

  • Tin Foil Hat Marketing and the rise of the “good guy”
  • Why turning down freelance work can boost your bottom line
  • Should you worry about new mobile privacy guidelines?
  • The 80/20 rule of slow copywriting
  • Why aren’t you specializing?!
  • How to write a remarkably simple business plan

Hit the flash player below to listen now:

Other listening options:

The Show Notes:

About the Author: Robert Bruce is Copyblogger Media’s copywriter and resident recluse.

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