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Identifying Your Customers - The Four Personas

Identifying your Customers - The 4 Personas.


In order to get the most out of your online sales, it is important to know who you customers are. Knowing the details of the 4 major personality types and how they buy, will help you convert more visitors into buyers.


1. The Competitive Persona- These people prefer a process where they are given options, probabilities and challenges. They need to feel that they are really in control of the searching and buying process. The number one question you have to answer for this type is why are YOU the best at what you do?


2.The Spontaneous Persona- These people need lots of attention, they are a bit scattered and may not always know exactly what they want. You need to provide them with opinions and guarantees, rather than options. 


3. The Humanistic Persona- This type of person is looking to build a relationship with your site before they commit to anything. This is where testimonials and incentives come in to play, this will give them the security in you they need in order to convert.


4. The Methodical Persona- This person is very logical and deliberate. They take the longest of the 4 personality types to make a decision. Service and evidence are the two things they look for before making a purchase.


Now that you know what each customer is looking for, it is important to implement and test the tools that will engage your customers. 


How to Defend Your Digital Reputation

In a recent Harvard Business Review article “Reputation Warfare", Leslie Gaines-Ross described various corporate strategies for countering online assaults. Given the often anonymous, easily accessible and rapidly disbursable nature of these attacks, every one of them has the potential to become a crisis, grabbing headlines and spreading instantaneously to millions across Twitter, YouTube, and other social networks.

How well a business manages such events not only prevents against unwarranted damage to its reputation, but also adds value in its own right. A company that handles itself online says much about its ability to execute in this modern age and helps define how a company is perceived.

Having in place an effective digital defense plan is thus crucial. Four essentials when building such a plan are:

1. Beware, the Clock Ticks

Company response times to a media crisis used to be measurable in days—72, 48, or at the very least, 36 hours.

This is no longer the case.

Today’s 24/7 news cycles are only 60 minutes. Companies must now respond immediately to an emerging issue or crisis.

To be nimble requires preparation. A company should be ready at a moment’s notice to issue an online corporate statement, press release, video message, social media mention, e-mail or tweet. They should be set to launch a microsite or dark site that can be activated in the event of a crisis. Failure to be prepared undermines credibility and surrenders the playing field to adversaries.

A company often learns of a problem when a detractor first raises it online. Having the first word has a marked advantage, since any delay in responding allows criticism to spread virally at a geometric rate. The longer such criticism spirals out of control and goes unanswered, the more truthful it appears and the more defensive a response seems. Even inaccurate rumors left unchallenged can be highly problematic.

When erroneous tweets first circulated that a Qantas A380 flight crashed off the coast of Indonesia last fall, the lack of an immediate corrective response from the airline fanned the flames of confusion. Approximately 12 hours later, Qantas officially confirmed that the airline was safe, but not quickly enough to avoid its reputation being bruised.

This is not to say that in the rush to comment, a company should sacrifice accuracy or the facts. Truth and accuracy remain paramount. But it does mean that a company must be able to determine truth and accuracy at a much faster rate than was required in the past.


2. Monitor Carefully: Nothing Is Too Small to Ignore

There was a time when a single antagonist or disgruntled employee was an annoyance that was easily ignored unless he or she drew the attention of traditional media. Now, that individual armed with no more than a computer or cellphone can play havoc with a corporate reputation, whether intended or not.

Last year a volunteer at the Youth Olympic Games in Singapore innocently posted a photo of his meal on Facebook. The picture of a skimpy meal created such a furor that an online petition demanding an apology from the Minister of Community Development, Youth and Sports was launched and an I HATE YOG Facebook page erected.

Had a digital defense plan been in place to monitor early warning signs online, such an uproar may have been nipped in the bud. A response could have been put in place if the negative reaction had been observed at its earliest stages. YOG could have set up automatic online alerts or issued social media guidelines for all athletes and “other accredited persons” as the International Olympic Committee (IOC) recently did for the London 2012 Games.

Nowadays, the most inconspicuous event must be taken seriously and evaluated for negative consequences.

3. Plug the Leaks

The world of social media is not easy to police. Information is readily available and disseminating it is just as easy and there is the possibility that a site will be hacked.

Companies need to inform their employees on the principles of digital security. Social-media guidelines and policies need to be established that convey how long to keep documents, what is permissible to share online and how to safeguard information.

The leaking of Nokia CEO Stephen Elop’s internal memo referring to a “burning platform” circled by a “blazing fire” of competitors is yet another example of how many companies today are little more than informational sieves.

Violations of corporate confidentially need not even be intentional. In a Weber Shandwick survey, 87% of global executives admitted to having erroneously sent or received at least one private email, text or tweet. Companies are often one keystroke away from disaster. The time to engage in digital security is now.

4. Don’t Always Turn the Other Cheek

Increasingly, leading companies are displaying corporate moxie by using many of the same social-media tactics as their opponents. Depending on a brand’s personality, and only if done truthfully and ethically, fighting fire with fire with social media can be a very promising way to counter negativity.

Consider for example Taco Bell‘s response when the quality of its beef was challenged in a lawsuit that was ultimately withdrawn voluntarily by the plaintiff’s attorneys. In what is now a textbook digital response strategy, Taco Bell, a Yum! Brands company, promptly posted a YouTube video—“Of Course We Use Real Beef”—featuring its president Greg Creed extolling the high beef content of its seasoned mixture.

The video, which has had over 247,000 views appeared on the company website, Facebook and other social-networking sites. Taco Bell also initiated a search engine visibility campaign to optimize search results, sponsored online ads and bought select key words related to its product.

Remembering these simple rules of thumb can go a long way to determining your online reputation, and in turn, your success. Get in touch with us here at NetGains and we will be more than happy to help you develop strategies to hep you get the most of of your online resources.



Does Your Website Need a Redesign? Sign Two: Are You Invisible to the Search Engines?

Have you ever tried to Google your company name and not even shown up in the results? Super powers are cool, but if it’s your website that’s invisible, you may need to think about getting a new one.

If you run a local business, having a presence on the search engines is crucial. Last year, 80% of searches online were looking for a local business, if you aren’t showing up on the results you are losing customers to companies who are.

Here are some red flags that your website isn’t getting the placement it deserves:

1.  You aren’t optimizing your meta tags

When Google displays a search result, you are able to see two main elements, the Title and the Description. These elements are among the most important in the search engine’s determination of what your website is about. Having “untitled”, generic “home” or “about us”, or simply your company name is not helping in your quest to rank on a specific search term. 

2.  Your website is 100% flash based

If your website is 100% flash based and you aren’t being indexed on the search engines, you may want to consider a redesign. While the movement is beautiful, there are many drawbacks to flash based websites. Consider using a more search engine friendly programming language such as HTML5, which can mimic the movement of flash, but still allows the search engines to spider your website. 

3.  Your content isn’t SEO friendly

The search engines “read” your content to try and determine when your website is relevant. Ensuring that your content has been written to include the keywords you want to show up on is important. Having those keywords included in important elements of that content, such as h1 tags and anchor text will help even more.

4.  You are using outdated or ‘black hat’ SEO strategies

Did you know that the algorithms used by the search engines to rank your website are constantly changing? Did you know that some of the tactics that yielded great results 3-5 years ago, may actually get you black listed today? If your website’s SEO strategy includes keyword stuffing, invisible text, doorway pages, or other “black hat” SEO Techniques, your might find yourself banned from the search engines.

If your website isn’t driving you the business that it should, and any of these red flags are present, you need to consider having your website redone, or at least “made-over” in a search engine friendly manner.  With more than 450 million searches performed daily on Google alone, if you aren’t ranking, you may as well be invisible.

 


Want to Enhance your Website Image? Use Contrast!



When it comes to creating a visually appealing web design, there are many things to take into consideration. Each website is created of a huge amount of different elements, and some are more important than others. Take a look at your website. Your web designer likely created your site to give certain elements more significance than others; however this it is very tricky to communicate the importance of relationship between items visually. A skilled designer will do it through the use of Contrast.

Simply put, contrast is the difference, often visual, between two or more elements. It is the web designer’s job to create this contrast which will create visual interest for the viewer and, if done well, direct the viewer’s attention in the desired location.  A webpage that looked entirely the same would be boring, and soon viewers would grow disinterested, exactly the reaction you do not want. This is why contrast is an essential part of web design. Without it, it would be nearly impossible for web visitor to gain any value from the site.

Contrast can be developed three ways: size, color and alignment. Take a look at your site now and see how your web designer created contrast through these elements.

Color is one of the primary ways to achieve contrast, and it is often the most common ways that people think of. Almost all well designed websites have a clear visual distinction between the background, content area, and header and footer area, using color. Colors are also useful to set apart, featured areas or calls to action.

Size is another easy way to create contrast. Through size of text or size of images themselves, it is an easy way to create and control contrast without using color.  Larger images or elements will draw the viewer in first, which sets them apart as the important elements on the site.

Alignment is also an important way to create contrast, however, because everyone seems to have a different opinion about what is visually appealing when it comes to alignment, it should be used sparingly. Some people favor a very straight line up while others like things to be off set, so it is largely a personal opinion.

So, now that you know a bit more about contrast and how it should be used on your web page, take a good long look at your web site and see if it is portraying the right image, enhancing the proper areas.



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