Friday, April 29, 2016

This Week in Social: The Latest News, Trends and 5 Eye-Opening Stats You May Have Missed

The social media world moves incredibly fast and to help you stay up to date, we thought we'd round up some of the latest news, trends, research, and statistics that caught our attention this week.


From Twitter redefining itself and some big news from Facebook to new features on Pinterest and Periscope, it's been an exciting week.


Let's get started!



pablo (52)


What's new in social this week


Want to jump to a particular story? Try clicking one of the headlines below:





Facebook reaches 1.65 billion monthly users


facebook-mau


In its Q1 2016 earnings report, Facebook announced it has now reached. 1.65 billion monthly users. That figure means Facebook grew 3.7%, from 1.59 billion monthly users last quarter (Q4, 2015).


The social network's daily active user count has also grown significantly. It reached 1.09 billion daily active users in Q1, compared to 1.04 billion in Q4 2015, a 4.8% increase.


fb-dau



Twitter is no longer a social network


Highly alert Twitter users noticed it's now categorizing itself very differently. In an update on April 28th, Twitter now sits in the News category rather than Social Networking.


This change moves Twitter away from apps like Snapchat, Facebook and Messenger in the App Store and the switch also boosted the app to the #1 spot in the News category (it was previously sat 6th in Social Networking).


twitter


Ranking #1 in a category could be a nice boost for Twitter, and could help attract new users who want to keep up with the latest news on mobile. Being ranked #1 will also help with App Store visibility and could lead to more organic downloads.


Could this be a sign of a significant shift for Twitter? Or maybe an experiment to see how App Store categories and rankings affect downloads? Keeping an eye on this over the coming weeks will be interesting.



Video consumption on Snachat has doubled


Daily video views on Snapchat have now hit 10 billion. TechCruch reports that the new numbers represent a 150% increase in video consumption on Snapchat in just under a year.


In February 2016, Snapchat reported 8 billion daily video views and in November 2015, 6 billion views. That's incredible growth.


➤ For more on Snapchat, check out our 'Complete Guide to the Ghost' here.



Pinterest Featured Collections


pinterest


Pinterest has released Featured Collections, a way to keep tabs on trending topics and content. Every day, the brands, celebrities, and influencers, and Pinterest's own editor's will curate popular pins, users, boards, and searches within Featured Collections.


The Featured Collections will be localized to the UK, France, Germany, Brazil, and Japan, further strengthening the network's relationship with international users.



Periscope launches sketch feature and deeper analytics


Thursday, April 28, 2016

How to Create the Perfect Facebook Page for Your Business: The Complete A to Z Guide

Facebook now has over 1.65 billion monthly active users. And as small business owners and brand managers, there's a very good chance you'll be able to reach and connect with your target audience through Facebook.


Great! So where should you start? And is there an easy blueprint to follow?


From creating our Facebook Business page to posting several hundred times over the past few years, we've experimented a lot with various Facebook marketing tips and have enjoyed figuring out the best way to create and manage our Facebook page here at Buffer. I'd love to share with you how the process has worked so far from start until now!



Since things continue to change regularly with Facebook and its algorithm, consider this A to Z guide as a great jumping off point for creating a Facebook business page and growing your audience. Start here, test what works for your individual business and brand, and make changes as you learn.


How to Create a Facebook Business Page in 5 Simple Steps


Creating a Facebook Business Page, Facebook, Facebook Business, Facebook Page


Step 1: Fill out your basic business info


Open the following URL to create a business page on Facebook:


https://www.facebook.com/pages/create.php


Once there, you'll choose one of the following six categories for your page:



  1. Local business or place

  2. Company, organization, or institution

  3. Brand or product

  4. Artist, band, or public figure

  5. Entertainment

  6. Cause or community


facebook create a page


Keep in mind that you can change the category and name later on if needed.


Also, at this stage, it might be helpful to know that a physical address figures prominently in the setup of a local business or place, and the actual Facebook page will appear differently as well.


Here's the look for a local business:


facebook page business example


Here's the look for a company or brand:


facebook page company example


It's something to think about when choosing a category.


Following the category selection, the next setup screen will ask for a descriptive sentence or two about your page, a URL, a Facebook page URL, and a profile picture. If you've selected a local business, you'll also have the ability to select category tags to further define what your store sells.


About your page – You get 155 characters to describe your page. This description appears prominently near the top of your Facebook page on both desktop and mobile. Be as descriptive and helpful as possible.


URL – The web address for your store, company, or brand.


Facebook URL / username – You may have the option to choose a custom vanity URL for your page, i.e. facebook.com/yourbrandname.


(Facebook will ask that you reach 25 fans first before you can unlock a custom Facebook URL)


Profile picture – Upload a main profile picture/icon for your page. This photo will appear as your icon every time you comment on a post or publish in a news feed. Square dimensions are best. Facebook will force rectangular photos to be cropped to squares.


Profile pictures should be at least 180 pixels wide by 180 pixels tall. Here is a full list of the sizes that Facebook uses for your profile picture in various places around the site:



  • The main profile image on your page – 160 x 160

  • In a news feed – 100 x 100

  • In your timeline – 86 x 86

  • Next to comments – 43 x 43


The final two steps in the setup process include adding your page to your main Facebook menu (so you can access it quickly and easy each time you log in) and setting up a Facebook ad to promote your new page. These options can be skipped for now.


Step 2: Create an awesome cover image in a snap (no designer required!)


facebook cover image size


By this point, your page is live for all the world to visit. Let's see if we can make it look even snazzier.


First thing, add a cover photo. The cover photo appears across the top of your page and is a great opportunity to deliver a visual element that supports your branding, draws attention, or elicits emotion from your visitors. 


A note on ideal Facebook cover photo size and dimensions: 


Facebook cover photos appear at 851 pixels wide and 315 pixels tall on desktop, however, Facebook crops out some of each cover photo on mobile devices. It specifically strips out 144 pixels off the right and left sides of the image.


Therefore, Facebook cover photo dimensions are 851 x 315px, but only the center 563 x 315px portion of the picture appears on mobile.


You can certainly hire a designer to make you something fabulous, or you can go the DIY route. Many photo editing apps like Pic Monkey or BeFunky can help with creating images of just the right dimensions. If you're a Photoshop user, we've created a couple of Facebook cover photo templates that might be helpful. Canva is another super helpful tool for Facebook cover photos as it comes with several premade templates that look great right out of the box.


Here's an example of a Canva template you could choose. You can upload your own image to use as the background, and you can edit the text to say whatever you'd like. If you're looking for high-quality image options, we've compiled a list of our favorite sources for free social media images.


Canva template


Once you have created your cover image, upload it to your page by clicking on the “Add a Cover” button.


add a cover facebook page


If you happen to upload an image that isn't quite the exact dimensions of the Facebook cover, you'll have a chance to move and edit the image to fit the available window. When you're happy with the final look, you can click “Save Changes,” and you'll be set!


Facebook cover example


Here's a pro tip: When you upload a cover photo to your page, the photo is added as an update to your timeline. If you edit the description of the photo, you can add a message to the update. Click on the photo to open up the photo viewer, and you'll notice a link that says “Add a description.”


facebook image add description


You can add description, tags, location, and date to your photo. Once you've finished, the update to your timeline will be changed to reflect your edits.


facebook cover custom update


Step 3: Fill out your profile completely


Next, you can fill out your profile even more by adding information to your Page Info section. To access this section, click on Settings in the top menu bar on your page, then click Page Info.


page info facebook


Your name and category will be filled in already. Some of the most helpful bits of information to add next might be:


Start Info – You can choose when your company or product was founded, created, started, or launched. This information will appear on the history timeline to the right of your page's feed and as an update at the very bottom of your main feed.


Address – Enter this if you want people to be able to check in via Facebook when they're near your place.


Long description & Mission – Add additional details that explain your business or brand even further. This is a great way to go beyond the 155 character description that appears on the main page.


Phone number / Email address – Add additional contact information.


All of these details will appear on the About tab of your Facebook page.


example about section facebook


Step 4: Add collaborators to your page


If you plan on sharing your Facebook marketing duties with a team, you'll want to grant access for various folks and various roles.


Here are the roles that you can choose from:


Admin – Complete and total access to everything (you are an admin by default)


Editor – Can edit the Page, send messages and post as the Page, create Facebook ads, see which admin created a post or comment, and view insights.


Moderator – Can respond to and delete comments on the Page, send messages as the Page, see which admin created a post or comment, create ads, and view insights.


Advertiser – Can see which admin created a post or comment, create ads and view insights.


Analyst – Can see which admin created a post or comment and view insights.


To add collaborators, go to your page settings and the “Page Roles” section. You can type in the name of any Facebook friend or person who has liked your page. Alternately, you can type in an email address associated with a Facebook account.


Step 5: Publish your first post


Add content to your page by publishing a post-a status update, a link, a photo, a video, an event, or a milestone. New, fresh content on your page will make it look all the more enticing once new visitors come over to check it out.


Keep in mind that visual content does exceedingly well and that Facebook is now ranking Live Video higher in people's news feeds.


Here's a telling graphic from a BuzzSumo study showing how Facebook posts with images receive 2.3x more engagement than those without photos.


Facebook, Facebook Engagement, Facebook Marketing, Facebook Pages


And there you have it!


Your Facebook Business page is up and ready to deliver awesome content to your fans and grow into something wonderful.


Read on to learn more about growing your Facebook page and posting best-practices!


How to gain your first 100 fans to your Facebook page


The temptation might be to share your Facebook page right away with all your Facebook friends. Not so fast. Take a moment to think strategically about your plan and to seed your page with content so that it looks inviting and engaging when visitors do stop by.


Publish three to five posts before you invite anyone. 


Then try out one of these strategies to get to your first 100 fans.


Invite your Facebook friends


Facebook has a built-in feature to tell your Facebook friends about your page. Click on the Build Audience link in the top right corner of your page, and choose Invite Friends from the dropdown.


Facebook page setup


You can then pick and choose which friends you'd like to invite, and you can drill down into specific sections of friends, filtered by location, school, lists, and recent interactions.


Once invited, your friends will receive a direct message with an invitation to your page. You won't have a chance to edit the message they receive.


Invite your coworkers


One of the best sources of social media promotion for your company could very well be your coworkers. Ask everyone who works with you to like the page and-if willing-to recommend the page to any friends who might be interested.


Promote your Facebook page on your website


Facebook offers a full complement of widgets and buttons that you can add to your website to make it easy for website visitors to like your page.


One of the most ubiquitous plugins is the Facebook Page Plugin. With Page Plugin, you can easily embed and promote any Facebook page without visitors ever having to leave your website.


Facebook Page Plugin, Page Plugin, Facebook


Promote your Facebook page in your email signature


One of the most visible places you might find to promote your page is in your inbox. Edit your email signature to include a call-to-action and link to your Facebook page.


signature


Hold a contest


Facebook contests can be huge for gaining likes on your page. Two of the best apps for creating contests are ShortStack & Gleam which help you create custom campaigns to drive Likes to your page (or email capture or fan engagement or any number of different ideas you might have).


What to post and when to post it


In general, there are three main types of posts you're likely to publish on your Facebook feed:



  • Photo/video

  • Text update

  • Links


As mentioned above, posts with photos garner 2.3x more engagement than posts without photos. 


Definitely make visual content a huge part of your Facebook strategy as well as your larger social media marketing plan.


As far as the frequency with which to post, Facebook's algorithm changes have made research into the topic rather difficult. The consensus seems to be to experiment as much as possible. As often as you have fresh, compelling content to share on Facebook, give it a try. Try testing post frequency in week-long intervals so that you can measure the results quickly.


With that, we recommend being consistent with your content. When your content is good, your audience will start to expect it on a regular basis. Even if you're only producing enough content to post to Facebook once per day, try to stick to that schedule.


Social media scheduling apps like Buffer help make this easy by letting you schedule posts ahead of time. You can add to a queue so that your page always has fresh content being posted automatically on schedule.


Ideal length and timing of Facebook posts are another area you might want to experiment with.


HubSpot collected a ton of research from the folks at CoSchedule and from a variety of sources, including QuickSprout, SurePayroll, The Huffington Post, Buffer, TrackMavenFast Company, and KISSmetrics.


Their takeaway:


Facebook Posting, Facebook, Managing Facebook 


As far as ideal length, we partnered with our friends at SumAll to place the data and insights into a fun infographic. What we found was that Facebook posts with 40 characters receive 86% more engagement than those with a higher character count. 


Facebook posting strategy, facebook, managing facebook


How to tell what's worked and what hasn't


After sharing posts, you're likely to want to know how they did. Your social media management tool would figure to have some built-in analytics that can help you better understand how your posts performed. Here's a peek at what the Buffer for Business analytics look like:


Buffer for Business, social media analytics, Buffer Analytics


You can also gain a huge number of stats and numbers from Facebook Insights.


Once you've shared several pieces of content to your Facebook page, you'll see an Insights tab at the top of your Facebook menu, between Activity and Settings.


Buffer


At the top of the Insights page, you'll see your Page Likes, Post Reach, and Engagement stats for the week, along with a comparison to the same stats from last week.


facebook insights


Another neat area to check is the demographic information on the people who visit and engage with your page.


Click on People from the Insights menu, and you can drill down into demographic information of your fans, the people reached by your posts, the people who engage with your post, and the check-ins you receive at your physical location.


Here's an example from Buffer's page insights about the people reached by our posts.


facebook insights demographics


One of the newest features of Insights is the “Pages to Watch” section at the bottom of the page. You can add other pages that you want to monitor-a great way to grab some competitor research and take inspiration from the way that other pages market themselves.


To add a page, simply click on the Add Pages button at the top of the section.


add pages facebook


Search for the name of the page you want to watch, then click to add it to your watch list. Once a page has been added, you can click on the name of the page from your Insights dashboard, and you'll see an overview of their best posts from the week.


Facebook Insights


Now I'd love to turn it over to you!


What Facebook page tips and advice do you have? What have you learned along the way? Is there any part of the Facebook page creation and management process you'd like to know more about?


Excited to hear from you in the comments!


Oh, and by the way: Buffer can help you drive more Facebook traffic and engagement in less time. Sign up for free and see how it works for you!


Editor's Note: This post was originally published in 2014, but we've updated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness for your reading pleasure. – Brian


The post How to Create the Perfect Facebook Page for Your Business: The Complete A to Z Guide appeared first on Social.


The Local SEO Agency's Complete Guide to Client Discovery and Onboarding

Posted by MiriamEllis

[Estimated read time: 6 minutes]


Why proper onboarding matters


Imagine getting three months in on a Local SEO contract before realizing that your client's storefront is really his cousin's garage. From which he runs two other “legit” businesses he never mentioned. Or that he neglected to mention the reviews he bought last year. Worse yet, he doesn't even know that buying reviews is a bad thing.


The story is equally bad if you're diligently working to build quality unique content around a Chicago client's business in Wicker Park but then realize their address (and customer base) is actually in neighboring Avondale.


What you don't know will hurt you. And your clients.


A hallmark of the professional Local SEO department or agency is its dedication to getting off on the right foot with a new client by getting their data beautifully documented for the whole team from the start. At various times throughout the life of the contract, your teammates and staff from complementary departments will be needing to access different aspects of a client's core NAP, known challenges, company history, and goals.


Having this information clearly recorded in shareable media is the key to both organization and collaboration, as well as being the best preventative measure against costly data-oriented mistakes. Clear and consistent data play vital roles in Local SEO. Information must not only be gathered, but carefully verified with the client.


This article will offer you a working Client Discovery Questionnaire, an Initial Discovery Phone Call Script, and a useful Location Data Spreadsheet that will be easy for any customer to fill out and for you to then use to get those listings up to date. You're about to take your client discovery process to awesome new heights!


Why agencies don't always get onboarding right


Lack of a clearly delineated, step-by-step onboarding process increases the potential for human error. Your agency's Local SEO manager may be having allergies on Monday and simply forget to ask your new client if they have more than one website, if they've ever purchased reviews, or if they have direct access to their Google My Business listings. Or they could have that information and forget to share it when they jump to a new agency.


The outcomes of disorganized onboarding can range from minor hassles to disastrous mistakes.


Minor hassles would include having to make a number of follow-up phone calls to fill in holes in a spreadsheet that could have been taken care of in a single outreach. It's inconvenient for all teammates when they have to scramble for missing data that should have been available at the outset of the project.


Disastrous mistakes can stem from a failure to fully gauge the details and scope of a client's holdings. Suddenly, a medium-sized project can take on gigantic proportions when the agency learns that the client actually has 10 mini-sites with duplicate content on them, or 10 duplicate GMB listings, or a series of call tracking numbers around the web.


It's extremely disheartening to discover a mountain of work you didn't realize would need to be undertaken, and the agency can end up having to put in extra uncompensated time or return to the client to renegotiate the contract. It also leads to client dissatisfaction.


Setting correct client expectations is completely dependent on being able to properly gauge the scope of a project, so that you can provide an appropriate timeline, quote, and projected benchmarks. In Local, that comes down to documenting core business information, identifying past and present problems, and understanding which client goals are achievable. With the right tools and effective communication, your agency will be making a very successful start to what you want to be a very successful project.


Professional client discovery made simple


There's a lot you want to learn about a new client up front, but asking (and answering) all those questions right away can be grueling. Not to mention information fatigue, which can make your client give shorter and shorter answers when they feel like they've spent enough time already. Meanwhile your brain reaches max capacity and you can't use all that valuable information because you can't remember it.


To prevent such a disaster, we recommend dividing your Local SEO discovery process into a questionnaire to nail down the basics, a follow-up phone call to help you feel out some trickier issues, and a CSV to gather the location data. And we've created templates to get you started...


Client Discovery Questionnaire


Use our Local SEO Client Discovery Questionnaire to understand your client's history, current organization, and what other consultants they might also be working with. We've annotated each question in the Google Doc template to help you understand what you can learn and potential pitfalls to look out for.


If you want to make collecting and preserving your clients' answers extra easy, use Google Forms to turn that questionnaire into a form like this:



You can even personalize the graphic, questions, and workflow to suit your brand.


Client Discovery Phone Script


Once you've received your client's completed questionnaire and have had time to process the responses and do any necessary due diligence (like using our Check Listings tool to check how aggregators currently display their information), it's time to follow up on the phone. Use our annotated Local SEO Client Discovery Phone Script to get you started.


local seo client discovery phone script


No form necessary this time, because you'll be asking the client verbally. Be sure to pay attention to the client's tone of voice as they answer and refer to the notes under each question to see what you might be in for.


Location Data CSV


Sometimes the hardest part of Local SEO is getting all the location info letter-perfect. Make that easier by having the client input all those details into your copy of the Location Data Spreadsheet.


local seo location data csv


Then use the File menu to download that document as a CSV.




You'll want to proof this before uploading it to any data aggregators. If you're working with Moz Local, the next step is an easy upload of your CSV. If you're working with other services, you can always customize your data collection spreadsheet to meet their standards.


Keep up to date on any business moves or changes in hours by designing a data update form like this one from SEER and periodically reminding your client contact to use it.


Why mutual signals of commitment really matter


There are two sides to every successful client project: one half belongs to the agency and the other to the company it serves. The attention to detail your agency displays via clean, user-friendly forms and good phone sessions will signal your professionalism and commitment to doing quality work. At the same time, the willingness of the client to take the necessary time to fill out these documents and have these conversations signals their commitment to receiving value from their investment.


It's not unusual for a new client to express some initial surprise when they realize how many questions you're asking them to answer. Past experience may even have led them to expect half-hearted, sloppy work from other SEO agencies. But, what you want to see is a willingness on their part to share everything they can about their company with you so that you can do your best work.


Anecdotally, I've fully refunded the down payments of a few incoming clients who claimed they couldn't take the time to fill out my forms, because I detected in their unwillingness a lack of genuine commitment to success. These companies have, fortunately, been the exception rather than the rule for me, and likely will be for your agency, too.


It's my hope that, with the right forms and a commitment to having important conversations with incoming clients at the outset, the work you undertake will make your Local team top agency and client heroes!


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Taking your analytics practice to the next level

As both a Googler and ClickZ team member, I recently attended and participated in the always-inspirational ClickZ Live New York event.


Along with Katie Morse, Vice President, Social and Search at Nielsen and Pierce Crosby, business development and experienced data analyst at StockTwits, we had a panel discussion on how brands can take their analytics practice to the next level.


First, a quick description of the panel:


Data has become everyone's domain, in all aspects of your marketing and business. Most companies do a good job at collecting and reporting data and have a basic process in place. But many are stuck as to what to do next to elevate value of data in their company.


As our conversation, and those questions the audience asked, were so good, I wanted to pull out some of the best questions and summary of answers we shared with attendees.


ClickZ NY analytics


Pierce, Katie, and Adam presenting at ClickZ Live NYC. Photo by Search Engine Watch columnist Thom Craver (used w/permission).


1. Most companies have varying groups that need access to analytics insights. How do you efficiently get them all what they need and how do you ensure it's most useful for them?


The answer is process. Ensure that you have the right metrics delivered to the right people at an anticipated frequency. Also ensure that you have conducted proper resource allocation in order to allow time not just to share dashboards, but flesh out insights for your teams to take action on.


If you are just delivering dashboards without context, you're not doing your job. Actually, you're performing the job a script can do – which isn't a good place to be.


The more formalized you can be with your processes, the better, as this will make you incredibly efficient and free up time for the creative, valuable (and fun!) analyst projects.


2. How do you see a breakdown of time spent on analytics between data capture, reporting, and analysis? What are the best ways to help get organizations to move up the value chain?


The more time you can spend on analysis, the better. But if you're not capturing the right data and reporting it in an articulate way, your analysis won't be accurate or defensible. That's why it's important to spend time up front on ensuring your data quality is excellent and you're effortlessly generating beautiful reports.


Need some hard numbers to serve as a guideline? Aim for 10% of time spent on data capture, 20% on reporting, and 70% on analysis and delivering insights to your team (my previous ClickZ column goes over the reporting part in more detail).


The way to get an organization to move up the value chain is easy: trend down the time you spend on capture and reporting. It'll happen organically.


3. Can you talk about how you are using data across tactics - such as how does search inform social, email or other areas of marketing?


Data should not exist in a silo. You should be using it to inform everything you do, and you should be using it to understand your users, not simply to fill in dashboards.


For example: if you notice visitors to your ecommerce site are frequently querying a product name or type you don't have in site search, you should share this data with your product team and persuade them to offer it. Marketing isn't just about promoting products anymore.


Marketing now needs to be involved in the actual strategic decisions companies make, and data is how we get a seat here. Our user data should be informing what we do next, not just showing successes of our sites and apps. This all starts with breaking down silos and using insights cross functionally – beyond marketing.


4. Let's talk about goal setting: how you can quantify success outside of just ROI? What are some other metrics that we might want to take a look at?


ROI in dollar terms is great. Everyone can understand this, especially your CFO. But generating revenue is just one outcome from your marketing and content, and just one thing to optimize.


For example, if your call center or social CRM team notices a recurring question about your company's product they have to answer repeatedly, that's a huge opportunity. What you need to do in this type of situation is measure what your user's problems are and use this information to power answers in an automated / self-service fashion such as an FAQ page on your site or chatbot.


Creating this type of content in a data-driven manner can help trend down easily answered questions, freeing up your customer service team to focus on tougher problems which require a human touch and making your customers happier by simply getting the information they need immediately. That's a win-win: and very measurable!


5. What are some actionable ways or things we could all do to become better at analyzing the “what happened” and “why” at our metrics?


This is an area of practice makes perfect. The answer is to hire skilled leaders for your team that can inspire and grow your team's analyst skills. But personal growth helps too: so attending events like ClickZ Live, trainings and courses (such as our Analytics Academy) and reading blogs and books (like Avinash's definitive book, Web Analytics 2.0).


Although, there is simply no substitute for hands on experience at making data-drive decisions and becoming fluent in the world of digital measurement.


Working at an agency and on hundreds of clients across industries helped me get to where I am, so that's a path I can personally recommend. Although there's no reason you can't build your skills in-house too.


To learn more about the changing face of digital marketing, come to our two-day Shift London event in May.

How to Find Who Reads and Subscribes to Your WordPress Blog

Do you want to find who reads and subscribes to your WordPress blog? Part of building a website is to understand is how your users read and interact with your content. In this article, we will show you how to find who reads and subscribes to your WordPress blog.


Who reads and subscribes to your WordPress blog


Why You Need to Know Your Audience?


Understanding your audience is crucial for the success of your blog or business. It helps you learn: which pages on your website are most popular among users? How your users found those pages? Where those users came from? And what else they looked on your website?


All this information helps you decide what kind of content works for your audience. It also helps you find out what is not working with your readers.


This allows you to plan and create better content.


Having said that, let's take a look at how to find out more information about your readers and subscribers.


Learn About Your Readers and Subscribers Using Google Analytics


Google Analytics is the most comprehensive analytics available in the market today. It can be used to track your site visitors as well as your RSS feed subscribers.


First you need to visit the Google Analytics website and signup for an account. Take a look at the section 'How to Signup with Google Analytics' in our guide on how to install Google Analytics in WordPress for detailed instructions.


Setting up Google Analytics for WordPress by MonsterInsights


For this tutorial, we will be using the MonsterInsights plugin. If you are already using the plugin and have it setup on your WordPress site, then you can skip to the next step.


First thing you need to do is install and activate the Google Analytics by MonsterInsights plugin. For more details, see our step by step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.


Upon activation, you need to visit Insights » Settings page and click on 'Authenticate with your Google account' button.


Authenticate Google Account to select your Analytics profile


This will open a popup dialog where you will be asked to allow Google Analytics plugin to access your Google account.


Google Account Permission


Click on the allow button to continue.


The popup will now show you a code which you need to copy and paste into Google Analytics plugin settings on your WordPress site.


Once you do that, the plugin will now fetch your account settings from your Google Analytics account. After that you need to select your analytics profile by clicking on select a profile.


Select a profile


Click on save changes button to store your settings.


That's all you have successfully setup Google Analytics by MonsterInsights on your website. For detailed instructions, take a look at our beginner's guide on how to use Google Analytics for your WordPresss site.


Tracking RSS Links in Google Analytics


Google Analytics can not only track visitors coming to your site, but it can also track links to your website from other sources like your RSS feed, email newsletter, social links, etc.


See our guide on how to track links in WordPress using Google analytics.


If you are manually sharing links, then you can add your own URL parameters. But the links in your RSS feed and newsletter are automatically generated by WordPress.


Here is how you can track your RSS feed links in WordPress using the Google Analytics by MonsterInsights plugin.


Go to Analytics » Settings in your WordPress admin area and click on the Advanced tab.


Tracking RSS feed links in Google Analytics


Check the box next to 'Tag links in RSS feed with campaign variables' option and click on the save changes button.


That's all, you have successfully enabled tracking of links in your RSS feed.


Viewing Reports for Your RSS Feed Links in Google Analytics


Log in to your Google Analytics dashboard and then visit the reporting page. Go to Acquisition » All Traffic » Source/Medium tab.


Google Analytics Acquisition


There you will find RSS as source and as medium in your reporting. You can click on it to further drill down, and see which content they clicked.


Finding Subscriber Information


In order to find subscriber information, the first thing you need to do is give your users the ability to subscribe to your blog through an email newsletter. See why you should build your email list right away.


We also have an email marketing 101 guide that will help you build an email list in WordPress.


We're going to cover how to find subscriber information in two of the most popular email marketing platforms among our users.


Find Subscriber Information in MailChimp


If you are using MailChimp, then it comes with its own built-in analytics. These reports tell you how your newsletter campaigns and your RSS to Email campaigns performed.


Simply login to your MailChimp account and click on Reports from the top menu.


You will see a list of emails sent to your subscribers. Click on the view report button next to an email.


View reports in MailChimp


This will show you an overview of your campaign. It will also provide you with information like how many users opened or didn't open your email, bounced email addresses, abuse reports, total clicks, links clicked, etc.


Viewing MailChimp reports


Find Subscriber Information in AWeber


If you are using AWeber in WordPress as your email list provider, then you can use AWeber's built-in reports feature. It will show you how your newsletter or RSS to email campaigns performed.


Simply login to your AWeber account and then click on reports.


Aweber Reports


The reporting dashboard provides an indepth overview of your overall opens and click rates. You can drill down the reports by clicking on shortcuts in the left menu.


AWeber reports shortcuts


That's all, we hope this article helped you find who reads and subscribes to your WordPress blog. You may also want to see our list of 40 useful tools to manage and grow your WordPress blog.


If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.


The post How to Find Who Reads and Subscribes to Your WordPress Blog appeared first on WPBeginner.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

How to Get Your Ideas to Spread with Influencer Marketing

When 50 fashion influencers on Instagram posted a picture of themselves in the same Lord & Taylor dress, it sent out signals that this dress was a must have fashion piece. The following weekend the dress was completely sold out.

lord-taylor


This Lord & Taylor campaign is a perfect example of the power of influencer marketing.


65% of brands now run influencer campaigns and according to an infographic by The Shelf, 92% of consumers trust recommendations from other people-even if they don't know them personally-over promotional content that comes directly from brands.


We're more likely to buy a product if it's recommended by a friend than pushed at us by an advert and an eMarketer study found that advertisers who implemented an influencer marketing campaign earned $6.85 in media value on average for every $1 they spent on paid media for influencer programs.


Influencer marketing opens up endless opportunities for brands to amplify their content, connect with consumers and build relationships more organically, and more directly.


But how do you get started with influencer marketing? What makes an influencer? And how can you build relationships with influencers?


In this post, I'd love to give you the lowdown on influencer marketing and some actionable tips to help you find the best influencers for your business.


Let's dig in.



pablo (50)


How to get ideas to spread


Success in marketing often comes down to one simple concept: getting your ideas to spread.


Traditionally, mass-media adverting is the go-to way to spread ideas. Here's how it works (in theory)you buy some ads, put those ads in front of your audience, and that's how your idea spreads. In turn, these ads drive sales and then you can buy some more ads, to reach some more people. And so on…


The problem with this approach is that we live in a time where choice is abundant and time is sparse.


Consumers are spoiled for choice when it comes to what to spend their money on and have too little time to consume content and engage with adverts. What this means is that most advertising is just ignored.


Time Choice 3


As technology advances, traditional marketing techniques have become less and less effective. This is where influencer marketing can help.


What is influencer marketing?


Consumers have always looked to fellow consumers to inform their purchasing decisions, and with the rise of social media, it's becoming easier for brands to discover and partner with influencers to get people talking about their company and products.


To help us give you the best tips and advice on influencer marketing we spoke with social media agency, SocialChain:


“Influencer marketing is a marketing style that focuses on using influential people to share a brand's message with their chosen audience,” explained SocialChain's Anna-Marie Odubote.


“Influencer marketing is beneficial to businesses because it arguably creates more meaningful engagement than traditional advertising.”


“Influencers have very trusted voices. They are real people that appear to be unbiased; a traditional advert or a post directly from a brand will often be ignored. But an endorsement from an influencer is like your friend, brother, sister or parent 'having your back' and telling you about something you need to check out. And regular social media ads are a little bit like strangers shouting random things at you – after a while you just tune them out.”


Primarily, influencers act as a mutual friend connecting your brand with your target consumers. An endorsement from an influencer has the power to drive traffic to your site, amplify your message across social media platforms, and even directly sell your product through their recommendation.


Marketing and The Diffusion of Innovation


The Diffusion of Innovation is a theory that seeks to explain how, why, and at what rate new ideas and technology spread through cultures.


What the Diffusion of Innovation shows is that adoption of new technologies doesn't happen simultaneously for everyone. Facebook, for example, was first adopted by college students and only now has it started to be used by the late majority and mass market.


The Diffusion of Innovation is broken down into five adopter categories:



  • Innovators: These are people who want to be the first to try the innovation. These people are very interested in new ideas, very willing to take risks, and are often the first to develop new products and technologies.

  • Early Adopters: These are people like to adopt new ideas and enjoy being amongst some of the first people to try new technologies and spread the word about them. Often these people are leaders and share their experiences with the people around them.

  • Early Majority: These people are rarely leaders, but they do adopt new ideas before the average person. Typically they like to see that an innovation will work before they're willing to use it.

  • Late Majority: These people are skeptical of change, and will only adopt an innovation after it has been tried by the majority.

  • Laggards: These people are bound by tradition and very conservative. They are very skeptical of change and are the hardest group to bring on board.


Innovators


Editor's note: for more on the Diffusion of Innovation and marketing, check out this great talk by Simon Sinek


Most marketing is traditionally aimed at the mass market (Early Majority and Late Majority in the above graphic). The problem with this approach is that it's much harder to get these people to care about your product.


Innovators and early adopters, however, care deeply about new products and technologies. For example, a tech product reviewer on YouTube will be extremely interested in using the latest smartphone technology, whereas someone in the early majority will likely only care when their old phone is outdated.


If you'd like to get your ideas to spread, reaching the innovators and early adopters within your niche can be a great way to go. This is something Apple has mastered over the years…


Influencer marketing on the grandest stage


When Apple have new products to launch, the first people they talk to are those who want to listen. The people who actively opt-in to hear Apple's message.


When Tim Cook gets up on stage at the WWDC conference, he's not talking to the mass market; he's talking to innovators and early adopters in the hope that what he says will inspire them enough to pass the information on to their audience.


WWDC


These innovators and early adopters care deeply enough about Apple to give up their time and watch a whole keynote presentation purely focused on Apple products. For Apple, it makes much more sense to talk directly to influencers who care, rather than push a message out to the mass market directly.


After the WWDC conference has finished, Apple knows their message and news about their new products will reach the masses through content produced by journalists and social influencers.


When you think about marketing your business, try to think about the innovators and early adopters within your target audience: Who sincerely cares about the problem your product or services solves? Who can you speak to that will really listen?


What makes an influencer?


SocialChain describes an influencer as, “an individual that has a significant audience, who listens and makes decisions based on his/her opinions.” And influencers come in various shapes and sizes:



  • Journalists

  • Industry experts

  • Celebrities

  • Academics


Editors of highly read blogs can be influencers as can highly viewed YouTuber's like MKBHD, and influence isn't just based on follower counts and audience size.


A celebrity may have a large following purely because they're famous, or someone may have acquired hundreds of thousands of followers on Twitter because they're great a curating content. But a large following doesn't necessarily dictate influence.


Measuring influence


SocialChain has developed a simple method for measuring influence across the main platforms; T-Score (Twitter) F-Score (Facebook) Y-Score (Youtube) I-Score (Instagram).


The scoring system is aimed to decipher exactly how much of the meaningful engagement you're actually paying for and how cost-effective an influencer is, as Steve Bartlett, SocialChain's founder explains on his blog.


Here's an example of the T-Score in action:


– Tom is a real YouTube influencer who we've worked with [SocialChain] on a number of influencer marketing campaigns 


– Influencer Tom's last 50 tweets have 17,600 engagements combined (replies, likes, retweets). 


– He has 210,409 followers on Twitter


– He charges £100 per tweet


17,600 (combined engagements from last 50 tweets) / 50 = 352 (Average engagement per tweet)


352 (Average engagements per tweet) / £100 (total following) = 3.52


Tom's T-score = 3.52 and you're effectively paying £1 per 3.52 engagements that Tom is generating for himself.


(This doesn't mean you'll get 3.52 engagements per £1 on your sponsored content, but it gives you a good idea of how much engagement you will hope to see per £1 spent.)


How to find influencers


The type of influencer you're looking for will depend on the goals of your campaign.


“To find influencers that fit your business, you need to have an in-depth understanding of your own brand and how you want to be perceived,” Anna-Marie Odubote explained.


“There are many influencer discovery tools online that you can use to search for influencers in certain categories and countries. If you want to find more bespoke influencers, the best way would be to manually search social media.”


Here are a couple of tools to help you discover influencers in your niche:


Followerwonk


followerwonk


Followerwonk is a brilliant tool from Moz. It allows you to search for keywords in Twitter user bios to find those with the most authority and largest reach.


Klear


klear


Klear allows you to search for keywords and discover relevant influencers on both Twitter and Instagram. You can also filter users by skills and location as well as add all your selected influencers to a list.


Content + Distribution: The perfect mix


When you're looking for an influencer to partner with, the ideal influencer tends to have two key abilities:



  1. The ability to create content

  2. The ability to distribute content


Reach and content


Content


Great content is the heart and soul of any influencer marketing campaign.


Most influencers have managed to build their audience through creating their own, unique brand of content, and if you're simply asking them to share a piece of content you've created, it can feel a little inauthentic and stand out as an advert or sponsored posts.


Ideally, you're looking to partner with influencers who can create content alongside your business. Rather than only sharing content, you've already created.


Distribution


I like to look at distribution as a combination or reach (audience size) and engagement. Sometimes it can be easy to feel that someone with say 100,000 followers on Twitter or 10,000 subscribers on their email list is an influencer. But really, it doesn't matter how many people follow someone. What's important is how many people engagement with them. And how many people click the links they share.


The SocialChain scoring system mentioned above can be a great way to measure engagement various influencers receive on their content.


How to build relationships with influencers


Once you've identified your influencers, the next step is to start building relationships with them.


“If an influencer manages themselves and all of their enquires, you always need to be personable and make the influencer feel valued and unique. Although influencers are their own business, the majority aren't businesspeople. Too much corporate talk can scare them away, and it's best to arrange a face to face meeting/ Skype call as soon as you can,” said Odubote.


“Depending on the influencer's reach, [some larger influencers have management teams] you'll often speak to their management (the influencer will see the initial enquiry and forward it to their management if it's something they're interested in).”


Over to you


Thanks for reading! I'd love to continue the conversation about influencer marketing in the comments below. Have you tried any influencer marketing campaigns? Any tips on building relationships with influencers?


The post How to Get Your Ideas to Spread with Influencer Marketing appeared first on Social.