Tag Archive for: Tips

Snowy mountain valley at dusk with pine trees covered in snow and beautiful purple coloured clouds

Winter is upon us, and for businesses in Whistler, it’s a season of both excitement and challenges. As the snow blankets this picturesque region, adventure seekers and travellers flock to the mountains, seeking thrills and unforgettable experiences. But how can your business stand out in this winter wonderland? How can you navigate the snow-covered path to success? In this article, we’ll explore 5 strategies to snow-proof your business and make this winter in Whistler truly remarkable.

 

1. Elevate Your Digital Presence for Winter

Whistler transforms into a winter wonderland during this time of year, and your online presence should reflect that. Picture your website as a cozy cabin inviting visitors to experience the magic of the season. Update your website with winter-centric imagery, highlight your seasonal offerings, and ensure a seamless mobile experience. Let’s make sure your online welcome mat is ready for the winter rush!

Desktop computer on a desk with a chair and a coffee cup and a desk palnt

2. Navigate the Snowy Path with Local SEO

Much like preparing for an exciting mountain expedition, gear up your website with strategically chosen keywords and robust local SEO tactics. Just as a well-marked trail leads adventurers, optimize your online presence to guide your target audience directly to your establishment. When winter enthusiasts seek services in Whistler, ensure your business shines on the virtual map, standing out like pristine powder after a snowfall. Let local SEO be your compass, directing eager customers to your doorstep!

 

3. Craft Tempting Winter Promotions

As the winter wonderland embraces Whistler, entice your audience with promotions designed to encapsulate the magic of the season. Develop irresistible winter-themed experiences, such as après-ski gatherings, guided winter adventure tours, or seasonal tasting events. Showcase these experiences as the focal point of your winter promotions. Complement this with a loyalty program that rewards repeat visits, enhancing customer retention during the season. Additionally, optimize your approach with targeted seasonal email campaigns, tailoring content to resonate with your audience’s winter aspirations and preferences. Let the allure of winter guide your marketing strategies, ensuring your offerings captivate and resonate with both local and visiting patrons.

 

4. Spin Tales of Winter Magic with Engaging Content

Every winter season has its own unique story, and your business plays a vital role in Whistler’s winter tale. Weave this narrative through diverse and engaging content that resonates with your audience. Picture your content as a warm mug of cocoa by the fireside—inviting and comforting. Share thrilling blog posts about winter adventures, host cozy fireside chats with industry experts, run a winter photo contest to showcase community moments, and spotlight your seasonal menu offerings. Invite your audience to immerse themselves in the beauty and excitement of winter, establishing a strong emotional connection with your brand during these frosty months.

 

Vintage camper outdoors in the snow with people sitting around a fire

Four Season Whistler

5. Form Snowball Partnerships for Collective Success

In the spirit of unity within our community, forming meaningful partnerships can make this winter season truly exceptional. Imagine collaborating with a local ski rental shop, offering joint discounts for adventure seekers, or partnering with a nearby spa for après-ski relaxation packages. Additionally, teaming up with a neighboring café to provide exclusive coffee and dessert pairings can enhance the winter experience for your patrons. Let’s explore these collaborative opportunities, creating a snowball effect of success that benefits us all in Whistler’s close-knit business community.

 

A group of people smiling and collaborating over coffee and technology

 

As we gear up for a winter full of adventure, delight, and growth, let Cloud9 Marketing be your trusted companion on this exhilarating journey. Our team is here to ensure your business soars high and embraces the magic of the season. Let’s make this winter in Whistler one for the books!

 

Reach out to us at [email protected] or book a consultation to get started on your winter marketing adventure.

Video Mistakes You Might Be Making

It’s no secret that videos are trendier than ever. From hilarious cat videos, to live news on your smart phone, our society is in love with videos. Embracing film as part of your marketing strategy can drastically improve your reach. We are all for video content because we know how powerful it is, when it’s done right that is. Whether you are gearing up to incorporate video into your marketing strategy or already have it implemented, these considerations for a successful video are key.

Concept

Whatever your concept is, make it clear in the first 8 seconds. The first couple of seconds are when the viewer decides if it is appealing or not. This is your do or die window for their attention. Reflect on what audience you are trying to reach and what you are trying to say about your brand, this is your time to shine.

Overselling

Finding the balance between being clear about your product or idea and drowning people in it can be tricky. The goal with any video is to make a lasting impression and call the viewer to action. You want them to remember your brand, and dig a little deeper on their own free will. It’s about creating engagement from the viewer. Rather than spill all the beans, lead them on with excitement and have all the info they’ll be craving ready in another video, or written on your website and point them in that direction.

Feedback

Everyone needs more feedback. Ask strangers in your target audience what they think about your video. Outside sources are best for feedback as your team, family and friends will have a bias.

Call to Action

As mentioned in overselling, each video needs to call the viewer to some kind of action. The call can be just to create curiosity, generate a referral, get a free quote, how to use your product and so on. Maybe all you are trying to do is get them to like your Facebook page, whatever it is, make sure it is clear in your objectives before and after the video is created.

Boring

A few things can make a video boring. If it is too long, it’s boring. If the concept isn’t portrayed in an engaging way, it is boring. If the people in the video are, well boring, it is of course going to be a boring film. Spending a couple of extra bucks to hire someone to film and act in your video could make all the difference. This is something you’ll need to weigh out for yourself, but if you were planning on using Larry, the monotone receptionist as your lead star, maybe rethink that one.

Placement

Now that you’ve created your perfect video, don’t let it go to waste! Placement on your website should be front and center. On YouTube it should be on your own channel which will eventually have more videos to fill the auto play, this will keep your target audience much more excited about your company as there is even more material for them to view. Be sure to cross post on other outlets like Vimeo and Facebook. If you choose to do paid advertisement with your video choose the sites that will appeal to the right demographic, and again watch placement of where your video will be on each page that you are paying for.

We can’t say this will make video-making fool proof, but it is a step in the right direction. When creating or perfecting your video content keep these helpful hints in mind. If you are interested in video marketing but don’t know where to start, check out Cloud9’s video production & marketing services.

email marketing

Originally posted on Mashable: 5 Tactics to Grow Your Email List.

Back in January, many email marketers said increasing their lists was their top goal for 2013. Well, spring is here. Is your mailing list growing as fast as your flowers and lawn? If not, it’s time to execute a new plan.

Many marketers have email addresses only for 30% or less of their customer and prospect lists. They’re tempted to revert to their direct-mail experience and reach for a quick fix like email append (“e-append”) and list rental/purchase.

But in today’s engagement-based inbox placement world, this “quick fix” approach can give you more headaches than new sales.

If you seek quantity over quality in list growth, you’re practically inviting the ISPs either to block your entire opt-in mailing list or route everything to your recipients’ bulk folders, where they’ll languish in obscurity until the ISPs dump them automatically.

So, what should be in your email list growth plan? Below are five tried-and-true methods to ignite your email list growth, in a safe, permission-based way.

1. Make It Easy to Opt In on Your Website

Your customers and prospects must be able to find your opt-in form easily on your home page. This advice has been around for years, but today’s web designers apparently didn’t get the memo. They position Facebook and Twitter icons prominently but send you on a search-and-rescue mission to find the opt-in field.

Many websites undersell the email value proposition, using just a link saying “Sign Up for Email” relegated to the homepage footer. Worse, the email opt-in call-to-action isn’t even on the page. Make your forms stand out.

If you want to get more opt-ins, make the email invite more visible. Use a benefit-based call-to-action, and test an offer that you subsequently deliver in your welcome series.

2. Don’t Stop at Just One

Add more opt-in forms throughout your site and in various placements: above the fold (the horizontal halfway point on your website, like the fold in a newspaper), below the fold, in the right rail, in left-hand navigation and on a dynamic layer that displays according to visitors’ site activity.

Test these locations to see how many more opt-ins you can drive, each one alone and in combination with each other. One opt-in form on a page might drive X, while having two opt-in form placements on a page might drive 1.5X to 2X.

At the EEC Summit in 2012, Tommy Hilfiger reported that his company drives 2% of all site visitors to opt in by using a dynamic opt-in layer served to new site visitors on site entry.

3. Collect Emails at Your Stores

Ask your customers to opt in for email at your checkout counter or when requesting an email receipt. However, be sure you are collecting high-quality names.

You’ll have to develop a request procedure that helps you overcome two big pitfalls of point-of-sale requests: phony addresses, either provided by reluctant customers who can’t say no to the request or keyed in by sales associates who have to meet email quotas.

Mistakes, which happen when sales people misspell a written address, misunderstand a customer’s spoken address or omit a crucial detail like the “@” symbol.

Here are a few suggestions for collecting more and better addresses:

  • Let customers type in their email addresses on a POS touchpad or credit card terminal.
  • Give them an offer or benefit for signing up in-store.
  • Explain what they’ll be receiving.
  • Get explicit permission before adding the address.

4. Make It Mobile

Consumer adoption of mobile sites and apps makes mobile another important collection point for opt-in for both email and SMS text. The best mobile site home pages have two opt-in forms: one for email, one for SMS. Remember the constraints that mobile puts on viewing and data input.

Don’t ask users to fill out lots of form fields. Keep the form short and simple. You can collect more information later in your welcome series using progressive profiling.

5. Remember Your Social Networks

Give your Facebook followers a simple opt-in form page. Call out the benefits and differences between your social experience and your email communications.

Consider using social login, also known as social sign-in. This uses existing login information from social networks such as Facebook or Twitter to sign in to a website without having to create a separate login account specifically for your website.

You can also use this process to allow your site registrants to quickly and easily sign up to receive your marketing emails.

customer choice business

Here is a question I received through my Linkedin account in regards to customer choice – I thought the question was pretty interesting and touched on companies having to build on trust and goodwill to move forward, especially with the new Panda and Penguin releases in Google – so I decided to share it…

Hi Virginia,

I know you deal with a lot of people everyday and as a marketing professional I thought you may be able to give me some feedback. I have now been in a sales role with Paladin Security for just over 8 months. Cutting to the chase here is I wanted to know in your opinion what your feelings are to NOT having to lock into a 3 year contract for a business service such as cell phone service or as in my situation security alarm monitoring (for commercial or residential customers). Would not having to sign a fixed term contract be more attractive to you or people you know in general? Or would your answer be that it wouldn’t influence you in any way? Paladin just went with all services on a no fixed term contracts so I’m trying to see how I can position that in my conversations with decision makers. Thanks for any feedback. Greatly appreciated!
Warm regards,

Christine

————————–

Hi Christine,

Thanks for your message and congrats on your relatively new position!

Personally, I like the idea of a product not being available only on a fixed term. Especially as we are moving toward an era of genuine and transparent B2C interaction. With the importance of social media and socially influence search playing a much bigger role in SEO and other business ranking factors, the more trust you can build with your customers the better.

In my experience when you lock someone into a contract there is a mild feeling of mistrust – like “Why do they have to lock me into a contract? What don’t I know that I may not like down the road?”. Which does not build a feeling of goodwill and trust toward the business, and ultimately a negative impression – if only slightly. This may influence how they talk about your product OR if they talk about your product at all. Your customers want to feel in control about their choice to use your service and that by offering a flexible no-obligation option, you value that choice. I think if your marketing efforts can focus on humanizing your brand and developing a great customer satisfaction strategy, then your company’s move to no-fixed terms will be a success.  Good luck – thank you for your question!

With appreciation,

Virginia-Rae Choquette