Is Google’s Advertising Destroying the Sanctity of Search Results?

A few months back, I wrote an article titled Google’s Panda Update: Haters, Cheaters and Consequences. The article was my defense of Google’s constant algorithm changes. In that article I naively wrote the following:

“Unlike a lot of cynics out there, I believe that Google is trying to deliver the most relevant and useful search results possible.”

Well, I’ve always been a big enough man to admit when I’m wrong. And I was wrong about Google. Dead wrong. Like so many others, I too was fooled by Google’s clever sleight of hand. Let me explain.

Google’s Clever Sleight Of Hand

Over the years, Google has had numerous algorithm changes:

* 2003-05-01 “Fritz” update
* 2003-05-16 “Florida” update
* 2007-01-25 Googlebombs “defused” update
* 2009-02-20 “Vince” update
* 2010-05-01 “Mayday” update
* 2011-02-24 “Panda” update
* 2011-05-10 “Panda 2.1″ update
* 2011-06-16 “Panda 2.2″ update
* 2011-07-23 “Panda 2.3″ update
* 2011-08-12 “Panda 2.4″ update
* 2011-09-27 “Panda 2.5″ update (Source: ToddNemet.com)

Obviously, with so many major updates, it would be reasonable to assume that Google was working hard trying to deliver a superior product – provide users with a better search “experience.” It would be reasonable to assume that, but it would be the wrong assumption.

Show Google The Money

Why? Because Google has strayed far away from its original search roots. Today’s Google is first and foremost a greedy corporation – a powerful advertising company that generates 97 percent of its income from its advertising programs – namely Adwords. And while Google may have made its name in search, it made its fortune from advertising.

And when 97 percent of your revenue is coming from advertising, guess what your overriding priority is going to be? That’s right… how to make more money from your advertising programs!

So how did it come to this? How did Google lose its way?

In a word…greed. Google makes a lot of money from online advertising. How much is a lot? In the twelve months ending June 30, 2011, Google brought in $33.3 billion in revenues. Of that, 97 percent ($32.2 billion) was from advertising.

You Gotta Pay To Play

WordStream, a provider of software for keywords and pay-per-click marketing campaigns, has done research to discover which keywords receive the highest costs per click (CPC) in Google AdWords. Following are the top 20 keyword categories that fetched the highest costs per click:

1. Insurance – $54.91 per click
2. Loans – $44.28 per click
3. Mortgáge – $47.12 per click
4. Attorney – $47.07 per click
5. Credít – $36.06 per click
6. Lawyer – $42.51 per click
7. Donate – $42.02 per click
8. Degree – $40.61 per click
9. Hosting – $31.91 per click
10. Claim – $45.51 per click
11. Conference Call – $42.05 per click
12. Trading – $33.19 per click
13. Software – $35.29 per click
14. Recovery – $42.03 per click
15. Transfer – $29.86 per click
16. Gas/Electricity – $54.62 per click
17. Classes – $35.04 per click
18. Rehab – $33.59 per click
19. Treatment – $37.18 per click
20. Cord Blood – $27.80 per click (Source: PracticalEcommerce.com)

Can you believe the cost-per-click of the top 20 keyword categories? Not only is Google thumbing its nose at searchers, it’s also kicking small advertisers to the curb as well. The same small advertisers who helped Google become the dominant advertising force that it’s become. At those prices, it’s impossible for small advertisers to compete. The playing field is tilted decidedly towards the side of big business.

One Man’s Rant?

So, is this article one man’s rant, or do others feel the same way I do? I can assure you, I’m not the only one condemning Google for its irresponsible actions and greed. Here’s what SEOBooks’s Aaron Wall had to say in his article Forget about SEO. To be visible in Google today, try Adwords.

“Some of Google’s new search results look quite alarming in terms of every single link above the fold is either a paid ad, or links to yet another Google page wrapped in ads.

I have a huge monitor & it is impossible for me to click *anywhére* above the fold on some search results without going through Google’s toll booth or clicking off to yet another Google ad wrapped page.

Those who coddled Google & gave Google the benefit of the doubt now have egg on their face, and the industry as a whole is poorer for their poor judgement & lack of stewardship.”

And here’s what NetSpeak Solutions Stephen Dow had to say in his article Google Panda: Hurting SEO and Search Results for Increased Ad Revenues?)

“All during the ‘Panda mess’ one thing has been positive for Google, their ad revenues! They’ve grown to record levels (especially this last quarter). Why? I believe it’s simply because desperate business owners (and SEO marketers) don’t have sure answers to make-up for lost rankings and traffic. So, they decide to ‘punt’ by using more paid advertising – even going as far as pointing ads to home pages (now that’s desperation)!

As Google continues with its Panda ‘search engine redesign,’ let’s all just sit back and watch them continue to mess up organic search and the Internet marketing industry.”

So, am I and others criticizing Google unfairly? Or, am I right to ask the question: Is Google’s Advertising Destroying the Sanctity of Search Results?

What do you think?

About The Author
David Jackson is a marketing consultant, and the owner of Free-Marketing-Tips-Blog.com – Powerful, free marketing tips to help grow your business! free-marketing-tips-blog.com

WNW Design Ltd Launches All Clean Website

WNW Design Ltd are proud to announce the launch of the All Clean website.

All Clean offer, domestic, office and exterior cleaning, as well as grounds maintenance and holiday home maintenance in the South West. They have got offices throughout Devon and provide professional and friendly service. The All Clean staff are trained Certified Technicians and all their work is fully insured.

Browse the website http://www.allcleanuk.co.uk/ for more information.

WNW Design Ltd Launches Partners In Payroll Website

WNW Design Ltd are proud to announce the launch of the Partners in Payroll website.

Partners in Payroll affer a Book-Keeping, Payroll and Sage training services to small and medium businesses. They also offer AAT Apprenticeships which are supported by Accountancy Plus in Exeter.

Browse the website http://www.partnersinpayroll.co.uk/ for more information.

Small Businesses Use Of Facebook Ads On The Rise

Facebook Ads nearly as popular as print newspaper and direct mail advertising.

MerchantCircle released the results of their latest Merchant Confidence Index last week. The study focused on two main points: small business owners’ expectations about the economy, and their adoption of new marketing channels. According to the study, newer marketing channels have gained significant ground over more traditional methods recently. Nearly a quarter of the 2,500 respondents – 23% – said they use Facebook Ads to market their products. That is nearly as many as use print newspaper ads (25%) and direct mailings (24%).

Meanwhile the use of group deal services like Groupon, Living Social, and Google Offers is also on the rise. Twelve percent of respondents said they participated in these programs, with the relatively new Google Offers gaining on its big name competition at a surprising rate. Thirty-two percent of respondents said they plan to use Google Offers in the future, compared to 26% who plan to use Groupon and just 16% who plan to use Living Social.

The increase in the use of Facebook ads is especially interesting in light of two other recent studies that have been done about the effectiveness of advertising in certain contexts. A recent study by neuromarketing firm NeuroFocus found that people tend to engage emotionally with ads on Facebook significantly more than they do with ads in other places – be it elsewhere on the web or in real life, like in a newspaper. Meanwhile, a study conducted by marketing research firm eMarketer has found that ad spending has failed to keep up with the ways people spend their time. The study compared the time spent by American adults tuned in to various media – TV, the internet, their phones, etc – to the share of ad spending that each medium gets. Th! ey found that while roughly proportional amounts of money were spent on TV and internet ads, newspapers and magazines got vastly more ad money than the time people spend reading them would seem to warrant, while the mobile ad space is virtually untouched, even though people spend roughly 10% of their time there.

MerchantCircle’s study, then, suggests that small business owners are catching on to the ways people spend their time and to the kinds of ads that are most effective, and are spending their ad dollars wisely.

About the Author:
Shaylin Clark is a staff writer for SmallBusinessNewz. Twitter: @stclark81, Google Plus: +Shaylin Clark

The Key To Making Money In Your Small Business

What’s the number one thing you must have in order to grow a successful small business? It’s not clients or customers, though those are critically important.

It’s not effective marketing, though you absolutely need that too.

I’m talking about something far simpler. And I know I risk sounding like Master of the Obvious with this, but I’ve seen so many entrepreneurs struggle because they don’t have it…

What is this key to making money in your small business?

You have to have something to sell!

See, I told you it was obvious. But I’ve had more than one client come to me and say…

“Okay, I’ve built my new blog site, launched my brand and am trying to get out there and make connections. But so far I’ve spent a bunch of time and money and none is coming in.”

Oftentimes they really aren’t clear about what they’re selling. One person was offering the always too vague “coaching”… Another had spent all her time and money building a free membership site with no real idea of how to monetize it …

Yet another was trying to sell other, complimentary experts into becoming members of her site and program in exchange for marketing them online and getting them more exposure. The only problem? She didn’t have a list of people to expose these experts to. So she still really had nothing to sell.

If you’ve got nothing in particular to sell it’s hard to make any money.

The solution?

Create specific products and/or services that provide value now.

These could be ebooks, audio trainings, video tutorials, membership programs, coaching programs, consulting packages, done-for-you services, or a combination of any and all of the above.

The only criteria are:
Whatever you’re selling has to be something people want to buy
It has to be easy to understand what you’re selling, who it’s for and why they would want it (that’s the old “what’s in it for me” part)
It has to be sold in a way that makes it easy to buy
Of course, there is just a bit more to it than that.

But the most important thing is that you come up with something to sell that’s got tangible value and benefits, and provides a specific set of services and/or products for a specific price.

For example, selling coaching or consulting does not fit the bill here. However, selling a specific number of hours or sessions with a particular goal does. So selling marketing consulting is a no go, but selling a 6-hour Marketing Jumpstart program works. Throwing in a complimentary workbook makes it even better.

Make sense? If so, then take a look at what you’re offering and find ways to turn it into specific, value-packed products, services and programs.

About the Author:
Practical Marketing Expert and Business Lifestyle Architect Stacy Karacostas is on a mission to end Entrepreneurial Overwhelm and Marketing Madness! Discover how to grow your businesses with less effort-so you can help more people, make more money AND still have a life-by grabbing your copy of her FREE “Success without Shackles Starter Kit” at http://www.theunchainedentrepreneur.com.

WNW Design Ltd Launches New Rougemont Chambers Website

WNW Design Ltd are proud to announce the launch of the Rougemont Chambers new website.

Rougemont Chambers offer specialist expertise in advocacy, commercial, chancery, real property, employment, landlord/tenant and family law. Their clients are individuals, companies, government bodies and local authorities. They offer advice nationally as well as locally.

Browse the website http://www.rougemontchambers.co.uk for more information.

20 Little-Known Marketing Blogs You Should Be Reading

When it comes to marketing blogs, we all know what the “authority” blogs are, right? After all, they’re hugely popular and many of us follow those blogs faithfully. Blogs like ProBlogger, DailyBlogTips, SearchEngineJournal, ShoeMoney, CopyBlogger, just to name a few. You know, the usual suspects.

But there are many other outstanding marketing blogs flying under the radar, whose marketing content is just as impressive, but perhaps not quite as well known to the average online marketer. I call these “the unusual suspects.” And since they may not be quite as well known, chances are, you probably aren’t familiar with them.

Following are 20 Little-Known Marketing Blogs You Should Be Reading:

1. Content Marketing Today

When it comes to content marketing and content marketing strategies, I can say without the slightest bit of exaggeration, Newt Barrett’s Content Marketing Today blog is as good as it gets.

2. Brian Carroll’s B2B Lead Generation Blog

Brian Carroll’s blog focuses on B2B lead generation, sales leads, and marketing.

3. Peter Stone’s Copywriting Blog

Peter Stone is simply one of the finest copywriters on the planet…period. But be warned, this isn’t basic copywriting. These are sophisticated, highly advanced copywriting concepts, and as such may not be everyone’s cup of tea.

4. Chris Mole’s Media Blog

>From copywriting to website design, and everything in between, this blog covers it all.

5. Jeff Korhan Blog

Jeff Korhan’s New Media and Small Business Marketing Blog helps mainstream small businesses get practical results from their onlíne marketing.

6. Search Engine Guide

When it comes to knowledgeable, “on-the-money information” about search engine marketing, it’s hard to top these guys.

7. Unstuck Digital

Mike Tekula’s blog is quickly becoming one of my favorites. Lots of good SEO resources.

8. The Content Revolution Blog

Content Marketing strategist, Joe Pulizzi’s Junta42 brings clients and vendors together through its Content Vendor Matching Service.

9. Heidi Cohen

Actionable Marketing expert Heidi Cohen’s blog provides marketing related insights grounded in digital and direct marketing.

10. Web Ink Now

Author and Marketing Strategist David Meerman Scott’s blog specializes in marketing and leadership strategies.

11. Get More Clients Online

Donna Gunter, author of “Get More Clients Online: How to Get 95% of Your Clients from Internet Marketing,” helps introverted independent service professionals stop the client chase and create online businesses that drives clients to them.

12. Author Marketing Experts

If you’ve written a book or are in the process of writing one, Penny Sansevieri’s Author Marketing Experts blog is for you. This blog teaches authors how to get published, as well as other helpful book marketing tips.

13. Mark Widawer’s Traffic and Conversion Blog

This blog specializes in website traffic and conversions, as well as Internet marketing training and education.

14. Small Business Search Marketing Blog

Matt McGee’s Small Business Search Marketing Blog helps small businesses compéte and succeed online on their own terms (and budgets).

15. Church of the Customer Blog

Talk about a hidden gem. This outstanding blog specializes in word-of-mouth marketing and teaches you the art of getting your customers to be “evangelists” for your business.

16. PR Secrets Blog

Media Coach and Marketing Strategist, Susan Harrow teaches you how to get publicity for yourself in a dignified fashion, without selling your soul.

17. Pro Copy Tips Blog

Copywriter Dean Rieck’s Pro Copy Tips Blog gives you the tips, tools, resources, and inspiration to turn ordinary words into extraordinary success.

18. CK’s Blog

The initials “CK” stand for Christina Kerley, and her B2B blog helps guide marketers through strategy… social media marketing, mobile marketing… and whatever’s coming next.

19. Email Marketing Reports Blog

Mark Brownlow’s Email Marketing Reports Blog is a blog about email marketing advice, info and tips by – and nothing else! If the topic has anything at all to do with email marketing, this blog covers it and covers it well – probably better than just about anyone else.

20. Laurel Papworth Blog

Laurel Papworth’s Online Community News Blog subject matter focuses on social media and social media commentary.

Conclusion
Like I said in my opening, these blogs may not be quite as well known to the average online marketer. However, that shouldn’t be interpreted as meaning they’re not popular in their own right, and don’t have loyal followers. They are and they do. And if by chance, you’ve been fortunate enough to have already stumbled across one or more of these marketing gems…kudos to you!
And if you haven’t, you’re in for a real treat!

About The Author
David Jackson is a marketing consultant, and the owner of Free-Marketing-Tips-Blog.com – Powerful, free marketing tips to help grow your business! free-marketing-tips-blog.com

Where Are Smal Businesses Spending Their Marketing Budgets

Microsoft is sharing some survey results from BIA/Kelsey about small businesses. The results were presented at the ILM West conference in San Francisco. The main takeaways are as follows:

Based on responses to the survey, local media spend in the US is forecasted to hit $149.4B in 2015 with $37.9B of that being online/digital.

Local search is forecasted to hit $9.1B by 2015 – up from $5.1B in 2010.

The percentage of ad budget spent online continues to sit around 25%.

Businesses that are between 4-6 years old spend 33% of their budget on online advertising.

Businesses that are less than 3 years old spend 38%.

40% have a Facebook page, 14% have a blog, 14% use twitter, and 10% have YouTube videos.

22% intend to create a YouTube video in the next 12 months!

Those siting the importance of online ratings and reviews rose from 42% to 54% since last year.

Over 50% are buying online advertising on their own – though sometimes with assistance.Something else that is striking, in terms of ad spend, is the ratio of spend on print vs mobile. This is something highlighted in an eMarketer study, as reported by Josh Wolford at WebProNews. He writes:

About the Author:
Chris is a content coordinator and staff writer for SmallBusinessNewz and the iEntry Network. Subscribe to SmallBusinessNewz RSS Feeds.

Best Marketing Tips of Highly Successful Marketers

Most of the time when I write an article, I share my own personal marketing experiences, viewpoints and opinions – my OWN marketing tips as it were. Today, I’m going to change things up a little and share with you some of the best marketing tips of other successful marketers.

I compiled these remarkable marketing gems from the thousands and thousands of quality blog posts, articles, newsletters and interviews I’ve had the pleasure of reading over the years. The hard part was narrowing my list down to only 20. I could easily have listed 100. Oh well, perhaps I’ll write a sequel or two or three… Enjoy!

- Tim Berry, Planning Startups Stories – “One of the most expensive myths in marketing is that lower price produces higher volume. That might be true for coal or gasoline, but not for most businesses. Lower price means, well, ask yourself: do you always eat at the lowest price restaurant? Purchase the lowest príce clothes? Do you drive the lowest priced car? Pricing is your best statement of value.”

- Drew McClellan, Drew’s Marketing Minute – “Do Less. One of the most tempting aspects of marketing is the veritable smorgasbord of different marketing tactics that you can toss into a marketing plan. It’s almost overwhelming.

Many marketing professionals make the very understandable mistake of believing that more is better. But they’re wrong.

You will be vastly more successful if you do less, but do it better. Pick 3-4 marketing tactics that you think are really going to be valued by your audience and drive the behavior/action you’re looking for. Then, figure out how you can do them in an extraordinary way.

100% consistency. 100% relevancy. Do less. But do them better.”

- Siamak Taghaddos, Grasshopper.com – “People don’t like to be sold. If they did, they would spend all their free time in car dealerships. Instead, people want to be informed, they want to be educated. You’ll find your best customers are those you educate about your product or service and who then decide to purchase it because it is a good fit for them.

Prospects who buy your product/service but are not educated about your offering will be disappointed. They will not be return customers. Worse, they will tell others how they got ‘sold’ by you. In the Internet age, this can quickly be very destructive to your business.”

- John Jantsch, Duct Tape Marketing – “Become a journalist – no, I’m not really suggesting that you join the staff of some publication, but the acceptance of new media tools like blogs and podcasts has turned the marketing tables – so take advantage of the allure of a reporter and start a blog and podcast and request interviews with industry leaders, community leaders, authors and maybe even your biggest prospects. Instead of asking for a meeting to demonstrate your product, ask to feature your prospect in your next blog or podcast episode. You will automatically change your status in their eyes, enhance your role as an expert and create great content for your marketing materials.”

- Scott Shane, Author of Illusions of Entrepreneurship – “The data shows that most entrepreneurs compete on price, but doing this leads companies to perform worse. New companies are better off competing on service, quality or some other dimension.” (Source of above tips: SmallBizTrends.com)

- Adam Urbanski, TheMarketingMentors.com – “Most people like to overcomplicate things and then they become overwhelmed by too much information and the complexity of what they are trying to create. My advice to all my clients and to everybody reading this is this: map out a simple action plan and work diligently to implement it.

My favorite saying to all my students is this: If something is worth doing, it’s worth doing poorly to start with! It’s implementation over perfection!”

- Michel Fortin, MichelFortin.com – “Time and time again, I’ve told many aspiring copywriters and marketers that a USP is what distinguishes you from the pack. It increases perceived value, expertise, and credibility – without needing to state it outright.

Just by being 10% different, unique, original, or special is enough to make you stand out like a sore thumb in an overcrowded, hypercompetitive marketplace.”

- Robert Fitzpatrick, FalseProfits.com – “This research has shown that the ?LM business model, as it is practiced by most companies, is a marketplace hoax. In those cases, the business is primarily a scheme to continuously enroll distributors and little product is ever retailed to consumers who are not also enrolled as distributors.

Financially, the odds for an individual to achieve financial success under those circumstances rival the odds of winning at the tables in Las Vegas.”

- Jim Connolly, JimsMarketingBlog.com – “You cannot promise the marketplace a high quality service and yet charge a bargain-basement fee! If you do, you will send people a mixed-message, and it will lose you business every time.

Everybody knows that quality doesn’t ever comes cheap – that if something looks too good to be true, it is too good to be true! Make your services as valuable to the marketplace as possible and then charge accordingly.”

- Jill Koenig, GoalGuru.com – “If you want to create massive changes in your life, you must arrange and design your life so that your Goals and Dreams are at the Forefront of your day, instead of them being an afterthought.”

- Tinu Abayomi-Paul, FreeTrafficTip.com – “Search engine traffic is fantastic when you can get it. But don’t rely on search engines alone for traffic to your site. If you added just one more traffic tactic that gets you as much traffic as you get from search engines, you’ve doubled your traffic. And if sales go up at the same rate, you’ve doubled your incóme too.”

- Chris Knight, Ezine Articles Blog – “Set your goals higher than you think you can achieve and then don’t worry about the ‘how you’ll achieve it’… Whatever you think most about expands. If you’re committed, you’ll find a way to pull off the results you’re seeking.”

- Matt Shobe, MattShobe.com – “Find and surround yourself with smart people you like and who complement your strengths, and good things will follow. I think this holds true whether you’re just starting out in an internship or summer job, an entrepreneur with a few partners, or a senior executive of a major corporation.”

- Michael Fleischner, MarketingScoop.com – “Marketing is everything and everything is marketing! The key to a successful marketing campaign, business, or even career, is knowing that you are always communicating. This is not to say that you have to be overly cautious, but rather think about the implication of your messaging.”

About The Author
David Jackson is a marketing consultant, and the owner of Free-Marketing-Tips-Blog.com – Powerful, free marketing tips to help grow your business! free-marketing-tips-blog.com

8 Video Marketing Strategies for Small Business

There are a zillion ways to use video for business, varying from stylish, high-priced ad crusade commercials to complex landing page pieces designed to pull someone into a purchase. What are the greatest types of video for Small Business owners that can be created cost-effectively and published quickly and produce leads? Here are the Elite Eight.

Introductory Clip

Well-known and regularly underused, the video Intro to the Business is a brief, 5 minute or less (2-3 works well) homepage introduction that tells who you are, what you do and why customers should care. This can be done using a narrative in a commercial replete with lots of motion shots of the shop floor, the office, and merchandise; a talking head of the CEO to a blank camera; or use the 3rd party perspective of an authentic Video interview (see below) Business FAQ.

Development costs can range from free (CEO riffing into a webcam) through a few hundred dollars to thousands for a videographer shot commercial. Google doesn’t care; either will index well given the suitable keyword tags. The question you have to answer is, what is going to be quickly informative, entertaining, and referable (as in Re-tweeted).

Product Demonstration

Specific to demonstrable products, especially ones that move, like machines, toys, electronic devices, and, considering the medium, software. These again shouldn’t run on too long but may be longer than an introductory commercial. A software-based demo may take up to 8 minutes, but you should be able to say it in less time than that. When it comes to demos, sometimes less is more. Most often either a narrative led demo showing strictly merchandise or a spokesperson paced demo (think QVC or Home Shopping Channel) works the best. Just make sure to show the BEST features of your product and explain repeatedly (3x) how this addresses a problem for your prospects.

Professional Abilities

This is very similar to a product demo and works best for suppliers, specifically those in developed countries, trying to demonstrate their superior technology will in reality cost less money or provide better quality merchandise for a customer engaging them with a contract for ongoing services. Machine shops and laser houses love this stuff, showing programmed machinery cutting steel while a guy with a hardhat and safety specs controls the process. This can run 5-10 minutes tops. The key here is, make sure that your ability really is something unique (as in a True Competitive Advantage that others don’t have) and that your video captures its uniqueness.

Company Headlines

This is more of a tug on the heartstrings video that spotlights either what your company has achieved that is noteworthy or what your employees have done for your company. If it’s about the business, it MUST be legitimized by 3rd party reference, as in an accolade won from a prominent registrar (Best in Class, Malcolm Baldridge quality), a status obtained (ISO 9001 certification, etc.) or a cat saved from a tree on the news. When discussing employees, the old Employee of the Month style headline adds a nice human element and speaks to what your company values in its people, and that can make a big difference to prospects with the same value system. For these types of videos, keep them brief (2-4 minutes) and keep them current, particularly for the employee notoriety videos. An Employee of the Month surmises that next month, we’ll see a new one.

Video Landing Page Combination

I could write pages on this one and to be truthful, I’m not a professional at it, but I am sure you’ve experienced pages that have these videos. These are designed to be easy for the vendor of a product or service, meaning, don’t call me, take the action explained on the video. That means enter your email address to get something for FRÉE for agreement to market to you, or sign up for the thing (whatever it is) immediately! Just like text-only sales landing pages, these are long-form videos, with Squeeze Pages (get the email address) videos stretching from 3-7 minutes, and Sales Pages running all the way up to 30 minutes (that is too long in my view, with 10-12 being enough). The most important stuff here: limit options to only this with no other on-page interruptions and make multiple calls to action to the viewer.

Vlog Posts

All about providing info this one is. It comes in the form of a training video, which is conveniently done for things like software applications using screen capture software, or talking head telling something she knows, and often is the Expert Interview (I’ve done a bunch of these in my blog, see sample). The goal is expert positioning for your company while providing real value for the view. These videos can run from 5-30 minutes or longer (think of a book author interview), but I prefer to keep them between 7 and 15 minutes (YouTube has a 15 minute max until you are a recurring video poster). Tickets to success are to limit the subject matter to prevent rambling, don’t provide fluff with a sales pitch to get more, and add some written text fore and aft of the video to set it up and summarize.

Testimonials and Case Studies

Very self-explanatory here, this is 3rd party Reliability Building 101. Take the same things that marketers value about written examples and testimonials and put them on steroids. This definitely MUST be a person unrelated to the business telling about what the company did for him or her, and it can NOT be anonymous (just like those absurd fake reviews you see, “JL from Tampa says …”). Use foresight if the person doing the talking is not good on camera. It shouldn’t make a difference but it does. He doesn’t need to be Ben Affleck, but he can’t be a stiff either. These run no more than 3 minutes in length and follow my rules for great reviews. Quality can’t be weak, but a webcam with reasonable quality can be used effectively, as the subject matter of the person’s referral is the principal piece.

Video Interview

I saved this for last and, as you probably know by now, Smart Company Growth does these in packages for the right type of clients. Video interviews work well for any company that wants to put a human face on its brand, so consider if that is you. They work extremely well when your organization has these three aspects:

1. No physical product – Right for consultants, lawyers, accountants, financial advisors, IT people and anyone else offering professional services. You sell intellectual property and that is difficult to show by showing a video shot of your report (although you can show results charts, but the people who can use this method the most, financial advisors, usually have rules stopping it).

2. Trust is the key to business
– Same group, right? If you’re an attorney, how can you start to break the trust hurdle down without ever meeting someone? Show some face time with the 3rd party legitimacy that comes from being interviewed.

3. Sameness in Brand - If you look at your rivals’ websites and they look like yours does – competent yet non-distinguishable – you’re a good prospect for a video interview to set yourself apart. Once more, this is why professional service companies fall so nicely into video interview candidates.

About The Author
Karl Walinskas is the CEO of Smart Company Growth, a business development firm that helps small to mid-size professional service firms build competitive advantage in an online world of sameness. He is author of numerous articles and the Smart Blog on leadership, business communication, sales & service, public speaking and virtual business, and Getting Connected Through Exceptional Leadership, available in the SmartShop. Get your Free LinkedIn Profile Optimization eBook & Video Course, Video Marketing video and course, or Mastermind Groups e-course & video now.