Respecting The eCulture

Online review sites expect
eBook copies of books to review.
It doesn’t matter if the book
will only be in print,
they wish to review it in eBook.

As a blogger,
I dislike it when advertisers call me.
When readers call me,
okay,
but when advertisers call me,
it tells me they want to do business
on THEIR terms, not mine.

eCulture has its own etiquette.
If you’re asking for favors online,
it helps
if you respect it.

Published
Categorized as Marketing

Ram Charan And Killing Ideas

In a brilliant interview with Fast Company,
Ram Charan talks about
why killing ideas is necessary…

“…because the success rate of innovation
is not going to be 100 percent.
If it’s 100 percent, you’re taking no risks.”

He says that deciding what ideas to kill
is easier if there is a portfolio of innovation.
Ideas can be ranked by priority.
“…if you take one idea,
it’s going to be almost impossible to kill.”

Agreed.
If you have a product development team
and only one innovation in the pipeline,
killing that one idea
will put them out of a job.
Highly unlikely they’ll support that move.

Matthew McConaughey And Leaving Crumbs

In March’s Men’s Health,
Matthew McConaughey says

“I don’t like to leave crumbs.
I like to do things right,
and not cheat to get ’em done.
That’s what a man does.
I don’t owe anybody anything.
I never go anywhere
and worry,
‘Oh shit,
so-and-so’s here.’
I don’t have crumbs in my past.”

That’s what smart women do also.
Don’t do anything you’ll be ashamed of
later.

Grouping Like Stores

Ever wonder why you see
clusters of antique stores
side by side in a mall?

Because grouping like stores
drives more traffic.

In Sharon Harvey Rosenberg’s
The Frugal Duchess,
Adele Meyer,
the executive director of the
National Association of Resale and Thrift Shops
says
“Consumers will drive further
if they have more than one store to visit.
I’m seeing more of it happen.”

Can you team up with your competition
to drive more business?

No Cash Rewards

In his book Word Of Mouth II,
Dave Balter talks about
an experiment described in the scientific paper
Effort Of Payment.

A research subject asked people
to help him move,
offering them different rewards.
People were least likely to help
when offered money.

Why?

Because money made the helpers
evaluate their assistance
as work for hire
rather than helping a friend.

In fact, people will make more of an effort
for no payment
than for a low cash amount.

Make cash rewards significant
or don’t offer them at all.

Published
Categorized as Marketing

The Updated Website

In the June/July edition of CMA Magazine,
Colin Payson, a designer for Pylon
says
“Five to ten years ago
a company could build a website,
leave it alone, and
expect people to see what is on there.
Now, it’s quick –
you’ve got to move with it,
and you’ve got to add more to it constantly.
You can’t just leave it.
I don’t think there’s such a thing
as a static website anymore.”

I don’t think so either.
The reason I use a blog format
for my writing site
is because I update it daily.

Keep that in mind
when you’re designing your site.

Published
Categorized as Marketing

Be The Change

With 6,400 romance novels published a year,
review sites are swamped
with requests for reviews.

As a result,
the smaller publishers,
the smaller authors
often get neglected.
Without the publicity,
they stay small.

So when a big review site
placed a call for volunteer reviewers,
I put up my hand.

What do I choose to review?
Only small or e- press.

If you want to make a change,
BE the change.

Your Competitors Have Never Paid Your Bills

A writer friend of mine
tossed her manuscript.

Why?

Because a well established author
recently released a novel
with a very similar plot.

If I tossed my manuscript
every time a similar one was released,
I would have never gotten published.

Tom Peters has a great quote from
Howard Mann’s Your Business Brickyard
“Your competitors have never paid your bills
and they never will.”

In other words,
focus on your customers,
not your competition.

What Business Travelers Want

What is the number one amenity
U.S. business travelers want
from a hotel?

Is it a business center?
Coffee in the morning?
The newspaper?

Nope.
According to the
2006 National Business Travel Monitor Survey,
70% of business travelers
want premium-quality mattresses and bedding.
In other words,
they want a comfortable bed.

Cover the basics first
before looking elsewhere.

Published
Categorized as Marketing

My Email Response Rate

I ran a contest
using an email list as a base.
I had a 10% response rate
but the interesting part
was how quickly recipients responded.

43% entered Day 1
43% entered Day 2
8% entered Day 3
4% entered Day 4
2% entered Day 5

What does this mean?
If you don’t get a response to your offer
within two days,
you’re not going to
(unless you resend the email).

Published
Categorized as Marketing