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However, my experience with BlogHost.Me, which I decided to try out this morning at your suggestion, was disappointing. Upon going to their site (tubu.net/blogger) and filling out the online forms for purchasing the $10 annual service, I was sent along to Paypal for payment, where the transaction immediately ended - there was/is no facility for actually paying "Tubu Internet Solutions" (as their usually is under such circumstances) - and no way to return to Tubu to complete the transaction. An attempted call to their 877 support number (the one advertised on their sign-up form) resulted in a "number no longer in service" message. An email to their support inbox resulted in a "we'll get back to you" sort of message.
Just thought you should know what the *real world* user experience was looking like for this outfit....
That's interesting. I just bought a website for my daughter there last week and it worked slick as anything. Ping @andyquayle on Twitter? Maybe he can answer. If you're still stuck, drop me an email: blog at chrisbrogan . com, and I'll get Andy to reach out and solve the issue.
Sorry for your trouble.
Thanks very much for your note - much appreciated. I just posted an
update to my *slightly unhappy* original post on your site explaining
that Tubu's support folks actually jumped on my problem immediately
and took care of me. Looks like there's some sort of problem with
Tubu's API hooks into Paypal not working properly (Tubu thinks the
problem is actually on Paypal's side). Anyway, they had me forward
them the annual fee directly from Paypal (so, by-passing their online
forms), and I had an account up and running in less than an hour.
All's well now - thanks again,
Michael.
I'll ping him on Twitter as well, but I had the same experience with phone number being invalid, which I have to admit spooks me a bit. Otherwise, sounds like a great service I'd be interested in using for multiple sites.
I prefer WordPress, but others find Blogger.com or Tumblr.com just as easy. WordPress is a hair better, in my mind, because of how it boosts search efforts (the details of this are somewhat tricky for me to explain) and because it's very customizable. TypePad is also an alternative. I picked one software just to make it easier on others.
Great advice. I discovered (in the past couple of months) that for small business people, the best advice I can give them about Social Media is to pick one activity, get really good at it, then add more. Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and a blog as the hub, is more than most can handle at the beginning. B2B business owners need a LinkedIn profile, and B2C businesses need a Facebook profile, even if they don't focus on it too much at the beginning. I make sure their blog posts flow into both so they are kept fresh. It works!
1) WHAT is more important than WHY in social media. If I can get a small business just doing these few things, in 6 months they understand the WHY. If I spend 2 hours explaining the WHY, they never do it. Trust is important at the first stage.
2) Don't forget in small business ultimately, it is about answering phones, making pizza. Followers and friends don't matter if they ain't buying anything.
http://www.dogwalkblog.com/2009/01/22/businesse...
6. Breath. Social media is unlike traditional advertising or marketing in that you can't just pay for instant access/exposure to a market. In all but the rarest occasions, it takes time to build the population of people you're communicating with. But once there, you've got a community you can converse with over time for free instead of an audience you broadcast to in paid increments.
Patrick Allmond
p.s. I team SM101 classes, and I get paid to help people research and setup SM channels
Even with all the attention social media is getting today, there are still tons of small businesses that are not leveraging the web to its fullest potential. These are people that do have websites, do have domains names, and hopefully already know their USP.
A savvy business owner could look at this list in the morning, and implement most if not all 5 options before the end of the day. It's a good starting point
Also measure. What is working for your business? Learn to love Google Analytics. What are your KPIs for the excercise? If you are just trying to learn, then a KPI will be "what you have learned". Understand why you are doing these things. You'll then begin to find what works for you and where you should be spending your time.
I'm curious how many small businesses, like pizza shops, do keyword analysis. I mean, they should, but do you really get the sense that they are?
--Chris...
This post has successfully simplified the first things to do, and defused much of the anxiety involved.
I will definitely share and discuss this with my team, and pass it on to all my contacts:)
Thanks!
The people who matter to you might not yet be here in an easy-to-find way.
if someone is still skeptic, please consider reading this article (welcome to the twitterhood) with plenty of real-life of examples http://www.lohud.com/article/2009909130337
1. Create a measurable call to action on their site.
2. Ping the Major search engines on a local level.
3. Purchase an obvious local URL and create a redirect to the existing URL.
4. Set up a blog that I encourage the shop owners to add value to their community with.
Key: Don't forget the basics before jumping into social media. Make the time spent ~ Time well spent.
On step 2, listening, I like to encourage my small business / local business clients to start a search on Twitter (http://search.twitter.com) even before starting up an account, or before they start blogging. Search for your industry terms, names of cities in markets served, look for names of other local businesses and see how they're using it etc., then drop those searches in an RSS reader.
You can also use tools like TweepSearch and TwitSeeker to search bios and tweets for these key words. Once you get some of these searches saved you can start listening and find out what's going on, gain insights, ID gaps and opportunities and get a sense of how you might join and be useful.
I think the process for social media marketing for local / small business is: Listen...Plan...Account/Tools Setup...Engage...Measure...Repeat.
Overcoming the "I don't have time for one more thing!" objection is tough. So help them reclaim some time by using that new blog to answer customers' frequently asked questions. You'll prevent some phone calls that way. Use video to show how to use your products, like United Linen showing how to change the roll in the new automatic paper towel dispensers. It's simple, but it saves a lot of customer service rep time.
-Nikki-
Patricia
http://dataentryjob-s.com
Thanks for this great post.
I share restaurant marketing.. online (social media) ideas with
small independent and franchise restaurants and I find it a perfect article that explains why they need to also
focus on marketing their business on the internet..
I would be happy to share this post. Thanks
Nash @iRestaurant
They need to do Identity Optimization not SEO, and the directory sites are the place to start. And they need to do Reputation management and the review sites are the place where they should be spending time interacting with customers. Once those are don, sure, do a blog, use facebook - but most small businesses don't have the time.
I did a presentation on this a while ago, and am poking at expanding it...
I guess the good news for me after reading this, I'm already doing 3 out 5 of those things. Which are, I've started a blog, I'm using Twitter & Facebook, and I've been doing some listening.
I just need to start doing 4 & 5 now.
Great info, Chris.
Paul.
Patricia
http://dataentryjob-s.com
The challenge, at least from my point of view, is that I deal with many well established small businesses who, despite my best efforts, will just not invest time and effort into their business on the web.
Oh well, I shall keep up my social media evangelism by using such excellent articles as this one.
Thanks, Chris.
I don't know why my blogs aren't showing up in the pingback but I further explored your point on the Referral Key blog.
Cheers,
Chris O.
@referralkey
Domain reg was fine, they are affiliated with godaddy on backend and process was smooth.
$10 Bloghost.me not smooth. After filling out order form, they would take Paypal only. When I logged in paypal, the autopopulate "Send Money" did not work, so had no idea what email to send $10 to. Called the two Bloghost.me phone numbers 877-326-3272 and 412-223-2512 and both were reported disconnected.
My next move was to change my paypal password.
Suggestion: Pass on tubu.net and use godaddy.com for domains and rochen.com for hosting @ $8 / mo. Guess you get what you pay for.
Which support page were you seeing the disconnected numbers on?
http://www.tubu.net/blogger/
http://tubu.net/v8/?page_id=3
but today you have a different number Phone (412) 567 7836
which is fine. Glad to QA it for you.
Not implying it is not legitimate. Just needs work to be production ready.
Definitely sound advice. I actually learned something a little extra here. I'd seen you tweet about DISQUS but didn't know how it worked. Since I'm using it on your site, now I get it! (I always learn best through doing!)
Patricia
http://dataentryjob-s.com
There's so much information out there....this must be what it feels like to be 5 years old and learning so much 'stuff' all at one time!
Also, far too many small businesses think it’s about "more" sales...it's not!
What you really want is to "create sales Velocity" as discussed in my blog post: http://nosmokeandmirrors.wordpress.com/2009/09/...
Everything you do above must attract the right customers.
Mark Allen Roberts
Have a great day!
Just want to say thank you for coming to Chapman University this week and sharing with us OC locals a some of your ideas sprinkled with a generous portion of humor! It was an enjoyable evening. Having read the post above and your book, marking many pertinent pages with unerlines and post-it notes, I am ready to carefully dip my toe into social media on behalf of my small business. Though I didn't get a chance to meet you up close I do appreciate you signing my book! And thanks also to Eileen for making that connection on my behalf.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=856BZNQLpU4