Jun 17

As a huge advertising site DIY Doctor gets asked a great many questions about advertising and marketing and the most often asked questions by the tradespeople we work with is; “What exactly is marketing and why does a small company need to know about it, surely that’s is for bigger firms”.

The answer to this question is a resounding NO !!!! Marketing is for every single company regardless of the size.

Many people believe marketing is simply advertising dressed up in a grand name but it is so much more than this. Over the next few weeks we will be offering you a lot of free marketing tips but firstly, lets sort out what it is!

The Chartered Institute of Marketing define marketing as ‘The management process responsible for identifying , anticipating and satisfying customer requirements profitably’

Philip Kotler defines marketing as ‘satisfying needs and wants through an exchange process’

The main theme here is that marketing is to find out exactly what a customers wants or needs and provide it in the right place, at the right time, for the right price….BUT, this does not just mean the product !

What the customer wants, as well as the final product, is a good experience on the way to getting the product. The customer wants to be treated as a special person. They want to feel their wants and needs have been heard and understood. They want to feel their money is safe with you and that you are a reliable company. They want a good experience, not just a good product.

If you go to the restaurant and your meal is the best food you have ever tasted but the service is diabolical………Do you go back? Mostly no.

If a customer rings you for a quote and your phone is answered by a 3 year old who obviously can’t take a message…….Does the customer call back? Mostly no.

This is marketing. From the moment you put an add in the paper, or start a website you must be marketing. Your customers must get a good experience. It must “feel right” to use you for their needs.

Regardless of people who say, “Its too expensive”, very very few jobs are turned down on price. Price is a great customer excuse, but it is rarely the real reason you did not get the job. The reason you did not get the job is usually because the customer felt that their needs were not going to be met by you.

Marketing is listening. Marketing is providing detailed quotes which list every operation for the amount of money to be charged. Marketing is about presenting the quote in a professional way. Marketing is about asking the customer whether your quote answers all the questions they have buzzing about in their heads. Marketing is about presenting yourself and your company in an appropriate way. Marketing is about your demeanour and you appearance. Marketing is about your company vehicle and the way you explain things to potential customers. Marketing is about your customers, not about your profits.

If you get your marketing right, your profits will follow. If you do not, you will only ever earn wages, not real money.

More soon. Let us have your thoughts and questions on marketing. Its our business to make the very most of your business and we do this, here, for free so join in if you feel so inclined.

Mike Edwards

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Jun 10

Attention all web site owners:

For a long time webmasters have been promising people high search engine ratings and then buying or begging links from other well know sites. This is now against Googles Quality Guidelines. Google lists hundreds of pages to help site owners we urge that you read them all. Every bit of information is listed to make your site a Google friendly site. The emphasis, quite rightly, is on making your site useful to visitors and stop web sites clogging the internet with obtrusive, non context adverts, duplicated pages and other methods of optimising a poor site.

Google even offers a pdf on search engine optimisation and tools for creating site maps. There are video tutorials for webmasters and a webmaster help forum, webmaster checklists, a page about googles search results

Unless a link on a website is part of the natural page and links to a site with further information to that listing the link then any other links need to have a rel=”nofollow” tag attached to tell google it is either advertising or a link to another site which is for the purpose of viewing further content which is not necessarily directly related to the content you have.

You can check the indexing of your website on Google by visiting the webmaster tools page where Google will tell you if it has listed your site and any potential problems you may have with getting your pages listed. https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/sitestatus?hl=en

The emphasis on a Google search should be content. Not links which are inserted to get an average site to the top of the engines. A website should be listed for its merits, not the number of unnatural links it has.

These are part of the quality guidelines from Google.

  • Make pages primarily for users, not for search engines. Don’t deceive your users or present different content to search engines than you display to users, which is commonly referred to as “cloaking.”
  • Avoid tricks intended to improve search engine rankings. A good rule of thumb is whether you’d feel comfortable explaining what you’ve done to a website that competes with you. Another useful test is to ask, “Does this help my users? Would I do this if search engines didn’t exist?”
  • Don’t participate in link schemes designed to increase your site’s ranking or PageRank. In particular, avoid links to web spammers or “bad neighbourhoods” on the web, as your own ranking may be affected adversely by those links.
  • Don’t use unauthorized computer programs to submit pages, check rankings, etc. Such programs consume computing resources and violate our Terms of Service. Google does not recommend the use of products such as WebPosition Gold™ that send automatic or programmatic queries to Google.
  • DIY Doctor supports this initiative and agrees that websites should write for their users.

    The specific guidelines for users offered by Google are:

    • Avoid hidden text or hidden links
    • Dont use cloaking or sneaky redirects
    • Don’t send automated queries to Google
    • Don’t load pages with irrelevant keywords
    • Do not duplicate content
    • Avoid doorway pages just for search engines
    • If you use an affiliate program, make sure your users have a reason to visit your site first.

    If you find you have trouble being listed by Google look at the above conditions, read all of Google’s guidelines, change your site and re-submit your site for consideration.

    Much more marketing help can be seen at http://www.diydoctor.org.uk/diydoctormarketing.htm

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    May 18

    Anyone out there with a small or medium sized Business that is sick and tired of giving Newspapers and Magazines money for advertising which simply does not work?

    In the UK, every year, we spend 20 billion pounds on advertising. Yes, thats 20 billion pounds !

    At the same time the most well known fact in advertising is that, for most companies, at least 50% of their advertising budget is wasted on rubbish advertising.

    Logically this means that UK Buisinesses are throwing 10 billion pound a year down the drain. This might explain the fact that 75% of start up businesses do not make it past their first year.

    We want to hear from anyone with a bad experience from their advertising. We will not be frightened to name and shame companies who have taken the money but not provided the service. UK advertising from Local papers and Radio etc is a disgrace. They are not proactive in any campaings after producing expensive artwork and voice-overs. Take the money and run seems to be the order of the day.

    It would take 1 additional hour, per customer, to sit down and talk to them about how to make the most out of an advertising campaign. It would lead to repeat business and at least some of the dying companies would be saved. Talking to businesses about basic marketing would be added value in anyones book.

    Let us have your thoughts.

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