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DBC Digital | Plumb Marketing Services
  • Expertise
    • Digital Marketing
    • Video Marketing
    • Website Design
    • Creative Studio
    • Print and Mailing Services
      • Marketing Express Program
  • Work
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact
    • Free Consultation
    • Refund and Delivery Policies
    • Terms of Service
  • Upload Your Files

Archive for PRINTING SERVICES – Page 3

Posted by DBC Digital on
 June 10, 2014

What Exactly is Inbound Marketing?

With the way the Internet expands and evolves, new phrases and terms are coined just about every day. For the technology-challenged, this only makes the digital realm more confusing and intimidating. And yet, even as it grows more difficult to understand, online commerce is only growing more critical to the success of just about any business. Whether you seek brand exposure, lead generation or direct sales through online portals, almost every business–no matter what your industry–can benefit from building an online presence.

Today, that presence typically revolves around an inbound marketing strategy customized to serve your company’s needs. Yet too many companies and small business owners struggle to know where to begin. Some may only know the term “inbound marketing” but have no idea how it relates to their business goals.

For that reason, DBC Digital offers a quick, back-to-the-basics look at inbound marketing.

What is Inbound Marketing?

The best way to understand inbound marketing is to compare it to its counterpart in the physical world. In the real, brick-and-mortar world, customers are everywhere: commuting to work, going to dinner, watching TV. Marketing efforts are all built around trying to reach customers in the places they’re most likely to be found. TV commercials sell because there is a built-in audience, and billboards get rented because the exposure is guaranteed.

The Internet functions a little differently, though. Online, consumers aren’t just going through a daily routine, they’re actively seeking content. It could be the score of last night’s game, information about filing an insurance claim, research on local dentists. Ultimately, most online actions are intended to find content that is of value to the consumer.

A variety of tools now help consumers seek out that content. Google searches, social media and email are among the most common. Inbound marketing, then, is building the content those consumers are seeking, and optimizing the opportunities for those consumers to find it.

Think of inbound in terms of this age-old proverb: “If you build it, they will come.” Content–blog posts, static Web pages, contact info, etc.–is the solution being sought online. If companies don’t have content, they can’t get discovered. Inbound marketing builds this content, thereby establishing an online presence, and then makes sure consumers have easy ways of discovering that content.

How Does Inbound Differ From Traditional Marketing?

The basic difference between traditional and inbound marketing is the way in which consumers are reached, and in the way consumer appeal is created. In traditional marketing, you’re clamoring for attention–commercials need to be memorable, billboards need to have eye-appeal. With inbound marketing, though, you’ve already secured a key victory when consumers find your content and click on a link leading to your business. Instead of trying to stand out, your main objective at this point is to provide information and value to the consumer.

The main goal of securing a sale stays the same, but the strategy used is different. Inbound marketing works best when companies demonstrate their value and authority to a customer. Because consumers are already actively seeking out a solution to a problem they may have, the hard sell isn’t important. Inbound marketing’s main goal is to convince consumers that a given company can solve the problems they’re struggling with.

What are the Benefits of Running Inbound Marketing Campaigns?

Inbound marketing functions very similarly to how a sales representative might appeal to a consumer. The difference is in how much value a given piece of content can provide over time. A sales representative is often appealing to consumers on a one-to-one basis. The pitch gets repeated over and over again, at a time cost to that representative. Meanwhile, the employee can only actively work with one consumer at a time.

Inbound marketing content, on the other hand, can be used repeatedly, and without any extra cost to the business. Dozens of people can read a piece of content at the same time, essentially turning one blog post into three dozen sales pitches being run simultaneously. And perhaps best of all, simple data tracking tools like Google AdWords can help analyze the performance of pages, telling companies which efforts are working and which ones need to be fixed or retired.

Over time, an established inbound marketing strategy should become much more cost-efficient compared to traditional marketing strategies. Inbound can also reach new customers you never would have discovered otherwise. If you’re ready to invest in inbound marketing but still aren’t sure where to begin, contact DBC Digital and see how our services can help your business blossom.

Categories : PRINTING SERVICES
Posted by DBC Digital on
 June 27, 2013

Guest Post: Tips for Making a Great Infographic

Posted by Nicole Rende on Thu, Jun 27, 2013 @ 04:59 PM

Information Graphics, or Infographics, are graphic visual presentations of information, data, or knowledge. These are intended to explain complex information quickly and clearly. This is especially good when trying to explain an internet marketing concept that may be confusing to some.

Follow these seven steps, and you will be able to create the most informational graphics:

  1. Edit first

    1. People can sometimes become too attached to their content. They want to include everything they found in their research, but that can get extremely cluttered and make the infographic look sloppy.

One reason this clutter occurs is because people do not clean up their information before they make the infographic and it becomes crammed. It is a good idea to do the layout first and this will give you an idea of how much information you need to throw out.

  1. Break your content into sections

    1. Breaking down your content into three or five sections makes your graphic easier to follow. Making an outline with each section title will help you organize your thoughts better. Another good way to break down your content is into a mind map. There are many websites that will help you with these mind maps.
  2. Organize your layout

    1. Use grid lines to layout your design. This will allow you to carve into the space. Do not have too many lines, like graph paper, but not less than four. A good medium is about seven lines. You want to leave enough space to make your design.
  3. Keep it simple

    1. Keep the layout simple and logical. The goal of the design should be to lead the reader easily through the information. You want to lead their eye through the design. Being too creative can often lead to clutter and be fatal for easy navigation. The easiest way of navigation is to start your graphic at the top left hand side and end at the bottom right.
    2. Make the topic’s main point the largest element
      1. For most marketing tactics, you want to grab someone’s attention and give them a quick idea for what the content is about. In this case, you want to make sure the infographic’s idea is the biggest part of the graphic. Make sure you have enough content in this section to justify its size.
  4. Keep type simple

    1. Using fonts like Comic Sans and Papyrus can cause laughter and reduce the level of your graphic’s credibility. It is hard to choose the correct font, so when you are in need of some help, just use Helvetica or Arial and use an array of sizes and weights. The headline is always going to be the largest because that is where you want people’s eyes to go first. Keep the text black and leave color for the graphics.
  5. Use color for good reason

    1. Do not use every single color in your infographic. Make sure to keep the color minimal by following a few simple steps. Make sure you color the less important parts a muted color and use one or two bright colors to accentuate where you want the readers eyes to go. Consider your company’s brand when choosing a color scheme. Lastly, you want all your palette colors to blend well together. You can find color families by searching the web for similar search terms.

When you are preparing to explain something rather confusing to others, making an infographic can be the best way to relay that information. Just make sure that you follow the above seven steps and you will have an amazing infographic.
Written by Nicole Rende from Ethical SEO Consulting

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Greg Sherwood is CEO of DBC Digital, a marketing agency based in Denver, Colorado.  With over 30 years of marketing experience with traditional and inbound (internet) marketing, Greg helps mid-sized businesses get a better return on their marketing dollars.  

You can reach Greg at (303) 357-5757 or at dbc@dbcdigital.com

Categories : BLOGGING, INTERNET MARKETING, MESSAGING AND DESIGN, PRINTING SERVICES
Posted by DBC Digital on
 June 21, 2013

A Brief History of Marketing

history-of-marketing-infographic

Marketing Evolution

Marketing has had many evolutions, and a longer history than most people actually realize. In the past 30 years, marketing’s evolution has accelerated at a very rapid pace with all of the digital marketing opportunities. Today, we, as consumers, are targeted relentlessly through digital mediums, physical advertisements, and throug audible airways in our everday lives that we might not even realize all the product and brand placements that are in place. To get back to the roots of marketing, and recap on just how far it has really come, this is the brief history of marketing.
  • 1450

    The beginning of print marketing – Gutenberg invents moveable type, making mass printing possible.

  • 1730

    Magazines emerge for a new type of print marketing. The first magazine created was published in 1731, in London. It was called The Gentleman’s Magazine and is considered to be the first general-interest magazine.

  • 1839

    Posters become extremely popular and were banned in London because they were advertising on private property. In turn, London began using humans as billboards by wearing sandwich boards with their advertisement on them.

  • 1867

    This was the year that billboards were starting to be leased.

  • 1922

    On February 1922, AT&T announced that they would be selling advertising spots on the radio. WEAF of New York aired the first paid radio commercial.

  • 1941

    The first recorded television advertisement was broadcasted in the United States on July 1, 1941. The watchmaker Bulova paid $9 for a placement on WNBT, a New York station before a baseball game between the Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies.

  • 1946

    The first telephone calls from marketers were made from automobiles. The Bell System’s – Mobile Telephone Service – inaugural call was made on June 17th in St. Louis, MO.

  • 1973

    While at Motorola, Dr. Martin Cooper makes the first hand-held mobile phone call. He is responsible for the development of the cellular phone and brought it to the market.

  • 1984

    Guerrilla marketing is used to generate buzz and in 1984 guerrilla marketing become popular through a book called Guerrilla Marketing, written by Jay Conrad Levinson, who coined the term.

  • 1985

    Desktop publishing makes print advertising even easier by launching an Apple LaserWriter printer, and later would introduce PageMaker software from Aldus.

  • 1994

    The first automated, large-scale commercial use of spam was created, which was advertising their service of enrolling people in a green card lottery. The U.S. government allocated a limited quantity of green cards to certain non-citizens, so these lawyers offered to do the necessary paperwork for free.

  • 1995

    Yahoo! was launched as a search engine on March 1st. Alta Vista search was launched as an internet search engine on December 15th by Yahoo!.

  • 1996

    First recorded use of the term search engine optimization (SEO). Webmasters began optimizing sites for search engines. Initially, all a webmaster had to do was submit the URL to the search engines to haeve them crawl it.

  • 1998

    Google was launched as a search engine. MSN search engine was launched.

  • 2003

    MySpace was founded in August. LinkedIn was launched on May 5th. Can-Spam Act was signed on December 16th. This act was the first national standard for the sending of commercial emails.

  • 2004

    Facebook founded in February. It was founded by Mark Zuckerberg with his college roommates. Facebook was initially created for connecting between college students.

  • 2005

    Google begins personalized search results. When a user is logged into a Google Account, all of his or her searches on Google Search are recorded for their web history and will help for a better user experience by personalizing searches.

  • 2006

    Twitter was created in March 2006 by Jack Dorsey. The original name before twitter was twttr.

  • 2009

    Google Instant is a feature that displays suggested results while the user is typing in their search query and launched in 2009.

  • 2011

    Google+ is a social network and identity service and launched on June 28th. Google Panda was a change in Google’s search results ranking algorithm that was first released in February 2011.

Categories : PRINTING SERVICES
Inbound Marketing
Posted by DBC Digital on
 April 17, 2013

Inbound Marketing- The Rise of Inbound Marketing Infographic

The transition from outbound marketing to inbound marketing has been propelled by search engines like Google, Bing and Yahoo as well as the ever growing social media channels to gain information like Facebook, Google+ and Twitter. As these applications and informational mediums get more and more convenient with technology, the effectiveness of inbound marketing continues to grow. Below are some of the facts on the growing effectiveness of inbound marketing.

inbound-infograhic (1)Greg Sherwood is CEO of DBC Digital, a marketing agency based in Denver, Colorado.  With over 30 years of marketing experience with traditional and inbound (internet) marketing, Greg helps mid-sized businesses get a better return on their marketing dollars.  

You can reach Greg at (303) 357-5757 or at dbc@dbcdigital.com

Categories : INTERNET MARKETING, PRINTING SERVICES, STRATEGY
Posted by DBC Digital on
 October 25, 2012

The Right Content to the Right Person at the Right Time

Content Marketing

From the beginning of time, agencies and other businesses have used content marketing to support their products and services. Everything from the quaint-looking ads in the Victorian-era newspapers to today’s business blog posts is based on providing the information buyers need or want.

Content marketing through content mapping

 

But now buyers, being bombarded with information from every direction, want more from our content marketing than to just receive the same blast messages sent to everyone else.

Today we need better precision, better accuracy, and better ROI.

How do we do that?

By using “Content Mapping.”

 Content Mapping

Content mapping is the method of ensuring that relevant content is delivered to your buyer at the right time in their buying cycle.

According to Ardath Albee  (“eMarketing Strategies for the Complex Sale”) content mapping takes advantage of the information you have already been collecting about your buyers in order to identify, at each point in the buying cycle, who the customer really is (especially important in larger companies), how he or she prefers to “consume” your content, and what they will need and want to know at each point in the cycle.

Since the standard sales funnel contains more sections than just the top (interest) and bottom (final choice), it’s important to consider the “in between” steps of the buyer’s behavior that require this “mapped” approach.

 The Middle of the Sales Funnel

Between the two ends of the funnel, the buyer is conducting research, reviewing options, choosing from among those options and then stepping back to validate their final choice before committing.

While the buyer is in this “middle-of-the-funnel,” we need to prove that we not only have the solution they need, but that we can provide the information they need to build the business case that supports their choice.

In other words, we need to ensure that we have mapped content to be delivered to the buyer at the right time that reassures the buyer that our option is the best solution.

 The Right Information at the Right Time

Barbra Gago, of the Content Marketing Institute, adds that the early stages of the buying cycle are supported more by providing educational materials. As the cycle progresses, you need to demonstrate both your expertise and product/service suitability. Then, towards the end of the cycle, your content needs to differentiate you from your competition and tell the buyer more about your business (such as in the “About Us” page of your site).

The following types of content should be mapped to the most appropriate step in your prospect’s buying process:

  • Status Quo/Nurturing: Providing educational articles that establish you as a thought leader covering new developments and solutions.
  • Research: Creating white papers that showcase your expertise and that helps build the business case for your solution.
  • Options: Summarizing case studies and customer success stories, including customers’ additional reasons for choosing you.
  • Priority Shift: Offering webinars detailing how your product is the best solution for their problem.
  • Step backs: Providing content that supports any previously-identified reasons a buyer may hesitate to go through with the purchase.
  • Validation: Writing content that proves your company’s viability, service capabilities, and activities that are all part of the customer experience with you. (Testimonials and research reports highlighting your product or service are highly effective.)
  • Choice and Commitment: Developing customer proposal templates or other customized offers that keep your buyer front and center (i.e. not your company) after they have chosen your solution.

While this may sound like a lot of work, content mapping has become an important part of a successful marketer’s inbound marketing strategy to separate him-or herself from the noise in the marketplace.

This approach will help you identify content gaps, address customer needs, and keep your message on track all the way through the funnel, ensuring higher rates of success for you and your company.

Content mapping supports your overall marketing strategy from content creation to social media.

It provides a solid foundation that matches your buyer persona with the most effective information at each stage of the buying cycle.

 

Categories : PRINTING SERVICES
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