Are you struggling to grow your e-commerce business?
Sick of low conversion rates?
You’re not alone.
On average, only 3% of e-commerce website visitors converted into customers.
Yikes.
Yet, brands like the Dollar Shave Club and AppSumo are making millions even during a global pandemic.
You want to join their ranks, but you’re just not sure what you’re doing wrong. It feels like everyone else is in on some secret recipe to success.
On August 24 at 8 am PST, I’m exposing the hidden tactics the fastest growing e-commerce brands are using to dominate the online shopping industry with a free webinar.
Along with my co-host, Matthew Santos, VP of Products and Strategy at NP Accel, and Brooke Hess, Senior Director, Paid Media at NP Digital, we’ll break down how you can implement each one to boost your e-commerce sales.
Since opening my agency, NP Digital, I’ve worked with companies of all sizes, including some of the world’s fastest-growing e-commerce brands.
I’ve seen first-hand the unique strategies these companies use to generate targeted traffic, attract quality leads, and convert shoppers into paying customers.
The best part? These e-commerce sales tactics work for brands of all sizes. Whether you’re just starting or you already have some skin in the game, these strategies can work for you.
Here are some of the specific things we will teach you:
E-commerce SEO: Learn how to generate free, recurring, and high-converting traffic with SEO practices no one else is talking about.
Paid advertising: Discover how to multiply your results and increase your conversion rate even with a small paid ads budget.
E-commerce CRO: Uncover the powerful strategies fast-growing e-commerce brands use to improve conversion rate optimization (CRO).
These points are only scratching the surface of what you’ll learn.
Conclusion
One of the best ways to become successful in business is to look for clues. Brands leave breadcrumbs you can follow and reverse engineer to your benefit.
We’ll show you how to spot these clues and give you actionable advice on implementing these strategies to skyrocket your e-commerce brand’s growth.
Whether you’re just starting or you’re feeling stuck, these tactics will change the game for you.
New York and San Francisco have proof of vaccination rules coming for indoor restaurants and bars, and some venues are going to great pains to enforce them.
A conversation from The Diane Rehm Show archives with pop and country super star Kenny Rogers. In a 2012 interview, he reflected on his challenging childhood, aging, and his 50 years in music.
A conversation from The Diane Rehm Show archives with singer-songwriter Judy Collins. In 2003 she talked to Diane about her son’s suicide — and how music and speaking publicly about mental health has helped her keep going.
Working from home has many advantages. One of the easiest ways to start a business is to start it from your own home. It’s the most natural way to start for many. Whether you are baking, woodworking, offering a service, or anything else, doing so out of your house has many advantages. What isn’t discussed as often are the disadvantages of working from home.
5 Surprising Disadvantages of Working from Home
Most business owners just assume that if they are running their business from home, their home address and their business address will be one and the same. That’s fine, but what if you decide to move out of your home? Changing business address can cause issues. This is just one of many surprising disadvantages of working from home.
Disadvantages of Working from Home #1: Your Home May Not Be Conducive to Productive Work
A home may not necessarily be well equipped to handle working. You need a workspace that will help you be productive. This will be different for everyone. But, consider that you at least need a room with a door you can close. Drawing boundaries between home life and work life can be hard.
Learn more here and get started with building business credit with your company’s EIN and not your SSN.
Managing time can be harder when working from home as well. It can be easy to work all day when you are at home, or not work enough due to “home” distractions. It’s hard to get people to respect your time and boundaries. Also, isolation and depression are not uncommon.
Disadvantages of Working from Home #2: You May Not Be Allowed to Run Your Business From Your Home
In some situations, you may not be allowed to run your business from your home. If you rent, you will need to check your lease to make sure there are no issues. Whether you rent or own, you need to check zoning requirements. Also, agencies like the Health Department and the FDA have guidelines related to running certain types of businesses from your home.
Disadvantages of Working from Home #3: Home Address on Public Record
Many people worry about their home address as their business address. They feel it is unsafe, so they turn to a PO Box or an UPS Box. However, that can make it difficult to get funding. Lenders require a physical address.
This is a unique disadvantage of home-based businesses. Even home based businesses need funding for a number of things:
One option is to use a virtual address. Be aware however, that some lenders will not accept those either. The truth is, if someone wants to find your home address, it’s easy enough regardless of whether you use it as your business address or not. In the end, to get funding for your business you are going to need to use a physical business address where you an receive mail.
Learn more here and get started with building business credit with your company’s EIN and not your SSN.
Disadvantages of Working from Home #4: Changing Your Business Address Later Can Cause Problems
You may think you can get by with using your personal address now, and just change it later. That’s not a good idea. If you think about it, your business address goes everywhere. For example:
All legal documents
Licences
Marketing materials
Your website
Insurance papers
Everywhere!
The longer you wait, the more places you will have to remember to change it. It is a bigger deal than you may think if you miss one. If lenders start looking into your business and see your business address is listed differently in different places, it can cause unnecessary issues. It brings up fraud concerns.
A bank will not take the time to try to figure out all the different ways a business may be listed. Even something as simple as using Street vs St, or using an ampersand in one spot and the word “and” in another can cause issues. So you can imagine using your home address in one spot and a separate business address in another will definitely cause problems.
That doesn’t mean that if you move your business out of your home you have to keep your home address. Just be aware that you will need to make sure the address is changed everywhere.
Disadvantages of Working from Home #5: Legal Issues
There are a number of legal considerations that you have to think about when it comes to running a home based business. For example, even if zoning laws allow you to run your business from your home. You need to check out what requirements those laws lay out. Some cities have regulations regarding foot traffic. Some even regulate yard sign use for advertising. And if you have an Homeowners Association (HOA) you may need their permission as well.
Learn more here and get started with building business credit with your company’s EIN and not your SSN.
Some cities limit the number of employees a home based business can have. Some even regulate the number of customers that can come to your door. You’ll need to check with your local city officials to determine what if any regulations apply to you. And figure out what licences and permits you need to operate.
Consider the tax issues as well. While you can deduct some expenses when it comes to home-based businesses, it can get complicated. You need to make sure you thoroughly understand the home business deduction on the front end and plan accordingly.
Insurance needs to be considered as well. If you have employees or customers coming in and out, you need to think about what would happen if they were injured. Will homeowners’ insurance cover it? Often you will need to purchase a separate policy or a rider. All insurance needs to be in place on the front end. Be sure it has the proper business address on it!
Avoid Many Disadvantages of Working From Home
Nothing is perfect. Running a business from your home is no different. However, you can avoid many of the disadvantages of working from home by building fundability from the beginning. Not only will it help with legal issues, but it makes a bigger difference than you may think when it comes to funding.
The best way to start building fundability, whether you own a home-based business or run a business from a different location, is to work with a business credit expert. Contact us today for a free consultation.
Do you remember when only celebrities and major companies had personal brands? Actors, musicians, Fortune 100 businesses, and athletes got all the attention and dominated the airwaves.
Now, nearly anyone willing to put in the time and effort can become a “thought leader” in a specific niche. It won’t happen overnight, of course.
You only need to do a quick Google search to see that ordinary people from all over the world are using new personal branding tools, particularly social media, to craft personal brands that attract countless people to their websites and social media accounts.
Personal branding is what separates you from the rest of the people trying to make it in your field. Building a personal brand allows you to become a standout figure that people know, like, and trust.
Follow these seven simple steps below to become the go-to expert in your space.
Step #1. Start By Finding Your Niche
There’s a saying about SEO traffic that highlights something most people miss.
You can’t create search demand. You can only harvest it.
That means you can’t force people to search for a specific keyword. They either already do or they’re searching for something else.
See How My Agency Can Drive Massive Amounts of Traffic to Your Website
Your job in SEO is to recognize that and work on getting as much traffic you can from words that are already popular on their own.
Personal branding is similar, believe it or not.
For example, being the best CrossFit pug breeder in the world is worthless if there isn’t already a market or niche for that. (Seriously, is there?!)
The niche selection process is really important! You don’t want to spend all your time and energy linking your brand to a niche that’s not growing.
Where should you start when picking a niche?
That’s a good question because there’s no right answer necessarily, but here’s where I think you should start.
Pick something specific that you can do better than 90% of the world.
Why is that so specific? Because you can probably do a lot of things well, but that doesn’t mean you’re an expert in every single one of them.
The only way to create a personal brand is by becoming the go-to, recognized authority on a specific topic.
If you’re not an expert on it, someone else will be. Don’t be afraid to go small or narrow to dominate a topic.
The “online marketing” space, for example, is massive, and it’s taken the better part of a decade for me to become a recognized authority.
Take someone like Brian Dean, who decided to go deep on a particular topic instead of biting off more than he could chew.
Notice how he perfectly positions his personal brand. It’s all about backlinks and rankings for SEO.
Then the site’s graphics, design, and testimonials all reinforce those points.
There’s another important ingredient for a successful personal brand, though. One that deals more with your own style and point of view on this topic.
Step #2. Inject Personality Into Your Personal Brand
The first step (finding your niche) is about your own skills and potential market value.
The second step is about what you personally bring to the table. It’s your point of view or your “tone” that will help differentiate you from everyone else who talks about the same topics as you.
For example, I want to be seen as personable and down-to-earth.
That’s why I often use slang when writing. We might be talking about a technical topic, but I want to help you understand it in an easy-to-digest format.
He works in the personal finance space, which is full of questionable people that give suspicious recommendations.
Ramit takes the opposite approach, using casual language, inside jokes, and F-bombs to show you that he’s being honest and holding nothing back.
My favorite post of his is on avocado toast, in which he completely debunks terrible “advice” from another personal finance columnist.
Ash Ambirge at The Middle Finger Project also uses strong language and a no-B.S. attitude that gets people to sit up and take notice.
Being polarizing like this might turn some people off, but it can also help you create raving fans who might feel like being politically correct with the same material comes off as disingenuous.
Now, contrast that example with someone who talks about similar topics, but in a completely different style and tone: Marie Forleo.
They might both cover similar topics, but Marie’s personality (and therefore, content, design, and other branding elements) are polar opposites.
If Ash sometimes slips between PG-13 and rated R, Marie is firmly rated G.
What you’re saying is important, yes. But how you’re saying it can be equally so. Make sure you choose a tone that is authentic to you and port
Step #3. Create Your Brand Identity
Have you noticed a trend with the past few people mentioned?
From my own website to Ramit, Ash, and then Marie?
Go back and look at their websites. What do you notice?
The design is impeccable.
They each have custom sites, beautiful photography, and even their logos are easily identifiable.
Why the heavy investment in the look and feel of these sites?
Because according to one academic study, 94% of the time someone’s first impression is based on design, and it only takes 50 milliseconds for that split-second decision to get made.
A massive part of creating a personal brand islooking the part. There’s a secondary benefit as well.
Consistent design helps them become recognizable no matter where they decide to post or interact online, from their websites to media sites like Entrepreneur.com or even Facebook and Twitter.
The first step to accomplish that is creating your brand’s mark or logo. Here are some of my favorite resources to make it happen.
99designs crowdsources design samples from people all over the world. So you can set a budget and explain what you’re looking for, then sit back and watch designers start submitting ideas.
Then you can decide which ones are on the right track, give them feedback to further revise the logo, and disqualify the rest.
Best of all, if you’re unsatisfied with the options, you’re not locked into paying.
If you don’t think the design examples you received are up to snuff, you can simply use the company’s 100% money-back guarantee to get your funds back.
Another less expensive alternative is LogoNerds, which is ideal if you’re on a budget. These logos start for as little as $27!
Many times, you can even have LogoNerds create a few samples to get ideas, and then take those off to a more seasoned designer to show them the direction you like or don’t like.
Once you’re ready for the big leagues (with a budget to match), you can find amazing designers to work with personally on Dribbble.
The best designers will use Dribbble as a way to showcase their work and latest projects so that you can get a sense of their style.
Many will also show off brand concepts or logo ideas, like these Brand Elements from Steve Wolf, so you can get a feel for what your own might look like.
Professional design is often what separates the ‘real’ experts from everyone else.
Start small with a logo to establish that working relationship with a designer you like, because they’re going to be worth their weight in gold when it comes time to redesign your website.
Step #4. Create and Redesign Your Own Personal Site
This means not only does your content need to be great, it means it also needs to be published frequently(like several times a week at least).
Continually putting out good stuff under your own name starts to create that connection between you and the topic target you’re aiming at.
Here’s what I mean.
Google “Neil Patel marketing.”
My content shows up all over the place, from Entrepreneur.com to Inc. and beyond.
Those sites are so big that they’re often ranked at the top of the search engines. So imagine you work hard to become an expert on a topic, but then when people Google you, they end up going to a different website instead of your own.
Frustrating, right?!
That’s why having your own site, and then working hard to raise its profile, can be an invaluable part of reinforcing your own personal brand.
See! I own and control almost every site on the first page of the SERPs for my name.
If anyone is looking for more information about me, they go to one of my websites instead of someone else’s.
That means I’m able to convert a much higher percentage of people into new, interested leads each month.
My content and social strategies are among the main reasons that my sites rank above those other mainstream media sites.
Step #5. Carve Out a Content and Social Strategy
Content marketing “costs 62% less than traditional marketing and generates about three times as many leads.”
That stat says about all there is to say!
Look back at the SERP example in the last step.
The reason all my websites rank highly for my name is because of all the quality content I’ve published for over many years.
There’s no secret:just a lot of consistent hard work.
Personally, I find long, in-depth content works the best for generating leads and ranking well. For example, some of my posts are over 10,000 words and require a full table of contents!
Look at those social share numbers though!
My readers love long-form content (the stats back it up), so I keep delivering.
The same goes for my advanced guides, which in addition to being in-depth, are also beautifully designed.
The trick is to figure out what kind of content works best for you and your readers.
For example, MarketingProfs is another big website catering to marketing professionals. However, its content is totally different from mine.
MarketingProfs focuses on seminars, webinars, and other data as opposed to in-depth guides. So there’s no “right” answer, necessarily.
Your content strategy should also extend to your social media channels.
But keep in mind you shouldn’t necessarily be on every single social platform.
Spreading yourself too thin (and then not updating each frequently enough) is almost worse than not being on any social platforms at all.
So once again, go back to your own audience. Where are they?
Your own product or service plays a key role, too. For example, a wedding planner might not gain much traction on Twitter. However, if said wedding planner switches their focus to an image-focused social platform, like Pinterest or Instagram, they’re in business!
Step #6. Guest Blog to Promote Your Brand
In the early days, nobody will really know who you are.
That’s OK! It’s just critical that you realize this early before it’s too late.
If you spend all of your time initially only putting out good content on your own site, you’re unfortunately going to be wasting your time.
Instead, you should almost spend more time trying to get on other sites first.
Focus on sites that already have the traffic and audience numbers you’re targeting. For example, becoming a regular on a huge site like Forbes suddenly gives you a presence in the industry.
Now you can leverage that traffic to drive people back to your own site when they start looking for more information about you.
Many times, these sites will allow you to add your own bio and title, too.
So instead of the generic “Founder of a Company That Nobody’s Ever Heard From,” you can use that valuable real estate to start planting the seed for your personal brand. Incorporate your niche and bring in elements of your personality.
Step #7. Seek Out Mentors
There’s no such thing as a “self-made” successful person.
They had to have help from someone, somewhere, at some time in their life.
Similarly, becoming a recognized expert in a field can be incredibly challenging at first.
You’ll eventually need other big-name players in the industry to recognize you as an expert, which will boost your brand to help you reach the top of your chosen niche.
Even Tiger Woods, arguably the most successful golfer of all time, worked with a swing coach for almost his entire career.
Think about that.
The guy arguably didn’t need to listen to anyone; and yet, he used mentors to help him sharpen his game.
80% of CEOs surveyed in one study said they had a mentor to help them early in their careers.
Almost all successful entrepreneurs I know have had mentors help them become the recognized experts they are today.
Personal Branding FAQs
What is personal branding?
Personal branding is reputation building by finding what makes you unique. This is how your brand communicates and how your brand presents itself visually.
Why do I need a niche?
Specifying your niche will allow you to find what makes you unique. This also means you’ll be able to tap into the audience that is looking for what you can do to help them.
What is design important for personal branding?
Great design is easy on the eyes and captures attention. It’s also easy for people to identify common design elements so reinforcing your brand is easier. This makes you instantly recognizable online.
What can I do to establish myself as an authority?
Creating and promoting content on other websites and blogs will help you connect with existing audiences and build awareness about you. Guest posts on blogs can help you build a digital presence.
Personal Branding Conclusion
Becoming the go-to, recognized expert in your industry isn’t an overnight proposition.
It’s going to take a lot of hard work and effort to reach the top, but it’s also one of the highest ROI activities you can pursue.
Not at first, of course. You have to invest the time, money, and work to slowly break through in your industry.
You’re going to have to look the part, put out content at an intense pace, and constantly meet new people. Finding a mentor can help you to avoid many of the same mistakes that have plagued the people before you.
What’s your best personal branding tip to break through a crowded space?
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