Princess Diana’s custom 1985 Ford Escort RS Turbo Series 1 car sold at auction Saturday for more than $850,000.
Ordered and specifically made for the late Princess of Wales, the black hatchback vehicle was only used for a few years until it was returned to the manufacturer with fewer than 6,800 miles on it.
“The car is believed to be unique as the first and only black RS Turbo Series 1,” according to the Silverstone Auction house.
She owned the two-door vehicle beginning in 1985 while she was married to Prince Charles and was famously seen driving Prince William around town in the back seat.
The Escort was fitted with a regular, five-slat front grille to “assist in the stealth makeover and a secondary rear view mirror for the protection officer with a radio in the glove box.”
The vehicle racked up a few thousand more miles under different owners before being returned to the manufacturer, with a total of 24,961 miles.
The five-speed manual transmission with 130 horsepower made for a fast drive, and was sold for 724,000 pounds.
“Notwithstanding its very special provenance, this Escort RS Turbo Series 1 is an outstanding example in its own right, subject to nut and bolt detailing to a Concours standard,” Silverstone added.
Diana tragically died following a vehicle collision while in Paris, France, with boyfriend Dodi Fayed nearly 25 years ago on Aug. 31, 1997. She was 36 years old at the time of her death.
She was operated on for two hours at La Pitie Salpertiere Hospital, but doctors couldn’t get her heart beating again. She died from the internal bleeding that she sustained from the injuries.
Her full name was Diana Frances Spencer.
She was formerly known as Lady Diana Frances Spencer but upon her marriage to Prince Charles, became Diana, Princess of Wales.
While she was married to Prince Charles from 1981-1996, she gave birth to two sons, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex.
Fox News’ Ashlyn Messier contributed to this report.
Kurt Busch will miss the final two races of NASCAR’s Cup regular season, the driver of the No. 45 Toyota for 23XI Racing announced Thursday on social media.
Helio Castroneves has signed a one-year contract extension with Meyer Shank Racing that will bring the four-time Indianapolis 500 winner back for a 26th full IndyCar season.
INSIDE THE INVESTIGATION – FBI raid on Trump’s home leaves Americans with more questions than answers. Continue reading …
BILLIONAIRE’S BENEFIT – AOC’s constituents sound off after Democrats drop tax hike to pass climate initiatives. Continue reading …
CITY COUNCIL CHAOS – Protestors disrupt LA meeting on banning homeless camps near schools. Continue reading …
TAKING BACK POWER – Parents will call the shots in November’s elections and reclaim our culture, Michigan governor candidate Tudor Dixon says. Continue reading …
‘SHE WASN’T AFRAID’- Olivia Newton-John ‘defied all odds’ before her death, says best friend Jane Seymour. Continue reading …
‘FBI COMES A-KNOCKING’ – Trump FBI raid represents the ‘spotlight of justice’ in a ‘perilous time,’ Dan Rather says. Continue reading …
BUT HER EMAILS – Hillary Clinton appears to fundraise off Mar-a-Lago search. Continue reading …
Do you ever wonder how some people on Instagram gain so many followers in a short amount of time or on a consistent basis? Some people are celebrities or influencers, but nowadays, many are not.
The below article explains 15 easy ways to increase your following on Instagram.
If you prefer watching a video instead of reading content, watch this, as it will help, but I still recommend reading the article as it breaks down the steps.
Today, you don’t need fame to gain Instagram followers over time. It might take a little extra work, though.
No matter which step you’re on in growing your Instagram presence, there is a way to create an attractive, high-quality, unique experience with your audience. I’m going to help you get your Instagram right where you want it.
Get More Instagram Followers in 15 Steps
Step 1: Determine the overall purpose of your Instagram account
Step 2: Come up with a content strategy
Step 3: Design your profile for maximum engagement
Step 4: Post photos that grab attention
Step 5: Add long image captions to your post
Step 6: Add strategic hashtags
Step 7: Create a posting schedule
Step 8: Locate and follow your target users
Step 9: Follow 50 users per hour
Step 10: Become an active member of the community
Step 11: Partner and cross-promote with relevant users
Step 12: Run challenges and contests
Step 13: Run Instagram ads
Step 14: Link your Instagram to your offline customer
Step 15: Keep tabs on what’s working so you can continue to optimize your performance
Introducing Instagram
While I feel like this platform needs no introduction, some of you may be new to it.
So, I’d like to give you a few quick facts.
Instagram is a photo-sharing mobile app. It was launched in 2010 as a typical freebie app. There were a lot of other photo apps, but Instagram hit the sweet spot and started to grow exponentially.
They grew so quickly and organically that Facebook took interest and bought them for $1 billion in April of 2012.
As of February of 2022, Instagram has more than 2 billion active users worldwide!
The Evolution of Instagram
Instagram used to be a basic app. You took a picture, you put a filter on it (to make yourself look better), and then you shared it with your small Instagram following.
That was it. No bells. No whistles. Nothing fancy.
That’s no longer the case.
Today, Instagram is packed with tons of features, from automation features to fantastic filters. Once Snapchat started attracting millions of followers, and apps like Periscope leveraged live video, Instagram rushed to offer these features as well.
For example, you can edit photos using more advanced photo editing features instead of relying on Instagram’s built-in filters.
You can also post Stories. Stories appear at the top of your friends’ feeds and appear there for only 24 hours. If you want to keep your Stories discrete, you can send them only to select friends or curated groups.
You can edit your pictures with text, drawings, and other special effects, much like Snapchat.
Now, Instagram has a heavier emphasis on video, like its latest competitor TikTok. Like TikTok, Instagram’s Reels and Live Video features are also catching on. Since 2020, there’s been a high emphasis on influencers and the creator economy. User-generated content and influencer marketing have launched the platform ahead, where live video streams can also be used for social ecommerce.
Instagram is not like most live video platforms, because the video can be saved for IGTV after you stream. You can watch live videos while they’re being filmed and then share them with your audience that missed it, adding to your content.
My goal in this article is to show you how to get followers, not teach you how to use every feature.
Still, it’s important to be aware of these features, because you’re going to be using them to increase Instagram followers as you grow your audience by the thousands each week.
Let’s jump in.
Fake vs. Real Followers and How To Spot The Fakes
It’s the nature of the game.
Some people will try to prop up their accounts by misrepresenting their reach – and by extension – their influence.
They purchase followers and likes from black market sites so they can appeal to brands for affiliate marketing purposes. Others simply do it for superficial reasons.
These fake followers are typically bots that add no value to the platform. Worse yet, they take away from the user experience that we all love.
And do you know what?
Spambots can’t really “like” your brand. They can’t give real insight that can impact your business. And they can’t spend real money.
Here are a few strategies that you can use to audit individual profiles:
Step 1: Determine the Overall Purpose of Your Instagram Account
This is fundamental.
If you’re on Instagram purely for the social aspect, you can jump over to the next step.
But if you’re interested in tying your efforts to a business or marketing goal, you need to determine what the overall purpose of your account is.
By establishing a purpose or niche for your account, you can remind yourself why you started sharing your insights.
Once you gain a decent footing in your niche, you can then branch out and have the support of your loyal followers.
The point of this goal mapping exercise is to:
Make yourself accountable for a specific outcome. This way, you can measure your results, track your progress, and determine your ROI.
Improve the effectiveness of all the steps that you take moving forward. Your content strategy and everything else you do will be dependent on the goals that you’re working towards.
What does a goal look like on Instagram? It can be any number of the many uses that the platform provides.
Show off your company culture so you can attract superstar team members
Build buzz and momentum for an upcoming product launch
You can make these more concrete by attaching specific numbers to them.
For example, “start generating 5K/month in affiliate marketing income by the 31st of December.”
While specificity is important, your goals don’t have to be set in stone.
They can evolve as your business grows. They can take a complete turn if your vision changes. They can increase or decrease in scope.
You are the architect of this plan.
Step 2: Come Up With a Content Strategy
Now that you know what you’re working towards, it’s time to think about content.
I can tell you with all certainty that this is a critical part of the Instagram success equation.
Let’s briefly define content – it is anything you express through text, visuals, and whatever medium that Instagram allows.
If you create random content, you will attract random people who couldn’t care less about you. These people will be spectators and passers-by. They won’t take any action. They won’t move any growth needles for your business.
On the flip side, if you create content that is strategic and targeted, you will attract exactly the right kind of followers. They’ll care about your business, engage with your calls to action, and be of great value.
The task now is to map your content strategy into the business goals that you came up with in step one. This will ensure that you create the most impactful kind of content.
But first, let’s talk about something – often ignored – that’s critical to the success of your content strategy.
Context.
Most people either don’t understand what context means for social media or they ignore it altogether. In the end, their content ends up missing the mark.
Let me explain.
Essentially, these two should not exist without each other.
There are easy ways to understand content versus context and how they relate:
Content is what you create. Context is the meaning attached to what you create.
Content marketing is delivering quality information to your audience. Context marketing is delivering the right information to the right person at the right moment.
Do you see how they work as a team? How content would fall flat without context?
The question now is, how do you achieve that balance?
I like to think of content as the informational nugget and context as the stories that you use to deliver the message.
This means that to create the proper context for your Instagram content, you need to employ the elements of a story:
What…
Who…
When…
Why…
Where…
The “How” element is another piece of the puzzle. It refers to the medium in which you’re going to deliver that content.
On Instagram, users are conditioned for a medium that is largely visual, so you don’t have to spend time thinking about this. Photographs, videos, and stories are what will resonate with your audience.
As you can imagine, context is all very nuanced and becomes increasingly difficult when you have a large following. Even in a niche market, different people will connect to different stories.
Also, context switches as quickly as new information comes in.
The only way you can get these answers, and be on top of it when it changes, is to consistently engage with your audience.
Don’t just put out content and disappear.
Establish feedback loops, monitor the conversations, and be present in the communities that form around your business.
You’ll learn to tell the right stories and tell them well.
When it comes to your audience, storytelling is the way to remind them why they followed you in the first place.
Different types of Instagram content: When you understand context, your content strategy becomes amazingly simple.
In the first step, you came up with specific goals for your Instagram account. These goals will determine the type of content that you create.
What are your options?
People-centric content: Human faces are a big deal.
You can’t succeed on Instagram without humanizing yourself and your brand. Content that is true to you and your brand is what your audience wants to see.
By giving your Instagram followers free access to your life, you create an authentic, meaningful online community.
This type of content is especially powerful if your goal is to show off your company culture. Giving people a behind-the-scenes look at your team, their work processes, and how they interact with each other is digital gold.
Do what you do best and watch your Instagram followers grow. These posts evoke an emotional response in your audience and make them feel personally connected to your business.
Need some ideas for content that is people-centered?
Candid photos of employees hard at work
Shots of team members outside of work, perhaps at a company retreat or team-building getaway
Photos of your team supporting a social cause together
Behind-the-scenes of workstations or tours of where products are made
Pets at work (these aren’t people, but they evoke the same emotional response)
Employee-curated content. Allow your employees to take over your Instagram account on different days and post from their perspective. HubSpot is a perfect example with their hashtag, #hubspotemployeetakeover.
Product or service-centric content: Looking to increase sales? You can publish product-specific content.
Include strategically placed mockups of your products or showcase people raving about your services.
Here’s the thing.
Having a sales-oriented goal doesn’t mean you have to place the focus on the product or be overly promotional.
Prop up your product with a gripping narrative.
Nike does this visual storytelling brilliantly. They showcase their product by honoring great athletes. It’s the perfect balance of lifestyle and branded content.
Some ideas for product, service, and brand-specific content:
Give a sneak peek of a new product or behind-the-scenes of a product launch
Show how your product is manufactured
Shots of people wearing your branded clothing
If you’re a service-based business, show off what’s in your work toolbox, e.g., photographers can feature their favorite camera or tripod
Text-based content: It’s no secret that quotes are a phenomenon on Instagram.
It doesn’t matter what niche you’re in, motivation and inspiration will always have an impact.
If you don’t have a lot of time or you’re just starting out on Instagram, I recommend starting off with quotes. They’re easy to create by using certain apps and are almost guaranteed to generate a lot of likes.
Some tips for creating text-based content:
Share quotes that reiterate your brand message (Don’t forget to add popular hashtags like #instaquote!)
Quotes from influencers or thought leaders in your niche market
Shocking statistics or facts that aren’t common knowledge
A quote from a customer raving about your business
Newsworthy information about your business
Quotes that highlight snippets of your brand story
Recipes and other How-to posts that are relevant to your industry
User-centric content: Networks like Instagram run on user experience.
To outperform your competitors in that regard, you can:
1. Publish user-generated content (UGC)
This is where your content is created by other users. They could be your customers, brand advocates, influencers, site visitors, or any of your followers.
Buffer increased their following by almost 400% when they started user-generated content campaigns.
Not convinced? Here are some more benefits:
Greater SEO capital – Looking at the world’s top 20 largest brands, 25% of their search results are links to user-generated content.
Drives sales – Stackla found that based on their study, nearly 80% of respondents admitted user-generated content highly impacted their purchase decisions.
Positively impacts engagement – No doubt, involving users in your content creation process will lead to greater interaction with your brand.
So how do you get other people to create your content?
It’s simpler than it sounds. Here are some tips:
Be clear and specific about what you want people to create. While you want to give users as much creative license as possible, you also don’t want your content to be off-brand or off-message.
What’s your angle? Earlier, I referenced setting goals for the overall function of your Instagram account. Goal mapping can also be looked at from the lens of specific campaigns. If you’re going to start a UGC campaign, decide what the outcome will be for your brand.
Credit your content creators. This is a great way to build goodwill and positive relationships with your audience. It’s also the right thing to do when you’re using somebody else’s work.
Incentivize users to create better quality content. You can tie your campaign to a contest where the best content creators win something related to your brand.
2. Start “user action” campaigns
If you want to increase engagement, campaigns that encourage users to be active on the platform are the way to go. This is where you add captions that call your users to action or ask them a question.
Some industry-specific examples:
Landscape photographers may post a picture of a scenic place and ask users to “tag a friend you want to visit this place with”
A florist may post an image with different flower arrangements and ask users “which do you prefer: roses or orchids?”
A food blogger may use a caption detailing a recipe and ask users to “tag a friend you’d like to prepare this with”
A gym owner may post an image of a two-person workout and ask “tag a friend who you would like to do this workout with”
A wedding photographer may post an image and ask users to “tag someone who’s getting married soon”
Fashion bloggers or brands may post an outfit and ask their followers to “tag a friend who can pull this off” or “which pieces would you rock?”
To be clear, these are not the only types of content that you have in your toolbox. But now that you have an idea of what your options are, here’s a simple three-step formula for coming up with what to publish:
1. Select your theme (product sales, company culture, engagement, etc.).
2. Think about the Who, What, Why, When, Where, and How that surround your theme.
3. Create and publish a mix of content based on your ideas.
Step 3: Design Your Profile for Maximum Engagement
The first thing you’ll need to do is to create an Instagram profile that people will be interested in. This matters. Your picture, your name, profile name, and your description are your digital billboard on Instagram. People will look at it, browse your photos, and check out your website.
Everything starts here.
If you’re just getting started with Instagram, the process will be simple and straightforward during the signup process.
If you already have an Instagram account, you can change your profile name and username.
First, tap on the profile icon at the bottom right corner.
Then, tap “Edit Profile” at the top of the page.
Now, change each of the following to something that accurately reflects who you are and the value you provide.
1. Name. I recommend using your real name.
2. A profile photo. Use a photo that is warm, approachable, and trustworthy.
3. Username. Your username needs to be unique. If your name is already taken, add some words or phrases that make it distinct.
4. A URL. Point this to your website if you have one. This URL is the only clickable link that you’ll be able to provide on Instagram.
5. A bio. A brief description about yourself. Make this description as warm and engaging as possible. An emoji or two won’t hurt.
How to increase the visibility of your Instagram profile?
Making your profile swoon-worthy is just one part of the equation.
You now have to drive as many eyes to your account as possible so you can increase your follower count and level of engagement.
Here’s what you can do to make it easy for users to find and follow you:
Promote your account via your email list. Place a link to your Instagram profile in the footer or closing of every newsletter. You can even include a link in your email signature of your personal and business emails.
Place social media badges on your website. Do not overwhelm your users with a choice of 9 different social media platforms. Keep it to 3 or 4, including Instagram of course.
Place your account handle on business cards, stickers, brand memorabilia, thank you notes when customers purchase a product and any other physical thing connected to your business.
Ask your followers on Twitter, Pinterest, Facebook, and your other social networks that you’ve already built a following on to connect with you on Instagram. While cross-posting is not always a great idea, it’s possible to sync your Facebook account with your Instagram. This way your posts will appear on both platforms, and you can tap into your Facebook reach.
Step 4: Post Photos That Grab Attention
Stunning visuals are the lifeblood of Instagram.
That’s where it all started, and no matter how the platform evolves, it will always be a central part of it.
In this step, you need to build a collection of attention-grabbing posts.
Here’s how.
Step #1: Create a visual theme for your account
Our brains are built for visual stories. In fact, we process images 60,000 times faster than text.
If you want to tell visual stories that stick in the minds of your followers, you need to develop an overarching theme for your account.
Here’s why it’s beneficial:
You come across as having put more thought and effort into your account (Even if you didn’t). The result is that your perceived value increases and people are more likely to follow you.
Your brand will be more memorable. When you have consistent visuals, your brand image is continuously being reinforced every time you publish a post. On the other hand, if you publish content with no unifying marker, there’s no way you’ll stand out among the 4.2 billion posts that are published daily.
If it means anything, the statistics are in your favor. It’s been tested and proven that great design converts better.
Consistency breeds trust. When you show up with a degree of sameness, your followers come to depend on you.
So how can you come up with a visual style guide for your profile?
It’s easy – and you’ll also find that consistency does not have to mean boring.
Here are some tips:
Tip 1 – Use similar brand elements that you use on your website and other social media platforms.
Disclaimer: You don’t have to be repetitive and robotic.
What you can do, however, is be consistent enough to evoke a feeling of familiarity in everything that you post.
This includes fonts, brand colors, logos, and even the way in which you use language.
Tip 2 – Experiment with patterns and shapes to create a unique layout.
The way that the Instagram feed is laid out in a grid makes it great for creating uniform patterns. The checkerboard layout is quite popular but can be made unique in so many ways.
To top it off, it looks great!
Tip 3 – Stick to one color palette
I’ve seen accounts that post entirely in one color. The only variation is the different shades.
I’ll be honest – it takes commitment, but the result is beautiful.
If you don’t feel strongly about any particular color, you can always stick to a combination.
Either way, color-based visual themes are very effective.
Tip 4 – Use a dominant filter
Celebrities use this technique a lot.
That’s because their accounts have different purposes and are used to document their lives rather than for branding.
When you stick to one filter, all your images will have a congruent hue. If you’re building a personal brand and you haven’t niched yourself into a box, this is a great option.
Tip 5 – Use motifs
This is a literary technique that is used in movies, books, and other literature. For the purpose of your Instagram feed, it is a dominant element that frequently shows up in your visuals.
Here are some examples:
A particular pose that you do in all your photos
An action that you do all the time
A type of prop that always shows up in your background
A symbol (could be your logo or even a specific emoticon)
A particular environment that recurs in your photos. Perhaps you want to subtly feature cityscapes or maybe grassland. (You don’t have to be a landscape photographer to use these elements)
If you’ve crafted a particular narrative for your business, you can tell that story using motifs. Airbnb, Virgin, Nike, and Apple do this very well on all their online platforms, including Instagram.
Now that you have some guidelines for creating an overall theme for your Instagram posts, here are some tools that you can use to create them:
Step #2: Use the following best practices when publishing your photos
Post original photos – No one likes to see an Instagram account that is stacked with stock photos or reposted viral pictures. They don’t connect and convert as well as real images. So, use your own photos.
Make sure your photos are relevant – Whenever you post a photo, think about the group that you want to attract. Who are these people? What will grab their attention?
Prompt followers to engage by using calls to action – We walked through this in detail when we looked at content strategy. The single best way to improve engagement is to write “user-action” captions for your posts.
Use the Geotagging function – When you add a location to your photo, you’ll get more visibility. Why? Because your photo “lives” in that location. Anytime someone searches for photos taken within an area, they will see your photo.
Instagram posts that include a location see 79% higher engagement than posts not tagged with a location.
Here’s how you can do it:
Tap “Add Location” on the new post screen.
Instagram provides you with a list of possible locations to choose from.
However, you can type in any location you want to, and Instagram will show you a list of the popular nearby locations.
I recommend choosing a popular location, so your post will get more visibility.
Step 5: Add Long Image Captions to Your Post
This is one of the most overlooked tactics in sharing photos. You should add several paragraphs of valuable written content to your post.
You’re allowed to write 2,200 characters. em>That’s a lot! For reference, 2,200 characters in this article will take you from the beginning all the way down to the paragraph that ends with “curated groups.” (CTRL + F to find it, and see how long 2,200 characters can stretch!)
Instagram will show only three lines of your image caption in users’ feeds. But that’s okay. If you can grab attention with those first three lines, you’ve won.
Instagram has a nasty thing about not allowing line breaks. The easiest way I’ve found to overcome this issue is by writing my post in my Notes app, copying it, and pasting it into Instagram.
To make things quicker, I open Notes on my MacBook which syncs with Notes on my phone. I type the caption completely and spell-check it.
I open the note on my phone and copy it. Then I open Instagram and paste it into the caption.
Boom. Instant juicy content, and line breaks where I want them.
A long and interesting image caption is the number one way that I’ve found to get people to comment on and like my posts.
Other tips for writing great captions:
Don’t bury the lede. Yes, you have 2,200 characters that you want to use up, but your most important content should be written first. Two reasons: most people hate to read, and Instagram will only show 3-4 lines of text in users’ feeds.
Always include a call-to-action. Ask a question, tell users what to do next after they read your post, encourage people to share, or anything else that will motivate them to engage.
You have to lead with a great picture, but a good picture isn’t enough. Everyone’s already doing that. You have to add more value by producing more written content!
Step 6: Add Strategic Hashtags
You can Instagram all day long, but if you’re not using hashtags, you won’t grow your audience.
It’s that simple. Hashtags give you visibility. Instagram users hop around on hashtags like a bored person channel surfs. They click from hashtag to hashtag to hashtag, occasionally stopping in to check out an interesting user.
But which hashtags should you use?
If you use bland hashtags like #happy and #selfie, you’ll get some people to notice your post, but it won’t be the right kind of people.
Your goal is to get targeted followers, remember?
I’ll show you how to do it but first …
How do hashtags work – You may be tempted to use the same hashtag strategy as you do on Twitter or Facebook.
It differs on Instagram.
Think of hashtags as a catalog system.
When you post a piece of content, you use a relevant hashtag that describes your content.
For example, if you’re a full-time traveler and you post a picture of you writing from your laptop on a beach in Thailand, you may use the hashtags #Digitalnomad, #Barefootwriter, #Thailand, and #Beachbum when you publish it on Instagram.
Anyone who’s interested in the nomadic lifestyle or in visiting Thailand can find your content by searching for these hashtags. So, in essence, they serve as navigation and also improve the overall user experience of Instagram.
A hashtag can be:
Location-specific
Lifestyle-specific
Brand-specific
Product specific
Community-specific
Challenge- or contest-specific
Campaign-specific
Event-specific
Subject-specific
You now know how hashtags work. Let’s get into some best practices for using them on Instagram.
Add hashtags in a comment, not in the actual photo – I recommend putting your hashtags in a comment on your own photo.
Why? First, it looks a little bit nicer. Your image caption should be clean and nice-looking. Hashtags tend to make things look messy.
Second, it keeps your caption distinct. Hashtags aren’t for people to see. They are for people to find you.
Third, you can add more hashtags. If you’ve filled out your image caption at the character limit, don’t worry. You have more room in the comments.
Be specific
Generic and popular hashtags like #instagood and #happy may have a larger reach, but they don’t have as much engagement as specific tags.
Specific hashtags mean:
You’re appealing to a more targeted audience
More emotional appeal – and as you know, emotion is the fast lane to the brain.
You’ll have more engagement
Of course, you don’t want to be ultra-specific to the point that nobody would even think about searching for your hashtag. That would defeat the purpose.
A long-standing hot topic on Instagram has always been the sweet spot for the number of hashtags to use. The Instagram Creators account recently announced that it’s best to only use 3 to 5 hashtags per post.
I know this may feel like a trick from Instagram, but let’s be real – using some hashtags do help boost your post. There may not be an optimal number, but paired with aligned content, hashtags can yield high engagement.
How to find relevant hashtags:
Step #1 – The first thing you want to do is create a spreadsheet or note file on your phone to store your hashtags.
I recommend spending a couple of hours putting together a database of hashtags for your profile. It’s a more effective strategy as opposed to searching for them for individual posts.
Step #2 – Start by typing a general hashtag that relates to your industry or audience
Go ahead and type a broad hashtag that is relevant to your audience.
For example, you may type “#digitalmarketer.” Notice what happens in Instagram when you do this.
Instagram shows you a list of popular hashtags.
You don’t need to guess which ones are popular because you can see the post count on the right-hand side.
Add as many of these hashtags as possible, as long as they are relevant. Doing this will give you a clear idea of the types of hashtags to use, and where to use them.
When you find a list of hashtags that gets high levels of engagement, copying these and save them in your note file. That way, instead of typing them out every time, you can copy and paste them into your comment.
Step #3 – Stalk your competitors
Your competitors have the same target audience as you do so, don’t be afraid to swipe the hashtags that they’re using.
If it’s working for them, it will likely work for you.
Sift through their feeds and take a note of popular posts and the corresponding hashtags.
Step #4 – Determine which hashtags work the best
Not every tag in your database will be a success.
The best way to know is to test them and see which ones outperform the rest. Key indicators would be engagement metrics like comments, likes, shares, follows, and mentions.
Step 7: Create a Posting Schedule
If you don’t post on Instagram, no one is going to bother following you.
Here is what I recommend:
Post 1-2 photos or videos (including reels) per day.
Add 5-30 Instagram stories per day.
Post 1 live video per day at the same time each day.
Let me break this down for you.
Post 1-2 photos per day.
The most popular Instagrammers post a lot of pictures.
There is a correlation between how often you post and how many followers you have.
So why do you want to post every day? Because you’ll get more followers and more visibility (which also gives you more followers).
Don’t stick to photos only. As Nike’s feed shows, you can get a lot of engagement from posting videos.
Add 5-30 Instagram stories per day… Wow. That’s a lot of stories!
Sure, but it’s relatively easy to do. You can post videos or still photos. I recommend a mix of both.
Your Stories will cycle automatically like a video playlist. Even though each story lasts only 15 seconds, you can string them together to form a long video.
Post 1 live video per day at the same time each day – Live video hasn’t taken off on Instagram like it has on Facebook, but it’s still powerful.
I recommend doing your live video at the same time each day.
Why? Because a live video appears only while it’s being broadcast. If you broadcast at random times — times when your followers aren’t actively on Instagram — no one is going to know you were even on live video.
There’s an easy way to overcome Instagram’s live video limitations.
Post a photo to your feed that announces the time you’ll be broadcasting live.
Post a story every day that announces your upcoming live broadcast.
To catch the audience that missed out, save your live on Instagram under IGTV
You’re ready to roll. Your audience will be prepared for your broadcast, and ready to tune in.
To start a live video, tap the plus sign in the upper right corner.
Then, press “live” from the drop down menu.
You’ll press the live button, the app will notify your followers you’re live and let you know….
You’re live!
Live videos are the first in line in the story carousel. In other words, as long as you’re live, more people will see you.
The more often you can post live videos, the better. Experiment with different times of day to see which time works best.
Step 8: Locate and Follow Your Target Users
Believe it or not, everything we’ve discussed up to this point has been a simple introduction.
You may be thinking, what?! What about the massive amounts of followers?
If you follow the steps above, you will be attracting users at a rate of 20+ per day, and probably more.
First, you’ll get followers slowly, and then the speed picks up over time. During your first few days following this guide, you may only get 5 new followers a day.
Within a week, however, the velocity will pick up.
Now, however, it’s time to put things into hyper gear. In this step, I’ll show you how to find your tribe and prepare for an avalanche of followers.
First, locate your top competitors.
Who are the Instagram users who already has a big following in your niche?
Find them, and start to follow their followers.
Here’s how.
Tap the find icon from the Instagram feed screen.
You’ll see a display of popular videos and posts.
Tap the “search” bar at the top.
Tap “tags” and begin searching for a term that is relevant to your industry.
I noticed that “#socialmediamarketing” has over 18,500,000 posts, so I tap it first. Here’s what I see.
These are considered “top posts,” because they were posted by users with a lot of followers, or they have a lot of likes and comments.
One or more of these photos was posted by a power user — someone with a lot of followers.
I’m going to tap one of the photos at the top.
Immediately, I noticed that this photo has over 1,000 likes. It’s likely this account sees high engagement regularly.
I also noticed that the photo was posted by @theadnetwork. I may have never heard of @theadnetwork, but they are obviously posting photos within my niche. And those photos are obviously popular.
So, I tap their name in the upper left corner. Here’s what I see.
I notice that they have 48K followers. This is a large following. I want to follow their followers.
Here’s the rationale. If these people chose to follow @theadnetwork, then they might choose to follow me, too. I’m in the same niche, same industry, and am providing just as much value (if not more!).
I tap “48K” to see the list of followers.
I can follow every one of these users by tapping “follow.”
You should follow this process multiple times to find more influencers in your space. Also, you should find the influencers who have the most engaged audience.
Repeat the above process every day as you seek to build new followers. Every time, the experience will be different. Experiment with it until you find the pattern that delivers the highest number of followers.
Here’s that process in bullet point format:
Tap the search icon.
Tap the search bar at the top of the screen.
Tap or swipe to tags.
Type a tag that is relevant to your industry.
There are probably dozens if not hundreds of tags you could use.
This is where you should branch out and experiment with different tags.
I also recommend exploring the “related” tags that Instagram displays at the top of the screen. You can find valuable tags and users that people are engaging in using this list.
Tap a top post within that hashtag.
Make sure that the account that posted has a lot of followers (rule of thumb: They should have more followers than people they are following).
Tap the number of followers they have.
Begin following these followers.
Step 9: Follow 50 Users per Hour
How many users can you follow, and at what rate?
Nobody, except a few select Instagram developers, knows the exact numbers.
Obviously, Instagram wants to keep users from abusing the system by spamming people with useless information. Therefore, they have some restrictions in place that keep you from following too many people.
It’s going to take you a long time to reach 7,500. So what should you do?
Follow at least 50 users per hour. If you try to follow too many people within a certain amount of time, you’ll no longer be able to follow people.
Instagram won’t ban your account. They will simply prevent the “follow” button from working.
What should you do then? Wait an hour, and try again. Most likely, you’ll be able to follow more people.
Do you think that following 50 users might take too much time? It doesn’t.
Here’s how it works. You can do this in just a few minutes each hour.
Repeat this process as often as possible.
As you follow users, many will begin to follow you back. If you are actively posting, engaging, and providing value, then you will quickly begin to attract a following.
If you don’t have the time, or just simply don’t want to do this manually, you could use a service like Kicksta to do it for you.
Step 10: Become an Active Member of the Community
Instagram isn’t just a broadcast platform. It’s a community of people who are helping each other, providing value, learning, and growing.
Personally, I’ve found a lot of inspiration on Instagram. I’ve met new people. I’ve learned new things. It’s been a great place for personal development and networking.
Here are the things that you should do in order to become an active member of the Instagram community and to grow and cultivate your audience at the same time:
If someone follows you, follow them back. Obviously, you want to avoid following spam accounts.
If someone comments on your photo, reply with a comment directed toward them. Mention them, using @, in the comment.
Like the photos that have hashtags that you’re interested in.
Comment on the photos that contain hashtags you’re interested in.
Like other people’s comments on photos that you’re interested in.
Send direct messages to people who you’re interested in, or who provide a lot of value.
In your photo, tag users who you know personally, or with whom you’ve formed a relationship on Instagram.
Ask questions or invite feedback in your posts.
There’s a difference between being a publisher on Instagram vs. being a participant.
I encourage you to become a participant.
Step 11: Partner and Cross-Promote With Relevant Users
Want to grow your Instagram in record time?
Partnering with other influential users on the platform is the surest way to get there.
This way, you get to tap into their following and funnel it into yours.
Cross-promoted content is effective for a few key reasons:
We trust the recommendations of our peers
We rely on consensus and the opinions of others to influence our actions (including purchase decisions and who to follow online)
The step-by-step play for cross-promoting your content with other users:
Step #1: Invest enough time in the groundwork so you can choose the right partners.
You want to select someone who’s not a direct competitor but has a following that matches your target audience.
This way, the relationship can be set up for an equal exchange of value.
You can either:
1. Spend time sifting through hundreds of profiles to find the best matches. It’s time-consuming, but it works best, particularly if you’re on a tight budget, or don’t want to spend any money at all.
Tips for searching Instagram:
Research a hashtag and check out posts with lots of engagement (likes, shares, comments). If you don’t have much to leverage, it may be best to start off with a low-hanging target with moderate engagement.
Look for users with a history of cross-promotion. The best method is to look at accounts that have content where someone else is attributed as the content creator.
2. Search through a marketplace of influencers. Several sites make it easy to find and connect with the right partners.
This approach is better suited if your goal is to increase brand awareness or ramp up product sales.
Be mindful that many influencer marketplaces listed may require monetary compensation rather than exchanging value without money.
Step #2: After you’ve pinpointed the best partners, focus on what you can do for them.
Here’s the deal:
If you’re just growing your account and you want to tap into someone else’s following, they’re the ones with the leverage.
This means that you have to think about what you can bring to the table.
What do they need right now? How can you make their lives a little easier? What are they working on right now that you can contribute to?
Answer these questions, and you have the perfect in.
I recommend establishing a relationship first or at least getting on their radar before you ask for something.
This way, you’re more likely to succeed.
Step #3: Set clear terms for your partnership
There’s nothing like miscommunication to sour a relationship.
Ideally, you want your partnerships to be long-term. Otherwise, you’d have to continuously be searching for new influencers every single time you’d like branded content with influencers.
To make sure that the process goes smoothly for both of you:
Make sure that you both are clear on what’s being exchanged
Establish a timeline
Honor your deal
Step #4: Make the most out of the cross-promotion
If you want to increase the momentum and impact of cross-promoted content, it will require some extra work.
Promote the content on other social media networks, announce it to your email list, and ask users to engage.
Step 12: Run Challenges and Contests
If you’ve ever thought long and hard about growing your Instagram account quickly, this tactic has been on your radar.
Give out a freebie, and people will come knocking down your door, right?
Anyone who has run a successful contest or challenge will tell you that this is not the case. In fact, it requires a fair amount of preparation and strategy.
When done right, it can be an extremely effective way of getting traffic and new followers to your Instagram account.
Here are the details that you need to work out:
So… what type of contest will you run? The type of contest will determine how people can take part in your giveaway. Each of these methods of entry has its benefits and downsides.
(i) Follow to win – Participants have to follow your account to enter the contest. Be prepared for a percentage of people to unfollow you after the contest is over.
(ii) Like to win – Participants have to like one of your photos to enter.
(iii) Comment to win – Participants have to comment on a piece of content to win.
(iv) Enter your email to win – Participants have to submit their info to enter. If your goal is to get more followers, you may want to skip this method or combine it with another method that gives you that outcome.
(v) Participate in the challenge to win – This is where you call on people to do something specific, like posting a photo and using a hashtag that you’ve created for your challenge. You can also set your challenge across several days, asking participants to do something different on each day and posting their results. This is the most participative type of contest, and it has the highest level of engagement.
(vi) A combination of methods – Participants have to perform several qualifying actions to enter the context. Any of the methods above can work together. It’s up to you and the goal that you have for your contest. Be mindful that you don’t want the barrier to entry to be so high that people get turned off by the process.
What are the rules? Every contest needs a set of guidelines.
It ensures that there are no disputes after the contest has run its course.
Your rules should include:
The contest duration (what date and time does it begin and end)
The prize and how the winner will be chosen
The method of entry
How will the winner(s) be chosen, and what is the prize? The tricky thing about using contests to grow your following is that you will be attracting people who aren’t necessarily interested in you or what you do.
They simply want to win.
The way to deal with that is to offer a prize that is closely aligned with your brand and business goals.
Some examples:
If you have a self-improvement blog, your prize can be some inspirational and self-improvement books.
If you own a tech company, you can give something that’s complementary to your product.
This way, there’s overlap between the contest prize and your Instagram content. Participants will be less inclined to unfollow you after the contest is over.
How will you promote the contest? Simply setting a contest in motion is not enough.
You need to gain as much momentum and traction as possible.
To drive awareness, you can:
Create a viral-worthy hashtag and encourage participants to use it
Promote the contest on all your social media channels
Link to the contest on the homepage of your blog
Announce the contest to your email list
Write blog posts about it and pay to boost them on Facebook, so they reach more people
Allow people extra entries for referring new participants
It’s also a good idea to write a follow-up piece on the winner, and the prize received. If your prize was a service or something results-driven, you could create a thorough case study of the winner’s before and after.
Step 13: Run Instagram Ads
Sometimes the most effective way is simply to pay to play.
That’s where paid promotions come in.
As you know, Facebook purchased Instagram in 2012.
This is significant because running ads on Instagram is the same as running Facebook ads. They’re controlled through the same ad manager.
If you’ve run Facebook ads in the past, you’re likely familiar with this method.
In any event, I’ll walk you through the process from start to finish.
The step-by-step play for running Instagram ads:
Step #1 – Connect your Instagram account to your Facebook page.
If you’ve already done this once, you don’t have to do it every single time you run an ad. But if you haven’t already linked the two accounts, go to “Settings” on your Facebook page and click on “Instagram Ads.”
After you click on “Add an account,” you’ll be prompted to fill in your Instagram username and password.
You’ll then be asked to select which Facebook ad account you’d like to use for your Instagram campaign. If you have more than one ad account set up, select the appropriate one.
Step #2 – Go to the Power Editor or Adverts Manager to create your Instagram campaign
Now that your accounts are connected, you can run your Instagram ads from your Facebook account.
You can either click “Create Campaign” in the Ad Manager or go to the Power Editor to create your ad.
Step #3 – Select the objective for your campaign.
You have three different categories to choose from:
Awareness – Increase your brand awareness, local awareness, and reach.
Consideration – For driving traffic, increasing engagement, getting more app installs, increasing video views, and lead generation.
Conversion – For conversions, product sales, and store visits.
Simply click on the category that you’re interested in. You can only have one campaign objective.
After you click on your objective, name your campaign and click “Continue.”
Step #4 – Create your advert set and define your ad audience.
Your audience can be defined by location, age, gender, language, and other detailed demographics. If you have saved audiences, you don’t have to create a new one.
Next, select your ad placement, budget, and duration of the ad set.
Once you’ve decided how much you’re going to spend and how long your ad will run for, it’s time to select the format of your ad.
Finally, select your images and write your caption. You can preview the ad to make sure that everything looks good. Click “place order,” and that’s all there is to it.
Step #5 – Set up a retargeting campaign
Retargeting ads are set up using more or less the same process as normal ads. Only this time, you’re targeting people who’ve already engaged with your business.
Maybe they visited your site, your opt-in page, or abandoned their cart before making the final purchase.
How do you know who those people are?
The Facebook pixel. This is a tool that allows you to track the actions that people take on your website as well as measure the effectiveness of your ads.
Ideally, you should install the pixel on your site even if you have no immediate intention of running an ad. This way, it can track as much data as possible, so your campaign will be more effective.
To get the pixel on your site, you can either install it manually or use a WordPress plugin.
Manual installation of the Facebook pixel:
Go to the Adverts Manager and find “Pixels” under the area labeled “Assets.”
If you’ve ever run Facebook Ads, chances are you’ve already created a pixel. If not, you’ll be asked to create one.
Select a name for your pixel and click “Create Pixel”.
You will get a Pixel code that you can copy and paste into your website header.
Alternatively, you can simply install a WordPress plugin called PixelYourSite. All you have to do after that is enter your Pixel ID in the settings of the plugin. Your ID can be found on the top right-hand corner of your Ads Manager dashboard.
Once your pixel has been installed, it will begin collecting data immediately. Running a retargeting campaign is simply a matter of creating a custom audience to include anyone who has visited your domain or specific pages.
The remaining steps are the same as what we walked through earlier for setting normal Instagram ads.
Step 14: Link Your Instagram to Your Offline Customer
Have you ever thought about how you can leverage offline interactions to grow your online presence?
Very few people do.
The thing is social media platforms and websites are not the only places that people come into contact with your business.
Particularly if you run an e-commerce site, you have plenty of opportunities to connect with users offline.
Here’s how you can make the most out of these interactions:
First, add your Instagram handle to physical product packaging.
The package that your product is shipped in is a unique part of the customer experience.
It’s a direct point of contact and presents the most opportunity because many people neglect it.
Next, consider placing a hashtag on the actual product.
Several popular brands have used this technique where they print hashtags on their products.
During the 2012 Olympics, Adidas and Nike featured their own campaign hashtags on their footwear.
Finally, be sure to Incentivize customers to follow you and promote your brand.
Sometimes, your customers need an extra push to take action. Here are some ideas:
1. Run a monthly contest asking customers to take a selfie with your product and post it on Instagram. Make sure they tag your Instagram page and add your specific hashtag. Every month, you can announce a different winner. Their followers will be inclined to check out your page and follow you.
2. As soon as you make a sale, ask customers to post a video talking about why they decided to invest in your product. Again, ensure that they tag you and use your product-specific hashtag. You can give them cash back or a coupon for a subsequent purchase. This can both increase sales and improve your following.
Step 15: Keep Tabs on What’s Working so You Can Continue To Optimize Your Performance
These steps are not the end-all, be-all of Instagram marketing.
Instead, they are powerful strategies that you can bet on to increase your following.
But guess what?
The platform is continuously evolving. New features are always being introduced. Old tactics become obsolete.
It is up to you to track which methods are working for you. I’d say the best measure of success on Instagram is how engaged and loyal of a following you have.
Having hundreds of thousands of followers who don’t take the time to interact with your content is pointless.
Keep monitoring the results that you get after implementing each step so you can keep optimizing them.
Some Key Performance Indicators to look out for:
Click-through rate – How many people are clicking on your links. You can shorten your website links using a URL shortener like Bitly. It also allows you to track how these links perform.
Traffic – How many unique visitors are you getting from Instagram to your website?
Follower growth – How many followers have you gained? Which tactics had the biggest part to play? Have you lost any followers?
Interactions per post – What’s the total social capital of each post? This includes the usual stuff like comments and shares.
Growth of branded or product-specific hashtags – If you’ve created any hashtags, how has your popularity and reach increased?
Learn from your analytics rather than the vanity metrics.
The level of insight from analytics will help you understand the type of content your audience engages with and likes most.
With the insight from analytics, you can see how your Instagram followers increase without building a community blindly.
FAQs
What is the trick to increasing followers on Instagram?
If you want to follow my formula: start with determining the purpose of your Instagram account. Form your content strategy that will drive maximum engagement and attract the attention of those in your niche. Be strategic not just with your content but in your captions and hashtags. Your reach in your niche and potential audience can grow when you target them.
Other than running Instagram ads, you can launch challenges and contests to nurture your audience. Remember, you can take your reach offline through events or product packaging. Just make sure you’re optimizing your performance by listening to the analytics because the data is coming from your audience.
How do I spot fake Instagram followers?
Do an Instagram audit. The signs of fake followers are when your account has unusual numbers that fluctuate but also don’t match your engagement. Accounts that post spam comments or have minimal details on their page can be run through a fake follower or bot detection tool. Your Instagram posts can be shared, liked, commented on, and engaged with by real people. People appreciate it when someone on the other end responds.
How often should I post on Instagram?
The Instagram post cadence I recommend looks like this:
Post 1-2 photos or videos (including reels) per day.
Add 5-30 Instagram stories per day.
Post 1 live video per day at the same time each day.
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Other than running Instagram ads, you can launch challenges and contests to nurture your audience. Remember, you can take your reach offline through events or product packaging. Just make sure you’re optimizing your performance by listening to the analytics because the data is coming from your audience.
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Conclusion
Social media, in general, can sometimes feel like fighting a losing battle.
You try to create content that will grab attention, move masses of people to action, and get them hooked on you for good.
The results are not always encouraging.
But this time, it’s different.
Why?
I really do believe that there has never been anything as prolific as Instagram. It is a remarkable place for personal branding and sales. Any ordinary person who puts in the right combination of strategy and effort can win big on this platform.
Yes, it can be challenging to build a following.
Yes, there’s a lot of noise.
But is there a way to build a powerful tribe of targeted followers? Absolutely.
I have used these exact steps for myself and my clients to attract more than 300 followers every single day.
One of the best parts about it is that these Instagram followers are bot-free. As long as I’m providing valuable content and regularly contributing as a member of the community, they will keep showing up to engage with my content.
Not only that, they’ll spread the word, and my following will continue to grow.
Eventually, you’ll reach a similar point. You won’t have to follow other users as aggressively. Instead, people will start flocking to you.
By that point, all your hard work would’ve paid off, and you’ll be well on your way to becoming a powerful Instagram influencer.
Are you using Instagram as part of your marketing strategy? What are some of the tactics that are working for you?
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Marketing used to be a lot less complicated. Today, users interact with brands on multiple devices and separate platforms—often simultaneously. Even in-person and online shopping, which used to be distinct events, are no longer completely separate due to the rise of trends like buy-online-pick-up-in-person. Consumer expectations are shifting as well. Today’s customers expect to receive … Continue reading Omnichannel Marketing: How You Can Use it to Reach More People Than Ever Before
Today, users interact with brands on multiple devices and separate platforms—often simultaneously. Even in-person and online shopping, which used to be distinct events, are no longer completely separate due to the rise of trends like buy-online-pick-up-in-person.
Consumer expectations are shifting as well.
Today’s customers expect to receive the same service and brand experience whether they’re scrolling Facebook, reading their email, or shopping in a store.
How do you give your customers what they want and deliver a better experience? With omnichannel marketing.
What Is Omnichannel Marketing?
Omnichannel marketing provides users with a seamless marketing experience across all platforms, channels, and devices throughout the marketing funnel. The core goal of omnichannel marketing is to place the customer at the center of all marketing strategies and provide a consistent, seamless experience.
Omnichannel marketing is growing in popularity, with 67 percent of e-commerce companies saying omnichannel is “very” or “quite” important to their business.
While implementation of an omnichannel strategy can vary between businesses, it can be identified by key goals, including:
personalized content and ads informed by past interactions with specific users
consistent branding, tone, and vision across all platforms
allowing users to continue their purchase path seamlessly, even if they switch platforms or devices
Benefits of Omnichannel Marketing
When implemented correctly, omnichannel marketing offers a host of benefits for both brands and their customers. According to Invesp, companies using omnichannel strategies retain 89 percent of their customers, while brands that don’t keep just 33 percent of their customers.
Several other benefits include:
Improved user experience: Omnichannel marketing centers the customer experience, providing a better experience for customers no matter where they interact with your brand.
Better brand awareness: Creating a consistent experience across platforms (including in-store) makes it easier for customers to recognize your brand.
Improved business data: Omnichannel tracks interactions across platforms, channels, and even in-person sales. This highlights which campaigns (and channels) are most effective at driving leads and sales.
Increased sales and revenue: Marketers that use three or more channels in one campaign see a 287 percent higher purchase rate. Omnichannel campaigns also have a higher order rate.
Examples of Omnichannel Marketing
Today, most brands realize customers engage with them on multiple channels. However, implementing an omnichannel strategy can feel overwhelming. Let’s look at a few brands that are getting it right.
Starbucks
Starbucks is more than just an in-person coffee shop and remote working haven.
They also offer online ordering through their mobile rewards app. Customers can upload money to the app, place curb-side orders, and even claim rewards.
How do they improve omnichannel with their app?
First, Starbucks offers rewards to app users, which encourages them to use the app. The app regularly pushes special rewards, such as earning extra points for ordering in the next two days or trying a new drink.
When customers use the app, it allows Starbucks to track in-store behavior—data they wouldn’t have access to otherwise. The app then offers recommendations and promotes seasonal drinks to drive sales.
Disney
Disney is a pioneer in omnichannel marketing. The brand has expertly navigated combining in-person, online, and television marketing for decades.
The brand’s omnichannel marketing really stands out in its My Disney Experience platform for visiting their park. Users can access the tool via app or browser and buy tickets, book hotels, reserve restaurants, schedule activities, coordinate with other users, and even store photos they take at the park.
Once users arrive at the park, the built-in GPS helps them find locations in the park, see real-time wait times at rides, and access the Disney MagicPass, a contactless version of the MagicBand. The app also promotes discounts, like 25 percent off hotel stays for Disney+ subscribers.
Providing a seamless experience from online to in-person helps make customers’ Disney adventure even more magical.
Warby Parker
Warby Parker, a well-known eye-glass company, was originally only available online. In recent years, they began to leverage omnichannel marketing. In addition to allowing customers to order up to five pairs of glasses to try on at home (one of their most popular offers,) they now have many brick-and-mortar stores.
However, they didn’t just create stores to sell more glasses—they’re committed to combining data from in-person interactions and online interactions. Warby Parker co-founder Dave Gilboa shared:
“We really focused on providing a great online experience but an offline as well. We have 70 stores and we’ll have 90 by the end of the year. We can see a clear path to several hundred stores in addition to a thriving ecommerce business.”
How does it work? Customers can favorite frames on the app, which in-store associates can then access to help them complete the purchase in person.
Shoppers can also try on glasses in the store and take a photo, which is converted into a link and sent to their email to complete the purchase online.
Omnichannel Marketing Strategies
Omnichannel marketing allows businesses to deliver the right message to the right customer at the right moment, driving sales, increasing customer loyalty, and providing a better customer experience.
Getting it right is no easy task. Here are five steps to building a better omnichannel strategy.
Map the Customer Journey
Omnichannel marketing creates a seamless customer journey. To do that, you need to understand the path your customers take when making a purchase.
Creating a customer journey map helps you better understand where customers interact with your brand, provides insights into their pain points, and makes it easier to create an effective omnichannel marketing strategy.
Here’s how to create your map:
Identify your customers: Identity who your customers are, where they live, and other demographic information. Look in your CRM or use a current buyer persona.
Understand their pain points: What drives your customers to make a purchase? What challenges do they want to solve?
Find out where they hang out: What platforms do your customers use during the purchase process?
Track the path of conversion: How do most of your customers convert? Keep in mind their path is unlikely to be straight. They might visit your in-store and then convert online, or view your Instagram reels and then visit your store. Aim to define the most common paths.
Once you’ve created your customer journey map, look at your conversion tracking data to find areas where customers are dropping off. Depending on how you track, this might be in Google Analytics or your sales platform. Customer satisfaction surveys may also provide insights.
Create a Consistent Brand Presence
Creating a consistent brand presence is a small part of omnichannel marketing, but it is crucial. Make sure all platforms use similar branding, tone, colors, and marketing messages.
Next, look at customer surveys (or create one!) and reviews to find out where customers aren’t happy. For example, you might find your website is too hard to use or your app is glitchy. Users might open every email you send but never engage on social media.
Once you see where your message doesn’t resonate, make plans to improve it. Does your audience prefer a different format, or more helpful content?
Remember, the goal is to be consistent, not identical. For example, your website might offer live chat—that doesn’t mean your social media channels need it, too. Instead, make sure the information, including things like what is in stock, is consistent where it is available. You don’t want a customer to see something is in-stock online and then show up to the store to find it is sold out.
Use Omnichannel to Increase Personalization
A report by Segment found that 71 percent of consumers feel frustrated when their shopping experience is impersonal. Even more striking, 91 percent of customers are more likely to shop with brands that deliver personally relevant offers and recommendations.
You can’t ignore personalization—it’s increasingly popular and customers expect it. Luckily, omnichannel marketing can help you leverage the strategy more effectively.
Personalization is the key to a successful omnichannel strategy, but it’s about a lot more than using the name tag in your email marketing. Rather, omnichannel marketing leverages data about customers to deliver ultra-relevant marketing messages at just the right time.
What does omnichannel personalization look like? While it can vary by brand and industry, here are a few examples:
A customer adds an item to their cart, but they don’t check out. Later, you send an email with a link to their cart, a discount, and a reminder to complete their purchase.
Using segmentation, you email different product recommendations to customers who purchase children’s clothing versus adult workout clothing.
A customer tells an e-commerce chatbot what types of cleaning products they are interested in. Later, a customized popup promotes a special on the products that the customer is interested in.
Omnichannel personalization takes personalization to the next level by delivering relevant messages across platforms.
Leverage Technology to Automation Omnichannel
Omnichannel marketing requires gathering and leveraging data—and developing different funnel paths for different types of customers. The problem is most marketing teams don’t have the time to manage this process manually.
Omnichannel marketing tools make it easier to gather and leverage data to build a better user experience. Your stack will vary by channel, industry, and the size of your company, but there are a few key platforms to consider.
Data collection: Omnichannel marketing uses data to understand customers’ paths and deliver a better experience. If you don’t have Google Analytics 4 set up, now is the time. Consider using a BI tool like Power BI or Google Data Studio to analyze data and create reports.
Marketing automation: Whether you want to engage more on social media, send scheduled emails, or move users through the conversion process, you need marketing automation tools to build an effective omnichannel marketing strategy. Many tools you already use, like email marketing, CRMs, and social media management, have built-in automation features. I also recommend a tool like Zapier to build custom triggers.
Chatbot automation: Want to be there for your customers even in the middle of the night? A well-designed chatbot script can answer questions, deliver resources, and qualify leads while you sleep.
Segmentation platform: One of the key benefits of omnichannel marketing is the ability to offer a more personalized experience. To do that, you have to segment your audience. Depending on your industry, this might mean using dynamic landing pages or a tool like Omnisend to send more personalized emails, pop-ups, and even push notifications.
Test and Optimize Your Omnichannel Campaigns
Building an omnichannel strategy isn’t a one-time endeavor. To be effective, you must constantly test, retest, and tweak your strategy. Over time consumer behaviors change, and you need to be ready.
The segmentation tools I mentioned in the previous section often offer testing features, or you can use Google’s Optimize or Optimizely to test audiences, content, landing pages, and even button color changes.
If you’re new to testing, this guide to A/B testing will get you started. It can feel overwhelming at first, but I think you’ll uncover really interesting data if you stick with it. Testing and optimizing drive ROI, so you’ll build a better campaign.
Omnichannel Marketing Frequently Asked Questions
What are the benefits of an omnichannel marketing strategy?
Omnichannel marketing provides a better user experience, increases retention rates, improves data collection, and makes connecting online and offline experiences easier. Together, all those benefits drive sales and ROI.
What is the difference between multichannel marketing and omnichannel marketing?
The biggest difference is that omnichannel marketing focuses on improving the customer experience, while multichannel marketing focuses on increasing customer engagement. Omnichannel also recognizes that customers may use multiple channels simultaneously.
What are the best omnichannel marketing tools?
The main tools you’ll need to implement omnichannel marketing are tools for all the channels your users engage on, like email, SMS, or social media. Automation tools, including chatbots, are also highly effective for omnichannel marketing. Finally, you need a robust analytics program, like Google Analytics 4, to track user interactions on both the web and apps.
What is an example of omnichannel marketing?
One of the best examples of omnichannel marketing is Starbucks’ reward app, which allows them to track in-person interactions, send personalized recommendations, and increase customer engagement.
Omnichannel Marketing Conclusion
The future of marketing is connected. Unlike multichannel marketing, which seeks to push out similar messages on multiple channels, omnichannel marketing focuses on bringing experiences together into a seamless experience that customers love.
Before you get started, make sure you understand who your customers are and look for marketing automation tools that will help you build a stronger omnichannel campaign.
Are you using omnichannel marketing? What challenges are you facing?
According to the Harvard Business School, the greatest problem faced by companies when launching a new product is a total lack of preparation.
Because of this, up to 30,000 new products are launched every year—and at least 95 percent end in failure.
While products can fail for many reasons, a solid product marketing strategy can help to mitigate many risk factors and boost your success.
What Is Product Marketing?
Product marketing is the entire process of bringing a new product to market, from the research and development to the launch and beyond.
It’s used by companies of all sizes with the ultimate goal of understanding and filling customers’ product needs.
Whether you’re launching your first product or your fiftieth, a solid product marketing plan can be the thing you need to push your success over the edge.
Benefits of Product Marketing
The main benefit of product marketing is to increase sales. However, an effective product marketing strategy can have more benefits than “just” profit.
First and foremost, product marketing can help you to position your product in the market for successful targeting and less advert waste.
A proper strategy would answer questions like “what product gap needs to be filled?” and “how does my product stand out from the competition?”
With product marketing, you also gain a deeper understanding of your customer base.
Who is your audience?
What are they buying?
What is their main reason for making a purchase?
By creating such buyer personas, you can increase your value proposition by up to 82 percent.
Then, to top it all off, you’ll get to unlock new insights about your competitors. While this isn’t often a huge concern for smaller businesses, up to 90 percent of Fortune 500 companies practice “competitive intelligence”—which has to say something for its value. If you want to grow, get ahead of your competitors while you still can.
Examples of Product Marketing
Before we get into our own strategies, let’s look at two brands with successful product marketing campaigns.
1. Poo Pourri
Poo Pourri is a great example of a brand that executed product marketing for an otherwise embarrassing and taboo subject (a toilet spray that eliminates the unpleasant odors associated with the bathroom.) It does so with humor and relatability because, after all, everybody poops.
They positioned their product perfectly.
Their first-ever video advertisement not only ranked as the number five most-watched video on the platform in 2013, but it also gained the brand a cult following that has continued to grow over the years.
How can other brands, even those with less taboo products, learn from Poo Pourri’s success?
First and foremost, find your platform and go hard. Poo Pourri used video advertising in its early years to continue to grow its following. This included television and online advertising where the brand was able to push the envelope with humor.
The brand also used customer personas to its advantage. It’s true, everybody poops. However, not everyone feels the need for a toilet spray.
Instead, their advertisements targeted certain markets and situations to really drive their point home.
2. Tesla
When you think of Tesla, what comes to mind? Electric cars. Clean energy. Solar power.
Your mental alignment of Tesla with these keywords and others in the clean energy space is for one simple reason: they built their entire identity, including each product marketing strategy, around their brand statement.
“Tesla builds not only all-electric vehicles but also infinitely scalable clean energy generation and storage products. Tesla believes the faster the world stops relying on fossil fuels and moves towards a zero-emission future, the better.”
Tesla effectively cornered the electric vehicle market. It knew it had a target audience in the space, of course, but it never swayed from its brand statement when developing electric vehicles and other clean energy products.
6 Product Marketing Strategies to Grow Your Business
If you’re excited to be a success story like the examples above, then consider these six product marketing strategies.
1. Pair With Robust Content Marketing
Did you ever think your product was too “boring” for content marketing to have an impact? Think again!
Blendtec, a seller of residential and commercial blenders, launched a series of videos aimed at making their boring product fun. The series was called “Will It Blend?,” and it’s just what it sounds like.
The company would test blend various inedible items in their blenders as a way to inject curiosity and humor into their product line.
While your content marketing strategy doesn’t have to be quite so outlandish, it can be just as successful. There are plenty of content types to include in your strategy, including:
blog posts
videos
podcasts
infographics
white papers
downloadable guides
You just need to ensure your content marketing is compelling.
First, understand what your customers need.
Second, push on their pain points.
Agitate that pain through storytelling.
Offer to solve their problem.
As long as you touch those four points, your content marketing strategy will be off to a strong start.
2. Develop a Product Launch Plan
Product launches don’t always go as planned.
According to Gartner, 45 percent of product launches are delayed by at least one month. This can lead to a domino effect of poor results.
While this is a bitter pill to swallow, it’s also one that should give you sufficient motivation to invest time in a clear and detailed product marketing plan.
It needs to be effective, on time, and successful, and consider these three stages:
Pre-launch.
Launch.
Post-launch.
Pre-launch is heavily focused on research and development. Consider what your industry is like, who your customers are, and what your product can offer that nothing else can.
This stage will also require heavy involvement with beta testing and finessing your messaging to the target audience.
What unexpected pain points come up during beta?
What is the feedback like?
What can you improve in your product or messaging?
Launch is all about getting the message out to the right audience. This means choosing the best channels to reach your target market and even hosting multiple online and in-person events to generate a buzz.
Finally, post-launch requires you to evaluate your targets versus actuals. Did you perform as well as you hoped? If not, why?
A poor initial launch isn’t a loss. It’s important not to lose momentum during post-launch and, eventually, shift your focus to retaining the customers you do have.
While customer service plays a huge role in retention rates, there’s also the important step of retargeting your existing customers. That is, marketing directly to them to address their needs and invoke feelings of brand loyalty.
What does this look like?
A few ways to retarget existing customers include:
Create custom ad campaigns for previous and existing customers. These should focus heavily on brand loyalty and customer satisfaction. What is it that keeps customers coming back? Capitalize on it.
Build a retargeting email campaign for customers who haven’t purchased over various timeframes. Using segmentation, create different campaigns for customers who haven’t purchased over various periods of time (e.g., within the last 3 months, within the last 6 months, etc.)
Bid more aggressively on retargeting campaigns. Consider that customers who previously converted are more likely to convert than new customers. This means you can afford to have a higher Cost Per Conversion (CPC) for retargeting campaigns.
Ultimately, the goal of your retargeting strategy is to remind customers why they purchased from you in the first place. Place heavy emphasis on their initial experience and the value your product offers.
4. Address Customer Pain Points
Consider that 63 percent of B2C consumers and 76 percent of B2B customers expect businesses to anticipate and address their needs. This is the true value of understanding your customers’ pain points and addressing them with your products and services.
Pain is an important part of any marketing strategy, but one that can often be overlooked in e-commerce. Here’s why pain is so important:
Pain can help move a customer to action.
Pain can create a sense of relief in a customer.
Pain can tighten the conversion funnel.
Pain can improve conversion rates.
As mentioned in the content marketing section, the key to a successful product marketing strategy is to identify your customer’s pain, remind them of the pain, and then show them the solution to their pain.
These insights come from a robust market research strategy which includes keyword research, competitor reviews analysis, and customer surveys.
Take Qdoba, for example. They know that additional charges for popular add-ons, like guacamole or queso, are a pain point for their customer base. So, they don’t charge extra:
Pain points don’t stop with the purchase of your product, though. You should also have a plan in place for when your customers experience pain as part of the usual customer service journey. For example, an issue with the product.
This includes monitoring customer reviews, offering live chats with customer service agents, and reading through the results of customer surveys.
5. Reevaluate and Improve Product Positioning
Just because you’ve launched your product, it doesn’t mean you need to stick with previously chosen markets and marketing tactics. In fact, launch may have shown you a new possible market for your product or even a unique value proposition.
Pre-launch, you and your product team would have answered the following questions:
Why was this product made?
Who is this product made for?
What challenges does this product resolve?
What makes this product unique?
Post-launch, it’s time to consider whether the answers you and your team came up with held true. If not, what do the new answers look like and how do they differ from the original plan?
That difference can give you a whole new idea for repositioning your product in the ever-changing market.
When you reposition and how you do so is highly dependent on the product and costs involved. A few examples of repositioning a non-profiting product include repackaging, remarketing it to a different audience, or even adding new features.
Fortunately, you have the value of customer insights and their feedback—which wouldn’t have been available to you during the initial product launch. Use this to implement a full product positioning strategy.
6. Consider a Change to Your Pricing Structure
Another way to reposition your product is to consider a change to your pricing structure. This is helpful if you’re seeing less-than-profitable returns on your product.
A change to your pricing can be as simple as lowering (or increasing) your price or running exclusive promotions.
You can also follow the likes of Peloton and hundreds of other companies who successfully implemented the “good-better-best” approach to pricing.
In short, the good-better-best pricing strategy involves three tiers of the same product with increasing value. This enables you to make your product more accessible to new customers while also increasing spending for those customers who want more.
To continue with the Peloton example, there are four options to choose from:
The Peloton Bike (starting at $1,195).
The Peloton Bike+ (starting at $1,995).
The Peloton Tread (starting at $2,345).
The Peloton Tread+ (starting at $4,295).
While the Peloton Bike and the Peloton Tread are unique products, they still offer one experience for the customer: a home workout device.
By offering your product at various price points, you open the product up to more customers. This can be a good step for companies hoping to break into more markets.
Product Marketing Frequently Asked Questions
What are the four types of products?
There are four product classifications, all of which can benefit from product marketing. They are convenience goods, shopping goods, specialty goods, and unsought goods.
What companies can benefit from product marketing?
If you think your business can’t benefit from product marketing, you’d be wrong. Companies of any size and configuration can benefit from a planned approach to product launch and sales.
What are the types of product marketing?
There are over 20 marketing activities that can fall under product marketing. These include advertising, branding, product management, product development, sales, and promotion.
What is the difference between marketing and product marketing?
Product marketing is a subset of marketing. Marketing is a broader term encompassing activities like marketing communications, operations, and project management.
Product Marketing Strategies: Conclusion
From product development to customer analysis to launch, a product marketing strategy can ensure you hit all the milestones in a set timeline.
In turn, you can launch your product on time and increase your odds of success.
As long as you have a solid product marketing plan in place (one that mitigates risks and anticipates customer needs), you’ll be off to a better start than most companies.
Which product marketing strategy do you think will be most effective for your up-and-coming product launch?
Are you happy with the number of leads your marketing campaigns are generating? Or, do you wish they were a bit more effective?
If you’re serious about growing your business—whether it’s a B2B company, an e-commerce store, or a startup—increasing the number of leads should be a top priority. Setting up online campaigns is a good start, but it’s not enough. You need to optimize those marketing campaigns to squeeze every last lead from your funnel.
Are you ready to get to work? Here are seven strategies to generate leads like never before.
Why Are Leads so Crucial to Business Growth?
Two of marketers’ top priorities are generating leads and converting those leads to customers. Only increasing customer satisfaction comes close to the importance of getting new leads.
It’s no surprise that lead generation is a top priority. Without a continuous flow of new leads, sales dry up. Without sales, there’s no revenue. And without revenue, your business folds.
What’s more, most people who land on your site won’t purchase right away. You need to constantly collect leads so you can nurture them and convert them into buyers in the future.
Not just any leads will do, however. Referrals, conferences, and cold calling are all great lead generation strategies, but they aren’t enough. You also need to learn how to generate more leads from your online campaigns.
Why are advertising leads better? Using targeting you can gather better leads faster and even automate parts of the process. How do you make sure your ads are driving quality leads?
How to Generate Leads Online: 7 Strategies to Drive More Leads
If you aren’t sure how to create a lead generation campaign, I have previous articles to walk you through the process. What I’m going to do is show you how to generate leads online by improving your existing ad campaigns.
Optimize Your Landing Page
Your landing page (or squeeze page) is one of the most important elements of your online lead generation campaign. The goal is to leave the visitor with no choice but to hand over information in exchange for something valuable.
Landing pages convert better than most other ads or offers. The average conversion rate is 2.35 percent, but some have conversion rates in excess of 10 percent. If your landing page’s conversion rate isn’t pushing double digits, you should look to optimize one or more elements ASAP.
I recommend looking at your page’s copy, including its headline, first. Make sure your copy is short, sharp, and engaging. Users need to understand exactly what your product is and how it helps them within a few seconds of landing on your site. Make sure you focus on the benefits of your product to the user, not its features.
Spend more time tweaking and testing your headline than anything else. This will be the first thing a user reads and one of the biggest deciding factors in whether they continue browsing the rest of the page.
You can speed up a user’s understanding of your product by including a video on your landing page. A good chunk of your audience would rather watch a video than read your copy, which is why 76 percent of sales teams say video is key to securing more deals.
Finally, remove all distractions from your page. The layout should be as simple as possible and there’s no need for a navigation bar or links to any other pages on your site. This leaves the user with two options: close their browser window or sign up.
ConvertKit’s Creator Pass is a fantastic example of how to create a great landing page. There’s no headline navigation, the headline copy offers a clear benefit, and there’s an enticing call to action right in front of you.
Offer Real Value
Arguably the most important part of your landing page isn’t the copy, image, or CTA. It’s the piece of content, tool, or resource you offer in return for each lead’s email address.
For most brands, gated content takes the form of a PDF download, something like an ebook or a whitepaper. But it doesn’t have to be. Case studies, surveys, webinars and video series are all excellent types of gated content.
Whatever form your gated content takes, it must deliver tremendous value. Otherwise leads will leave your funnel as quickly as they entered. How do you deliver value? By solving a problem your leads have. What are their pain points? Where do they get stuck? What expertise can you leverage to make their lives a little bit easier?
Delivering value also means presenting gated content in the best way possible. Make it visually appealing, with images, videos, and other forms of multimedia content. The nicer it is for your leads to consume, the more they’ll engage with it.
Here’s an example of a non-ebook lead magnet from Leadpages:
They know their leads often struggle to create high converting pages, so they created a training course to solve that issue.
Use Automation to Nurture Leads
Collecting leads is just the first step of the process; you also need to nurture them. Only two percent of sales are made at first contact, yet most salespeople give up after the first attempt. If you automate the follow-up process, you don’t have to worry about a thing.
I recommend using email to nurture when possible. It is a great way to drip feed messages to your leads, it also generates massive ROI. According to research by the Direct Marketing Association, the ROI of email marketing is £42 for every £1 spent.
If you don’t have an email automation platform yet, check out my review of the best solutions. Then integrate your landing page’s form so every email is automatically added to your mailing list.
Next, create an automated series of emails that is sent out at regular intervals. Your goal is to take leads through each stage of the buying process—and that means providing them with the right educational content at the right time. Start by educating them about your wider industry and their general problems. A couple of emails later, you can start to focus on your product and service and how you can help.
The more emails you send, the more you can make your product the hero of the email, and the more direct you can be with the lead.
Use Chatbots to Turn Conversations Into High-Quality Leads
Your salespeople aren’t the only ones who can nurture leads. Chatbots can automate almost every part of the lead generation process. They’re incredibly effective at it, too. Over half of businesses that use AI-powered chatbots generate better quality leads.
Start by replacing forms on your landing page with a chat bot. Forms can be long-winded and rarely offer a great user experience. Chatbots make it easier for prospects to fill out their details. In some cases, users may not even be aware they’re filling out a lead form.
You can also use chatbots to respond to leads at lightning speed. Response time matters in lead generation. A study by Harvard Business Review shows businesses that respond to leads in under five minutes are 100 times more likely to convert them. With chatbots, you can automate the response process and send a message as soon as a lead fills out a form.
Finally, use chatbots to nurture and qualify leads. Chatbots can ask the same qualifying question as your salespeople to separate the wheat from the chaff. The best can be sent directly to sales, while everyone else is added to a nurturing sequence.
Drift’s chatbot is an excellent example of this. It asks a qualifying question as soon as someone lands on the site, putting them straight through to a sales rep if they’re ready.
Use Multi-Platform Campaigns
How many platforms are you using to advertise your landing page and gated content? You probably aren’t using enough.
Today’s customer journey is long. Most don’t convert to customers the first time they land on your site. The majority probably won’t sign up on your landing page, either. A recent Google study found it takes between 20 and 500 touchpoints to become a customer.
The solution is a multi-touch campaign, where your message is delivered in multiple formats across multiple channels.
Advertising on a range of channels maximizes the chances that potential customers will see and click your ad. It’s a numbers game at the end of the day. The more shots you take, the more chances you have to score.
Leverage Personalization
If you want an easy way to increase conversion rates at every stage of your online lead generation campaign, try personalization. In a survey of B2B sales and marketing professionals, over three-quarters (77 percent) said personalization made for better customer relationships, and over half (55 percent) said personalization led to higher sales conversions.
How can you add personalization into your funnels to generate leads?
Start by personalizing your ads. While Apple may have made creating hyper-personalized ads a lot harder, Google still makes it relatively easy to personalize paid search ads with dynamic ads.
Next, personalize your landing page, particularly the call to action. Research shows personalized CTAs achieve 202 percent better conversions. Marketing tools like HubSpot and Unbounce can help you create dynamic CTAs that change depending on who views them. But you could also go old school and create several different versions of your page for each ad group and personalize the copy accordingly.
Finally, build personalization into your email automation tool. Every major email marketing tool makes it easy to automatically insert the recipient’s name into the subject line and body copy, so there’s absolutely no excuse not to personalize your nurturing emails.
Target Your Ads Carefully
There’s no point wasting resources nurturing leads who will never buy your product. That’s why you need to target your lead generation ads carefully.
I will say it’s important not to be too hasty when judging the performance of your landing page ads. When pruning and optimizing ad campaigns, don’t just judge performance based on how many people they send to your landing page that sign up. That’s a good measure, but it’s not as important as how many people actually convert into customers.
Think about it. One ad campaign could have a ridiculously high signup conversion rate of 20 percent. But if only a tiny fraction of those people make a purchase, it’s not a particularly effective ad. An ad campaign with a much lower signup conversion rate could be far more effective at generating high-quality leads.
Of course, this means you’re going to have to wait longer to collect relevant data. But the end result should be a much more targeted and effective ad campaign.
The best way to target ads effectively? Target keywords with higher buyer intent. These are search terms that indicate the user is closer to conversion.
Frequently Asked Questions About Generating More Leads
How do you build a lead generation campaign?
Start by having an objective and defining your target audience. Create a valuable piece of gated content and drive traffic to it using paid ads. Collect emails and then use email to nurture those leads.
What is an example of a lead generation marketing campaign?
A gated whitepaper is an example of a lead generation marketing campaign. Webinars can also be used as a lead generation marketing campaign to acquire leads and nurture them using video
How do I optimize my lead generation campaign?
There are several strategies to optimize lead generation campaigns. Improve your landing page copy, put your emails on autopilot, use chatbots to speed up response time, and personalize messaging.
Where should I advertise for my lead gen campaign?
Social media platforms are one of the most cost-effective places to advertise your lead generation campaign. But the important thing is to advertise wherever your target audience hangs out online.
Conclusion: Generate More Leads to Improve Marketing ROI
Improving your online marketing campaigns and optimizing how you generate leads are the keys to growing your business. But you don’t have to use all of the strategies I’ve listed all at once.
Optimizing your campaigns should be an ongoing endeavor, so pick one or two of these strategies to implement at a time. Pretty soon you’ll send your ROI skyrocketing.
Now you know how to generate leads online, which strategy will you start with first?
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