How to Set-Up a Mailchimp Account for Email Marketing

Despite the rise of social media, email marketing is still a massively valuable addition to any business’ online tool belt. Growing your business mailing list and creating engaging, useful or entertaining content for your subscribers should be standard practice in 2016.

If it isn’t, don’t worry. Get started today and before you know it you’ll be an email marketing expert!

In this case we will focus on Mailchimp, arguably the best and most popular email marketing platform available online.

Go to Mailchimp.com and click “Sign Up Free” in the top right-hand corner to get started.

Next fill out your relevant details including your email address, username and password. These could be generic business details or specific to a member of staff, you decide. When you’re happy click “Get Started”. 

After that you will receive an email from Mailchimp, to the address you listed, that will seek to activate and validate your account. Don’t worry if you don’t receive it instantly and keep an eye on your Spam and Trash folders just in case.

Follow the details in the email and you’ll be good to go! After that the fun can begin and you can explore the Mailchimp Dashboard until you feel comfortable to get cracking.

Good luck!

How to Set-Up a Twitter Business Account

Twitter has been around for a lifetime (in Internet terms anyway…) but if you’re a brand new business or have never used the social website and app before you might be wondering where to start.

With this short guide we’ll get you set-up with a brand new Twitter account for business.

To begin, visit Twitter.com and click on the “Sign Up” button.

The next step is to fill in your business name, email address and password. You can then skip the mobile phone stage, if you want, and head straight to the next section where you will pick your username. Make this your business name or something closely related.

Next, work through the various Twitter set-up stages where they ask about your Interests and other identifiers. You now have a fully fledged Twitter account for your business and you will be greeted with a screen similar to below. 

After that click “Edit Profile”, available via the drop-down menu on the upper right-hand side of the screen, at any time to edit your profile in any way. 

Remember to include your location, a short descriptive biography about your business, a link to your website and a great profile and cover photo!

Good luck tweeting! 

How to Set-Up a Facebook Business Page

Facebook is now a massively popular, and well-established, tool for businesses and brands on both a local and global scale.

 

If you haven’t joined the party yet or want to start a new business page for a new project, but can’t quite remember how you did it in the first place, follow the steps below and get started in minutes!

 

Click on “Create Page” which can be found via the drop down menu on the right side of the Facebook screen.

Click on the type of business most relevant to your business or brand.

Enter your basic details to get started.

Work through the four separate stages of “Set Up”.

After you’ve done all of that, click save and you’ll be ready to go!

 

Digital Attention in Northern Ireland

Social media is everywhere nowadays. In the last ten years we have seen the rise and growth of Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Reddit and countless other channels.

 

If you’re unsure about how this directly affects you from a business standpoint it might be worth considering Gary Vaynerchuk’s “Attention argument”.

 

Eyes & Ears

 

Vaynerchuk, in countless blogs and videos, repeatedly highlights that smart businesses market their product or service wherever mass attention exists.

 

For all of us in 2016, this means social media.

 

In just the UK alone Facebook has 30 million users, Twitter 15 million and Instagram 14 million.

 

If you can sell worldwide, most likely through an e-commerce site, and you want to expand this out to a global scale the numbers become even more incredible.

 

This is where the general public now focuses its attention and that means this is where we need to market our messages.

 

What to Focus on?

 

Another way to consider this is by using public road roundabouts as an example.

 

Every week I drive past roundabouts that feature a business advertisement or billboard stuck in the middle.

 

In some cases this could be connected to charity or local sponsorships and that is fine.

 

From a business point of view it makes no sense.

 

People fly past roundabouts and pay zero attention to this platform for a message, so why waste time and money advertising there?

 

Think about where you market your business nowadays; think about the general public attention connected to whichever platform you’re using and then think about if it’s really worth it.

 

Moving Forward

 

Moving forward isn’t hard.

 

Now that you know where the collective public attention is focused, you can begin to tailor messages about your business or product for specific channels.

 

Go where the attention is. Then try to engage with potential customers in a fun, original or creative way.

 

If you want to talk more about digital attention, get in touch.

Northern Ireland Tourism Workshops

Tourism is projected to become a billion pound industry in Northern Ireland by 2020.

 

Whilst that might be the case, there is still plenty of work yet to be done and recently myself and my colleague Jason Powell, of Powell Destination Marketing, had the pleasure of teaming up to host a tourism marketing workshop in Portrush on the north coast.

 

We set-up shop in the Magherabuoy House Hotel, just off the incredible Causeway Coastal Route, and started our workshop designed specifically for local bed & breakfast and self-catering traders.

Focus on Tourism

 

Jason started the day with a focus set firmly on the principles of tourism marketing.

 

With so much support now readily available via Tourism NI and Tourism Ireland it’s important to utilise what’s already out there including the regular opportunities e-zines and in-depth market research.

 

These two massive organisations have undertaken all of the research needed so we don’t have to. 

 

Instead, we have to focus on creating engaging products and messages for our target customer profiles like the Culturally Curious or Great Escapers.

 

A Great Escaper wants a holiday linked back to nature in someway so why not package your bed and breakfast rooms with a local walking or hiking trail?

 

The research tells us this is exactly what they want so now we have to get the message out there!

 

Focus on Digital

 

The next step is all about getting these specific messages and products in front of potential travellers.

 

Nowadays it is essential to do this is via digital channels online and the second half of the workshop allowed me to focus on all things digital whilst also relating back to Jason’s talk earlier in the day.

 

We focused on using digital signposts to drive people back to your website where direct bookings or enquiries are most likely to happen.

 

These digital signposts include, but aren’t limited to, popular social media channels, search engines and email marketing.

 

Puzzle Pieces

 

It was a great day and the feedback has been very positive.

 

At Counter Digital and Powell Destination Marketing we try to keep things simple when it comes to tourism marketing.

 

Tourism NI and Tourism Ireland hand us the puzzle pieces; it’s just about us putting them together in the right order and getting out there online!

For more information on tourism workshops click here.

Connecting Online and Offline Marketing in Northern Ireland

The rapid evolution of digital (online) marketing can make it daunting but the reality is that the goal remains the same – getting a message out there and in front of customers.

 

In some cases this can only happen after successfully connecting your online and offline marketing.

 

The two should never exist as separate entities.

 

Real World to Digital

 

I recently worked with a Northern Ireland gym and they had one key aim – increase footfall and class participation.

 

We started to make members more aware of upcoming classes and timetables.

 

We filtered this message through various social channels but we had to connect with our offline marketing to really achieve results.

 

We did this by collecting the email addresses of customers who entered the gym every day.

 

Every customer was asked two things:

 

What was their email address?

 

What did they most want to know about their gym?

 

We were then able to use the growing list of email addresses and customer feedback comments to create online email marketing campaigns that really worked and added value for both the gym and their members.

 

Digital in Real-Time

 

Similar to a gym, a hotel is the perfect place to showcase the connection between online and offline marketing.

 

There are opportunities everywhere in a hotel to collect the information that’s all around you.

 

We successfully did this, via opinion cards in the bar and restaurant, and then used the data collected to inform and direct our new digital marketing campaigns.

 

***

 

It won’t be as easy in every sector but connecting the dots between online and offline can really benefit your digital marketing here in Northern Ireland.

Bringing a Farm Online

Last summer we had the pleasure of working with Valdale Farm as they embarked on a new venture – producing natural raw milk.

 

Valdale Farm is a local Northern Ireland diary farm based just outside of Ballymena in County Antrim.

 

While they have produced pasteurised diary products for decades they recently decided to enter the natural market and needed some help spreading this message online.

 

Route to Market

 

There were various aims and targets set out at the beginning of this project with a massive focus placed on providing interested customers with the correct information and the right message.

 

Also, for a variety of reasons Valdale decided against exploring a social media route to market so ranking highly on Google (and Bing) was our key priority.

 

The product can only be purchased on site at the farm so it was extremely important that potential customers knew exactly where they could purchase raw milk in Northern Ireland.

 

Customer Focused Content

 

With very  clear aims we set to work and viewed search engines as answer machines and considered what sort of questions potential Valdale Farm customers might ask.

 

Where can I buy raw milk in Northern Ireland?

 

Is raw milk safe?

 

Why drink raw milk?

 

With this customer focused approach we set about creating relevant content that would both help customers and boost search engine rankings.

 

Amongst other actions we also ensured that title tags, descriptions, headings and image tags were all optimised for the best results possible.

 

Ranking on Google in Northern Ireland

 

With this organised approach we achieved the results wanted.

 

Valdale Farm now ranks on the first search page for “Northern Ireland raw milk” and “Raw milk in Northern Ireland” on both Google and Bing.

 

This means that Valdale Farm are now getting their message in front of customers actively seeking out their product!

 

If you want to know how this could apply to your business get in touch.

Learning at the Focus on Food 2016 Conference

Sometimes we’re so focused on the day-to-day that we forget to take time to ask ourselves questions about our businesses:

 

Where are we going?

 

What should we do next?

 

How do we get there?

 

If you work within the food, hospitality or tourism sectors of Northern Ireland the Focus on Food 2016 conference in Belfast was a great opportunity to ask those questions and think about the future.

 

Lessons

 

Although the conference was centered on a specific set of industries it’s easy to use the lessons learned when working in other sectors as well.

 

Lynsey Holywood of Ulster University noted that successful “food tourism” is achieved by creating “authentic, memorable and engaging experiences”.

 

Holywood also highlighted that a food industry disrupter, like AirBnB in the hospitality sector, is not far away. It is predicted that soon, amongst other things, we will be able to hire incredible chefs and cooks for the night or even eat in their own homes!

 

These two points can easily be expanded onto other industries and it’s clear that in 2016 we can’t rest on our laurels. We have to constantly ask ourselves questions, challenge our businesses and strive to move forward because disrupters are everywhere.

 

Likewise, we also have to create something authentic, engaging and valuable for our customers. Ewan Venters, Fortnum & Mason CEO, continued with this theme as he highlighted two key points to consider when marketing any brand, service or product:

 

Creating a shift in perception takes time

 

Creating memories leave a lasting impression and creates (social) content

 

Another interesting point came via Damien Donnelly as he highlighted that one third of all restaurant bookings now come directly from Google alone!

 

Digital Point of View

 

The above are just a small number of the many valuable points raised on the day and from a digital marketing point of view, in any industry, this means really striving to create incredible content and campaigns.

 

It also means businesses have to get themselves on Google in the correct way because if they aren’t doing it, one of their competitors is.

 

Finally, in todays saturated marketplace experience really is everything but that memorable experience could be a simple video on Facebook with a friendly face and a local voice behind it.

 

It could also be as simple as monitoring customer reviews and searching for new ways to improve.

 

As Ewan Venters noted, improving and shifting perceptions takes time but taking a moment to think is the start everyone needs.