I hate the term growth hacker, but I love the concept. The idea that you can grow a business from 0 to thousands of customers without much of a marketing budget is a beautiful thing, and very much the result of growth hacks — free marketing tactics that grow traffic, brand, links, and eventually, a customer base.
Moz is my fourth startup, and at each one, the same question has kept me up at night: What else can we do to expedite growth? You see, an early-stage company is never lacking time and effort, it's lacking tactics — tactics that earn customers without relying on a big budget.
Which leads me to this post.
I wanted to pull together a list of all of the "hacks" that I've picked up over the years, along with those from other startups, into a holistic view on how a startup can grow on the web today. For the sake of this post, I've focused the list primarily to software and consumer internet startups — which is where most of my experience lies — but it can apply to nearly any web business. As you'll notice, I've broken the list down into two categories to help you prioritize; low-hanging fruit and long-term investments. The low-hanging fruit tactics are the things that you should be doing today. The long-term investments are those that you should evaluate, but put some thought into whether or not you should pursue, as they may not make sense for every business.
But enough talking, let's dig in.
Low-hanging fruit
1. FAQ for the long-tail
This one was picked up from my good friend Neil Patel, who is a master of SEO and startup growth. The basic gist is to use your FAQ (or help forum) to target long-tail search queries, specifically those that lead to a buying decision. By the very nature of long-tail queries, the potential customer is usually pretty far along in the buying process. Using keyword research, targeted FAQ topics can help put you in the top of the search results for the questions that your customers are looking for answers to. When you do this, make sure that the FAQ has a clear call to action to sign up for your product or service, as well as a custom domain that doesn't rob you of the indexed pages and content. Content, mind you, that your community is often times creating. Tools like UserVoice (Perks Listing) and GetSatisfaction are great platforms to use for your FAQ, as they allow for domain customization and the use of your own CSS styles. CrazyEgg (Perks Listing), Neil's company, is a fantastic example of this in action.
2. Manual outreach to first customers
Your first customers will likely become your biggest advocates if — and only if — you treat them the right way. For your first 100 customers, you should be reaching out to each one, personally. I'm not talking about a canned email or an email from your info@ alias. I'm talking about a personal email. This is your chance to build advocates by thanking them for signing up and offering your help, whenever they may need it. It's so simple, yet so many companies overlook it. If you're beyond 100 customers (and have a budget), take a page out of MailChimp's book (Perks Listing) and make the high-touch process a bit more scalable. After sending your first campaign on MailChimp, you'll receive the email below, prompting you to claim your free gift — a MailChimp t-shirt (#want).
3. Partner distributions
It amazes me that more software companies don't do partner distributions. The concept of a partner distribution is simple; a discounted offer on your product or service that you distribute through partners. We've done this at Moz, and it's been a huge channel — over 7,000 free trials and 2,000 paid conversions in under a year. Keep in mind, there's no cost to running partner distributions, only the increased operating costs of offering an extended free trial (in the case of Moz). To apply this to your business, you'll need a few things. The first thing is a partner page, a custom URL that you can create for each partner that explains the offer and factors in the discount. Next, you'll need some platform to return the favor. At Moz, that's Perks, which allows us to co-market, while providing some awesome value to our customers. Below is an example of a partner distribution that we did with our friends at WPMU (Perks Listing).
4. Track competitor mentions
As many link-builders know, one of the best ways to find link prospects is to monitor where your competitors are getting mentioned. With that context, we built Fresh Web Explorer, to help you understand where your brand and your competitor's brand is being mentioned. Each mention of a competitor is an opportunity. An opportunity to build a relationship and a link. Along with that, you can find press opportunities by searching relevant subject matter in FWE. For example, if I was in the Wordpress hosting industry, I could search things like "Wordpress Hosting" or "Wordpress Development" to find sources that are covering topics related to my product — example of that below. Let's call this PR 102.
5. Double loop referral programs
Perhaps one of the most well-known (yet underutilized) tactics is the double loop referral program. Dropbox famously did this with the "invite your friends, get free storage" campaign. In the non-virtual world, DirectTV does this by giving every user that refers a new customer $100 off their bill, forever, along with $100 off to the customer that they refer. The structure can take many forms, but the concept is the same — provide monetary value, from both sides, for your users to refer your product, and they just may. Sometimes the traditional affiliate model just won't cut it. Pro tip: try just simply asking your users to refer their friends if they like the product or service. Often times, a reward isn't necessary if the product is good enough.
6. HARO
Wouldn't it be great if press came to you, rather than trying to guess what they're going to write about? Well, that's where HARO (Help A Reporter Out) comes into play. Created by the amazing Peter Shankman, HARO is a twice-daily email that pulls together all of the editors that are looking for quotes or opinions on articles that they're writing, usually on top-tier publications. It's free, and a complete no-brainer. HARO was the only reason why I was quoted in the Wall Street Journal about, yes, workplace fashion. Go figure.
7. Verified program
Link building without the manual outreach? Yes, please. It's amazing how underutilized verified programs are from a marketing standpoint. Some of the best examples of verified programs in the wild are Google Analytics and Twitter. All of these programs provide some sort of verification process or educational program, which in turn provides the individuals and companies that go through that process with a badge to proudly display on their site. As we all know, along with showing some credibility to the individual or company, an embedded certification badge also provides a link back to any site you'd like. Which, I hear, makes the SEO gods happy. We like this idea so much, that we're kicking around the idea of adding an embeddable badge to the Recommended Companies List.
8. Social prospecting
Consider this the guerrilla marketing tactic of the digital age: social prospecting via Twitter. Run a search on your favorite Twitter client for terms related to your product or service and provide helpful responses to those that are looking for help. For example, we do this for Stride, an app I helped create, by searching for the terms like "CRM recommendations" or "client tracking software." Having these searches saved pulls in a constant feed of prospective customers. However, I put this out there with caution; don't be that guy. Don't just tweet out a link. Provide helpful recommendations, often of your competitors, or engage on a topic that may be different from the keywords that led you. There's nothing worse than a feed of promotional garbage.
9. Video syndications
Online education is all the rage these days, and rightfully so. There's platforms like Coursera, Grovo, Udemy, and many more that empowers anyone to learn. If you produce video content and aren't taking advantage of these platforms, you're missing out on a great distribution source. We've done this with Udemy, utilizing our Whiteboard Friday content, and it's been a huge hit. What this allows us to do is reach an audience that wouldn't otherwise know about Whiteboard Friday, and are now exposed to the Moz brand. Like you needed more reason to create video content.
10. Comment marketing
Speaking of Whiteboard Friday, Rand did an awesome one on the next tactic, comment marketing. Using comment marketing intelligently, while providing value, is a great way to build relationships, earn links, and expose your brand to a completely new audience. In attempt to avoid duplicating what Rand said so elegantly, head on over to that Whiteboard Friday post to learn the right way to do comment marketing.
11. In-app sharing
Just putting links to share a page on Twitter or like an app on Facebook isn't enough these days, there's got to be more of an incentive for a user to share your site. The best integrations of social sharing come in the context of the application. For example, when a user achieves a certain milestone or unlocks a certain badge, they're presented with an option to share that achievement publicly. Perhaps the best, and most well-known example of a company that does this beautifully is Foursquare. When you unlock a badge, you're presented with the option to share that achievement socially. A great way to boost your ego, and an even better way to drive brand impressions for Foursquare.
12. Winbacks
This is one that Justin and Renea on the marketing team have been piloting at Moz, and it's simplistically brilliant. For most SaaS companies, once a user cancels their account or doesn't convert on their free trail, they're forgotten about. Why? Just because the product wasn't a fit at that time doesn't mean that it'll never be a fit. The concept of a winback is to send an email to those in said cohort, with an offer that makes it easy to come back to the product. For Moz, it was an extended free trial period:
13. Customer thank-you cards
On the topic of keeping your customers around, a "thank you" can be so simple, yet so powerful. At Moz, we do this in the form of a "happy package" (yes, really) once a Moz member hits a certain level of MozPoints. But it doesn't have to be that elaborate. An investment in something as simple as thank you cards, with a hand-written message, can go a long way in keeping your customers passionate about your product — and there's no better marketing than word of mouth.
14. Influencer program
Taking care of influencers, and getting them into your product early can be one of the most impactful things you can do for your company. For example, if I were creating a new product in the inbound marketing space, Rand is one of the first people I'd reach out to offering him early access. Using tools like FollowerWonk or Klout is a great way to find the influencers in your space — it's then up to you to provide them with early access, a free account, or anything else to incentivize them to use your product. Nothing fancy here, just good old fashioned influencer outreach.
Long-term investments
15. Tap into the viral loop
If you're lucky enough to have a product that lends itself well to the viral loop, you'd be a fool not to take advantage of it. Simply speaking, a viral loop is the idea of utilizing a natural function of your product to expedite growth. Heading back down the path of congratulating MailChimp on all their awesomeness, they do a fantastic job of utilizing the natural viral component of their product. If you've ever used MailChimp, it's likely you're familiar with MonkeyRewards, an option they offer when sending a campaign that allows users to place a "Powered by Mailchimp" badge at the bottom of their email in exchange for campaign credits. By doing this, they exchange a cheaper bill for free marketing to hundreds of thousands of people. Not a bad trade.
16. Guides
You're likely all familiar with Moz's Beginner's Guide to SEO. What you may not know, however, is how powerful it is from a growth perspective. Without digging into too much detail on numbers, it's suffice to say that the beginner's guide contributes significantly to our consistent stream of free trial sign-ups. If you're thinking to yourself, "Well, that's just because you're Moz," you're only partially correct. I wanted to test it for myself, with a lesser known brand, so I did. We created a Beginner's Guide to Sales for small businesses through Stride, and it's been just as powerful from a growth perspective, only on a smaller scale. But beware, guides, if done correctly, are a huge investment of time and design resources. At Moz, Ashley and her team have been working on some new guides on the topics of social media and content, and they've taken months of work. But, from the data I've seen first-hand, it's well worth the investment.
17. OEM deals
Back in the business development camp, there's a heavy investment opportunity that exists for most products called an OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) deal. Essentially, this is a deeply integrated partnership where a software (or hardware) provider bundles your product as part of their offering in order to fill a need or gap in their offering. The reason why it's such a heavy investment is that it often requires co-branding work, a separate billing infrastructure, and the negotiation of complex agreements. We've gone down this path a few times at Moz, only to walk away because the investment was greater, in our opinion, than the output. OEM deals are more commonly found on the hardware side, where a laptop, for example, ships with a software product pre-installed (example of that below). However, software OEM deals are becoming more and more common. If you're in the service business, play around with pairing your services with a related software product, similar to what we've done with Distilled.
18. Product integrations
The integration of your product into an existing, often much larger product, makes a lot of sense. Depending on how in-depth of an integration you're looking to do, this could almost be considered a low-hanging fruit option. There's truly no barrier to do it, only the investment of your time. In the software world, there's a few examples of great integration marketplaces. Notably Salesforce, Hootsuite (Perks Listing), and Zendesk. From our discussions with Hootsuite, they see an average of 100 to 500 installs per day of each application in their gallery. The impact of an integration, in terms of users acquired can be in the thousands. Not only that, but product integrations are often the entry point to a much deeper relationship — potentially even an acquisition.
19. Industry surveys
Becoming the voice of an industry can have massive implications on growth. One way to do this, as we've found at Moz, is to create an industry survey and publish the results. By doing this, you not only get to use the results for your own product intelligence, but also become the point of reference for thousands of people in your industry. This, as you can imagine, is a lot of work. Evangelizing the survey to the point it has enough data to make an impact, putting time into the analysis, and finally visualizing the data in a beautiful way can be a huge time investment. That's not to say it's not worth it, only something to consider when prioritizing. Looking back on the impact of industry surveys at Moz, it was definitely worth the time.
20. Rally the troops
21. Free standalone tools
And, that's it. Easy, right? :) Don't let this list overwhelm you. Depending where you're at in the stage of your company, some of these tactics may make a whole lot of sense — others not at all. This is meant to be your ammunition belt, something that you can pull ideas and tactics from as you reach certain plateaus or sticking points in your business. It's not meant to be a checklist.
Adapt to it, add to it, and put your own spin on it. Even better, if you have something to add to the list, feel free to drop it in the comments below.
I'll see you at the top of the growth curve.
If after reading this amazing post someone dares to ask a "But what can I do if I am in boring niche" kind of question, I can seriously start snapping faces all around.
You have been advised :)
Ok... it seems that some people didn't understand the irony in my comment... so, for them - who maybe are dealing with boring niches - here's a list of post that can surely be of help:
Thanks for these resources Gianluca.
Our company is in the tax space (the most boring thing that some people ca think of) but we don't think it's boring at all. If mint.com can make personal finance sexy anyone can do it. I would add Noah Kagen's blog https://okdork.com to that list to see what they did too. Also, I made a Scoo.it board, where I add stuff about Growth in FinTech (supposedly one of the most boring industries) at https://www.scoop.it/t/growth-in-fintech
Tax isn't boring as long as you are telling us how we can avoid paying so much :)
Good and loyal Customers is the result of good service, building relationships, fulfilling the promises, showing more than expected results on time, good ROI and much more.
Disclaimer: This isn't terribly helpful, or even relevant to the conversation.
Andrew, Graham and yourself are wearing a similar flannel shirt in the profile pics at the moment. It made me giggle a little. That is all.
"FAQ for the long-tail" - this is excellent method, I got excited about this and came up with a whole process for utilizing this.
Bonus Tip: Use videos in your FAQ pages. Add YouTube or Wistia (there is a Perk for Moz Pro Members) videos to your FAQ pages can drive video search traffic to your page as well.
There are a few other good ones out there too. I like Positionly.com.
I think that's it for now :)
Thanks for the guide, Sean! Really good and thorough stuff. Adding value to the article like a true marketer.
Thanks! Yeah, always trying to add value. And I like your idea as well. Creating inspiring FAQ pages can really turn some people onto company. Personally, there are a few companies that the only reason I chose them over a competitor was because their FAQs answered every question I had and it was super easy to find the answers. I think videos can go a long way in helping making your FAQs inspiring and easy for users.
I love #2 (Manual outreach to first customers). I just read an essay by Paul Graham talking about the same thing. Use your smallness as an advantage that lets you personally reach out, both to find initial customers and make and keep them happy: "That's one advantage of being small: you can provide a level of service no big company can."
I love tip #16 - Guides
But here's the problem... we need to prime the pump and get traffic to our guide - because few are going to track down our guide (especially with Google goin' crazy with their slaps).
Here's what I do:I look for bloggers who show up #1 in Google. Usually, they're getting some nice, steady traffic. I contact the blogger and offer to PayPal a monthly fee to insert a link to my guide (or special report, whitepaper, etc.) within their blog post...
.... Most bloggers LOVE me because they're getting paid (for example $20.00 a month) to insert a simple 5-word link in their article to my guide. It's fast and easy cash for them... and fast, easy (and super cheap) precisely-targeted traffic for me.
Yes, this works like crazy. I love getting my direct competitors to send me their valuable readers.:>
And if the traffic ever peters out, I simply cancel my PayPal subscription and move on - no harm, no foul.
If that's too complicated, there's a website that offers an easier way to sponsor specific webpages on just about any topic (mostly B2C). Here's a YouTube video about it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksoiNnUaBIA
Sure, free traffic is great if you can get it. But for me, paying for traffic is the way to go - especially when I'm able to get it fast and cheap.
You must be new here
This post is AWESOME and actionable to any start-up willing to grow and increase their customer base!
When you have such ideas lined up in your marketing side all you have to focus is on kick ass products that really helps people and convince them that their money is not wasted
I especially like the idea of double loop referral program and obviously I am a big fan of Moz’s point system that they have on their blog!
Superb and mind blowing!
"Don't let this overwhelm you." I am a bit overwhelmed but also inspired. Since I started my company 3 years ago I haven't done much to market my product. I've relied on word of mouth and the philosophy that "great customer service is the best marketing." But I'm slowly learning how to branch out and be more proactive with marketing. This is a nice list of options to add to my toolbox.
I love #13, sending hand written notes! With the ubiquity of email, people hardly receive any actual mail, especially not personal letters. This thank-you is sure to stand out in a customer's mind!
FAQ sounds legit to me, but how about Q&A? Did I miss it being mentioned in the article? It's basically user generated content. I figure it might require a little moderation, but it's as good an approach as FAQ. The fact that Moz has Q&A only proves that one might consider this.
Now that I think about it, I completely missed Q&A. Thanks for the reminder, another great tactic, and one we've used heavily at Moz.
Definitely the Q&A could be fruitful if moderated with care, it covers the topic missed in FAQ and other website content to get advantage of Long Tail Keywords. A Thumbs Up to EugeneKrall for adding one more superb tactic.
Regards
Sasha
Lots of great tips in here - thanks Andrew. The handwritten thank you notes really resonated with the Kick Point crew. We might have already sent some fun new stationary to our designer. Maybe. :)
The FAQ tip seems incredibly useful! Some FAQ pages are uninspired - probably because people don't think they're all that useful. The way you frame the concept and how useful it can makes me want to make an awesome FAQ page RIGHT NOW.
Talk about the ultimate low-hanging fruit. I encourage you, however, to pick a platform like UserVoice or GetSatisfaction that allows your community to submit content.
Fantastic to see such a comprehensive list. Thank you! Hand-written thank you notes are such a good practice. I use custom stamps of my logo for a special touch. Keeps clients happy!
Nice touch! May have to borrow that one. :)
Hello Andrew,
Thanks for providing unique tactics to reach larger audience. Specially the "Faq for the long-tail", "Manual outreach to first customers" & "comment marketing" are really superb as anyone can do it at first hand. I think along with the "track competitor mentions", these three tactics should be one's first step in establishing a business.
Regarding Viral Loops, if your product doesn't have an inherent loop built-in to it, its never too late to model out what a loop might look like and then test it out and iterate. It may be the most powerful method of gaining customer attention due to leveraging individual customer's social networks.
Yes, definitely. Most miss the viral loop because they don't explicitly look for it. However, if it's not there, you shouldn't force it. Some applications and products just don't make sense with a viral loop.
Referral programs always works, a customer always looks for sales, discount and referral benefits.
Wow, what an amazing article on possibilities out there for growing a business effectively with all the tools at hand...shall i say more than a month's worth..lol...very effective.
I'm definitely going to look into this haro one....does anyone here use that already? Is this something where you can reach out to certain writers or another site where you publish a press release and pray someone picks it up? Sounds like an epic product if it can get you a good list of influencers to contact with your content and get it out there on big websites like NYT or Huff Post.
It's not a press release distribution service, it's a daily email with the names of editors and the content they're looking to write.
A complete, all in one guide, really impressive , many unique ideas comes in mind after reading it
Definitely a lot of great tips in this post. And if anyone is running a startup consultancy, you should be following @neilpatel. He provides an incredible amount of insight, transparency and candor.
Youtube can also be a valuable and economical platform for top-of-funnel client acquisition. Creating a short tutorial or interview series is a good way to demonstrate your expertise to prospects. You could develop a beginner series for your clients and an advanced series for your colleagues. Just my 2 cents.
I don't know how you got the idea of writing something for me, but you did the best thing for me. I have personally seen the effect of FAQs and Comment Marketing myself. Specially Comment marketing is something that make you look professional if your comments are bound with the post and have something to give to other readers as well. One can prove his/her professionalism by posting to the related community, it may be blogs, forums or answers.
Hats off to you for the great post.
Regards
Sasha
Totally doing the comment cards!
Good form!
your pal,
Chenzo
Hi Andrew,
Thank you so much for mentioning HARO to your readers. We really appreciate the shout out! I do want to make one minor correction about our service. We send out three daily emails vs. only two emails. Either way, thank you again and great article!
Best,
Laura
HARO's Social Media Community Manager
Low hanging fruit is key. More often than not as marketers we tend to focus on what the competition is doing and chase after that but a key thing to remember is that most competitors have been around for a while and it makes sense to reach for the easy stuff first. Thanks for a great post.
All methods are fruitful for us because this era is not belong to link building. This era belong to link earning that's why all methods are effective nowadays like Gift cards, offer discount and so on. Moz also doing similar thing while approaching their users and clients. Why we not apply similar techniques in our business site. Last not least, I like on more thing is FAQ because this section is also good for end consumers. If you provide well detail information in FAQ then there is a maximum chance that customer convert into consumer.
Wow, what an extensive collection of business building tips and advice! Seems like enough to put a book together. Thanks for this incredible value and reference tool that I can come back to and revisit for my clients.
That's not a bad idea. ; )
Andrew@
A very valuable research. I appreciate you commitment and knowledge. We all know its very competitive market to get a client on regular basis and its more competitive to keep them stay with us. If your performance is consistently good then only you can stand other wise you will out of race. In this article you have mentioned each and every point - How to start - How To stay in competition - How to perform and How to keep trust of the clients. I am glad because i findout some points where i was lacking. Overall its an effective post with practical points to read and follow.
Excellent post with some good info, think i'll share this on my twitter if you don't mind and maybe even blogroll it depending on the feedback, thanks for sharing
Excellent article!! I will definitely apply these in my marketing.
I have used HARO as much or more for developing fantastic, deeply researched and unique content as I have for outreach to build links back to the sites I work on. It really is a fantastic tool all-around, plus they love social sharing the content you write after using their services to connect with sources.
I am a huge, huge fan of the handwritten note thing. It always makes me smile when I see brands do that. Maybe it's because my grandmother threatened to never give us birthday or Christmas gifts again if we didn't hand write our thank you notes within 2 weeks of receiving gifts, but it does have a special, personal touch that I think is lacking in so much of today's marketing. It's like we've forgotten the people who use our sites are human beings. It really stands out.
Have to say I'm super psyched on the survey idea. I've been bouncing a few ideas around in my head and I feel like you just helped them congeal. I think creating in-depth surveys with proprietary results that can't be found elsewhere is a great way not just to build phenomenal unique content, but also a great way to get your study or survey cited by reputable publications in ANY vertical.
Great article. I really like the Comment Marketing tactic. Rand's video was very informational. Another part of comment marketing is community comment marketing. We get some really high quality leads that have over 50% conversion rates using this approach. I am going to look more into HARO. So far, it has been not generating any results for us, but we will have to look closer and perhaps go with the paid version.
I have used HARO as much or more for developing fantastic, deeply researched and unique content as I have for outreach to build links back to the sites I work on. It really is a fantastic tool all-around, plus HARO loves social sharing the content you write after using their services to connect with sources. It's a testimonial for their service, so win-win.
I am a huge, huge fan of the handwritten note thing. It always makes me smile when I see brands do that. Maybe it's because my grandmother threatened to never give us birthday or Christmas gifts again if we didn't hand write our thank you notes within 2 weeks of receiving gifts, but it does have a special, personal touch that I think is lacking in so much of today's marketing. It's like we've forgotten the people who use our sites are human beings. It really stands out.
Have to say I'm super psyched on the survey idea. I've been bouncing a few ideas around in my head and I feel like you just helped them congeal. I think creating in-depth surveys with proprietary results that can't be found elsewhere is a great way not just to build phenomenal unique content, but also a great way to get your study or survey cited by reputable publications in ANY vertical. Note to self.
One of the most valuable posts I've read on Moz in a long time. We're going to implement 3-4 of these before the end of the year. Great stuff. Thanks!
Thanks for the tips... they really help!
Sharing these tactics really help us recently i attend Google for Entrepreneurs Week 2013 where all fellow friends share different tactics and experiences to helps others.
Awesome tips, Andrew! These are modern-day tactics that are so remarkable. It enumerated all the available channels out there. While maximum exposure is achieved here, one should not miss to create good and lasting impression in the process in order to stand out from the rest.
Man, Andrew, this is simple but incredible.
I love seeing this kind of stuff from you. My favorite reading is of actionable tactics, and all of your writing is so actionable. Great stuff man!
Adding this to my "marketing playbook" ;]
I use content marketing and works fine to me. Of course with good keyword selection.
Gr8 Post Andrew!
Thanks for suggesting HARO and Video Syndications for reaching more audience, these can be very useful for me.
Great Stuff!! Thanks for the amazing list of tips to acquire customers. Simply amazing ideas...Thanks for sharing an insightful post!!
Excellent ideas! As I was reading them, although I've been doing a couple of the ones you mention, I got new ideas - not just for my own business but for my clients as well! Thank you!
I am upvoting this as 95.2% awesome, because the HARO tip is more like a poke in the eye with a sharp stick. I have pursued probably 50 of those inquiries in the past 6 years and the "journalists" (most often from mid-level blog sites and specialty publications) always want you to write up some long thing and invariably, nothing ever happens with your contribution. More power to you for getting the WSJ mention. Direct outreach to journalists, "put me on your list as an expert in ___________" works better.
Inspiring and depressing at the same time - great ideas and but so much to do !
13. Customer thank-you cards - I think this is a must (and a great ROI). In this digital age, anything different than the typical thank you email is remembered. Most people only receive a couple of these a year and I bet most people remembered whos sent them!
I'm all for doing manual outreach on the first customers. Apparently, most companies are focusing too much on winning new customers.
While that's supposedly ok, they fail to capitalize on repeat business even if they can get TONS of value form it. You can gain tons of things from it, aside from just actual sales, you can also get referrals, endorsements and so much more!
10. Comment marketing
I can say from personal experience that this really works, and not in abstract terms like increasing engagement, click-throughs, search rankings, etc but in actually gaining real clients who spend real money.
From our experience offering something useful always helps people find you. And when you get new leads always going above and beyond to help means that you get recommended often to there circles more quickly.
That's the pre-requisite to all of these tactics.
Really great stuff. Some of these tactics work well if you're selling software, but may not be as useful for other industries outside of software. I'd love to see if you had any additional interesting ideas (or links to articles) that would be more specifically suited to e-commerce or building a online retail brand. Thanks again!
Customer acquisition - now that's what I'm talking about :) Many of these activities are extremely high value, especially when taken together. If all we cared about were the number and authority of links, we wouldn't even bother with some of these activities - and we'd be missing out. Great tips, Andrew.
Superb contribution, thanks!
Wooooah! Some fantastic ideas here for me to take away and implement. Questions is, where do I start?!!?
Video and beginners guides look most fun to me!
Cheers,
Josh
Never heard of this FAQ concept before, simply amazing.
Good thoughts Andrew, I'd cancelled my HARO subscription because I didn't seen anything I could really help with, but perhaps I should give it a go and get stuck in where I know enough to be dangerous.
Regarding Haro I strongly suggest you to read this great post by Emma Still on Seer: https://www.seerinteractive.com/blog/be-a-haro-hero-make-the-most-of-off-topic-queries
Pro Tip for using HARO: set up email filters for terms related to your company so that you don't get overwhelmed by emails. Setting up filters will send only the relevant opportunities to your inbox and the rest to trash.
So, I've sent some emails, but haven't received anything on how to get onto Moz's Perks Page. We have a great product, we refer people to Moz all the time, and it would be a great fit. Somebody let me know!
Go ahead and drop me a line to [email protected], I'll see what I can do.
Excellent piece Andrew. Would love to hear an equivalent for consumer (B2C) companies. Some of the techniques mentioned here - Press Mentions, Comment Marketing, Affiliate marketing, Industry Survey (for infographics/content), Social Prospecting work in that domain as well.
This is a must-read for those businesses promoting their products online. Comment marketing is already common but this FAQ for the long tail, I never through of this before.
GREAT tip for gathering new customers! Thank you for sharing!
Awesome article Andrew! Your strategies literally apply to every business and we can't wait to give them a try. Thanks.
Hi Andrew, Thank you for the fresh ideas. Acquiring new customers is always the ultimate goal.
Guide that i love so much
As a company at the start of developing a new stand alone tool for marketing this post was extremely timely - I will be writing a guide and setting up training and accreditations. On a different note, I have sent a handwritten card to cilents on their birthday rather than at Christmas along with a personalised bottle of wine from Mash - cost v. small in real terms, effect v. large in reality
Love it! We do a number of these for our clients already but I admit that we certiantly should be trying a few of the others!
Andres, this wasn't a sum up for me, I actually learned new staff! Thank you so much!
Haro looks very American, anyone knows UK version of Haro?
Ah that hand-written Thank You note! Comes handy for start ups! Perfect!
All great methods, and summed up in a clean article. Thank you for sharing this!
Great posting.
It was like viewing the wonder of 7 oceans put together in a single view...
@AndrewDumont - thanks a ton.