(This is the final post of a 3-part series — you may want to read from the bottom up
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Last but not least, HubSpot’s Rick Burnes flew all the way from Boston to talk with us about Inbound Marketing. This to me was a perfect finish to a perfect day. As a marketing leader for a company that provides cutting-edge inbound marketing software, Rick talked about how social media can allow people/businesses to build profiles for themselves in order to “pull in” customers. Traditional outbound marketing will always be part of a company’s plan of attack, but it continues to make up a smaller percentage of most business’ overall marketing strategy. Inbound marketing essentially speaks of a company’s ability to get found and convert leads. Not only is it considerably cheaper, but it demonstrates how driving traffic over time from Google (and blogging, etc.) is highly advantageous to a company’s bottom line. Rick used the following graph to explain:
Another key element of Rick’s presentation was a “how to” for increasing your organic rankings. It starts with picking your keyword battles, and understanding that there are two (2) sides of optimization: On-Page (which you can control) and Off-Page (things you can’t control… ie. links into your web site). How do we get links? Through tracking, researching, and analytics. Blogging, in particular, means more inbound links (about 97% more!). It increases your Twitter reach and ranks you higher in Google. And Off-Page optimization actually outweighs On-Page (apx. 75%-25%). Rick talked about how “content is key,” as it attracts more of the right people. With this in mind, it’s important to remember that blogs drive traffic — and help to maximize SEO. It’s a numbers game, and you’re simply increasing your odds. Just know who your customers are… and what you will write about.
In terms of publishing content, you must experiment to find out what mediums/vehicles are working best. Is it your blog? Your podcasts? Videos? Photos? SlideShare Presentations? The key thing here is, don’t talk about your product. Share info that YOU learn… info that will attract your target audience. Get creative. Convert emails into blog posts. Package your thoughts in a meaningful way and offer real insight!
Rick reviewed four (4) “engagement steps” that are critical in social media best practices: 1. Listen 2. Listen more 3. Build relationships (answer questions, build trust) 4. Share your content (add to the conversation, pull people back into your own funnel!). It’s all about conversation and distribution.
The (positively) lethal combination of social media, SEO, and blogging offers tremendous leverage for small and medium-sized businesses. Learn more about what RARELY gets shared (ie. product info, free trials) and what FREQUENTLY gets shared (ie. new data, funny videos). Finally, how do you measure what is working for you and what you should be investing in? By assessing your SEO and tracking your funnel for each channel… PPC, SEO, blog, social media, etc.
Rick provided a great list of resources that you should investigate, in order to educate… and then associate:
Twitter search, google.com/blogsearch, technorati.com, existing blogs, industry Twitterers, twitter.grader.com, Facebook discussions, Yahoo! Answers, LinkedIn Q&A and Discussions.




