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5 Proven Ways Good Design Can Improve Your Small Business Content Marketing Strategy

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If your small business is trying to leverage social media for marketing, you’re probably struggling to build a large, engaged audience.

You’re not alone.

Most businesses have a tough time standing out among the sea of content on social media sites.

Every 60 seconds there are 293,000 new posts and 136,000 new photos posted on Facebook alone.

With so much content flooding social media sites, it becomes even more challenging for brands to rise above the din.

Businesses need to leverage every strategy and tactic they can to effectively market on social media.

One of the most important strategies: investing in good design to amplify your content marketing strategy.

Good design is good business.

As Joseph Kalinowski, a creative director for the Content Marketing Institute said:

Having a weak or unappealing design could cause your content to be totally skipped and lost in the feed.

Here are five proven ways good design can amplify your content marketing strategy.

  • Good design is memorable
  • Good design builds brand recognition
  • Strong visuals perform better than text alone
  • Good design effectively uses limited space
  • Images attract more clicks, retweets, and likes

 

Good design is memorable

As we wrote in Why Good Design is More Important Than Ever for Your Business:

People have a very short attention span. In fact, according to a Princeton University study, snap judgments count. The study found after seeing a face for only 1/10th of a second people formed opinions about that person. Judgments were made on attractiveness, likeability, and trustworthiness, and prolonged exposure to that face just reinforced the initial impression.

With the incredible amount of content the average user encounters on social media, first impressions and snap judgments play an important role.

Research has found the attention span of the average adult has dropped to a mere 8 seconds.

When you have so little time to catch the attention of social media users, good design becomes even more critical.

“Good design is making something intelligible and memorable,” Dieter Rams once said.

Invest the time and money to leverage design to make your social media and content marketing more memorable.

 

Good design builds brand recognition

Colors, type, imagery, layout: they all contribute to the visual essence that makes up a brand.

These things are also vital components of good design.

Your social and content marketing is another expression of your brand, and you can use visual cues to help bolster customers’ perception of your brand.

As we said in an earlier article:

When it comes to design, investing in quality as soon as possible is the best way to get the most growth out of your business. Otherwise, you may find yourself working harder than necessary to earn customer trust and stand out from the competition.

Think about ways to incorporate elements from your brand in your content marketing.

Whether it’s a splash of color, the use of your corporate typeface, or an element from your logo subtlety integrated into the background of an image, there are many ways you can add your brand in without overwhelming the content.

For example, it only takes people 10 seconds to form a first impression of a brand’s logo, but it takes 5-7 impressions for consumers to recognize the logo. (for more on logo design, we recommend you read 2018 Logo Design Trends: Your Guide To Navigate Hot Trends and Avoid Fads).

Consider every post and every piece of content as another opportunity to get your brand in front of your customers, and your efforts will be more consistent and more powerful.

 

People remember visuals better than text

Scientists have found that people’s ability to recall images is dramatically better than remembering text alone.

They even coined a cool name for this phenomenon: the Picture Superiority Effect.

Inc. magazine explains:

It works like this: If you hear information delivered verbally, you are likely to remember about 10 percent of that information three days later. Add a picture, however, and your recall rate will soar to 65 percent. Put simply, visuals matter—a lot.

“Human PSE is truly Olympian,” writes molecular biologist John Medina in Brain Rules. “Tests performed years ago showed that people could remember 2,500 pictures with at least 90 percent accuracy several days post-exposure, even though the subjects saw each picture for about 10 seconds.

That kind of recall is even more critical when you consider the deluge of content people scroll through every day on social media.

It’s not limited to adding pretty photos to your content – although that matters, too.

Incorporating images with good design is a powerful way to extend your brand. Small businesses should remember to take advantage of an image’s ability to be remembered – it’s a powerful way cement their brand in viewer’s minds.

For example, if you’re showcasing your products on social media, be sure that you have strong packaging design (the physical packaging for your products) and package graphics (the graphics, including images and content, on the packaging) so that your products stand out. To learn more about this, read 7 Important Packaging Design Trends.

74% of social media marketers use some visual asset in their post and marketing, and 37% of marketers said that visuals were their most important form of content. Only blogging rated higher.

 

Good design effectively uses limited space

According to recent studies, an incredible 80% of the time on social media is spent using mobile devices.

This is a problem for communicating with customers and prospects because post and image sizes on many social media sites are quite small:

  • Instagram posts are resized to 612 pixels by 612 pixels.
  • Facebook and Twitter feed images end up just over 500 pixels wide.

Good design can help boost your content when you’re working with a limited amount of space.

Less can be more.

A smart layout remains one of design’s biggest superpowers.

Using space effectively (and in a clear way) is a big part of what constitutes good design.

How something is organized visually and how well it’s perceived is primarily informed by psychology and how our brains interpret what we see. To learn more about this, read The Psychology of Design: Why Your Business Must Understand How Design Influences Customer Behavior.

 

Good design encourages sharing

Marketing studies reveal a staggering statistic: the average American is exposed to around 5,000 advertisements and brands per day.

Guess how many leave an impression?

Twelve.

Want to be like those twelve impressive, spotlight-stealing brands?

You need practical, attractive design.

When consumers are faced with deciding between a wide array of choices – all things with similar features or benefits – they go with the one that they either recognize or the one that has a more pleasing design.

Smashing Magazine’s Steven Bradley explained it well:

Human beings have an attractiveness bias; we perceive beautiful things as being better, regardless of whether they actually are better. All else being equal, we prefer beautiful things, and we believe beautiful things function better. As in nature, function can follow form.

Images attract more clicks, retweets, and likes

According to research conducted by Buffer (a social media tool we use and like), tweets with images received 150% more retweets than those without any images. A closer look at these images showed that companies often took the time to post something more than a stock photo.

Images fared well on Facebook, too.

Studies found that posts on Facebook with images had 2.3 times more engagement than those without.

Customers aren’t the only ones that agree good design helps companies on social media platforms.

60.8% of marketers said that in 2017, design was essential to their marketing strategies. 93% agreed that it was very important.

We are visual beings.

Nearly 30% of our brain’s cortex is devoted to visual processing.

By leveraging good design, you can ensure that your content marketing efforts won’t be another momentary blip in your customers’ endless social media stream.

Are you ready to elevate your marketing to the next level? Let crowdspring’s 210,000 designers help you bring good design to your business today. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation for a new custom logo, web design, product design, packaging design, package graphics, or any other type of design, with one of our design experts today.

The post 5 Proven Ways Good Design Can Improve Your Small Business Content Marketing Strategy appeared first on crowdspring Blog.


Twitter Link Roundup #336 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers!

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The daily commute to work is often a source of stress and anxiety.

Tokyo, as home to the world’s busiest train stations, is deeply familiar with the tolls commuting can take on its passengers.

The high volume of riders demands a system that incorporates smart engineering, thoughtful planning, and a creative approach to passengers’ psychology. Tokyo has implemented several features into their train stations which are designed to positively impact passenger behavior by manipulating light, sound, and other critical elements of the riding experience.

To read more, check out this piece on The Amazing Psychology of Japanese Train Stations.

Now, we hope you enjoy another great set of links and articles that we shared with you over the past week on our crowdspring Twitter account (and on Ross’s Twitter account). We regularly share our favorite posts on entrepreneurship, small business, marketing, logo design, web design, startups, leadership, social media, marketing, economics and other interesting stuff! Enjoy!

smallbusinessblog

startupsblog

socialmediablog

designblog

logodesignblog

otherblog

Are you ready to embrace your inner entrepreneur? Learn to lead and manage your business like a pro. Download our free ebook by crowdspring CEO Ross Kimbarovsky, Stand Out: An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Starting, Growing and Managing a Successful Business.

The post Twitter Link Roundup #336 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers! appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

7 Proven Tips to Make Your Consulting Website More Credible and Effective

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As a consultant, your success hinges on convincing others that you’re an expert in your field and that you can deliver real results for clients.

Your web presence is often the very first impression your consulting business will make with a potential client.

A well-designed website will inspire confidence and trust – two factors that turn leads into clients.

A mediocre or poor website will undermine your credibility and your business. Instead of creating trust and confidence, it will create doubt and unease.

Here are 7 proven techniques to make your website more credible and effective.

  1. Align your website design with your brand.
  2. Pay attention to detail.
  3. Post your credentials prominently.
  4. Provide social proof.
  5. Show (don’t tell) your expertise.
  6. Optimize for search engines.
  7. Show your value with case studies.

Let’s look at each of these techniques to see how you can use them on your own consulting site.

1. Align Your Website Design With Your Brand.

As a consultant, you are more than the sum of your knowledge and experience.

You are also a human being.

You have a personality with traits that will make working with you a unique experience.

To create a strong consulting brand, you must capture and communicate those traits that define you, as well as your knowledge and experience. This is what will set you and your consultant brand apart from your competitors.

Your business namelogo, color choices, and typography will all play a role in creating your visual brand.

And an effective website design will showcase the design choices you’ve made for your brand.

This consistency is valuable.

Here’s why: credibility is a form of trust. And, as we’ve pointed out in Grow Your Small Business with Consistent Branding, consistency builds trust.

Choosing a web design that effectively communicates your personal consulting brand will help potential clients get to know you.

Here’s one way to test whether you’ve injected your unique brand into your site. Look at your site and consider whether it can be the site for any of your competitors. If the images and content are generic and can represent anyone, you need to work harder to create something that reflects you and your personality.

Presenting consistently unique branding design elements over and over in your marketing and on your website will reinforce the identity you’ve established. This builds trust in you and credibility for your consultant business.

 

2. Pay Attention to Detail.

Successful consultants are experts. And, experts aren’t supposed to make mistakes.

If you want your website to add to your credibility instead of detracting from it, pay attention to the details.

Mistakes undermine your credibility. So, take the time to make sure that your website is error-free.

Check and double-check your copy content and grammar for accuracy. Grammarly, one of our favorite writing tools, can help.

But, policing for missed commas or the incorrect use of “your” is only half the battle.

If your website is poorly designed or executed, that will reflect poorly on you as well. When investing in a website design, bring in a professional graphic designer. You can work with a traditional design agency; or, if you’re budget-conscious you can crowdsource custom website design for a small fraction of the price you’d pay a traditional design agency.

A professional designer will not only ensure that you execute a brand-conscious design; they’ll also be better equipped to take care of all of the technical essentials – like vector images and responsive design – that will make you and your website look professional.

 

3. Post Your Credentials Prominently.

Prospective clients shouldn’t have to dig to find your credentials.

If you’re pursuing a career as a consultant, you should have years of experience under your belt. Not to mention a degree or two and often, certification in your field.

Don’t underestimate the power of these standardized achievements. An MBA or professional certification lends real weight to your credibility and is worth mentioning.

If you don’t already have a consulting certification, consider getting one. Small business consultants can get their AASBC certification from the Association of Accredited Small Business Consultants. The Institute of Management Consultants offers a CMC certification.

Feature your qualifications prominently on your website.

I’m not suggesting that you post your full resume on your website’s homepage. But, do make sure your professional credentials are easy to find. If your certification offers an accreditation badge, include that in the footer at the base of your website.

Transparency builds trust, and professional qualifications show prospective clients that you have the necessary training and expertise to get the job done right.

 

4. Provide Social Proof.

When it comes to finances, most people want to minimize risk.

We want to know that we’re spending our money on a worthwhile product or service.

This is why shoppers often look to their peers for reassurance that their purchase is a smart one.

Who would know better than someone who has already walked that road? Positive reviews create confidence in potential clients.

Share testimonials and reviews from happy clients to build credibility on your website. Here’s an example of how we share crowdspring reviews on our own site.

And, if you’re lucky enough to have an endorsement from a well-known professional in your field, feature that as well.

Peter Gasca, founder of GascaCo, LLC writes:

First, recognize that everyone you meet in your career, regardless of how small or insignificant a role they might play, is someone who can add value to your credibility. Be unabashed about asking for endorsements and testimonials from these individuals, especially if your role in the relationship added value and had a positive impact.

The more endorsements and testimonials you have from other successful professionals, the better it speaks to your own credibility.

Feature a handful of truly glowing reviews on your website to reassure potential clients that you’re as great as you claim.

 

5. Show (Don’t Tell) Your Expertise.

One of the most compelling ways to establish credibility with your website is by showing that you know your stuff.

Anyone can claim to be an expert, but only a real expert can back it up.

Writing and sharing consistently insightful content with real value will prove your expertise.

Give your prospective clients a taste of what you know for free with a blog or “resources” section on your website.

Crowdspring has built a great audience, in part, through our award-winning business marketing blog and small business resources site.

Offering this information at no cost accomplishes three things:

  1. It shows that you know what you’re talking about.
  2. It gives your potential client something of value for free – which they’ll appreciate.
  3. And, it inspires the client to wonder what else you have to offer if you were willing to share this information at no charge.

When writing your content, you will appear more credible if you cite other reliable sources to support your statements.

Anyone can write anything they want on the internet. But, citing the original source for quotes and specific facts shows that you can back up your claims.

 

6. Optimize for Search Engines.

In these modern times, Google is the oracle of our age.

If a prospective client searches your area of expertise, and your website appears at the top of the search results,  you have a shot at converting that prospect to a client.

But, if your website is buried in the third or fourth page of search results, then that client will probably never know you exist.

Not only that, people naturally assume that the top search engine results are the best results. So, Google’s endorsement (ranking your website highly) will lend credibility to you and your business.

So, optimize your website so that you can earn one of those treasured spots at the top.

Search engine optimization is too big of a topic to cover in-depth in this article. But, here are a few tips for getting started:

  • Optimize your website’s load time.  Slow load times negatively impact your search engine ranking and user experience.
  • Write valuable content, regularly. Strong content will attract other reputable sites to link back to you. And, inbound links are good for your search engine ranking.
  • Write descriptive names for your images, concise and meaningful URLs, and unique meta descriptions for each web page. This ensures that all of your website’s elements are easily searchable and will increase your rank.

To learn more, here are two excellent articles from digital marketing guru Neil Patel to help you dig in a little deeper:

SEO Made Simple: A Step by Step Guide

The 10 Most Important SEO Tips You Need to Know

 

7. Show Your Value with Case Studies.

One of the keys to making a sale is to help the customer envision how your product or service will positively impact their life.

Featuring case studies on your website can help your prospective clients do just that. A brief library of case studies will also build your credibility at the same time.

Inbound marketing specialist Andrea Moxham explains:

When your prospects are on the fence, pondering whether to purchase from your company or a competitor, they’re likely doing thorough research to ensure they’re making the right decision… Case studies can be an extremely effective marketing tool at this point in the relationship and can be the tipping point for a prospect considering making a purchase.

A good case study will walk your prospective clients through the experience of successfully completing a project with you. It will help leads wrap their head around your process and show the awesome results you can deliver.

Feature your case studies on a dedicated page on your website. This will make it easy for prospective clients to research your process and your results. It will also provide additional valuable content to help boost your search engine rankings.

Not to mention that it makes you look pretty darn good if you have enough happy clients to feature a number of case studies!

Here’s an example of how we feature and write crowdspring case studies. There are many ways to do this – we’re showing you just one way that works well for us.

 

Make Your Case

When your stock-in-trade is the knowledge you possess, you need to establish your expertise right from the start.

The first impression your consulting business will make is increasingly on the web. So, ensure that your website is properly building your case as the dynamic, results-oriented expert you are.

Here’s a quick re-cap of the seven tips you can implement to make your website more credible and effective:

  1. Align your website design with your personal brand to create a professional and consistent user experience.
  2. Pay attention to the details in both your content and website design to show that you’re professional and trustworthy.
  3. Openly share your professional credentials. Transparency inspires trust and a strong CV will showcase your skill.
  4. Relieve potential clients’ unease by providing social proof with glowing testimonials and endorsements.
  5. Show (don’t tell) that you’re an expert by writing and sharing free valuable content on a blog or “resources” page.
  6. Optimize your website for search engines to improve your ranking and gain a coveted 1st-page spot. If Google says you’re credible, the world will believe.
  7. Publish case studies on your website to help leads envision working with you and establish the credibility of your process and results.

Are you ready to create or update your website to inspire trust and confidence in your consulting business? Consider enlisting the help of crowdspring’s network of 210,000 creatives. On crowdspring, you’ll pick your favorite design from a variety of great options. You can get started on a website design,  logo design or request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today.

The post 7 Proven Tips to Make Your Consulting Website More Credible and Effective appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

5 Scientifically Proven Ways to Reclaim Your Personal Life and Improve Your Work Productivity

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Striking the right balance between your personal life and work is hard.

But, getting your work-life balance right is vital for your health, happiness, and quality of life.

No one wants to look back at the end of their life and regret that they spent too many hours at the office.

But, you do want to be productive and successful.

So how do you walk that line?

There are only two ways to increase your productivity. You must either work more hours or work smarter.

People who find a great work-life balance always pick the latter.

Here are five scientifically proven ways you can improve your productivity at work and reclaim your personal life.

  1. Take more time off.
  2. Take advantage of natural breaks in your day.
  3. Unchain from your desk.
  4. Eliminate the negative.
  5. Seek opportunities for “flow”.

Let’s look at these productivity enhancers in detail.

 

1. Take more time off.

It seems counter-intuitive, but taking more time off is one of the best things you can do to create a better work-life balance.

In the U.S. we’re taught that a workday is 40 hours; but, if you really want to get ahead you’ll work harder and longer.

Get in before the boss and be the last one to leave – that’s the way to get ahead!

And, if you’re an entrepreneur, you may feel like the demands are even higher. It’s a badge of honor and dedication to work through meals, pull all-nighters and skip vacations.

This approach is wrong.

When you work yourself into the ground there’s no one waiting to give you a medal.

And, it actually makes you less productive.

Joe Robinson of Entrepreneur Magazine explains in The Secret to Increased Productivity: Taking Time Off:

You get more done quicker when you step back and recharge the brain and body. Studies show that performance increases after breaks of all durations: from extended vacations down to microbreaks of 30 seconds….

One study found that mental fatigue takes hold after three hours of continuous time on-task; other scientists say brains need a break after 90 minutes, the length of the “basic rest-activity cycle.”

Burning up mental resources without replacing them leads to stress, burnout and poor performance.

You wouldn’t drive your car until it was completely out of gas. It makes no sense to treat your body that way.

Dan Sullivan, a successful author, and business coach coaches entrepreneurs on ways to increase their productivity by prioritizing free time. According to Sullivan,

It’s not the amount of time you spend working each day. Entrepreneurs get paid through problem-solving and creativity. You can create a solution in a shorter period of time if you are rested and rejuvenated.

In fact, one of Sullivan’s clients reports quadrupling the size of their company in the 12 years they’ve worked with Sullivan’s coaching firm – a feat they attribute to Sullivan’s radical take-more-time-for-yourself approach.

From regular work-day breaks to honoring your existing time off, to actual vacations… every bit of rest time helps make you more productive at work and gives you more time to enjoy at home doing the things that really matter.

 

2. Take advantage of natural breaks in your day.

Taking more breaks will make you more productive.

But, what’s the best way to take breaks?

Adding a new item to your mental to-do list, even if it’s something fun like “take a break,” still adds another thing you have to think about.

And anytime you need to make additional decisions, it’s going to drain those cognitive resources that we’re so anxious to optimize.

There are better ways to improve your focus and concentration.

Take advantage of the breaks that naturally present themselves. Like lunch.

Stop working through lunch!

You’ve got to eat. Lunch is an obvious stopping point in your day. So, take that time to recharge and socialize. Ditto for breakfast and dinner.

Do you have a dog? If you do, I’ll bet you probably prefer your dog to do his business outside. If you work from home or bring your pooch to the office, schedule in regular walks so you can both get some exercise, spend some time outdoors, and give your brain a rest.

Are you a work-from-home parent? Then stop and take a break when your kids get home from school and your spouse gets home from work. It shows them that you care and also gives you an opportunity to reconnect with the people that are important in your life.

Be creative in finding ways to incorporate meaningful break times into your day.

But, make sure that your breaks work with your schedule and not against it.

 

3. Unchain from your desk.

We are blessed to live in an age with technology that allows us to work from nearly any location.

Laptops, tablets, smartphones, and even noise-canceling headphones are available if the need should arise.

Being able to move your office with you allows you to live while you work. Or, better yet, work while you live.

Amanda Abella, life coach and best-selling author of Make Money Your Honey argues:

The ability to create location independence will greatly serve you on your path to creating work life integration. Being able to run an entire business from my laptop comes in handy when I want to take a random trip, need a change of scene or need to speak with clients on the other side of the world.

Now, this tip can be a bit of a slippery slope. Taking your work on the go does NOT mean that you should be actively working at all times.

But, it does give you the flexibility to live your life and still be productive.

Schedule that doctor’s appointment or haircut you’ve been putting off because you’re “too busy” and then work from the coffee shop next door.

Meet your friends for lunch at their house and then piggyback on their wifi for your afternoon meeting.

The possibilities are endless when you think creatively about how you can structure your time and location. You can stimulate both your social life and your productivity with simple changes of scenery.

 

4. Eliminate the negative.

Setting healthy boundaries is essential to getting the most out of your life.

And, if your goal is to increase your productivity, one of the most valuable boundaries you can set is to minimize the negativity in your life.

Realistically, you can’t eliminate all negative things.

Life throws all sorts of challenges our way and all we can do is make the best of them.

But we can make smart choices about the people with whom we spend our time.

And, it’s in our best interest to eliminate the people who drag us down and distract us with unnecessary drama.

Allison Gabriel, Assistant Professor of Management and Organizations at the University of Arizona,  studies employee motivation. She shares that humans have a “limited pool of cognitive resources.”

So, if we burn those resources focusing on hurt feelings, anger, resentment or frustration we will deplete our reserves much faster. And those are the very same emotional and cognitive resources that we use to be productive at work and engage with our friends and loved ones.

So, when choosing your colleagues, friends, and romantic partners; aim for people with high emotional intelligence and low negativity.

The less time you spend dealing with drama, pain and anger, the more time and cognitive resources you’ll have to accomplish your goals. And, the happier your personal life will be.

Not to mention that when you’re surrounded by a support network of positive people who lift you up, your emotional resilience is improved. And, as a result, your cognitive resources will replenish that much faster.

 

5. Seek opportunities for “flow”.

Flow is a state of mind that has commonly been linked with higher levels of happiness and life satisfaction.

Therese J. Borchard, author, and mental health advocate explains:

Flow is the mental state of a person when he is completely immersed in one activity or event — a moment in which all of her energy is focused on one thing so that she is oblivious to the world around her.

One of the hallmarks of flow is to be so deeply immersed in the task at hand that everything else just seems to fall away – which sounds like a pretty productive state of mind!

And, while you’re not aware of being happy in the moment of flow, people who experience it tend to derive great satisfaction and increased happiness after they’ve resurfaced.

But, there is no magic switch you can flip to activate a state of flow – it has to be found authentically. And, that’s where finding flow can get tricky.

Psychology professor Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi first identified the concept of flow.

According to Csikszentmihalyi’s research, you can attain a state of flow when the challenge of the task is a strong match for your skill level.

In other words, if the chore is too easy – no flow.

If the project is way too hard – no flow, either.

Instead, you have to find that Goldilocks space – a task just slightly more challenging than your skill level.

So, seek out opportunities that will allow you to tackle undertakings that are just outside of your comfort zone.

And, find other ways to solve problems that are far outside your comfort zone.

For example, entrepreneurs and small businesses often need help with branding and design. After all, good design is good business.

Very few entrepreneurs and small business owners can create professional designs for their own company. They’re typically too busy running their businesses and solving dozens of other problems.

Consider getting outside help with branding and design if you don’t have experts on your own team.

Over the past decade, crowdspring has helped tens of thousands of the world’s best entrepreneurs, small businesses, agencies, and non-profits with everything from professional logo design to product designpackaging design, and even naming businesses and products. You can get a finished design in as little as one day. Custom design and naming projects on crowdspring start at $299 (including all fees) and there’s a 100% money-back guarantee.

Outsourcing problems far outside your comfort zone to others on your team, or to companies like crowdspring, will help you create flow and substantially improve your productivity at work.

When you outsource problems far outside your comfort zone and aim just beyond your current level of expertise at work, you’ll steadily grow your own skills and become more productive.

Importantly, those feel-good flow vibes will lift you up both at work and at home.

You can also find flow doing fun activities like exercising, painting, ballroom dancing or sewing. Any task that consumes your attention and challenges your mind.

Seek out new activities to find flow and you’ll find your life expanding in unexpected and rewarding directions.

 

Before You Go

If you’re serious about optimizing your personal life and your productivity at work, you’re going to have to make it a priority.

If you don’t make conscious choices about how you spend your time, you will live your life reacting to the events occurring around you. And events are always occurring around you.

Design the life that you want to live. Only then can you take the steps to remedy a work/life situation that isn’t working for you.

 

Want more time to focus on your life? Enlist crowdspring’s help! Our team of over 210,000 creatives is ready and waiting to handle your business’s package graphicslogo designweb design, and more – everything you need to build a great brand. And, our outstanding customer service team is available to guide you through the whole process. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today.

The post 5 Scientifically Proven Ways to Reclaim Your Personal Life and Improve Your Work Productivity appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Twitter Link Roundup #337 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers!

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There are many different kinds of intelligence.

We’re all familiar with IQ, or intelligence quotient, which we recognize as strength in memorization and reasoning skills.

EQ, or emotional quotient, is just as important. Growing our EQ can improve relationships, decision-making skills, and our ability to recognize good opportunities.

To explore the qualities that every emotionally intelligent person should strive for, read this piece from Quartz.

Now, we hope you enjoy another great set of links and articles that we shared with you over the past week on our crowdspring Twitter account (and on Ross’s Twitter account). We regularly share our favorite posts on entrepreneurship, small business, marketing, logo design, web design, startups, leadership, social media, marketing, economics and other interesting stuff! Enjoy!

smallbusinessblog

startupsblog

socialmediablog

designblog

otherblog

Are you ready to embrace your inner entrepreneur? Learn to lead and manage your business like a pro. Download our free ebook by crowdspring CEO Ross Kimbarovsky, Stand Out: An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Starting, Growing and Managing a Successful Business.

The post Twitter Link Roundup #337 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers! appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

7 Essential Personality Traits All Successful Entrepreneurs Must Have

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Nearly everyone dreams of being an entrepreneur.

You can set your own hours, do the work that you love, and directly reap the profits of your labor.

But, being an entrepreneur isn’t all perks.

It’s hard work.

Many startup myths hold entrepreneurs back.

And, it’s risky, as statistics show: 20% of new companies fail in their first year, while only 50% survive through their fifth year.

So, why do some startups fail while others survive?

While leadership can’t account for everything, it does account for a lot.

The choices you make as a leader steer the overall direction of your business. You set the goals, the company culture, and the business practices that guide your business forward.

As an entrepreneur, you have a tremendous impact on how well your business venture fares.

And, possessing a certain set of entrepreneurial traits, tips the odds in your favor.

If you’re considering starting your own business, you owe it to yourself – and your future employees – to ask yourself if you’re cut out to be an entrepreneur.

Do you have these seven essential entrepreneurial traits?

  1. Vision.
  2. Passion.
  3. Pragmatism.
  4. Problem-solving.
  5. Flexibility.
  6. Bravery.
  7. Self-discipline.

Let’s look at each of these seven traits in detail.

Trait #1: Visionary

It’s hard to pursue a dream if you don’t have a clear vision of that dream.

An entrepreneur must have a clear vision of what they want to accomplish.

Being a visionary is perhaps the single most important entrepreneurial trait.

Without the ability to envision an outcome or goal, there is no business.

Small Business BC, a support organization for the small businesses of British Columbia,  points out:

Successful entrepreneurs can visualize how they want their future to unfold. They hold a clear picture of what direction they want their company to take and possess a plan to guide it from conception to realization….

A vital step in determining whether you are suitable to an entrepreneurial lifestyle is your ability to clearly communicate the dreams and aspirations you have for your company.

Your vision serves as a guiding star to help you navigate all of your business decisions. And, there are many decisions to be made.

So, ask yourself, “What is my vision?”

Define your ultimate goal. And, plan out the steps necessary to carry you to that goal.

 

Trait #2: Passionate

Passion provides the motivation you will need to make it through the tough, lean days.

Entrepreneurs are often responsible for… well, everything in the early days.

If it’s your business, the buck stops with you.

So, when the billing needs to be done – you do the billing. And, when it’s time to market your business – you do that, too. Need to find vendors? That’s your job.

If you don’t have a passion for what you’re doing, you will burn out quickly.

Sujan Patel, entrepreneur, marketer, and co-founder of Web Profits reflects:

Building a business takes a lot of time and effort. It means putting in longer hours and doing extra work. If you don’t love what you do, you’re not going to want to do what it takes to achieve success.

So, ask yourself if you are passionate about your business idea.

And, I don’t mean one-night-stand passionate. I mean, put-a-ring-on-it-and-spend-the-rest-of-your-life-with-it passionate.

If you’re not ready to make that commitment, consider another business idea.

Or, consider working for somebody else.

 

Trait #3: Realistic

Good decisions are nearly always grounded in reality.

Without a clear view of the landscape (and appropriately informed actions), businesses fail.

As we pointed out previously:

Faulty facts, incorrect assumptions or simple lack of information all open up the possibility that you will make choices that are counter to the objective reality and, as such, may harm your business.

Whether we like it or not, an objective reality exists. And your business is going to be a part of it. You can’t afford to ignore the financial, political or social landscape that surrounds your business.

So, take a good hard look at what’s really going on around you and how that might impact your new business idea.

  • What do your customers want?
  • What do your employees need to get the job done?
  • Can you deliver these things in a cost-effective manner?
  • Is there a market for your product or service?
  • Can you afford to fund your venture?

These questions – and so many more – need to be both posed and answered if you’re going to succeed.

These questions are relevant not just when you begin your business, but can make a difference when you look to scale and add new products or services.

Let me illustrate with an example.

Crowdspring was founded ten years ago and initially focused on graphic design services, including logo design, web design, and print design. Over time, we’ve added many other categories of services, largely driven by looking closely at the needs of our customers.

When we learned that many of our customers were struggling to name their businesses, we studied how we could help them, the tools our team would need for us to offer business naming services, and how we could deliver those services at a fraction of the price people were paying.

Even though we were already successful in offering graphic design services for many years, we still had to run tests to assess whether there was a market for new services, including naming. We’ve done this many times since as we’ve launched affordable and unique services to help businesses with packaging design (the design of the packaging for products), package graphics (the design of the graphics on product packaging), and even product design (the industrial design of physical products).

Get real about your business, ask the right questions, and you’ll see your business become a reality.

 

Trait #4: Problem-Solver

If an obstacle makes you want to pack up your toys and go home, you have no business becoming an entrepreneur.

Starting your own business will present you with constant challenges.

If you’re a natural problem-solver, you have a clear advantage.

Job search hub CareerBuilder points out in “What are problem-solving skills and why are they important?“:

Problem-solving skills are important in every industry. There’s no business that’s immune to the regular onslaught of problems. Business managers and office managers may find that nearly every aspect of their daily routine centers around some type of problem-solving.

And the further up the ladder you go, the more time you spend solving problems. Employees always look to their leadership for guidance and answers.

Creative problem-solving is a crucial leadership skill in and out of business. Dr. Paul Schempp, author, and professional speaker explains:

Leaders, it seems, play a crucial role in the creative problem-solving process. The leadership skills they possess can significantly affect the quality of the innovative outcome. Consequently, as organizations increasingly depend on new products and processes to fuel their future, creative problem-solving stands as a critical leadership skill.

People who turn out to be unsuccessful in entrepreneurship tend to push problems to another day. But procrastination is the enemy of entrepreneurs.

Being in charge often means that people assume you have all the answers. And, while that may sound flattering, it’s also a big responsibility.

Are you up to the challenge?

 

Trait #5: Flexibility

If your only plan falls through and you give up, your business has already failed.

Flexibility allows an entrepreneur to adjust their course and try new solutions when one plan fails.

Adjusting course is the essence of what it means to do business. Nothing is perfect on the first try. If success was easy, everyone would be a successful entrepreneur.

The reality is that no matter how well you prepare, or how great your idea is, there’s always room for improvement.

Flexibility allows you the space to make those improvements.

Author and marketing expert Jim Joseph advocates strongly for flexibility:

Gone are the days where we can create business and marketing plans a year ahead of time and expect them to be etched in stone. Sure, planning is a necessity, particularly for long-term vision, positioning and innovation, but just as important is short-term activity.

Joseph explains that new data, shifts in consumer audience, and evolving business models all drive the need to be as flexible as possible:

It’s more important to be flexible now than it ever has been. It’s a way of making the right decisions on a daily basis to keep your business prosperous as you gather new information, attract new customers and refresh your business model for continued success.

So, ask yourself: How do you respond to unexpected change?

If you can roll with the punches and land on your feet, you just may have a future as a successful entrepreneur.

 

Trait #6: Bravery

Starting your own business is risky. It’s baked right into the entrepreneurship experience.

Entrepreneurs often use their own money as start-up funds. Their own future rests on the success of their business.  And, the financial well-being and job security of their employees do as well.

If you want to be an entrepreneur, you have to be brave enough to accept these risks and proceed anyway.

Web Profits’ Patel points out:

Risk taking is par for the course when you’re starting a new business. But taking risks shouldn’t scare you. It’s necessary to achieve your goals, and successful entrepreneurs understand this.

But remember that brave doesn’t mean reckless. You also have to make smart choices about which risks to take.

Former entrepreneur and freelance writer Larry Alton shares:

…most successful people will tell you they got to where they are because they were willing to take risks no one else was — whether that was developing a product nobody else thought would work or investing a sum of money everyone else thought was crazy.

It’s up to you to decide which risks will gain your business the biggest pay-offs. But once you’ve found a gamble worth taking, you’ve got to be brave and commit to it.

Can you take that plunge?

 

Trait #7: Self-Discipline

I wish I could tell you that every day as your own boss is a magical, perfect day.

But, I can’t.

Because it’s not true.

You will encounter hardships.

You will deal with cranky customers, vendors, or clients.

You’ll even run into some good old-fashioned boredom, dealing with repetitive tasks that you don’t enjoy doing.

Being an entrepreneur doesn’t absolve you from having to deal with the negative aspects of work.

In fact, it virtually guarantees that you’ll see even more of those things.

Because, until you build a team you can rely on, every issue and responsibility will come back to you.

This is why self-discipline is vital to your success as an entrepreneur.

We explained in a prior article:

Self-discipline has the power to transform your life for the better. Imagine how much you would accomplish if you completed every task you set out to do; or if you established healthy, productive habits and actually followed through. Self-discipline very well may be the key to unlocking your untapped potential.

Without self-discipline to carry you through, you won’t actually do the things that need to be done to make your business run.

In fact, self-discipline and the ability to say no to things is key to being able to focus on what’s most important in your business. As we wrote previously:

While it might seem counterproductive for an entrepreneur to say no to people or opportunities, it’s actually one of the most important characteristics of being a successful entrepreneur.

The things you say no to are often the catalysts that give you the time and focus to succeed.

The more entrepreneurs say yes, the less time they have to dedicate to what is actually important.

Pretty soon, you can find yourself so busy that business strategy and a balanced work-life schedule fall to the side.

When strategy and work/life balance deteriorate, so does your business.

Be prepared for long hours, difficult conversations and tedium along with the pride, satisfaction, and profits.

It’s time to self-reflect. Do you have the willpower to keep moving forward even when you just don’t feel like it?

If not, check out How Self-Discipline Can Unlock Your Business Success to strengthen your self-discipline skills.

 

Have You Got What it Takes?

Starting a business, while incredibly rewarding, is also very hard work.

And, it’s a decision that shouldn’t be taken lightly.

If you’ve been toying with the idea of starting your own business, start by taking a look at one of the most important factors in your business’s success – you.

Answer these seven questions honestly and you’ll have a pretty good idea if you’re destined to be a successful entrepreneur:

  1. Do you have a specific vision for your new business?
  2. Are you passionate enough about your business idea to dedicate your life’s work to it?
  3. Can you see the world as it is and make decisions based on reality?
  4. Are you a creative problem-solver?
  5. Can you change course mid-plan and adapt quickly when a situation changes?
  6. Are you brave enough to take the necessary risks?
  7. Do you have the will-power to do what needs to get done? Even when you’re not in the mood?

 

Are you ready to launch your new business? Enlist crowdspring’s help! Our team of over 210,000 creatives is ready and waiting to handle your business’s package graphicslogo designweb design, and more – everything you need to build a great brand. And, our outstanding customer service team is available to guide you through the whole process. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today.

The post 7 Essential Personality Traits All Successful Entrepreneurs Must Have appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

5 Best Canadian Cities For Startups and Entrepreneurs

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What are some of the things that come to mind when you think of Canada?

Hockey?

People who say “eh”?

Celine Dion?

Our neighbors to the North carry a lot of stereotypes on their broad but polite shoulders. One that you probably want to add to that list is “start-up powerhouse.”

Yes, the country north of the 49th parallel may have 1/10th the population of the United States, but when it comes down to pure entrepreneurship it punches far above its weight class.

There are a number of reasons for this.

Canada boasts a well-educated population that draws its heritage from all corners of the globe.

It’s rich in natural resources and has a number of renowned universities and technology institutions.

And it boasts some world-class cities that routinely place on top ten lists of the best places to live in the world.

There is also excellent support for entrepreneurs, both home-grown and imported.

It’s true that there’s less access to VC funding compared to the leading U.S. cities, but the Canadian government remains at the ready to attract and assist new startups.

There is an ample selection of government aid that small businesses are encouraged to take advantage of – some of which include grants that require no repayment.

The roster of the country’s best-known business successes confirms this reputation for excellence.

Companies like Hootsuite, Shopify, Slack, 500px, and Kik call Canada home, and there are some premier innovation centers like Toronto’s MaRS Innovation and Vancouver’s 312 Main.

Over the past decade, crowdspring has helped many Canadian startups with everything from naming their business, to logo design, packaging design, product design and more.

Many major companies have taken notice of Canada’s virtues and set up offices there.

Google has a sizable presence in Ontario’s Kitchener-Waterloo area. Amazon and Microsoft have large engineering offices in Vancouver and Toronto.  And gaming companies like EA, Ubisoft, Bioware, and Capcom are either based out of Canada or have large operations in the country.

It’s no surprise that in 2017, Canada was rated the 7th best country in the world to start a business by Business Insider.

We’ve previously looked at the best cities in the US to build your startup, and we’ve even looked at some of the best cities globally. Let’s turn our attention to our neighbors to the north, and look at the best and brightest cities in Canada for startups and entrepreneurs.

Vancouver

This rainy city on the west coast is one of the biggest and best-known startup centers in Canada. World-famous startups like Hootsuite and Slack are based there.

The Global Startup Ecosystem Report put Vancouver as the 15th best city in the world to start a tech company and for good reason. The study calls out Vancouver’s:

[…]highest concentration of visual effects and animation studios, two of the top six video game franchises, and its ranking as one of the world’s top 20 Global Financial Centers.

The report details some of the high profile success stories in Vancouver:

In the early days Slack’s founder estimated the market for the software to be $100 million, which they exceeded in just three years—and have now become the fastest growing business software of all time. Broadband.tv is now the third largest video streaming site in the world after Facebook and Google, while dating app Plenty of Fish sold to Match. com for $575 million.

Vancouver leads PeoplePerHour’s Startup City Index.

The bustling Canadian seaport has been ranked the best place in the world to start a business, topping the Startup City Index with a high quality of life, good access to office space and relative ease of getting a company off the ground.

The city’s close proximity to major business centers like Seattle and Silicon Valley is another notable benefit, enabling a vibrant flow of talent between cities up and down the west coast.

Vancouver has aggressive provincial and federal tax breaks in place, a concentration of skilled labor and talent, and a year-round climate that is both temperate and pleasant. It’s no surprise that companies like Amazon and Microsoft have set up offices in the city, with many more to come.

It doesn’t hurt that Vancouver routinely makes the top five of “best places to live” lists (like the Economist).

Add to that the fact that it an equally beautiful place (being nestled in-between the mountains and the Pacific Ocean) and you have quite the compelling case for Vancouver as an entrepreneur’s dream.

 

Edmonton / Calgary

Alberta is home to two cities that may share a province, but bring different benefits to those interested in starting a new business.

Edmonton is a leader in Canada for a number of industries, from biotechnology and digital media to oil and gas. There are a handful of respected incubators operating in the city, including Startup Edmonton and TEC Edmonton.

Edmonton also has a number of high-quality post-secondary schools that continually add many highly-skilled employees to the job market.

The city may enjoy its status as the province’s capital, but its larger neighbor to the south is probably better known as a place where business gets done.

Calgary is Canada’s fourth-largest city by population and is well-known as a center for entrepreneurship and business related to the energy sector.

Incubators like Startup Calgary and Innovate Calgary give entrepreneurs the support they need, and a wide selection of coworking spaces bring them together.

 

By Christian Raul Hernandez

Toronto

As home to 230 different nationalities and with a population of 2.8 million, Toronto has been declared the most diverse city in the world. As we wrote,

Toronto is also one of the most multicultural cities in the world, with half the population of foreign origin. This makes for a wonderfully diverse, compelling population; it also provides critical ingredients for a startup business foundation. The undeniable correlation between immigrants’ willingness to relocate (and the inherent intrepidness behind that) and entrepreneurial activity is notable and evident in the broad cultural blend of Toronto.

Toronto reigns as Canada’s largest city, and it’s no coincidence that it also serves as Canada’s tech, commercial, industrial and financial hub.

As home to between 2,500 and 4,100 active tech startups, and boasting the world’s largest innovation hub (which covers a daunting 1.5 million square feet), Toronto earns its place as a phenomenal startup city for entrepreneurs of all kinds.

It’s an especially friendly place for minority entrepreneurs, notably women: 12.5% of partners at venture capital firms in Canada are women, which more than double the US rate of 6%.

For entrepreneurs seeking assistance in R&D, Toronto is a great bet.

The significantly lower cost of R&D, compared with other major startup cities like Silicon Valley, New York, and Boston, makes  Toronto an alluring choice. It’s nearly irresistible when you take into consideration that the Canadian government provides refunds on R&D investments. Refunds can be as high as 65% of the R&D cost.

Toronto has obvious and dedicated support and enthusiasm for startups and entrepreneurs, and nowhere is that more evident than in the Ontario Network of Entrepreneurs.

Ontario Network of Entrepreneurs (ONE), a government creation, supports over 130 not-for-profit organizations throughout Ontario. It aims to support businesses through their varying stages – starting with researching new ideas and assisting all the way through to a company ready to launch their product.

The ONE places a high value on developing an entrepreneurial culture. It makes a point of nurturing innovation and hopeful newcomers looking to get their start.

The ONE recognizes that whether or not any given startup succeeds is less important than their underlying goal: to truly foster a spirit of entrepreneurship that will promote a thriving community of intrepid minds.

As of 2017, the ONE has helped an impressive 5,600 Ontario entrepreneurs open new businesses.

It’s clear that a move to Toronto means you’ll be at the center of a community that truly values innovation. In fact, Toronto was named one of the world’s most innovative cities.

If you’re looking for an example of one of these successful Toronto based startups, you don’t have to look much farther than FreshBooks.

FreshBooks is an accounting platform for small businesses, has more than 10 million users. It has a 43,000-square-foot office in the city housing 245 employees. Mike McDerment, Founder & CEO of FreshBooks, is full of praise for Toronto:

I think it’s an attractive place to come for talented people, it’s a huge market for creative people and I think there are some companies emerging that give people hope that it can be done here…Tell every smart person you know who’s interested in technology to move to Toronto as well and then start your damn company.

In addition to FreshBooks, Toronto is also home to Fortune 500 corporations and hosts the Canadian headquarters of Google, Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.

 

by Victor Vucicevich

Waterloo

Waterloo, a small city with a population of just 550,000, is located sixty miles west of Toronto.

In contrast to its small population, Waterloo is home to a massive 1,100 new ventures, making it a region with the highest startup density of any area globally aside from Silicon Valley.

It’s no wonder why Waterloo acts as such an incredibly fertile area for startup growth. A recent report from research firm Compass details many of the advantages of starting up in Waterloo (factors like growth, performance, funding, and exit values were all considered), ranking it the No. 25 best startup ecosystem in the world.

Waterloo hosts a significant portion of Canada’s tech talent. Similar to San Francisco and the Bay Area, Toronto and Waterloo together form a corridor hosting a surplus of startup innovation between them.

Because of this, the Toronto and Waterloo corridor is frequently referred to as “The Silicon Valley of the North.”

Waterloo is home to the University of Waterloo, which has been an outstanding resource for startup ecosystems looking to attract new talent.

The University of Waterloo has over 30,000 undergraduates and boasts an internationally admired engineering program. Students are welcome to participate in their co-op program (graduating with one or two years of work experience, which is of high value to many companies).

Many companies, some of them well known and established, count on the University to snatch up new employees. It’s telling that, after the University of California, Berkeley, graduates from the University of Waterloo are the second-most-frequently hired in Silicon Valley.

“If you ask around Silicon Valley, all the top companies will have had an intern from Waterloo,” says general partner at SV Angel Kevin Carter.

Startups in Waterloo further benefit from institutions like the Communitech coalition and the Accelerator Centre. Both of these provide in-house mentorship from entrepreneurs and venture capitalists, educational courses, and funding access.

Communitech is one of nine North American tech hubs in the Google for Entrepreneurs network. They describe themselves as a thriving community that: “enables tech hubs by providing them with technical content, business tools, and infrastructure upgrades so that they can support increasing demand from developers and startups and help grow their local economies.”

The Accelerator Centre is an award-winning startup accelerator that has a mission statement of helping entrepreneurs with “building and scaling sustainable, globally competitive companies and giving startups the highest probability of long-term success.”

 

Montreal

Montreal has been rated as one of the top 20 startup ecosystems in the world by Startup Compass.

This isn’t surprising.

Montreal boasts a tightly knit community bolstered by unique startup events like Startupfest, a highly regarded, much anticipated annual event that brings in a couple thousand of the world’s groundbreaking innovators, entrepreneurs, and prominent speakers.

Montreal is further bolstered by supportive non-profits and incubators like Montreal NewTech and Notman House.

PwC Canada and CB Insights have released their MoneyTree report which takes a close look at Canadian VC activity from 2017. Canadian companies raised $4.4 billion CAD total – and impressively, Montreal raised more funds than any other city on the list.

This substantial amount of funding is in large part because Montreal has become a globally recognized AI hub over the past several years.

Montreal-based artificial intelligence (AI) company Element AI raised $102 million (USD) in Series A funding as of June, which goes down as the largest ever amount for an AI company.

Facebook’s announcement that McGill professor Dr. Joelle Pineau would be leading Facebook’s fourth Artificial Intelligence Research Lab (FAIR) amplified this activity in the AI arena and has lead to a domino effect of other related activity in the Montreal scene.

Another major advantage of starting out in Montreal is a surprisingly affordable real estate market.

When local startups don’t have to worry about the cost of living and are able to keep their costs lower, it’s an enticing prospect to many would-be entrepreneurs. Currently, the average house price is $238,000, which is significantly lower than in other cities in the North American region.

Montreal’s strong talent pool is helped by the numerous universities and technical institutes that populate the area.

There are outstanding business graduates flocking to make a living in the city after graduating from Concordia’s John Molson School of Business. Local technical schools further strengthen the startup ecosystem, providing an adept, motivated engineering workforce.

It’s clear that Canada knows a bit about creating a great culture for startups and entrepreneurs to succeed.

It might be time to pack your parka, grab a coffee from Tim Horton’s, and start planning your next brilliant startup business.

Are you ready to launch your startup or take your existing one to the next level? Our team of over 210,000 creatives is ready and waiting to handle your business’s package graphicslogo designweb design, and more – everything you need to build a great brand. And, our outstanding customer service team is available to guide you through the whole process. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today.

The post 5 Best Canadian Cities For Startups and Entrepreneurs appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Twitter Link Roundup #338 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers!

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According to a recent Pew Research study, in a field of 72 countries, American 15-year-olds placed 39th in math scores.

You don’t have to be great at math to know those numbers are not good.

Math anxiety is a real issue – and a contagious one. When a parent exudes stress and frustration while helping Junior with their algebra homework, Junior internalizes that anxiety as a fight-or-flight response – and no one can do mental math in that state of mind.

To read more about this phenomenon, and what we can do to help mitigate and prevent the damage, read this piece on Medium.

Now, we hope you enjoy another great set of links and articles that we shared with you over the past week on our crowdspring Twitter account (and on Ross’s Twitter account). We regularly share our favorite posts on entrepreneurship, small business, marketing, logo design, web design, startups, leadership, social media, marketing, economics and other interesting stuff! Enjoy!

smallbusinessblog

startupsblog

socialmediablog

designblog

logodesignblog

otherblog

Are you ready to embrace your inner entrepreneur? Learn to lead and manage your business like a pro. Download our free ebook by crowdspring CEO Ross Kimbarovsky, Stand Out: An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Starting, Growing and Managing a Successful Business.

The post Twitter Link Roundup #338 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers! appeared first on crowdspring Blog.


Essential Facts and Statistics Every Entrepreneur Must Know

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Starting a business can be terrifying.

Many startup myths threaten to hold back even the best-intentioned entrepreneurs.

The statistics don’t do much for confidence: 20 percent of new companies fail in their first year, and only 50 percent survive through their fifth year.

In spite of those sobering numbers, today, there are close to 400 million entrepreneurs worldwide.

Many people looking to start a business hesitate because they’re don’t know what it will take to get started. They wonder, for example:

  • What percentage of entrepreneurs are successful?
  • What is the average age of an entrepreneur when they start a business?
  • What is the job outlook for an entrepreneur?
  • What is the average salary of an entrepreneur?
  • How often do new businesses fail?
  • What is the main reason that entrepreneurs fail?

Let’s look at the essential facts and statistics to help you understand what being an entrepreneur really looks like, how you can increase your chances of success, and what you can expect once you start living that startup life.

We’ve curated important statistics and separated them into five categories:

  • General facts and statistics
  • What are the best locations to start a business?
  • Where does the funding come from?
  • The profile of the average entrepreneur
  • Living the startup life

1. General Facts and Statistics

How many new businesses fail?

A little more than 50 percent of startups fail in the first four years. 19 percent of startups fail because of too much competition, and another 18 percent fail because of pricing or cost issues.

You’ll want to do everything you can to foster the success of your new business.

Start by making sure you build a great business brand, including a strong business name and a memorable logo design.

As we explained in Powerful Branding Lessons From The World’s Best Brands:

A brand is the sum total of the experience your customers and customer prospects have with your company.

A strong brand communicates what your company does, how it does it, and at the same time, establishes trust and credibility with your prospects and customers.

Your company’s brand is, in many ways, its personality.

Your brand lives in everyday interactions your company has with its prospects and customers, including the images you share, the messages you post on your website, the content of your marketing materials, your presentations and booths at conferences, and your posts on social networks.

While the failure rates for new startups are high, business failure rates are actually in a pattern of long-term decline. According to Entrepreneur, the rate that entrepreneurs in the US have failed has fallen by 30 percent since 1977.

If you’re looking for some thriving industries, consider:

  • Virtual and Augmented Reality (VR/AR),
  • Medical Marijuana,
  • Financial Technology, and
  • Biotechnology.

 

2. Ideal locations to start a business

Where can you find cities with great environments to foster startup success?

The United States provides a phenomenal environment for promoting startup ecosystems, ranking 1st out of 138 countries using the Global Entrepreneurship and Development Index.

In fact, 6.02 percent of the US adult population owns their own business as their primary source of income.

Not sure where in the US to start your business?

We’re partial to Chicago.

Chicago is home to many successful startups, including crowdspring,

Chicago boasts a thriving startup scene, an incredible 10 times a return on investment, and pretty outstanding hot dogs.

KPMG’s survey backs us up, with more than 800 tech leaders ranking it in the top ten tech innovation hubs worldwide.

Beyond Chicago, there are many other great cities in the US for startups and entrepreneurs.

For a nearby global perspective, Canada has rated the 7th best country in the world to start a business by Business Insider. Take a look at five of Canada’s best startup cities.

If you’re feeling especially restless and adventuresome, embrace your inner globetrotter. Here are 11 cities worldwide where startups are flourishing.

 

What if you can’t afford the rent?

Not sure you can afford an office in one of these fantastic, but expensive, cities?

Consider a coworking space.

Co-working spaces tend to provide businesses with savings up to 30 percent, which can be huge savings for new companies with a lot of expenses to contend with. Such spaces offer a great solution for affordable office space and for networking.

At the end of 2017, nearly 1.2 million people all over the globe had spent time working from a co-working space. Co-working spaces have grown an impressive 89 percent in the last 12 months, and 300 percent since 2010.

Here’s a good look at coworking spaces in Chicago.

3. Where does the funding come from?

80 percent of entrepreneurs funded their business out of pocket.

The remaining 20 percent?

Ah, the kindness of strangers… or Mom, Dad, and Aunt Susan. These entrepreneurs benefited from the generosity of family, a bank, or interested investors.

 

The profile of the average entrepreneur

What does the average entrepreneur look like?

It’s typical to picture the “average” entrepreneur as a twenty-something, but this is a myth.

According to a First Round survey, the number of startup founders in their twenties falls somewhere around 20 percent. A paltry 3 percent are between the ages of 21 and 25.

Founders of the companies with the highest growth clocked in with an average age of 45.

Also contrary to the popular myth, the average entrepreneur isn’t an unwashed college dropout living in his parents’ basement.

While it is true that 51.6 percent of businesses started out running from someone’s home, many of those entrepreneurs were well educated.

39 percent of business owners have a bachelor’s degree or higher.

In a survey run by the Kauffman Foundation, 95 percent of the business founders surveyed had at least a bachelor’s degree, and 47 percent had even more advanced degrees.

Stay in school if you want to be successful.

When you think of an entrepreneur, you probably picture a man, right?

While startups are still dominated by male entrepreneurs, women are starting to grow their presence.

In fact, it’s a great time to be a female entrepreneur.

While only 40 percent of new entrepreneurs in the United States are women, the rates of female entrepreneurship are increasing. At an average of 10 percent across 51 different economies, the growth rate for women as entrepreneurs hit ten percent, higher than the comparative five percent growth rate for men.

For more about this, read about 5 key traits that make women successful entrepreneurs.

 

Does having experience matter?

Company founders were 125 percent more successful if they had worked previously in a similar industry as their new companies.

Tellingly, when 51 percent of entrepreneurs were asked, “What’s the best way to learn more about entrepreneurship?” they answered with a decisive “Start a company.”

Entrepreneurs who began their careers working for someone else before venturing out on their own benefited significantly from their industry experience. Armed with experience as the best teacher, these entrepreneurs had about a 30 percent chance of success in their business venture.

Compare that to the first-time business owners with a comparatively meager 18 percent chance of success, and you might want to sit things out until you get to know how the industry sausage is made.

Don’t beat yourself up if you do try and fail, though. Entrepreneurs with previous failures increase their chance of success the next time 20 percent.

What should you study to be an entrepreneur?

An entrepreneurship education might mean an actual entrepreneurship degree.

You might find more versatility – and more interest – in a broader category of business education. The well-rounded approach might better prepare you for the challenges you’re bound to face in an entrepreneurial career.

While no straightforward path in education will lead you to startup success, a business-related degree can’t hurt. Combine any education with something directly related to your field.

For instance, if you want to open a restaurant, having some kind of hospitality training is essential.

If you’re looking to create an app for the financial tech world, having education in finance and technology is pretty important.

For an idea of where to start, take a look into any of the following:

  • Business management
  • Business analytics
  • Economics
  • Accounting
  • Marketing
  • IT/Software Engineering/UX or UI Design
  • International business
  • Hospitality management

Looking to improve your education level to strengthen your odds of success, but not sure you have the time to travel all the way to your nearest university?

There are many online programs that can help you improve your business skills.

 

4. Living the startup life

Being an entrepreneur isn’t easy, and it takes a certain personality type to truly be successful.

Problem-solving, self-discipline, and flexibility are all critical components of successful entrepreneurs, and will come in handy when tackling the challenges – and rewards – of the startup life.

What is the average annual salary of an entrepreneur?

According to a study from American Express OPEN, the average entrepreneur pays himself or herself an annual salary of $68,000. According to the same study, 15 percent of entrepreneurs feel that they need to work a second job to help make ends meet.

The core takeaway is there may not be a big payoff at the beginning, but things can still come up roses with more effort and time.

But the hours are good, right?

A survey of hundreds of entrepreneurs revealed:

  • 19 percent work 60+ hours per week,
  • 30 percent work 50-59 hours per week,
  • 33 percent work 40-49 hours per week,
  • 14 percent work 30-39 hours per week, and
  • 5 percent work less than 30 hours per week.

The upside of this is that 73 percent of the businesspeople surveyed said their hours were more flexible now than when they worked for someone else.

The long hours don’t necessarily mean that you’ll be working without breaks, based on the survey results. The same survey found that when it came down to vacations:

  • 44 percent take 16 vacation days or more each year,
  • 26 percent take 11 to 15 vacation days,
  • 19 percent take 6 to 10 vacation days,
  • 11 percent take 1 to 5 vacation days, and
  • 2 percent never take any vacation days.

That last 2 percent may be burning the midnight oil just a little too intensely, but the stereotype of the endlessly hustling entrepreneur is a hard one to shake for some.

Based on these numbers, the idea that a startup will take as many hours as you can give it seems to hold true.

This attitude is changing, however, as people start to push back on the idea that you need to continually be on the move to succeed. Many entrepreneurs have stepped back and reevaluated their attitudes towards work. Johnathan Goodman wrote about this for Entrepreneur.com:

As entrepreneurs with so many hats to wear and fires to put out, it’s all too easy to get pulled in multiple directions and lose sight of what’s truly important and what’s not. It took me a long time to realize that “hustling” every day didn’t get me to where I wanted to be any faster. So, I stopped the hustle, prioritized the most important areas of work and spent my spare time on things that make me happy. The result? More success in business and a higher quality of life.

This approach may not work for everyone trying to start a business, but it’s worth considering. We’ve examined entrepreneur health and wellness before, and work-life balance is a vital part of that.

Even so, you should prepare yourself for long hours. It’s unlikely that you’ll see a short-term payoff until your business gets off the ground.

If you’re looking to improve your mindset and your capacity to put your head down and get it done, check out How Self-Discipline Can Unlock Your Business Success to strengthen your self-discipline skills.

 

Wrapping up

As you’ve seen, the road an entrepreneur travels on is rarely paved with gold, but with effort, discipline, a well thought out business plan, and a little bit of luck, you may find your way.

No matter what direction you may go, knowing the numbers and being prepared is a critical part of success.

But there’s one thing more important than being prepared. As Simon Sinek said, “dream big. Start small. But most of all, start.”

Are you ready to launch your startup or take your existing one to the next level? Our team of over 210,000 creatives is ready and waiting to handle your business’s logo designweb design, and more – everything you need to build a great brand. And, our outstanding customer service team is available to guide you through the whole process. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today. Check out these case studies to read about how crowdspring’s talented creatives have helped other startups get noticed.

The post Essential Facts and Statistics Every Entrepreneur Must Know appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Post-Millennial Marketing: How to Market Effectively To Generation Z

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Millennials have starred in marketing headlines for the past several years.

But, did you know that Generation Z will make up about 20% of the workforce and 40% of consumers by 2020?

While few agree on exactly where the cut-off between Millennials and Generation Z is, (is it 1995? 97? 98?) everyone can agree that a new generational cohort has arrived on the scene.

Why should you care and how does Generation Z impact your business?

You need to have marketing strategies in place for millennials and their generational successors. Heike Young, Salesforce’s Industry Strategy & Insights Manager, explains:

They may all look young. But Millennials and members of the subsequent Generation Z are markedly different in how they shop, interact with brands, and view money.

If you’re a marketer, you’ll need to tailor your messages to reach a new audience.

If you’re a business owner or manager, you’ll need to figure out what these new employees will be looking for and how to get the most out of your working relationship with them.

Here are 5 key differences between Generation Z and Millennials, and our perspective on how these differences will impact your business.

  1. Generation Z is more entrepreneurial.
  2. Generation Z is more realistic.
  3. Generation Z has a shorter attention span.
  4. Generation Z  grew up with personal brands.
  5. Generation Z has higher expectations.

Let’s examine each of these differences in detail.

1. Generation Z is More Entrepreneurial

While entrepreneurship – a staple element of the American Dream – has ironically been in decline in the US for several decades, Generation Z may be on the verge of turning that trend around.

According to serial entrepreneur and best-selling author Deep Patel:

Generation Z is 55% more likely to want to start a business than millennials. In fact, a full 72% of Gen Z high school students say that they want to start a business.

If Gen Z follows through on these aspirations, they very well may reinvigorate the American entrepreneurial landscape for years to come.

But, what is motivating this trend?

Altitude’s Jeremy Finch writes for FastCompany:

Recent reports have labeled Gen Z the “entrepreneurial generation” and highlighted their desire to forsake the corporate grind for their own startups. We found that while Gen Z like the idea of working for themselves, the majority are risk-averse, practical, and pragmatic. Their supposed entrepreneurialism is actually more of a survival mechanism than an idealist reach for status or riches.

Each generation is shaped by the events that occurred as they grew and evolved.

Generation Z is coming of age, having witnessed the struggles of the 2008 economic crisis. They saw the resulting changes in their world – even if they didn’t understand them at the time.

These events inevitably left their mark and likely explain Gen Z’s desire to control their own economic future.

But, whatever the reason, Generation Z is poised to take their financial future in hand.

And, they’ll probably re-shape the American economy as they do.

Your Take-Away

Gen Z is equally as likely to become your competition as they are to become your employee. Be prepared to offer autonomy, flexibility, and fair financial compensation as part of your terms of employment if you want to have any hope of enticing these workers to your business.

 

2. Generation Z is More Realistic

Millennials, fairly or not, are forever branded as the entitled generation of the participation trophy.

But, Millennials didn’t choose this path for themselves. It was a by-product of their upbringing. Millennials grew up in a time of financial prosperity. As did their parents – the Baby Boomers.

The Boomers were the product of the golden age of American capitalism. In such a positive economy, it was much easier for Baby Boomers to achieve financial security.

Millennials dutifully absorbed the lessons of their parents – and naturally expected that when they followed the same prescribed steps, it would lead to the results they were promised.

Is that entitlement? Or merely a nasty bait and switch?

Whatever the case, as a result, Millennials appear to be more optimistic than Generation Z.

Generation Z is coming to the workforce with a completely different perspective than their predecessors. Altitude’s research reveals that:

On a professional level, Gen Z are hyperaware of the negative stereotypes that have plagued millennials. As a result, they want to be known for their ability to work hard and persevere offline.

Ryan Jenkins, an expert on the differences between Millennials and Generation Z, reveals:

Seventy-seven percent of Generation Z expect to work harder than previous generations.

Millennials became optimistic thanks to their encouraging Baby Boomer parents and growing up in a time of prosperity and opportunity. Generation Z will be realistic thanks to their skeptical and straight-shooting Generation X parents and growing up in a recession. According to Pew Charitable Trusts, during the Great Recession, the median net worth of Generation Z’s parents fell by nearly 45 percent.

Generation Z is walking in with their eyes wide open.

This is not the golden age of capitalism. And they know it.

A booming economy isn’t waiting to support them with open arms and easy paydays.

And they’re ready to work.

Your Take-Away

Give these young employees space and autonomy to shine. They are driven to work hard, so let them do that in their most productive way.

Marketers, Gen Z is pragmatic and careful with their money. Make the value you offer very clear if you expect to make a sale.

 

3. Generation Z Has a Shorter Attention Span

While Millennials grew up as modern technology took hold, Generation Z has been saturated in it from day one. Deep Patel explains:

Millennials are hard to keep engaged, but Gen Z’s attention is even more split. On average, millennials use three screens (and bounce between them intermittently). Gen Zers use five: smartphone, TV, laptop, desktop and tablet.

It’s true that Generation Z tends to bounce from device to device, screen to screen, but it may be too reductive to call them attention-deficient.

With endless options for entertainment, information, and communication, Gen Z has no tolerance for wasted time. Do they have a short attention span? Or a fast filter?

Jeremy Finch opts for the latter:

Gen Z have a carefully tuned radar for being sold to and a limited amount of time and energy to spend assessing whether something’s worth their time. Getting past these filters, and winning Gen Z’s attention, will mean providing them with engaging and immediately beneficial experiences. One-way messaging alone will likely get drowned out in the noise.

Knowing this, it will be essential to capture attention quickly and to be present on multiple platforms to ensure that you make it through these filters. Patel lays it out:

If you want them to click on your blog post, watch your video or like your Instagram photo, you need to help them understand what the content is about, why they should care and how it will help or entertain them.

And you need to do it in eight seconds or less. This is an art, and it’s not easy. It’s why today’s best content creators are in such demand.

Generation Z’s discerning eye is waiting to see what you have to offer.

Your Take-Away

To help pierce the noise, targeted messaging will become that much more important as Generation Z begins to influence the market. Getting the right message on the right platform at the right time will be key.

And keeping those messages consistent will also be important. Consistency starts with strong branding, including the company name and logo design, and continues with delivering on your brand’s promises.

Employers will need to present interesting challenges as well as opportunities to learn and evolve in their roles to keep Gen Z engaged in the workplace.

 

4. Generation Z Grew Up With Personal Brands

Millennials remember Myspace. But, social media has been a part of Generation Z’s lives for as long as they can remember.

As a result, Gen Z approach social media differently.

Millennials tend to splash every detail of their lives on their social media accounts.  However, Generation Z takes more care in curating the content they share and the image they present on social media.

Millennials and Generation Z expert, Jeff Fromm describes this phenomenon:

Through social media, they meticulously curate their personal brand to reflect how they want to be perceived. Unlike the millennial generation, Pivotals [Generation Z] only share specific stories, to specific people, on specific channels.

Generation Z understands the importance of “code-switching” (adapting to the language of the cultural context in which they find themselves).

Their personal brands are reserved for recreational social media platforms. And their professional persona will be managed separately.

This privacy is very important for Gen Z. Ryan Jenkins shares that:

Seventy percent of Generation Z would rather share personal information with their pet than with their boss.

Your Take-Away

Understanding and respecting this desire for privacy will be important when it comes to connecting with and managing Gen Z.

And, if marketers hope to reach this audience, they need to be just as savvy in curating targeted appropriate content for specific channels.

 

5. Generation Z has Higher Expectations

You should know by now that Millennials value authenticity in the brands with which they do business.

This is true for Generation Z as well.

But, Gen Z take it one step further. Like their older cohort, Gen Z is vigilant against ads and being “sold.” But, they also expect to be a part of something bigger. Deep Patel points out:

According to a recent report, 60% of Gen Zers want their jobs to impact the world, and 76% are concerned about humanity’s impact on the planet.

This means that if you’re a big brand with a social responsibility element, it’s really about walking the walk. Whether you’re selling to or hiring Gen Zers, you should realize they are going to know very quickly whether they’re part of something special or are caught in another big-talk campaign.

This new generation is bringing high expectations and a sense of social responsibility with them. And, is it any wonder?

Generation Z  was watching and listening as the 2016 election divided our country as never before.

Serious questions about the direction for our country were raised. Will we be inclusive or divisive? Will we take care of our own through social support and healthcare? Will we take steps to protect the planet on which we all live?

Generation Z has opinions and they want to make an impact. Patel explains:

Gen Z is open minded, and believe there’s plenty of room for everyone to thrive together.

This is important for big brands to note. Now more than ever, consumers are eagerly looking to the big brands and companies of the world to facilitate these major changes…

Your messaging needs to be intelligent, thoughtful and inclusive. It’s not about proving that you’re right and someone else is wrong. It’s about including everyone together.

Gen Z is already tired of the status quo. They want their role to make a difference for the better. And they’re not waiting – they already have a strong influence on purchases:

Your Take-Away

If you’re looking to snag these young visionaries as employees, be prepared to show them how your business is making the world a better, more inclusive place.

And, if you want to sell to them, be ready to create an authentic brand with values they can get behind. For example, if you sell physical products, consider sustainable strategies when creating products and packaging design for those products.

 

The Future is Here

Millennials have already conquered the workforce. And, shortly, Generation Z is poised to make an equally significant impact.

Your business needs to adapt. Or it will become obsolete.

Gen Z is a driven, pragmatic and ambitious crowd.

You can create a welcoming environment for them, or become their competition.

They’re impatient with the choices that have been made for them; and, ready to start shaping the world in their own image.

Gen Zers are your next employees, co-workers, and consumers. If you get to know them for who they really are and what they really want, your business will thrive with them.

If you’re ready to create a more authentic brand, now’s your time to act. Crowdspring’s community of over 210,000 graphic, web, and product designers can help you create a Millennial and Generation Z-friendly brand – without breaking the bank. You can get started on a project here, or request a free design consultation with one of our design experts here.

 

The post Post-Millennial Marketing: How to Market Effectively To Generation Z appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Twitter Link Roundup #339 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers!

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Ahh, summer. Breezes drifting in and out of windows, the clamor from kids relishing their newfound freedom, and days stretching endlessly ahead, inviting possibility with every sunshine filled minute.

Maybe that possibility includes a picnic?

No picnic would be complete without the perfect drink accompaniment – and we have you covered. From grown-up drinks to non-boozy selections, The Guardian pours out their recommendations for what to bring to your next picnic.

Now, we hope you enjoy another great set of links and articles that we shared with you over the past week on our crowdspring Twitter account (and on Ross’s Twitter account). We regularly share our favorite posts on entrepreneurship, small business, marketing, logo design, web design, startups, leadership, social media, marketing, economics and other interesting stuff! Enjoy!

smallbusinessblog

startupsblog

socialmediablog

designblog

otherblog

Are you ready to embrace your inner entrepreneur? Learn to lead and manage your business like a pro. Download our free ebook by crowdspring CEO Ross Kimbarovsky, Stand Out: An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Starting, Growing and Managing a Successful Business.

The post Twitter Link Roundup #339 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers! appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

These 12 Apps Will Help Boost Your Productivity

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Every day, another app or service is unleashed on the world that claims to increase your productivity, corral your to-dos, or assassinate your procrastination.

Keeping track of these products can be a full-time effort on its own, never mind figuring out what they do and if they’re right for you.

But rest easy, because we’ve collected 12 of the latest and greatest productivity products here for you to check out.

 

Station

Why it’s worthy: If the frequency of new services launching as web apps are any indication, the days of desktop-only productivity may be on the wane.

From long-established stalwarts like Google’s G Suite and Zoho’s expansive selection of apps to more recent entrants like Quip,  more and more work is getting done in the browser.

Using these apps in a web browser, however, can be a pain.

Web browsers weren’t really designed to handle apps that stay open all day long. Browser makers have added some half-hearted attempts to accommodate these persistent apps through the concept of browser tab “pinning” (here’s how for Apple Safari, Google Chrome, and Mozilla’s Firefox), but overall, it’s a bit of a mess.

Apps like Station attempt to address this issue by acting as a dedicated web app. It takes the apps you’d usually open in your browser and keeps them in their own dedicated window, so your web browser can get back to doing what it does best; browsing.

Why use an app like Station?

  • It keeps your web apps separate from your browser and restores them on launch, so you don’t have to do that yourself
  • It lets you create starred links to favorite or frequently-used documents or files (eg. a specific Google Sheets spreadsheet) that are easy to find and reopen
  • It’s dedicated just for web apps, so there are fewer distractions than using a web browser
  • It automatically “sleeps” apps you’re not using, so it helps reduce computer memory and CPU use
  • It collects notifications from all of your web apps in one centralized location
  • It supports a huge list of web apps, with more added frequently

There are a number of “app organizers” similar to Station out there (Franz, Rambox, and Manageyum are just a few) but Station is one of the best.

Available for:
Mac, Windows, Linux

Cost:
Free

 

Taskade

Why it’s worthy: Taskade is a task and to-do list app with a focus on flexibility, simplicity, and ease-of-use. Its simple design hides a lot of features, including some robust collaboration tools like chat (video, audio, and text), as well as sharing and collaborating on lists.

Its flexibility allows you to create lists, outlines, and notes and share them in separate workspaces with different collaborators. Taskade’s strength is it doesn’t try to do too much, but what it does, it does with clarity and style.

Available for:
web, iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows

Cost:
Free, with premium accounts and features planned.

 

Be Focused

Why it’s worthy: Our next choice isn’t a service on its own, but an app that helps you focus and split up your work. Be Focused is an app that allows you to use the Pomodoro technique in your workday.

What is the Pomodoro technique? It’s a time and work management system created by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s that breaks your work into smaller, more focus intervals of time called, you guessed it, pomodoros.

Named after the tomato-shaped kitchen timer Cirillo used in university, a pomorodo is typically 25 to 30 minutes of focused work time, followed by a short 3-5 minute break. After you’ve done four pomodoros, you take a longer break lasting 15-30 minutes.

The idea behind the technique is rather than forcing yourself to try and work for a long stretch of time, it’s easier to stay focused when you use “timeboxing” to chop work into smaller intervals. Timeboxing is when you set aside a short amount of time to work on a specific task.

By working for shorter lengths of time, you can reduce the chance you’ll get interrupted and increase the possibility of getting into flow, that mythical state of mind where the work fades away and you’re fully energized and focused.

There are many different Pomodoro apps available for almost any operating system or platform, but we’ve found Be Focused to be one of the more popular ones.

Its combination of a simple interface, powerful tools, and availability across Mac and iOS devices makes it a compelling choice.

Available for:
Mac, iPhone, and iPad.

Cost:
Free, although there is a pro version that adds some extra features (and removes ads) for $4.99

 

Notion / Coda

Why they’re worthy: Notion and Coda are excellent examples of a new breed of apps that blur the lines between document types. They take elements of word processing, note-taking, lists and outlines, and spreadsheets and mashes them together into something new.

The concept behind both apps is the documents we create aren’t just one type of thing.

The key here is flexibility: any document you create could have elements of lists, embedded media (including video, audio, and webpages), spreadsheets, wiki-style content, and other data all together in one place.

Both apps are highly collaborative and have a bunch of features that make working on the same document across multiple people straightforward.

The apps may be similar, but they take different approaches to how they organize your content.

Notion is closely tied to the idea of documents, where the flexibility is found in the content you can include and how you can organize and link between that content.

It feels like a supercharged word processor crossed with a wiki, where you can collect many different types of content in one place and then create links and relationships between them.

Coda is similar but feels more like the evolution of spreadsheets. Many of the familiar ideas from spreadsheets are here: tables, cells, data, formulas, and organization.

The difference is Coda treats your data as the launching point for a multitude of different applications.

Its templates page showcases a variety of ways people have used Coda to create personalized apps: from simple to-do lists and tabular data to kanban boards, trip planning, and even baby-naming tools.

If there’s one thing that separates the two apps, it’s in availability: Notion is widely available across many different operating systems and platforms, whereas Coda currently only works on Google Chrome and requires a beta invitation.

Both apps are incredibly powerful, and we’ve only given a brief overview of their possibilities. Your best bet is to take a look at the way some people have used them and see which one (or both!) fits your needs.

Available for:
Notion: Web, iOS, Android, Mac, Windows
Coda: Web (Chrome browser only)

Cost:
Notion: Free for your first 1000 “storage blocks” with monthly subscriptions available
Coda: Free

 

Brain.fm has a large list of sounds and AI-generated music to help you sleep better, relax, and be more productive.

Brain.fm / Noisli / Coffitivity

Why they’re worthy: The next three apps are different than the ones we’ve already looked at. They’re not organizers or document editors or to-do lists. They’re not classic productivity tools at all.

What they do is help you become more productive by blocking out the chaos of a noisy world. They create predictable sound environments that help you focus and get into flow.

There’s scientific proof that ambient background noise can have a positive effect on productivity and creativity.

A study by Ravi Mehta at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign found that the ideal work environment had a little bit of background noise.

The type and level of the noise were important, as noted in the study:

Each of the groups was subjected to a different level of background noise (50 decibels, 70 decibels, 85 decibels, and total silence). When they scored each person’s test, the researchers found that those in the 70-decibel group, exposed to a moderate level of ambient noise, significantly out-performed those in the other three groups. The background noise boosted their creative thinking.

Mehta elaborated on this in an article from the New York Times, where he said that extreme quiet could sharpen your focus, which prevents you from thinking in the abstract:

This is why if you’re too focused on a problem and you’re not able to solve it…you leave it for some time and then come back to it, and you get the solution. But moderate levels can distract people just enough so that they think more broadly. It helps you think outside the box.

What do you do if you can’t find a place with the right level and quality of background noise? That’s where these apps come in.

Each one creates soundscapes designed to help you concentrate and be more creative.

Brain.fm is the most comprehensive of the three, with background sounds designed for three different goals: focus, relaxation, and sleep. It has a huge variety of sound loops and effects to listen to, including nature sounds, ambient music, and more.

Noisli has a more focused list of sounds available, designed for productivity or relaxing. It has a built-in text editor so you can write in the app while you listen to ambient sounds and also has a timer for applying the Pomodoro technique or some other time-based system.

Coffitivity is the most straightforward app of the three, and as you might have guessed from the name, it specializes in the ambient sounds of cafés and coffee shops.

The site was created by a couple of entrepreneurs after they read Mehta’s report on background noise and creativity.

“We had been in and out of coffee shops, and we were getting really good work done,” co-founder Ace Callwood told the New York Times.

One of the other co-founders noticed that when he came back to his quiet workspace, his productivity plummeted.

After his request to work from a coffee shop was turned down, he and Callwood decided to bring the coffee shop to them, and Coffitivity was born.

The site offers a selection of different cafe sounds, from “Morning Murmur” to “Brazil Bistro,” which captures “the musical chatter of a Brazillian coffeehouse.”

There is also a Mac app available for offline access.

No matter which solution you choose, based on the science and the long list of pleased customers of all three sites you should see some benefits from hacking your background noise.

Available for:
Brain.fm: web, iOS, Android
Noisli: web, iOS
Coffitivity: web, iOS, Mac

Cost:
Brain.fm: The first five sessions are free, and there are monthly, yearly, and lifetime subscriptions available
Noisli: Web is free, iOS is $1.99
Coffitivity: Free, with a $9 annual fee that gives you unlimited access

 

IFTTT / Zapier

Why they’re worthy: These two services are unique in that they require access to other apps to work.

Confused?

The meaning of IFTTT‘s name makes the apps’ purpose clear:

“If This, Then (do) That”.

Both apps take information from one service and use it to trigger or cause something to happen with another service.

Command-line experts refer to this process of data in and out as “piping,” and in fact, IFTTT’s name itself is a reference to a software development concept.

Both act as the glue that joins two or more separate services together. You can use them to do things like automatically update your Twitter avatar every time you change your Facebook profile photo, or turn on the lights in your smart home when you send a text message to a special number.

The possibilities of the apps are only limited to the services each one supports, and your imagination.

Of the two, IFTTT’s learning curve is much gentler, which fits its emphasis on consumer products and services.  It has a huge selection of “recipes” created by other users to choose from, and the recipe creator is clear and easy to use.

Zapier’s caters more to small businesses and business needs, and its integrations and “zaps” (what it calls its version of IFTTT’s recipes) tend to cover more work applications.

Zapier’s business and workday focus make the zaps you can create more powerful and sophisticated, but that also means getting started is a little more involved than IFTTT.

The power of both apps can’t be understated, however: by combining multiple services, the potential for time savings and productivity gains is huge.

Available for:

IFTTT: web, iOS, Android
Zapier: web

Cost:

IFTTT: Free
Zapier: Free plan available, monthly plans start from $20

 

HabitHub is an Android app that uses Jerry Seinfeld’s famous “don’t break the chain” habit-forming technique

Nirow / HabitHub

Why they’re worthy: When we think about habits, we often think about the bad ones: chewing the ends of pencils (or our fingernails), spending too much time on the phone, continually being late; the list goes on and on.

Picking up a bad habit is often far too easy. (I’m looking at you, coffee!)

Developing good habits, on the other hand, can be challenging.

It’s hard to change our behavior for the better, and even with our greatest effort we often fail. As sociologist Christine Whelan told the Washington Post:

The unsexy and unappealing truth is, behavior change is hard because we’re creatures of habit. To make a change in our behavior, means we’re adding something, or subtracting something, and we have to figure out what that is.

It can be even harder as a businessperson trying to juggle work/life balance, families, business deals, and the countless other things busy entrepreneurs need to keep track of.

And as many articles will tell you, the best business people work hard to develop good habits. Lots of them.

One of the best techniques for establishing a good habit came from an unexpected place: comedian Jerry Seinfeld. His process works like this:

  • Choose the thing you want to do.
  • Get a big calendar.
  • Every day you do that thing, mark a big X on the calendar.
  • Your goal is to keep filling days. As Seinfeld said, “don’t break the chain.”

We may not have the luxury of putting up big calendars all over the place, but thankfully there are apps available that make tracking habits easy.

Nirow and HabitHub are mobile apps that help you track habits that you want to establish. These can be anything from “drink more water” to “take more breaks” or “write in my gratitude journal.”

Each one uses a different tactic to help here.

HabitHub uses Seinfeld’s method to track daily habits, whereas Nirow combines a calendar approach with automatic tracking of things like location and health.

Both are beautifully designed, and make keeping track of habits easy.

Available for:

Nirow: IOS
HabitHub: Android (with iOS “coming soon”)

Cost:

Nirow: Free, with in-app purchases
HabitHub: Free, with in-app purchases

Wrapping up

The number of productivity apps out there is staggering, and the numbers keep growing. As long as there is work, there will be apps that claim to help you get more done faster with less effort.

We hope this list will help you find more time, productivity, and flow in your day-to-day work. If you’re looking for more tips on how to make more time and be more productive, check out some of our other guides:

Are you ready to launch your startup or take your existing one to the next level? Our team of over 210,000 creatives is ready and waiting to handle your business’s custom logo designweb design, naming your business and more – everything you need to build a great brand. And, our outstanding customer service team is available to guide you through the whole process. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today. Check out these case studies to read about how crowdspring’s talented creatives have helped other startups get noticed.

The post These 12 Apps Will Help Boost Your Productivity appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Why and How to Rename Your Business

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“…a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” – William Shakespeare

A strong business name identifies your business, tells your customers and prospects something meaningful about your brand, and helps to differentiate your business from your competition.

But what should you do if you decide that the name you’ve been using for your business isn’t effective at accomplishing those goals?

While we strongly advise against changing your business name just because you’re in the mood for something new, there are times when it’s in your business’s best interest to take the plunge.

Here are 4 reasons to consider renaming your business… and 7 tips to help you pull it off successfully.

 

Why Change Your Business Name?

Changing your business name is rarely the first choice.

But, there are times when a new business name truly is the best choice.

Here are some of the most common reasons to consider a new business name…

#1 Trademark Issues

Occasionally more than one company has the same name. Or, the names are so similar that they may as well be the same.

When this occurs, there’s a good chance that one of those companies will get a cease-and-desist letter requesting that they stop using that name.

And, it’s no wonder why – your business stands to lose a lot of money if someone else operates under the same name as yours.

This is exactly what happened to entrepreneur Jacob Childrey and his established food spice company. He received a cease-and-desist letter from a much larger competitor.

Jacob leveraged crowdspring’s global community of 210,000+ creatives to create a fresh, powerful new name for his company.

You are at a big disadvantage too if another business with your name is caught up in a scandal. The resulting reputation blow will affect your business as well!

It’s important to protect your business name so that you can control the message about your brand and ensure that you’re not sharing your profits with a competitor.

To learn more about how to properly register and protect your business name, check out What Small Businesses Need to Know about Trademarks.

And, if you happen to find that you don’t have the first and only claim to your business name, it’s time to consider a new one.

#2 Your Name No Longer Reflects Your Business

Businesses grow and change over time.

Some business names are adaptable enough to survive this growth. Others are not.

If your business has outgrown its name, it may be time to think about renaming.

Nellie Akalp, entrepreneur, author, and small business expert, explains:

It’s only natural for a business to grow, evolve or change direction over the course of its lifetime. The name you hatched in the early days may no longer fit your business’ market, activities or brand personality now.

Not all changes warrant a new business name. But, some do.

  • Have you recently switched to a new product or service?
  • Did your business merge with another?
  • Has your business philosophy or mission changed significantly?

If you answered “yes” to any of these, then it may be time to consider a new name that better reflects your brand’s current identity.

#3 Your Name is Not Unique

Your business name needs to stand out.

It needs to be unique and support your business’s overall brand identity.

Generic names like “Publishing Services” or “Professional Tax Accountants” don’t help to differentiate you from the competition. And they certainly aren’t memorable.

So, even if you deliver fantastic service, well-meaning customers may get your name wrong when asked for referrals. Or they may not remember it at all.

Your word-of-mouth marketing will suffer. And so will your web marketing.

If you are one of ten variations of the same generic business name, you will be nearly impossible for customers to find on the web. They don’t want to sift through a full page of search results to find just the right “ABC Plumbing.”

Not to mention that no one really wants to do business with a generic, lackluster company.

Your business, your brand, and your customers will all benefit if you switch to a more unique name that really embodies your brand.

#4 Your Name is Confusing/ Hard to Spell

If your business name is confusing or hard to spell, customers may not be able to find you. It’s that simple.

A business name that doesn’t make sense and confuses consumers won’t be remembered.

According to Mariano Sigman, founder of the Integrative Neuroscience Laboratory of UBA, “a memory is a network of connected elements.” The human brain stores and accesses memories based on forming associations between two or more pieces of information.

So, if your business name is confusing or completely unrelated to your business, there’s a good chance that consumer’s brains won’t form the necessary connections between your business name and your business to remember the two as linked.

And if it ‘s hard to spell, they may end up finding another business and getting frustrated.

 

How to Rename Your Business

If it’s time to rename your business, you’ll want to be extra careful to get it just right this time around.

Changing your name requires a lot of thought and work. Not just on your part, but for your customers, too. They’ve gotten to know your old brand and now they’re being asked to unlearn all of that and start over.

So, this time around, follow these tips to name or rename your business to help ensure that your new name serves your business well for the long run. For a longer, more detailed version, also be sure to read 10 Tips for Naming Your Startup or Small Business.

#1 Start with your Brand

Your business name should be an extension and representation of your brand essence. It should embody the public identity you want your business to present.

So, start by thinking about your brand.

  1. What does your business do?
  2. What does your business stand for?
  3. How is your business different from your competition?
  4. What is your brand’s personality? (Quirky, Solemn, Formal, Playful, Aggressive, Warm)
  5. What is your unique value proposition?

Take your time and give some serious thought to what your brand is now. You knew your old brand, so you may be tempted to blow through this process. Don’t.

If you’re changing your business name, enough has changed that you need to take the time to rediscover what your brand is today.

Once you’ve defined your new brand, brainstorm names that support the most important elements. If a name doesn’t relate to your brand in a meaningful way, cut it from the list.

#2 Make it Easy to Pronounce and Spell

Hopefully, this is self-explanatory.

In the age of Google and the Internet of Things, it’s vital that your business be easy to find online.

A business name that is easy to pronounce and spell will serve you well in this regard.

Margaret Wolfson, founder and chief creative officer of branding/naming agency  River + Wolf, points out:

Today, a visible digital presence is absolutely critical to the success of any business. You want people to be able to search for and find you with little effort.

Don’t make it harder to find you with an unpronounceable name or a name even Rhodes Scholars can’t spell. As in all aspects of your business, make your name easy for your customers.

#3 Avoid Too Narrow and Too Wide – Aim for The Goldilocks Zone

Choose a name that is unique, but flexible enough to allow your business room to grow.

If you followed our first tip and started with your brand, your new name candidates should be directly related to the brand identity you’re trying to project.

Review your prospective names to ensure you avoid the following traps:

  • names that are linked to specific technologies likely to become outdated (remember Radio Shack?)
  • names with a focus so narrow that they preclude future evolution (ie. “Just Cabinets”)
  • geographical references that may make your business seem irrelevant in a broader market
  • broad or generic names without personality that don’t tell consumers anything about your brand

Ideally, your new name should be specific and memorable while also being adaptable to all future business growth.

Margaret Wolfson offers this example:

…your name should be able to embrace eventual product extensions. A notable example is the company name change Steve Jobs made from Apple Computer to Apple. This gave the company room to grow into yet unimagined products like watches, iPads, iPhones and other products.

So, think your name options through with an eye to longevity. Your new name should leave room to grow.

#4 Don’t Forget to Differentiate

Do you know who your competitors are?

You should. Because they’re the companies selling to your customers.

It’s vital that your new business name help your brand stand out from those competitors. So, get to know who they are. And then choose a name that can’t be confused with theirs.

Otherwise, you’ll be back at this renaming rodeo again before you know it.

#5 Get Your Logistical Ducks In a Row

Renaming your business isn’t just a creative branding endeavor – it’s also a practical one.

Here’s a quick list of logistical chores you’ll need to complete in order to ensure that you can legally operate under your new business name and protect that business name from competitors.

  • Ensure the name is available to trademark (Check the Trademark Electronic Search System (TESS) on the USPTO website).
  • Check to see if an appropriate domain name is available. We recommend searching here.
  • Register the new name with your state and/or the Federal Trademark Commission. You can read up on the basics of trademarking here and research the requirements for your state here.
  • Update or amend any legal documents to reflect your new name.
  • Notify the IRS of your new name.

For a more in-depth look at all of the practical steps to fully updating your business name, check out this article.

#6 Remember to Tell Your Story

Renaming your business isn’t ever just renaming – it’s also re-branding.

And, part of a successful re-branding process is figuring out the authentic brand story you want your audience to associate with your business.

Since your business name is a central element of your brand, it’s essential that you figure out how your new name relates to that brand story.

Alina Wheeler’s recently updated book “Designing Brand Identityaddresses this very issue:

Names are powerful tools, but they do not tell the whole story. A name change alone – without rethinking of all brand communications – could risk being seen as superficial.

It’s not enough to rethink all of your branding internally. You have to share it with your audience as well.

After you’ve selected your new name, decide how you’ll publicly share the brand story that supports your new name.

Whether you opt for a social media campaign, an email series to existing customers, a television or radio ad, or something else entirely, make sure your customers can see and understand the new you.

#7 Update All of Your Branding Elements

Sharing your brand story is an important piece of the renaming/rebranding process. And, in order to make it stick, you’ll need to update all of your visual branding elements. After all, a strong brand is important for your business.

This includes updating your business logo, business cards and stationery, your website, and any other visual collateral like data sheets, or marketing collateral.

Wheeler recommends in her book “Designing Brand Identity,”

Consider how new taglines, design, communications and other context-building tools should work with the new name to build a rich new story that you can own.

In other words, think holistically. Whenever you rename a business, you must make sure that name is part of a complete, authentic brand.

Every aspect of your brand will be impacted from start to finish. So, make sure to complete the transformation your name change will start throughout your brand.

 

Parting Thoughts

Changing your business name is a hassle. And, it can be tough on your business to rebuild relationships after a change of that magnitude.

If you can avoid it, don’t do it. But, if you find yourself facing a cease-and-desist or running a business that just doesn’t match up with the name it’s operating under, you may have to.

When you realize that a name change is in your future, gird your loins and make sure to get it right this time around.

 

Does your business need a new name? Our creatives at crowdspring can help. Let our team of over 210,000 creatives help you choose your business’s next name. We can also help update your logo, business cards, stationery, website and more. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today.

The post Why and How to Rename Your Business appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Influencer Marketing: Proven Strategies To Find Influencers Who Fit Your Brand

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The digital marketplace changes more often than Kylie Jenner switches her hair color.

It not easy for entrepreneurs, small business owners, and marketing strategists to keep their marketing campaigns relevant and competitive.

Influencer marketing, if done right, can help your startup or small business grow your audience, improve sales, and expand brand awareness through social media.

Influencer marketing targets a smaller, more precise market for each business, thereby reducing the overconsumption and chaos of an otherwise confusing, overwhelming digital marketplace.

But for influencer marketing to succeed, there has to be a good fit between your brand and the influencer(s) that represent you.

Business owners and marketers regularly ask:

  • What is influencer marketing?
  • Why use influencer marketing?
  • Who are the influencers in social media?
  • What’s the best platform to find influencers?
  • What are micro influencers?
  • How do I find a good fit between my brand and an influencer?
  • What’s the best software to manage influencer marketing?

We’re here to answer those questions and help you succeed with influencer marketing.

What is influencer marketing and why should you care?

Influencer marketing is the cool, indie stepsister of traditional celebrity endorsements, and serves as a hybrid of conventional marketing strategies fused with a modern-day content-driven approach.

These fresh new marketing campaigns exist as more natural collaborations between brands and those who endorse them.

Virtually anyone can be an influencer if they have the right qualities and an audience that follows them.

Your neighbor, the girl you see on the subway, your Uncle Kevin – the best influencers for your business often aren’t celebrities; they’re relatable figures who are in touch with a large audience online.

These people might be influential because they are well respected in their field, or because they have a popular fashion blog – whatever the reason, what’s important is that they have the eyes and ears of a super-targeted niche audience primed to be interested in your business’ service or product.

That’s why it’s important to find an influencer or micro-influencer who fits your brand.

 

How can influencer marketing benefit your business?

Here are the three clearest benefits of influencer marketing:

  • You can tap into an influencer’s knowledge of a platform. Use their proven understanding of what works and what doesn’t when curating or creating content for that specific platform.
  • Linking your brand to an influencer provides you valuable access to their audience, creating a direct line of contact to a valuable, targeted niche base.
  • Influencers can make the best customers. Embrace them as such and gain their feedback, perspective, and review of your product.

Are the most popular influencers best?

When it comes to influencers, bigger isn’t always better.

Larger scale influencers can help brands increase their exposure and spread brand awareness.

However, if the influencer is a poor match for the brand and doesn’t fit in with their existing brand identity, people are likely to dismiss their “influence” as a blatant money grab.

If you are a small business and don’t have the budget of a larger company, consider working with a micro-influencer (people who have between 10,000 and 100,000 followers). With high engagement rates and lower fees, micro influencers are an excellent choice for businesses just starting to expand their brand’s reach.

Micro-influencers give smaller businesses another great advantage by allowing those businesses to target smaller, more unique audiences.

How do you find influencers?

When you ask brands and marketers for the best platform for influencer marketing, the vast majority of them will answer Instagram. Many surveys support this view – here’s one citing Instagram as the No. 1 platform for 92% influencers.

You would be unwise to limit yourself to Instagram alone, however. Plenty of influencers are also keeping up with their base on Facebook, Snapchat, Twitter, YouTube, and Pinterest.

  • Pinterest – Pinfluencers have been known to attract as many as 1.8 million followers,
  • YouTube – Google discovered that influencers on YouTube had 3x as many views and 2x as many actions on sponsored content posts as compared to celebrity posts,
  • Blogs geared toward your market – Bloggers, as a group, tend to be trusted authorities in their niche groups who can attract customers while building community, and
  • Other platforms where you’re likely to find your target audience – Think Twitter, Snapchat, and common interest communities across the web. On Twitter alone, almost 40% of the users bought something because an influencer tweeted about it – that’s a very impressive figure.

 

What should you pay influencers?

Influencers construct their prices based on three major factors:

  • The size of their following,
  • Their engagement rate, and
  • How in demand they are.

If they’re a popular, well-known influencer on a platform like Instagram, they are likely to receive plenty of offers to promote brands on their Instagram posts. Consequently, the price that they charge for Instagram posts is going to be much higher.

Here’s where you can score a bargain: the same influencer who might have a massive demand for their Instagram marketing posts might be less in demand on Pinterest or Facebook. That means they may charge less for working on those platforms, giving you a way to reach at least part of their market for a fraction of the price.

It’s true that you may not reach as many people on Snapchat as you could on Instagram. However, if you are paying less and getting great conversions, you’re still generating a better ROI.

To get a better sense of pricing for influencers marketing, take a look at this post from Digiday.

 

Courtesy of socalitybarbie

Reality check: fake followers

There has been a lot of media coverage about influencers using unethical means to bolster their follower count to look more influential than they actually are.

The New York Times had a critically acclaimed article on fake followers that focused attention on a well-known “dirty secret” of influencer marketing.

“Social media is a virtual world that is filled with half bots, half real people,” said Rami Essaid, the founder of Distil Networks, a cybersecurity company that specializes in eradicating bot networks. “You can’t take any tweet at face value. And not everything is what it seems.”

The idea that “things are not what they seem” seems even more applicable when it comes to follower counts and reach. Social sites like Twitter have made efforts to curb this by purging millions of fake and bot-driven accounts from their network, but this is (and continues to be) a thorny problem.

Make sure that the person you’re looking at has the reach they claim to have. You want to find a valued partner to work with, not throw money at a mirage.

Influencer marketing uses engagement as a metric to measure the level of interaction influencers receive with their content.

The percentage of an influencer’s audience who actively responds to their content can come in several forms:

  • Post Likes/Reactions,
  • Shares,
  • Views, and
  • Comments.

Engagement rate matters because it provides you with information about how well an influencer’s content performs on the platforms in which they are participating.

If an influencer has a high number of likes, generates valuable shares to broaden the reach of their brand, and has a steady influx of conversation in the comments section, you know you’re dealing with someone who can in turn substantially extend the reach of your brand.

When you understand the rate at which an influencer’s audience is engaging with the influencer, you can find out whether or not, and how much, that influencer can help deliver an adequate ROI (return on investment) if you work toward establishing a partnership with them.

What should you look for when searching for an influencer?

Brand

For all of its potential advantages, influencer marketing is a wasted investment if you pair yourself with an influencer who doesn’t fit your brand.

As we previously explained:

A brand is the sum total of the experience your prospects and customers have with your company. A strong brand communicates what your company does, how it does it, and at the same time, establishes trust and credibility with your prospects and customers. Your company’s brand is, in many ways, its personality. Your brand lives in everyday interactions your company has with its prospects and customers, including the images you share, the messages you post on your website, the content of your marketing materials, your presentations and booths at conferences, and your posts on social networks.

When deciding on an influencer, you need to keep in mind two critical questions: Is this influencer a good representation of your brand, and do they have a good engagement rate?

Consider how any potential influencer can best reflect a quality or aspect of your business that is a natural fit for you both.

After all, you don’t want your business name or logo associated with someone who has a questionable or negative reputation online.

An important way to evaluate fit is to consider about the influencer’s “voice” and whether that voice matches your own. Neil Waller, co-founder of Shore Projects and co-founder and CEO of Whalar offered a great analogy for how to choose a good fit for you:

At their best, influencers are like magazine publishers. If you picked up a magazine, you’d have a sense of voice and tone, what the magazine stands for, and what the magazine writes about. And with magazine publishing, that’s how you would choose whether to associate your brand with that magazine. Apply the same process to influencers.

 

Background

It’s essential that when you evaluate an influencer that you take into consideration the entirety of their online presence, and that includes things they’ve said or done in the past.

Doing your due diligence with a new potential influencer means spending some time looking at things they’ve posted, and getting a feel for where they came from and what kind of person they were (or persona they adopted) in the past.

What you don’t need is finding out too late (after you’ve committed to someone and tied your brand to theirs) that they made offensive or inappropriate comments years ago, or they used to be someone whose attitudes or personality clashed with your brand.

How can you validate an influencer that you’re thinking about working with?

  • Ask for a media kit. They should be able to provide you with some documentation that explains their audience and the kind of engagement they see. They should be able to give you an idea of how well their posts perform and what you can expect working with them.
  • Spend some time following them yourself before and after you initiate contact. You should be able to validate what they tell you with your own eyes by observing their social feeds. Look for someone who is passionate about complementary things to your brand and your services.
  • Talk to them. Spend a bit of time getting to know them, ask questions, and make sure they’re someone you can see yourself working with.
  • Read their comments. You can often get a good idea of someone’s posting history and their values through their comments. This isn’t always true (as comments can be a total dumpster fire), but it can be helpful. For example, reading the comments of a hugely influential Instagram account like Humans of New York shows that, for the most part, the account has encouraged and cultivated a positive environment.

Take the time to ensure the people you’re considering are who they say they are, and you’ll potentially save yourself some serious pain later.

You found an influencer. Now what?

How to get started with an influencer 

Once you have identified an influencer who would be a great fit to speak about your brand, reach out and connect with them.

There’s no shortage of ways to do this. You can:

  • Reach out over social media – try tweeting at them!
  • Take advantage of direct messaging available on social media.
  • Email them.
  • Call them.

The next part is simple. Start a conversation! Be friendly, be straightforward, be real.

Don’t beat around the bush about why you’re trying to connect – explain your goals, why you think they’re an excellent fit for your brand, and what you believe a mutually beneficial relationship might look like.

 

How to maintain the relationship

Just like with social media management, influencer marketing requires its own set of tools to keep things running smoothly and effectively.

It’s important to look into a variety of influencer marketing tools so that you can create workflows and processes for any marketing campaigns.

Taking care to properly manage these things will both save you time and help you measure the performance of any marketing efforts you put forward.

With so many growing platforms and influencer marketing tools available, it won’t be hard to find an influencer and manage the relationship and its workflow. Take advantage of tools like Tapinfluence and Upfluence to help you find influencers and manage subsequent workflow.

Tools like Traackr focus on what they call Influencer Relationship Management. Traackr’s major goal is to give brands it works with “lasting influence.”

The platform lends a broad ear to influencers, allowing interested brands to engage with them and their audiences. The meaningful communication encourages familiarity between the brands, influencers, and readers – which in turn grows trust, which is priceless.

NeoReach is influencer marketing software that offers an option for “Managed Campaigns.” NeoReach will design and run full campaigns for their clients, who are welcome to check on their campaign at any time by viewing their project’s dashboard. Convenient!

Make influencer marketing work for you

Influencer marketing works well if done right. But for influencer marketing to benefit your business, you have to find influencers who fit your brand.

You never know – a new influencer just might be amongst your newly curated followers!

If you need a more authentic brand that’s worth following, get yourself a fresh design that wows your customers and prospective customers. Crowdspring’s community of over 210,000 graphic, web, and product designers can help you create a brand worth engaging with – without breaking the bank. You can get started on a logo design, web design, print design, packaging design or any other design project here, or request a free design consultation with one of our design experts here.

The post Influencer Marketing: Proven Strategies To Find Influencers Who Fit Your Brand appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Twitter Link Roundup #340 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers!

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Have you ever looked back on something you’ve written and cringed?

You’re not alone.

Take a hard look at your work and edit with a firm hand. Here’s a terrific article by Ryan Holiday about the importance of reflection.

Now, we hope you enjoy another great set of links and articles that we shared with you over the past week on our crowdspring Twitter account (and on Ross’s Twitter account). We regularly share our favorite posts on entrepreneurship, small business, marketing, logo design, web design, startups, leadership, social media, marketing, economics and other interesting stuff! Enjoy!

smallbusinessblog

startupsblog

socialmediablog

designblog

otherblog

Are you ready to embrace your inner entrepreneur? Learn to lead and manage your business like a pro. Download our free ebook by crowdspring CEO Ross Kimbarovsky, Stand Out: An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Starting, Growing and Managing a Successful Business.

The post Twitter Link Roundup #340 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers! appeared first on crowdspring Blog.


The Psychology of Logo Design: How Fonts, Colors, Shapes and Lines Influence Purchasing Decisions

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Your company’s logo is the visual figurehead of your brand. It’s important to get it right.

Whether every detail of a logo is intentional or not, every detail will influence people who see that logo.

Nothing should be arbitrary.

It’s in your best interest to make sure that every logo design choice is intentional and communicates the message you want to convey.

Thoughtless design choices lead to misleading or confusing logos. Or, even worse, logos that don’t say anything at all.

Let’s take a deeper look at the psychology of logo design and how fonts, shapes, lines, colors, and composition can affect how a logo can influence purchasing decisions.

 

The Psychology of Fonts in Logo Design

Fonts have a psychological impact on people. The emotion generated from font choice is directly tied into the shape of the letters and our psychological response to those shapes.

When using fonts for your business, choose a font with the right “personality.” As we wrote,

Typography is an effective way to convey more than just the words involved in written communication. It showcases personality by visually representing the tenor and tone of what it is you’re talking about. You may find that your purpose is best met by using a font with a vibrant personality throughout your website or using an amalgamation of sans and serif typefaces.

Some people are familiar with Serif and Sans Serif fonts (you’ve seen them even if you don’t know how to tell them apart). They were designed to make it easier for people to read words and that makes most Serif and Sans Serif fonts a good fit for many different kinds of businesses.

How do you know which font style will work best for your business?

Are you better off with something conventional, like Arial or Helvetica? Maybe you’ll find a stronger fit with an offbeat choice like Kirsten or Papyrus (Papyrus!)

It’s clear that whatever your font choice, it should align with your customers’ expectations when they encounter your brand.

The Software Usability Research Laboratory (SURL) at Wichita State University ran a study that examined the traits people associate with varying fonts.

Traditional fonts including Arial or Times New Roman were categorized as “stable” and “mature”, but were also considered “unimaginative” and “conformist.”

In contrast, “youthful” and “casual” fonts like Comic Sans were also considered “happy” and “casual.”

Fonts for a business logo, for example, should work to be traditional and clean. You need to be sure anything with your font on it – letters, emails, business cards – reinforces the message that you’re a trustworthy, credible business.

A more casual coffee shop, on the other hand, should avoid overly rigid, hyper-clean fonts. A cafe’s atmosphere is typically relaxed and comfortable, and your font choice should reflect that.

Most important, be sure that the company’s name is legible and readable. You’d be surprised how many logos we’ve seen that are unreadable.

How can you remember a business if you don’t know the name of that business?

The Psychology of Shapes in Logo Design

All logos – whether they include an icon and text, only an icon, or even just text – have a shape.

And, it’s important to consider what that shape communicates about your brand.

Shapes fall into 3 major categories – geometric, abstract/symbolic and organic. And, they all come prepackaged with their own psychological associations.

Geometric Shapes

Geometric shapes of all kinds look man-made. Mathematically precise squares, perfect circles, and isosceles triangles don’t tend to appear in nature. So, using these shapes communicates a sense of order and power.

Squares and rectangles convey stability, reliability, strength, order, and predictability. Think of the bricks that are used to build sturdy, stable buildings. If you want your logo to communicate strength and reliability, considering incorporating squares or rectangles.

This is precisely what IBM did in creating its iconic logo. Their full company name, The International Business Machines Corporation, was shortened to IBM to create a more powerful, minimalist visual brand.

 

Circles are never-ending. So, they may be the right choice for your logo if you want to make your consumers think of harmony, unity, eternity, or timelessness. Curves are considered to be feminine; and, as such, circles communicate softness, gentility, and femininity.

Triangles are a directional shape. As a result, they change meaning depending on how they are positioned. When right side up, triangles convey power, stability, and upward momentum. Inverted triangles suggest instability or downward momentum. And, triangles pointing to the side convey movement and direction based on where the triangle’s point is facing.

Abstract or Symbolic Shapes

Symbols are simplified shapes that represent something specific in a culture. And, because symbols have clear, common meanings, they are relied upon heavily as a visual language.

People have seen these images again and again, so it’s really important to be clever and original in how you use them. It’s easy for logos featuring symbols to appear trite and unoriginal.

Here are a few common examples of symbols:

Stars can convey patriotism, religion, or even show business and Hollywood depending on how they are used.

Hearts can be used to communicate love, relationships, and marriage; while broken hearts represent break-ups, divorce, and sadness.

Arrows suggest a direction, movement, and travel. These are commonly used in businesses that ship and deliver goods (FedEx and Amazon, anyone?)

Be very careful when using these, and other, common symbols in your logo. They may be an easy-to-understand visual shorthand, but they are also so commonly used that you run the risk of looking indistinct from your competition.

If your logo is too “on-the-nose” and unoriginal you may come across as unprofessional; which will undermine your potential customers’ faith and trust in your business.

FedEx and Amazon are examples of logos that use symbols well.

The arrow in the FedEx logo is subtle and created from negative space – it’s an unexpected surprise.

Amazon’s logo features an arrow that serves triple duty signifying a package being delivered, their range of products (from “A” to “Z”) and the recipient’s resulting smile.

Organic Shapes

Irregular, organic shapes are wide open to your creativity.

Organic shapes include the shapes of actual organic items occurring in nature (rocks, leaves, tree bark, amoeba, water ripples, etc.). This category also encompasses any irregular non-symbolic shape, even if it’s not inspired by nature.

Professor Sunday Moulton, PhD explains:

Organic shapes are defined by not being regulated by patterns or exact dimensions in their angles, curves, or lengths of lines. In fact, they are just like shapes we find in nature with all the randomness and freedom you might see in a rock formation, a tree branch, or a leaf chewed by an insect.

When utilizing organic shapes, keep these guidelines in mind:

  1. Natural shapes like leaves, grasses, representations of water, and trees tend to have a soothing effect on the viewer. This is why they tend to appear in logos for spas and holistic medical businesses.
  2. Shapes with jagged angles may create feelings of anxiety for your viewers, while shapes with soft curves will make them feel more relaxed.
  3. Shapes that don’t resemble anything recognizable are open to the viewer’s interpretation. This means that you will need to work harder to communicate a specific message through other design elements and branding choices.

When designing a logo, be mindful of what shapes will represent the brand best. Is the brand a reliable, precise square or a wacky organic inkblot?

 

The Psychology of Lines in Logo Design

Lines appear everywhere.

And we usually don’t give them much thought.

Lines divide space. They create definition and form. They communicate direction. Lines tell us where to stand and where to drive.

But, beyond their practical function, they can also communicate a great deal aesthetically.

ArtyFactory, a free online learning resource for visual artists, shares:

Line is the foundation of all drawing. It is the first and most versatile of the visual elements of art. Line in an artwork can be used in many different ways. It can be used to suggest shape, pattern, form, structure, growth, depth, distance, rhythm, movement and a range of emotions.

Geometric line art logos are currently popular and among the logo design trends this year.

Let’s look at how lines can have a psychological impact in a logo design.

Thin vs Thick Lines

Thin lines are delicate and may appear fragile. They communicate elegance and femininity. They can also imply frailty, weakness or flexibility.

Alternately, thick lines suggest strength and rigidity. They appear more traditionally masculine than thin lines. Thick, bold lines are used to draw focus and create emphasis where they appear.

Straight vs Curved Lines

Straight lines imply order, structure, and predictability. They may also be perceived as rigid or harsh. Straight lines are the best option for underlining text to draw the viewer’s attention, while at the same time allowing the text to be the star.

Curved lines, on the other hand, offer more energy and dynamism. Curved lines are visibly flexible and can communicate agility and reactivity. If you’re looking to convey grace and fluidity, curved lines are a great choice.

The stronger the curve, the higher the energy the line will communicate. Softer curves are more calming to look at.

Horizontal vs Vertical vs Diagonal Lines

The position of your line in space impacts the psychological effect that the line creates.

Horizontal lines run parallel to the horizon. As a result, they contain the least visual energy of all line positions.

Unlike vertical or diagonal lines, they look as though gravity has already acted upon them and there is nowhere for them to fall. This means that horizontal is the most restful and stable line position. They feel comfortable and safe.

Horizontal lines help to emphasize width, can be used to indicate the earth or ground, or to indicate lateral movement.

Vertical lines run perpendicular to the horizon. They appear to rise straight up from the earth, filling them with the potential visual energy to tip or fall.

Vertical lines draw the eye upward. And, as such, are often used in religious iconography to draw focus upward to the heavens.

Thicker vertical lines are perceived to have more stability (and be more calming) than thin vertical lines which look more fragile and unstable.

Verticality also can be used to convey dignity or upstanding trustworthiness.

Diagonal lines can be positioned anywhere between horizontal and vertical. This makes them very expressive and the least stable of all the line positions.

The higher the top of the line, the more distance the line can fall. This translates to more potential visual energy. You will elicit more tension in your viewer the higher the angle you create from the horizon.

Diagonal lines suggest movement and action. They are more casual and playful than vertical or horizontal lines because they resist being pigeonholed in either resting position.

Smooth vs Jagged vs Irregular Lines

Smooth lines are clean, calming and restful. Depending on their context, they can convey confidence, fluidity, or ease.

Jagged and zig-zagging lines are filled with tension. These dynamic lines change direction quickly, communicate erratic movement, and irregularity. They can suggest excitement or anxiety, confusion or danger.

Irregular lines that are neither completely smooth nor jagged look hand-drawn and natural. They appear casual and can create emphasis and focus by placing additional weight in the places where you want to draw focus.

Irregular lines can convey playfulness, confidence, timidity or hesitation based on how they are drawn.

Lines are incredibly expressive tools with great potential for embodying emotion. You can combine most of the factors described above to create lines with great individuality.

When designing a logo, make sure to choose the style of line that best supports the brand the logo will represent.

 

The Psychology of Colors in Logo Design

Color contributes the strongest emotional trigger in your logo design repertoire.

Colors are strongly linked to emotions in the human psyche. Whether our interpretation of colors is hardwired into our brains or is due to cultural influence – or a combination of both – there is a generally accepted language of color.

As we explained in a Small Business Branding: What Color Says About Your Business:

While our perception of colors and what they mean is subjective, there are some basic qualities that we can apply generally. Here are some of those qualities:

Red. Often considered exciting, attention-grabbing, warm, and connected to love, anger, life, and comfort.

Yellow. Seen as adventurous, evoking happiness, enthusiasm, youth, and travel.

Green. Of course, this color is connected to money, but it’s also known for its connection to balance, health, sustainability, and knowledge.

Blue. The color of honesty, high quality, competence, trust, reliability, and integrity.

Pink. This color evokes love, compassion, romance, gentleness, and sophistication.

Purple. Creativity, royalty, mystery, respect, and playfulness are often connected to purple (and violet).

Brown. Brown is the color of the outdoors and can be seen as friendly, organic, natural, friendly, and rugged.

Black. This color is all about sophistication, intelligence, seriousness, and expense.

White. The antithesis of black is known for its order, innocence, purity, cleanliness, neutrality, and space.

Grey. When you need to communicate timelessness, neutrality, refinement, of the moment, or practicality, you might want to use grey.

Culture and context can also influence how a color is interpreted. Therefore, do your due diligence and research your audience so you can make the best choices based on their specific backgrounds.

It’s also important to bear in mind that how you mix your colors in a single design also has psychological implications for your viewers. For instance:

  • A multitude of bright colors appears youthful, childlike, or full of energy.
  • Black and white is a classically elegant combination that implies maturity and sophistication.
  • Monochromatic schemes allow you to embrace more vibrant colors while maintaining a softer, more unified feel.
  • Combining neutrals with an accent color allows you to take advantage of the emotional influence of a strong, bright color without the childlike implications.

Choose your colors wisely to elicit appropriate brand-appropriate emotions. Your color choices should always embody the personality of the brand.

The Psychology of Composition in Logo Design

Shapes, lines, and colors are the building blocks for a great logo design.

But, don’t forget that how you compose those elements also impacts how the logo is perceived and the message it sends.

Here are some important considerations to think through when composing a logo design:

  • Size denotes importance. The larger an object is the more focus it draws and the more important it seems.
  • Western audiences read from left to right. So, things appearing on the left side of the logo will be viewed first and perceived as the most important.
  • Loosely spaced items surrounded by negative space look more restful than items that are closely spaced. If you choose to emphasize negative space, be careful not to leave too much or the logo may lack coherence.
  • Scattered, or irregular placement suggests playfulness, chaos or rebellion; while orderly, symmetrical arrangements communicate formality, stability, and conformity.
  • Layering items together creates visual relationships, so be mindful of how you combine shapes and lines.

The combinations of lines, colors, and shapes to create a logo are limited only by your imagination and creativity. For more on this, read The Business Owner’s Guide to Creating a Unique Logo.

Putting it Together

Every detail of your company’s logo will influence people who see that logo.

You can communicate a lot – and do it efficiently and effectively – if you understand your brand and make informed, thoughtful choices regarding fonts, shapes, lines, colors, and composition.

 

Are you ready for a new logo? The crowdspring community (over 210,000 graphic, web and product designers) has helped many entrepreneurs, small businesses, and agencies design professional, unique and memorable brand-centric logos, for a small fraction of the cost those companies and agencies would otherwise pay.

If you’re ready for the next step, engage with crowdspring’s community of over 210,000 designers who can work with you to move your company’s brand and design to the next level by creating an awesome logo design for as little as $299.

 

The post The Psychology of Logo Design: How Fonts, Colors, Shapes and Lines Influence Purchasing Decisions appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Telling Your Brand Story Through Packaging Design: These 3 Businesses Are Doing It Right

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We all like to acquire new things.

Every new item arrives fraught with the unspoken possibility that this thing could make your life better.

But, a new phone, snack food, lipstick, or computer is made even better when it arrives in awesome packaging.

If you sell products, invest in good packaging design (the packaging for your product) and package graphics (the graphics/content on the product packaging) to help your company succeed.

Product packaging has the power to inspire us to purchase a product and can make us feel even better about the purchase we’ve just made.

Product packaging accomplishes this by helping tell your brand story in an expanded format. Victoria Greene of BrandPackaging.com explains:

The way a product is packaged can create a dynamic, engaging story about your brand, drawing upon a multitude of features. These include the design itself, the shape and size and technical features, and the copy used on the packaging. It also extends to how it links with wider marketing campaigns… It even encompasses the materials used to create it: Is it recyclable or reusable? Vintage or contemporary? Each aspect of packaging works together to silently speak volumes about the product.

To build a strong brand, you must tell compelling brand stories. As we wrote previously:

Effective product packaging does more than merely set the stage for a product. The experience of unpacking a product is part of a customer’s experience with a brand, much like a company’s name and logo.

The need to tell compelling brand stories will grow in importance in the years to come. Millennials and Generation Z are taking on bigger and bigger roles in the marketplace. As we see in current packaging design trends, these consumers value authenticity and seek out brands striving to make a genuine connection.

Let’s take a closer look at three businesses who do a great job telling their brand story through product packaging.

 

Divine Chocolate: Featuring Brand Promise

Your brand story – as we’ve already mentioned – covers a lot more ground than just your company’s name, logo and tagline. And, your brand promise is a particularly integral part of your overall brand story.

Your brand promise is the commitment your business makes to its customers.

Lee Fredericksen, Managing Partner at Hinge Marketing explains:

A brand promise is an extension of a company’s positioning. If you think of positioning as the fertile ground that allows a brand to germinate, grow and thrive, the brand promise is a brand’s fruit—it’s the tangible benefit that makes a product or service desirable.

Divine Chocolate promises its customers delicious chocolate. But, that’s not all.

Divine Chocolate

Image courtesy of Divine Chocolate

You may remember Divine Chocolate and its managing director Sophi Tranchell from 11 Entrepreneurs Who Are Changing the World.

Divine is a UK-based chocolatier. But, they’re so much more than that.

Divine has made it their mission to “make the world a place where chocolate is cherished by everyone, including the family farmers who grow the cocoa.”

How do they do this? By putting their money and their business where their mouth is.

Divine’s chocolate is farmed by the Kuapa Kokoo cooperative in Ghana. The 85,000 farmers in the cooperative are co-owners in the company.

The farmers receive a share of the profits and have a voice in the business. Divine is following through on their promise in a very real way.

Their brand promise – luxurious fairtrade chocolate that you can feel good about enjoying – is an extension of this mission.

And, they’ve done an excellent job of prominently showcasing their brand promise within their larger brand story on their chocolate packaging.

The Packaging

Image courtesy of Divine Chocolate

The packaging for Divine’s chocolate bars prominently features their opulent gold script logo. This reminds customers of the high-quality and decadent chocolate experience awaiting inside.

The logo is printed in raised metallic ink, providing a tactile experience for the consumer as well as a visual one.

And, surrounding that logo is a pattern of adrinka symbols. These symbols derive from Ghanian culture – and are still embraced by the farmers of the Kuapa Kokoo cooperative.

Each symbol represents a virtue that is valued by the brand. You can learn more about them in the graphic above.

These symbols pack quite a bit of visual information in just the small amount of real estate available on the packaging. But, even if you don’t know what each symbol means, they remind consumers of the chocolate’s Ghanian roots.

And, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the color scheme, an important psychological element in product packaging. Bright colors on a rich black or smooth, chocolatey brown background. The vibrant Ghanian-inspired colors layer over the chic luxury of the neutral background to communicate the two most important elements of their brand story.

And, that’s just the outside of the wrapper. The inside of Divine’s wrappers includes copy and graphics explaining their story.

Liz Miller, Divine’s Senior Marketing Manager, explains,

Consumers love discovering that the Fairtrade cocoa in our chocolate is grown by family farmers in Ghana and that they receive 44% of Divine profits… This empowers people to become a part of our story by treating themselves and others to Divine Chocolate.

Divine has masterfully communicated their brand story to their customers in an eye-pleasing and effective package.

What You Can Learn

  • Feature your logo prominently to increase brand recognition. And, make sure that your company’s logo is the best possible representation of your brand.
  • Make thoughtful choices about the graphics that will best communicate your brand story. Dig deep and be selective – use the images that pack the most meaning possible while also jiving with the overall design concept and brand story.

 

Charlotte’s Web: Brand Perception

As much as we try to control the narrative around our brand, there is one element that we can influence, but never truly control. And, that’s our brand’s perception.

Brand perception is how your audience perceives your brand. And, it’s as much a part of your brand story as the elements you can control, like your brand promise, brand personality, and your branding style guide.

The Stanley brothers – founders of Charlotte’s Web – know this well.

Charlotte’s Web

The Stanley Brothers (Charlotte’s Web) – Image courtesy of LA Weekly

Charlotte’s Web, a manufacturer and retailer of high-quality CBD hemp oil, must walk a fine line.

Cannabis has quite a reputation in this country. Ever since President Nixon declared a war on drugs in 1971, cannabis has gotten some pretty bad PR.

But the Stanley brothers, founders of Charlotte’s Web, have worked hard to ensure that their product is “The World’s Most Trusted Hemp Extract.”

Their product is perceived as safe, legal, and of high quality. This is quite a feat considering the overwhelming stigma attached to the plant from which their product is made.

So, how do these legal sellers of medicinal hemp oils create such a positive brand perception?

They lean hard on their brand story of a dedicated family-run business and their heart-warming origins helping the real-life Charlotte become healthy enough to live like a normal kid.

And, their packaging design and package graphics help, too.

The Packaging

Image courtesy of Charlotte’s Web Hemp

Charlotte’s Web products are packaged to inspire confidence.

They use bold, but trustworthy neutral colors that create the perception of sophistication – a far cry from the red, green and yellow Rastafarian colors usually associated with cannabis.

There are no mushrooms, hookah-smoking caterpillars or Grateful Dead bears here. The minimalist design is elegant, professional and understated with clean sans serif typography and simple line art.

But look closer – they’ve also modeled their design after traditional medicinal packaging. They mention the number of milligrams of active ingredients contained in the product.  And, language like “balm,” “extract,” and “dietary supplement” create further associations with health and medicine.

In addition to that, the inclusion of the Charlotte’s Web logo and brand name links back to the fuller brand story of how their product was able to help young Charlotte – after whom the company was named.

And, finally, their branding is consistent throughout all of their products. From their hemp oil extracts to their capsules and their balms, all of the packagings shares consistent visual branding. This gives the whole line an air of professionalism and reliability.

What You Can Learn

  • If your brand story is counter to popular perception, visually align your packaging design and package graphics to show the story that you do want to tell. Be careful to avoid references that might accidentally conjure the undesirable story with which you don’t want to associate.
  • Consistently brand your product packaging so that consumers can get to know and trust your visual brand. Repeat interactions with your visual brand will build familiarity and confidence.

 

PoopBags.com: Brand Personality

Image courtesy of Packaging of the World

Every brand has a personality that is integral to who they are.

Investopedia defines brand personality as:

 …a set of human characteristics that are attributed to a brand name. A brand personality is something to which the consumer can relate; an effective brand increases its brand equity by having a consistent set of traits that a specific consumer segment enjoys.

These traits usually come from the person in charge. But, they can also be determined by the business culture.

And, if you’re aiming to create an authentic brand with a genuine brand story, it’s important that your brand personality comes from an honest source.

Enter PoopBags.com…

PoopBags.com

Image courtesy of Packaging of the World

The folks at PoopBags.com are trying to solve a problem, help the planet, and have fun doing it.

In 2003 owner Paul Canella began selling biodegradable dog waste bags and he’s never looked back.

Dogs will always poop. And bags for cleaning up dog waste are in constant demand for city-dwelling dog owners. But, no one is really excited about the topic of dog poop bags – except for Paul “Mr. Poop Bags” Canella.

He felt bad using non-biodegradable bags to collect his dog May’s waste, knowing that they were not good for our planet. So, he set out to create an Earth-friendlier biodegradable version to solve this issue.

But, even though Canella is driven by a high-minded and worthwhile purpose, he’s never lost touch with his sense of humor:

Poop Bags! When you typed some keywords into your search engine of choice, you may have laughed when you saw the link for www.poopbags.com come up. Well, when I was walking my dog in the summer of 2003, I laughed too when I first thought about the idea…

PoopBags.com has a distinct personality that shines through in their product packaging.

The Packaging

Image courtesy of Packaging of the World

PoopBags.com’s packaging design keeps things light and playful, showcasing their fun personality.

Their products come in boxes featuring a range of bright, exuberant colors juxtaposed with a neutral background. The raw cardboard color shows through beneath the cheery, saturated pastels to remind consumers of their dedication to using and creating biodegradable materials.

Their logo embraces the light and humorous personality of their brand with a gently rounded font and a cute flower to remind consumers of their eco-mindedness and provide a cheeky nod to poop’s role as a fertilizer.

They complete their brand story with a seal claiming that they have been “Saving the Earth Since 2003”. This seal features their dedication to helping the planet with their product.

PoopBags.com’s packaging unapologetically owns their role as purveyors of potty accessories and has fun with it. But, they also manage to deftly remind their audience of their enthusiasm for protecting our planet, all in one cohesive and attractive design.

What You Can Learn

  • Choose colors, imagery, and fonts that reflect your brand’s personality. And don’t forget to use an appropriate voice for your packaging copy. You can communicate so much about your brand by showing instead of telling.
  • Share what your brand is all about. Do you have a cause or mission that you’re passionate about? What motivates you? Feature that in your packaging design.

 

Wrapping Up

Product packaging offers a tangible way to help your company connect with your customers and prospects. They can see, touch, and (if appropriate) smell your packaging.

It’s rare that you’ll have this much of a customer’s attention.

So, take advantage and share through your product packaging as much of your brand story as possible.

This is your chance to help your audience really get to know you – and make a lasting positive impression

 

Is it time for you to re-evaluate your product packaging? Or, maybe you need packaging design or package graphics for a new product line? Let crowdspring’s team of over 210,000 designers help tell your brand story with amazing packaging design or package graphics. Click here to start your packaging design project or request a free, no obligation design consultation for a new logo, business card, or any other type of design, with one of our design experts today.

The post Telling Your Brand Story Through Packaging Design: These 3 Businesses Are Doing It Right appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

Twitter Link Roundup #341 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers!

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That sound you hear is George Orwell peering incredulously from his grave as he rolls over.

As science races ahead, people continue to search for ways to more deeply integrate technology into humanity. The questions this raises, both in benefits and in long-term consequences, are as fascinating as they are portentous.

Rohit Talwar, futurist and CEO of the think tank Fast Future, sees chipping (adding technology to the human body) becoming widespread very quickly – especially as companies compete with one another to stand ahead as forward-thinking and just-this-side of full-on dystopian.

Medium’s notable piece on human chipping is a terrific read on this topic. Talwar says, tellingly: “We could see a massive acceleration in this as we move into enhancing and augmenting ourselves and stepping into the world of transhumanism.”

Now, we hope you enjoy another great set of links and articles that we shared with you over the past week on our crowdspring Twitter account (and on Ross’s Twitter account). We regularly share our favorite posts on entrepreneurship, small business, marketing, logo design, web design, startups, leadership, social media, marketing, economics and other interesting stuff! Enjoy!

smallbusinessblog

startupsblog

socialmediablog

designblog

logodesignblog

otherblog

Are you ready to embrace your inner entrepreneur? Learn to lead and manage your business like a pro. Download our free ebook by crowdspring CEO Ross Kimbarovsky, Stand Out: An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Starting, Growing and Managing a Successful Business.

The post Twitter Link Roundup #341 – Terrific Reads for Small Business, Entrepreneurs, Marketers, and Designers! appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

16 Powerful Tools and Services to Help Non-Marketers Grow Their Business

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Most small businesses and young startups can’t afford to hire marketers.

That leaves those companies in a tough situation: they need to market to grow their business but they need to grow their business to hire marketers.

Fortunately, there are terrific services and apps that can help non-marketers to market their business until they can hire experienced marketers.

We’ve collected some of the essential marketing tools and services that can help you improve your marketing and grow your company’s revenues, even if you know little about marketing.

Search marketing

Ahrefs

Ahrefs is one of the best Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Search Engine Marketing (SEM) tools available for anyone who prefers to make data-based decisions in their marketing strategies.

Ahrefs is valuable for getting an inside look at what your competitors are doing online. Its resources uncover where competitors’ traffic originates from, how competitors rank in Google Search for specific keywords, and who is linking to their website (including how many backlinks they have).

Great features like “Alerts” allow business owners to set an alert every time a website ranks for a keyword that you’re keyed into.

With “Content Explorer” you can easily explore the most shared content on the web. With filters, a substantial database of keywords and access to keywords in 170 countries, and a thorough SERP analysis, Ahrefs is a heavy hitter in providing any business with valuable data to guide a successful marketing strategy.

Cost:
Pricing ranges from $99/month up to $999/month for Ahrefs’ “agency” package.

 

Google Adwords

Want to use a real powerhouse tool to reach new customers and monumentally grow your business?

For many small businesses, Google AdWords is one of the most effective ways to reach new customers and grow your business.

People who use Google AdWords have two possible networks they can use to target users: the search network, and the Display network.

The search network involves pay-per-click advertising (or Paid Search). That means that marketers can bid on any keywords that are useful for their business. They also are given the opportunity to display advertising to users searching Google with those keywords.

The Display network, on the other hand, provides marketers with the option to incorporate banner ads on websites included in the Display network.

Not impressed?

The Google Display Network has a massive reach of approximately 90% of global internet users. That should provide any business with a solid shot at connecting with their market.

Although Google AdWords offers a wide range of diverse ad formats, text-based PPC ads form the core of AdWords. Writing ad text is a particularly challenging task, not least because of the space restrictions that advertisers are subjected to.

Need help writing clickable ads that lead to conversions? We have your back. Check out:

Cost:
Free for the tool but ads are paid.

 

Google Keyword Planner

Google Keyword Planner is a feature in Google Adwords. You can find it handily located in the “Tools” tab.

The tool allows you to select one or several keywords and provides concrete figures for how many times your word was searched and in which country and language.

You can also see whether the competition for those keywords is high, medium, or low and what a recommended bid for that keyword would be, making the process of choosing the right keyword for your brand straightforward and easy.

Prefer a streamlined process? Google Adwords lets its users launch campaigns directly from your research on keywords, making it a one-stop shop for keyword success.

Cost:
Free

Here are two more useful tools you should consider: SEMrush is an excellent paid tool (cheapest plan is $99.95 per month; we use it at crowdspring) that can provide detailed analytics on the top keywords used in search engine marketing by your competitors, but also which of your competitors receive the most organic search engine traffic. We also love and use tools from Moz and highly recommend them (particularly Moz Pro, which starts at $99 per month).

 

Email marketing

Mailchimp

Email may seem a little old-hat compared to newer, more innovative marketing options, but it’s still very useful. As marketing firm McKinsey & Company said,

E-mail remains a significantly more effective way to acquire customers than social media—nearly 40 times that of Facebook and Twitter combined.

When it comes to email marketing, no discussion is complete without a mention of Mailchimp. The email service is one of the most popular tools available for marketing via email.

And for a good reason: Mailchimp has features and services that make email marketing easy and accessible to all. Their “forever free” plan is just that, and it’s nothing to sniff at, allowing you to send 12,000 emails per month at absolutely zero cost.

It’s renowned for being easy to use, with a robust set of features and an extensive set of help documentation and support.

If you’re planning to use mass-email in any capacity, there are many options available, but Mailchimp is generally regarded as one of the best. It’s worth checking out.

Cost:
Free, with paid plans ranging from $10/month to $199+ for the full “pro” plan

 

Drip Marketing

Drip marketing (also known as automated email campaigns, lifecycle emails, or marketing automation) is one of the more recent uses of email to gain traction amongst marketers.

Drip marketing, according to Wikipedia, is “a communication strategy that sends, or “drips,” a pre-written set of messages to customers or prospects over time. These messages often take the form of email marketing, although other media can also be used.”

If you want to start a drip marketing campaign, Drip is a natural choice. The service focuses on the email analytics and automation portion of drip marketing, making it easy to create a campaign and track how well it performs.

One of email marketing biggest challenges is making the content you send out relevant to the receiver. Vero answers that need with its suite of email marketing tools that can integrate emails with data from your website for more personalized messaging.

 

SendWithUs also handles drip marketing but focuses on sending messages directly from your app or website using email designs created by you. It also has a translation service which makes sending email to international users much easier.

Cost:
Drip – Free, with plans from $41 – $83 per month
Veroplans range from $99 – $1049 / month
SendWithUs – Free, plans start at $100 / month

Social marketing

Facebook Ads

Facebook still stands tall as the most extensive social network in the world, averaging 2.2 billion visits per month, which is a 13 percent increase year over year.

Facebook can help you figure out the right type of ad for your business based on which market you’re looking to target. There are a variety of ad types, including:

  • Awareness
  • Consideration
  • Conversion

At this point, Facebook is approaching notoriety for the incredible volume of data it stores on users.

The social network’s real power lies in the vast amount of information available that makes creating highly targeted ads and messaging easy.

Using Custom Audiences and you can import an existing list of user emails and then hone in on a very specific subsection of people using Facebook Audience Insights.

That makes Facebook Audience Insights a powerful tool in creating targeted ads.

If you’re interested in preparing a well thought out, intelligently executed Facebook ad campaign, this tool is an obvious must have to deliver significant ROI on your marketing efforts.

Facebook Audience Insights allows you to view the number of users you can access based on several key factors including:

  • Country,
  • User interests,
  • Devices used,
  • User behavior,
  • User habits, and
  • Life events.

It allows provides valuable demographic data and, in some countries, shows household income.

Want to be sure that you’re curating a complete profile of your target audience? Facebook Audience Insights even shows you other related interests your market may have and the best way to incorporate those into an effective strategy.

With over two billion active users, Facebook represents a tremendous marketing opportunity that cannot be ignored. The social network has many powerful tools that allow businesses to market to specific segments of their audience on the site. Make sure you take advantage of them for your next campaign.

Cost:
Facebook Audience Insights and Custom Audiences are free. The price of placing an ad on Facebook varies.

 

Hootsuite

Managing your social media presence can be a real chore, especially when you have accounts on multiple networks with simultaneous marketing and outreach campaigns at play.

This is where Hootsuite comes in. This Vancouver-based company provides a web-based interface that collects all of your social media presences into one centralized location.

Once you’ve added your accounts to the service, a plethora of powerful features become available, including post scheduling, content curation, topic tracking and monitoring, and analytics. You can also track all of your social media feeds in one place using its multi-column interface.

HootSuite also has powerful team management features that make it easy for teams to collaborate and post on social media. This makes it straightforward to have a single source of truth for your social media presence while controlling who has access and what can be done.

Cost:
Free, with plans ranging from $19 to $599 per month.

Buffer

If you’re looking for another social media management option, Buffer is worthy of your time. The service has been around about as long as Hootsuite, and although the two are often mentioned in the same breath, Buffer is different enough to stand out.

Buffer is optimized for scheduling and managing posts. It doesn’t pull all of your networks’ feeds into one location as Hootsuite does. It also has team collaboration features and post analytics. We love Buffer and use it at crowdspring.

Cost:

Free, with paid plans available from $15 to $399 per month.

The difference between the two services ultimately comes down to what you need. Because Buffer is focused more on posting and team collaboration features, it’s more streamlined and easier to use. HootSuite takes more of an “everything but the kitchen sink” approach that many will find appealing, especially if you’re looking to consolidate all of your feeds into one location.

Analytics

Google Analytics

You can’t market effectively if you don’t know your audience, and Google Analytics is one of the best (and cheapest) options available for gathering valuable metrics about your website and app’s usage and performance.

Getting started with Google Analytics can be a little daunting at first, as it has a considerable array of metrics and data available. It’s sometimes hard to figure out where to look for the information you need.

Three sections in Google Analytics generally have the most appeal for marketers: Acquisition, Audience, and Behavior.

The Acquisition section shows you how people get to your site: where they came from (known as “referrals”), what search terms they used (if they came from Google search), and much more. You can find out if they came from a social network, or if they clicked on an ad to get to your site.

The Audience section covers what you’d expect: information about the people who used your site. There’s a surprising amount of information available here, including technology (what browser or device they used), geographic info (where they live, often right down to the city), and even personal demographic data like gender, age, and interests.

Behavior looks at just that: how your users behaved while they were on your site. What links did they click on? What was the flow they took through your site? How much time did they spend on a particular page? How did they leave your site?

Using information across these three sections is a powerful way to divine valuable information about who your visitors are, what they’re interested in, and how they use your site.

Google has a number of free courses that teach you how to get the most out of Google Analytics. We recommend you start with Google Analytics for Beginners.

Cost:
Free

Facebook Analytics

It’s fitting that a site with over two billion active users and deep wells of personal data would have its own robust set of analytics tools. Facebook provides marketers with some impressively detailed reports and dashboards that show you at a glance how your brand and Facebook pages are doing on (and even off) the network.

Use Facebook Analytics to see what content resonates best with your users, where users came from to get to your content, and how widely the content was shared.

You can also see how users engaged with your content. Did they like it? Mark it as spam? Hide it from their feed? Use Facebook Analytics to post content at the optimal time for the highest engagement.

Of course, you can also access very detailed personal information about your users: demographic information like age and where they live, what language(s) they speak, and much more.

Cost:
Free

Visual marketing

If you’re a small business owner or marketer, you need to find smart ways to improve your company’s visual marketing without breaking your budget. Visual marketing is considered to be the second most important form of marketing content – second only to blogs. In fact, a Social Media Examiner report revealed that 74% of marketers use visual content in their social media marketing.

Fortunately, there are some terrific, affordable tools and services that can help you to improve your company’s visual marketing and help your company compete more effectively against established companies.

Here are two terrific visual marketing tools that can help you grow your business.

Snappa

If you’re confident with graphic design, Snappa may be the choice for you.

You can build designs from scratch with Snappa or use templates.

But be careful when using generic templates for visual design. The point of visual design is to tell unique stories. Using generic templates is the opposite of unique.

Snappa offers a library of thousands of royalty-free photos, icons, and fonts to choose from. You can also easily upload your own images, resize your own images and upload new fonts (check out Font Squirrel below!).

One of Snappa’s strengths is shareability. Snappa supports team collaboration; making it easy to share brand assets or designs. And, it integrates directly with several social media platforms, allowing you to publish your creations straight from Snappa.

Cost:

Snappa’s impressive Pro service starts at $10 per user/ per month, but you can give Snappa a test drive with their free version.

 

crowdspring

If you’re looking for affordable, custom, professional visual designs, you won’t go wrong with crowdspring.

Crowdsourced design platform crowdspring is an awesome resource for custom, professional graphic, web and product design at a price that fits every budget.

Over the past 10 years, crowdspring has helped tens of thousands of the world’s best entrepreneurs, small businesses, Brands, agencies, and non-profits with logo designweb designproduct designpackaging design, and even naming businesses and products.

Crowdspring is perfect for business owners and people who are not designers but who demand high quality, affordable custom designs to help their businesses grow. You can get a finished design in as little as one day.

Here’s how crowdspring works:

Step 1: Select your package. With a variety of options, crowdspring’s design packages are perfect for businesses of any size, and upfront pricing means you’ll always know the cost. No hidden fees, no surprises.

Step 2: Create a project brief. Answer a few questions about your design needs in crowdspring’s simple project questionnaire. The more you share, the better the results.

Step 3: Crowdspring designers get to work creating dozens of designs.Crowdspring’s 210,000+ designers from Australia to Zimbabwe, and everywhere in between, are standing by to help you. They’ll share dozens of designs for you to review, and will tweak the designs based on your feedback.

Step 4: Pick the winning design and complete the project. When you find something you love, select it as the winner. You’ll review design proofs and make refinements. After you approve the final files, crowdspring will pay the designer and you’ll receive full intellectual property rights to the design through a custom, written legal agreement.

Cost:

Custom design and naming projects on crowdspring start at $299 (including all fees) and there’s a 100% money-back guarantee. You can request a free, no obligation design consultation if you have questions.

Even if you can’t yet afford to hire marketers for your business, you can use these services and tools to get informed, organized, and collaborate effectively and ensure that your marketing efforts pay back with a healthy return on investment.

Are you ready to take your marketing efforts to the next level? Our team of over 210,000 creatives is ready and waiting to handle your business’s design needs.  Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation with one of our design experts today. Check out these case studies to read about how crowdspring’s talented creatives have helped other startups and small businesses get noticed.

The post 16 Powerful Tools and Services to Help Non-Marketers Grow Their Business appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

7 Ways to Amplify Your Marketing With an Integrated Online and Offline Strategy

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There are so many ways to market your business today that it can be hard to know where to start.

Content marketing, direct mail marketing, email marketing, influencer marketing, experiential marketing, social media marketing… These are only the tip of the iceberg. The list goes on and on.

It’s not enough to market on different platforms. True success lies in integrating your marketing strategies across platforms.

As Sreerenjini Menon explains:

An integrated marketing strategy not only gives you more reach, it will help you to convey the message in a more effective way through multiple channels.

So how does one actually go about integrating marketing across platforms and channels?

Here are 7 strategies that will help you bridge the gap between your online and offline marketing efforts.

 

Keep Your Messaging Consistent Across All Platforms

The first (and most important) rule for creating an integrated online and offline marketing strategy is consistency.

It’s vital that your brand represents itself consistently to build consumer recognition and trust.

Consistent messaging allows customers to get to know your business and the message you’re sharing. As we wrote previously:

Customers can’t get to know (and trust) your business if they don’t have the opportunity to experience your brand in a consistent manner. Here are some compelling ways that consistent branding ban strengthen your business:

  • Easy brand recognition leads to positive associations.

  • Consistency provides an advantage over the competition.

  • Increased perceived value leads to higher sales.

Inconsistent messaging never gets the chance to build familiarity. And, it may create confusion about your brand’s identity.

Digital Republik (digital marketing experts) has strong feelings about this topic:

…don’t say one thing on a billboard and another on your Facebook page, it will only annoy a customer. If someone sees that your company is giving him a 15% discount on website purchases on a nearby billboard but a 10% discount on the Facebook page, he is likely going to be a bit turned off. Whether it’s pricing or brand messaging- consistency is key!

Customers want an experience that they can depend on.

This means offering the same promotions across multiple channels.

It also means using consistent branding, including your business namecompany’s logo, colors, and language so that they can recognize your business regardless of the platform they happen to find you on.

You’d be surprised how many companies have a business name that differs from their website, or multiple variations of a logo that are inconsistent and unrecognizable across marketing channels.

The easiest way to blend your online and offline marketing is to be consistent across all of your platforms.

 

Engage in Teaser Advertising

Curiosity is a powerful emotion.

People enjoy the experience of being intrigued in entertaining ways. The movie industry has capitalized on this truth for years.

Is it possible to remain ignorant when a new teaser trailer drops for an anticipated film in the Avengers franchise? Not in my world.

People want to be in the know. And teaser campaigns take advantage of this.

Techywise’s Menon describes a teaser campaign as “…a series of small advertisements that invoke curiosity in the audience.”

The most obvious path for a teaser campaign is offline to online. You drop the teaser offline and then direct your audience to your website… Or better yet, a landing page specific to the campaign.

Menon explains:

When you advertise on any form of offline media, the information that you can convey is limited by time and space. It will help you get consumer attention but you might fail to convey the overall picture of the campaign clearly to the customers.

It’s easier to share larger quantities of information online where a consumer can peruse it on their own time. In cases like that, it’s best to tease offline and direct consumers online.

But, it’s possible to tease an offline campaign online as well.

Are you planning an event? Tease your event online through your social media channels or an exclusive email campaign to motivate customers to attend.

Are you offering a special flash sale? Tease that online so that shoppers are primed to jump into action when the opportunity presents itself.

Be creative and you’ll find all sorts of ways to use curiosity to drive your consumers from one platform to the next.

 

Reincarnate Your Content Marketing

Are you investing the time and effort to create valuable content for your consumers?

If so, don’t just pop it on your blog and forget about it.

You can amplify and integrate your online and offline efforts by recycling your content on multiple platforms. That’s how you can create content marketing unicorns.

Did you write a popular blog post that racked up clicks? Then help that content live on!

Create an infographic for Facebook. Or, post a short quote on Twitter with a link to the full article.

And, don’t stop with online platforms. Pitch your awesome content to print publications that your audience is likely to read. Or even plan a class that consumers can attend to study that content in more depth.

You’re already investing the time and effort to develop content. So, maximize your return on that investment.

Spread access to your valuable content online and off, and you’ll build trust and recognition as an expert in your field.

 

Get Personal in Your Customers’ Mailboxes

Everyone likes to feel special, right?

Personalized URLs can help you create trackable, customized interactions with your customers.

They can also help to integrate your online and offline marketing efforts.

If you’re not familiar with PURLs, Marty Thomas, founder of PURLEM, explains:

A personalized URL (PURL) is a unique and personalized Landing Page created especially for each recipient of your direct mail or email marketing campaign.

As you may imagine, a targeted and personalized landing page has a far greater chance of success than throwing one message out and hoping that it appeals to everyone.

So, how to integrate this strategy with your offline efforts? Share the links for those PURLs via direct mail.

I’ve heard the rumors and you probably have, too. Those rumors that claim direct mail marketing is dead.

But, direct mail marketing is still thriving. Steven Pulcinella, Director of Digital Marketing for ProspectsPLUS, writes:

However, it’s [direct mail marketing] not just alive and well, but in fact, direct mail could be considered superior to other marketing channels based on recent statistics and studies.

If you’re looking to integrate your online and offline marketing, reaching out via direct mail printed with PURLs for the recipients is a fantastic blend of old and new marketing techniques.

Just make sure to hire a printer with variable data printing capabilities. Without variable data printing, those PURLS become plain old URLS and the customization is lost.

 

Bring Offline Events Online

Queen Elizabeth II’s televised coronation circa 1953. Image courtesy of Royal.UK

Accessibility and authenticity are becoming more and more important as Millennials and Generation Z gain power in the marketplace.

These generations are seeking authentic interactions with the brands they patronize.

So, create offline marketing events that consumers will truly want to experience.

Are you holding a launch party for a new product? Maybe it’s time for your semi-annual sale. Perhaps you’re planning a series of seminars. Or, you’re holding a fundraising event for a local charity.

These offline events can reach a greater audience if you bring them online as well.

You can announce and advertise your event online to your local social media followers. You can send email invitations to local customers from your mailing list.

But, don’t stop there. Get creative.

Livestream your event and give people a reason to tune in. Offer rewards or discounts to customers who watch online and comment on social media.

Share real-time photos from the event on Instagram and Facebook. Live-tweet the action on Twitter with witty (and brief) commentary.

If your event features education content, you can charge for offsite viewers to tune in to the webinar. And, then market that webinar as a stand-alone product after the actual event.

There are so many creative ways to bring your offline event online. So, don’t miss out on this opportunity to exponentially grow your event’s impact.

 

Build a Mobile App

If you’re really dedicated to creating a seamless online-offline experience for your customers, consider building a mobile app. ThriveHive’s Kristen McCormick explains:

…across audiences and industries today, people all share one behavior in common: That of bringing their online devices with them to all of the offline places they go, and sharing all of their offline experiences online.

The advent of the smartphone completely changed the world forever. This includes how your customers interact with your business.

  • Customers can bring online coupons to the store on their phones – no need to print!
  • Consumers can look your business up while they’re out running errands and Google maps will guide them to your door.
  • Your guests can take pictures of their in-store experiences and share them on social media.
  • Your customers can read online reviews and leave one of their own without breaking stride.

The smartphone is a powerful tool for marketing. And, if you want to make the most of that tool, you should build an app designed specifically for that medium.

While it’s true that customers can open up your coupon from their email or look up an offer on your website, those aren’t the most elegant solutions.

Consumers today value convenience and ease of use. And, it’s easier and more convenient if they can access everything they might need from your business in one well-designed mobile app.

A mobile app can…

  • Provide exclusive offers for app users, as well as compiling all non-exclusive offers in one easy-to-find spot.
  • Allow consumers to leave reviews for your product or service right through your app.
  • Include a store locator with synced GPS directions so your customers can find you easily when they’re on the move.
  • Invite users to engage with your social media platforms directly from your app.
  • You can even gamify the app, providing rewards to customers for completing certain offline actions and tracking with hashtags or QR codes.

Use this fantastic mobile tool to bridge your online and offline marketing endeavors as consumers carry it with them wherever they go.

 

K.I.S.S.

Image courtesy of Retail Next

Looking for low-tech ways to promote your online marketing offline?

Keep it Simple Stupid.

Use your physical marketing collateral and store/office space to direct guests to your online efforts.

If you have a brick and mortar shop or office, use signage to refer your guests to your online platforms of choice (website, Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn)

Have an undecided shopper? Give them a flyer to an online discount to take with them when they leave.

Include your website and Twitter handle on your business cards. Print your landing page URL on physical coupons.

Verbally ask satisfied clients or customers to leave a positive review for you on Google.

Integrating your online and offline marketing doesn’t have to be hard. But, it does need to be consistent. Make it easy for your consumers to find you online by sharing your website and social media prominently in-store and on all of your marketing collateral.

 

Before You Click Away

Integrating your marketing across multiple channels can seem very daunting when there are so many channels to cover.

But, don’t panic.

While there are seemingly a million different marketing platforms and strategies, you don’t have to cover them all.

The key is to strategize and prioritize the marketing channels that are most valuable to your business. And those are the channels where your actual customers are.

Everyone should aim to keep their marketing consistent across all channels. But, beyond that, it’s up to you to decide where your marketing efforts are best spent.

Just remember that an integrated marketing strategy that reinforces your messaging and drives consumers to engage and convert both online and off will serve your business best.

It’s time to integrate your marketing strategy. Let crowdspring help. Get started now and request a free, no obligation design consultation for a new custom logo, landing page design, infographic design, business card design, package graphics, or any other type of design, with one of our design experts today.

The post 7 Ways to Amplify Your Marketing With an Integrated Online and Offline Strategy appeared first on crowdspring Blog.

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