Small Town Marketing: What Businesses Need to Know

Small Town Marketing: What Businesses Need to Know

This is Episode 71 of This Old New Business weekly business podcast with Jeff Korhan and Tom Egelhoff.

In this episode, we have a conversation with small town marketing expert Tom Egelhoff to learn what businesses need to know.

In addition to being a Vietnam veteran, Tom is also a veteran of 25 companies in 18 industries. His experience includes selling sewer piping, retail furniture, technology, commercial buildings, and being the founder of his own successful marketing agency.

Today he is a radio talk show host, blogger, podcaster and small town marketing and advertising consultant.

Create Helpful Small Town Marketing Messages

Tom Egelhoff believes the programmatic advertising is happening somewhere every day and all you have to do is find what works and apply that to your market.

He recommends using the Differences in Search Engines and the Internet to research successful small town businesses across the country. Call them up to learn as much as you can. This is a great way to make new friends, save time, and make the most of your limited marketing budget.

In the spirit of This Old New Business podcast, you’ll discover marketing messages that help buyers are both old and new. Use them to establish yourself as an expert in your field and a trusted friend in your local community. By establishing your company domiciliation in the local area, your employees and clients will be welcomed in a professional environment, which is extremely important for good business.

This is how small town marketing works, and also this thing we call content marketing.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on small town marketing. Meet me over on Twitter to take the conversation further.

Key Take-Aways

How to subscribe to This Old New Business podcast

Click here to subscribe via iTunes.
You can also subscribe via Stitcher.

Help us Spread the Word

If you enjoyed this episode, please head over to iTunes or Stitcher to leave a rating, write a review, or subscribe.

About the Author:  Jeff Korhan, MBA, is the author of Built-In Social: Essential Social Marketing Practices for Every Small Business and host of This Old New Business podcast.

He helps organizations use media to create exceptional customer experiences that drive business growth in a digital, social and global world. Connect with Jeff on LinkedInFacebook, and Google+

Editorial Guidelines: How to Publish Content that Builds an Audience

Editorial Guidelines: How to Publish Content that Builds an Audience

This is Episode 62 of This Old New Business weekly business podcast with Jeff Korhan.

In this, our first 2016 episode of This Old New Business we discuss why breaking your publishing schedule is not a good thing to do, but it’s better than publishing content that does not merit the attention of your audience. Maybe you could capture their attention by printing some personal merchandise to sell or give out, you could do that by contacting Ricoh Printers to see what printing services they have available for you.

In addition to recommitting to this show, we are starting a new podcast show for landscaping, lawn care and other green industry professionals that want to discover relevant resources, tools and training on all aspects of digital marketing.

You can sign up to be notified about the launch at Landscape Digital Institute.

Build a Professional Digital Marketing Plan

Many small businesses understand and use an editorial calendar to plan the consistent publishing of content. In addition to consistent publishing, it is also vital to have guidelines for assuring that content meets the expectation of its targeted audience.

#1 – Business Objectives

Whether the priority is attracting leads, retaining customers or increasing a particular type of revenue, those objectives will shape the strategy for achieving them.

#2 – Content Mission

The content mission or purpose must define the target audience and specifically address how it is going to deliver value and achieve desired outcomes for that audience.

#3 – Content Goals

The cure for mediocre content is clarity that comes from measuring progress against strategic goals. These may include growing email subscribers, nurturing relationships with current customers or documenting and refining the brand story.

#4 – Audience Persona(s)

Descriptive audience personas help to create content that addresses the right needs and wants at the most important touchpoints throughout the customer experience.

#5 – Business Distinction

The value your business brings to an audience becomes the collective brand story that distinguishes the business from every other for the audience it was meant to serve.

#6 – Editorial Calendar

The editorial calendar is more than a schedule of activities. It considers the content goals, audience needs and resources available. Additionally, it should help to streamline the content workflow to create content with greater impact. The editorial calendar should also establish who owns the content from ideation to publication and promotion.

#7 – Publishing Guidelines

The content voice and tone are just a couple of important publishing guidelines. Article length, headline style and image size are all essential for creating content with a consistent look and feel that resonates with the target audience. If you happen to use outside contributors, these guidelines will make it much easier to maintain consistency.

#8 – Channel Plan

The channels your business uses to publish and promote content should be intentional. There should be a logical sequence to when and where content is first published, republished and promoted. This workflow sequence saves time and makes the most of your content ideas.

#9 – Tools

There are numberless tools for creating, curating and sharing content. Smart businesses tend to settle in on a few and use them well.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on editorial guidelines. Meet me over on Twitter to take the conversation further.

Key Take-Aways

How to subscribe to This Old New Business podcast

Click here to subscribe via iTunes.
You can also subscribe via Stitcher.

Help us Spread the Word

If you enjoyed this episode, please head over to iTunes or Stitcher to leave a rating, write a review, or subscribe.

About the Author:  Jeff Korhan, MBA, is the author of Built-In Social: Essential Social Marketing Practices for Every Small Business and host of This Old New Business podcast.

He helps organizations use media to create exceptional customer experiences that drive business growth in a digital, social and global world. Connect with Jeff on LinkedInTwitterFacebook, and Google+

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