Showing posts with label wordpress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wordpress. Show all posts

Monday, 29 May 2017

The Best Email, Social Media and Digital Marketing Posts You May Have Missed

 

About 38.7 million new blog posts are published every day on WordPress alone. With all that content buzzing around on the Internet, chances are, you most likely missed 1.6 million potentially mind blowing, life changing blog posts every hour! Sure, there are plenty of “fish in the sea,” but remove posts including cat videos (I’ll only judge you a little if these do change your life), and you still have a lot of juicy content out there that could be vital to your next marketing move. With so many options, and so little time, it’s easy to let good a thing pass you by. Where’s the Missed Connections section for blog posts when you need one? So to save you the trouble, here’s roundup of the best email, social and digital marketing posts from the VR Marketing blog you may have missed. Don’t let one of them be “the one that got away”!
Email Marketing:
Social Media Marketing:
Digital Marketing:

Monday, 8 May 2017

A Guide to Setting Up Google Analytics for WordPress


Google Analytics is a versatile reporting and tracking system that turns out valuable data regarding the performance of your website. Launched in 2005, it is an easily operable system, even for beginners. It also has many advanced features that can help with the creation of complex reports, track visitors’ movement paths through the site, and monitor conversions of goals you set at specific intervals. The service is free, although a premium option is also available for advanced users and corporations.

The benefits of Google Analytics

The data received through Google Analytics provides in-depth knowledge regarding the various performance aspects of your website. Through these reports, you can track the performing and non-performing areas also. You can track marketing campaigns, integrate Google Adsense and Adwords to see reports regarding revenues earnings site-wide. You can also track e-commerce dealings, campaigns and keywords to identify the best revenue sources.

Google Analytics account

The first step of using Google Analytics is to create an account on the Google Analytics website. You need to sign up with your existing Google account and start creating a new account there. Be sure to enter your account name, website name and URL address in the requisite fields. Then you need to select the “Data Sharing Settings” at the bottom of the displayed page. By default, all four types of data are selected. Click on “Get Tracking Id” to proceed to the next phase.

In this context, you may also configure the “User Management” tab in the Admin area. Here, you may set up accessibility options for different users of your website with regards to Google Analytics reports. There are four permissions available – ‘Edit’, ‘Collaborate’, “Manage Users” and “Read and Analyze”. In this page, you will also be able to view all the webpages where you have enabled in Google Analytics reporting.

Tracking code

Agree to Google’s “Terms of Service” page for continuing to the next page. You will get the tracking id here. It will start with the prefix ‘UA’. You need to copy this code and come back to your website. In your website’s Google Analytics Settings Tab, copy this code to the “Tracking Id” text box and click on “Save Settings”. This will link your website to the Google Analytics site and enable exchange and processing of data between them.

Adding Google Analytics to WordPress

After creating your WordPress website, the next step of setting up Google Analytics is to add the tracking id to your WordPress site’s pages. There are three ways of achieving this integration:
Manually enter the JavaScript tracking id before the closing <head> tag of your webpage. Repeat this for every page of your website or you may track selective pages in this manner.
In most regular WordPress themes, you may create a child theme and add the tracking id in the header.php file, in the same position as the manual entry (discussed above). More advanced and premium themes have a separate place of entering the tracking id in the Settings menu.
Use a plugin for Google Analytics and configure the “Web Property” tab by putting the tracking id there.







Google Analytics currently uses asynchronous loading to ensure the faster processing of webpages and not affecting page loading speeds. This mode ensures that the tracking code executes only after the entire page is loaded in the user’s system.

Now that Google Analytics has started functioning for your website, you need to wait for 12 to 24 hours, depending on your website’s traffic, for report generation.

Different reports in Google Analytics

The ‘reports’ area of Google Analytics provides access to the different aspects based on the data collected from your website. These reports are generated from the date of installation of Google Analytics only. There are several categories in the ‘reports’ section:

Dashboards

This section allows users to display any report from a large number of pre-made reports generated by Google Analytics. There are two sections – Blank Canvas and Starter Dashboard. You may create your own kind of reports in the Blank Canvas section. The starter dashboard is the area where you may preview the various reports available.

Shortcuts


As the name suggests, this option allows creating links with the reports you use on a frequent basis. The menu displayed at the top of every Google Analytics report has this option where you may add a ‘shortcut’ of the same. From this menu, you may also email the report as an attachment or save it in different downloadable formats.

Intelligence events

This option allows you to track daily, weekly or monthly occurrences as per your choice. These trackable events include clicks, visits, page views, sales conversions, bounce rates and so on. This page allows the creation of alerts also, which may be applied in general to all traffic or upon specific criteria fulfillment. You may choose an alert parameter among a number of them provided, with the freedom to set up the value of the alert triggering. These alerts may also be received through email.

Real time


This section generates reports involving the visitors currently accessing the website. The default ‘Overview’ page shows the number of live visitors with graphs available for per second and minute views for the last half an hour. Most visited pages and referrals, top social traffic and content are also displayed in this section.

Audience

You will find over twelve different reports in this section. Audience reports include analysis on visitor demographics, location and the platform used for viewing your website. This section is important for determining the type of customers who are interested in your website.

Acquisition


This section provides information about the origins of the people visiting your website. The reports include data about referrals, channels, paid and organic search engine traffic, along with a comprehensive breakdown of social media traffic to your website.






Behavior

The behavior section lets you know the activities of the user upon their visit to your website. These include the user’s site searches, landing pages and exit pages. This provides valuable data about the user’s preferences in the website over a period of time.

Conversions

This section offers valuable e-commerce reports regarding product and sales performance of the website. It can also track transaction speed and purchase time of the user. The conversion page may also be used for advanced reports like Goal Creation and Monitoring.

Thus, you can now install Google Analytics on your WordPress website, monitor its performance and formulate strategies and tactics for your website’s improvement with proper data analysis.

Your next step

Now that you know how Google Analytics can help you track your online campaigns why not give it a go? You can start by learning how to set up GA to track email list sign-ups so that you know which of your marketing campaigns drives you the most subscribers.
Your thoughts?

How has Google Analytics helped you improve your website? Did you use it to learn anything about your website that you didn’t expect? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Tuesday, 21 March 2017

Get More Traffic From YouTube: 5 Steps for Adding Links to Your Videos


Have you got any videos on YouTube at all? If not, have you thought that you'd eventually like to get some videos up? If you answered yes to either of those questions, and you have a website, then bookmark this post, because you're going to need it. 

This post builds on my last one, which was all about a video marketing funnel. For anyone who hasn't read it, I showed how my colleague successfully generated traffic on YouTube... without any fancy video techniques or experience. She's been sending this traffic to a squeeze page on her website, which is then converting into leads and sales. 

Why Should I Put Links to my Site on My Videos?

These link annotations have proven to increase traffic and leads from YouTube.

After talking to my colleague and the case study, one thing clear: The best way to get people from YouTube to your website is to have a clickable link appear over your video telling them to do so. When talking to my colleague about what happened when she added these annotations to her videos, she said:
"Courtesy of the new changes to my videos, I'm getting 1 confirmed email sign-up for every 50 video hits now, so the cards and annotations really work. Previously I was getting 1 confirmed sign-up for every 100 views, but it is definitely more like 1 in every 30-50 views now."
These clickable annotations are getting more traffic from YouTube to her website, and more of those people are signing up to her list. They get the attention of viewers, they make a great call-to-action and they provide an instant and easy way to go to the website.
When I tried to replicate the process of setting this up, however, it wasn't so easy to figure out clearly how to add these links to my videos. It's more complicated than adding regular annotations, as there are a few things you need to set-up on your YouTube account first.
I've worked it all out now though, so I'm documenting the process in detail so you can do the same with much less hassle.
You can start once your YouTube channel has been set up, with at least one video uploaded. If you haven't done that yet, don't worry. It doesn't take long. You can find instructions in steps 3 and 4 of the previous post.

Step 1: Go to the YouTube Creator Studio 

The Creator Studio is the hub from which all of the following actions will be done.

Creator Studio
Call me daft, but I found myself getting lost in YouTube quite often. If you ever can't figure out how to get back to your video manager or other editing functions, just head back to the Creator Studio, because this is where you manage your channel. 
Making sure that you're logged in to your Google account, head to YouTube. You should be automatically signed in this way. In the top right-hand corner, there's a small circle with your account picture in it. Clicking on this will drop down a list of any channels that you own. 
Making sure that you have the right channel selected, click on "Creator Studio."

Step 2: Verify That You Are, in Fact, a Human

Ain't nobody got time for bots. Verifying your account is quick and painless.

Once you're in your Creator Studio, you'll see a left-hand side-bar menu. Under "Channel" you'll find "Status and features." Account status is right at the top, simply click on the "Verify" button.
verify account
Then you'll be asked to select your country. Decide whether you'd like to receive your verification code through a voice message or a text message, then choose the language you'd like your code in and enter your phone number for receiving it. 
verify
I find that the text option is easiest. Once you've submitted this information and received the text (or voice message) you'll be able to enter it into the box provided. Then your account will be verified!
account verified
YouTube knows you are not a robot and is, therefore, happy for you to have more freedom to your account. Now you can navigate back to your Creator Studio (as shown in Step 1) in preparation for the next step.

Step 3: Enable Monetization

This will make you a YouTube partner, another step towards linking to your site from your videos. 

Monetizing your YouTube account means that you'll become a YouTube partner, and they'll be able to put ads on your videos. It also means that if your videos become popular enough and you connect up your AdSense account, you can earn money from these ads. 
At this point, however, the main reason for enabling monetization is that being a YouTube partner gives you certain privileges, such as being able to link to your own website from your videos. 
Under "Channel" in the left-hand menu, a few spaces down from verifying your account (which should now have "Verified" next to it), you'll see "Monetization." Click on the "Enable" button. 
enable monetization
You'll see a page with more information about monetization. They're just short snippets about what it involves for you, so it's a good idea to read them to get an understanding for yourself of how it works.
When you're ready, click the "Enable My Account" button, and you'll be shown the terms and conditions that must be agreed to before you can proceed. 
If you have no videos uploaded yet, that'll be the end of the process (although you need at least one monetized video to be a YouTube partner). You can always monetize individual videos later on. 
If you do already have videos up, it'll ask you if you'd like to monetize them, and what ad formats you're OK with. 
monetize
You can see previews of YouTube's ads here, and select one or more of the options if you're OK with them. Remember that you must own the material in your videos. If you've recorded them with a webcam or a slideshow of your own work, this will be fine. Just be careful to avoid material that you don't have the rights to, like your favourite song playing in the background, or a branded t-shirt with a logo on it. 
Once you're done with monetization, you once again need to navigate back to the Creator Studio so that you can proceed with the next step.

Step 4: Verify That You Own Your Website

Pick method 1 OR method 2. Website verification allows you to add links to it from your videos. 

This step can be a little complicated if you're not technically inclined when it comes to site-building, but for others with more experience, it may be entirely straightforward. When I initially looked for information on how to do this myself, I found it very difficult to get clear instructions, so I'm hoping that this will make it easy for anyone else to do. 
This time in the left-hand side-bar menu, you'll go to "Channel," but you'll click on the bottom option: "Advanced." Scroll down until you see the area called, "Associated website" and enter your website's name here.
Add Website
YouTube will then tell you this website is pending, and you'll have to click on the word "verify" to move forward with this process.
Pending
You'll then be taken to Webmaster Central so that you can link your site to your Google Account. This is the complicated part. There's a fairly simple version using a plugin if you have a WordPress site, but there's also an alternative option for if you don't, or if you'd prefer not to install the plugin. 

Method 1: The WordPress Plugin Option

For this option, you want to click on "Alternative methods" in Webmaster Central, and then click on the HTML tag option. This will drop-down a meta tag that you can copy and — later on — paste into the WordPress plugin. 
HTML tag
In a new tab, open your site in WordPress, head to the plugins area and click on "Add New."
add new plugin
Search for "add meta tags" and it should be the first option to come up. You can also find it here. You can then click "Install Now."
meta tags plugin in wordpress
Once the plugin is installed, you'll be able to activate it, and then when you go to settings in the left-hand side-bar menu of WordPress you'll see a new option called "Metadata." Click on this to go through to your new plugin!
meta data plugin
Then you simply scroll down to where it says "Site-wide META tags" and paste the meta tag from Webmaster Central (as seen in the image at the beginning of this step).
site wide meta tags
Scroll down to the bottom of this page and "save changes." Then return to Webmaster Central and click on "Verify." 
Website verified confirmation
If all has gone through and been processed properly, then you should find that your website is verified and you're ready to start adding links to your videos!

Method 2: HTML File Upload (YouTube's Recommended Option)

This method of verification is YouTube's recommended option, but it's a little more complicated than doing it with the plugin. Still, if you're reluctant to use that plugin, you don't have a WordPress site or you'd just prefer to use the recommended method, then this is how it's done.
In Webmaster Central, under the recommended option tab, you'll be able to download an HTML file by clicking the provided link.
download HTML link
Then you'll need to upload this file to your server. I did this using the FileZilla client, which can be found here. You can use another FTP client if you are familiar with a different one, or you can download this one and follow along with my instructions for the rest of the process.
You'll need to find your server login details from your hosting provider. I just did a search in my email for the name of my hosting provider, and I found the email that they sent me just after signing up with information such as my cPanel Access and FTP details. If you don't have these details you could request them from your hosting provider. 
The FTP details are what you want. Once you've loaded up FileZilla, you can enter these details.
FTP details
This will connect you to your server so that you can upload the file that you downloaded from Webmaster Central. That process looks like this:
FTP process
You may want to click on that image to open it in another tab so that you can see it more clearly. Basically...
  • The left-hand side is your computer, and the right-hand side is your website information.
  • The top windows are the folders, and the windows below those show the contents of whatever folders have been selected.
  • You need to find the location of the file that you downloaded earlier in this step from Google Webmaster Central (see numbers 1 and 2 in the example above).
  • You then need to drag it into the public_html folder on the right (see numbers 3 and 4 in the example above).
Now you have uploaded the HTML verification file to your website. You can return to Webmaster Central, and test whether it's working, using the link they've provided. 
test link
Then you can click verify, and if everything is working as it should, your website will be verified and ready to go. 
website verified

Step 5: Add Linked Annotations to Your Videos

Your account is set up and ready to go. Now it's time to actually add the linked annotations to your videos. 

Congratulations! The hardest part is over! And it's worth it to be able to add these links to your videos so that you can give people a strong clickable CTA directly over your videos.  
Now when you go back to your Creator Studio in YouTube (Step 1), head to the "Video Manager." You'll see a list of your videos. Click the small arrow next to "Edit" to produce a drop-down menu, and select "Annotations."
YouTube
You will be given an option here to enable your account for external annotation links. You want to click "Enable" on the right-hand side. 
Allow External Links
Then you want to create a note. You can do so from the drop-down menu under "Add annotation." You can edit the text of your note in the window on the right, or by clicking on the note itself. You can change the font, the colour of the text, and the colour of the background. 
adding a note
link details
You can adjust the time that you'd like the note to appear on the video, either using the "Start" and "End" boxes on the right, or by moving it around physically in the timeline that you'll find below the video. 
At the bottom-right, you'll notice a little check box with "Link" next to it. Clicking on this will allow you to select what type of link you'd like to add. If you've followed all the steps correctly up until this point, there will now be an option from the drop-down menu here for "Associated Website."
Once you've selected this, you'll be able to add an URL to any page of your website. If you're using the video marketing funnel from the previous post, you'll want this link to lead to a squeeze page, and you'll want the text of the note to let them know what they'll get there.
For Example: The note text here could be "Click here to get your free weight-loss e-book now!" and then the link would lead to a squeeze page where people will get this e-book when they signup to your list. 
Once you're done, click "Apply changes" in the top right corner, and then go to the video. Check that the note is now where you put it in the video and that you can click it and it takes you to the right place. 
You've done it! And you can continue to do this for any videos that you'd like to use to direct traffic to your website. 

Bonus: Adding Cards

Cards are a lot like clickable link annotations. It's a different format for website promotion. 

Another thing that worked for my colleague were Cards. When editing your videos, they're right next to annotations.
Cards
If you click "Add card" and enter the URL of your associated website, you'll be able to add a call to action and some 'teaser text' for enticing viewers to click on your card. 
editing your card
Then the teaser text will appear over your video, and if you click on it you'll see the full card with the call to action.
YouTube cards
This is an option for a more aggressive brand-promotion for your website. 

Don't Forget Your Takeaways!

takeaways
In order to enable your YouTube account for clickable links to your website, you'll first need to:
  • Verify that you're human.
  • Monetize your account.
  • And verify that you own your website.
You can do all of these things using the steps above. Once you have, you'll be able to add CTA notes to your videos that link back to your website. You can also make cards to further promote your site. 
The benefits of this is that it increases traffic to your website as well as leads and conversions, as can be seen in the case study at the beginning of this post. It's a direct and simple way to both promote your website and get people there effortlessly. 

Monday, 16 January 2017

AFFILIATE MARKETING WEBSITE TUTORIAL for Beginners


In this video I take you through setting up an affiliate marketing website using WordPress. This tutorial is designed for Beginners so even if you've got no experience in affiliate marketing or making WordPress websites, don't worry, you'll be fine.

Affiliate marketing is when you sign up with an online merchant, or shop as an affiliate and send traffic from your website or social media using special tracking links. When someone makes a purchase from them after clicking one of your links (or in some cases using your voucher code) you get a commission.

A great way to get into Affiliate marketing is setup a review site. With a review site you post honest reviews about products and services along with your affiliate links so people can easily make a purchase. The great thing about a review site is that catches shoppers just before they are about to buy, which in turn can give you a high conversion rate.. :)

In this video we go through everything from setting up the website hosting, through to setting up WordPress and posting some reviews. You can post reviews on anything you like, the WordPress themes are just an example. You can also change all the colours & logo etc allowing you to create an affiliate marketing site that matches your products.

BOOKMARKS

Introduction to Affiliate Marketing and this video: 1:18
Setting up our website Hosting: 9:07
Repointing a domain you’ve already registered: 15:33
Installing WordPress: 18:17
Logging into to WordPress: 19:44
Downloading and installing our Affiliate Website Theme: 21:05
Installing the demo content to get us started on our Affiliate Marketing Website: 25:05
Customising our Affiliate website logo and top area: 27:14
Adjusting colours and fonts: 30:45
Working with review categories: 32:15
Adjusting the text on the homepage: 35:57
Editing and Adding the Affiliate reviews: 37:08
Adding your Affiliate links to reviews: 55:03
Adding the duplicate post plugin to easily copy your content: 01:03:06
Adding banners to the homepage 01:05:37
Working with blog post: 01:13:11
Configuring the widgets in the footer and sidebars: 01:21:23
Final Tweaks and settings including changing the the text in the header: 01:25:32
Customising the menu across the top of the website: 01:28:24
Adjusting the menu font size: 01:30:24
Working with WordPress pages: 01:30:55
Making the Affiliate Marketing Website live: 1:33:00