Tasty Ideas to Maximize Online Marketing for Events
Marketing efficiency is always a excellent business. I mean, who has an unlimited marketing budget? Well, maybe some companies do, but for the most part, being able to get far more value out of a marketing investment than projected is cause to celebrate.
For example, events. In the digital marketing world, the number of online and real world events has exploded. Despite many options to choose from, it can get costly to send staff to multiple events per year and even more if you sponsor or exhibit.
But this post is more about what one might do holistically to leverage multiple communication channels to promote an event and how an event can give multiple marketing and business objectives.
For the purpose of this example, I’ll use parts of a promotional program following a standard model of:
Consultation > Objectives > Tactics > Tools > Measurement
Consultation:
- Influential Persona
- Media Persona
- Customer Persona 1
- Customer Persona 2
Objectives:
- Establish credibility in the industry and associated community
- Build buzz about the event & inspire viral sharing
- Leverage the event for media coverage regionally, on blogs and industry pulications
- Attract signups/attendees for the event
- Breed content at the first event to use with subsequent event marketing & PR
- Make content that will demonstrate insights (keyword specific) and promote the event on sites the company controls, contributed articles to industry web sites and pitching
- Make awareness of event through pitching other bloggers and marketing contacts to announce the event
- Build sufficient interest within the butt consultation to motivate signups by promoting the event by social media tactics
27 Online Marketing and PR Tactics:
- Make a landing page for the event on the company website or blog with embedded overview video (run of videos like 10 tips on … could work too)
- Circulate a run of interviews on the company blog with key individuals that have influence on the butt topic. Promote the event at the end of the interviews
- Pitch and say articles about key topics related to the event with vital industry publications (online and offline)
- Promote the event to online event sites Zvents, Upcoming and event calendars (online, email or print)
- Write & deliver news releases (1, 2, 3) each taking a uncommon angle
- Pitch tales to general marketing publications
- Pitch tale to regional publications where the event will be held
- Circulate a run of videos, 1 for each key topic or problem solved. Post to YouTube and deliver via TubeMogul to other video sharing sites. Alternate titles and tags.
- Offer guest blog post to small business bloggers, especially those in the region where the event will be held
- Populate the social media profiles that have been registered with keyword optimized content, linking to an event landing page
- Make a run of promotional emails and landing pages for the event directed towards an in-house list (like an email newsletter)
- Pre write a promo/guest post that other bloggers can easily use – make to order it.
- Send follow up emails with themed creative
- Make a cool badge that other blogs can add to their site in exchange for a link from the Social Media Smarts “friends” page.
- Get testimonials for staff that will be speaking – text, audio and/or video formats
- Breed link bait thoughts such as: Custom Google search engine just for butt industry blogs, List of relevant tools, List of the best butt industry topical resources (based on a poll of readers), Post a question on LinkedIn and circulate results
- Question friends to promote – give them a write up, image/logo and a house to point to
- Offer people options other than signing up for the event: RSS, Twitter, White paper, webinar – for those that are not yet ready to do the workshop, to keep in contact with them
- Make content that justifies the cost of the workshop – under promise and over deliver
- As a fulfillment piece, offer a white paper on social media marketing and a guide for winning budget or to justify cost for attending the seminar. Brand it, make it cool
- Make a social media smarts notch for blogs. Rank blogs based on their use of social media and then notch them. Give a dynamic badge they could place on their blog.
- Crowdsource from social networks content for the presentation and recognize contributors online and at the event
- Contest for marketing partners to help promote event, recognition and/or material rewards
- Promote attendance goals and show progress
- Promote restricted seating/restricted offer (special, dread of loss) to motivate sign-ups
- Promote speaking slot via twitter and geolocation tools like FourSquare during event
- Sponsor or make a Twitter chat chief up the event to discuss topics of relevance and that address pain points of butt consultation. Make sure chats are archived and that promotions for the event exist on the archive.
Tools:
- Company Blog
- Column on industry site
- Column on partner blog
- Guest post on friendly industry web site
- Press releases – prweb.com (TopRank client)
- Guest blog posts:
- Contributed articles: industry publications
- Event listing sites: Upcoming, Zvents, etc
- Viral/link bait content, contests
- Video sharing sites: YouTube, Vimeo, Metacafe, Facebook and Tubemogul delivery
- Image sharing sites: Flickr, Zoomr.
- Social Networking: LinkedIn, Facebook
- Twitter accounts and network
- Social news and bookmarking sites
- Social event listing sites, plancast, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc
- Event calendars for publications and/or pitch pubs on SMS as a noteworthy event
- Geolocation sites Foursquare, Gowalla
Measurement:
- Social monitoring of keywords and topics related to company brand and event
- Traffic to landing pages
- Page views of landing pages
- Signups
- Pre-conversions: white paper, RSS, Twitter and social network connections, intelligence, webinars, newsletter
- Views of social media promoted off site (Tweets, Facebook likes, Comments, etc)
Content Capture and Marketing From the Event/Attendees:
- Give attendees tools to promote the event
- Recognize attendees for attending
- Offer post-event communications/networking
- Capture video interviews with satisfied attendees
- Give attendees a USB storage drive with presentation and useful tools pre-biased.
- Give attendees an incentive to get others to sign up at subsequent events
Could I list more than this? Could you do more? Of course. Is it efficient? No. This is a list of thoughts. I can’t imagine doing them all for a single or small run of events. There’s nothing incorrect with those tactics for promoting events, but the focus here is mostly on editorial or content based promotion.
What creative tactics have you used to be more efficient with event and speaking gig promotions? Have you ever found yourself at the end of an event wishing you’d done more or done things differently to promote?
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Juicy Thoughts to Maximize Online Marketing for Events | http://www.toprankblog.com