Tag Archives: analytics

Email Drip Campaigns for Blogs: 7 Best Practices to Follow

The post Email Drip Campaigns for Blogs: 7 Best Practices to Follow appeared first on HostGator Blog . For your blog to succeed, you don’t just need people to stumble across it. You need them to keep coming back for more. To become a successful blogger, getting readers is step one. Building a community around your blog that keeps coming back for more and actively engages with your content is the long-term goal you should really aim for. To stay connected to your visitors and keep them more engaged, use email marketing . Even if a visitor really loves the first blog post they read on your site, hoping they’ll come back on their own is a long shot. There’s a lot of other content out there and most people will need a nudge to remember to come back to check out yours again. Promoting your email list gives new visitors a way to let you know they like your stuff enough to hear from you again. And once they take that step, it’s up to you to really seal the connection. The best way to do that: setting up a solid email drip campaign for your blog.   What is a Drip Campaign? A drip campaign is a series of automated emails you send to your blog subscribers. Drip campaigns are triggered by a specific event – most commonly, when a new subscriber signs up, but it could also be something like signing up for a course or downloading an ebook. Pretty much any email marketing software you use should have the option to set up a drip campaign, including Constant Contact , MailChimp, or Aweber. You can write and design the emails in advance and automate the process of getting them to subscribers at the right time to get and keep them engaged in your content.   4 Benefits of Setting Up a Drip Campaign for New Subscribers When someone chooses to sign up for your email list , it’s a big opportunity. They’re showing you they not only like your blog, but they like it enough to actively choose to hear from you about future posts. That’s a big deal and an opportunity you want to make sure you take advantage of. A drip campaign is a good way to make the most of it for a few main reasons.   1. You introduce subscribers to what your blog is all about. A new subscriber has probably read a post or two from your blog, but they’re still learning the basics of who you are and what your blog covers. Your drip campaign gives you a chance to provide an introduction to what your blog is all about that makes a case for why they should get on board and pay attention. It gives you the power to define your blog for them on your terms, which is valuable at this stage in the relationship.   2. You develop a relationship with your subscribers. If you meet someone once at a party and then don’t see them again until a year later, you’re much less likely to remember them than if you saw them again three or four times in the first couple months after you met them. In the same way, someone who signs up for your email list and doesn’t see anything from you for weeks is less likely to recognize you and remember their connection to you than someone who hears from you a few times in the weeks after signing up. If you give people time to forget you, then your emails will look like confusing spam, rather than something valuable they’ve asked for. A drip campaign gives them several opportunities to interact with you soon after they sign up, so you become someone they know and recognize when they hear from you again.   3. You can set it and forget it. Drip campaigns have the added benefit of being easy.  You put the work into creating some really solid introductory emails once, and you can automate the process of sending them to every new subscriber who signs up. Your subscribers get helpful emails that solidify their connection to your blog, while you can focus more on creating the new blog posts that keep your blog current. Since drip campaigns are automated, you can set it up once and use it for new subscribers for months to come.   4. It helps your most popular posts stay popular. Some of your blog posts are going to be higher quality and resonate more with your audience than others – that’s just the nature of blogging. You don’t want those to get buried over time as you keep adding new posts. Your drip campaign gives you a way to get the best content you have in front of your new subscribers so they get a solid first (and second and third) impression of what you can do that makes them more likely to stick around.   7 Ways to Make the Most of Your Blog’s Drip Campaign If you decide to set up a drip campaign for your blog, make sure you do it right. Here are some of the most important best practices to follow.   1. Make sure your email list is opt-in. First things first, good email marketing requires that you only contact people who have actively made the choice to join your email list. Buying emails or adding people you found online that you think might be interested will not only result in people deleting or ignoring the drip campaign emails you send, it will get them marked spam – something that could get you booted from your email marketing platform. Your drip campaign should only be triggered when a visitor to your blog knowingly signs up for your email list.   3. Use it to define your positioning and create camaraderie. What sets your blog apart from similar blogs out there and makes it worth following? That’s your unique positioning. Use your first emails to lay out your positioning and humanize yourself to your subscribers. They’ll be more likely to connect with a blogger they feel they can relate to. Don’t be afraid to show some personality.   3. Highlight your best work to get your subscribers on board. This is your chance to win subscribers over and hopefully turn them into followers for the long term. Break out your best work to show them what you’re capable of. This helps you impress your new subscribers, as well as a way to drive new traffic to some of the blog posts you’re most proud of.   4. Make it one part of a larger email marketing strategy. Your drip campaign shouldn’t be the last thing you send your subscribers. Develop an ongoing email marketing plan to keep communicating with your subscribers long after they first sign up. You can email them to alert them to new blog posts, start a monthly e-newsletter, or create unique content just for your email list. Whatever route you choose; just make sure you stay in touch. That’s the whole point of an email list.   5. Pay attention to your email analytics. While a drip campaign technically only has to be created once and will keep working for as long as you want it to, you’ll want to revisit it at least once or twice a year to look for ways to improve. Check your analytics to see which emails people open, which they respond to, and which they click on the links in. You may want to tweak the wording, change subject lines, or update your drip campaign with new content and links based on what the analytics show you.   6. Ask your readers to take action. Ideally, you don’t just want your subscribers to read, you want them to engage. One way to get them more actively involved is to directly ask for feedback. You can make a survey part of your drip campaign, or include a CTA in your emails asking for subscribers to reply with their input or add comments to your blog posts. Subscribers that provide feedback are valuable because they clearly care about the direction your blog goes in. And their responses can help you improve your blog and make sure you provide what your audience is looking for moving forward.   7. Personalize your emails. If your blog covers an array of topics, then you may have some subscribers more interested in one subject area than others. In that case, it could pay to set up different drip campaigns that each emphasize specific topic areas. That way you can be sure that everyone who signs up is getting information relevant to their interests, which makes them more likely to stick around and stay a subscriber.   Connect with Your Blog Readers Drip campaigns provide a low-effort way to make a connection with every new subscriber you get. A good drip campaign can sell new subscribers on your content and make them feel like part of your blog community. You probably can’t manually contact every person that reads your blog to show them you appreciate them, so this is the next best thing. Are you a HostGator customer? Learn more about how you can get started with Constant Contact email marketing . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Your 7 Step Guide To Website Maintenance

The post Your 7 Step Guide To Website Maintenance appeared first on HostGator Blog . Your 7 Step Guide To Website Maintenance Websites aren’t something you create once and then you’re done. You need to continue caring for them and do ongoing website maintenance to ensure they continue to do the job you need them to do. Once you’ve built your website and it’s up and running, make note of a few main web maintenance tasks that you need to remember to do moving forward. To help you out, we’ve organized these tasks by how often you should perform them: yearly, quarterly, monthly, or weekly. Annual Website Maintenance Tasks 1. Perform User Testing. You worked hard to build a website that’s intuitive to users and drives the kind of actions you want them to take. Frustratingly, the way people use the web frequently changes. A website design that felt natural and intuitive in 1998 wouldn’t work for users today. To make sure that your website continues to make intuitive sense for users and work well on all devices people view it on (including those you can’t anticipate now – who knows what people will be using in 2-3 years), mark a time on the calendar to set usability testing once a year. Bring in people that aren’t associated with your business or brand who can give fresh eyes to browsing your website. Make sure your testing includes all browsers and device types visitors may use so you get the full picture. And create a maintenance schedule for making any updates your testing determines are necessary – it’s not worth much if you don’t turn the insights you learn into action.   Quarterly Website Maintenance Tasks 2. Make Test Purchases. As far as eCommerce website features go, the most important type of functionality on your website is the purchasing function. If it stops working, or even if it’s glitchy for any reason, you could lose out big on profits until you catch the problem and fix it. So at least once every couple of months, have someone in the company make a few test purchases to see how the process works. Have them do this on different devices and in different browsers so you can figure out if there are any snags in the process that only happen in some cases and not others. If there’s anything about the process that isn’t seamless, you’ll want to find out and update it ASAP.   3. Test Out All the Forms on Your Website. If your website includes any contact form plugins you want visitors to fill out, you want to be confident these all work properly as well. At the same time that you make your test purchases, go through the process of filling out all the forms on the website. In this case too, make sure you try them on all the devices and browsers your visitors might use. If any of your forms aren’t working right, you could be missing out on valuable leads, so make sure you catch the problem sooner rather than later.   4. Fix Any Broken Links. Every time someone clicks on a link that leads to a 404 page , it’s disappointing. When that dead link is on your website, it makes your business look bad and leads people away from the page you want them to be on, which is why you need to perform preventative maintenance.  No matter what you do, you’ll end up with broken links on your website from time to time as other websites you link to move or die or change domains. You may not be able to avoid them completely, but you can make sure they don’t stay on your website long by making it part of your regular website maintenance. Every few months, check for broken links and either remove them or replace them with updated links. Finding broken links is actually easier than you might think. There are a lot of free tools available that automatically check websites for broken links, such as Google Search Console (which offers plenty of other useful features to boot). Because these tools make the process so simple, you should easily be able to fix any broken links you find quickly. Monthly Website Maintenance Tasks 5. Check for Security Updates. You hear about high-profile security breaches all the time and you can only assume that there are even more low-profile ones you never hear about. Securing your website from hackers   has to be a major priority for anyone that runs a website – and it’s even more important for eCommerce businesses who deal with customer’s private data.  One of the most important website maintenance practices you should plan on for security is checking that all your platforms, plug-ins, and scripts are up to date . Usually when developers release updates for these, it’s to improve the security or patch up a vulnerability they’ve found. Don’t procrastinate making those updates, or you could be putting your website and visitors needlessly at risk.   6. Regularly Back Up Your Site. It’s happened to all of us: you work on a project all day long, and then something goes wrong with your computer and you lose your entire project. If this has happened to you, you probably got really good at staying on top of your computer backups to save you from future trouble. If you’re not careful though, the same thing could happen to your website. If a hacker does somehow get through, they could wipe you out in one fell swoop. But if you have a current backup solution, fixing the problem will be much easier. You can invest in a backup system like Codeguard ,  to save you the work of treating this as a separate website maintenance step. If you don’t though, make sure you put it on the calendar to create an updated backup of your website at least once a month.   Weekly Website Maintenance Tasks 7. Review Your Key Metrics. Google Analytics provides a ton of useful information about how people are finding and using your website. Make sure your website is accomplishing what you want it to and figure out what about it’s working well and what still needs improvements by logging in to check your analytics at least once a week. Some businesses will benefit from checking it more often than that, and brand new businesses can expect traffic to be slow to start, but it’s important to keep an eye on your website’s growth and success as you go. Google Analytics is the best place to do that and a crucial resource for finding ways to improve.   Don’t Skimp on Website Maintenance Just like car or home maintenance, website maintenance is crucial. But it’s important and can save you time, money, and unnecessary trouble in the long run. Get these website maintenance steps on your calendar and stick with them. Your website will thank you! Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Introduction to Social Analytics [FREE Ebook]

The post Introduction to Social Analytics [FREE Ebook] appeared first on HostGator Blog . Free Ebook: Introduction to Social Analytics You know it’s important for your business to have a presence on social media, but figuring out what you’re doing on there is an ongoing challenge. Each social media platform is unique and requires its own approach and strategy. And no matter what you do when you’re just starting out, there will be room for improvement. The only way to learn how to get better as you go is to pay attention to what works . The way to do that is with social analytics. If you’re just starting to venture into social media marketing for your business, our ebook on social analytics provides all the information you need on how to access social media analytics and what to do with them.  Click here to download now or keep reading to learn more about what you’ll learn in this FREE ebook.   What Are Social Analytics? All of the major social media platforms offer data on how people interact with the posts and content you share. Some of the information they provide is fairly basic, like showing you how many people viewed or liked a post you published. Some of it goes deeper, providing demographic data on the people who interact with your posts or details about their behavior on the platform. All of this information can be put to use to strengthen your social media strategy and get better results for the time you spend on social media, but only if you know where to find it, and how to use it.   Why Social Analytics Matter There are thousands of blog posts and articles out there about how to do social media marketing well. And they’re a good place to start. Knowing the best practices and seeing examples of what has worked for other brands does help in establishing a solid plan when getting started. But ultimately, you don’t need to know what works on social media for another brand or media property – you need to know what works for your audience . The best way to figure that out will never be someone else’s blog post; you have to turn to your own social analytics for that.   What You’ll Learn When You Download the Ebook This ebook delves into how to access social analytics data for the five main social media platforms:      Facebook      Twitter      Instagram      LinkedIn      YouTube While there’s a lot of overlap in the kind of information each platform provides, each one supplies a different dashboard and layout for finding the analytics they make available. Once you’ve found the analytics, you’ll need to understand what you’re looking at. Our Social Analytics Ebook also covers the most important categories of data the platforms offer and why each one is valuable to users.   Download Now You know from running your website how important analytics are to analyzing what’s working and what’s not. You’d never know if your website was doing its job or not without useful metrics that show you how people find and interact with your pages. Social analytics do the same job for your social media profiles. With their help, you can optimize your social media efforts to make sure you’re reaching the right people, at the right times, with messaging and content they’re likely to appreciate. Download the Social Analytics for Business ebook to learn all the basics you need for success on social media. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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FAQ Pages: What Every New Business Should Include

The post FAQ Pages: What Every New Business Should Include appeared first on HostGator Blog . What Every New Business Should Include on Their FAQ Page One of the most frequently asked questions about frequently asked questions is “What should I include on my FAQ page?” The obvious answer is also the least useful one, because a well-written, properly formatted FAQ page can do much more for a small or new business than provide basic information. Yes, your FAQ page can and should answer the questions your customers ask most often, but there are ways to do so that also boost your business’s visibility in search results, establish your expertise and reliability with current and prospective customers, and help you connect with prospects. How? We’re glad you asked. What Questions Should I Answer On My Business FAQ Page? First , answer any recurring questions from your customers about your specific business. Do shoppers want to know how long it takes you to paint a custom mural? What services are included in your basic bookkeeping package? How many bees you include with hive delivery? Put those Q&As at the top of your page, because they set your business apart, show its unique value, and make visitors want to stick around and learn more. For example, why lead with booking or payment information Q&As when you can lead (or is that llead) with llamas, as this backcountry outfitter does for its pack-animal rental business? Next , go ahead and answer the questions you may have answered elsewhere on your site but which visitors may have overlooked. For example, your location, contact information, shipping fees, and return policies should be on each page of your site, but don’t make visitors to your FAQ page hunt around your site for that information. They’re on the FAQ page because they want to know more about your business. Make it easy for them. Finally , and here’s where you can move beyond the basics, look at the types of searches that lead customers to your site. For example, if your analytics show that your custom cake business gets a lot of traffic from searches for “gluten-free birthday cake” then it’s a good idea to include a Q&A about it. ( “Do you offer gluten-free birthday cakes?” “Yes, we do. Simply request the gluten-free option when you order your cake and we’ll prepare everything in our gluten-free workspace so you can enjoy a cake that’s delicious, beautiful, and worry-free.” ) This type of Q&A shows that you understand what your customers are looking for and why it matters to them. (In this case, because no one with celiac disease wants to get sick from a cake with trace amounts of flour in it.)   How Can a Good FAQ Page Help My SEO? Creating Q&As using the most common search terms for your traffic can also help your site rank better in those searches because your content is now more relevant. If your questions and answers align well with specific searches, your FAQ can end up in the prized “position zero” of Google search results. For example, I searched on desktop, mobile, and with voice to ask “what vaccinations does my dog need to be boarded?” The answer in the featured snippet box comes not from a pet health magazine or veterinary association but from a boarding kennel that provides a clear, concise answer that’s easy to read on desktop and mobile screens. In a voice search , Google reads aloud all but the last sentence of the featured snippet text and mentions the name of the business. Google doesn’t say exactly how it chooses featured snippets, but following best practices for your FAQ page and site formatting will increase the likelihood of your FAQ ranking well. For more tips, check out our blog post with 5 ranking strategies for featured snippets !   How Do I Write a Good FAQ Page? To create an effective FAQ page, answer these questions. 1. What keywords are customers looking for? Use your analytics dashboard to see how people find your site in searches. If you’re starting a new business, you can research keyword phrases in Google Keyword Planner and Soovle. 2. What’s on my competitor’s FAQ page? See what Q&As they include and which keywords they focus on, but remember that they may not have optimized their FAQ page. Use keyword analysis tools (see above) to decide if they’re on the right track. If so, you may want to include similar (but not too similar) content. If not, don’t follow their lead. 3. Are your questions phrased the way customers will write or ask them? Try typing your questions in your browser’s search bar to get a sense of how people key in those questions. Then ask your questions on your mobile device or digital assistant to hear what sounds natural. Next, write your natural-sounding questions and answers in short, clear sentences that will look good on a mobile or desktop screen. Now, read them out loud. If they sound weird or confusing, rewrite them until you can imagine Siri reading them. 4. Is your FAQ page formatted properly? Group your FAQs by category if you have more than one type of question in categories like shipping, services, products, or something else. Use your carefully researched keywords in the page’s meta tags. Include relevant links to the products or services mentioned in your FAQ. Add contact info so people who didn’t find the answer they wanted can ask your directly, and wrap up the FAQ with a call to action like “shop now,” “book now,” or “contact us.”   Want to learn more about putting together a website that helps your new business grow? Make sure your site includes these must-have elements . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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7 Reasons Why You Should Be Using Google Analytics

The post 7 Reasons Why You Should Be Using Google Analytics appeared first on HostGator Blog . Why Use Google Analytics? If you have a website, you should be using Google Analytics. There are no exceptions here – it’s a useful and important tool for every website owner.  One of the first things we recommend website owners do when launching a new site is get tracking set up for Google Analytics. But […] Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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