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Hope you’re having a great time getting prepared for the holiday season. I have added three amazing Limited Time offers together for … | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1742475&goto=newpost Continue reading

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16 Tips for Promoting Your Small Business Website During the Holidays

The post 16 Tips for Promoting Your Small Business Website During the Holidays appeared first on HostGator Blog . If you’re reading this post, you already know that running a small business is hard work. And it only gets more difficult during the holiday season. As a small business owner, you may feel that each day with an “open” sign is a reason to celebrate. We get it. HostGator is turning 16 years old , but like so many other businesses, HostGator started as a small business with a single client. Our customer base grew quickly from dozens to hundreds, and hundreds to thousands, and so can you!   We may be turning 16, but we’re celebrating you – small businesses – and helping you succeed with a birthday sale and 16 tips to promote your small business website during the holidays. Let’s get started! 1. Determine your holiday marketing budget. Hopefully you have a regular budget set aside for online marketing. If not, it’s likely time to think about a budget, even a small marketing budget, particularly since some social media channels require a small “pay to play” amount. Yes, your Facebook business page is still free, but the Facebook algorithm gives high preference to sponsored posts and ads. As such, it’s harder to be seen in the busy news feed. One solution is to work incredibly hard at organic posts – publishing your posts multiple times or offering giveaways if your fans will share your page. The quickest solution, however, may be to buy small ads or promoted posts to ensure that fans see your posts. If you already have a marketing budget, great! Think about how much additional money you can contribute to your marketing budget during the holiday season. 2. Make a “set it and forget it” plan for social media marketing. In the hustle and bustle of trying to work your business during the holiday season, give yourself a break by planning and pre-scheduling as much as you can. Social media may be the last thing on your mind when the holiday season ramps up, so create a social “set it and forget it” media promotion plan. Creating and scheduling social media posts in advance can save you a ton of time during the busy season, and it will free up your mind to be more creative in the moment. Make a list of at least three posts per week that you can pre schedule. Your scheduled post can be as simple as a reminder of your holiday hours or as detailed as a featured item of the day or a blog post you’ve already written. If social media content seems too overwhelming during the holiday season, consider hiring a freelance social media manager. You can find affordable freelancers on websites such as Fiverr . But hiring a freelancer doesn’t completely eliminate your need to be involved. A freelance social media manager will likely want to schedule a meeting with you to go over ideas, and may even request your approval of the content before posting to social media. A freelancer can certainly be helpful with on-demand needs such as if you expect to get more inbox messages on your page. If you have social media-savvy staff members, consider giving them access to post on your social media accounts during the holiday season. Ultimately, be smart about what will pose the least risk for your business and will also help maximize your time during the holiday season. 3. Be sure that your physical location and office hours are correct and consistent. Be sure that your physical location and office hours are correct and consistent across the internet. Don’t forget to check all mentions on your own website, all ‘about’ sections on social media, your Google My Business listings, and any other local listing websites. In the long run, consistent information will give you credibility with search engines which may, in turn, list your website higher in search results. Take a few minutes to be sure all your information is correct and consistent. If you have special holiday hours, be sure to list them and consider noting that they are, in fact, holiday hours. Customers are more likely to shop with you if they can trust that you’ll be open when your website says you will be open. 4. Offer a holiday coupon. According to a 2016 CouponBox survey , coupons can increase revenue for retailers up to 40 percent. But what type of coupon should you offer? First of all, determine your profit margin and create a coupon that brings revenue without cutting into your profit margin. Create a coupon that will be intriguing for your customers, and share the coupon as often as you want – on social media, in email marketing, or even a traditional printed coupon stuffed into shopping bags for future purchases. Create unique coupon codes for each coupon that you offer in order to track which coupons are most popular. For instance, have a coupon code such as “EMAIL” for email offers and a different code, such as “SHAREME,” to indicate coupons found via social media. At the end of the holiday season, count the coupon codes to know which coupons were most profitable for your business so that planning for next year will be easier. Online coupons are very shareable, which can be in your favor, but keep in mind that online coupons can also be picked up by sites like RetailMeNot. Be sure you are able to sustain a coupon (and orders) on a large scale. 5. Develop an email marketing campaign to promote your sales & holiday promotions. Email marketing is an efficient and cost-effective way to communicate with your customers. As social media feeds continue to limit timely exposure to your fanbase, email marketing allows your customers to see and open your emails on their own schedule. To make it easier on you, set up email automation by scheduling a series of emails to distribute throughout the holiday season. Use your email campaigns to promote the coupons, holiday gift guides, and other holiday sales you have going on during the holiday season. 6. Develop new ideas for your holiday campaigns by reviewing last year’s analytics. You know that statement about learning from your past? You can apply the same concept to your holiday marketing efforts by looking at last year’s data to find ideas you can apply or tweak this year . Create a list of all your data and analytics that could be helpful such as Google Analytics, analytics from your email marketing software, and social media analytics for paid and organic posts. Review your data from October to January, and look for trends such as what your audience reacted to, which posts received the most traffic, and what time of day your website received the most traffic. You can learn a lot from last year’s analytics that can help shape your holiday marketing strategy this year. 7. Build your following by co-sponsoring a giveaway with a complementary brand. Word of mouth still has a strong influence on shoppers. One way you can capitalize on word of mouth is to partner with other small businesses or brands. Look for small businesses that offer products or services that would be of interest to your customers. Consider small businesses with a strong social media following that is larger than yours or has customers that are similar to yours. To double your exposure, both companies should tag the social media promotion. 8. Ask current customers for reviews. Building on the word of mouth concept, customers are highly likely to read online reviews before purchasing. In fact, customers often read product reviews on multiple sites during their decision making process. According to research from BrightLocal, 88% of customers trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations. Online reviews are also important for search engine rankings. Websites may rank higher in search results if the company has reviews, especially positive reviews. If a customer has a positive experience with your business, encourage them to share it on one of the review sites. You can get started easily with reviews on Facebook, Google My Business, Yelp, or even reviews posted on your own website. One thing to note – search engines usually want these reviews to be and feel organic. If you were to run a contest and encourage people to complete a review in order to enter the contest, Google may see this flood of reviews as spammy. Bottom line, keep it organic and honest. 9. Make sure your website is ready to handle the holiday traffic boost. Many businesses start with a small, shared web hosting plan, but eventually reach the point where they need to upgrade. Small businesses may choose to upgrade their website hosting for more server space, more speed, or if they want a more secure server environment. But how do you know if it’s time to upgrade to a dedicated server ? If you’ve experienced slow website performance or if you keep highly sensitive information, it may be time to consider a dedicated server.  During the holiday season, you’re likely to expect more traffic to your website, and upgrading to a dedicated server could the perfect solution to ensure your website is ready to handle the traffic spike. 10. Update your website to a mobile-friendly design template. The rise of website traffic from mobile devices , as compared to desktop computers, continues to grow. Some people who browse the web on their mobile devices don’t mind seeing the full website, but others want to find the information as quickly as possible. You can make your website responsive , meaning the layout adjusts based on the screen size of the user. As your customers are out on the road during the holiday season, they will certainly appreciate being able to access your website from their mobile phone or tablet. Added perk? Google will give higher search engine ranking preference to websites that are responsive. 11. Add social media links and feeds to your website. Social media is a channel that offers high return for sharing content with your fans, but did you know that you can make it easier for your fans to share your content across social media ? Add social share buttons to your website so fans can hit one button and quickly share your content without ever leaving your website. Consider adding a social media feed to your website, either on the sidebar or embedded in a page, so website visitors can easily see the sales or promotions you may have on social media. 12. Offer exclusive events for your members or top customers. Throw a holiday-themed party for your customers to encourage brand loyalty. If you can, time the event with a product preview, product launch, or a “sip and see” for your new product line. Promote the event on your website, in an email invitation, and even on social media. Try to host this party early in the season such as October or November when your customers begin to think about holiday shopping. 13. Create a holiday gift guide. As you know, shopping for everyone on your holiday gift list can be overwhelming. Make shopping easier for your customers by creating a holiday gift guide. A holiday gift guide organizes the best of your products and gifts into categories based on the gift recipient, dollar amount, or by theme. For example, sort products by gifts for her, gifts for him, gifts under $50, gifts for teens, gifts for the home, and more. A guide will highlight your products, make shopping easier for your customers, and will be easy for your customers to share with their friends.  14. Reorganize your website by gift categories or themes. Now that you’ve created a holiday gift guide, consider updating the main navigation of your website to match your holiday shopping categories. Many people visiting your website during November and December will likely be purchasing gifts. Make it easy for them to find your top recommended gifts so they will be more likely to purchase.  15. Bring customers back to your site by remarketing on social media. Have you ever searched for a product online and later saw an ad for the same product on social media? That’s a feature called remarketing that allows you to reconnect with people that have visited your website. You can use remarketing ads on social media platforms, on Google search, and in other websites that support display marketing ads. A remarketing campaign is an effective method to ensure customers keep thinking about your product and have easy access to the link when they are ready to buy. 16. Take website security seriously. Get an SSL certificate. Website security should be a top priority for you year-round, but especially during the holiday season. During the holidays, more people are shopping online, but so are hackers who are shopping for credit card information or personal data. If you haven’t heard, in July 2018, Google Chrome released a security update that will alert your website visitors if your website doesn’t have security measures in place. An SSL certification is meant to create a secure transaction of personal information such as contact information and credit card data. If you don’t have an SSL certificate, your website visitors will receive an alert message discouraging them from checking out on your website. What can you do about it? Many web hosting companies offer SSL certificates for purchase and they are usually a low-cost option to securing your website. If you don’t have an SSL certificate and aren’t sure if you can get one, switch to HostGator where a free SSL certificate comes with all web hosting packages . In conclusion… With 16 tips for how to promote your small business website during the holidays, there’s bound to be a few that would work for your business. Try them out and let us know your results ! What are your “must do” tips for other small businesses? Comment below with your best advice for how to promote a small business website during the holidays!   Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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10 Holiday SEO Quick Wins To Help Shoppers Find Your Business

The post 10 Holiday SEO Quick Wins To Help Shoppers Find Your Business appeared first on HostGator Blog . The holiday season might not quite be upon us, but the holiday marketing season definitely is. Business owners have to start planning for holiday shoppers sooner rather than later. When your target audience goes looking for gifts for their loved ones over the next couple of months, you want them to find you. SEO is a long game, which means that it’s a tactic you want to approach with a long-term strategy in mind. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth looking for ways to improve your SEO for holiday shoppers. 10 Holiday SEO Quick Wins That Take 15 Minutes or Less In addition to the ongoing SEO strategy you employ throughout the year, here are a few tactics you can try  to boost your SEO during the most important season for small businesses. Good news: they all take 15 minutes or less!   1. Submit your sitemap. For pages on your website to show up in Google searches, the search engine’s crawlers have to find them first. You can speed up the process by submitting your sitemap through the Google Search Console . It’s a simple step that makes sure Google has all your webpages in its index, including any new ones you’ve added to the site for the holiday season. 2. Optimize your title tags for new holiday pages. If you already know your SEO basics, you’ve probably already done this for your existing pages (if not, our ebook on the subject will bring you up to speed). Now you want make sure you do it for any pages you create for holiday specific products and promotions. For every page or piece of content you add to your site for the holidays, do keyword research to find the best holiday-related keyword to optimize for and strategically add it to the title tag on the page. Also consider pages you can create specifically to make your website more findable for holiday shoppers. Pages that collect gift products under $10 or pages that highlight gift options for specific audiences give you the chance to optimize for various gift-related keywords your customers may be searching for.   3. Optimize all holiday images for SEO. Every image you add to your website is an SEO opportunity. And the holidays usually mean new images that add seasonal cheer to your site. Optimize every new image you add to your website for the holidays by:      Customizing the filename to include target holiday keywords      Filling in your image alt tags with your target keywords      Adding the images to the sitemap you submitted in step 1      Choosing the right quality-to-size ratio to make sure your image looks good, but doesn’t slow down the site’s loading time. All of these should just take a few minutes per image, but can make a difference in how your site shows up in search.   4. Sponsor local charity events. This is one of those tips that allows you to do something good during the holiday season, earns you goodwill with your customers, and helps with SEO all at the same time. Look into the local charity drives and events happening in your area or in your industry to identify at least one to put your company’s weight behind with a sponsorship.  Many nonprofit sponsorship opportunities come with a link back to your website as a perk, so this is a good tactic to build some extra link love around the holidays. If possible, try to find a cause that’s in line with your brand and/or your audience’s values. If you sell pet products, then see what events nearby animal shelters or rescue groups are promoting for the holidays. If moms are in your target audience, then a cause that helps kids is likely a good fit.   5. Add some seasonal topics into your content strategy. Unfortunately, creating the content will take more than 15 minutes, but if you’re doing content marketing, then you’ll already be spending that time on content creation in the next couple of months. What you can probably accomplish in 15 minutes is coming up with a number of good holiday content ideas to add to your strategy. If you’re a local store, make some of your holiday content local. You can highlight holiday events in your area, great local nonprofits to support, or some of the best local businesses to consider for holiday shopping. That way you can optimize for local variations of your holiday keywords, which will be less competitive.   6. Create relevant holiday blog categories. If you’re creating enough holiday content, then you can make it go a little further in search by creating relevant categories or tags on your blog using your primary target keywords. This signals to Google that your blog includes a lot of content around the terms you’re trying to rank for, so a blog that has 10 blog posts and a devoted category for “Miami holiday gift ideas” is going to look more relevant for that search term than one that doesn’t. And creating a category means you have a whole other page on your website optimized for the term. 7. Re-promote last year’s holiday content. If this isn’t your first year doing content marketing, then you can make the content you created in past years for the holiday season keep working for you by promoting it anew this year. Share it on your social networks, send it to your email list, and if you’re really proud of it, consider promoting it with paid search or social ads. As long as your old content is still relevant this holiday season, there’s no reason not to drive more traffic to it this year and boost its ranking power in the process.   8. Add links to new holiday content to your most popular old holiday content. Your old holiday content will now have more authority than anything new you create. You’ll have built up links, traffic, and keyword rankings to it. Figure out which of your pieces from past years were the most popular and have the most backlinks from other websites. Then look for natural opportunities to add links to your new holiday content within the piece. This is a relatively quick and easy way to give your new pieces some immediate authority by building off of what your old pieces have already earned.   9. Upgrade your web hosting for holiday traffic. A slow website can be the death of holiday sales. If you’re expecting an uptick in traffic during the holiday season, then you need a strong enough web hosting plan to support holiday traffic surges . Check with your web hosting provider to see if they feel that your current plan will support an increase in visitors. If not, consider if it’s time to upgrade to a new plan or a different provider.   10. Find and fix broken links. Broken links make you look bad and increase bounce rates, which hurts your SEO. With a free broken link tool like Broken Link Check, you can identify all the broken links on your website within seconds. Go through and remove or replace them all to create a better experience for your visitors and improve your SEO authority.   Your Holiday SEO Checklist Good SEO takes time and none of these SEO quick wins should be seen as a replacement for a long-term SEO strategy. But if you want to find some quick and easy ways to give your larger SEO efforts a little boost for the holiday season, adding all of these steps to your holiday marketing list can help. For longer-term help with your SEO, contact HostGator’s SEO experts . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Top Fraud Threats Facing Online Stores This 2018 Holiday Season

The post Top Fraud Threats Facing Online Stores This 2018 Holiday Season appeared first on HostGator Blog . Holiday gift-givers aren’t the only ones who flock to online shops between Black Friday and Christmas Day. Fraudsters know it’s a great time to scam, because merchants—especially smaller ones—are often too busy filling orders to spot fraud attempts. But even sellers who are paying attention can get ripped off by fraudsters who manipulate the order delivery process. Here are two shipping fraud schemes to watch out for this holiday season plus some tips for protecting your store year-round. Prevent Package Rerouting Scams First of all, what is shipping fraud, and why do people commit it? Shipping fraud is a way to beat merchants’ fraud controls, which flag orders with shipping addresses that are known to be associated with fraud or that raise other concerns. For example, if a fraudster has stolen a consumer’s payment and address information (thanks to a data breach or account takeover), they can enter that consumer’s delivery address so the order won’t raise fraud flags. Of course, the thief won’t get the goods if they go to the victim’s house so they need to change the address in a way that won’t tip off the merchant that something’s up. That means dealing directly with the shipping company. There are two common ways thieves manipulate the shipping process that you need to watch out for. 1. One is straightforward—the thief contacts the shipper while the package is in transit and asks for the package to be sent to a different address. The merchant may not even know that what’s happened until the victim files a chargeback, by which time the thief and the merchandise are long gone. To prevent this type of rerouting scam, ask your shipping partner to note your account so that all your customers’ rerouting requests have to go through you. That way you can screen the new delivery address for fraud indicators before you approve the delivery change. 2. The other rerouting scam is easier to prevent. If a customer places an order and then asks you to use their preferred shipping service instead of the one listed in your shop, you can simply refuse. This is a common way for fraudsters to get items shipped with a company that they know will reroute package for them after the order is approved.   Find Help Now for Rush Order Fraud-Screening In 2016, the last day for regular Christmas delivery and the last day for express delivery saw spikes in fraudulent orders . Thieves count on merchants spending less time screening for fraud when there are lots of last-minute orders in the queue and lots of customers expecting those packages to arrive on time. The selection of rush delivery can itself be a flag for fraud, because thieves want to get their stolen goods before the fraud is uncovered so the delivery can’t be canceled. But during the holidays there are plenty of good customers requesting rush delivery, too, because they’re strapped for time to get gifts to their friends and family. When you’re backed up on last-minute orders, you really don’t have time to carefully screen them all yourself and follow up to verify questionable orders on the phone. So what do you do? Get help. Even if you can handle your own order screening the rest of the year, the holidays are a time when it makes sense to invest in professional fraud-screening help. When you’re looking for a service, find out if there’s a minimum service period, what their rates are and how they’re calculated, if the service scales up for sales peaks, and whether they cover the cost of any fraudulent chargebacks that get through their system. Find out also if they provide customer service reps to contact shoppers whose orders could be fraudulent, or if they simply kick out all orders that look like they might be fraud (which could end up costing you good orders and customers).   Follow Shipping Best Practices Year-Round If you’re not already doing these things, now is a good time to start. They’ll help protect your store during the holidays and beyond: 1. Use the address verification system provided your bank or payment service to verify billing and delivery addresses before orders are approved. By checking addresses (and other data like the Card Verification Value on the back of the customer’s card) you can screen out some obvious fraud attempts. 2. Ship all orders with a tracking number so you can verify delivery. This can help your store avoid “friendly fraud,” which happens when a customer falsely claims they didn’t get their purchase and files a chargeback. Tracking numbers and other data can provide the evidence you’ll need to get the chargeback claim dismissed. 3. Make sure your shipper won’t reroute packages without talking to you first. This can reduce your risk of shipping fraud. 4. Make a policy to only use the shipping companies you choose , not those requested by individual customers. This cuts your fraud risk and saves you time dealing with unfamiliar shippers. 5. Collect as much transaction data as possible , including customer phone numbers in case you need to call to check the validity of their order. 6. Keep tabs on the riskiest zip codes for e-commerce fraud . Orders originating from or going to those areas need extra screening. Experian updates this information each year, and while the exact locations can vary from one year to the next, port cities in general are riskier than other areas because it’s easier to get stolen merchandise out of the country from those locations. 7. Start researching third-party fraud screening services now to find one to help out during the holidays and other sales peaks. 8. Make sure your store’s web hosting service protects you from data breaches and fraud with malware scans and removal , strong server firewalls, and physical server security. Protect Your Online Store From Fraud This Holiday Season Start your holiday retail season right by protecting your store against fraud. And get your store ready for holiday shoppers with these tips . Protect your site from hackers, malware, and more with Sitelock , starting at just $1.94/month. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Use Your Website Analytics to Prepare for Holiday Traffic

The post Use Your Website Analytics to Prepare for Holiday Traffic appeared first on HostGator Blog . If you run an eCommerce store, it’s already time to be thinking about the holidays. The holiday season is exciting for online stores because it means an influx of sales. But it’s also stressful, because it’s the most important time of year to be on your A-game so you don’t miss out on the profit opportunities of all that gift giving. For the next couple of months, you want to make your website and holiday marketing strategy do as much for you as absolutely possible. One of the best ways make the right movies to get those holiday dollars is by making your analytics a key part of your planning for the holiday season. 8 Ways Website Analytics Can Prepare You for Holiday Shoppers Here are eight ways your analytics can help you craft a more successful holiday marketing campaign this year.   1. Revisit last year’s analytics. Start by looking at the analytics for October through early January of last year. Pull up all the different data sources you have so you can get the big picture of what worked during last year’s holiday season. This likely includes:      Google Analytics     PPC analytics      Email analytics      Social media analytics (both for unpaid social media marketing and paid advertising) In addition, you may have analytics from your SEO, CRM, audience listening tools, and any other piece of marketing technology you use. Identify all the different sources of analytics you have so you can bring them together to do your analysis. You want to be able to spot how different analytics tell a larger story – was that boost in traffic for a particular blog post in December because you emailed it to your list or promoted it on social media? Did the gift guide you put together drive sales to the products you highlighted? The most important data to analyze here is that from the holiday season, but don’t stop there. Take a high-level view of all your analytics from the past year. This will help you spot trends in what your audience responded to throughout the year and if there have been any changes to the channels they care about between last year and now. If the past few months saw an uptick in results from Instagram, for example, you don’t want to leave that out of your holiday marketing planning. The overall trends from the past year will help you gain a better understanding of who your audience is and what they respond to, while your data from this time last year provides insights into how they behave during the holiday season. Looking at both will help you gain a clear picture of what works for your target audience so you can craft your holiday marketing strategy accordingly.   2. Identify your top marketing channels. With all your data in front of you, start figuring out which tactics and channels most consistently lead to sales and, more importantly, which provide the highest ROI. Google Analytics will show you where traffic is coming from and allows you to set up conversion tracking (so you can connect website behavior to eventual sales). Your other analytics sources can help you dig deeper into the data for each visitor —your email marketing data can reveal which email drove a specific visit, and your social analytics show which specific posts contributed to your social traffic. Keep in mind here that some of your tactics that don’t lead to conversions right away may help drive people to the channels that eventually pay off, so don’t discount those social media posts that got people to your website even if the visitor didn’t convert to a sale on the first visit . This is why you’re working to see the bigger picture — so you can draw connections between how everything fits into your larger strategy. With this information, you can begin to rule out the tactics that aren’t leading to sales and determine the ones you should definitely invest time and money into this year.   3. Analyze the timing of purchases. Conventional wisdom about holiday shopping may be that most shoppers will buy gifts on Black Friday or last minute in the weeks leading up to the holidays, but research from CPC Strategy found instead that over a third start shopping before Thanksgiving. This is why you should trust data over conventional wisdom! But don’t just assume CPC Strategy’s averages apply to your customers. Sit down and figure out for yourself when your audience does their shopping. Analyze your purchase data from last year to figure out what portion of your customers did their shopping well in advance and which tended to be last-minute shoppers. You may well have a mix of both, but if your audience tends to buy within a particular time period, then that should be when you do the biggest push in your marketing. Send out persuasive promotions to your email list, increase your PPC maximum budget, and do a big social media push. This data can also help you figure it out if it will pay to offer faster shipping options when it gets closer to Hanukkah and Christmas day. If a majority of your customers are last-minute rush shoppers, then you can make the decision to buy from you easier with guarantees that the products will get there in time.   4. Figure out which keywords lead to conversions. This is key for both your PPC and SEO strategies over the next couple of months. You don’t just want to track which of the keywords you targeted led to increased traffic, you want to figure out which of those visitors turned into customers. Based on what your analytics show, you can craft a PPC strategy for the holiday season that targets the types of keywords most likely to lead to actual revenue. And you can create a content plan that incorporates the keywords that bring in your most high-value visitors to improve your holiday SEO. HostGator’s expert team of PPC pros can help you spin up a lucrative holiday campaign quickly. Contact us to learn more.   5. Repurpose your best content from past seasons. Content marketing may be a long game, but that doesn’t mean that seasonal content can’t pay off big if you do it right. Look at the holiday content you created over the past few years and which pieces brought in new visitors and purchases. This can not only help you generate new ideas for content to create this year based on what you know resonates with your audience, but you can take the concepts you know pay off and rework them to replicate those results. Was your gift guide a hit last year? Create a new one for this year, or make a few different versions for different audiences. Did people really respond to your blog posts about holiday giving? Create a video tackling the same topic. Repurposing is a tried and true tactic for making the successful content you’ve created go further.   6. Highlight your best products on your most popular pages. In the Behavior > Site Content section of Google Analytics, you can see which pages on your website get the most visits. Each of these is an opportunity to drive more conversions. Look at the products and promotions that performed the best during the holiday season last year and use your popular pages to promote them. By getting the items your visitors are most likely to buy in front of more of them on those pages, you increase the chances of turning visitors into conversions. You have to make sure that your products don’t feel shoehorned in here, but an attractive image that links your visitors back to the product page can likely be worked into the design of the page without it distracting from what your visitors came to the page for to begin with.   7. Send personalized emails to your list. Your email marketing analytics provide a wealth of data on what your subscribers have opened and clicked on in the past. And unlike the rest of your data, most email marketing software providers let you break down the data in terms of the behavior of specific people. That means you don’t just see that 1000 people opened your email, you can see who those specific people are. Use the data you have on what individual subscribers like to create a personalized email campaign during the holiday season. Put together emails that highlight the kind of content and products that were popular during the holidays last year and create segmented email lists to get the most relevant holiday emails to the right people on your list.   8. Do A/B testing to collect better data for next year. Everything you do for the next few months will create the analytics you use to repeat this process next year. Use the opportunity to establish even better data to shape next year’s plan with A/B testing. See what happens when you offer free shipping on some days and not others, or pit a free gift-wrapping option against faster delivery to see which gets more people to buy. Try A/B testing emails with different subject lines or CTAs to see which get people to open and click. And try promoting different products and packages to see if some lead to higher conversions than others.   Don’t Forget Your Site Analytics This Holiday Season This is the most important time of year to get things right. Use the analytics you have now to create a strategy likely to increase sales and revenue throughout the holiday season, and generate more useful analytics at the same time to take things even further next year. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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