Post by flora60468 on Feb 25, 2024 1:59:38 GMT -4
Millions of people use Basecamp” It immediately makes the user feel like tons of really important people and businesses trust this company, perhaps they should too. Here are a few examples of landing pages that are done well, to get your juices flowing as you jump in and create a healthier landing page. If you have examples of great landing pages or epic fails, share them in the comments below.Right now the fire is hot for quality content about content (see what I did there?). So whether you’re just getting started, or a seasoned vet, all 5 of these posts are definitely worth a Friday or weekend read, if content marketing is your MO… Which it should be.
The Content Marketing Manifesto Rand Fishkin’s presentation Chinese Malaysia Phone Number List from SEER Interactive’s SearchChurch is rock solid. 46 slides of high level, fun, simple, direct, and ultra important lessons (or reminders) about content marketing. And hey, it’s Rand, need I say more? If you don’t believe me, read this excerpt: The Content Marketer’s Pledge I [your name] pledge to create something remarkable. Something that people will love. Something that they will want to share. Something I can be proud of. And if it fails to achieve my marketing goals. I won’t give up. I will try again. My failures will be the failures I need to earn future successes and future customers. — Rand Fishkin 2.
It’s not all about you: The value of objective content marketing Brafton, who definitely practice what they preach, provide a nice reminder of the content marketing keystone, keeping your focus on your audience. Case in point; writer Sean Greene uses objective and research-based content to prove just how important those two elements are to your marketing goals, and this post does it well. 3. The Most Dangerous Opinion in Marketing: Yours This week I stumbled upon Eric Wittlake for the first time, and ate this up with a spoon. He uses Heat’s infrographic to highlight the massive differences between a marketer and their audience (ie. you and ‘normal people’) to prove just how important it is to test your assumptions, he also suggests some pretty awesome tools to do just that.
The Content Marketing Manifesto Rand Fishkin’s presentation Chinese Malaysia Phone Number List from SEER Interactive’s SearchChurch is rock solid. 46 slides of high level, fun, simple, direct, and ultra important lessons (or reminders) about content marketing. And hey, it’s Rand, need I say more? If you don’t believe me, read this excerpt: The Content Marketer’s Pledge I [your name] pledge to create something remarkable. Something that people will love. Something that they will want to share. Something I can be proud of. And if it fails to achieve my marketing goals. I won’t give up. I will try again. My failures will be the failures I need to earn future successes and future customers. — Rand Fishkin 2.
It’s not all about you: The value of objective content marketing Brafton, who definitely practice what they preach, provide a nice reminder of the content marketing keystone, keeping your focus on your audience. Case in point; writer Sean Greene uses objective and research-based content to prove just how important those two elements are to your marketing goals, and this post does it well. 3. The Most Dangerous Opinion in Marketing: Yours This week I stumbled upon Eric Wittlake for the first time, and ate this up with a spoon. He uses Heat’s infrographic to highlight the massive differences between a marketer and their audience (ie. you and ‘normal people’) to prove just how important it is to test your assumptions, he also suggests some pretty awesome tools to do just that.