Posts tagged as:

goals

Online marketing goals that make senseGetting your customers, employees and messages lined up sometimes feels like herding… things that are hard to herd (I hate cliché). But why is it so hard? Often the problem isn’t your customers or your employees or your messages.

What is it then?

Your goals.

The right goals can captivate customers, engage employees and multiply your messages’ effectiveness. Getting your goals right may make more of a difference than anything you do in marketing, and is the focus of my latest post for Mike Moran’s Biznology blog, “5 Online Marketing Goals That Make (Dollars and) Sense.”


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Tim Peter & Associates helps companies from startups to the Fortune 500 use the web to reach more customers, more effectively every day. Take a look and see how we can help you.

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Compass for online strategy image courtesy of Matt Biddulph on FlickrHaving the right online business strategy is the difference between doing things right and actually doing the right things. Sure, you could be as efficient as possible. Or you could offer the most beautiful website in your market. But, if your efficiency is costing you customers or nobody comes to that pretty site, your business is just as dead in the long run.

Here are four unconventional tips to help you consider whether you’re doing the right things with your online business:

  1. Many online businesses put a significant portion of their advertising into paid search. I think that most businesses can benefit from well-executed PPC marketing. But, you can easily spend too much money for too little return. Then why is it that the folks at Rimm-Kaufman suggest maximizing your marketing budget’s ROI bad for you? I’ll give you a hint: your ROI probably isn’t the problem. It’s how you budget.
  2. Everyone knows you should spend more time on improving your business from existing customers. Well, everyone except for Kevin Hillstom, who says you should “focus a disproportionate amount of time and energy on finding new customers.” He’s even got math to back it up.
  3. “Best practices?” We don’t need no stinkin’ “best practices.” Seriously. GrokDotCom has a great write-up of why you should ignore best practices. Me? I’m a fan of the benefit of worst practices, too.
  4. Finally, Steve Rubel commits heresy by looking at when should you build someone else’s website instead of your own.

Obviously, part of doing the right things for your business online is making sure that each of these suggestions fits your business. Don’t do ‘em just because I say so (Or George. Or Kevin. And so on). These 4 tips challenge us all to reconsider whether we’re following the wisdom of the crowd or are just following the other lemmings off the cliff.

Look at your business. Look at your goals. Line up your measures and your standards with those goals. And give your team the tools to get there. And that’s the best tip I can ever recommend.



Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today.

Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow Tim on Twitter.

Image credit: Matt Biddulph via Flickr using Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic.

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Do you check your analytics dashboard every day? Yeah, me neither. We all mean to do it. We know it’s important. But, real life – helping customers, dealing with employees, what-have-you – sometimes takes priority. That’s what makes Google’s new “Analytics Intelligence” and Analytics Alerts so handy.

Basically, the new features within Google Analytics allow you to define events – a big jump in traffic, or worse, a big decline – and receive alerts when those events occur. Here’s what they say about it on the Google Analytics blog:

  • Analytics Intelligence: We’re launching the initial phase of an algorithmic driven Intelligence engine to Google Analytics. Analytics Intelligence will provide automatic alerts of significant changes in the data patterns of your site metrics and dimensions over daily, weekly and monthly periods. For instance, Intelligence could call out a 300% surge in visits from YouTube referrals last Tuesday or let you know bounce rates of visitors from Virginia dropped by 70% two weeks ago. Instead of you having to monitor reports and comb through data, Analytics Intelligence alerts you to the most significant information to pay attention to, saving you time and surfacing traffic insights that could affect your business. Now, you can spend your time actually taking action, instead of trying to figure out what needs to be done.
  • Custom Alerts make it possible for you to tell Google Analytics what to watch for. You can set daily, weekly, and monthly triggers on different dimensions & metrics, and be notified by email or right in the user interface when the changes actually occur

And here’s Google’s video that explains how to use them:

What do you think? Will Intelligence and Analytics Alerts help your business? Tell us about it in the comments.



Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today.

Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow Tim on Twitter.

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Luck of the Irish

March 17, 2009 Leadership

Do you feel lucky? Well, do you? You can, you know. Here’s how.

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Why you must set goals for your business blog

December 15, 2008 Blogging

Goals aren’t a destination; they’re a direction. Have you set the right direction for your business blog?

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Does your ecommerce strategy have the right goals? (Guide to Small Business Ecommerce Strategy)

May 13, 2008 E-commerce

Are you getting everything you expect from your small business website? In fact, do you know what you should expect?

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