Ask HN: What was your product's biggest marketing win?
My friend Lars recently told me that his company's biggest win (in terms of getting new email leads) was a focus on SEO: "Nothing beats people searching with intent."
What's been your biggest marketing win of the past year?
16 comments
[ 21.8 ms ] story [ 2765 ms ] threadPretty easy (results in days): Answering questions on Quora was a relatively easy, quick win. I answered a question on salary negotiation or job interviews every day for a month, and immediately saw a lot more interest in my site.
Harder (results in 90+ days): A focus on SEO has really paid off. SEO takes a while to build up, but once it's built up, it's pretty reliable traffic source. That means I can spend time working to offer more value to visitors so they'll stick around and come back later.
What tools / approaches were most helpful?
It seems like you're just asking about the SEO side (not Quora), so I'll focus on that.
My book is about salary negotiation, so most of my focus is on variations around "salary negotiation". That's a pretty competitive search term, so I focus on more long tail terms like "salary negotiation email", "salary increase letter sample" and "current salary interview question".
The tools I use are all free: Google analytics, Google search console, Google keyword planner, MozBar, and Google itself.
When I want to write a new article - I have a topic in mind - one of the first things I do is hop into the Keyword planner and figure out what people are ACTUALLY searching for around that topic. Most of the time, the way _I_ describe the topic is not the same as what people are searching for.
Once I know what people are searching for, I write the same article I would've written, but I try to use the more common terms rather than my own made-up terms. (For example, I would not usually say "salary negotiation email sample" - I would say "counter offer email template" or something like that. But when people want that email template, they search for "salary negotiation email", so that's the terminology I used for that article on my site.)
I gave a very, very brief overview of some other tactics I use in a talk at this year's MicroConf in Las Vegas. Here are my slides, a link to a video, and links to some of the tools I use: http://www.joshdoody.com/microconf
Hope this helps!
Quora has surprised me how much traffic you can get from it if you're correctly and directly answering questions with value
You could just search for a few terms in your area of expertise and see what comes up. You'll know pretty quickly if there are a lot of questions about it, or if Quora might not work for you.
About 20% of my visible audience took part in the assessment and/or bought the product. I got a really good vibe of the people that are most likely to engage and who I should be focusing on.
Surprisingly, people that my content is reaching are further along in their journey than I had intended on reaching out to.
This has been my biggest result so far from my efforts
Since Coach is an online course platform, we're not only giving people a demo of our product, but we're also providing value through content.
For example, we giveaway a free eBook on selling more online courses & digital products: https://coach.withcoach.com/level-up-your-sales
We also run a free email course on launching your next digital products in 10 days: https://coach.withcoach.com/10-day-product-bootcamp
Both have driven thousands of leads to our product.
https://www.s3stat.com/Pricing.aspx
For https://weddinglovely.com, I work with small businesses and running the weddings blog has been our biggest marketing win. Our businesses send us content, which we publish, getting traffic and also cementing our relationship with the submitting business. We've also started getting significant affiliate revenue ($2k+ mo) from past articles we've written.
If you'd rather not comment on this thread, I've also created a quick survey here:
https://tinymarketingwins.com/2017survey/
About 10% actually did a review of us on launch which gaves us a major boost. However, the ones that reviewed us a few months later are those with a long tail.
Reach out to those that love good products. Even if they have a small audience, it all adds up in the end.
Be active not reactive.
We mostly do this through our blog to pick up traffic like @JoshDoody mentioned below, but we try to capture the email by pay-walling (which I was MASSIVELY against at first) with a subscription page popup.
From there we drip feed them value before ever mentioning our own product.
However, without a decent backlink profile it can seem like you're not getting anywhere, so do bear in mind that SEO is the other side of the coin here.