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The Biggest Stories: HuffPo Likes Me! Edition
3 weeks ago · 1 comment
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The Biggest Stories: HuffPo Likes Me! Edition
This is how I find my visitors to my blog. Since I have a niche blog which is concentrated on topics of entrepreneurship, personal finance, investments, and self-motivation, I usually go to forums and other blogs and start leaving my footprints.
Another thing is to participate in contests and media exposures. It should be both online and offline.
I think this is one of the most brilliant things I’ve heard about teenageers for a long while. It makes me sick when people stuff teenagers/youth/whatever-they-want-to-call-us (whatever “us” means) into tiny (and often not so positive) little boxes.
Marketers assume they understand the target audience. I agree with you that teenagers are definitely one of the most poorly classified groups. We should not be targeting "teens" any more than we should be targeting "moms." We target moms of babies, moms in the suburbs, moms with jobs, etc. And for some reason we just target "teen girls" as if they're all at the mall with their parents credit cards.
Phenomenal piece. This is something I've been dancing around in my conversations with brands who are interested in engagement with @20SB.
I'm doing a lot of thinking lately around my small financial planning practice to these ends. If you saw the regulatory rules around 'advertising' in my industry it would make you cringe, but I firmly believe that any professional interested in building trust with his community and clients must leverage these mediums to do so. The industry is so caught in the archaic days of demographic data and blind mass marketing that 'prospecting' has essentially been put into a box in which cold-calling and seminars are about all that's allowed. I think that's an unattractive state of affairs for both planners and clients.
I'm shocked that more brands aren't trying to work with 20SB, who I would consider the next generation of influencers (after the mommy bloggers).
The financial planning practice sounds like it's a bit stuck. It seems like marketing would be very important for the finance industry, considering that people are still wary of where they put their money and who they trust. We really have to move from prospecting which worked so well in the '90s to relationship marketing.
Thanks for the comment!
Twitter is a perfect example. Millions of people leave tweets trying to sell all kinds of stuff but their efforts are seen, at best, for a split second. Is this truly the way to spend your valuable time even if you are able to "target" your followers?
Just a thought....