Posts Tagged ‘content’

Afraid of What Your Web Site Inventory Might Reveal?

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

At least every year, manufacturers, distributors and retailers typically conduct a physical inventory of their warehouses and shelves to see exactly what’s on hand. Comparing what’s actually there to what your inventory management software shows should be there and what your memory believes is there often reveals striking differences. Rookies quickly update the inventory software and move on with day to day operations. Veterans who’ve driven this process understand these differences aren’t merely numbers to be reconciled but symptoms of inefficiencies. “Of course you’re hoping that what’s on the racks matches what’s in the computer but that’s not likely to happen,” says Mike Dorsey, vice president of manufacturing for plastics design and manufacturer Meese Orbitron Dunne Co. (www.Meeseinc.com). “Any difference in the item count is an opportunity to find a hole in the process, close it up and become more efficient.” At some companies, it’s common for outdated, obsolete or just poor-selling parts and products to sit on the racks for years, being given little attention until their rediscovery during inventory. This seems how many companies approach their Web sites.

More and more companies are adding product information, photography, videos, news and other content to their sites on a regular basis but few companies seem to remove it…any of it…ever…until someone poking around the site while awaiting a flight finds something that shouldn’t be there anymore. Rather than wait for a situation like this, I recommend conducting a Web site inventory. It’s very simple. Just look at every page on your Web site, read every article, look at the pictures and captions and make sure the site is presenting your company and products in the finest possible light.

Take inventory of your Web site as often as the inventory of a warehouse is checked. Photo courtesy Tingue, Brown & Co.

Here are some common items to check:

  • Email addresses for people who are no longer with the company
  • Email addresses that send messages to nowhere
  • Product specifications that are no longer accurate
  • Products that are no longer offered
  • Videos that don’t load or take too long to load
  • Computer renderings when photography is now available
  • Once-fancy java scripts that don’t work
  • Pricing from last year
  • Trade show schedule from last year

Your customers and prospects are already doing this Web site inventory for you but they won’t tell you what they find. They’ll just leave.

Just as a physical inventory may reveal holes in the system, your Web site inventory may reveal patterns  that point to systemic flaws in how content is developed and added to the site. Establishing guidelines that address and correct these flaws helps ensure that your Web site is always up to date, complete and sporting the fresh, useful content that keeps your Google rankings high and moves prospects towards sales.

Your PR Program As Content Generator

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Think of your PR program beyond publicity – beyond the media. Think of it as a content development program. It’s a planned, coordinated attack that consistently develops the information your prospects need to feel comfortable buying your products and/or services. Done properly, it’s presented in a style, structure and format that entice journalists to publish the information in their magazines, email newsletters, on their Web sites, blogs, and in other media. As effective PR, it generates qualified sales leads, boosts credibility and expands name brand awareness, but there’s so much more your informative news can be doing today:

epr Public Relations Content DevelopmentContent for your Web site – relax knowing your Web site will always feature fresh, new information. This instills confidence in prospects and customers and ensures coverage in search engines with both the content needed to appear in relevant searches and the frequent site updates needed to support high rankings. Google considers the freshness of content as an important factor determining search results.

Content for your email newsletters – it’s easy to stay in touch with customers and prospects and stick to your email newsletter schedule when you already have current news in the can that may be rewritten to suit an email publication. Plus, the email brings prospects back to the original article on the Web site.

Content for your social media program – now that your Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn pages are setup, it’s easy to keep them fresh by leveraging your news to suit the format of each platform. Your PR program provides a steady flow of postable material that can be rewritten to encourage comments and discussions and attract fan support.

Content for your blog – use your blog to reveal the backstory behind the news or add a personal angle to the story. Surely, developing a new product over several years required overcoming a host of challenges and surprises and sparked several inside jokes among the project team. This is the material that draws comments and interaction.

Once you get access to a constant flow of newsworthy concepts that warrant media attention, you’ll soon see there’s no reason to restrict their release to the media – there is every reason to leverage and reuse these concepts everywhere. The key is to uncover the worthy concepts hiding inside your product, service or company.