Small Business Marketing – Tips on using Flickr

Flickr is another tool in the small business marketing armoury. Adding photos and videos to your website is proven to increase rankings in Google.Here are some tips for using Flickr on your website, written by Kim Bhasin on the AMEX open forum.

 

use flickr for small business marketing

Source Flicr.com

Tell your company’s story, through pictures

 

Every brand has a story. Flickr presents an opportunity to share it with your customers, and more importantly, you can give them a chance to be a part of it. Flickr is particularly strong at telling stories visually. Use compelling photos that represent the identity of your company, where its roots are and where it’s headed.

 

And be sure to get your customers directly involved with, and be able to affect, that storyline. Have them submit their pictures interacting with your brand, and encourage them to talk to each other—and you—about it. And remember, in order for people to talk to your brand, you have to make things personal. Your voice must be real, and human.

 

Always avoid the hard sell

 

Never, ever, post anything that looks or feels like an advertisement. That’s not the point of Flickr, or any other social network. You’re trying to find ways to get closer to your customers, not scare them away with annoying advertising. This holds true for both comment sections, and photo captions. It’s not an online store.

 

That doesn’t mean to separate your products completely from your Flickr account. When there’s a launch coming up, use the platform to get customers involved. But base it around their experience, not your own marketing.

 

Integrate Flickr into everything you’re doing on the Web

 

To get all the value you can out of Flickr, use it to connect with your other platforms. Make sure each part of your digital network is linked, from your Web page to your blog to Facebook to Flickr. Tell your customers that these places exist, and how to get there. Then they can decide which ones they want to interact with.

 

At the same time, make sure that you’re using each social network for its strength. For example, if you have both a YouTube channel and Flickr page, it’s okay to post videos on Flickr, but keep it primarily focused on photos because that’s the reason people will be going to your page. Beyond that, you can use Flickr as a resource for your other sites. There are tons of Creative Commons-licensed photos available for use.

 

Allow and encourage others to share your content

 

It’s a photo sharing platform, so treat it like one. You could be hosting your photos anywhere on the Web, but you’ve picked Flickr because of its users, and the site’s social features that better allow you to connect with those users.

 

Since you want exposure, don’t be hyper-protective with your content on Flickr. Allow sharing, and don’t limit what folks can do with your content. The whole point of a business being on the site is to let people interact with the content that you put up.

 

Also, upload your photos on a Creative Commons license so that people can use them. You’re probably not a professional photography company that has to protect its valuable pictures. Every time someone shares your content, that’s a plus for you. If you’re particularly concerned about people stealing your work, use small watermarks.

 

Join relevant groups and participate in the community

 

Groups are an integral part of the user experience on Flickr, and your business should be a part of that. There’s a group for pretty much any topic on Flickr, and finding some that are relevant to your business can pay off. Be active in comments, even if they may not be directly related to your business. Also, add people’s photos to your business’ ‘favorites’ stream.

 

Again, it comes down to being human. So get off the sidelines and participate in the community like any regular user. Fortunately, this is one major advantage small businesses have over the big boys. You don’t have that initial stigma of being a bloated corporation, so it’s usually easier for folks to relate with your brand.

 

When on Flickr.com the photos and videos get shared around the community. Remember again, this is not the place for the hard sell. It is to  build awareness about your brand, creating discussion and driving more people to the business end, your website.

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Small Business Marketing – how to make an eBook

In a previous article we looked at what an eBook was & how to use in our small business. Here Karen Leland continues with how to write an eBook in 4 simple steps.

 

Small Business marketing - how to write an eBook

Karen Leland

 

Step #1 Choose a topic: Brainstorm ideas that that use your expertise, knowledge base or specific information and/or research. Consider smaller slices of bigger topics for eBooks. Books that can fit into the “how to” topic area are some of the most popular.

Step #2 Create Your eBook Outline: Decide what five to ten basic topics you are going to address in your eBook, and then outline the three main points you are going to make under each of those topics.

Step #3 Begin Writing Your eBook: Oddly enough, the easiest part of eBook publishing is getting the finished product up and running for distribution. Many can be uploaded with just a click of a few buttons. But where most entrepreneurs face a challenge is in finding the time, or having the writing chops, to craft the eBook in the first place. I get weekly calls from small business owners asking me to ghostwrite their eBooks because, although they have great content and ideas, they don’t have the writing skills.

Even if that’s the case, it’s no excuse, since there are scads of eBook-savvy small businesses whose sole purpose is to ghostwrite, edit, design and publish your eBook.

Step #4 Edit and design your eBook: A few things to keep in mind:

Unless you were an English major, hire a proofreader to go through your manuscript to check spelling, grammar and punctuation.

Unless you were a graphic design major, hire a designer to create the layout, cover and formatting of your book.

Unless you are an illustrator, hire a graphic artist to add pictures or drawings to your eBook.

Consider embedding video in the eBook.

It sounds simple, but no doubt takes time and effort to produce. Possibly less expensive than printed options that often get thrown away, and you do have the option of having them printed as well. Remember to  update to keep the information fresh and  current.  This is a great way to spread the word about your business,and how to get it out into the world? 

  • adding to your blog
  • sending an email to existing customers
  • sending out to new ‘likes’ on your facebook fanpage
  • adding to newsletters
  • sending excerpts to other bloggers who could link back to your site
  • sending excerpts to twitter, linkedin etc

 I would love to hear from you if you have any examples that have worked for you