Google Implements AdWords Express for Local Businesses
Today, we’re officially introducing AdWords Express, a faster and simpler way to start advertising online in under five minutes. We first launched this product as Google Boost last October for a small number of local businesses. Since then, we’ve continued to improve the product and enabled all U.S. businesses new to online advertising to reach customers with ease. AdWords Express is designed to help local businesses that aren’t already AdWords advertisers create effective campaigns—watch the video below to see how you can create and run an online campaign from start to finish in just a few clicks: http://www.youtube.com/user/GoogleBusiness#p/u/4/AJoUEBYIniI
AdWords Express helps potential customers find your website or Place page, and gives you a quick and straightforward way to connect with them and grow your business. You simply provide some basic business information, create your ad, and your campaign is ready to go.

After you sign up, the campaign will be automatically managed for you. AdWords Express will figure out which searches should trigger your ad to appear and displays it when these searches happen. Your ad will be shown in the Ads section of search results pages—on the top or right hand side—and in Google Maps with a distinctive blue pin. Customers can see your ad whether they’re searching on laptops or mobile phones.

As with all our ad products, you pay only when a customer clicks on your ad. To make things even easier, AdWords Express optimizes your ads to get the most out of your advertising campaign and budget.
Many businesses are already finding success through AdWords, but we know many of you are looking for an easier way to begin advertising online. Visit www.google.com/awexpress to sign up or learn more about how it works.
Posted by Kiley McEvoy, Product Manager, AdWords Express
All aspects of marketing, promotions, and engagement should be working toward the goal of solving the customer need
ABSOLUTELY LOVED THIS POST AND HAD TO SHARE IT AGAIN!
http://www.mpdailyfix.com/stop-surprising-delighting-customers-just-solve-their-problems/?mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRoisqXAZKXonjHpfsX87%2B0rX7Hr08Yy0EZ5VunJEUWy2oMJS9QhcOuuEwcWGog8wwNVCuWbeIlV9w%3D%3D
Stop Surprising & Delighting Customers—Just Solve Their Problems!
by Linda Ireland
As much as creative marketing and promotions can help a product, service, or company stand out, it always comes down to a simple premise: Did you solve the need that triggered the customer to act in the first place?
Said simply, did you solve the customer’s problem?
One reason that question may be difficult to answer is that marketing leaders get lost in trying to “surprise and delight” customers with the latest in technology and gadgets, or the most liberal service policies. All those additional features and options are bound to make customers happy in the moment, but if you don’t solve the problem that triggered them to act in the first place, their satisfaction–and your business performance–will fade quickly. This holds true across industries. Customers are looking for companies that can simplify their lives by providing quality service without hassle. A great Harvard Business Review article on customer service highlights two key takeaways that should remain top-of-mind for businesses:
- Delighting customers doesn’t build loyalty, but reducing the work they must do to get their problem solved does. (A win for your customers!)
- Acting deliberately on this insight can help improve customer service, reduce customer service costs, and decrease customer churn. (A win for your company’s bottom line!)
The second reason this question may be difficult to answer is that marketing often doesn’t have complete accountability for solving the customer’s problem. As the old African proverb and a former First Lady have taught us, “it takes a village.” Marketers must work across, up, and down the organization to solve customer needs. Your organization needs a shared view of the target customer experience that solves your customers’ needs, and focus in each area of the company making the right daily decisions to make that happen. Marketing typically sets this direction; everyone plays a role.
Who Is Succeeding?
If you’re looking for examples of companies that are living the mantra of solving every customer’s need, start with Amazon. The company does consistently well in customer surveys and performance rankings because of a strong, unwavering focus on fulfilling customer needs. If there is a problem, it is quickly rectified with the goal of getting the right product to the customer ASAP. Technology investments are high for Amazon, but they’re all matched to things customers’ value. When Amazon was ranked the most trusted brand in the U.S. in a recent Millward Brown study, I thought it was a great testimony to the effectiveness of its ability to use technology to solve customer needs in a personal way. The model at Amazon is simple: Create a place where customers can find or discover anything they can imagine buying online.
Other companies that rank well in terms of solving the customer’s need include:
How Does This Change the Role of Marketing?
Make no mistake about it, marketers’ roles are changing. The link between marketing performance and effective customer experience is now unquestioned. Joe Tripodi of the Coca-Cola Company is a great example of a leader that is adapting to the expectations of customers while protecting one of the most well-known brands in the world. By remaining supportive of loyal Coca-Cola brand advocates, Joe and his team are reaping the benefits of customers who fill online channels with positive messages.
The flow of information is no longer just company-to-customer. Information now flows both ways, sideways and diagonally. The marketing team has switched from measuring impressions (views or reach) and now measures expressions (a comment or other kind of action that demonstrates engagement). What Joe’s figured out at Coke is that if they can provide exceptional experiences that solve needs, then those experiences can be multiplied and shared time and again—online and off.
6 Simple Tips
By following some simple principles, most businesses can minimize the risks of negative “buzz” while ratcheting up the likelihood that positive experiences will be shared. Here are six tips to keep in mind:
1. Do what you said you would do to eliminate the customer problem. Seems simple really doesn’t it? Deliver on the promise you made to address that particular customer’s problem in the time period agreed upon. Poor customer experiences arise from a failure to deliver on that initial promise or when surprises in the process pop up that were not communicated.
2. Don’t make your customers jump through hoops. Customers are not seeking another task on their daily to-do list. The reason they reach out for help is an understanding that there is someone out there more qualified to do this job than they are. They are seeking help. The last thing they want to do beg for it.
3. Don’t try and deliver added benefits the customer doesn’t need. Keep it simple. Don’t try and oversell how wonderful you are. Bragging about those 20 new features you just added (that are more about extending your sales or helping your operation than they are about moving your customer toward a need solved) isn’t going to convince anyone to be an advocate for your brand. Keep it simple. Fix their problem. Then stop. Then solve another one.
4. Be emotional. While the tangible product or service itself (and process steps a customer follows) must directly solve a customer need, the emotional elements of the customer experience best inspire loyalty and satisfaction. The trick is balance, a focus on both in a way that solves your customer’s need better than anyone else could. Ideally, what should your customers feel at each step of their experience? Match your actions to that.
5. Be helpful. Any experience must be accessible. You’re the expert. Your customer is hiring you to solve a problem or desire. Focus on how you can be a trusted source by providing the insight, explanation, and resources needed to solve the customer need. This is one area where your website, social networks and greater peer connectivity is a tremendous asset. Another (and often overlooked) opportunity is held by leaders whose customers use their company’s products or services over time (rather than in a moment, like an ice cream cone). My use of Windows software as I type is an example. How can you design your customer’s ongoing experience to give your customers the ideas and support they need to feel good about the process and decision to hire you, buy, and use your product or service?
6. Lead the village. Think about the interactions most critical to solving your customers’ needs as customers learn about your product, try you out, buy, use your product or service to solve their need, and even evolve over time. Which departments, processes and people have the biggest impact on making those interactions successful? Marketers have a key role in defining the target–or most ideal–experience customers should have at each step, and then engaging others in the company to aim at the same target. Building alignment can turbo boost the efforts of smart, well-intended people across your organization.
Ultimately, it’s not what customers accept, it’s what they value that matters most.
All aspects of marketing, promotions, and engagement should be working toward the goal of solving the customer need. If—and how well—a need is solved is your customers’ measure of success. And it’s a key measure of performance for you, your brand, and your organization.
Google Plus Button Consideration Important for Businesses
So, in my quest to keep abreast of the ever changing world of the web, I read this intense article about the Google Plus button and what it may mean to business and thought I would share some highlights to consider with your wesite. You may, of course read the entire article, but here are the the main points that we should consider:
Snippets of importance from this article written by Jay Baer:
“…even though Google is pretty d___ good at figuring out what’s good and what’s less so on the Web, their entire outlook historically been rooted in two key components: the page and the link (Cindy’s Note: We still subscribe to this with our client’s through LuCorp because it still plays an important role in the every changing landscape of the Internet rankings.)….Google then was able to incorporate Twitter data into Google results, and the tweets and mentions your published content receives has a material impact on how Google ranks you (Twitter’s agreement with Google to feed the Search Engine stopped July 2nd….in time for the Google Plus launch!)“ …..so now, Google has tried to invent a source of social signals to give it the scoring information it needs to stay on top of the relevancy heap in an ever-expanding Web …
“There is no question in my mind that Google will very quickly (if they aren’t already) begin incorporating Google Plus behaviors into the ranking algorithm for Web pages.”
“Here’s the scenario I see unfolding before the end of 2011, and possibly before Labor Day. Google opens up business pages on Plus to Adwords customers. Any clicks and +1 (Google’s version of Facebook “like”) your business content receives on Plus has a direct impact on your organic search engine rankings….
How do you feel about Google + then? Certainly, if consumers don’t flock to Google + then businesses will continue to put many eggs (too many in most cases) into their Facebook fan pages, in an attempt to be where their customers are, and their Google + presence will be a secondary concern. But if Plus gets any sort of real momentum among end-users – and I firmly believe it will – Google’s unique ability to finally tie search and social together in one package will force the hand of business, making Google + the place to be for interaction between companies and their customers.
I’m not predicting the death of Facebook (or even Twitter), but smart companies will spend some time this summer making sure they’re focused on how to BE social, and not how to DO social on a particular platform. Because eventually, the tools always change online.”
LuCorp Marketing Implements new Press Distribution Service with Great Results
We are so excited to have implemented a new media distribution program that allows us to connect better with writers, bloggers and journalists. We have been using this program to it’s fullest extent and have seen great results! Here is a few of the results:
World Fence Magazine publication of Press Release for DCS Global:
Grand Canyon Whitewater Announcement of their Yoga and Music Inspired Trip
Read MoreBlogging Adoption and Blog Consistency
I read a fascinating article in the BtoBonline.com article by Jon Vanzile that was in response to the New York Times article saying blogging is doomed because of Facebook and Twitter. Jon points out that B2B businesses are “still rapidly adopting blogs even in the age of social media.” Point in case, Jon’s reference to a conversation with Cisco’s Director of Social Media Marketing, Jeanette Gibson, who states, ”blogs are destination links.” and “People want targeted content, and the nature of blogs very much works for Cisco.” Per Jon’s article, “In Ciscos point of view, social media doesn’t replace blogging, it supports it.”
At LuCorp Marketing we wholeheartedly agree! Our customers are even increasing the amount of blogs. We work with software programs like Compendium which “focus efforts on creating relevant content with our straightforward content creation and administrative tools.” This program has great impact and leverages blogs through delivering content and calls-to-action based on customer’s search queries – Search Engine Optimization at it’s core purpose!
With blogging we see opportunity to tell stories, voice opinions, launch products and services, tell more about what a company does through blogging. It is very much like the company’s voice on a website. Blogging adds pages to the website, provides the Search Engines with more to cache, helps customers and prospectives find a company, drives more traffic to the website, integrates other marketing efforts like email campaigns and social media, enhances offerings, enhances customer interaction, …. BUT, blogging requires commitment, follow-up and feedback. Many small companies don’t have the time or energy to do this, that’s why we provide this service to our clients, to manage this process for them and to write, develop and plan scheduling and feedback.
Of course, we are much like the cobbler, who fixes other peoples shoes and who’s own shoes need repair! We don’t follow our own advice here, so our blogs are few and far between, but we try! :)
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