4 Steps - How To Digitize Your Business By Promoting Your Blog
By Joan Magat
August 16, 2016
It can be difficult for a pure brick and mortar businesses (if any still exist) to transition to a digital environment. But it doesn’t have to be. Think of the process as digitizing your business to reach people in a different environment more effectively. Take all of the things that draw customers to your physical location, and offer them online.
Establish Your Authority
When customers visit a physical location, it is easier for them to determine if the people working there experienced and friendly. When visitors reach a website it is far more difficult to determine the type of business and people the site represents. Give your visitors a better idea of why they should trust you with their business.
Adding a testimonial section to your blog is a great way to establish your authority. Ask current clients to discuss their experiences in detail so those who are interested in your services or products are able to get a feeling for how you do business. It is the feeling of walking into a building or talking to other customers that matters in this context more than information. You need to create a digital experience of the community. Encourage social media followers to help with this project and ask if they are willing to share a photo of themselves to make it even more personal.
If you have an “About” section, be sure to include images of any awards, certifications, or relevant degrees. Link to the institutions that awarded or featured you, so as to make it easy for visitors to fact check and learn more about how these items verify your authority.
Maintain Visual Consistency
Visual consistency is as important in a digital environment as it is in a physical location. There is a reason companies have employees wear uniforms or dress in a single color, it creates visual consistency that makes it easy for customers to identify the people who are there to help them. Print ads and signs are visually consistent for a similar reason: It is important that when consumers see information about your business, they instantly make the connection. And visual “cues” make that easier.
Translated to the online world, this means you can build as much emotion as you want into your websites, emails, social media, infographics or blog posts, but it will amount to little unless your design and flow work the way users expect them to. A clean, visually consistent web or app interface gives users feelings of comfort, control, and familiarity.
Creating visual consistency online seems complicated because of the graphical nature of the environment. There are many free resources, such as Canva, that help people of all experience levels create the digital resources they need to brand and market themselves in a visually consistent way. It is important that businesses take the time to plan out the colors, typography, and type of images they want to be associated with their brand online.
Graphics are necessary for emails, social media, workbooks, infographics, blog posts, and so much more. The visual element of your digital business is as important as the way an office is decorated or the sign outside.
Offer Free Resources
In a digital environment, it is important to show people why they should trust you with their business. Testimonials and credentials are valuable for this purpose, but even better is a sample of your work.
No matter what type of business you have, there is something you can teach people. YouTube is an excellent way to promote your blog while giving potential customers something of value for free. This allows customers to get to know business owners, or employees, even if they can never visit a physical location. It makes the experience of interacting with a company feel more authentic. A marketing professional can make tutorials that walk people through how to use various marketing tools. A photographer can show visitors how to frame a shot, edit in various applications, or review photography apps. A veterinarian can make videos explaining first aid techniques for a variety of animals, grooming tips, or product reviews. You get the idea… Showcase your skills and services and prove to potential customers why they should support your business.
Your videos can be posted on individual blog posts in addition to being found on the business YouTube page. The YouTube page is also a great way to incorporate the visual branding elements the business has developed and can link to the business blog for viewers who find the company directly from the YouTube videos.
If you don’t feel comfortable in front of a video camera, tutorials are an excellent option. The key to making a tutorial truly valuable is to make it the absolute best of its kind. Don’t leave out any steps and utilize multiple pictures for each one to ensure clarity.
Create Personal Connections
Social media is one of the most commonly discussed methods of creating personal connections with potential customers. However, there is another way that is even more personal. Begin speaking at and attending conferences where your target demographic is likely to be.
Blogging conferences are a great place to get to know individual bloggers. The niche markets which are represented are extensive and most businesses find they fall within one or several. By speaking at these conferences, you can connect with bloggers passionate about your field. It is beneficial to your business and a blogger who hosts an interview with you, a review of your service or product, or a giveaway.
Attending and speaking at industry-specific conferences allows business owners to network within their field and make valuable connections. Speaking at those events lends credibility to your authority and can be featured on the company blog.
Over To You
It is possible to promote your blog simply by doing the things necessary to ensure your digital presence is as robust as your physical presence. For those businesses that operate entirely in a digital environment, this is even more important. It is vital to make the business as multi-dimensional as possible to become and remain competitive. Promote your business blog by establishing authority in your field, remaining visually consistent and recognizable, offering free resources of value, and creating personal connections with live events.
About The Author
Tracy Vides - Digital Content Strategist
Tracy is a content strategist and serial blogger who gives small businesses and entrepreneurs online marketing advice. Hit her up any time on Twitter.
Joan Magat
We believe that everyone should be able to publish digital content and make money without being dependent on ad networks or giant platforms, or wrestling with complicated publishing solutions.
Content creation should be a part of every website’s SEO strategy. Publishing content for your targeted audience not only drives organic traffic to your website but improves your site's authority and relevance on that subject.
Consistently publishing new and meaningful content is one of the number one drivers to achieve search engine rankings. This is because search engines perceive regularly updated content as one of the best indicators of a domain’s knowledge and credibility on a subject. The outcome of this is that you’ll rank higher in search results for your keywords and bring more visibility for your website.
However, the effort of producing fresh content can be onerous - especially if you don’t have the budget to hire a content creator. But with the advent of numerous AI-powered automation tools, content generation no longer needs to be a one-man show.
How to auto-generate topic ideas
Before any writing can begin, you have to have a topic idea. Besides producing content, there are generators that can even provide the inspiration for ideas.
Hubspot’s free idea generator, can help you to brainstorm fresh article topics. This is especially useful when you’re focused on a single niche and seem to have exhausted every angle. You just need to enter a noun to start the ideas flowing.
But deciding the topic is only the first step in creating content!
Two tools to auto-generate long and short-form content
Content generating tools can speed up and streamline the writing process.
The content creating tool, Article Forge, specialises in generating long-form content.
You can generate articles from 50 to 750 words in length which can also be scheduled to post directly to a WordPress website. Article Forge claims every article is written completely from scratch, so you'll never get duplicate or plagiarised content.
With Article Forge, you start creating an article by entering a ‘keyword’ that describes the main topic of your article and then sub-keywords which help to focus the narrative. Article Forge will then need a few minutes to process the query.
As with any tool, there’s a learning curve required to produce suitable and readable content. Sometimes the quality and relevance can be hit or miss. The more precise and developed the data you input, the richer and more relevant the result.
The outputs produced for my keywords were good rough drafts but not what I would consider the quality of a ‘final copy’ without editing. Some of the text was repetitive, some irrelevant or just down-right nonsensical.
Here’s a paragraph from the output for the keyword ‘Lead Magnet’. The content output reads coherently then all of a sudden it swerves off-piste.
Article Forge has one plan billed at $57/mo or $27/mo paid annually.
The content generator Conversion.ai was recommended to me by a colleague. She found it a great resource for generating short-form copy which she could be assured was grammatically and conversationally fluent in English - as English was not her native language.
Conversion.ai has over 50 use case templates (some are still in beta) ranging from blog post outlines to email subject lines to Pinterest pin descriptions and personal bios.
With Conversion.ai, you begin by choosing the template for your use case. Then you input the topic, enter a tone of voice and click Generate. The output will display in the split screen. When generating long-form copy, you have to prompt it along by entering your own transition copy.
Here again, the output for my ‘personal bio’ suddenly crossed over into the realm of fiction with some very curious extrapolations from the data I entered:
Conversion.ai claims its generated content is 99.99% original and clear for publication.
An added bonus with conversion.ai, is their dedication to building a supportive community around their product with a private Facebook group, Training Academy and a daily 30 minute live Q&A session with its co-founder Chris Hull.
Conversion.ai has two plan tiers. The Starter plan, at $29/mo, gets you short-form copy generation such as headlines, descriptions and bios. While their Pro plan, at $109/mo, allows access to their long-form assistant for copy such as blog posts, video scripts and books.
In conclusion
While content generators can help with some of the heavy lifting of content creation, it’s quality clearly still needs the human touch.
Particularly important to keep in mind is that Google and other search engines can easily recognise auto-generated content and if they determine it to be without human review, sufficient value or curation, they may take action against - meaning your content might suddenly drop in ranking.
So use these tools to help facilitate your content production but remember that machine written articles still can’t equal words composed into meaningful thoughts by an organic being.
Weather you’re offering stock market tips or personal financial advice, a membership website is the best way to monetize your finance expertise.
Individuals and families are always looking for non-biased advice on topics like education savings, saving for retirement, home financing and more. And a membership site is the perfect venue to offer consistent stock market tips and advice for a monthly or annual fee.
Launching a successful financial membership website may seem daunting if you’re just starting out or just thinking about taking your expertise online. But if you package your knowledge correctly and with your potential customer in mind, you will have a framework that has proven successful in the industry. Here are 5 accepted and expected ways to deliver your knowledge, and provide the impact to inspire your website visitors to join your membership.
Financial Education
Why have you started your financial membership website? To share your knowledge through education, of course. You can do this in a number of ways:
Online Courses
Most membership platforms these days offer a course creation tool. Some of these tools are fairly simple to navigate, while others are much more complex. SubHub’s course creator is easy to use, while at the same time allowing you to offer courses with as many lessons and modules as desired. Some of the more expensive platforms offer quizzes, badges etc. While these items are not built into the SubHub platform, it is super easy to integrate them using third-party hosting platforms.
Webinars
The popularity of webinars these days can’t be overstated. Webinars are extremely versatile and can be effective tools when addressing potential clients at any stage of the buying cycle. For example, if you have created a signature financial coaching program, a webinar is an excellent way to introduce you and the program to a brand new audience. It works just as well as tool to provide details about your program for those who may know who you are but need more information on your services. You can also direct your comments to those who are ready to buy buy creating a special offer on your program for participants.
Articles
Articles can contain text, images, audio files, videos, PDF’s and more. Financial membership content in the form of articles is quick to compile and straight-forward to offer on most membership website platforms. Article content can be categorized like a blog, but reside behind a paywall. Membership tiers allow you to charge more for certain more specialized content, or for access to live coaching. Content such as a monthly budgeting planner for newlyweds, a tax planner or 5-year retirement strategy are some example that are well-suited to article content.
Access to the Expert
It’s great to offer pre-recorded videos, podcast episodes, or pre-written articles. To take your offerings up a notch, you may want to offer one on one or group access to you, the expert.This can be in the form of coaching calls, group participation calls, or high-level personalized coaching programs that you can charge a premium for. Usually, financial advisors offer a combination of live and recorded access to their expertise.
For example, an evergreen course that allows students to enrol at any time and take the course at their own pace, might be punctuated with a live group call once per month. On that call, you as the expert can provide a Q&A session, answering questions from your members. This adds tremendous value to the course for your students.
Financial Tools
Online financial tools have many benefits besides allowing potential clients to get crucial information they need quickly. Calculators, budgeting templates, investment trackers and calendars are just a few examples. These tools provide a service to clients and visitors that will make your website stand out in their minds later. You can offer them for free to everyone, free only to members, or for a fee. It’s entirely up to you.
Another advantage of online tools is that it keeps your visitors on your website longer, increasing the time that they are interacting with your brand. You will find that most membership website platforms will not offer specific financial tools, but may provide a way to embed such features into a web page. ChatGPT may be a resource for creating a tool for you, even one that is unique to your service.
Community Opportunities
Building a community around shared financial goals and challenges fosters engagement and support. Financial membership websites often include forums, discussion boards, or social networking features where members can interact, share experiences, and learn from each other. Networking opportunities allow individuals to exchange insights, strategies, and encouragement.
Regular Updates
Staying abreast of the ever-evolving financial landscape is crucial, especially in a membership model. Assuming your members are paying on a recurring subscription basis, you will be expected to offer updated content on a regular basis. Successful financial membership sites regularly update their content to reflect current trends, regulations, and best practices. You can also offer bonus content via newsletters, blogs, or curated content. The important thing is to ensure your members have access to the latest information and strategies from your perspective.
An effective financial membership website combines educational resources, personalized tools, expert guidance, community support, and up-to-date content to empower individuals in managing their finances successfully. By focusing on these key characteristics, your website can be an invaluable resource hub for your members’ financial well-being.
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To get the maximum out of your marketing budget using Google Analytics, you need to know which strategies do and which don’t work. Once you know what does work, you can invest more time and money into it for a maximum Return On Investment.
Google Analytics is one of the most popular tools for keeping up with website statistics, but a lot of people don’t yet know what all those numbers mean!
Here I will clarify some key terms:
Sessions
A session is a visit to your website. Within 1 session, multiple pages can be visited. One person can have multiple sessions on a day, so the amount of sessions does not indicate how many different people have visited your website.
Users
A user is a unique computer or device that has visited your website. If someone visits your website on the iPhone and afterwards on the computer, then Google Analytics will count this as 2 different users. If 2 different people visit your website on the same computer, then this will be seen as 1 user.
Traffic Sources
The traffic sources indicate through which main channels your website is being visited. This is divided into 5 main categories, namely Organic Search, Referral, Direct, Paid Search and Social Media. It is not only very important to measure how many visits you get per channel, but also which results are being achieved through this, such as the buying of a product, filling out a contact form or subscribing to the newsletter.
Bounce Rate
The Bounce Rate is the percentage of the visitors who only visit 1 page and also stay on this page for less than 30 seconds. This can have various causes: it could be that someone has immediately found the information he was looking for or that the website is not relevant for him. It could also be that the page doesn’t load quickly enough or is unattractive for this visitor.
Goal conversion
Google Analytics gives you the possibility to set goals, such as purchase of a product, filling out of a contact form or subscribing to the news letter. Via the Goal Conversion functionality you can see the extent to which these goals are being reached. You can measure this down to the smallest level, for example per channel, per country, city or per type of device.
We’re helping you get a head start with your business endeavors by providing startup advice in the form of 10 really juicy tips for starting a business. There is always sweat, blood and tears involved, but the pay off in the end only makes it worth it. Here are 10 things to stay aware of in the areas of starting, mentoring, pitching, funding and so much more. Tell us if we missed any good business tips by adding your two cents in the comments below.
1. Legal Business Tip
Do your best not to skimp on the legal aspect of your business. Get legal advice from the very beginning. A lawyer will help you make sure your business is legally set up properly, can help minimize the tax burden, make sure you are in compliance with laws relating to your business that you may not know exist, and all this can save you from very expensive future lawsuits. Always take the time and the money, to get advice.
2. Mentoring Tip
When starting your business select one or two businesses similar to yours and keep an eye on how they navigate through their industry. Model some of your ideas after what they are doing. It's a way to keep someone more knowledgeable than you as an unofficial "virtual" mentor. Also, make sure to check out the mentoring service available via EFactor here.
3. Crowdfunding Tip
If you are planning to crowdfund, working up your campaign, strategy, and finding the crowd who will fund your campaign should happen first. Treat the crowdfunding portion of the program as your means for collecting the funds and not the other way around.
4. Ideation Tip
When it comes to validating your business idea, get out of the building. Hit the streets and start asking people what they think. Start with friends and family, but also ask those you don’t know as well or hit up an entrepreneurial Meet Up or EFactor event to talk to other innovators about it. They are more likely to tell you the truth and whether your idea or product is a viable one. Consider implementing Non-Disclosure Agreements when your idea is in the very early stages to discourage copy cats.
5. Business Planning
Your business plan isn’t just a formality. When done correctly, the business planning process will help guide you to how much cash you need for each of your scenarios. You must know how much money you need to get through the first year without panic.
6. Pitching Tip
To be successful with your pitch, it’s important to organize your data, and do your best to think like an investor. If you were to invest your own hard earned cash, what would you want to know about the idea and the people behind it? Be realistic with your numbers and explain everything you intend to use your investments for. Our Ultimate Slide Deck makes it easy for you to plug in your data, numbers and information into a template that’s simple, makes sense and is easy to look at, get a copy for yourself here.
7. Funding Tip
When it comes to funding, look to yourself, your friends and your family first. Once you need to look to outside sources, remember that a lot depends on relationships. You will want to find an investor or series of investors that you trust and you have good rapport with. Money isn’t always easy to talk about, so make sure you enter into solid and comfortable funding relationships.
8. Starting Your Business Tip
Find paying customers before starting your business. Go ahead and offer your product or service to those you think will be interested in it and see if they would actually pay for it. Since not every business is guaranteed to work on the first try it’s important to validate it as much as you can. If you can’t find paying customers, then you might have to head back to the drawing board. One of the hardest things is finding paying customers, so always make sure that people actually want what you have to offer. Even if customers like your idea but won’t pay, it’s your job to find out what they will pay for, or buy.
9. Growth Tip
Once you get to the place where you can start hiring people on, always try to choose people who are smarter than you in different skill sets. Also, be willing to accept that once you bring people on, they will disagree with how you built your original prototype/business model. Listen to them, they are providing an additional perspective of your business blind spots.
10. Success Tip
If you want to make your company successful the key is to NEVER. GIVE. UP. Always survive, never quit, as we stated never give up. Pull yourself up after setback, there will always be setbacks. As long as you keep going, you will make it work eventually. Raising a business is like running a marathon. You have to make sure you have enough endurance to make it to that 26th mile. Give yourself at least a five year commitment.
Ready to transform your knowledge into an online business with a membership website but don’t have the time or skill to build it yourself? Our design service could be the solution.
Getting your first 100 paying customers for a membership website is always the hardest part. But once you reach that number, it becomes much easier to attract new members.
We've put together a 90-day plan for you to get your first 100 paying customers.
Starting an online magazine has never been easier. Whether you are an individual with a passion for a specific niche or a business seeking to expand its online presence, the wealth of affordable and user-friendly tools makes publishing an online magazine achievable for even a solopreneur.
These days, if you're looking to manipulate or edit your photos and images, it shouldn't mean you have to purchase expensive software or engage a professional graphic designer. A lot of the functionality that the majority of people need is available with free or low-cost web-based image & photo editing software.
Using headings effectively on your website’s homepage is essential for both engaging users and optimising your site for search engines. Well-crafted headings not only capture attention but also play a vital role in guiding your visitors and improving your SEO performance.
Color is a visitor's first point of engagement with a website. This makes choosing the correct color scheme essential. Not only do color choices, create brand awareness, they actually trigger specific emotions and influence conversion rates.
If you run a coaching business in 2025, taking it online through a membership website is a smart way to expand your reach globally and scale your business quickly.
Setting the subscription prices for your membership website is a critical step to ensuring its profitability and long-term sustainability. When deciding the price, it's important to consider various factors, including the value you offer, your target audience and the costs involved.
The best place to start is with your content. Once your message and structure are clear, design becomes a tool to present that message effectively. A well-designed site should look visually appealing, guide visitors intuitively, and inspire them to take action.
If you’ve ever wondered how to plan an event online, now is the time to learn. With 2020 being the year of Zoom, it’s no surprise that holding virtual events has skyrocketed as traditional live events are on hold. But you might be wondering, "Is that good thing?"
The importance of an intelligently crafted pricing page cannot be overstated. When trying to convince visitors to become subscribers of a membership website, the pricing page is a pivotal element in the conversion journey. It's the gateway where potential customers make the crucial decision to commit to your membership.
If you're an expert in a niche subject and want to start a business to earn an income from your knowledge, then starting a membership website is the answer.
A membership website allows you to protect your exclusive content behind a paywall so access is only granted to subscribers.
This article will list the steps you need to take to start building your membership website.
1. Identify your target audience
Growing an audience of paying users requires creating content tailored to their needs.
It may seem counter-intuitive but by focusing on a specific niche subject you'll be able to more effectively create content that appeals to your target audience.
Knowing the customer persona of your target audience, enables you to identify and create impactful content specific to their needs along with effective marketing strategies to reach and engage them.
A narrow audience allows you to craft targeted marketing messages that will resonate with potential members resulting in successful marketing campaigns.
2. Determine your membership model
Once you identify your audience, you need to decide the content that you plan to offer, how it will be delivered and the sales model. Employing multiple revenue streams will maximise your ability to monetise your content. For example, by providing a visitor, who doesn't intend to sign-up to a membership, the opportunity to purchase a course, digital download or pay-per-view product means you still capture revenue. The SubHub platform gives you the ability to create multiple revenue streams.
Offering membership tiers which unlock more content and perks depending on the level is another upsell option to employ. But remember, too many choices can have a negative impact. According to Hick’s Law, the more choices you present to a user can prolong their decision making process. So limit the membership levels to no more than four.
Membership fees can be set up as a one-time payments or on a recurring basis. Recurring fees have the advantage of providing a steady and reliable income flow. For members that might need a nudge, including free trial days can entice them to sign up.
3. Choosing the best membership platform for your needs
These days there are a wealth of membership models to choose from. They include WordPress, where you can build your site's functionality with plugins, to all-in-one SaaS solutions. Which you select will depend on your budget, tech skills, membership objectives and the content you want to sell.
WordPress offers the most flexibility when it comes to the design and functionality you can achieve with your website. However, those benefits also come with costs and disadvantages. Unless you have technical skills or the budget to hire a developer, a WordPress site can be out of your price range.
The other major downside with WordPress is plug-in maintenance. When you build a website based on the interaction of multiple plugins, you must insure they are all compatible. One incompatible plugin, can break your whole site. This often happens when a plugin needs to be updated. And when it does, you'll need to hire a developer to fix it.
Alternatively, a SaaS solution (Software as a Service) is a complete service that provides you not only with the website but hosting, maintenance and customer support. Popular SaaS examples are Wix, Shopify, Teachable and SubHub. A SaaS solution reduces the stress of running an online knowledge business. If something breaks, you just need to submit a support ticket. And SaaS companies are always working to improve their product offerings.
You'll want to select a platform you can grow with. The design, functionality, and scalability should be flexible enough to modify to meet your target audience’s changing needs.
Many SaaS solutions specialise in the delivery of specific types of content. If you plan to only sell online courses, you might select an eLearning platform like Teachable. If your focus is website membership, but also want the additional revenue stream of selling courses then the SubHub platform is the answer.
Lastly, choose a platform that provides dedicated customer support. When you run a membership website, there will be issues. Read client reviews support by people who really understand both technology and online publishing is vital.
4. Building your website
If you've selected a SaaS solution, you can start right away creating your site with that solution's website builder. Most SaaS solutions are intended to be intuitive enough for a non-techie to easily use.
Your homepage will be the most important page on your site as it will influence whether or not a visitor becomes a member. Be sure to carefully craft the copy of your banner and body text so that it informs and engages with your potential members. Clearly define, the benefits of your membership proposition.
Your homepage must also be SEO optimised with keywords so that your site is found in search results.
Include a testimonial section as client reviews can have a persuasive impact by showing visitors that others value your product, it’s a vote of confidence in your product.
Pay attention to page speed as a slow loading page will cause visitors to bounce.
These are just a few tips to create a converting homepage.
5. Upload initial content
Before launching, you'll need to have uploaded enough content to satisfy your first members. This could be in the form of blog posts, courses, downloads, videos etc. Then you'll need to stay committed to a regular schedule of adding new content.
Make sure your content is meaningful and is of value to your audience.
6. Follow SEO best practices
Just launching a website isn't enough to get found. From the start, be sure to follow SEO best practices when creating your site and adding content. This will improve your chance of getting found in search results. Using keywords, the proper heading format, internal links and requesting backlinks are all necessary to insure that when Google and other search engines index your site that they understand what your site is about, how content relates to each other.
The same focus keyword needs to be present in your meta title, article headline, first sentence and a few times in the article body.
Once you create an article, submit it to Google search so that it is indexed within 24 hours.
Use the proper heading (H1, H2, H3...) format on your pages. H1 must only be used ONCE on any page. Proper headings inform search engines about the structure of your site and the hierarchy of your content.
Internal links are created when you include links of similarly-themed content to each other. Again, this help search engines understand the content on your site and how it relates to each other.
When a site links to your site, this is a backlink. It proves to search engines that your content is relevant and trustworthy.
7. Grow a community on social media
Drive traffic to your website using your social media channels. It's best to select a single social media platform and then dedicate all your efforts to building an audience. Choose the platform where your prospective members will be hanging out.
Conclusion
Membership is one of the most exciting business opportunities on the internet today. It is established enough that you will not have to reinvent the wheel. Everything you need to be successful is available and accessible to novices and experts alike.
Having a well-designed church website is essential for keeping your congregation connected, attracting new visitors, and sharing your ministry’s mission. A great website serves as a hub for online sermons, event updates, and community engagement.
Making the leap from a structured 9-to-5 job to starting your own business can feel both thrilling and overwhelming. You’re stepping into the unknown—but also into unlimited possibility. If you’re a new entrepreneur just leaving corporate life, here are some key tips to help you hit the ground running with clarity and confidence.
Bekah's vision led her to become an online fitness coach over eight years ago. She recognised that, for many of her in-person gym clients, finding the time to workout was a balancing act between their job and family responsibilities.