Print Marketing Tip for B&B Inns & Restaurants: Recipe Postcards

March 23rd, 2012 by

Wakefield Inn Recipe Postcard

A recipe postcard design is now an effective part of the print marketing for The Wakefield Inn.

Finding new and effective ways to engage your print marketing audience presents a challenge. Sending guests or clients a postcard featuring a recipe is a great way to follow up or touch base with them. This works especially well for B&B inns, cafés and restaurants, since they can feature a favorite dish that guests have enjoyed.

InsideOut Solutions recently worked with The Wakefield Inn, a bed and breakfast in New Hampshire, to design a postcard with Chef/Owner Janel Martin’s pear scone recipe. They chose a 4.25″ x 6″ card,

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Your Website Branding Should Be Your Own Brand, Not Anyone Else’s

February 5th, 2012 by

Internet Marketing Weekly: Don’t Cede Your Website’s Branding to Promote the Brand of a Paid Membership

Post No Bills: Don't allow other brands to dominate your website.

Don't allow other brands to dominate your website content or important code.

Your website is your property (heck, even the place it is kept is called your domain). As a business, your website is the primary place to market your business online. Anyone who reaches it, whether by search engine or referring site, should be enticed to stay there and learn more about your company, not given every opportunity to be sent off to another website before they can get to know more about your services or products.

If a paid membership website asks you for advertising space on your website, which many do, be careful about how far you go in promoting your membership in, and association with, that organization.

We received word recently of a paid membership organization - which we’ll call “X Directory” – offering a “marketing tip” it ostensibly received from one of its members advising each member to add the X Directory name to the “Title line” of their website home page.

This “tip” is recommending that you promote your membership in X Directory on the Title tag of home page: the most important page of your website. The Title tag of a website is the primary tag search engines use to determine validity of your website for keyword placement. The first 65 characters of the Title tag are all that you have to promote whatever keywords you want to be most competitive for on that page.

Also important to note is that the title is also what shows up as the link in search engine query results.

Yahoo Internet Search

Would Yahoo's search query results for "internet search" be improved with "Powered by Bing" in the linked title? It may be factually true, but it isn't helpful for building Yahoo's brand.

By giving prominent title positioning for the name of X Directory on your home page, you are telling the search engines that this name is important to this website. Yet, it’s not your business name, nor is it related to you in any way accept that you pay X Directory for membership; membership that’s supposed to promote your business. If X Directory is advising you to promote theirs in such an invasive and aggressive way, you have to ask yourself if X Directory has your marketing interests in mind.

Whose Brand Are You Promoting?

Brand confusion

Who's in charge here - Sample Inn or X Directory?

We’ve also heard requests from paid membership directories advising members to add their directory’s logo and link placement “above the fold” in the header section of the layout on a member website’s home page (or, in some cases, all pages). As with ceding space on your title tag, giving prime page layout “real estate” to an external link is not recommended from an website marketing point of view. This is especially true now that a Google Page Layout Algorithm Improvement is, as of January 19, penalizing websites that have too much advertising or other “non-content” located “above the fold” of a web page.

The first thing we recommend you do when you see advice like this is check the value of the source. When it comes to a paid listing on an online directory this is easy to do in Google Analytics.

If you have Ecommerce tracking set up, it’s a matter of tracking the that referring site (and any affiliated sites) as sources of transactions. If you pay X Directory $1,200 per year to be listed on the X Directory website and affiliates Y Directory and Z Directory, you would look at those Ecommerce transaction sources to see what your $1,200 bought you in terms of online revenue and take that into account as as a major part of evaluating your membership with X Directory.

Evaluate the Ecommerce revenue of paid directory listings.

Ecommerce revenue should be a primary consideration when evaluating paid directory listings. Looking at X Directory's revenue for the last 12 months, is $1,200 per year worth it?

If you don’t have Ecommerce tracking in place, you can still evaluate your paid online directories with Google Analytics by looking at visit quantity and, most especially, quality from those sources of website traffic.

Bottom Line: “Membership Has Its Privileges” is the slogan of American Express. Of course, membership also has its price. When it comes to paid directory listings, a reasonable price might include a reciprocal logo link with the logo given correct alternate text and placed “below the fold”. It may even require home page placement of that link. From a website and search marketing perspective, it should never include the requirement or even suggestion to surrender valuable space in your home page title tag or the “above the fold” content of your website pages.

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Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce Launches New Site Design!

August 18th, 2011 by

Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce

The Sequim Chamber of Commerce came to InsideOut for a site re-design after recently updating all of their branding. We were more than happy to put together a custom design utilizing WordPress as the CMS. This new site puts a variety of editing capabilities into the hands of the Chamber of Commerce.

The largest benefit of the new Sequim Chamber site is having ease of access to updated information about Sequim events, latest news and more, just visit their new blog, which is seamlessly connected to the rest of the site, and with any WordPress based site.

Another great advantage with the new Sequim Chamber website are the new features offered to the Chamber Members. Member listings can be found by category, or more specific terms by using the search fields at the top of the website. In addition, members now have a ton of real-estate for showcasing an image on their listing, this has always been an extra feature with an additional fee to the Chamber of Commerce, yet now you have the opportunity to view your business image at a maximum of 400px! It is a great feature, we can’t wait to see more businesses take advantage of it.

Interested in learning more about custom sites built around WordPress? Contact Us.

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Steps to Building Your Online Brand Awareness

June 27th, 2011 by

Brand awareness is no longer a one lane road. It’s more like a major interstate with lanes and exits in every direction. You can no longer rely on just buying advertising and sending customers marketing pieces in the mail. You have to interact and engage your potential customers.

Consumers have always relied on word of mouth, friends and family to help them make purchasing decisions. Facebook has really taken that method world wide. It has expanded the communications and speed at which people share opinions and advice. Don’t be shy, you have the ability to join in on the conversation. You no longer have to buy the radio spot or the mail coupon and sit by the front door, peering through the blinds hoping someone will stop in. Be proactive, engage and connect with potential clients in ways you were never able to before.

New Marketing

Become an expert about your area

Often times being a local means you have experienced all the local restaurants, hiking trails and parks in your area. Those experiences are priceless and become great content for a blog post. I often look at blogs before I travel just to get feel for some activities and events that may be happening while I’m in town. I always find the greatest adventures from locals and not generic activity websites. This is a great way to create an ongoing conversation with both new and returning customers. Being an expert and providing relevant information goes along way in helping your brand to succeed.

People love to give their opinion

The easiest way to engage your website or Facebook visitors is through polls, surveys, and quizzes. This a great way to get people to come back again and again to participate in what your doing. Remember your brand is an experience and this is cheap and clever way to provide that to your visitors.

Promotions, the next generation

Promotions and giveaways have been at the heart of brand awareness and brand building for many years. Look around your house,you will find that great pen from your dentist or that magnet on the fridge from the dry cleaners down the street. This is not going away but it has changed. You will find that many people are using Facebook to run picture contests, naming contests and other creative promotions. Most of these contests offer a grand prize and not simple trinkets. The nice part to promoting online is that branding occurs during the visit and not two months down the road when you stumble upon a pen in drawer. You can run these promotions “24/7/365″ days a year. You don’t have to wait and rely on your local trade shows or fair booths anymore. The days of buying 10,000 promotional rulers are over, give your customers a chance to win a great prize and brand along the way.

If you would like to read more about the statistics and research that contributed to this article, you can click here to visit Hubspot Marketing Data Box.

In conclusion, remember to get creative, engage, and don’t be shy. Consumers love to be informed, give their opinions and of course win prizes. Get blogging and continue to grow that social network.

 

 

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7 Seas Wine Label Design

April 19th, 2010 by

The finished packaging with dark maroon capsule.

Captain’s Walk Winery in Green Bay, Wisconsin wanted a wine label for a rosé to be heavily promoted during the annual Tall Ships Festival. The wine, called ’7 Seas’, needed a look that was eye-catching but in a muted palette that would work with established branding and the wine’s color. The final design is the result of a fruitful collaboration with the InsideOut design staff, the winery’s team and the printer, WS Packaging.

Click here to see a closeup of the finished front and back label.

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Hudson, New York inn's new rack card

September 25th, 2009 by

New rack card design for The Croff House in Hudson, NY.

New rack card design for The Croff House in Hudson, NY.

The Croff House is a Victorian home with a beautiful and comfortable updated decor. Owners Duncan Calhoun and Russell Gibson worked with InsideOut to create a great web site that captures the contemporary feel of the inn and showcases its luxurious amenities. With the web site completed, it was time to create a print piece that could do the same job in a much smaller space. Again, they turned to InsideOut — this time, for the design of their 4″ x 9″ rack card.

Strong branding with matching marketing pieces:
Print designer Jennifer Lozada transferred the logo, colors, fonts and layout of the web site to the much smaller 4″ x 9″ print format. Rather than cramming the space with text, she let the photos do most of the talking. Open spaces (“white space”) in the layout draw the eye to the most important information. White space is key if you want to convey elegance and sophistication. Even with the “blank” space, text and photos, there was still room for a helpful locator map. Good feedback from the owners helped refine the map, text and photo selections.

The result: The web site and rack card are a match, conveying a consistent message. The owners decided on a quantity of 5,000 cards. InsideOut managed the printing to ensure quality, affordable cost and speed of delivery.

“It’s perfect!!!!” – Duncan

“The rack card looks great.” – Russ

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Key West Florida inn's new print designs match website

June 16th, 2009 by

Rack card and business card designs for Garden House, Key West, FL

Rack card and business card designs for Garden House, Key West, FL

Catering to the Key West crowd
Key West is a favorite spring break destination and Garden House has just the right vibe for this fun-loving crowd. Garden House owners John and Connie Manasco worked with InsideOut to create a great website that’s fun and easy-to-use. Next, they needed print pieces for visitors to pick up and keep. They turned to InsideOut to design a rack card and business card that matched their site.

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