March 2009
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Websites That Get Clients – the basics

March 13th, 2009

Despite what many website designers would have us believe, the websites that actually get clients aren’t necessarily the ones that look like glossy brochures. Sure, it’s important to have a good-looking website to engage the initial interest of your visitors. But ultimately, they’re not going to roll over, panting at the gorgeousness of your website imagery, and gasp ‘Coach me, coach me!’ are they? Let’s face it.

It is, in fact, incredibly rare for website visitors to convert into coaching clients right there on the virtual spot. Actually… what potential new clients who visit your website want is to get a feel for whether you and your services are a fit with what they’re looking for. If they’re interested enough, the next thing they want to do is to enter into a relatively anonymous relationship with you. They want to find out more without having to pick up the phone and talk.

It’s all about information capture

This is why you MUST ask visitors to your website for their name and email contact details. Because once you start to collect contact details, you have a chance to be in touch with your potential new clients – people who have expressed an interest in what you have to offer – and you can start building that relationship with them.

If you don’t offer them a way to be in contact with you without having to sign up for coaching with you there and then, they will most probably surf on by and you’ll never even know they were there, let alone that they were interested. Now that’s the kind of opportunity it would be foolish to pass up on, don’t you think?

The value of a mailing list

By collecting contact details, you’re in the process of building your mailing list. And a mailing list is the best way to cultivate new clients online. Of course, you do have to mail out to your mailing list to build and maintain that relationship with them. And some will take longer to convert into clients than others. Some never will. But it’s easily the most effective way to get clients from your website.

As your mailing list grows, so does its worth. I’ve heard various estimates put on the value of each email address on your list, but the most frequently quoted is £1 per contact. Not that I’d advise you ever to put your mailing list up for sale… if you don’t have a decent privacy statement next to the sign-up box on your website (a ‘we will never pass your details to third parties’ message), your sign-up numbers will drop anyway.

The true financial value of your list, though, is in potential it contains to convert interested enquirers into real-life, fee-paying clients. As your list grows, so does the number of future new clients it holds. It’s a numbers game. The more names you have on your list, the more clients they will convert into. Although don’t forget that to be valuable your list must contain the contact details of genuinely interested parties.

No more hit and miss

What makes a website effective (or not) can so often seem a mystery. Use your website to capture visitor information and build a mailing list, though, and you have something considerably less mysterious on your hands. In fact you have a financially valuable asset that will carry your business success into the future.


“How to Set Up Your Coaching Website AND Get Clients From It” is a FREE 20-page bulletin by Mary McNeil. Click here to grab your copy now!

Must-See Online TV: Kutiman’s Mother of All Mashups

March 13th, 2009

After seeing mention of it on TechCrunch and Mashable, thought I’d check out this Kutiman guy’s new album/video: the one in which every clip and every sample came off of YouTube. It’s aptly called “ThruYou” and the Web site on which the seven-track production can be found sports an interface that looks like the YouTube home page — if it had been left under a bus and run over a few times. Recognizable, but a faded version of the actual product.

But this whatever-it-is is anything but. The world music/funk “ThruYou” is a ton of fun, and sometimes, even, haunting (there’s a word that’s never been used in a Social Media Insider column before). But it’s also mind-blowing just because it exists; it would have been unimaginable a few years back that so many people would share little audio and video bits of themselves with the rest of the world. The clips that appear in the videos — and off of which the audio is based — range from an elderly woman playing a church organ to a young French guy smoking a joint.

A few years back, it also would have been unimaginable that someone could make art out of all these audio and video bits, working at home, as Kutiman apparently did.

A project like “ThruYou” should make us crucially aware of one fact: the line between professional and amateur content is getting more and more squiggly. What do you call an album created by a professional musician out of amateur content? The first song is called “The Mother of All Funk Chords” (quoting someone who appears on what looks like an instructional video for guitar) — but the project is certainly the Mother of All Mashups.

Now, because I always wonder about these things, I wonder how Kutiman will make money out of this. Unlike one of his albums, it’s not on Amazon or iTunes… yet. And maybe, due to intellectual property concerns, it can’t be, unless all of the YouTube “stars” his project uncovered sign off on it, and, probably, if they’re smart, ask for some revenue. That would be a logistical nightmare. By my count, ThruYou uses upwards of 150 YouTube clips. However, with all the buzz this project seems to be getting, it’s quite possible the music will become popular on a broader scale. I hope Kutiman is ready to go wherever this takes him.

But enough of my lame attempt at a business angle. I suppose I focused on this because, despite our little community’s obsession with iPhone apps and social media ad models, sometimes it’s worth pointing to one of those things that sums up how social media is creating the zeitgeist. This is one of those things.

Catharine P. Taylor has been covering digital media and advertising for almost 15 years. She currently writes daily about advertising on her blog, Adverganza.com. You can reach her via email at cathyptaylor@gmail.com, follow her on Twitter at cpealet, or friend her on Facebook at Catharine P. Taylor.

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