For some insurance agents, online marketing is a mythical concept. It's
hard to understand and some see it as a waste of time. However, it is
not just a passing fad. The Internet has changed not only how consumers
purchase goods and services, it has changed how businesses reach those
consumers.
Here are five of the biggest online marketing myths we hear from time to time.
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The IWB SEO Tips Blog - Essential SEO tips and tricks designed specifically for Insurance Website Builder customers.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Monday, March 11, 2013
How Your Insurance Website is Losing Money on Google
Or more accurately, how to lose money by not being on Google. It's
simple to lose money by not ranking in Google's search results... don't
invest in SEO.
When you have a few minutes, conduct an experiment. Go to Google (make sure you're not logged in if you have a Google account), and search for one of your top keywords. If you don't have a keyword, use the line of business you are promoting right now with your city or geographic region if your agency is in a small town. Some examples: "Carrollton home insurance" or "Fort Worth auto insurance." Is your agency on the first page of results? If it's not, you could be losing money.
SEO services can take up a lot of your marketing budget. To determine if investing in SEO makes sense for your agency, you first need to calculate your potential return on investment.
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When you have a few minutes, conduct an experiment. Go to Google (make sure you're not logged in if you have a Google account), and search for one of your top keywords. If you don't have a keyword, use the line of business you are promoting right now with your city or geographic region if your agency is in a small town. Some examples: "Carrollton home insurance" or "Fort Worth auto insurance." Is your agency on the first page of results? If it's not, you could be losing money.
SEO services can take up a lot of your marketing budget. To determine if investing in SEO makes sense for your agency, you first need to calculate your potential return on investment.
Read More
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
5 More Annoying Social Media Behaviors
In posts earlier this year, I talked about mistakes you can make on social media that were specific to Facebook and Twitter.
Here are five more annoying behaviors that would be a mistake to make when you're trying to develop relationships and build trust on social media. These are not specific to any one social network but can be applied to them all.
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Here are five more annoying behaviors that would be a mistake to make when you're trying to develop relationships and build trust on social media. These are not specific to any one social network but can be applied to them all.
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Monday, March 4, 2013
Microdata, an Important Update to Your Website, That No One Will Ever See
In previous posts
I have mentioned that search engines are becoming smarter. They are no
longer looking for backlinks to determine your website’s content
relevancy. They are looking at the content itself. They are looking for
data.
Your website is littered with data: phone numbers, product offerings, address information, company facts and figures, employee details and much more. More often than not, the data is placed in the web page HTML, formatted to look good for a visitor and forgotten.
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Your website is littered with data: phone numbers, product offerings, address information, company facts and figures, employee details and much more. More often than not, the data is placed in the web page HTML, formatted to look good for a visitor and forgotten.
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Monday, February 25, 2013
Busting 3 Facebook Myths
Social media is surrounded by many myths. Facebook, the largest social
network with more than 1 billion users, is no exception. Here are a few
of the biggest Facebook myths.
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Friday, February 22, 2013
Why Buying Followers is a Waste of Money
When agents begin marketing their agency via social media, they tend to
focus on the quantity of likes and followers as opposed to the quality
of those likes and follows. You’ll see advertisements all over the web
trying to sell you “real” followers and likes for anywhere from $5 to
$200 depending on how many you purchase. But 2,000 spambots and fake
accounts (by the way, they're never real followers) do not make a
successful social media presence. Basically, all buying follows and
likes will do is make your page seem more popular than it is. It’s like
paying to sit at the popular kids’ table at lunch.
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Thursday, February 21, 2013
The Evolution of Marketing
Here at ITC we are constantly researching ways to improve the services
that we offer. In order to market effectively you have to continuously
measure and tweak your plan due to the change in consumer needs and
changing technology. A few weeks ago we went over the difference between
inbound marketing vs outbound marketing. Today we’ll look at how marketing has evolved and how marketing automation is the next big step in the marketing evolution.
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Wednesday, February 20, 2013
How Retention Rate is Misleading Your Agency
One of the things I see all the time when it comes to agency marketing
and agency health is a reliance on the blanket retention rate. A high
retention rate is good, while a low retention rate is bad. Some agencies
understand that they will have a low retention rate due to their
clientele and have modified their business plans and pricing
accordingly. However, the vast majority of agencies will live or die
based on their retention rates.
While speaking to a particular agency, I asked, “What is your retention rate?” They proudly stated, “Roughly 85%.” Never mind that the principal did not know the exact number (a carrier offered his retention of their customers), a retention rate of 85% is a decent number. However, this retention rate is misleading the agent into thinking all is well with his agency. When I asked a few more questions looking at a three-year sample of the agency, the following picture unfolded.
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While speaking to a particular agency, I asked, “What is your retention rate?” They proudly stated, “Roughly 85%.” Never mind that the principal did not know the exact number (a carrier offered his retention of their customers), a retention rate of 85% is a decent number. However, this retention rate is misleading the agent into thinking all is well with his agency. When I asked a few more questions looking at a three-year sample of the agency, the following picture unfolded.
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Monday, February 18, 2013
Marketing Tips for LinkedIn
The third social network of what many consider to be the big three,
LinkedIn may not be as popular as Facebook or Twitter, but it has its
own niche as the social network for business.
Because it is for business, how you use LinkedIn will differ slightly from how you might use Facebook or Twitter. If you're looking for ways to use LinkedIn to market your agency, there are several things you should be doing that will impact your marketing results from LinkedIn.
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Because it is for business, how you use LinkedIn will differ slightly from how you might use Facebook or Twitter. If you're looking for ways to use LinkedIn to market your agency, there are several things you should be doing that will impact your marketing results from LinkedIn.
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Monday, February 11, 2013
4 Areas to Audit on Your Insurance Website
Your website is your agency online. For some visitors it will be their
first impression of your agency. For others it will be their only
impression. If your website doesn't function the way it should, that
first impression could be one you wish you could do over. A regular
audit of your website will help you identify what areas need to be
updated as well as what areas may no longer be functioning the way it
should.
Here are the four areas you should review on an annual (or as often as quarterly if you can) basis to make sure your website is updated and working for you the way it should.
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Here are the four areas you should review on an annual (or as often as quarterly if you can) basis to make sure your website is updated and working for you the way it should.
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