red barn consulting

Copy-Competition

Why you should STOP copying your competition

The old saying goes “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery”, but when it comes to your marketing, it’s just NOT a good idea. For centuries, we’ve been using other’s ideas, creative, and art as inspiration for our own work – and that’s fine if it’s used to spark ideas of your own. BUT if you are just copying every move your competitors are making, you are just setting yourself up for failure.

At Red Barn, we love a good life hack or a process or software that helps us save time and energy, but when it comes to copying competitor’s content – we draw the line. Copying other’s content is a big no-no because it can actually hurt your marketing strategy and your business. Let’s go back to why you started your business, because you wanted it to be uniquely yours including your content. Here’s several reasons why copying your competition is just a recipe for disaster.

  1. They don’t know what they are doing either. Just because your competitor has interesting and flashy creative it doesn’t mean that it’s actually working. Unless you have access to their analytics to confirm, you could be making the same bad mistakes as your competition. Also, your competition could be just as clueless as you AND they also could be copying another competitor – and now it’s an endless cycle! No matter how good the creative seems, there is simply no guarantee it will work for you.
  2. You might have a different target audience. Every business has their own Target Client Profile – or target audiences. Your competition may actually be targeting a difference audience than you, and an audience that you have no intention of targeting. You and your competitors each have your own unique strategy in regard to targeting your audience, without knowing the thought and reasoning behind the marketing, you simply won’t know if that creative is appropriate for your audience.
  3. It doesn’t set you apart. Customers aren’t dumb, they will recognize if you are doing copycat marketing. Not only are you showing them that your business lacks creativity and is unable to promote your business in your own unique way, but by copying others you’re also not getting valuable data. You need to see what works and what doesn’t for your business and use your own data to adjust your marketing accordingly. Your marketing should be authentic and original to you and your business – that’s why your customers want to work with you – because of who you are.
  4. You’re limiting yourself and your marketing. Not only are you limiting your creative ability to target your prospective clients, but your creative won’t be nearly as effective as your competition because you won’t know exactly how to execute it like they do. If you have someone who does your marketing, you’ll also be limiting them and their creative ideas and expertise and producing great creative in the future.
  5. You are confusing your customers. You are not giving your business its own unique brand and identity. You’ll also confuse potential customers, as they will see the same style and messaging of creative from both you and your competitor.
  6. You don’t have the same budget or resources. Even though you have an idea of what your competition is doing, there may be a lot of software, staff, budget, or even a marketing company behind the scenes that are all working together.

Your competition’s content and marketing strategy may seem easy and obvious to you from the outside, but it could be very complex with a lot of systems running on the inside. The best content is fresh and new and also is optimized. You can’t emulate and replicate a company that has a full-time in-house content marketing team, in addition to external agencies or consultants, who also help with their content marketing when you are a small business on limited resources. It’s just not feasible.

What you should do instead of copying your competitors

  1. Determine your goals – create your own marketing strategy that will outline your own content creation, paid search, email, social media, SEO, social media, and design (digital and print). You should have a focus and target client for each of these channels. Some of your goals for social media may include increasing engagement on Facebook, driving more repeat traffic to your website, etc. Having your own goals and strategy will allow you to stick to your own plan and not follow your competition – which could conflict with your goals.
  2. Start using the right tools and people. To be efficient and productive you need to use the right tools. If you need to segment your email lists, then use an email marketing software that makes it easy. If you want to schedule social media out in advance, use a tool that lets you do that. And make sure you have the right people doing the right things. Don’t use staff who hate writing and have poor grammar to write your blogs. Use the best people for the job to create and execute your content marketing strategy – this could be an outside firm too if it’s something that can’t be managed in house. Learn to delegate when needed or when it makes sense.
  3. Do your research and don’t stop reviewing metrics. If you do your research right, you should be able understand some of the reasons why and how your competitors are doing what they are doing. You’ll also want to track your own metrics and adjust your marketing accordingly. Less traffic on LinkedIn and more on Facebook – boost your Facebook posts to capitalize. More email opens with specific topics or subject lines – adjust and implement more like those. You can also subscribe to email newsletters of your competitors so you can see what they are doing, how they onboard new subscribers, what their subject lines are, etc. You shouldn’t copy, but it’s a good idea to know what they are up to.

Don’t underestimate the damage that copying your competitor’s creative can cause when it comes to your marketing efforts. If you have questions or need some advice, give us call or send us an email. We love talking about this stuff!

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jacque Williams

Jacque Williams – Founder and Owner of Jacque Williams Entertainment

\"jacqueLet\’s welcome Jacque Williams  – entrepreneur, musician, activist, community builder and economic development driver – to the podcast!

He\’s deep, philosophical and yes, has a blog called Music & Politics – gotta love it!

 

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The power of your LIST

It’s no secret that Team Red Barn is Pro Email Marketing.  The bang for your ROI buck is huge compared to other advertising and customer engagement methods.  It is all about the POWER of your LIST.  The more targeted, the more engaged, the higher that ROI will be.

The biggest question I often get is “But Cindy, how do I get a list to email to?”

You build it – over time.

First let’s talk guidelines.

Email rules here in the US are not as stringent as they are in the EU – as long as you follow the guidelines of the FTC CAN-SPAM Act: A Compliance Guide for Business and ONLY email to people in the US you will be fine.  Note – GDPR rules and regulations are insanely stringent and carry large fines. So if you work globally – make sure you are GDPR Compliant.

In the US, you CAN add people to your email list without having them OPT IN as long as you give them a clear OPT OUT option and comply with that request within the CAN SPAM guidelines.  There are also rules around advertisements, etc.

Note if you add people without them opting in you WILL by default have lower engagement rates, higher spam rates, and higher opt-out rates.  We only suggest this if it is a very targeted audience such as an association you belong to or are associated with and you are offering some type of educational content to them.  If you get high spam rates your email provider WILL turn you off and even black list you.  So beware.

The best way to build your list is organically. Here’s how we do it:

  1. Make is CRAZY EASY – is the rule and have opportunities everywhere for them to subscribe.
  2. ASK.  Every time I do a speaking engagement, training, etc – I ask people to sign up for my weekly email – I tell them the value they will get and of course they can opt out if they don’t like it.  I entice them as well – by giving them something OR making a donation to a local charity for each sign up. Works every time.
  3. LEAD MAGNETS on your Website – valuable educational and/or entertaining intel that they need to give you their name and email address in order to get your content.
  4. In your EMAIL SIGNATURE – have a hyperlink to your sign up form.
  5. ON YOUR WEBSITE – have sign up forms in a variety of places.
  6. Share lead magnets on SOCIAL MEDIA – capture email addresses that way.

It doesn’t end there – you need to actually use the emails you’ve collected to bring in the ROI.  Weekly nurturing emails and email automation based on segmented lists is what we do here at Red Barn and it’s how we help other companies tell their story in a low cost conversational and converting way!

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Doreen Dilger – Certified Manifest Method Coach

\"\"Meet Doreen Dilger who in her own words is a Certified Manifest Method Coach * Author * Speaker * Connector * Networker * Time Management and Productivity Expert * Master Motivator * Excuse Eliminator * Organizing Queen * Planner * Goal-getter * Animal Lover * Artist * Wife * Mom * Grandmother

Doreen helps small business owners stay on task AND create the life they want. She is AMAZING.

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Deene Morris of Inspire Leadership

\"DeeneDeene Morris talks with Cindy about being an Interpersonal Adventure Guide, how she ALMOST sold organic food to the Judds, her transition from being an advocate for migrant workers, to owning Heat ‘em and Eat ‘em, then off to corporate and landing where she is now at Inspire Leadership. It’s been a wild and thrilling ride – oh and she uncovers Cindy’s TRUE Myers-Briggs type – tune in!

 

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Deene Morris of Inspire Leadership

\"DeeneDeene Morris talks with Cindy about being an Interpersonal Adventure Guide, how she ALMOST sold organic food to the Judds, her transition from being an advocate for migrant workers, to owning Heat ‘em and Eat ‘em, then off to corporate and landing where she is now at Inspire Leadership. It’s been a wild and thrilling ride – oh and she uncovers Cindy’s TRUE Myers-Briggs type – tune in!

 

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Dean Davison of Davison Strategic Communication

\"\"Dean Davison of Davison Strategic Communication joins us today to talk about the transition from the world of Corporate to owning his own firm – and how he is loving life as an entrepreneur. We also dive into brand, company culture, crisis communications and our common ground: The world of insurance.

 

 

 

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Stephainie LaBonte – Empowered Girls Rise

\"\"Stephanie LaBonte,  is a wife, mother, author, and speaker. With over a decade of experience teaching in an inner city school, she found her passion in helping young girls find purpose in their lives. She believes in bringing the community in to inspire and to be a support system for these girls. She has seen great success with her girls empowerment rallies because of the relationships that are formed with other peers and the community. She hopes that bringing these movement packages to schools will nurture the potential and instill a sense of belonging to girls all over. Stephanie enjoys reading, writing, and spending time with her family, especially her two little girls, Hailee and Aubrey. She is a co-author of #GirlConfident: Discover Your Most Confident Self workbook for girls. Take a listen to Stephanie’s amazing story! Full time mom, full time business owner and full time teacher – she does it all!

 

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Should you use Email Automation?

There is a big difference between having an email marketing program and having an AUTOMATED email marketing program. The word “Automation” tends to send people into the panic zone – conjuring up visions of AI, robots, machines, “Danger Will Robinson” and the like.

Well, indeed it’s a bit computer geeky to set up the email automation, it is in fact far more human than sending one off emails.

First let’s get the lingo down.

Non Automated: If you are sending out an email and you have nothing set to “Trigger an Action” when someone clicks on something, opens something, or doesn’t do either of those – then you are not using email automation.

Automated: If you are setting up an architecture behind the scenes with Boolean cues i.e. “if this…than that” then you are automating. We marketers create workflows that automatically send emails to subscribers based on what they do or do not do.

Pros of Email Automation

First off, at Red Barn we do both. My weekly Thursday and Monday emails (SIGN UP HERE) are not automated. They are called just broadcast emails. If you don’t open them or don’t read them we aren’t prompting you to do something else.

Back to the pros…

Using Email Automation allows you to personalize and deliver customer-centric content that is specific and relative to your clients. In other words – you are speaking to them on a more personal level.

For both prospects and clients.

We use email automation to nurture prospects through the customer journey – bringing them along the Know, Like, Trust trifecta. We pepper them with content that will help nudge them to the trust and ergo buy phase. Perhaps they downloaded a quiz or an article, liked us on Facebook, went to a certain page on our website – all might trigger a unique email experience to them. Speaking to them on a personal level. “Hey Jenn, thanks for downloading that paper on Email Marketing – here’s something else you might like XXXXX”

We use automation to nurture clients in our Business Success Framework program – helping Corporate Executives launch Coaching and Consulting Careers. Everything from – \”Hey, you’ve got this\”, to \”Hey, I see you haven’t completed Module 2 and you are probably missing something AMAZING.\”

In the end – almost any action a person takes when engaging with your brand can be tracked and incorporated into an email marketing automation.

Found this handy stat on CampaignMonitor.com – “email marketing is the king of the marketing kingdom with a 4400% ROI and $44 for every $1 spent.”

When you are ready to dip your toes – call us. WE LOVE EMAIL MARKETING AUTOMATION.

Should you use Email Automation? Read More »