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Best and Worst Inbound Marketing Practices

Best and Worst Inbound Marketing Practices

There’s no shortage of options when it comes to marketing techniques. A typical business might invest in direct mail, trade shows, SEO, affiliate programs, and more recently, blogs and social media. But diverse as it is, marketing has its upsides and downsides like any other industry. Simply put, some approaches work better than others—and some don’t work at all.

The makers of HubSpot, a popular marketing system, have come up with the best and worst Web marketing moves in their recent Inbound Marketing report. By polling a group of online entrepreneurs, they found out which techniques worked for most clients, and which ones flopped.

The best: websites, blogs, and SEO

Websites are pretty much a given: you simply don’t get much business if you’re not on the Web. But the other two are proof that your website isn’t everything. Blogs help you reach out to a bigger audience and generate more organic leads. Done correctly, it also offers a credibility boost and potential for long-term client relationships.

The poll also shows that SEO remains a strong driving force behind web marketing. And since it worked for most companies, it’s also proof that keeping your SEO up to date—for instance, keeping tabs on Google’s SEO checklist—is still worth the effort.

The worst: trade shows, telemarketing, direct mail

We don’t need to get into detail about telemarketing: besides the fact that it annoys half your audience, there’s also the fact that anyone can block you off courtesy of the FTC’s Do Not Call registry.

What ties these three together is high-cost execution. Trade shows have expensive registration fees, booth setups, and marketing media. Telemarketing can run you down in human resources. Direct mail requires high volumes of printed material, postage, copywriting and design. It may have been worth it ten years ago, but when you have the Internet to reach the same number of people, it doesn’t make much financial sense.

7 responses have been posted:

  • John Taylor posted - April 23rd, 2009 at 6:43 pm

    Interesting blog post. What would you say was the most important marketing factor?

  • Benjamin posted - April 28th, 2009 at 4:13 pm

    Hi John,

    In these hard economic times I would invest in both corporate blogging and search engine optimization. SEO particularly because you can closely monitor your investment and the resulting return on investment. Beyond SEO, the most affordable way to improve your audience reach is to create a company blog.

    However, it’s important to note that the blog shouldn’t be too corporate or no one will bother to read it. It should provide readers value and not an endless stream of press releases. I checked out your blog and you seem to be on your way. What do you find working best for your clients?

  • alex farguson posted - May 27th, 2009 at 6:51 pm

    Wow! Thank you! I always wanted to write in my site something like that. Can I take part of your post to my blog?

  • alex farguson posted - May 28th, 2009 at 11:33 pm

    :O So much Info :O

  • Benjamin posted - May 30th, 2009 at 8:53 pm

    Alex,
    Please don’t take our work without citing the source. We don’t mind if you give credit back to the original authors, which would be us.
    Thanks

  • John S. posted - June 4th, 2009 at 7:20 pm

    I was wondering if you allow advertising on this site – because I’d be interested in talking to you!

  • Benjamin posted - June 8th, 2009 at 5:51 pm

    John S.

    Hit us up on our contact form and we’ll get in touch.

    Thanks
    Ben