Showing posts with label Better. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Better. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 April 2013

MySpring It - Spring Facial Hair Removal Tool (Better than R.E.M. for less money)

MySpring It - Spring Facial Hair Removal Tool (Better than R.E.M. for less money)The New "must have" facial hair remover for every woman. In just 2 minutes your unwanted facial hair will be gone!! With "My Spring It" you can remove facial hair by yourself, without damaging your skin.
1. The hair is being pulled from the root, it won't grow any darker or thicker like when you shave.

2. When using "My Spring It", your skin is not subjected to chemicals or burns like when you wax.

3. "My Spring It "catches several strands of hair and not one by one like when you pluck.

4. With "My Spring It" you get to save your money (unlike going to the facials). "My Spring It" can be used up to one year before replacement and is affordable for every woman (unlike laser hair removal)

5. "My Spring It" is very small and doesn't need any battery or electricity, so you can add it to your make up bag and take it with you everywhere!

6. You can use "My Spring It" on cheeks, chin and upper lip hair, also great for fine hair
and peach fuzz! (like facial hair threading or threading hair removal). Product demonstration videos are available at myspringit.com

Price: $12.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

The New Facebook News Feed: Bigger and Better

Facebook is about to throw you for a loop, again.

Yesterday, the social network announced another new update to the news feed – your home page when logged into Facebook. This is the first big update Facebook has rolled out since Facebook Timeline launched in 2011. Facebook’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, sees the news feed as “the most personalized newspaper,” evolving with users and the way we are sharing content. The more relevant news feed gives us more information and more to do within the Facebook walls. If you are anything like me, you check Facebook a few (ok, multiple) times a day and scroll through your feed until you hit a post or two that you have already seen; then you move on to the next web page or activity in your day. Now, when you hit the end of interesting posts in one feed, you will have another feed to explore. Facebook is going to keep us engaging on the site longer.

So, what’s new?

Bigger Images
Everything is bigger, but a main focus of the new redesign will be on images, link posts, and videos – both from users and brand pages. Facebook and Instagram images, which consist of 50% of shared news feed content, will now be larger and more appealing. There will also be a separate feed showcasing only the posts that have photos.

Multiple Feeds
Speaking of separate feeds, there will now be multiple feeds available for users to toggle. Facebook users will now be able to subscribe to specific feeds: all friends, close friends, music, photos, news, games, and brand pages. For example, the music feed will show what music friends are listening to on apps like Spotify and Rdio, concert updates, news from artist pages, and album releases. There will still be a chronological main news feed – where brand page posts will still remain.

Mobile Consistency
One important aspect of this new Facebook look will be that it is even more mobile friendly. The new look was largely inspired by our increased use of different mobile devices. According to Facebook, the site has seen a large spike in mobile engagement recently with more than 680 million monthly active mobile users. This means that no matter what device you are using to pull up Facebook in a browser, the look will be consistent – similar to what we currently see when we use Facebook from a smartphone or tablet application.

Bigger, More Prominent Ads
The new redesign should open an opportunity for advertisers to serve ads similar to the rich media units they are used to on other websites. We will most likely see brands take advantage of offering big pictures and videos, a feature that hasn’t been provided to brands yet. Ads will blend in more with the content our friends are sharing, making them less annoying and more likely to encourage engagement. They will also likely cost a lot more. Everybody wins.

Want the new look? Get in line. Check out the information Facebook has shared on the new feature, and join the waiting list.

Are you going to embrace the new look? Let us know your thoughts.

Carly is an Account Manager at 435 Digital and manages the day-to-day responsibilities associated with running successful SEO and social media campaigns.Previously, Carly managed media campaigns for Tribune Media Group’s New Business Development & Cross Platform Team. Those campaigns incorporated a combination of newspapers, magazines, TV, radio and online advertisements.

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435 Digital helps businesses build brands on the web. Visit here for inspiration on how to stand out and grow your business.


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Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Better Buttons Part 1: Set the Right Expectations

This guest post is by the Web Marketing Ninja.

Almost everything I read, see, or hear about buttons (the web version) is all about color, size, location, and contrast. Do any research on this topic, and you’ll come across statements like these:

“Just make the button bigger.”“Orange buttons always convert better.”“Get your buttons above the fold.”“You need to use contrast and responsive design with you buttons.”“Make sure your button’s at the bottom of the page, too.”

To a degree, that’s all relevant (although I still can’t explain the orange button mystery!). But there’s one aspect of buttons that I never read about, and it’s something I think is just as important—maybe more important.

And that’s the text you use on your buttons.

Sure, design and location will get your button noticed, but it’s the text that drives that all-important user action.

Let’s first fly a little left of center a look at what a button is … in the real world.

Excluding the really real button—the fashion button—a button is something you interact with (that is, press) in order to make something happen. And we usually have an expectation about what that “something” will be.

There are three key points here: interaction, expectation, and response.

A button’s color, size, and location might suggest to a users what’s going to happen (“Don’t press the red button!”) but it’s either a symbol or words that give users the greatest indication of what will happen when they press a button. And the same goes for buttons on the web.

So let’s look at each of these stages in a button-press.

Interaction: In the web world, interaction involves a mouse click, a tap (on a tablet or phone), or a key stroke. The interaction is the easiest part of the process to wrap your head around.Expectation: You’ve asked your user to do something and yay they have…  but what have you set in the way of expectations?Response: The interaction initiates a response. That response might be to show a page, enlarge an image, or something else.

Now, let’s look at a good web example. On your sales page, you have a nice, clear, above-the-fold, and—for the sake of it—orange button. The text on the button clearly reads Buy now.  A user clicks on the button, and the next page they see is the Checkout page.

Interaction = clickExpectation = to orderResponse = checkout

Tick, tick, and tick! We have a happy customer, and a happy blogger.

Now, let’s look at a not-so-good example. On your sales page, you have a nice, clear, above-the-fold, and—for the sake of it—orange button. The text on the button clearly reads Download now. A user clicks on the button, and the next page they see is the Checkout page.

Interaction: clickExpectation: to downloadResponse: checkout

Here, the user is clicking a Download button and getting a “pay me” response. That’s bad.

What’s that? More people will click on a Download button? That’s true. I guarantee that if you put a Download button on your page, rather than an Order Now button, you’re going to get more clicks. But why stop there? Make it a Free Download button, and watch your clicks go through the roof!

But what happens next?  When the user’s expectation about their interaction with a button isn’t met by an appropriate response, fear will strike and they’ll bail.  After all, a lot of users are just looking for an excuse to leave.

But that’s not all. There’s a name for this kind of tactic: it’s called “bait and switch.” In many countries it’s actually illegal, but regardless of where you’re located, it undermines your sales process. You shouldn’t do it. But if you do do it, and you do it before you’ve got the cash from your customer, you’re only robbing yourself.

Let’s look at a real-world example: let’s see what Darren does.

Darren opts to include a double meaning in his sales page buttons. Because he’s selling ebooks, he wants to set the clear expectation that customers are going to need to download something (that is, they’re not buying a printed book), and that they’ll need to pay something to get the download.

Given the larger font used for the Download text on this button, I do wonder if he’s trying to toe the line between getting as many clicks as possible without misleading his customers—this is something I’d love to test on the site.

When I talk to people about buttons, in 99% of cases, they’re not trying to bait and switch customers—it’s just that many online marketers chase the click first, and worry about checkout abandonments later. Most of the time, they haven’t really through about the expectations that button text can drive, either.

I’ve focused here on just one type of button, but let’s look more subtle example.

When you click a button that says Join, you expect to be joined with the site’s community. On the other hand, button text that reads Sign Up suggests that something still needs to happen before I join—I need to sign something.

So Join is best used when it’s complimented by an input box that accepts the user’s email address—you have all the information you need by the time the user clicks on the button, and you can respond with a message that tells them they’ve joined your site. However, if it’s a standalone button, you might want to use text like “Sign-up to our newsletter” before taking users to you form.

These subtleties can make a significant difference.

I’ve spoken about sales funnels before, and when you’re thinking about button text, there’s timing to be considered as well.

If you take on board the advice we’ve already discussed, you’ll meet users’ expectations of your buttons with an appropriate response, but now you’ve got to ask yourself, “Am I asking for the interaction at the right time?”

Continuing with our transactional (Buy Now) button text example, your sales funnel might move people through these stages:

Google AdWords adto a sales pageto a checkout processto a sale.

This is pretty basic—you might include a free sample or email auto-responders as part of it—but for now, let’s keep it simple.

Now let’s think about what button text we’ll use, and where. On your AdWords ad, you could use button text like More information, Order now, Free download, or Free sample—to name a few options.

You might find Free download is your best-converting button text for clicks (but if you don’t offer a free download, you’ll be in trouble, as we saw earlier). To then meet users’ free download expectation, you take them to a free download landing page (mentioning a paid option if you want to).

However, your testing might show that a Buy Now button does the job with fewer clicks. You’re now in an interesting position.  As we mentioned at the beginning, the expectation around a Buy Now button is that it will let the user buy, so take them straight to the shopping cart, rather than a sales page. In my experience, the straight-to-cart option wins in terms of both conversion and dollars.

If your More Information button wins, that’s the easy one: you can take users straight to the sales page.

You’d repeated the same test on all the steps in your sales funnel—your ad, your landing page, and your cart—to make sure you’re showing the right text at the right time, and delivering on user expectations.

Here, I’ve talked about buttons from a customer satisfaction perspective, but later today, Georgina will look at button text from a branding perspective.

Stay tuned for more posts by the Web Marketing Ninja—author of The Blogger’s Guide to Online Marketing, and a professional online marketer for a major web brand. Follow the Web Marketing Ninja on Twitter.

Better Buttons Part 2: Buttons as Brand Engagement Tools

Earlier today, the Ninja made an important point about buttons on your blog: he said that users have an expectation about the kind of response they get when they interact with a button.

In a world where engagement is the blogger’s ultimate goal, we can take this one step further. We can see buttons as the mechanisms by which users effect their engagement—whether they’re clicking Subscribe or Comment or Share or Download or Buy, users enact engagement on your blog using buttons.

This is, primarily, why it’s important to use the correct—honest—words on your button: as the Ninja says, verbage sets an expectation that your conversion process must fulfil.

Another consideration is usability. The poor average reading levels of many web users, coupled with the distractions and limitations we all face as we use the web, suggests that we should keep button text as straightforward as possible. There are also standard web conventions for many interactions, and it makes good practice to consider those, too.

But there’s another element of engagement that we should consider when we look at button text, and that’s your brand.

If buttons are the ultimate point of engagement with your blog, they may well be the ultimate point of engagement with your brand, too. So your button text needs to be honest, clear and brand-appropriate.

For most bloggers, honesty and clarity are brand values, so a button that invites users to sign up for an email newsletter with the words “Subscribe now” is probably pretty brand-appropriate.

But, depending on your brand and your audience, there may be other options, including:

Sign up nowSign me up!Subscribe meLet’s do itBombs away!

That last example is a real-world example: it’s from the subscription form on Ashley Ambirge’s The Middle Finger Project.

As the Ninja alluded in his post, the button text you choose will always be seen in context, so you can shape it according to the surrounding calls to action. That said, it’s true that readers’ eyes may be drawn to buttons before they’ve read any surrounding text, so there’s a very strong argument that your button text should make sense independently of that text as well as within it.

Of course, “making sense” is relative to your audience: what makes sense to you may baffle me. So while some may argue that a text input box followed by a button that reads “Bombs away!” is not prescriptive enough—not a strong enough call to action—Ashley may reply that her readers get it, well and truly.

Moreover, we can imagine that those who do get it also get a kick out of clicking a button that reads “Bombs away!” rather than boring old “Subscribe.” Maybe “bombs away” is within their own personal vocabulary; maybe it simply resonates with them—tickles their fancy, or gives them a chuckle.

I wonder how many people are smiling as they’re clicking Subscribe buttons on websites right now? If your blog’s users are having a positive physical response to your brand as they’re interacting with your blog, that may well dictate something about the emotional depth of that engagement, and its potential to evolve into lasting loyalty.

This isn’t to say that your button text should always make people smile. Obviously that’s not appropriate for all brands or contexts. But words do solicit feeling, so a consideration of users’ feelings—which will, after all, affect their eagerness to undertake the interaction your button is inviting—is important.

Would you rather:

Get started, orProceed?Buy now, orPurchase?Become a member, orJoin us, orCreate an account?

Your answer probably depends on the site’s purpose and brand. And what about your blog? Is the text on your buttons consistent with your blog’s brand? I’d love to hear in the comments whether you’ve considered buttons as a branding element.

Thursday, 1 July 2010

My Favorite Gmail Feature Got Better

IBM Acquires Coremetrics: Companies Acquire Better Web Analytics

IBM has historically been known as a hardware driven computer Tech Corporation. They’ve had their hand in a few different fires in the past, but a new acquisition by IBM is pushing them head first into web analytics.

IBM just acquired Coremetrics, a web analytics and online marketing optimization company.

May not sound like a big deal, but it is (whether positive or negative).  Web analytics have always been steps behind traditional business analytics.  The problem found with most web analytic solutions is they leave you with a ton of unstructured data that you don’t really know what to do with.

With that said, here’s what IBM is attempting to accomplish by acquiring Coremetrics.

Coremetrics will create web analytics that allow companies to use a cloud-based delivery model, which in turn gives companies real-time information from customer interaction whether it be through internal functions or social media networks.  In the end, companies gets faster results that lead to more targeted marketing campaigns.

The advancements that Coremetrics can provide will ultimately lead to more accurate and relevant web analytics.  If this is true, online marketing efforts should greatly benefit from getting the information faster and more organized.

I know there are some out there that don’t like to see the acquisition of small companies by large corporations. What do you think of this move by IBM? Comment Below and Let me know what you think.

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