ʻEnehana ʻenehanamaʻiʻo ke kūʻai akuʻanaHuli i kaʻikePāʻoihana Pāʻoihana & Mea Hoʻolaha Hoʻolaha

Mai Pili i nā mea a pau ma kahi hoʻolālā Organic

Had a great conversation with one of our clients over the weekend, who often checks in and asks for feedback regarding the site, analytics, and other questions regarding the inbound marketing strategy. I love that they’re engaged; many of our customers are not… but sometimes the effort it takes to respond and explain the reasons we’re doing takes away from the actual work itself.

One critical remark was that their only expense was the online organic growth strategy. While I love that we’re in charge of that, it scares me that this is the only strategy being invested in. I’ve often told people that building an organic online presence is like building a store, restaurant, or office. The store should be centrally located (search and social), should attract the right visitors (design and messaging), and should convert prospects into clients (Nā CTA and landing pages).

But if you build a beautiful store, locate it well, and can convert your visitors into customers… the work is not over:

  • You still need to promote your store. I don’t care who you are; you must get out there and press the flesh, build a following, and engage others in the community. A great store in a great location with great people and products still needs promotion occasionally. As a business owner, you can’t sit back and wait for the business to come; you have to look for it while waiting for your online marketing strategy to develop.
  • Organic strategies like 'ōlelo o ka waha (WAKOU) may grow your business, but not at the speed you need it to! WOM is a fantastic strategy and typically produces the highest quality leads. But those leads take time – so you may have to offer additional incentives to drive traffic faster. Or you may need to buy traffic through pay-per-click (
    PPC), sponsorships, and even banner advertisements. It’s expensive but can get you a lot more traffic faster.
  • Organic growth takes time. A great online marketing strategy builds relevance and authority a little bit at a time. As you’re paying the marketing bills, an upward trend isn’t always consolation when more bills are coming in than revenue…, but you have to watch that upward slope and trend and look at it a year out, two years out, and five years out. Many businesses invest online and expect to have all the business they need in the next 60 to 90 days. It’s often not the case.

Don’t bet everything on organic growth. Or… if you do, be sure to leave time and resources to help promote and get the word out on your online marketing strategy. You can’t simply dump a bunch of money into a nice website and good content and expect great results – there’s more to do.

My only wish for this client is that they put as much effort into activity they hiki control rather than pulling our attention away. They’ve entrusted us with their strategy… and next to the client, no one wants to have it succeed more than we do!

Douglas Karr

Douglas Karr he CMO o OpenINSIGHTS a me ka mea nana i hookumu i ka Martech Zone. Ua kōkua ʻo Douglas i ka nui o nā hoʻomaka ʻana o MarTech, ua kōkua i ka hoʻomaʻamaʻa pono ʻana ma luna o $ 5 bil i nā loaʻa a me nā hoʻopukapuka kālā ʻo Martech, a hoʻomau i ke kōkua ʻana i nā hui i ka hoʻokō ʻana a me ka hoʻomaʻamaʻa ʻana i kā lākou kūʻai aku a me nā hoʻolālā kūʻai. ʻO Douglas kahi hoʻololi kikohoʻe i ʻike ʻia ma ka honua a me ka loea a me ka ʻōlelo a MarTech. He mea kākau ʻo Douglas i kahi alakaʻi a Dummie a me kahi puke alakaʻi ʻoihana.

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