Tag Archives: social media

LTCSocialMark2.0 Program Updates and Information for our Private Clients

Posted 21 June 2009 | By Val | Categories: Aging in Place, FACEBOOK, KeyWords, Marketing Elder Care, Marketing to Physicians, Post-Click Marketing, SEO, Story Telling Marketing, Twitter, Web 2.0, Web TV, home care sales, marketing adult day care, marketing assisted living, marketing home care, marketing long-term care insurance, marketing reverse mortgages, marketing senior services, marketing to baby boomers, marketing to caregivers, social media | No Comments

Hi all,
Hope everyone is having a great summer! We are continuing to add new accounts and enhancements to our program.
Some of you who are new to the program will note that your blogs are set up on our own servers now.
That gives us more control over content, rights, and information, and SEO options.
We will be sending out new URLs and usernames and passwords to those of you who were moved over.

A few reminders:
1. If you haven’t downloaded the community presentations, please do so at any time!

2. If you would like to watch the Do-It-Yourself Video Course, you are welcome to do that.
There are 15 short videos that walk you through a lot of what we do. Some of the info has changed over time,
but you will get the drift.

We will be having our usual private monthly webinar soon. Watch your email for instructions.
Also, be sure to register for our conference this fall- we will absolutely sell out before August 1.
Very few seats left! Register ASAP!!!

www.PowerMarketingConference.com

Thank you from all of us!
Valerie and Staff

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If You Own a Senior Service Business- Pay Close Attention.

Posted 20 June 2009 | By Val | Categories: Aging in Place, FACEBOOK, KeyWords, Marketing Elder Care, Marketing to Physicians, Post-Click Marketing, SEO, Story Telling Marketing, marketing adult day care, marketing assisted living, marketing long-term care insurance, marketing reverse mortgages, marketing senior services, marketing to baby boomers, marketing to caregivers, social media | No Comments

Interesting Facts:

70% to 80% of consumers’ clicks still happen within natural search results. (iCrossing). Search spending totaled more than $13.5-billion in 08, 88% of that spent on paid search/pay per click advertising. (SEMPO, Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization).

So, even though, 70%+ of traffic comes from organic search, business is only devoting 12% of its resources to that, 88% to pay-per-click. YOU can be smarter!

Knowing how to attract your ideal customers from their own active search activity gives you enormous advantage!

If you want all of your social media marketing and natural search engine results Done-For-You, be sure to contact us to set up a time for conference call and by all means visit http://www.LTCSocialMark.com  right now!

The site does say that we are sold out- but we will take new clients by private referral or interview on a case by case basis. We’re ready to get started, are you next?

Senior services and the elder care market are our specialty, our niche, and our expertise!

http://www.LTCSocialMark.com

Valerie

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Another Voice on Internet Marketing for Elder Care and Senior Service Providers

Posted 15 June 2009 | By Val | Categories: Aging in Place, FACEBOOK, KeyWords, Marketing Elder Care, Marketing to Physicians, Post-Click Marketing, SEO, Story Telling Marketing, Twitter, Web 2.0, home care sales, marketing adult day care, marketing assisted living, marketing home care, marketing long-term care insurance, marketing reverse mortgages, marketing senior services, marketing to baby boomers, marketing to caregivers, social media | No Comments

In this installment I will discuss a few ideas about Internet marketing.

By Tom Day                www.longtermcarelink.com


I am by no means the expert on Internet marketing, but I am using it successfully. The National Care Planning Council has achieved our growth primarily through using the Internet. As far as I can remember, we have never spent a dime on hiring salespeople or using traditional media advertising strategies. Our primary website — www.longtermcarelink.net — receives about 800,000 hits a month from roughly 60,000 visitors a month — almost all from search engine searches. We currently have a Google page rank of 6. We are ranked by Alexa at around 500,000. People find us through approximately 16,000 keyword searches a month. At least 15 of these keyword searches are common public search engine inputs for long-term care issues and bring up our site in the top three returns on a Google search.


In September, we will have a brand-new version of www.longtermcarelink.net and expect this will increase our traffic and our business by 20% to 30%. We are already in the process of redesigning our state council websites and this has brought increased traffic as well.

Our other 20 websites are also popular for certain keyword search strings and come up in at least the top five searches on Google for these categories. In addition, we maintain another 83 websites for our veterans benefits consultants. We are adding 6 or 7 new websites a month. A year from now, we will have well over 180 websites generating leads for our members.


Our websites are designed to produce requests for help from the public. The number of these requests has doubled or tripled every year. As an example, the search category that attracts the public to our primary website on the aid and attendance benefit is currently producing about 10 to 20 requests a day for all of our veterans aid and attendance consultants. The volume of these requests has quadrupled over the past two years since we started offering this service.

I’m sure many of you are well-versed in strategies using the Internet to attract new business. I will share with you a summary of some of my observations on Internet marketing.


Using a Website to Establish Your Credibility

When someone contacts me about our services, I go to that person’s website. If I don’t get a URL or recognize a domain from their email, I will do a Google search until I find a website. If there is no website, I will go to the specific search links that reference that particular person to learn as much about that person as I can. Sometimes, a website will give me an idea of who people are and what they do and give me some confidence in their services. I would like to think I’m not alone in this behavior. I believe more and more that the public is doing this or will be doing more such person-specific Internet searches in the future.


I realize that social networking websites can serve a similar purpose. Quite frankly, I am older — a baby boomer — and I don’t feel comfortable registering for a social network site to find out about someone. Somehow I think this more of an activity for people in their 30s or younger. These people are not our target market. It is either the older folks or their children who are in their late 40s or in their 50s. My personal opinion is having a website is more effective than using social networking sites to tell people about you.


I believe there is a trend for the public to rely on Web searches for an unknown individual to check that person out and to try and get an indication of that person’s credibility. I know this isn’t fair and might not even be true, but I often judge a person’s ability by the design of that person’s website. A crummy looking website gives me a negative feeling about that person’s abilities. If I have this feeling about websites, then perhaps others may as well. I might not be alone in the way I relate people to their websites. Here are some of the things I look for when I land on a website. I could write pages on each one of these items. There is simply not enough room to do this here.


· professional and pleasing design

· intuitive and easy navigation of the site

· generous content on a number of pages

· clear message of the services provided

· good biography of the people offering the services

· compelling sales message why I should use the services

· third-party endorsement by being a member of one or more recognized organizations


Using a Website to Establish an Identity and a Presence in the Community

It seems that everyone in business has a website. Those who don’t have a website are likely at a disadvantage to those who do. I think it is getting to the point that the public expects any organization offering services to the community should have a website or that person or company might not be considered to have an identity or a presence in the community. The lack of a website may result in losing some new business that would have been created had there been a website.

[...]

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Seniors as Entrepreneurs: Their Time Has Come!

Posted 10 June 2009 | By Val | Categories: Aging in Place, FACEBOOK, KeyWords, Marketing Elder Care, Marketing to Physicians, Post-Click Marketing, SEO, Story Telling Marketing, Twitter, Web 2.0, Web TV, home care sales, marketing adult day care, marketing assisted living, marketing home care, marketing long-term care insurance, marketing reverse mortgages, marketing senior services, marketing to baby boomers, marketing to caregivers, social media | No Comments

Great article at business week about seniors opening their own businesses and getting back in the mix:

http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/jun2009/sb2009068_927403.htm?chan=smallbiz_smallbiz+index+page_top+small+business+stories

Economic volatility plus more boomer retirees have moved the starting age for startups and led to a surge of senior-run businesses.

“In recent years, the number of individuals starting their own businesses during what is usually considered the “retirement years” has been rising, according to economists and small-business observers. And so has the age at which they are starting their own ventures: According to the nonprofit AARP Public Policy Institute, in 2008, 21% of the self-employed were between 55 and 64, while 10% were 65 and older. Of course, not every self-employed senior is an entrepreneur, but experts believe the stock market’s recent brutalization of retirement accounts will prod additional older Americans to start their own businesses. ”
 

Click Here
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If you market elder care, or market senior care services, but don't understand social media marketing online, this might be why…..

Posted 09 June 2009 | By Val | Categories: Aging in Place, FACEBOOK, KeyWords, Marketing Elder Care, Marketing to Physicians, Post-Click Marketing, SEO, Story Telling Marketing, Twitter, Web 2.0, Web TV, home care sales, marketing adult day care, marketing assisted living, marketing home care, marketing long-term care insurance, marketing reverse mortgages, marketing senior services, marketing to baby boomers, marketing to caregivers, social media | No Comments

If you don’t understand how social media marketing fits into your current marketing plan, and how it changes the way you might traditionally look at Return on Investment, here’s an article that I think explains it precisely. I proper social media marketing plan is not an option moving forward. Those who survive an economic turn down are those who plan effectively and for the long haul….and that means starting TODAY (ok yesterday, but it’s not too late)
Valerie
PS Register for the Power Marketing Conference for Elder Care Entrepreneurs and Senior Service Providers at http://www.powermarketingconference.com

Why Big Brands Struggle With Social Media

February 20th, 2009 | by Tom Smith
Original Post at: http://mashable.com/2009/02/20/big-brands-social-media/

Tom Smith is the founder of Trendstream, a research consultancy that specialises in providing research and consultancy on social media, web and mobile. He formerly worked as Head of Consumer Futures at Universal McCann.

Social media continues to grow globally in terms of adoption, usage, interest and impact in a massive way. It’s undeniably changing the way that content and information work particularly in terms of the publishing of consumer opinion. This has transformed the way that consumers relate to brands and the way that brands should operate, driving direct interaction, transparency and a more consultative approach.

However, we still operate in a system defined by the old media world and consequently big brand involvement is still in the main tentative and sporadic. From my experience of trying to get big brands to embrace the social revolution, there are a number of reasons why they have yet to embrace the real opportunities that involvement can deliver:

1. Social Media is often viewed as just another marketing channel: It is of course so much more; it is a completely different approach to interacting with consumers and customers. Of course, you can advertise in a social media environment, but the true return on investment comes from developing communities, creating content to be shared, and talking and listening directly with consumers.

2. It does not fit into current structures: True social media falls somewhere between marketing, PR, communications, content production and web development. No one is quite sure whose responsibility it is and who should ultimately deliver their organisation’s social media strategy.

3. Communities and content are global: Users of social media connect, consume, and share content globally with little care for international borders. Marketing and PR departments and objectives are set up nationally or regionally. Very few organisations have a truly international structure and perspective.

4. Social media needs a long term approach: To build community, distribute content, or get people actively involved in an application takes time. Marketing and PR work on short time frames and are wedded to sets of individual campaigns or short term objectives. Social media is not a campaign, it’s a permanent approach.

[...]

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