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Author: Brad Johnson

Brad Johnson is an author and blogger who helps writers discover their niche, build successful habits, and quit their 9-5. His books include Ignite Your Beacon, Writing Clout and Tomes Of A Healing Heart. For strategic content and practical tips on how to become a full-time writer, visit: BradleyJohnsonProductions.com.

What’s the most intriguing marketing tip you’ve uncovered from this post?

https://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/621806944/0/convinceandconvertconsulting/

 

How to Communicate with Your Customers During the COVID-19 Crisis

The worldwide panic of coronavirus is leaving big and small brands wondering what happens next and the best way to communicate with customers. Here are a few ways to win your customers’ trust during these crazy times:

Use Your Site

Creating a public update on your corporate blog describing how you are coping with the situation and how your brand is helping its customers is always a good idea.

Nancy Seeger shares some valuable tips on how to phrase your public messaging effectively:

Don’t pretend everything is normal – address the issue head on.

Don’t keep you marketing the same as before. Now is the time for some great karmic marketing messages. One of the car companies in Canada changed TV ads – to say “This is where we normally would show you our great new models, but instead we want to thank the doctors and nurses for……”

Another example is the new Budweiser commercial that is also thanking the doctors and nurses.

Build your local community. Offer shout outs to those that are supporting the local community or industries that support your industry.

Use humor carefully. We don’t want to be dark and depressing, but many have love ones that are sick or at risk. Tread carefully.

Avoid generalizations or statistics that change to often. Marketing Communication stays around for a while and needs to be specific and valuable enough, without becoming dated too soon.

Give hope. People will always remember how you make them feel and giving hope in times of crisis is a great way to create positive energy.

All in all, your messaging should make each of your customers feel they are not alone.

B2B SaaS companies should have a policy in place regarding what to do to try to counteract cancellations. Some businesses have lost part of all of their income and must cut expenses. This might be to waive fees for a particular period of time or grant extensions on time to pay. It is better to retain them as a customer you hope will recover soon than potentially lose their business forever.

Get in Touch

If you have their email and social accounts, put them to use — but only if you have something useful and relevant to say.

There was a flood of Covid-19 email updates recently which also resulted in lots of memes like this one:

covid emails

The bottom line is: Keeping your customers informed is important but only if what you have to say is important to them.

Gail Gardner of GrowMap.com is sharing her experience:

Ecommerce stores I’ve bought from for years and others I’ve only used due to shortages of food staples are sending their customers email messages. If you have backordered products, keep your customers informed by email.

Anita Campbell, founder and CEO of Small Business Trends: suggests a very personal approach:

Send a message just saying “How are you doing? Is everyone well there?” No pressure. No selling. Just a friendly “I care about you enough to check in” message. I’ve had a couple of these. One from the owner of the virtual assistant agency we use. Another from a consultant we have used from time to time. Usually the only time I hear from them is when they send an invoice. So it’s nice to get a friendly “human” message.

To support businesses vcita had come up with coronavirus email templates helping their users to manage communications with the customers of theirs. All you need to do is to sign up for vcita free trial to access the templates:

covid email templates

These template collection offers to-the-point message for you to put together a meaningful update.

Janice Wald of Mostly Blogging brings up an important point: don’t use Coronavirus crisis as a marketing opportunity:

It is important you let your email list members feel your compassion not greed during this difficult time. Trying to profit during the Coronavirus is fine. Don’t try to profit FROM the Coronavirus.

For example, you can begin your marketing emails by expressing concern about the email list member and their family. End by expressing wishes they stay safe and healthy.

Create and Curate More Resources

Keep your social pages and feeds updated. Be honest about how this situation is affecting your ability to serve your customers. If payments are an issue, be flexible and think through your strategy in advance.

Share tips and insights about how your industry can cope or even expand during these challenging times. Shawn Hessinger, an executive editor Small Business Trends, has set up a standalone Facebook page that aims at helping small businesses through these uncertain times:

covid support group

Using your site as a knowledge hub for your customers to have a page to refer to is also a great idea. SEFCU created a huge list of resources informing their customers how they can use online banking to avoid trips to their offices and how to apply for the financial relief program.

Nextiva created a similar resource geared towards small businesses struggling to set up a remote working environment. The page lists all possible tools to create a remote office, including their business collaboration suite.

Collaboration suite

At IMN, we put together a private dashboard for us to brainstorm tips for our clients to keep their businesses afloat. Because we manage clients in a variety of industries, creating standard guidelines for all of them wouldn’t work, so we have to approach each of them. These recommendations are totally complimentary. Let’s face it: our company’s success depends on their keeping their businesses active. We are into this together.

covid consulting

Conclusion

Whether coronavirus is going to threaten humanity remains a question but one thing is clear: No matter what thousands of businesses are already affected and it may get worse. To prepare your company for possible outbreak consequences, use the steps above.

The post How to Communicate with Your Customers During the COVID-19 Crisis appeared first on Content Marketing Consulting and Social Media Strategy.

How will you utilize the tips from this post?

https://wordtothewise.com/2020/04/deliverability-discussion-3/

Next deliverability discussion will be Wednesday April 22 at 5pm Ireland, Noon eastern, 9am pacific. As always, drop me a mail at laura-ddiscuss@ the obvious domain.

I’m still thinking about the final topic. One of my ideas is a continuation of the machine learning discussion from last time. I think most large scale spam filters use ML for some parts of their filtering engine these days. But how the engines are taught and the feedback for training varies. A filter aimed at the corporate market isn’t going to have the level of engagement data a Gmail or VMG has.

How filters learn drives how we can and should react to delivery problems. Many filters provide support channels but not all of them do. But a better understanding of the filters will inform how we deal with delivery problems.

Look forward to seeing you there.

How will you utilize the strategy from this post?

https://www.rohitbhargava.com/2020/03/10-futuristic-ideas-becoming-reality-faster-because-of-covid-19.html

For the past ten years I’ve been a collector of innovative ideas. When I write about them and interview the people behind them, I know they are far ahead of their industry. Over the past month as our entire culture has been upended by the arrival of the COVID-19 virus, one of positive side effects I have been watching is a rapid normalizing of ideas and technology that might have seemed too dangerous or risky to try.

Here are ten of the biggest ideas gaining momentum, along with some implications for what each might mean after the current threat of COVID-19 begins to lessen … whenever that might be:

1. Distance Learning

As schools across the world have cancelled classes and kids remain at home, the topic of distance learning has become an urgent and personal one for every parent and child. Options for learning remotely had been around for many years (Khan Academy was founded 12 years ago) but as an entire generation of kids are forced to learn online for what is likely to be several months, this is likely to be the tipping point that causes parents, teachers and students themselves to rethink the educational system itself.

2. Ghost Kitchens

More than a year ago I remember reading about a surge in what several journalists had started calling “ghost restaurants” – a term used to describe a kitchen-only restaurant that offered home delivery without investing in a sit-down restaurant. Now as restaurants struggle to rethink their business models, this futuristic concept is going mainstream.

3. Home Theater Streaming

Dreamworks co-founder Jeffrey Katzenberg famously said back in 2013 that he anticipated a future where people might pay to watch new theatrical releases based on screen size. That’s just one of the potential futures unfolding right now as Universal is leading the charge to release new films directly to live streaming audiences and the film industry considers a big shift in how people might watch new films in a time where theaters are closed (and even afterwards when they reopen but moviegoers may still be reluctant to come out).

4. Drone Delivery

The use and potential for drones was already moving quickly even before COVID-19 came along. Now there are new stories weekly of drones being used for surveillance, mapping, delivery and plenty of other applications. The innovation is causing an urgent debate in many sectors about just how fast they are willing to deploy these drones and how to make it work.

5. Remote Work

Over the past two weeks, I have participated in more virtual presentations and conferences than the entire six months before COVID-19. As the events industry works hard to adapt to more virtual events and just about everyone seems to be getting more comfortable on Zoom, many believe this will fundamentally change the way we work and offer proof that the rumors about remote work are true. You can actually get more work done without the constant interruptions of the modern office.

For more advice on being effective while working remotely, make sure you join my newsletter: www.rohitbhargava.com/subscribe

6. Spectator eSports

Last night I watched two NFL athletes playing each other in a video game as part of the Madden eSports Tournament. As content-starved sports fans look for their next fix of competitive action, sports networks are responding with the one sport that can easily be played in isolation from home … video games. ESPN also launched an esports series with Nascar and we can expect to see more of these types of events as the orders to shelter in place continue. Along the way, this desperation-watching might finally offer the boost the esports needed to graduate from engaged fans watching on Twitch to gain a larger audience.

7. Digital Currency

Currency has already been marching steadily towards becoming mainly digital, but this current crisis and the accompanying disruption of financial markets may be what it takes to create a tipping point around cryptocurrency options like Bitcoin and speed the transition to a new future of money, banking and transactions.

8. Virtual Travel

In recent years, the idea of virtual travel seemed limited to the cool-but-motion-sickness-inducing experiences you could have with a virtual reality headset. As planes have been grounded and tourism halted, people are starting to think more broadly about how they might engage their wanderlust while stuck at home. Virtual trips, live animal cams, and even some (much better) virtual reality experiences are now seeing vast amounts of interest and an audience far more willing to experiment and embrace a disruptive new technology.

9. Universal Basic Income

Depending on where you live in the world, the idea of offering a Universal Basic Income of any kind might have seemed hopelessly out of touch. Until crisis hit. Now the United States and many other nations are either discussing the idea seriously, or actually implementing it to offer relief to citizens unsure of where their next paycheck is coming from.

10. Facial Tracking

Perhaps none of this technology being adopted faster is quite so worrisome as the potential uses (and misuses) of facial tracking technology. The potential ills of the technology are well explored in this powerful article from Sapiens author Yuval Noah Harari. The scary part of how AI and facial tracking may be used isn’t only from what could be possible today, but what new standards and acceptable uses might evolve to be even after this crisis passes.

What comes next?

I know some of these advances will seem far more hopeful and optimistic than others. And more than a few of them will create a scary amount of disruption in each of our lives both personally and professionally.

It’s too early to know which will be positive and which will be negative, and I’m trying hard not to make too many judgements right now either way. When the world is moving this quickly and we’re surrounded by noise, the best thing any of us can do is try to be a bit more intentional about what we choose to pay attention to.

These are ten ideas I’m watching, and for now the best advice I can offer is that you pay attention to them too.

What’s the most helpful content marketing tip you’ve uncovered from this post?

https://www.rohitbhargava.com/2020/03/10-futuristic-ideas-becoming-reality-faster-because-of-covid-19.html

For the past ten years I’ve been a collector of innovative ideas. When I write about them and interview the people behind them, I know they are far ahead of their industry. Over the past month as our entire culture has been upended by the arrival of the COVID-19 virus, one of positive side effects I have been watching is a rapid normalizing of ideas and technology that might have seemed too dangerous or risky to try.

Here are ten of the biggest ideas gaining momentum, along with some implications for what each might mean after the current threat of COVID-19 begins to lessen … whenever that might be:

1. Distance Learning

As schools across the world have cancelled classes and kids remain at home, the topic of distance learning has become an urgent and personal one for every parent and child. Options for learning remotely had been around for many years (Khan Academy was founded 12 years ago) but as an entire generation of kids are forced to learn online for what is likely to be several months, this is likely to be the tipping point that causes parents, teachers and students themselves to rethink the educational system itself.

2. Ghost Kitchens

More than a year ago I remember reading about a surge in what several journalists had started calling “ghost restaurants” – a term used to describe a kitchen-only restaurant that offered home delivery without investing in a sit-down restaurant. Now as restaurants struggle to rethink their business models, this futuristic concept is going mainstream.

3. Home Theater Streaming

Dreamworks co-founder Jeffrey Katzenberg famously said back in 2013 that he anticipated a future where people might pay to watch new theatrical releases based on screen size. That’s just one of the potential futures unfolding right now as Universal is leading the charge to release new films directly to live streaming audiences and the film industry considers a big shift in how people might watch new films in a time where theaters are closed (and even afterwards when they reopen but moviegoers may still be reluctant to come out).

4. Drone Delivery

The use and potential for drones was already moving quickly even before COVID-19 came along. Now there are new stories weekly of drones being used for surveillance, mapping, delivery and plenty of other applications. The innovation is causing an urgent debate in many sectors about just how fast they are willing to deploy these drones and how to make it work.

5. Remote Work

Over the past two weeks, I have participated in more virtual presentations and conferences than the entire six months before COVID-19. As the events industry works hard to adapt to more virtual events and just about everyone seems to be getting more comfortable on Zoom, many believe this will fundamentally change the way we work and offer proof that the rumors about remote work are true. You can actually get more work done without the constant interruptions of the modern office.

For more advice on being effective while working remotely, make sure you join my newsletter: www.rohitbhargava.com/subscribe

6. Spectator eSports

Last night I watched two NFL athletes playing each other in a video game as part of the Madden eSports Tournament. As content-starved sports fans look for their next fix of competitive action, sports networks are responding with the one sport that can easily be played in isolation from home … video games. ESPN also launched an esports series with Nascar and we can expect to see more of these types of events as the orders to shelter in place continue. Along the way, this desperation-watching might finally offer the boost the esports needed to graduate from engaged fans watching on Twitch to gain a larger audience.

7. Digital Currency

Currency has already been marching steadily towards becoming mainly digital, but this current crisis and the accompanying disruption of financial markets may be what it takes to create a tipping point around cryptocurrency options like Bitcoin and speed the transition to a new future of money, banking and transactions.

8. Virtual Travel

In recent years, the idea of virtual travel seemed limited to the cool-but-motion-sickness-inducing experiences you could have with a virtual reality headset. As planes have been grounded and tourism halted, people are starting to think more broadly about how they might engage their wanderlust while stuck at home. Virtual trips, live animal cams, and even some (much better) virtual reality experiences are now seeing vast amounts of interest and an audience far more willing to experiment and embrace a disruptive new technology.

9. Universal Basic Income

Depending on where you live in the world, the idea of offering a Universal Basic Income of any kind might have seemed hopelessly out of touch. Until crisis hit. Now the United States and many other nations are either discussing the idea seriously, or actually implementing it to offer relief to citizens unsure of where their next paycheck is coming from.

10. Facial Tracking

Perhaps none of this technology being adopted faster is quite so worrisome as the potential uses (and misuses) of facial tracking technology. The potential ills of the technology are well explored in this powerful article from Sapiens author Yuval Noah Harari. The scary part of how AI and facial tracking may be used isn’t only from what could be possible today, but what new standards and acceptable uses might evolve to be even after this crisis passes.

What comes next?

I know some of these advances will seem far more hopeful and optimistic than others. And more than a few of them will create a scary amount of disruption in each of our lives both personally and professionally.

It’s too early to know which will be positive and which will be negative, and I’m trying hard not to make too many judgements right now either way. When the world is moving this quickly and we’re surrounded by noise, the best thing any of us can do is try to be a bit more intentional about what we choose to pay attention to.

These are ten ideas I’m watching, and for now the best advice I can offer is that you pay attention to them too.

2020 April PAD Challenge: Day 25

Write a poem every day of April with the 2020 April Poem-A-Day Challenge. For today’s prompt, write a remix poem.


For today’s prompt, write a remix poem. That is, take one (or more) of your poems from earlier this month and remix it. Make a free verse poem into a villanelle. Or condense a sestina into a haiku or senryu. Or forget form. Just completely jumble up the words…or respond to the original poem(s). As always, have fun with it.

Remember: These prompts are just springboards; you have the freedom to jump in any direction you want. In other words, it’s more important to write a new poem than to stick to the prompt.


Get your poem on with these poetic forms!

In The Complete Guide of Poetic Forms: 100+ Poetic Form Definitions and Examples for Poets, Writer’s Digest’s resident poetry expert and former Poet Laureate of the Blogosphere Robert Lee Brewer showcases more than 100 poetic forms to serve as both an informative resource and inspiration for new writing!

After all, poetic forms are essentially poetic games with rules and guidelines that can help focus poets on how to get from line one to line done. This guide includes those guidelines with an example to help writers visualize how to write their own.

Plus, it offers an incredible mix of the old favorites—like the sestina, villanelle, and pantoum—with more contemporary forms—like the fib, golden shovel, and hay(na)ku.

Click to continue.


Here’s my attempt at a Remix Poem:

“Cento of the Stairs”

It’s not my nature to say no.
As long as I can remember,
I’ve always been a fool finding
myself unable to figure
out which way to go, breaking lines
night after night, thoughts rambling
and scrambled (lost in the forest
of no returns) before the doors
swing open and aliens crash
the party. It’s true I expect
the worst of the world, wishing I
could erase an entire day or
year, and I don’t know why I do.

If you find this note, I cannot
take for granted when we don’t say,
“I love you.” In the beginning,
when everyone already knew,
it was so easy it was bad luck.
I cannot escape that space is
relative to the light starting
to glow against the window’s blind
dogwoods blossoming before we
sheltered from the sun watching us
turn away like passengers in
lonely vessels of confinement
wandering through the windows of
our spaced out minds finding we are
both the fools who reap what we sow.

(Note on my remix: As the title suggests, I made a cento using lines and phrases from each of my previous 24 poems this month.)

The post 2020 April PAD Challenge: Day 25 by Robert Lee Brewer appeared first on Writer's Digest.

How will you use the knowledge from this post?

https://conversionsciences.com/defending-your-design-fight-opinion-with-experimentation/

Having trouble viewing the text? You can always read the original article here: Defending your design: fight opinion with experimentation

Are you tired of arbitrary changes being suggested for your designs — ads, copy, layout — based solely on opinion. We talk about defending your design in part two of my conversation with Tom Niemeyer. Defend your design. Let’s face it. Your design work is going to be evaluated by neophytes. Whether you work as […]

The post Defending your design: fight opinion with experimentation appeared first on Conversion Sciences.