Archives for May 2015

Market Your Product On Social Media

You may have the greatest product in the world, but if you’re not getting your product in front of buyers, you’ll struggle to grow your business.

There are many ways to reach potential customers- social media has revolutionized marketing.

Social media is a powerful marketing tool, but you have to do it right. With each social media post, you need to have a conversion goal: What are you trying to achieve?

Here are five ways to market your product using social media:

Facebook/Twitter Recommendations:

Remember to follow the 80/20 rule– 80% fun, information, entertaining and 20% hard sell.

Run weekly contests.

Install a Facebook store.

Every Twitter post needs an image or URL.  Retweet from like-minded accounts.  Use hashtags.

Post behind-the-scenes photos and videos.

Instagram:
Instagram is one of the fastest-growing social media platforms.  Post images each day. Use hashtags.  Run photo contests.

Pinterest:

If you don’t have a Pinterest page for your brand, get one.  Don’t just pin your products, pin similar products and accessories that would go well with your product.
YouTube and Vimeo: 
Record behind-the-scenes videos and upload them to YouTube and Vimeo.
Add a links to your videos and to your description to purchase the product you’re featuring.

Brafton's Infographic:

 

Source: Brafton 

Color-Coded Food Label Lauded By Nutritionists

Labels

Image Credit: Free Images

 

What if every food label had a color-coded grade that told customers whether or not the food is healthy?  Imagine picking up two bags of chips: one with a large red ‘F’ on it and one with a large green ‘B’ on it (red ‘F’ indicating the food is a poor dietary choice and the green ‘B’ indicating the food is a healthier option).  Which would you choose?

France is considering a similar labeling system. The proposal is to use a colored-lettering system to help consumers know which foods are healthy and which ones aren’t.

The goal is to combat food companies’ clever marketing tactics such as labeling foods as “Low Fat” or “Reduced Fat” by providing consumers with an overall grade that takes saturated fats, sodium, calories, sugar and cholesterol into account.

“An effective antidote against nutritional marketing: The coloriel code thwarts marketing techniques consisting of wear flattering cuts salt and fat or to make much of that ingredient nutritionally rewarding for imparting proper image,” a French study states.

If a color-coded, grading system was applied to the FDA’s newest food label recommendations, do you think it would help combat obesity and diabetes?

Using creative, colorful fonts and tag lines are great, but using misleading health claims is not a fair way to gain a loyal customer base.

Consumers are getting smarter and are really beginning to question what goes into their food.

Don’t end up on one of the many sites now devoted to calling out foods and manufacturers who make misleading health claims. 

Labels are important. Use yours to promote your product in an ethical, responsible way and you will gain a loyal customer base!