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Brand Development, Web Design, and Google Analytics Specialists

Experienced in SEM, SEO, Social Media, and Traditional Media

15Oct

Databox: How to Track Your Social Results

As a marketer, analytics and data is a huge part of my life. I am constantly searching for consistencies and patterns, and adjusting along the way when things aren’t trending in directions I would like for my clients. Making these changes requires a lot of data research, and I have been using this website Databox.com to gather the numbers, and organize reports so that I can easily see social media metrics and progress daily.

How does Databox work?
Databox pulls all your data into one place, so you can track performance and insights on your business, marketing, and/or sales all in one place in real-time. Once you create an account on Databox.com, Databox then brings you to a page that includes over 65 different integrations including Google Analytics, Hub Spot, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter. Those are just a few of the most popular. Linking your accounts is easy. You simply click which account you’d like to link, and then login to that account and approve the connection. Once you link the social accounts that you want to measure to Databox, they show up on your home screen as soon as you login. You also always have the option to add on more accounts as you go.

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Advantages of Databox
The home page gives you 5 different tabs that allow you to take advantage of the usefulness of Databox.
• The option to set and track your goals for yourself, your business, or your team. You have the ability to set time-bound numeric goals and track your progress on these personalized goals.
• The option to change the template of your accounts to your liking.
• The option to manage account data.
• The option to view notifications (scorecards and alerts).
• And the option to add clients for overview performance so you can quickly scan your goals and metrics across all clients.
These options allow you to customize each client’s reports, and manage the data easily and quickly. If a client has a specific need or wants to see different metrics, I can easily switch things out on the home page and make new reports based on the new settings.

Databox Data Board Tab
On the data board tab, where you have access to your accounts- on the right side you are able to see your setup progress, and what you have left to do in order to become a registered partner (level one). This unlocks many benefits including being listed in the Databox partner directory, increased exposure from features in Databox, self-service email support, and the ability to vote in new features and integrations. Once you unlock level one, there are two more levels: Certified Partner, and Premier Partner. Each level gives you access to more and more benefits. Even without these benefits the site still helps you see your growth and progress without having to login to every social account separately and look at each post and like and engagement. On the data board tab, you are also able to access a ton of information on your accounts. You can customize the information that you want the ability to view.

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Databox Data Points
Databox has tons of valuable information right on the home page for you to click and look at visually. Things like LinkedIn followers, Facebook page likes, and Twitter followers were some of the most popular that I chose for the first client I plugged into the software, but there are different metrics based on the various social channels you plug in. Every metric is customizable, so it depends on you to decide what is most important to you when you are looking at your goals and matching them up to the results you get with the software tracking.

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Overall
Databox is extremely helpful because it allows you to manage multiple accounts at once and provides important metrics that provides you with helpful information to grow and drive traffic to your accounts. It helps you identify what is working and what isn’t. It helps me provide my clients the information they need to make the best educated decisions for their business and brand. If you’re looking for a great software to use to gain insights into your social progress, try Databox today.

25Jun

12 Most Inspiring Entrepreneurial & Business Minded Instagram Accounts

1. Create & Cultivate 

Created by Jaclyn Johnson as a unique way to encourage women entrepreneurs to go after and achieve their dream careers. The feed is stacked with inspiring women, powerful quotes, and real career advice that’s sure to kick-start your entrepreneurial endeavor.

2. Tony Robbins

The man. The myth. The legend. Tony Robbins is a motivational speaking ninja with actionable business and personal tips to empower people to take control of their lives and accomplish their dreams. As the most recognizable face in leadership coaching, he provides his over 2 million followers with motivational quotes, videos, and stories of men and women impacted by his programs.  

A post shared by Tony Robbins (@tonyrobbins) on

3. Small Business Revolution

Each post hones in on an entrepreneur, making their story a stitch in the greater fabric of America’s small business community. Every story is told through photography, film, and the written word.

4. Amy Landino

Thinking of entering the vlog game? Then Amy’s feed is your place to learn how to “vlog like a boss.” As a CreativeLive teacher and boss at Vlog Boss Studios, she shares images of her speaking at various marketing and leadership conferences, motivational tips and quotes, and actionable marketing advice.

A post shared by Amy Landino (@schmittastic) on

5. Peter Voogd 

Peter Voogd is the latest young-gun entrepreneur and motivational guru to take center stage. He’s a best selling author and his Instagram should be your go-to for inspirational quotes on entrepreneurship, following your dreams, and learning how to pick up the pieces and move forward when failure strikes.

A post shared by Peter Voogd (@peterjvoogd) on

6. Harvard Business Review

As Harvard’s influential business magazine, its goal is to improve the practice of management. Follow for stories of business life, strategy, and thought provoking topics that are sure to draw spirited conversations.

7. Garyvee

Garyvee has become synonymous with the hustle. As a serial entrepreneur, best selling author, international speaker, and mega-internet personality he has become one the most important and inspirational business leaders of our time. Known for his frank, passionate, and ruthless advice and commentary, followers go to Gary Vaynerchuk for the no holds bar truth (with an expletive or two thrown in there). His account is full of motivational quotes, videos, and honest tips and lessons to help you successfully launch a business.

A post shared by Gary Vay-Ner-Chuk (@garyvee) on

8. Gabrielle Bernstein

As a motivational speaker, life coach, and New York Times best selling author Gabby Bernstein teaches her followers the power of self-love and a balanced lifestyle. Both much needed in the business world where people neglect maintaining a healthy work-life balance. Her effervescent personality perfectly comes through on her posts with inspiring quotes and pictures from her personal life.

9. 6am Success

With a lofty goal of inspiring 10 million, 6am Success is the source for inspirational quotes and content.

A post shared by 6am Success ✈ (@6amsuccess) on

10. Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur Magazine is the premier source for inspiring, informing, and celebrating entrepreneurs. All of the amazing content you love on their website is now jam-packed into their Instagram account.

A post shared by Entrepreneur (@entrepreneur) on

11. Lewis Howes

We’ve shared about Lewis Howes in the past, letting you know about his hit podcast and awe-inspiring story of struggle and triumph. Through his Instagram, Howes provides amazing free content, powerful motivation, inspirational stories, and videos to help you pursue your passions.

A post shared by Lewis Howes (@lewishowes) on

12. Instagram for Business

Confused by the latest algorithm update? Unsure of how to fully utilize Stories for your business? Then follow Instagram for Business for tips on how to best use their platform to boost your business’ marketing goals. You’ll also be incredibly inspired by other influential businesses they regularly post up as examples of using their platform in a creative and impactful way.

Bonus: Above the Fold Agency

Did you know we too have an Instagram account worth following? We share the latest from our marketing blog, inspirational quotes, and expert marketing tips that’s sure to power your work-week.

29Mar

10 Podcasts that Will Ignite Your Entrepreneurial Spirit

Podcasts are increasingly becoming a part of our daily habit. No other platform allows audiences to consume educational content while completing other tasks. Marketers, business owners, and entrepreneurs strive to become greater experts in their fields, and podcasts give them the ability to develop professionally even during their daily commute.

We’ve sifted through the endless marketing, business minded, and self-development podcasts to give you the 10 very best. Each podcast dives into varying arenas of the business world. All sure to provide nuggets you can take with you into your personal and professional life.

Let the boost in productivity and inspiration begin!

1. Gary Vee Audio Experience

An amalgamation of the million different podcasts and audio content Gary Vaynerchuk seems to produce these days can all be found in the Gary Vee Audio Experience. Gary believes the future is voice and audio, and so you can expect full throttle, epic content to inspire your work day and motivate you to launch your dream business you once thought impossible. Prepare yourself for unapologetic straight talk when it comes to his thoughts, interviews, and business advice.

2. Social Media Examiner

The Social Media Marketing Podcast is a top-10 marketing podcast hosted by Michael Stelzner and fellow members of the SME team. Episodes feature success stories and expert interviews from industry leaders to help listeners learn new strategies, and actionable tips to improve their social media marketing. Delivered in 45 min digestible weekly episodes every Friday, it’s your go-to for everything Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and beyond.

3. Smart Passive Income

Who doesn’t relish the idea of making money while you sleep? This is the core concept behind passive income. Of course, there’s plenty of work to be done upfront to get your business soaring, and this is where Pat Flynn steps in. His weekly podcast provides his audience with life-changing strategies and advice for building your online business. Often he interviews business men and women who share their own stories of failure and success.

4. The Joe Rogan Experience

While Joe Rogan is best known for his stand-up comedy and stint as Fear Factor host, he’s also one of the original podcasters that propelled the platform into the colossus that it is today. We included Rogan because of the breadth of guests he interviews on his show. They range from entrepreneurs, musicians, actors, activists, viral sensations, MMA fighters, to political juggernauts. Each with their own knowledge to impart and stories of struggle and triumph to inspire your own journey.

5. The Tim Ferriss Show

As one of the most prolific marketing and business podcasts on the airwaves, The Tim Ferriss Show has consistently been the #1 business podcast on all of iTunes, and has regularly ranked #1 overall amongst 300,000+ podcasts. Each long-form and content packed episode features world-class performers, entrepreneurs, and business leaders to extract the precise tactics, tools, and routines they use so you can adopt into your own life. It’s definitely a can’t-be-missed listening experience.

6. Online Marketing Made Easy

If you’re a small business then you have to listen to Amy Porterfield’s Online Marketing Made Easy. She outlines various marketing strategies by breaking them down into manageable, step-by-step pieces. Ensuring she’s fulfilling her mission to make everything as actionable and profitable as possible. Not only does she provide marketing guides, but also killer expert interviews and intimate behind-the-scene secrets from her biggest launches.

7. The Turnaround – The Growth Show

Half of all businesses fail after five years, and only a third make it to 10. Produced by Hubspot, The Turnaround/Growth Show is a podcast highlighting companies that nearly closed up shop, and instead embarked in a stellar turnaround. Making it a great show for any business struggling with how to grow effectively.

8. The School of Greatness

Hosted by entrepreneur and internet guru, Lewis Howes, The School of Greatness is dedicated to sharing inspiring stories from the most brilliant business minds, world class athletes, and influential celebrities to discover what makes people great. Prepare to self-analyze and feel tested. Both of which will lead to self-growth and success.

9. The Broad Experience

The Broad Experience is a 20 minute podcast conversation about women, the workplace, and success. Hosted by Ashley Milne-Tyte explores everything from race and class to being a professional woman without kids, the difficulty of delegating, and sexual harassment. Outlets like Fortune, Gawker, The New York Times, The Economist, The Guardian and more have praised the show for its storytelling and intelligent discussions.

10. Entrepreneurs on Fire

John Lee Dumas has taken the term “content creator” to the next level. His podcast, Entrepreneurs on Fire (EOF), interviews inspiring and successful entrepreneurs 7 days a week! Everyday you’ll hear from featured guests describing their worst entrepreneurial moments, their AH-HA moments, and what’s working for them in business right now. Over 1,900 interviews have been published with guests ranging from Tony Robbins, Seth Godin, Gary Vee, Barbara Corcoran, and many more.

19Oct

8 Productivity Quotes from Top Entrepreneurs to Fuel Your Work Day

As business owners big and small our time is precious, in fact it may be our most valuable asset. When we’re being pulled between internal or clients meetings, deadlines, or a never ending unread inbox our productivity  decreases as a result. Making it even harder to find a moment to recenter and focus the mind on what’s actually important.

However, finding moments to gain clarity and foster creativity are essential to long term success (and let’s be honest, sanity)!

Thankfully there are those that have gone before us and found ways to boost productivity in their daily lives and businesses. Here’s how they’ve done it:

1. “Have a clear system for to-dos: whether it’s ‘Getting Things Done’ or the ‘Checklist Manifesto,’ just have a system and stick to it. I have a very specific method I use in Slack and in email that works for me, and knowing I have that system keeps me from feeling overwhelmed even when I’m behind or the to-dos pile up.” —April Underwood, Vice President of Product, Slack

2. “The key for me is you have to understand how your brain works and when you are most productive. For me, I’m most productive and creative in the morning through early afternoon, so I’ve gotten rid of lunch meetings to keep my productive time going as long as I can. I make sure the tasks I have at the beginning of the day are the tasks that require the most creativity or, in other words, tasks I have never done before.” —Ryan Smith, CEO and co-founder, Qualtrics

3. “Dream big. Start small. But most of all, start.” —Simon Sinek, Author & Motivational Speaker

4. “Inbox zero is a fool’s errand. I don’t try to keep up. I feel perfectly fine picking and choosing what I want to engage in.” —Jeff Lawson, CEO, Twilio

5. “Never procrastinate. Just get it done right away. I don’t wait until I get home, I take calls wherever I am. I execute on any feedback I get right away. That way, the work never piles up.” —Anthony Tan, CEO and co-founder, Grab

6. “Don’t build links. Build relationships.” —Rand Fishkin, MOZ

7. “Turn off everything—email, phone, stock tickers, news, etc.—as often as possible and focus on a single task without interruption.” —Dianne McKeever, Co-founder and Chief Investment Officer, Ides Capital

8. “Think big and don’t listen to people who tell you it can’t be done. Life’s too short to think small.” —Tim Ferriss, Author of The 4-Hour Workweek

28Sep

Why Going Cheap on Your Branding Is One of the Worst Mistakes You Can Make

Going cheap on your brand development could not only lead to a disconnect with potential customers, but could also result in your company shutting its doors as a result of low sales.

Your brand has a life.

Believe it or not, this thing you’ve created has legs to stand on, living and breathing every day. While this may sound high-minded, statistics prove otherwise. According to a study compiled by Bop Design, 54 percent of people don’t trust brands. But for those who do, 64 percent cite sharing a common bond with the brand as their primary reason for following or purchasing from them.

Why is this the case? Because your brand is your business’s first impression, and if done poorly, possibly the last. To some, branding seems like a luxury investment (and in some cases, this is true). However, going cheap on your brand development could not only lead to a disconnect with potential customers, but could also result in your company shutting its doors as a result of low sales. It’s a nightmare scenario for most entrepreneurs, which is why I’m going to go over a few reasons why investing in your brand is one of the wisest investments you could make.

A story you can sink your teeth into.

Breathe life into your business with a brand story or mission statement. Let’s be honest, coming up with your brand’s story is not an easy task. It’s going to take a lot of self-reflection and doubt, running through your purpose as to why your business exists in the first place. Additionally, this mantra will be what dictates every piece of copy or content your company puts out, creating a skeleton of how your voice will sound.

Let’s look at Whole Foods. The company could have created a wholesome-looking logo to lure people through its doors, but the multi-national retailer takes careful measures to back up its introduction to consumers. The brand has built a foundation of offering healthy and nutritious foods, and this foundation informs every marketing initiative and company development. From offering in-store educational experiences to teach consumers about food and emerging brands to getting involved in community-building programs through donating food to shelters and supporting local vendors, Whole Foods doesn’t just view its brand story as a marketing ploy, but leans on its pillars to guide the brand forward.

As Kissmetrics points out, there’s an actual science to what we deem as an authentic brand story. This breaks down to what’s essentially called neural coupling, or the emotional connection we feel when hearing a story. However, reaching this point might not be easily solved on your own, especially if you’re in a time crunch to launch.

While it’s up to you to have an agency or consulting firm take over your entire branding objectives, a lot of this is going to come from you. It’s not a bad idea to gain an outside perspective from someone to ask you the tough questions on why you started your business and what it represents, as well as where exactly you want it to head. The love you feel for what you’ve created is something most will understand, which is why having a third party pull the beauty of that out of you and translate it in a way others can comprehend is vital.

Because once you release your brand to the outside world, the perception of what it represents no longer belongs to only you anymore.

Your brand is more than just a logo.

A common misconception by novices in the branding world is making the assumption that a logo and a brand are synonymous. While your logo is one of the most important visual assets for your company — it is just the beginning. From there, you need bring your brand to life by embodying your values through marketing initiatives, product development and customer experience enhancements. Your brand’s goal is to represent an idea or shared truth between you and your audience, and that shared truth should permeate into the ethos of your business. It’s a common bond that drives towards a specific mission, which is something you’re going to miss the mark on by simply going for a cheap logo with the idea you’ll fix it later on.

When it comes to your logo, this symbol is going to represent an ethos that reflects upon how your company is aiming to change the world. Take the Whole Foods logo, for example. Many consumers in every major market across the country not only instantly recognize the green Whole Foods font, but new consumers also immediately recognize what the Whole Foods brand stands for thanks to the homage its logo pays to fruit and natural foods.

There’s plenty of places you can get a quality logo that won’t break the bank (I recommend checking out Deluxe). Remember, your logo is literally going to be everywhere your company is, so make it worth the ink it’s printed on. Plus, when done right, your logo is going to serve the purpose of telling your brand’s story without saying a word. So you have your logo … now what?

People talk, so you should listen.

How your brand is going to interact with the outside world will largely dictate the success of your company. From trade shows to social media, every interaction can give a valid perspective on who your company actually is. As Pew Research notes, more than 68 percent of all U.S. adults are on social media, so the potential amount of feedback you might receive could be tremendous.

Your brand is going to represent that universal truth you share with your consumers. Although discovering this is going to be tough, the rewards will be tremendous. People will no longer just be fans, but evangelists for what you’re about. Which begs the question: Are you ready to not just tell your story, but make it one that can stand the test of time?

 

About Andrew Medal: He is the founder of creative digital agency Agent Beta. He has helped organizations like the California Education Department, Proctor & Gamble, Microsoft, Warner Bros. and Inc. Magazine.

Link to original article on Entrepreneur.

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