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16 Cheerful Examples of Holiday Homepage Designs

Website Design Examples
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16 Cheerful Examples of Holiday Homepage Designs According to the National Retail Federation, eCommerce accounted for 20.9% of total holiday sales in 2019, and that number seems to increase every year. As a result, you have the opportunity to position your online shop in front of a huge base of consumers who are actively browsing the web with intent to purchase goods. The smartest marketers prepare for website traffic increases not only by prepping their website for higher-than-normal traffic and optimizing it for mobile devices, but also by giving their website design a dose of holiday cheer. It all starts with the homepage: The first page many people will see when they come to your website. Holiday Homepage Designs to Get You in the Spirit How have other companies redesigned their homepages for the holidays? Let's take a look. Note: Businesses change their homepages on a regular basis. The examples below may not be current. 1. Free People When your business has a loud personality like American bohemian retail company Free People does, making a big first impression on your homepage can be a great thing. Free People's redesign is all-encompassing, starting with a large banner promising free express shipping, which appeals to any buyers concerned about delivery times when doing their last-minute shopping. Underneath the main banner are four navigational calls-to-action emphasizing gifts and festive products. This directs holiday shoppers to the pages of their site they'll find most useful. 2. PayPal Who ever said online...

The 5 Best Ebook Formats for Marketers [Free Templates]

Lead Generation
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The 5 Best Ebook Formats for Marketers Some argue that in the world of marketing, ebooks are dead. Others say they are not. But the fact is that ebooks — when written, designed, and marketed properly — can generate thousands upon thousands of contact submissions for your business. Whether you're just getting started with ebook creation as a marketing tool, or you're reconsidering the role of ebooks in your existing content strategy, you're likely asking yourself an important question: What is the best ebook format for the ebooks in my marketing library?It's important to note that this question can be answered in two different ways: What is the best ebook format for content creation? What is the best ebook format for content consumption? Here, we'll cover best practices for both of these topics — and explain how HubSpot's Ebook Templates can help you achieve your marketing team's lead generation goals. Featured Resource: 18 Free Ebook Formatting & Creation Templates Download Free Ebook Templates Need help formatting your ebooks? Our collection of 18 free ebook templates will help you create and format your ebook content for an incredible reader experience in Microsoft PowerPoint, Adobe InDesign, and Google Slides so that you can format your ebooks in the way that best suits your marketing team and your content readers. The 3 Best Ebook Formats for Content Creation 1. Adobe InDesign Adobe's advanced design software gives content creators a myriad of options for creating and formatting their ebooks....

9 Product Category Marketing Examples to Inspire Your Own

Product Marketing
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9 Product Category Marketing Examples to Inspire Your Own Stores and websites aren’t a mishmash of products with no discernible organization for a reason. People want a sense of direction and a positive customer experience, even when they are “just browsing.” They also want to know they are in good hands when it comes to the product category they’re exploring — whether that’s kitchen tools, breakfast cereals, or winter coats. Product category marketing helps your brand stand out among related items, so your company’s products wind up in the shopping cart — whether real or virtual. What is a product category? A product category is “a particular group of related products,” according to the Cambridge Dictionary. Your distinct offerings and customer personas should guide the organization and grouping of your product categories. For example, REI Co-Op offers a wide range of outdoor gear. To guide customers, they split their products into interest-based categories, such as running, climbing, and snow sports. For fashion retailers, it makes more sense to organize categories by product type, such as shoes, shirts, and pants. Product category marketing amplifies why a company is the best choice within that group of products. Why should customers opt for your offering rather than your direct competitors? Gaining brand recognition and appreciation across a product category means greater returns for your marketing efforts. When consumers have positive experiences with a specific product category it also builds brand trust, which often expands to other categories through the halo effect....

Google Maps Marketing Strategy: The Ultimate Cheat Sheet

G Suite
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Google Maps Marketing Strategy: The Ultimate Cheat Sheet When I’m looking for a business that will have what I need, whether it’s food or office supplies, I use Google Maps. I know that the search results will give me enough information to pick the best option, like reviews, ratings, photos, and location information. I’m not alone in my preference for Google Maps, as it is six times more popular than other navigation apps. Given its popularity, it’s critical you optimize your business to appear in Google Maps search results. In this piece we’ll cover the basics of Google Maps marketing, best practices for optimizing your Google My Business for search results, and marketing tactics you can employ to improve your local SEO.   Google Maps marketing is beneficial for large and small businesses alike, especially because of Google Maps Local 3-Pack. Local 3-Pack is the first three businesses shown in search results that Google considers to be most relevant based on a user's current location or the location where they’re searching. The image below is an example of a Local 3-Pack for a restaurant query in Cambridge, MA. These three businesses are what Google considers to be most relevant based on the search query and the location where the search is being conducted. You can think of it like this: if your Google Maps marketing strategy is focused on optimizing your Google My Business profile for search results, Google will take note of this and show your business in the...

The Beginner’s Guide to Structured Data for Organizing & Optimizing Your Website

Structured Data
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The Beginner's Guide to Structured Data for Organizing & Optimizing Your Website It’s Friday afternoon, and your team is jonesing for Happy Hour. For the last few weeks, you’ve been going to the same ol’ bar by your office, so you decide it’s time to try something new. What do you do? Step outside and walk around until you find a new spot? No, you hop on Google and let it conduct the search for you. Your ideal post-work pub is nearby, open right after work, and offers a few gluten-free options so your entire team can partake. You plug these criteria into Google, and you’ve got three viable options at your fingertips — in a handy map format to boot. Pause. Have you ever wondered how Google can whip up such accurate, precise answers in so little time … and present them in such an easy-to-read way? Moreover, what are those restaurants doing to get featured so dominantly on Google’s search engine results pages (SERPs)? Heck, I’d love my business to pop up when consumers search for criteria relevant to me … wouldn’t you? No one knows exactly how Google’s algorithm works — but, there are a few ways to organize and optimize your website content so Google knows what content to feature on the SERPs for the various searches people conduct to find you. This is where structured data comes in. Structured data can make your organization more visible to potential customers and increase your click-through rate by...

Predictive Marketing: What it Is & How to Leverage It

Data-Driven Marketing
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Predictive Marketing: What it Is & How to Leverage It After months of working on a marketing campaign, nothing's worse than realizing you aren't seeing the results you expected. Unfortunately, many of us have been there. We've put all of our creative effort, time, and numerous resources into a campaign that sounded like a great idea, but had nowhere near the expected ROI or engagement. Then, on top of watching our project fail, we've had to deal with the awkward scenario of sharing bad performance data with our teams. No matter how hard you try, it's impossible to know exactly how well a campaign will do before you run it. However, there's a strategy that gets pretty close. It's called predictive marketing. While predictive marketing sounds like some futuristic technology you'd only see on a show like Westworld, using data to estimate an outcome isn't new. Predictive marketing is fueled by predictive analytics, which dates back to the 1930s. It enabled mathematicians and computers to calculate and analyze the possible successes, failures, and results of various scenarios -- such as health or weather conditions. Later, in the 1990s, when analytics tools became more available to brands, marketers at companies like eBay and Amazon began to combine marketing data with similar formulas or algorithms to predict and strategize around potential consumer behaviors, purchases, and marketing campaign performance. In the early 2000s, with the presence of "Big Data" many more brands and online advertising platforms embraced predictive analytics and marketing technology. Now, predictive marketing...

Should Your Brand Use Controversial Advertising? 10 Examples to Help You Decide

Advertising ROI
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Should Your Brand Use Controversial Advertising? 10 Examples to Help You Decide In the beginning of 2019, people were tweeting pictures of razors submerged at the bottom of their toilet bowls. No, this wasn’t a wacky teen challenge to make dads late for work. It was a protest against Gillette’s latest advertisement, one that confronts toxic masculinity. Brands that craft controversial advertisements like Gillette’s, however, expect this type of response, at least from some people. Taking any kind of stance on potentially sensitive social issues tends to lead to some form of disagreement. But authentically advocating for the causes you truly believe in usually has more pros than cons. “Even if publicizing your beliefs may ostracize some potential customers, it also builds deep loyalty for those who share your values -- particularly values like celebrating equality and inclusion, which many people support, regardless of political affiliation,” Joe Lazauskas, the Head of Content Strategy at Contently, wrote in an article after the divisive 2016 presidential election. “The same goes for expressing concern and support for the diverse people who work for you. Loyalty isn’t just a marketing metric; it’s also critical for measuring the internal health of your company.” Executed properly and from a place of genuine support, controversial ads can be an unexpected, emotional delight that can not only deepen your connection with your core audience, but can also help you reach new audiences. For instance, after Gillette released their ad challenging...

How We Octupled Image Search Traffic to the HubSpot Blog in 1 Year

Blog Optimization
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How We Octupled Image Search Traffic to the HubSpot Blog in 1 Year This post is a part of Made @ HubSpot, an internal thought leadership series through which we extract lessons from experiments conducted by our very own HubSpotters. Cliché: A picture is worth a thousand words. Fact: HubSpot's pictures are worth 120 thousand clicks. Last year, my colleague Karla Cook gave our readers a 3,000-word peek behind the curtain into a new SEO strategy we implemented at the beginning of 2018. That strategy, which was designed to fix a traffic plateau across the blog, increased our organic traffic by 25% year over year -- to eight million organic pageviews per month. This is about three million new organic views we didn't have at the beginning of 2018. Where that traffic is coming from is equally exciting. As I said, our new SEO strategy launched our organic blog traffic to heights it had never been to before. But that strategy had another, somewhat unintended consequence for us. While we increased our total organic traffic by 25% from last year, we increased our image search traffic by … wait for it … 779%. This refers to traffic that comes from people who conduct a search in Google, or a similar search engine, and click on an image result that leads to the HubSpot Blog. "Pics or it didn't happen, Braden.” As you wish: Source: Google Search Console Take a look at the royal blue tile in...

How to Grow Brand Awareness on Snapchat, According to Snapchat’s Product Marketing Manager

Snapchat Marketing
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How to Grow Brand Awareness on Snapchat, According to Snapchat's Product Marketing Manager Snapchat has undoubtedly become a powerful advertising tool for marketers aiming to reach millennials and Gen Z — and for good reason. For one, Snapchat reaches 75% of millennials and Gen Z. Additionally, Snapchatters are highly engaged on the platform. In fact, most users open the app 30 times per day. All of which is to say: If you're looking to reach millennials or Gen Z'ers and you're not using Snapchat for Business, you could be missing out. But that might sound easier said than done. How can you truly leverage the platform — typically used to send funny photos and videos to friends — to grow brand awareness and impact your company's bottom line? Fortunately, there are plenty of ways to grow brand awareness and drive sales on Snapchat — with the help of engaging ad formats, intricate targeting, and plenty of access to creative tools and resources. Here, I sat down with Evan Orenstein, Group Product Marketing Manager at Snapchat, to explore how you can expand your business' reach on one of the world's most popular social platforms. Let's dive in. *Click here for a $150 credit in ad credit from Snapchat & HubSpot — simply spend $50 in Snapchat's Ads Manager and receive $150 in ad credit to use towards your next campaign! (Note: The italicized questions are mine. The rest of the text is Evan’s direct quotes.) 1. How have you seen brands...