Ever notice that the flyer or poster images with text that you have uploaded on Facebook come out fuzzy?
Try uploading a PNG-24 lossless image instead of a JPEG. That way, Facebook doesn’t mess with the image quality.
Facebook’s JPEG compression is quite aggressive. In fact, Facebook compresses your images twice before they go live! So there’s a good chance you’ll end up with fuzzy compression artifacts around the edge of any text in the image, making it look … well, fuzzy.
JPEGs might be the most common file type you run across on the web. But, did you know that JPEGs are known for their “lossy” compression, meaning that the quality of the image decreases as the file size decreases?
PNGs are amazing for interactive documents such as web pages, but are not suitable for print. You can edit them and not lose quality, but they are still low resolution.
The reason PNGs are used in most web projects is that you can save your image with more colors on a transparent background. This makes for a much sharper image.
How to Choose an Image Format for Screenshots
If you are capturing a web page that has lots of text – like snippets of source code or Google search results pages or even a tweet – use the GIF or PNG format. The screenshots will be clear (JPEG adds grains or noise around text) and file size remains pretty low.
To make sure you’re avoiding other mistakes, this infographic will walk you through the best practices of choosing the right file types for your visual content.
Read up on the whole process by clicking on the image below. This is a fabulous resource!
– By Marcia Coffey
Find Marcia on Google+
Call Marcia at 561.906.3436.
Archives for January 2016
Creative Marketing On A Shoestring
In the 20th century “small businesses” were mostly local and had major marketing challenges.
Without the graphic design and marketing skills required, local car dealers, plumbers, stores, doctors, lawyers, et al. jumped into weekly newspaper advertising, brochure writing & design, direct mail, outdoor signage, radio spots, in-store promotions, and more.
None of this was cheap, though it could appear so. Much of it was hit and miss. All of it was ephemeral. Some of it relied on local “experts” in the field who charged whatever the market would bear.
Meanwhile, all of the above were brick and mortar operations with major overhead like employees.
Who knew?
In this century the same businesses have come to know a totally different universe. A seductive one. A do-it-yourself one.
Champagne Tastes and a Domestic Beer Budget
How to Squeeze the Most Out of Your Marketing Efforts
In her latest blog post, Pamela Wilson, Director of Special Projects, Copyblogger Media and Owner of Big Brand System discusses in fascinating detail all the ways you can get maximum impact from the limited budget you have.
Read Pamela’s post here:
How To Squeeze The Most From Your Marketing
– By Marcia Coffey
Find Marcia on Google+
Call Marcia at 561.906.3436
Promote Your Work With the Author Pro Theme
Until recently, the goal of getting published was beset with a long, arduous road filled with rejection and delays. It was tough to be an author. But times have changed. Advancements in technology and changes in consumer shopping habits over the past ten years have made it possible for more writers to become published authors than ever before, making this the best time in history to be an author.
These days it is essential for any published author to maintain a personal website.
Meet the Author Pro theme
- A website that’s clean, clear, and easy to navigate.
- A robust platform you can use to grow your audience both before and after your book launches.
- A simple way to feature your work and sell from your own platform.
The newest theme from Studio Press, Author Pro, was designed with you — authors — in mind.
See the Author Pro in action.
Websites can range from the very basic to the very complicated, but all author websites should include a few key pages:
Bio and author photo.
An Updated list of all your books.
Events and Appearances
Social Media and Contact Information.
Meet the Genesis Author Pro plugin
This plugin is a one-click free install on your Genesis Framework website, and can be used with any Genesis Framework child theme. The Genesis Author Pro plugin was developed at the request of published authors who were looking for a way to easily display their books on their websites.
Once installed, you’ll get access to a wealth of tools you can use to build an audience, and promote your work. You’ll be able to easily create a library of your published work using our custom book post type.
For each book, you can feature the: title; description; book cover with featured text banner; author; price; ISBN; publisher; editor; edition; publication date; and available formats.
Plus E-commerce Functionality
Plus, you can give your customers easy access to buy your book wherever it’s available with custom button links.
With the streamlined design of the Author Pro theme, your work and your words will shine.
– By Marcia Coffey
Find Marcia on Google+
Call Marcia at 561.906.3436
Sweet Plan for Inbound Marketing
While the shimmer of the latest gizmo that will catapult your website to the #1 ranking on Google is ever sensuous and tingly, the basics of marketing remain the same no matter the media.
They are: a quality product that meets a need and solves a problem that can be demonstrated or proven by third party verification in the marketplace. Meanwhile, here’s what you can do to get your marketing show on the road.
1. What are you trying to do?
Begin with your objectives in mind. Are you trying to raise awareness? Are you trying to launch a new product ? Are you trying to drive traffic to your website?
2. Focus on one specific target market.
Picking the right target market simplifies your marketing efforts.
3. Choose your tactics.
Twitter, Facebook , LinkedIn and YouTube are all basically free tools. You need to go where your consumer lives online. If your customers, prospects, and influencers are there, you should be there: listening, engaging, sharing, and helping them.
4. Simplify your message
Across all of your marketing platforms and based on your specific target audience , craft messages that are simple, compelling and focused on the problem you solve for your ideal client. Figure out what your ideal client wants and focus on the most important point that you want to communicate. Remember that your potential customer only cares about what you can do for them.
5. Create or gather content .
You need to have a blog and you must keep adding new, fresh content regularly. Blogs convert readers into buyers. According to Hubspot’s State of Inbound Marketing, almost 80% of marketers with a company blog have acquired new customers.
Here are some smart ways to go about it:
- Whatever you’re doing, write about it. Report on your progress.
- Come up with a daily question you’d want someone to ask and respond to it in a blog post or video.
- Place your product or service in front of people willing to blog, make videos, and tell stories about it.
- Conduct polls or ask questions about a related topic and turn these results into future posts as well as “news” you can release to both bloggers and press.
6. Decide when, what and where to outsource.
What can only you do best, and what is beyond your skill level and time constraints, but important enough to pay someone else to do?
Keep your marketing simple. Make your value clear, your purchase process simple and customer service awesome. Focus on creating websites and marketing materials with a clean design and a clear message to attract more people to your business.
– By Marcia Coffey
Find Marcia on Google+
Call Marcia, Genesis WordPress Web Designer, at 561.906.3436.
Follow @jmgroupdesign
New SMB Target Marketing Tool is a Feathered Friend
For the first time the world of target marketing is incredibly precise for the little guy. And budget friendly, too.
You will like this news. Keep reading.
A little history will shed light on the magnitude of this great discovery.
The first instance of target marketing has been traced to the General Motors Corporation in 1920, when they realized that Ford owners didn’t buy a second Ford. GMC started sending surveys to current Ford owners, asking them for feedback on GMC products. They never used the feedback, but found people were more likely to buy a GMC as their next car!
In the 1970’s, sales shifted from door-to-door to telemarketing . Direct mail marketing remained a constant annoyance, with only 2% of recipients expected to respond.
The use of census data, sold by the US government in the 1970s allowed marketers to add demographic data. A number of companies started to sell updated lists by taking the census data and using phone books and voter registration to add names back in. It would take 5 years to turn out a complete database.
In the 1980’s companies began collecting, and selling, psychographic data – what do people think, believe and how do they live. Direct mail in the 1990’s moved to a 10:1 ratio – $10 yield for every $1 spent.
Another Feather In Its Cap
This century’s ultra precise tool that does not require any of the above, i.e. hiring a mailing list company or a direct mail company or anybody for that matter is:
Twitter – the free, targeted treasure trove of all of your potential leads, customers and improved bottom line.
So here’s how to use Twitter as your own lead generation tool.
Step 1. Define Your Target Audience
You need to determine who your customers are by creating what’s called a buyer persona. To summarize, a buyer persona includes the following details as a starting point:
Are they male or female?
How old are they?
What is their level of education?
What is their occupation?
Are they married and do they have children?
What social media platforms do they prefer?
What are their life aspirations?
What are they afraid of?
How do they spend their leisure time?
What is their preferred method of communication?
Step 2. Search Your Niche
Then use Twitter’s Advanced Search tool where you can narrow your search and hone in on the people who are looking for your product, talking about a competitor or trying to get your attention?
Step 3. Follow people who are following others in your niche
This is the fastest way to grow your following with people who care about what you’re doing. In other words, you are selectively “lifting” your followers’ followers! It works.
Step 4. Post consistently
It’s called content marketing and you need to do this daily. Original blog posts, third party links and articles, with images that make you stand out .
“Tweets with images receive 18% more clicks, 89% more favorites and 150% more retweets.” – Hubspot
RESOURCES
- Great article: “How To Draw Attention With Images”
- A checklist of essential elements to make your life simple: “11 Essential Ingredients Every Post Needs” from Copyblogger
- Post content with Buffer to share on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn and more.
Step 5. Use 1-2 hashtags for each tweet
They are more effective than you thought. Using hashtags exposes you to an entirely new group of people that don’t follow you, but are interested in what you’re saying. Find, analyze and amplify the best hashtags with Hashtagify. Great and surprising tool!
Step 6. Spiff up your Twitter Bio
Your Twitter bio is a powerful representation of you and your company, and it should be handled with care.
Be razor sharp when you’re communicating your value proposition on your company’s Twitter bio. Your bio will get lots of attention and you want it to convert with your followers, i.e. get them to your website.
Don’t have the time to run your own Twitter lead generation campaign? Hire me!
– By Marcia Coffey
Find Marcia on Google+
Call Marcia at 561.906.3436