The 5 Minute Web Strategy

It’s been said that an expert is someone who has made all of the mistakes that can be made in a vary narrow field.

Last night I had the honor of being one of the chronic mistake-makers chosen to moderate a series of discussions on web strategy at the Troy Chamber Tech Exchange.

The event structure allowed attendees to select three subjects that they were interested in, and then participate 20 minute discussions on the topics with a group of eight people and an expert. When the 20 minute session was up, they would switch tables, and participate in the next discussion. It was a new format, but judging by the feedback that I heard, I wouldn’t be surprised to see it implemented again in the future.

I can’t speak for the attendees, but I can say that I learned a lot about doling out quick snippets of web strategy.

Troy Chamber Tech ExchangeFrom past experience, I know that it’s quite simple for me to look at a website, hear a few seconds of background information about a business, and rattle off five to ten things that a company could change on their site that will produce fairly drastic results.

I also know that I can spend weeks diving deep into a business’ sales, marketing, and operations processes, and surface with a web strategy that they can implement that will produce an increase in online business (meet Deep Discovery).

What I learned last night is that the 5 minute web strategy does not exist, in a broad sense. Sadly, even with everything in my bag of tricks, I cannot listen to the question, “I’m the marketing director for a IT company and I’m redoing our corporate website. How do I make sure that the new site increases sales?” and provide anything but an ultra-generic answer (concise copy, clean design, and strong calls to action!!).

I can, however, provide tough answers to tough questions, and prescribe things that you’ll never end up doing. The unfortunate answer to the question, “I don’t want to spend money on SEO, how can I outrank my competitors?” is still, “blog like crazy, create new website content every day, write industry articles, participate in online discussions, and spread your content far and wide to attract inbound links to your site.”

I could have spared them and just said, “it’s unpossible.”

Don’t get me wrong, we had some incredibly compelling conversations about web strategy, but there’s a lesson to be learned from all of this. The lesson was taught by the people who got a LOT of value out of last night’s session. These people came to the event after putting some thought into exactly what they were looking for.

A number of attendees came to the discussion and opened with questions like, “my homepage contains x, y, and z, and my goal is to drive phone calls or emails about these specific products by enticing my visitors with online incentives. What should I pay attention to?”

Now we can have a great discussion about things to do, things to avoid, and things to test.

Were these people BETTER attendees than the ones with broad questions? Absolutely not! But I truly believe that they left the session with a number of website improvements that they can implement quickly, and I’m excited to watch their websites as they put them in place.

Learn from this experience. The next time you have the opportunity to attend an expert discussion, take a few minutes during your drive to the event to formulate what you’re looking to get out of it. Ask some hard, specific questions to the expert, and you’ll most likely take home a few tips that you can quickly put in place that will yield good results.

After all, we’ve already made all of the mistakes. Why should you have to?

Many thanks to Deb at the Troy Chamber of Commerce for the invitation to moderate!

Ask Santa for Some SEO This Holiday Season

It worked for Rhonda Kallman, CEO of New Century Brewing Company, the brewers of Edison, The Independent Light Beer, and Moonshot, the caffeinated beer.

To be perfectly clear, Santa in this case is Entrepreneur Magazine which recently ran the Caffeine Marketing Jolt contest. The contest awarded the winner with over $20,000 worth of services including SEO, and six months of online promotions. The elves that are delivering these services are Awecomm on the SEO side, and ePrize who will be providing online promotions from their Caffeine group as well as strategic consulting.

The opportunity to work on this project is a great gift to us at Awecomm as well. It’s apparent that Rhonda doesn’t shy away from creativity or new ideas, and that’s the cornerstone of great search engine optimization!

Over 300 People Gather at MGM Grand Detroit to Launch ConnecTech

The message rang clear to anyone that attended the ConnecTech Detroit launch party on Wednesday night: “This is not just another boring technology networking group.”

People poured off the elevator into the Ignite nightclub well before the official start-time of 5:30pm. The huge, dimly lit club with thirty foot long fires burning inside glass walls provided the perfect backdrop for an evening focused on igniting the passion for technology in Detroit.

ConnecTech Detroit Launch

As the hours passed and the venue filled to near capacity, the assumption that the board of directors had made months ago was validated: Detroit is an area that is home to many innovative business people that live in the technical space, and they’re all excited about being able to get together, share knowledge, tell stories, network, and learn.

My personal desire to be involved in something like this was also met. I chatted it up with an IT Director who turned me on to a great open-source VoIP platform that I’m looking forward to testing out, caught up with a podcasting expert that I have been meaning to reconnect with for a long time, hung out with a friend who owns a company that provides a website search solution, and got a demo of a great mobile phone application that blew me away.

These are the conversations that I love having, and I’m confident at this point that the organization is going to help me have them more often.
ConnecTech Detroit Launch

Thanks to everyone that turned out to help us launch the organization, and those who put the event together!

Here are links to more photographs from the event, and the ConnecTech Detroit website for info about upcoming events and how to become a member.

P.S. The Sunday edition of the Detroit Free Press has a great article about the event in the business section, and there’s also a nice write-up in Matt Roush’s Great Lakes IT Report (GLITR).

Join the ConnecTech Detroit LinkedIn Group

Okay SERIOUSLY, we’re trying to make ConnecTech Detroit more progressive, more cutting edge, and more … dare I say it … Web 2.0 than any other technology group (the logo may not look the part, but I can assure you that our website will infinitely be in Beta).

We’re counting on social media sites to help us stay connected in between events, so we just launched the ConnecTech Detroit LinkedIn Group. If you’re currently a member of Glima (and your registration is rolling over to ConnecTech), or you’re planning on attending the launch party and signing up for a membership, click here to join the group.

A Facebook group will most likely be the next one on the list. My Facebook profile currently displays a picture of me at a bar in Cleveland with a (barely visible) drink in my hand. I’m sure you’ll agree that this is both unbecoming of a board member, and not terribly representative of my passion for technology in Detroit. :) Once I get that swapped out for a more professional picture, I’ll start working on launching the group.

If anyone wants to kick-start the effort, snap a picture of me at the launch party and send it to me!

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