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11 Words to Avoid Using On Social Media and What to Say Instead
oming up with original or catchy wording for your social posts is important if you want to stand out in the busy social media sphere. To help you avoid common clichés, we’ve put together a list of words to avoid using, (some of which can actually repel customers), and potential replacements.
1. Groundbreaking
Unless you invented the smartphone or something truly groundbreaking, you should refrain from using this word.
Good alternative: Swap out groundbreaking with “innovative” or “new to our industry.”
2. Once in a lifetime
Unless you’re pulling an Oprah and giving away cars, it’s doubtful that your customer will never again have a similar opportunity.
Good alternative: You can say “rare opportunity,” or use a deadline or restriction. For example, “Only 17 concert tickets left!”
3. Best
This is one of the most generic terms out there, so it’s a good idea to find an alternative.
Good alternatives: Use “our top seller,” “most-referred,” or “customer favorite.”
4. Check this out!
When you want to draw attention to something, this statement seems like the perfect fit, but it’s overused and doesn’t say anything engaging to draw your readers in.
Good alternative: Write a short description of the article to tease it and include a link. Your audience will do the rest.
5. Think outside the box
It’s another all-too-common phrase, so resist the urge to use it.
Good alternative: Describe how you’re different. The experts at specialty floral design company Flou(-e)r use descriptive posts to do just that. Rather than saying, “Here are a few out-of-the-box decorating ideas” the shop gets more specific by saying, “Check out our new ornate mercury glass candle pedestals with wax luminaries on top.” It’s more descriptive and gets the point across.
6. Game changer
Unless you can back up your mega-hype with something that will have other people calling it a game changer, you’ll want to swap out this phrase.
Good alternative: You could use words like “beneficial” or a phrase like “a new approach.”
7. World-class
Step out of the ‘90s and drop the world-class phrase.
Good alternative: Use statistics to show how amazing your company, product or service is. For example, Shirazi Law Group tweeted about getting a 9.9 out of 10 average rating from its clients.
8. LOL
We get it. It’s short, which makes it perfect for social media. This acronym for “Laugh Out Loud” is often used to indicate jest when a nonverbal statement might otherwise be taken seriously.
Good alternative: Don’t say anything at all. If you’ve made a funny comment, or posted something amusing, let your readers decide so, and allow them to reply with their revelations of laughter.
9. YOLO
If “You Only Live Once,” you’ll still see this acronym 6 million times before you die. We know it’s popular, but try using something more descriptive about what you have to offer.
Good alternative: Try other words that create a sense of urgency. You could use phrases like “This deal expires in 24 hours” or “Limited time offer.”
10. Selfie
It’s a term that plagues social media. We’re not against the act of taking a “selfie” (okay, sometimes we are), but there are better ways to ask your customers to participate.
Good alternative: Go old school with “photo” or “image.” If you’re asking customers to share a photo, describe what you want without using the word “selfie.” For example, “show us how you use our product.”
11. Bae or Bruh
The slang terms stand for “babe” or “brother,” and they’re commonly used phrases on social amongst a younger crowd. Just because they’re saying it doesn’t mean you should. Otherwise, it seems like an overly eager attempt to relate. Twitter profiles have been created specifically for shaming brands who use the words in their social and marketing efforts.
Good alternative: Using the word “friend(s)” or simply typing someone’s specific name is usually better if you want to make things more personal.
Overall, the best takeaway is to replace overused terms in your social media marketing with more specific and descriptive words. While they may work from some brands, you’re more likely to earn your customers’ interest, trust and business if you’re original.
Written by Wendy Burt-Thomas. To read the full article, click here. For more information on creating your own online brand, custom WordPress website and social media strategy, please visit us at www.mydigibrand.com and follow us everywhere @mydigitalbrand.
11 Words to Avoid Using On Social Media and What to Say Instead was originally published on MyDigiBrand
55 best social media quotes of all time. So good.
Which Marketing Channel Gets You the Most Bang for Your Click?
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The Psychology of Online Persuasion
By MegHan.Hunt The Psychology of Online Persuasion March 16, 2015 Nathalie Nahai postulates that there are t hree fundamental rules to understanding the secret to online success, and that every business - from the smallest mom and pop shop in the tiniest town, to the biggest fish in the vast Fortune 500 sea - could employ these secret rules to make their venture an absolute success. …read more Source:: Social Media Today
8 Reasons Why Every Business Needs Custom Twitter Hashtags
Custom hashtags are most popular on Twitter but are also used on Instagram, Tumblr, Super, and other social networks. They are unique, an extension of your brand. Best of all, custom hashtags are completely free.
Continue reading on Entrepreneur.com
#protocols
Why Use Google Analytics?
When it comes to running an online business, it is important that you have visibility into the performance of your site, particularly how your customers interact with your site. Luckily, there is a free tool out there called Google Analytics that will help you do this. Below is the purpose of Google Analytics, as well as some of the key features and capabilities.
Purpose of Google Analytics:
Understand Your Audience
Sell and Convert
Make Business Decisions
Understanding Your Audience:
Know Your Audience
Audience Data and Reporting - This feature allows you to dissect your audience: the kinds of people they are, where they come from, how they find your content, and how loyal and engaged they are.
Advanced Segments - This feature allows you to isolate and analyze subsets of your traffic, like organic traffic or visits that led to transactions.
Filters - This feature allows you to limit and modify the traffic data that appears in any given report view (Ex: You can exclude traffic from certain domains).
Trace the Customer Path
Traffic Sources - This feature allows you to evaluate the effectiveness of your referring sites, direct traffic, social media platforms, organic (unpaid) search keywords, and custom campaigns.
Map Overlay - This feature allows you to see your visitor stats broken down by continent, country and city, which will help you understand the real origins of your traffic and find the best places to invest for new opportunities.
See What Your Audience Is Doing
Behavior Reporting - This feature allows you to see new vs. returning visitors, how frequent visitors come to your site, how long visitors are staying on your site, etc.
Flow Visualization - This feature lets you see and analyze the path a visitor takes on your site. See where they came from, the pages they moved through, and where they exited your site.
In-Page Analytics - This feature allows to see how users really interact with your pages (Ex: see where are users clicking the most on your homepage).
Sell and Convert
Reach Your Performance Goals
Ecommerce Reporting - This feature allows you too see the performance of your products. Trace transactions right down to specific keywords, understand shopper behaviors, and adjust your shopping cart to build loyalty and improve sales.
Goals - This feature allows you to measure your sales, downloads, email signups, conversions, or define your own business goals.
Reach Peak Capacity
Real-Time Reporting - This feature allows you to see how many people are on your site right now, where they came from, and what they’re viewing.
Alerts and Intelligence Reports - This feature will call attention to any abnormal behavior happening on your site (Ex: A huge spike in traffic coming from a particular city or traffic source).
Site Search - When visitors can’t find what they want on your site, they search. This feature allows you to see what your visitors are really looking for, spot missed opportunities, and speed up time to conversion.
Site-Speed Analysis - This feature shows you load times across your site, so you can fix slow pages and make your visitors happier.
Make Business Decisions
Based on the information in Google Analytics, you will be able to make educated decisions regarding the following:
Product success and determination
How to better target and sell to your customers
Marketing and advertising strategies
Improved website design
5 Ways To Optimize Your Digital Marketing Budget
Marketing budgets are usually tight. To maximize profitability, every dollar must be allocated effectively. Here are five strategies that can be implemented instantly to get the most out of marketing budgets.
1. Focus on what works best. Set up goals in Google Analytics to effectively measure the source and quantity of leads or sales. By comparing sources such as paid campaigns, organic traffic and social media channels, you can apply the Pareto Principle, also known as the 80/20 rule.
Read the full article now (Entrepreneur.com)

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Sometimes it's easy to forget that the most important thing you can do for your brand, is to let people have fun with it... Get weird and give your customers a chance to laugh with you! Here are some more ad placements we love and for more absolute weirdness, follow us at roundupmedia.com. #branding #marketing #advertising #signs #creative #ads #roundup #roundupmedia
Meet your 2015 customer
Digital Marketing Trends 2015
What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail? (Taken with Instagram)

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Taking some rare time off and enjoying a few of our favorite things 😄 (Taken with Instagram at Safeco Field)
We LOVE what we do! #quotes #stevejobs #inspire #marketing (Taken with instagram)