35 Top Experts Share Their Tips for a Winning B2B Content Marketing Strategy

How do I beat the market with content marketing? What consists a great B2B content marketing strategy? How should I proceed with my content marketing efforts? If you’ve been asking yourself these questions lately, you can stop worrying. We gathered for you the best tips from the biggest global experts. Read, learn, and join the success club!

Define Your Audience

“Developing an effective content marketing plan requires you to clearly define your target audience or ‘buyer persona.’ It’s important to remember that you’re not targeting yourself. Once you have a better understanding of your target audience, you can model them based on different buyer personas.”

Shane Barker, Independent Digital Strategist, Sprout Social

Target Creatively

“My main tip for B2B content marketing is to not restrict your options to targeting business publications and influencers; everybody is using B2B publications and networks in the same ways, and it is very hard to be heard above the noise. Remember that everybody who has a business is an individual with a life outside of the office, so you can target these people outside of their business roles, whether through social campaigns or wider awareness or brand exercises. It’s about getting the attention of businesspeople in and outside of the office. I believe that this can generate real success; it feels less like a hard sell to the audience, and you have an opportunity to forge a more naturalistic relationship between a brand and its audience this way.”

Mike Bates, Organic Search Executive, We Are Boutique

Create a Documented Content Marketing Strategy

“Having a documented strategy gets everybody on the same page. One result of this is that your audience is less likely to be confused by inconsistencies in messaging when content creators work without a set of guidelines.”

Ron Seld, Head of Marketing, Start a Fire

Target the Right Stages of the Marketing Funnel

“Try to choose. When you’re creating your content, when you’re designing the strategy for why you’re going to produce a particular piece, decide what it’s going to help with. Point it at the area of the funnel that is in most need of assistance.”

Rand Fishkin, Founder, Moz

Create a Content Calendar

“It is a best practice to create a content calendar so you can plan ahead of major events in the year and create a rhythm of content suitable for your audiences. Regular content generally achieves greater results.”

John Kennedy, Digital Marketing Director, Brands on Digital

Consider Creative Ways to Scale Content Production 

“You’re regularly publishing, blog traffic is increasing, and you’re even seeing a decent amount of conversion. You just need to do more of it. Don’t fret if you can’t justify an increase in headcount because you may be able to tap into other existing resources. Don’t be afraid to republish content that did well in the past. Look at your blog analytics, see what an impact, and republish popular content with a fresh introduction and/or updated links and images. Not only is this now an accepted content strategy practice, it’s a highly effective one that enables you to make the most out of the polished work you put so much time into creating in the first place.”

Sachin Kamdar, CEO, Parse.ly

Market Before You Launch

“Content marketing can be a powerful tool to fuel B2B product launches. Don’t wait until your product hits the market to create quality content assets and deploy campaigns. Prepare the market for your solution by using content marketing to talk about the problem you are solving, explore current (and perhaps inadequate) solutions, and educate them about unknown or unmet needs. Leverage these campaigns to foster a community and build a key contact list you can reach out to when your offering arrives!”

Michael Passanante, Senior Director of Marketing, BESLER Consulting

Monitor Your Competition

“If you’re going to play the content game, play to win. To do so, you need to know your enemies. Monitor competitor activities and make sure you’re on top of the latest trends for your industry and your customers’ industry or industries.”

Rich Missey, Director of SEO, Insureon

Turn Down the Sales, Turn on the Value

“Content marketing is only effective to the extent that it meets some need on the part of the audience it is reaching. That seems logical; however, too often, marketers focus too much on what’s important to them (sales!) and too little on bringing value to their audience. Bringing value equals engagement, which, ultimately, will yield sales. It’s not an immediate process, but it’s a powerful one if done well. If not done well, marketers will fail to engage their audience and, worse yet, turn off those they have connected with. Turn down the sales pitch and turn up the value by gaining a clear understanding of who your audience is (very specifically) and what’s important to them and then finding the connection between what you’re selling and what they value and producing content that connects the two.”

Linda Pophal, Owner, Strategic Communications

Engage Other Teams in Content Creation

“Involving multiple teams in content creation opens up your blog to new ideas and perspectives. Someone in HR is much more qualified to write about a new skill requirement, while the production team is better at explaining their new product. Involving the company as a whole in your content will make it more real and more enjoyable for the audience.”

Amanda Dodge, Contributor, Copypress

Write in Conversational Language

“Write the way you would talk to an old friend. You don’t ever have writer’s block in a casual conversation, right? So write the way you would talk. Even better, exaggerate the tone—let yourself be silly. Try to make yourself smile.”

Joshua Nite, Content Marketing Lead, TopRank Marketing

Resonate Your Customer’s Stories

“Make sure you include detailed customer stories in your content marketing mix. Prospects want to know exactly how your product or service affects their day-to-day working life. This approach resonates much more than claims about product features and benefits. If prospects can ‘feel it’ in the content they read, they will consider it and move closer to buying it.”

Christopher Fox, Managing Partner, Syncresis

Go Deep

“B2B readers are proud of their knowledge and rightly so. They have invested their lives, their education, their careers and their time into acquiring professional skills. They love it when people speak to them on their level—a deep level. That’s why the B2B content that you produce should go deep.”

Neil Patel, Co-founder, Crazy Egg

Focus on the Pain

“Understanding customer pain points and their decision-making journey are especially useful, because B2B clients are more savvy about their challenges and often need guidance to help overcome them. Broad-scope content can be a great honey pot and is necessary, but more specific content focused on detailed industry or vertical ‘pain points’ will build more authority amongst customers that take action on your CTAs. Add ‘actionable’ directives that decision makers can apply immediately or a concise picture of benefits they can use to get approval or buy-in from other members in their organization. Solve immediate and common problems with detailed guidance—rinse, repeat.”

Adam Johnson and Justin Brown, Content Managers, Quote Wizard

Use Content That Converts

“Content marketing is not only about increasing visibility, social shares and traffics that look nice in the statistics. In the end, it’s about generating leads and converting them. That is why you must focus on content that helps you push leads down the funnel, content that makes them sign up for newsletters or free trials, and gives you direct contact to them.”

Daniel Slomka, Content and Social Media Specialist, Boost the News

Focus on Relevancy

“The problem businesses have in unattractive industries is they can’t easily brainstorm topics. It’s challenging to develop engaging content that centers on things like office chairs, hearing aids or insurance. As such, the temptation can be to create unrelated content just for the sake of gaining backlinks and traffic. Don’t do this. It’s far more valuable to focus on relevant content, even if it doesn’t have link-bait qualities. While it may not provide the same SEO boost as link-bait articles, do you really want to build a faulty foundation of users who don’t make up your target market?”

Samuel Edwards

Make People’s Life Easier

“Provide value to your audience. Don’t talk about yourself—just give them something you know they’re looking for, something that makes their job easier. This isn’t hard to do, and you should already know what your target clients are looking for. You can use SEO to see what people in your space or businesses in your target audience are searching for, put a list of tools or tips which will help them reach their goals, and do your best to make the content you share as easy to navigate through as possible while spending the time to create high quality ‘11 out of 10’ content.”

Vincent Magaline, CMO, Rebrandly

Make People Care

“Make sure every single piece of content—email, blog post, what have you—quickly and clearly answers the question, ‘Why do I care?’ This is the key to creating relevance and urgency. Far too many people think making a piece ‘accessible and fun’ means, ‘I can get away with yammering about stuff and amusing myself.’ Nope. Now, granted, that’s not usually B2B’s issue, but if the piece does more to serve your needs than the reader’s or customer’s, then you’re not really helping them at all, and you haven’t created value—and if content has no value, it ain’t content.” 

Terri Trespicio, Co-founder, Lights Camera Expert

Write P.E.A.C. Content

“P.E.A.C. stands for Practical, Entertaining, Awe-Inspiring and Credible. If you can achieve this, you will build up a reputation for yourself as a producer of great content. Not only will your outreach process be easier since your writing will be providing readers with useful and actionable tips, but it will also be more likely that those you outreach to will continue to read your content in the future. As a result, your content will also get more social interactions and more people linking back to it.”

Nadya Khoja, CMO, Venngage

Write Guest Posts & Articles

“To boost your B2B content marketing efforts, use contributed articles. Whatever industry you may be in, there are vertical publications who are looking for content. If you have an idea you can pitch for a contributed article, many times these publications will allow to submit an article that may be published on their site and/or in print. This will help you with content marketing, as well as PR and social media (as you may post the article to your social media channels once it appears). You may link to the article from your site, as well, and perhaps even use it in your customer newsletter.” 

Michelle Garrett, PR Consultant, Garrett Public Relations

Be an Expert

“Carefully plan the topics you are going to present in your content, and make sure they are meaningful to your audience. This is a great approach that allows you to discuss how your product or service can save money, increase the efficiency of production, or streamline tasks. Not only does it provide a chance to introduce your product, it establishes your expert status in the industry. The most important point is to post not only about your own products but other products your target market is sure to find useful. This way, your audience knows you are genuine in your efforts to enhance their business and find you and your company to be trustworthy.”

Daren Low, Founder, Bitcatcha

Give Back to the Community & to the Audience

“Give back to your customers and the causes they believe in. Our strongest content marketing and social media effort to giving back is through Facebook. We have 248,000 followers. For a B2B business that sells 225,000 general merchandise products, this is quite a following. To create such a following, we give back to our community with a different giveaway each month. We also have a program where any of our customers can designate 5% of their purchase dollars to their favorite charity, and [we’ve] created a free wishlist program for nonprofits to get what they need.”

Marc Joseph, CEO and President, DollarDays

Don’t Forget the SEO

“My advice is to remember that content marketing is married to modern SEO. You need to optimize both onshore (native to your website) and offshore (published on social media or by a third-party site) content with your SEO keywords, proper link structure, and rich contextual clues such as keyword-named images. Google’s algorithm has shifted significantly in the past decade to favor sites with the highest-quality and most visited content over those that game the system and use tactics such as keyword cramming or landing pages designed only for SEO. Do your research, and consult with your SEO professional before launching any new content marketing strategies.”

Molly Phillips, Senior Account Manager, Greenroom

Go Video

“Go video. YouTube is more effective than Facebook in generating B2B leads. I’ve long preached the value of video marketing for brands, including B2B. Keep in mind, YouTube is the world’s second largest search engine and is owned by Google, which means greater potential visibility in organic search results. Considering the fact that video also has 5x greater recall than the written word, why tell your complicated B2B story in text when you can tell it with a concise, compelling video?”

Kent Lewis, President and Founder, Anvil Media

Invest in Content-marketing Software

“As companies continue to invest in content marketing, there is a tremendous opportunity for content marketers to focus on content operations. Selecting the right content-marketing platform can help marketers create more and better content in less time. Once my own company started using our content-marketing platform, we found that we saved 74 minutes of staff time per piece of content produced now that we were no longer emailing Word documents around and trying to track it all on a spreadsheet. For the average company, that kind of inefficiency comes with a very real price tag; companies pay an extra $120,000 per year to produce the same volume of content as firms that invested in workflow software, according to a recent Gleanster Research study. Taking a close look at your content operations is more than worth the effort.”

Scott Severson, President, Brandpoint

Create Leaderboards

“The best way to engage a B2B audience with easy repeatable content is to create a ‘power 100’ leaderboard of top influencers in the sector. Update it every week, and you can be sure it will become the de facto standard ranking for your industry sector, bringing everyone to your site and content.”

Toby Beresford, CEO, Rise

Go Where Your Audience is

“You should only focus on social media platforms that you know your audience is using and is generating great results for your business. If Facebook is performing better than Twitter, then shift your time and resources to promoting your content on Facebook. It’s tempting to be on every single platform, but, starting out, focus on the places that will give you the most bang for your buck.”

Kristian Rivera, Digital Marketing Associate, Fit Small Business

Used Paid Promotion on Facebook

“Use social ads as a way to amplify the reach of your content marketing when you push it out through your social channels. A $10 to $20 boost on Facebook can go a long way.”

Sujan Patel, Co-founder, Web Profits

Used Paid Promotion on LinkedIn

“A very cost-effective way to get your B2B content into the right hands is to use LinkedIn sponsored-content ads. You can define your audience by title, industry, company size, company name, age, gender and more. Thousands of people will see your content, so you build brand awareness, but you only pay when someone is interested enough to click through. The average cost is about $5 per click. It’s a great tool for B2B content marketers.”

Judy Schramm, CEO, Pro Resource

Automate Where Possible

“You’re only one person, and you’ve only got 24 hours in a day. Even if you’re highly productive and efficient, automation can help you make even better use of your time by removing bottlenecks and rendering processes infinitely scalable. Automated tools also help your audience—bots might not have the same nuanced touch as a human, but they also never make mistakes like humans do, and they respond far faster.”

Ben Jacobson, Director, Action Packed Media

Contact Industry Influencers

“Did you mention anyone in your article? If so, send them a link to it. Who are the most influential people in your niche? Contact these people and ask what they think about your article. Who knows? They might even decide to share it with their followers!”

Daniel Tolliday, Chief Content Officer, B2B Marketer

Link out to Other Websites

“Link out to authoritative websites when referencing research, studies and reports. Linking out to external sites has three main benefits:

  1. “It’s good for SEO. Linking to authoritative websites can improve your own website authority.
  2. “It’s good for UX. When you reference a report, the reader might want to learn more, and a link to that site will improve their experience.
  3. “It builds credibility. By referencing a study, it shows you know your stuff.

“Another benefit of linking is that you can tag them when sharing your content on social media.”

Steven Macdonald, Digital Marketing Manager, Super Office

Reuse Your Content

“Reuse your content whenever possible to reinforce your message and save time. For example, after you write a blog post, you can use it as an article in your e-newsletter or share it across your social media platforms, or you could take a few of your blog posts that are related to each other and turn them into an infographic. You could even pull a helpful paragraph from a blog post and turn it into a helpful ‘quick tip’ video! By repackaging the same content in different ways, you can generate content that’s a good fit for your brand more efficiently.”

Emily Sidley, Senior Director of Publicity, Three Girls Media

Create e-briefs

“Create an e-brief from your existing materials. Every organization has a sales sheet or case study or even some general statistics they may use in sales presentations. Put all three together and create an e-brief. Make sure to remove sales-y language, use proper citations for statistics, and make the tone expert and informative for your readers.”

Anita O’Malley, CEO, Leadarati

Continue to Promote Your Content After the Initial Push

“Most content creators give the content a push on social media just after publishing and usually see a spike in traffic numbers, which then falls away, and they move on to the next task or piece of content, but only a tiny fraction of their social network ever got to see that content. That’s where social scheduling tools come into play—you should be sharing each piece of content regularly on your social networks. Some fear that over-promoting a piece will irritate their followers, but if you do it properly, you should avoid doing that.”

Alastair McDermott, Technical Director, WebsiteDoctor

Original article here: http://www.boostthenews.com/35-experts-tips-b2b-content-marketing-strategy/

5 Products That Can Reduce Your Environmental Impact

Environmental awareness has become more prevalent in recent years as people become increasingly concerned with global warming, water scarcity and the depletion of fossil fuels. Whether out of concern for the environment or a desire to save money, decreasing your impact on the Earth offers numerous benefits. There are countless ways to ease your environmental impact and reduce monthly spending simply by switching out some common products in your home for their sustainable counterparts.

  1. Compact fluorescent lightbulbs. Compact fluorescent lightbulbs are considerably more energy efficient, and they can drastically cut down on the energy consumption of your home and office. Not only will it result in a cost savings for you—about $57 in energy expenses per bulb—but it will allow you to reduce your environmental impact, as well.
  2. Biodegradable trash bags. Each year, 5.3 million to 14 million tons of plastic enter the oceans and landfills of our planet, polluting the Earth with ecologically harmful materials that pose a danger to wildlife and aquatic ecosystems. By switching out your regular trash bags for biodegradable trash bags, you’ll be reducing landfill waste by about two to three bags per week, or 100 to 150 bag per year.
  3. Water-saving showerhead. It’s estimated that about 0.007% of all water on Earth is available to fuel and nourish the growing human population. With many areas of the world becoming increasingly arid and major droughts plaguing much of the United States, water scarcity is a pressing concern. A water-saving showerhead can reduce your water consumption considerably. On average, a person uses about 6,000 gallons of water for showering each year. With the right showerhead, you can cut that number in half, saving 3,000 gallons of freshwater annually. In addition to saving water, you’ll also be saving about $32.50 per year due to decreased water expenses.
  4. Reusable shopping bags. We’ve all heard of “plastic island,” the large conglomeration of trash that’s floating around in the ocean and has already surpassed the size of Texas. The average U.S. family uses about 1,500 plastic shopping bags a year, which, with the help of reusable bags, can be completely eliminated.
  5. Recycled paper products. The global demand [for] paper is rapidly growing, even as technology usage increases. In fact, global demand has increased by 400% in just 40 years, with 35% of the world’s trees being cut down and milled for paper. […] Deforestation impacts local ecosystems, contributes to global warming, and requires considerable energy consumption to cut, mill and manufacture the trees. By using paper products [composed of] recycled materials, you can make a dent in energy consumption and reduce your reliance on deforestation. With recycled tissues, toilet paper, stationary and more, there are countless ways to improve the energy efficiency of your home.

There has long been an emphasis on going green for people and businesses alike. Going green allows a person to considerably reduce their own environmental impact while also reducing their monthly expenses. A simple switch of your lightbulbs and showerheads can help you save a few hundred dollars per year while also promoting healthier and more sustainable lifestyle habits.

Visit DollarDays.com to explore a range of sustainable, energy-efficient and biodegradable products that will enable you to reduce your environmental impact.

Original article here: http://globalbizcircle.com/5-products-can-reduce-environmental-impact/

DollarDays & the Walmart Supply Chain

Marc Joseph is the founder of DollarDays, the premier online wholesaler that helps small businesses compete against larger enterprises and [assists] nonprofit organizations [in finding] the products they need to support their causes. DollarDays offers more than 225,000 high-[value] products at wholesale and closeout prices.

Mr. Joseph has helped build some of America’s most known retail stores, including Federated Department Stores, Bill’s Variety Stores, Everything’s A Dollar Stores and Crown Book Stores. Most recently he started a chain of hair salons in Arizona and built it up to 11 stores before selling them to devote full-time to DollarDays. He is the author of the book, “The Secrets of Retailing…or How to Beat Walmart.”

In this interview, Marc Joseph breaks down his powerful company, DollarDays, and the Walmart supply chain.

Original video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hF2lpzYAOts&amp=&feature=youtu.be

Why America Loves Dollar Stores

American families have tightened their belts in the current economy, and they’re looking to smart sources for products they need to run their homes. The dollar store has answered the call, and many Americans are routinely shopping at these venues for great savings—and the feeling of pride in being penny-wise.

“I routinely visit my local dollar store for everything from shampoo to paper goods to dish towels,” Carole Purcell, 52, of Baltimore, Md., told LifeZette. “I have always liked dollar stores for value on certain items. You’re not cheap—you’re smart if you shop at a dollar store. While I wouldn’t buy bath towels there, I would certainly buy many things that just two years ago I never would have.”

Dollar-store stocks are surging in response to America’s steady patronage, according to CNBC. Dollar Tree stock hit an all-time high last Wednesday, and the day before, Dollar General hit a record high for the company. Investors may look for safer stocks during a turbulent time in the stock market, and dollar-store stocks are just the right fit.

Retail analyst Joseph Feldman of the Telsey Advisory Group told CNBC, “We’re favorable on both stocks. We like dollar-store space. It’s a bit of a safer trade.”

Have the American family’s spending habits really changed that measurably in the wake of President Obama’s disastrous economy? Apparently so.

“The true underlying reason why both store segments are growing faster than retail in general is the economy and the backlash of the recession we all just experienced,” Marc Joseph, CEO of America’s Suppliers, Inc., of Scottsdale, Ariz., said. America’s Suppliers sells over 225,000 products to the nation’s discount and specialty stores.

“Middle-class America was forced to shop differently to save money, and even though we are recovering today, the experience Americans had when forced to shop the dollar-store industry was not a bad one,” Joseph said. “They learned that private-label products do perform as well as branded goods, so even though they may have a few more dollars in their pockets today, they liked getting a deal—and that is why they continue to support the dollar-store industry.”

Feldman of Telsey Advisory Group told CNBC that Dollar General has begun rolling out new store formats and more efficient single-line checkouts to their locations. They’re also expanding their refrigerated and frozen-food selection in the hopes of becoming an even more desirable shopping destination to lower- and middle-income shoppers, he said.

Dollar Tree, said Feldman, is also expanding its brand after buying Dollar General’s main competitor, Family Dollar, last year. Everything in Dollar Tree literally costs just one dollar—as opposed to Dollar General, which is a multi-price point selection of products.

“In my opinion, we’re not seeing a recovery, and people are still feeling pressure on their discretionary income, so they will continue to shop to save.”

Daniel Celia, President and CEO, Financial Issues Stewardship Ministries

“I have been unemployed for a year-and-a-half, and I routinely shop for our family at dollar stores,” a Massachusetts 52-year-old husband and father of two college-age kids said. “I don’t have pride about it—you do what you have to do, and, honestly, a lot of the products are every bit as good as the name brands.”

Despite President Obama’s words about an improving jobs picture, […] some economists think the employment situation is dire. That’s partly because of the sluggish participation rate, which actually fell 0.2% to 62.8% this past April.

Additionally, construction employment rose only a fraction, and the retail sector shed jobs for the first time since December 2014, the Labor Department said on May 6.

“One of the key factors in dollar-store stock is definitely the economy, but not how you might think,” Daniel Celia, President and CEO of Financial Issues Stewardship Ministries of Westtown, Penn., told LifeZette. “The economy has been so weak and consumer spending so cautious that discount stores such as Dollar General are doing very well based on an increasing market share and consumers wanting to shop to save.”

He added, “Right now, the stock is showing two things: consumers needing and wanting to save, which indicates a weaker economy and less consumer confidence, and, as we know, wages continue to decline. The other factor is that in this kind of environment, consumers often change their spending habits [to stores like this], and habit generally sticks well into a real recovery.”

The smart dollar-store franchise has an “a little of this, a little of that” mentality.

“These stores must turn themselves into a treasure hunt, where they carry some basic [everyday] products such as toothpaste and batteries but continue to surround these basic items with products customers don’t necessarily need but will buy because of their novelty,” explained Joseph of America’s Suppliers. “Many of these items are closeouts, which show real value.”

For Celia, the writing on the wall is obvious. “In my opinion, we’re not seeing a recovery, and people are still feeling pressure on their discretionary income, so they will continue to shop to save.”

Original article here: https://www.lifezette.com/2016/07/america-loves-dollar-stores/

15 ways to celebrate the 4th of july under $10

15 Ways to Celebrate the 4th of July Under $10

The Fourth of July is a popular time to gather with friends and loved ones—and spend money.

In 2015, Americans spent $3.6 million on flags and $257.8 million on fireworks. Revelers spent a combined $6.6 billion on food over the weekend and drank $1 billion worth of beer. All in all, the average household spends roughly $346.50 over the July 4th weekend on food, drinks, transportation and other supplies.

Freedom isn’t free, but it doesn’t have to break the bank, either. Here are some ways to celebrate the 4th of July for less than $10.

1. Host a Traditional Barbecue

According to the American Farm Bureau Federation, the classic backyard barbecue is one of the only Fourth of July ideas that is actually becoming less expensive. A 10-person cookout costs roughly $55.84, or about $5.58 per person, which is 3% cheaper than it was last year. The estimated cost of groceries includes hotdogs, burgers, buns, ribs, ketchup and mustard, chips, potato salad, chocolate milk, lemonade, and watermelon.

2. Enjoy a DIY Fireworks Display

Light up the night sky this Independence Day by setting off fireworks yourself. Retailers like OnlineFireworks.com have a large selection of buy-one-get-one-free packages that start under $10.

Fireworks injuries are at an all-time low, but it is still critical to follow all instructions and never allow children to use these devices unsupervised. It’s also important to note that fireworks laws vary from state to state and are sometimes inconsistent even among counties. Before purchasing any fireworks, check with the American Pyrotechnics Association for a directory of state laws.

3. Have Fun with Sparklers

If you’re not up to putting on a full fireworks display, opt for the slow-burning fun of sparklers. Prism Fireworks sells 72 packs of red, white and blue sparklers for $9.99.

Be warned that sparklers can and do cause injuries. Because sparklers can burn at 2,000 degrees, it’s important to hold them at arm’s length, dunk them in water before tossing them in the garbage, and always keep them separate from other fireworks.

4. Create a DIY July 4th Outfit

Start by purchasing a basic white shirt or tank top (available at Walmart for about $5), then buy or scour the house for painter’s tape, star stickers, blue and red spray paint, and cardboard. After placing 50 star stickers on the top left portion of the shirt, apply the tape in horizontal stripes on the bottom half and opposite the stars. Lay the shirt down over a piece of cardboard to protect the underlying surface, then spray paint the stripes red and the area with the stars blue. Remove the stickers and tape, and poof—you’re a patriot on a budget.

5. Fly a Patriotic Bandana Banner

Buy several bandanas in red, white and blue, and cut each one into four squares. Fold each square into a triangle and iron it to create a sharp crease. Next, attach the triangles to a long ribbon in a repeating red, white and blue pattern, and drape the finished banner loosely, like a sagging clothesline. You can get a case of 12 bandanas for $1.96 each at DollarDays.com.

6. Take a Virtual Trip to New York

A trip to New York City is expensive, but it’s free to watch America’s largest Independence Day fireworks display from the comfort of your own home. Forty thousand fireworks will light up the sky over the Hudson River during the annual Macy’s Fourth of July Fireworks Spectacular. NBC begins broadcasting at 9:00 p.m., and the first shell is set to ignite at roughly 9:25 p.m. This year marks the 45th anniversary of the event, and Macy’s promises it will be the best one yet.

7. Have a Red, White & Blue Water Balloon Fight

Although holding a water balloon fight on a hot summer day doesn’t require much structure, PartyGamesNow lists the rules for an organized July 4th water balloon toss that pits two teams against each other. You can pick up 10 packs of red, white and blue balloons here.

8. Fly a Flag

There is perhaps no better way to show your national pride than to fly the symbol of American freedom—the flag. Amazon sells big, heavy-duty embroidered flags with brass grommets for as low as $4.69. Visit the American Legion site for rules regarding how to fly, handle and dispose of Old Glory properly.

9. Make a Donation

There are tens of thousands of charities dedicated to serving the needs of veterans and military personnel, and many of them accept donations of just $10. Charity Navigator offers a comprehensive list of organizations. Donate to groups based on what they do, the military branches on which they focus or even their geographic locations.

10. Drop a Salami

Hobby’s Delicatessen & Restaurant in Newark, N.J., delivers its famous salamis to hungry troops overseas through a program called Operation Salami Drop. This Independence Day, you can share the holiday goodness with a soldier who is far from home. For exactly $10, you can drop a salami of your own.

11. Bake a Pie

Apple pie is so associated with the United States that people often joke about things being “as American as apple pie.” Better Homes and Gardens offers a recipe for a cheap, simple apple/berry pie in a jar that features a big red star made out of fruit. You’ll need the following ingredients, which cost less than $1 combined: sugar, flour, salt, butter and milk. The other ingredients—blueberries and apples—cost as little as $1.50 per pound and $1.77 per pound, respectively.

12. Print Coasters

Instead of a covered dish, consider bringing something special to your holiday barbecue—patriotic coasters. The other guests will appreciate the creativity, and the host will appreciate the lack of ring-shaped stains on the tables. Favors LTD sells high-quality, round cork coasters with several choices of patriotic imagery. They start at less than $1 each and become cheaper the more you buy.

13. Go Fly a Kite

With just a kite and a little bit of wind, the whole family can enjoy endless hours of fun this Fourth of July. Stay on theme with a patriotic motif. You can score an assortment of America-themed kites for under $10 on the Oriental Trading Company website. Just remember to supervise young children, as kites can present a choking hazard.

14. Eat Red, White & Blue Ice Cream

If you can’t find red, white and blue ice cream to enjoy on the Fourth of July, you can always top your favorite flavor off with patriotic sprinkles, like the Merica sprinkle mix, currently available on Etsy for $3.50.

Additionally, families can purchase a box of firecracker Popsicles, available in the classic red, white and blue pattern. Eight packs have been spotted for just $1.

15. Make a Flag Kebab

With 12 kebab sticks ($1.99 for 100), a pack of marshmallows (45 cents per ounce), frozen raspberries and blueberries, you can make dessert kebabs that come together to form an American flag. Use the blueberries in the upper-left corner in place of the stars and thread the other ingredients together to form the corresponding red and white stripes.

This article originally appeared on GoBankingRates.

Check out another blog here: https://blog.dollardays.com/2021/06/15/four-steps-to-easy-donating/

DollarDays Works with Google to Help Inspire Future Scientists Through Making

DollarDays, the nation’s leading supplier of wholesale goods for small businesses and nonprofits, is pleased to announce today they are working with Google on the “Making & Science” initiative to inspire future scientists and makers. DollarDays is providing an arts, crafts and tool kit that can be used with the Science Journal Android App created by Google’s Making Science team. DollarDays’ kit is unique in that it provides almost every item needed to support all of the activities in the Science Journal Android app.

“We are excited to be working with Google on this initiative. Providing the supplies in the Science Journal kits aligns with DollarDays’ philosophy of supporting educational growth programs,” said Marc Joseph, CEO and president at DollarDays. “Team DollarDays is proud to be a part of inspiring the future.”

The Science Journal kits support activities developed by Google and the Exploratorium. Each kit includes the supplies for these activities which can be accessed through the Science Journal, a digital science notebook that helps kids and adults explore the world around them. The arts, crafts and tool kits include enough supplies for one facilitator and seven to eight children; available now on DollarDays’ website, it retails for $499.

“We wanted to provide these kits to be used in the classroom, in after-school programs and even at home to inspire the curiosity of our children in building, experimenting and creating with combining science and technology,” said Shelly Chaney, Vice President of Merchandising at DollarDays.

What is Making & Science?

Making & Science is an initiative from Google to inspire future scientists and makers. Learn more about Google’s programs, events, media and the new Science Journal app at makingscience.withgoogle.com.

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

DollarDays Selected as Finalist for Internet Retailer Excellence Award

DollarDays, the nation’s leading supplier of wholesale goods to small businesses and nonprofits, has been selected as one of three finalists for B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year at the prestigious Internet Retailer Excellence Awards.

Internet Retailer‘s panel of judges has selected DollarDays as a contender for this award, which is given to the manufacturer, wholesaler or distributor that makes the best use of a range of online marketing channels, including social networks and blogs, to expand its reach, boost its reputation, and increase website traffic and sales.

“It is DollarDays’ dedication to help small businesses grow, as well as helping nonprofits stretch their dollars, that propelled us into becoming a finalist,” said Marc Joseph, CEO & President at DollarDays. “We are thrilled to be a recognized among such large players in e-commerce, like Amazon, The Home Depot, Nordstrom and Wayfair. It shows our continued efforts to expand our reach through online marketing channels and social media is really making a difference. I want to thank the entire DollarDays team for a job well done.”

The B2B E-Commerce Marketer of the Year award is one of 13 awards Internet Retailer will present to recipients of the inaugural Internet Retailer Excellence Awards on June 8, 2016, in Chicago during the Internet Retailer Conference and Exhibition, the world’s largest e-commerce event.

About DollarDays
Founded in 2001, DollarDays is the leading supplier of wholesale goods for nonprofits, businesses and betterment organizations. By sourcing affordable products, backed by exceptional service and meaningful community engagement, we strive to inspire and empower our customers to accomplish their missions to improve the lives of people around the world. Recognized as the City of Phoenix Mayor’s Office “2018 Product Exporter of the Year” and Internet Retailer Magazine’s “B2B E-commerce Marketer of the Year” for 2016 and 2017, DollarDays is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. For more information, visit www.dollardays.com.

U.S. Import Costs Increase in March

The U.S. Labor Department reports that prices of imported goods rose in March by 0.2%, after economists had predicted an increase of 1.0% from February. Despite a lower-than-expected result, this is the first time since June 2015 that import prices posted a monthly gain. It follows a downwardly revised drop of 0.4% in February 2016.

Import prices increased in large part as a result of rising petroleum costs, though import costs have been down by 6.2% since March 2015, the smallest gain since December 2014. Consistently weak import prices, while helping to hold inflation below the Federal Reserve’s target of 2%, also point to continuing strain from anemic global growth. Meanwhile, prices on imported petroleum remain 39.5% lower than this time last year, while prices on exported oil were flat last month after declining 0.5% in February.

A gradual oil price rebound is also slowly increasing inflation pressure in the United States, which has been kept in check recently by low petroleum costs and the resulting decreases in import prices. While exported oil prices remain low, they appear to be steadying. In March, costs of imported oil increased by 6.5%, the first increase since June 2015, after falling 6.2% in February.

If the cost of imports continues to increase, industry companies may need to plan for future price adjustments on products from overseas. “Most importers, wholesalers and distributors can absorb a 1% increase in the cost of goods, but beyond that, it creates pressure to begin raising prices,” said Marc Joseph, CEO and president of DollarDays (asi/50287) in Scottsdale, Ariz. “Because these increases affect all importers, companies across the board will be forced to raise prices, so any short-term gain a buyer may have with one company lagging on a price increase will be short-lived. We should all start to budget for prices to go up over the next 18 months.”

U.S. import prices also increased because of a strong dollar, which gained approximately 20% against the U.S.’s primary trading partners from June 2014 through December 2015.

“We haven’t seen any drastic price increases from our overseas vendors simply because we asked them not to increase any prices during the year,” said Randy Chen, president of Impex International Inc., a New Jersey-based firm that provides direct import services and U.S.-based warehousing of imports for more than 100 industry suppliers. Chen cited both rising oil prices and the current exchange rate as reasons for the increase in import costs. “However, we’re always evaluating other suppliers that can provide same or better pricing just to put some pressure on our existing ones.”

Through its recent acquisition of Jetline (asi/63344), top-40 supplier Prime Line (asi/79530) has been able to shield clients from many price increases due to rising import costs. “We’ve able to mitigate it and even lower prices to distributors, because we have combined the buying power we now have with Jetline and buy even better,” said Jeff Lederer, CEO of Prime Line. “So while there might be an increase, distributors benefit by buying from our combined lines.”

Original article here: https://www.asicentral.com/news/newsletters/promogram/april-2016/us-import-costs-increase-in-march/

Internet Retailer Announces the Finalists for the 2016 Internet Retailer Excellence Awards

Internet Retailer, the world’s leading publisher of strategic e-commerce business intelligence, today announced the finalists for the 13 categories of the second-annual Internet Retailer Excellence Awards. The awards recognize the outstanding achievements made by innovative online retailers and business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce companies in the past year. Internet Retailer will announce the winners at the Excellence Awards dinner banquet held at the Hyatt Regency McCormick Place hotel on June 8, 2016, as the Internet Retailer Conference & Exhibition convenes for its 12th straight year. Internet Retailer serves as the official media sponsor of IRCE, which will occur at McCormick Place West in Chicago from June 7-10, 2016.

“I enthusiastically congratulate all 51 finalists for our second-annual 2016 Internet Retailer Excellence Awards,” says Jack Love, publisher of Internet Retailer. “Our goal is to highlight best practices that all online retailers and B2B e-commerce companies can learn from. We added three categories this year, and the greater number of awards will provide more knowledge to the industry and, thus, more ways for businesses that sell online to improve their operations. Given this slate of contenders, our job of picking the winners in each of the 13 categories will be extremely challenging.”

Determined by a team comprised of Internet Retailer senior editors and e-commerce industry experts, the finalists for each of the 13 Excellence Awards categories are as follows:

  • Emerging Retailer of the Year: Ipsy, Boxed, Green Chef, HF Global, Harry’s
  • E-Retail Growth Award: 123Stores.com, NakedWines.com, Saatva, Wayfair
  • Web Redesign of the Year: DJO Global/BetterBraces.com, Hickies, JackThreads.com, LeCreuset.com, OmahaSteaks.com
  • E-Retail Marketer of the Year: Dollar Shave Club, Wayfair, Yoox, Net-a-Porter
  • Best Marketing Video of the Year: Motorola Mobility, Net-a-Porter, Sears/Craftsman
  • Best Product Video of the Year: Cellular Outfitter, Music & Arts, Native Commerce, OFM, Thos. Baker
  • B2B E-Commerce Marketer of the Year: Cenveo, DollarDays, Edmund Optics
  • B2B E-Commerce Website Redesign of the Year: CivicSolar, Ferguson, Sustainable Supply, W.W. Grainger
  • B2B E-Commerce Player of the Year: CDW, Global Industrial (subsidiary of Systemax), MSC Industrial Supply, Premier Farnell
  • Mobile Commerce Award: The Home Depot, Netshoes.com, Revolve Clothing, Sephora
  • Global E-Retailer of the Year: Amazon.com, Huawei Technologies, Uniqlo
  • Omni-channel Retailer of the Year: Batteries Plus Bulbs, The Neiman Marcus Group, Nordstrom, Target
  • Internet Retailer of the Year: Amazon.com, Etsy, Nike, Nordstrom, Wayfair

“We were pleased to receive hundreds of nominations for our 13 categories of Internet Retailer Excellence Awards,” says Kurt Peters, executive editor of Internet Retailer. “The broad range of retailers and high quality of all nominations made choosing finalists difficult but ensured that when we announce the winners on June 8 at IRCE, we will be recognizing the leaders of the industry.”

For more information about the 2016 IR Awards event, please visit awards.internetretailer.com.

Original article here:
https://www.digitalcommerce360.com/2016/03/29/msc-industrial-cdw-and-grainger-named-finalists-b2b-awards/