Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Wendy McAvene 10 ways to promote your event

 

1. Start Marketing Early

Ideally, you should start your marketing plan about two months before your event. I have filled up events for advisors in two or three weeks, but it tends to be more stressful and disjointed. The best event marketing strategy is planned ahead of time with plenty of time to up the ante if you need more RSVPs as the big day gets closer.

2. Set a Schedule

I recommend at least three emails highlighting each event: Save the Date, Register Now, and Last Chance to RSVP! We see about 10% of our responses come after the “Save the Date” email, then about 50% from the “Register Now” email, and about 40% immediately following the “Last Chance” email. Sending in waves allows you to eliminate the last email if your event is full, or add another email to the end of the series if needed.

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3. Create an Online Registration Page

About 70% of our RSVPs come through the online registration pages we create, with the other 30% from either email RSVPs or phone calls. It’s critically important to have a registration page with the event title, a graphic, a short teaser featuring the benefits of attending, and the details. Even when we print and mail invitations, about 50% of those RVSPs come through the online registration page.

4. Design a Catchy Email Invite

Be sure the email invitation you send includes a compelling subject line, headline, graphic, teaser, and an easy-to-see RSVP button to allow people to register quickly. Cluttered or poorly designed emails can hurt your click-through and RSVP rate. Include photos from a past event so folks can remember how much fun they had last year or worry that they’ll miss out on the festivities. Highlighting any special guests or expert speakers helps pique interest. Here’s one example.

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5. Use a Facebook Event

Leverage your Facebook company page by creating a Facebook event. Then, invite your clients and prospects using the Facebook “Invite” feature. Guests can RSVP directly through Facebook and may invite their friends, depending on how your set up your event. Finally, boost your Facebook event to get more exposure to people in your area. You can even do a “Facebook Lookalike Campaign” to promote the post to people who are demographically similar to the people you invited. It’s fascinating and it works!

6. Promote on LinkedIn

Be sure to share the link to your event page on LinkedIn as both a publication, which will notify everyone in your network, and as an update to get more RSVPs. You can also send outbound messages to folks in your network inviting them to attend. We typically see a response rate of about 10% to these messages, so it’s worth your time to personally invite qualified prospects, key influencers, and referral partners.

7. Cross-Pollinate with Partners

Sharing the expenses and responsibilities for your event with a partner is a great way to decrease the cost and double the exposure. If you’re working together with another firm to host an event, make sure they are actively promoting it by email and on social media. Even if you’re hosting the event on your own, ask partners and referral sources to share your email invitation with their network. Cross promotion is important to increase your audience and get fresh prospects in the door.

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8. Consider Mailing a Paper Invite

For an important event that you aim to maximize, there’s no substitute for mailing a paper invitation. Emails can be skimmed and forgotten in a second, but an attractive paper invite that sits on a client’s desk or kitchen counter begs to be answered. Budget $2 per invite for printing and postage and expect a 15% to 30% RSVP rate.

9. Use a Calling Campaign

If you are serious about getting the max attendance for your event, one necessary evil is a calling campaign inviting your contacts and asking if they’d like to bring a friend. It’s time-consuming but effective, especially with older clients and prospects. As an add-on to our Event Marketing Package, we make outbound calls for $100 per 30 contacts.

10. Double Check Your Event Title

I worked with one advisor who really wanted to call his event “How working with top money managers can improve diversification, lower fees, and improve investment outcomes.” He had an amazing location and agenda lined up, but we were having a terrible time getting RSVPs. We changed the title to “Cocktails and Investment Secrets” and it was sold out in no time. If you’re struggling to market your event, take a look at your title and make sure it sounds interesting, beneficial, and fun.

Event marketing is a numbers game, and marketing your event is the same way. If you’d like to get 30 guests to attend, you should plan to start with an email list of about 300. On Facebook, we see 2-5% of invitees actually RSVP. On LinkedIn with a direct message, about 5-7% will RSVP. Paper invites and phone calls can double your response rate for a given segment. The easiest way to get more people to RSVP is to send to a larger audience, so get creative to gain exposure by email and on social media.


https://indigomarketingagency.com/ten-secrets-to-promoting-your-event/


Wendy McAvene Encouraging words for today

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Wendy McAvene Encouraging Quotes

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Friday, March 25, 2022

Wendy McAvene Best Air Fryer recipes

 Wendy McAvene best air fryer recipes


What To Cook In An Air Fryer

On first glance, you’re probably thinking, “Why do I need another $100 kitchen appliance that will take up a ton of countertop space?” And normally I’d tell you that you don’t. But this time, you kind of do. The air fryer can cook so many things well: chicken wingsmozzarella sticks, artichokes, Brussels sprouts, fried chicken, green beans, pigs in a blanket, and sweet potato fries. Anything that you’d normally put in a deep-fryer is fair game. But there are so many things that you wouldn’t think to deep fry, like shrimp scampi, toast, tacos, and turkey sandwiches, that you can cook in the air fryer.

Shopping For An Air Fryer

The marketplace is pretty crowded with air fryers at various price points, so how do you find the best one? Let me start with my favorites: The Instant Vortex is sold by the Instant Pot brand of appliances. It rings it at under $100 and has a six-quart capacity, which is ideal for large families and big-batch recipes. This one does take up a lot of space, so I’d only invest in it if you know you’re going to use it frequently and need to cook large portions. For something a bit smaller, I’d recommend the Ninja 4-Quart Air Fryer. It’s a bit more expensive than the Instant Vortex (it’s about $80), but it takes up less space, which is ideal for smaller families and cramped kitchens. It offers more customization options than other air fryers, which is nice if you like to manually control the cooking time and temperature.


Best Air Fryer Recipes

1. Pasta With Mascarpone Mushrooms

No, you're not cooking the pasta in the air fryer. But you are making the creamy mushroom sauce from start to finish in it. Winner, winner!

2. Shrimp Scampi

Lemony, garlicky shrimp cooks up extra quick in the air fryer—perfect over a bed of noodles.

3. Gochujang Chicken Wings

Sweet, spicy, and sticky, these wings star my favorite Korean chile paste, gochujang.

4. Indonesian-Style Chicken Wings

Chicken wings crisp up beautifully in the air fryer, and taste even better once tossed in kecap manis and sambal.

5. Korean-Style Beef Tacos

I like to use thinly sliced beef here, but you could also go for fatty pork shoulder. In any case, meat loves this marinade, which is punchy and umami-packed, perfect for taco night.

6. Chile-Cheese Toast

I grew up eating this toast as an afternoon snack. (It's an Indian thing.) And yes, the air fryer is great at toasting bread.

7. Crispy Brussels Sprouts With Garlic-Chile Butter

Who doesn't love crispy-crunchy Brussels sprouts?! (Crickets) Thought so. Pop them in the air fryer for an irresistibly snackable side. The garlic chile butter is a great touch (and the garlic can be roasted in a regular oven, FWIW), but you can eat these sprouts with just about any dipping sauce of your choosing.

8. Cheesy Potato & Broccoli Croquettes With Ranch Dipping Sauce

This recipe was made with a multi-cooker in mind, but there's no reason you can't steam the broccoli the old-fashioned way, then form the croquettes and stick them in the air fryer for maximum crispiness. While they're working, don't sleep on the zingy, herby ranch-inspired sauce.

9. Air Fryer Buffalo Cauliflower Tacos

Community member Foodlover 12 says of this recipe: "When I tried these, I could not beleive they were cauliflower. The air fryer gives them the most delightful light, crispy consistency that's better than any fried chicken."

Need we say any more? We think not.

10. Air Fryer Smoky Tempeh Sandwich

Tempeh can eat a little bitter if it's not prepared with care—luckily, this recipe is chock-full of the stuff (both tempeh and care). Pile smoky, crispy slices of the air-fried fermented soybean cakes onto your favorite grainy, seedy bread and dig in.