Marketing made easy

Marketing made easy

Put us to work and get results !

It makes sense for most company’s in today market to create branding on the social media platforms, companies need a social media manager who can help grow your business. We use a 8 step plan and well developed tools to execute and to get you there, on time.

1. Research & Planning
2. Analytics & Reporting
3. Design & Photo Editing
4. Writing & Editing
5. Video Creation
6. Paid Social Basics
7. Customer Service
8. SEO & SEM

 

Understanding the link between search engine optimization (SEO) and social media reach can be a bit confusing. Google suggests that social signals do not overtly affect your SEO rankings, but the full picture is more complicated.

Content that has a high social reach and gets lots of shares, likes, and comments is likely going to get similar engagement metrics that will be read by Google’s algorithm and positively impact your rankings. This is a correlation rather than a causation, so while you don’t want to build your social media plan around SEO, it’s a good idea to be aware of the common mistakes that social media managers often make.

Luckily, there are some great SEO tools out there. LSI Graph will identify relevant keywords and phrases according to what’s been searched on Google along with your primary keyword. This comes in handy if you’re looking for related topics to write about.

But, if you feel overwhelmed by the intricacies of SEO, remember that it’s all about creating great content that people will like and share.

 

UI/UX designer

The design is a milestone which sets the direction for the whole project. You will encounter at least two of its numerous types — user interface and user experience design. As a rule, web development teams comprise one designer who takes over both these roles.

At first, a UI/UX designer analyzes the project requirements along with its target audience to see the complete picture. Such approach lets him/her identify the difficulties users are faced with and effectively solve them through design. With this in mind, the designer creates a wireframe which is a schematic placement of elements on the website.

In some cases, the designer resorts to user stories which help to stay focused and keep in mind the project’s objectives all the time. Put simply, a user story describes what a user expects to accomplish by using one or another digital product. Here is a plain template: “As a user, I want to log out”. Such stories are quite specific, so it takes a lot of them to cover different use cases.

That’s where the user experience design part ends up and the designer can jump to the interface design.