There are an infinite number of tools out there today to help a marketer out. Here are my favs at the moment.
1. canva.com
Cost: free (pay for certain elements)
My love for canva.com might be excessive. I’m not a graphic designer and starting from scratch in a program like Photoshop is difficult for my skill level. I’m proficient with PowerPoint but find when I’ve tried to use it as a design tool (ghastly, I know) the end result looks a bit Microsoft-y. Canva is the bridge for me.
Simply put, it’s an online tool to do design work. What’s magical about it is the pre-built templates stock images for everything from slide decks to Instagram posts. My output looks above average for a non-designer and it’s incredibly easy to use. It’s a free tool. You just pay for images and some templates. There are a TON of free ones but those you do pay for usually cost $1. The downside is that only gets you 24 hours of access. Another downside is I’m not able to copy and paste from past projects nor set up branded color schemes that auto apply. Still, the amazing far outweighs the negatives. I use it weekly, sometimes daily.
Cost: free to $179/mth
A common theme to this post is that I’m not a designer so I need tools to help me look like one. Instapage is a landing page building and hosting product. Instapage has really been a powerful tool that, again, is incredibly easy to use. I’ve built several landing pages by customizing their templates. What stands out to me is how easy it is to customize templates. I’ve used Pardot’s tool for this in the past and I would use Instapage over that any day. Of course the negative is everything else Pardot does (segmentation, tracking, CRM integration) is absent from Instapage. But it’s a great tool if you’re getting started and lack the budget for marketing automation.
Setting up our own url like go.WEBSITE.com so the page doesn’t look spammy was simple. Done once and applies to all of our landing pages.
Forms are intuitive and easy to customize. An added bonus is that I can push completed forms to Constant Contact (not my fav) which through Cazoomi is being synced with Microsoft Dynamics CRM. This is a cumbersome process, no doubt, but no reflection on Instapage – just what life looks like without a marketing automation solution.
Cost: free
When I started with slideshare I thought it was just a tool where the cool kids were posting their presentation slides. But I’m a numbers girl and this has been a content distribution channel that has really paid off for me both in my personal brandingg and my 9-5 role.
I’ve posted a few different presentations and check daily, sometimes hourly, on the views. The analytics and reporting show you views by day, social shares, downloads, email shares and more. Social sharing is very simple for the end-user which seems to encourage actual sharing. These insights are really powerful in understanding what content resonates with my audience.
If this is a channel you explore, I recommend creating slides for slideshare explicitly. When I develop slides for a live presentation, I reduce text as much as possible. This doesn’t work in slideshare because there is no one speaking to the slides. The one exception… if you give a presentation and people who attended ask for your deck send it via slideshare instead of the file directly via email. This gives you (1) an opportunity show them more of your content (2) tracking on engagement of that deck.

