Back To The Basics

Brands need customers and customers need attention. Vijay, who did an internship cum summer job with a digital network publisher in Navi Mumbai when he was just 18, understood this line to be the backbone of building a stronger brand affinity for new and existing customers. He also happens to be doing his Diploma in Information Technology from a college in Navi Mumbai and stood first in his college in the recently concluded board exams. 

 

“Most loyalty programs are siloed and have limited customer engagement with zero personalisation to brands”

Vijay Zambare

Founder

 

“I used to spend a lot of time on my laptop reading up on various technology stacks and their benefits. One of the key concepts that intrigued me was the concept of zero platform risk. The reason it caught my attention was the fact that I did not have to purchase expensive server infrastructure to create and run a program. I had zero money and here was a zero platform cost option. Bring it on.”

 

Vijay also realised that the problems being faced by both online and offline businesses during the pandemic could only be solved by building a stronger consumer affinity program where it is not only important to capture customer data at different points of their purchasing journey and help or provide them with not just the usual points based reward system but also give them a proactive information platform which the customer can use to redeem in a variety of different ways. 

An unrevealed core concept, which Vijay says will be a game changer, is what makes his proposition even sweeter. 

Plan Your Content

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If you’re considering adding a blog to your site, you’ll want to have a plan beforehand. Planning your blog will help your subject matter remain consistent over time. It’ll also help you determine whether or not there’s enough material to maintain a steady stream of posts.

One pitfall many new bloggers run into is starting a blog that isn’t posted to frequently enough. A shortage of recent posts can give your visitors a bad impression of your business. One may think “I wonder if they’re still in business” or “they may want to hire a writer.”

A blog, like any other customer facing aspect of your business, communicates your brand. If it isn’t maintained and given proper attention, people will notice. Post regularly and keep your content fresh. Give your audience a reason to visit often.

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Categories and Tags

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If you write about a variety of subjects, categories can help your readers find the posts that are most relevant to them. For instance, if you run a consulting business, you may want some of your posts to reflect work you’ve done with previous clients, while having other posts act as informational resources. In this particular case, you can set up 2 categories: one labeled Projects and another labeled Resources. You’d then place your posts in their respective categories.

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Pages vs. Posts

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If you’re new to WordPress you may be wondering what’s the big deal behind Pages and Posts. At first glance they appear to be one and the same: if you were to create either a new page or a new post you’d be presented with nearly identical interfaces and in many cases the public appearance of pages and posts will look the same.

Don’t let this fool you. There’s a very fundamental difference between the two and that difference is what makes CMSs, like WordPress, great platforms for integrating blogs with traditional websites.

Pages

Think about the kind of pages that make up a typical website. Most often you’ll see pages like “Home”, “About Us”, “Services”, “Contact Us”, etc. Within WordPress these are often treated as Pages; documents that have no particular regard for the time they were posted.

For example, when you visit the “About Us” page of your favorite company’s website you don’t expect the content to be very different from what was available there a week ago.

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