Kicking Off the New Year: 7 Foolproof Ways to Increase Your Market Presence and Build Your Business
By Wendy Montes de Oca
“Make visible what, without you, might perhaps never have been seen.” - Robert Bresson
Whether you’re talking about the articles you include in your e-zine
or about your sales message, one thing is certain: Content is king. The
written word has the power to educate and inform… as well as create buzz
about your website, product, or service. That’s why one of my jobs here
at Early to Rise [has since left ETR and started her successful consulting firm, Precision Marketing and Media, LLC] is to circulate our e-zine articles through multiple
delivery channels. Reaching potential subscribers this way helps us
increase our readership and, ultimately, our revenues.
ETR’s publisher MaryEllen Tribby and I are firm believers in
leveraging our marketing message too. By circulating it in multiple
channels – online, e-mail, print, direct mail, and so forth – we are
able to touch our prospects through whatever medium they prefer. And for
those who like to receive their information through more than one
medium, our message is re-enforced every time they see it in another
channel.
I strongly encourage you to take this multi-channel marketing
approach with your own online business. Here are seven of the best and
most cost-effective channels to include in your marketing plan:
1. Paid Search Ads (Pay-Per-Click)
Google and Yahoo are the Titans of the paid-search ad world, with
nearly 70 percent of market share. But there are other search engines
that have a loyal following, such as MSN.com (with 16 percent market
share), AOL.com (with 9.6 percent), Ask.com (5.1 percent), Infospace.com
(1.1 percent), and Lycos.com (0.9 percent).
Pay-per-click (PPC) ads with any of these search engines is a
cost-effective way to target prospects looking for your specific product
and get broad exposure. You create a text ad, then bid on keywords (the
words or phrases your target audience will be searching for) to
determine your ad’s placement.
PPC paid search ads are perfect for acquiring new customers. That’s
because leads that come in this way are searching specifically for your
information (via targeted keywords). This makes them highly qualified
prospects. For ETR’s sister publication, Total Health Breakthroughs [since discontinued], PPC represents more than 30 percent of its online marketing mix.
2. Organic Search Results (Search Engine Marketing)
Search engine marketing (SEM) has a nominal cost. Annual fees with
search engine networks or directories typically range from $25 to $95
per year.
Some consumers give organic search results more “credibility” than
paid search ads. And because they “trust” the results of an organic
search more, they are more likely to click on an organic link. A recent
survey by Jupiter Research illustrated that 80 percent of Web users seek
organic search results. Their rationale is that organic results are
un-biased. The marketer didn’t pay for that ad space. So the link’s
appearance in the search results is based purely on various search
algorithms and Web crawlers.
Your goal should be to balance your online presence with both paid
ads and organic search results. Alexis Siemon, ETR’s Search Engine
Marketing Specialist [ – , optimizes our efforts by (among other things)
making sure we have keywords in all the right places. That includes our title tags, URLs, and inside the ETR articles themselves.
3. Banner Ads
Running banner ads on other websites can be another cost-effective
part of your online marketing mix. The pricing model for this is
typically CPM – a specified price for every 1,000 impressions/views you
receive (usually between $3 and $10).
Your media budget for banner ads will vary by:
4. Reciprocal Ad Swaps
Some of your best resources will be your fellow publishers. This
channel often gets overlooked by marketers who don’t give it the respect
it deserves. In the work I do for ETR and Total Health Breakthroughs,
I spend a good portion of my time researching publishers and websites
in our industry. I look for relevant connections between their
publications (print and online) and ours.
Let’s say I come across an e-letter about marketing that has a list
of readers similar in size to ETR’s. Since many of ETR’s subscribers are
interested in marketing, they might be interested in a product offered
by that marketing e-letter. And that publisher’s subscribers might be
interested in one of ETR’s marketing products.
Swapping ads will save you money on lead-generation initiatives.
Since you won’t be paying for access to the other publisher’s list of
subscribers, you can get new customers for free. The only “cost” is
allowing the other publisher to access your own list. It’s a win-win
situation. This technique also opens the door to potential joint-venture opportunities.
5. Co-Registration
Marketing expert Andrew Palmer defines co-registration – or “co-reg” –
as “the practice of referring leads, subscriptions, or memberships in
conjunction with another registration process.”
Co-reg ads use a CPL (cost per lead) payment model. You pay for the
leads you capture. Your text ad and a small image of your publication
appear on a webpage on another publisher’s website after a
primary transaction occurs. Your ad shares the page with other
publishers looking to build their own e-mail lists with free
subscriptions to their e-letters or free e-reports.
To make this work, I’ve found that you need to send special
introductory “bonding” e-mails to the people who sign up for your
newsletter before they get added to the general circulation. This helps
them remember that they signed up for your e-letter. (So when it shows
up in their inbox they won’t think it’s spam.) And it helps increase the
potential that those subscribers will convert to paying customers.
6. Direct Mail
Direct mail is still a consumer favorite – and another good way to
get your sales message out. It can be especially effective used in
concert with another effort, such as an e-mail campaign. A recent survey
published in DM News indicated that 70 percent of respondents preferred receiving unsolicited correspondence via mail vs. e-mail.
As with any marketing medium, though, you can end up paying a lot.
The most costly direct-mail packages are magalogs and tabloids
(four-color mailers that look like magazines). However, 6 x 9 postcards,
tri-fold self-mailers, and simple sales letters are three low-cost ways
of taking advantage of this channel.
Although 100 percent ROI (return on investment) is what you should
aim for, many direct mailers are content with 80 percent. This lower
figure takes into consideration the lifetime value of the names that
come in from this channel, because they are typically reliable buyers in
the future.
7. Print ads
This is another channel that’s gets a raw deal. One reason is because
it can be costly. To place an ad in a high-circulation magazine or
newspaper, you could shell out serious money. But you don’t need a big
budget to take advantage of print ads. If you don’t have deep pockets,
consider targeted newspapers and periodicals.
Let’s say you’re selling an investment report. Try using the Internet
to research the wealthiest cities in America. Once you get that list,
look online for local newspapers in those communities. These smaller
newspapers hit your target audience… and offer a much cheaper ad rate
than some of the larger, broad-circulation publications. You end up
getting quality rather than quantity.
I once paid for an ad in a local newspaper in Aspen, CO that had a
flat rate of less than $500. My ROI on this effort turned out to be more
than 1,000 percent. How’s that for a positive response rate!
The seven marketing channels I’ve just described can help you reach
more customers… and eventually add dollar signs to your bottom line. So
start the New Year off with a marketing bang. By leveraging the seven
channels of multi-channel marketing, I’m confident you will be amazed by
the results.
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This article appears courtesy of Early to Rise [Issue #2249, 01-11-08], the Internet's most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.
“Make visible what, without you, might perhaps never have been seen.” - Robert Bresson
- website
- ad unit size/type (300 x 250 typically performs best)
- location on website (home page, inside pages)
- whether the ad is targeted to a specific page or is on every page of the site
- the time of year the ad is running
__________________________________________________
This article appears courtesy of Early to Rise [Issue #2249, 01-11-08], the Internet's most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.
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