Marketing Your Business Online
By David Malan
How can a business that is already successful in reaching their local market
extend their marketing reach online? The good news is that the traditional
offline marketing that has always worked so well will still work at least as
effectively to promote your online presence. The other side of the coin is
that to promote your business online, the old traditions need some updating
to keep up with online marketing best practices.
Any business should already have a marketing plan and objectives from their offline initiatives, so let's jump straight into the technology aspects of online marketing. I generally look at the following things first, because they can be done at very low or no initial cost, and also because subsequent specialist marketing won't be as successful without these things in place. Of course there is a huge amount more to online marketing, the extent of which could easily be justified as a full-time university course. This is the pre-school notes, to help get your site to a starting point on a low budget if you can't quite afford to be calling in the big guns to market your site for you professionally just yet.
1. Optimize your site.
This is always the place to start, because the effectiveness of everything which
follows is often dependent on this being done up front. When I say this, I include
great content and intuitive navigation as the basis for everything. Only once your
site has been optimized for intelligent visitors should you tweak it for search
engines, but never at the expense of the former. Search engines look at things like
keyword density and how specifically a page matches a specific search term. Of course
this is extremely over simplistic, but nevertheless a worthwhile starting point.
By identifying 10-20 key terms you would like search engines to pick up on, and
creating specialised pages with relevant information which utilises those terms
in the right way, you will start getting much better results once your site has
been indexed.
You will find that it is best to use specialised keyword phrases, for example "precision-engineered
bolts" is likely to get better placement than a generic term like "engineering parts".
You should also work to create a single page for every key phrase you want picked
up on, and include the key phrase in the title, meta tags and use all the words
in the body of the page at a high density relative to other words. You should also
preferably include the key phrase in the page title, as well as the URL of the page,
for example, http://www.mysite.com/precision_engineered_bolts/. Each page should
use a different title, specifically based on the key phrase utilised in that page's
content.
2. Linking and indexing.
The next step is to get search engines to start to notice and index your site. Google,
for example, won't even look at your site until it has been linked to by at least
one other indexed site. Paid inclusion (paying the search engines to index your
site on a priority schedule) can be appropriate at this phase if you need to urgently
accelerate this process, however it is not always necessary.
Especially useful at this stage can be participating in forums serving your primary
target market. This has the dual benefit of creating awareness of your business
within communities you would like to reach, and at the same time can help create
incoming links to your site, something that search engines pay particular attention
to. Ensure that your site details are included as a link in the footer of your posts.
Never use a forum to spam members or submit unsolicited advertising posts -- that
just has the opposite effect of destroying your business' credibility. Some forums
have a separate advertising section in which it may be appropriate to professionally
post information about your services and products. Always make sure that your presence
represents a valuable contribution to the community. Stay on topic and be professional,
helpful and constructive.
Search engines take many factors into consideration when ranking a site. New sites,
for example, don't initially fare well, however you will find they will allocate
some credibility weighting to you the longer your site is up and running. The biggest
factor though, external to the site itself, is the number of inbound (preferably
non-reciprocal) links from other sites, and the context and wording of the referring
link, as well as the ranking of the referring page, and referring site. The popularity
of those sites plays a big role, as well as how high up in the site's own hierarchy
the link is. By way of example, a link from www.news.com.au counts for much more
than a link from a very deeply embedded page.
3. Implement online marketing partnerships with high-profile online businesses.
This is where you can really benefit if implemented successfully. When I was previously
running the e-commerce business unit for a large company, rather than pay high-traffic
websites to advertise on their sites, which can be very much untargeted, we offered
them a percentage of sales. In other words, we provided them with the banners to
promote the service, and implemented simple tracking of where our visitors were
coming from, and then paid a percentage of the total revenue to the referrer. This
resulted in very low marketing costs to us, and the referring sites started placing
more and more emphasis on their side to ensure that we got top placement whenever
they were low on paid inventory.
Another effective medium-term strategy is to provide content of value to sites which
serve your target market. They benefit from your topical content, you benefit from
the exposure and links.
4. Dabble in paid keyword advertising.
Only at this point should you actually be starting to pay for online advertising.
These forms of advertising, however, allow you to specifically target certain people,
which means you get a much better return on investment than simply advertising to
everyone. This can take some trial and error to find what works best, but the amount
you pay should be less than the amount of business you generate, and should normally
include full measurement and reports on a reasonably regular basis, preferably online.
For this purpose, I often suggest starting with Google. They are by far the most
popular search engine globally, they have a very good reputation, provide reporting
online, and are probably the most likely to produce results initially. Yahoo and
MSN also have excellent paid link systems, and they keep getting better all the
time. The latest offerings from all three are now also starting to allow targeting
to specific demographics, a trend that is likely to become the preferred way to
target online audiences once the capabilities for this type of targeting matures.
5. Involve an internet marketing specialist.
At this point, you should be starting to see some results, and be in a good position
to ask some intelligent questions. Preferably deal only with a business that has
a good reputation (ask for client contact details so you can find out how effective
they are), and has preferably has been around for at least a few years. They should
also provide very detailed reports (ask for examples of these up front), and be
able to explain in detail how they go about promoting your site, on which sites
they do so, the number of views and clickthroughs per site per day, and how effective
each promotion was relative to the next. They should also meet with you at least
once a month to review successes and failures and involve you in the decision-making
process of where next to promote your business. At least monthly, you should be
in a position to evaluate your cost per sale for various promotions, and to change
your focus accordingly.
Especially be wary of businesses who claim unrealistically quick results, or base
their business mainly only on search engine submission, or use deceptive practices
to try and "trick" search engines into ranking you higher. These usually at best
produce no value, and can in some cases lead to your site being removed or ranked
very low by search engines.
So in closing, what’s the best advice I can muster up on this topic? Make a sincere
effort to understand the Internet and the sheer power and opportunity it brings
to your business. Create a plan of attack and get in the game. Play on the grandest
court available today, the Internet!
David Malan is an internet and e-commerce expert with over ten years experience
in designing and developing enterprise grade online solutions for business. He owns
and runs RealmSurfer Consulting, based in Perth, Western Australia:
web design Perth
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