"The Sheep, The Shepard and an Internet Marketing Fleece-Job"
You have a site that's just returning on investment; nothing more or perhaps a
lot less. You believe in professional services as they're the experts. You have
little knowledge in their field, nor the time and resources for private research
or independent consult.
Perhaps its Internet promotion and advertising this time round and your parting
with $1000's a month for ho hum returns on your Web site investment.
BANNERS BABY!! Your net marketing agent says over and over... "We're going
to expand the banner campaign." When this advice hits your desk, another
$500 a month gets released to the professional coffers.
Next week, how are those sales stats going?
Some Internet promotion 'professional' may be fleecing you $1000's a month
in worthless banner advertising. Fortunately for you, this expenditure imbalance
is exposed with the help of a text log on your Web site's server, raw website
statistics. GOLD BABY!!
I recently submitted a proposal to a new client for, you guessed it, website
promotion and advertising. The first request to the client was for their website
stat logs, secondly their tentative figures on banner and other forms of advertising
on the Internet.
Web site stat logs are black gold. Each hit to your site is recorded by the
Web server in a text file. Much information about those individual hits is recorded
too; among that array are all your hit 'Referrers'. A referrer is the site page
from which a link was used to land on one of your Web site pages.
For my new client, I found a big, fat gold nugget worth $4477.05 in these web
stats. The client's banner campaign was restricted to one site, one domain,
one referrer. There was no evidence of an acceptable conversion to sales by
visitors from this site. Unique visits from these banners also generated .004%
of total traffic.
This client released equal money to that of banners for a major search engine
campaign. Without tallying up all the miscellaneous referrals from 3rd party
sites that used the same search engine and ads, 57% of total unique traffic
was being referred by the major search engine.
The search engine campaign bought in 150 visitors for every 1 from banners.
Please keep in mind here that banner visitors were also not notable sales converts
either. The cash spent on banners in this case is nothing more than gold leaf
dunny paper.
The "Sponsored Links" you see next to your favourite search engine's
results are usually priced by the key terms used for your search. A successful
bid on the ad's account for those terms determines the cost of a click through
to the ad's destination site. After a quick enquiry using one such ad account,
I found a low bidding term which related to the client's needs and delivered
30% more visitors. All this for the princely sum of $22.95.
In other words, the client could have the $4500.00 banner visits delivered
for $22.95. For how many years has this banner campaign been going?
Scenarios such as this indicate one of 2 things; your getting fleeced or gross
negligence on your trusted professional's behalf. Black gold is not Texas Tea
these days. It's also not newspaper classified ink. Black gold is currently
your Web site statistics logs.
Always ask your prospective advertising agency or promotion agent whether they
can back up campaign decisions with statistics. Assign someone within your company
the task of analysing site statistics against ad methods. If there is nobody
suitable, then you could save $1000's by paying for an independent 3rd party
assessment of your Web site statistics logs.
About the Author:
Mark Senden is an Australian professional within the commercial art and display
service industry. His services are sub-contracted to media studios in Australia,
UK and USA. His services can be found via; Web Site Design and Promotion at
v2Media. |