"How and Where to Advertise Your Small Business Online"
OK, I'll admit it, I'm a bit of a cheapskate when it comes to marketing. I let
my free ebooks, articles and newsletter do most of my marketing work.
But I also realize that in order to succeed in business, you must spend SOME
money advertising. And I've been relearning this lesson recently.
Today I'd like to share with you some of my own recent results, so you'll know
exactly how and where you should get started advertising online.
For starters, keep your wallet securely in your pocket. There are three things
you must do BEFORE spending ad bucks online. And here they are...
1. Get a handle on how well your site does its selling.
Figuring out how good a job your site does selling is simple. Just look at
your stats and do a little math. You are after just one number... how much a
website visitor is worth to you. Or more simply, how much you should PAY for
a visitor.
To figure this out you need to first find out how many visitors it takes you
to get a sale. If you get 1000 visitors a week and 10 sales in that same week,
then your visitor to sales ratio is 100-1. If you average 20 sales from those
1000 visitors, you are closing one sale for every 50 visitors. Once you know
your own number, you will be able to determine approximately how much a visitor
is worth to you. You simply take it one step further...
Let's say you close 1 sale in every 50 visitors and your average sale is $50.
Simple math tells you that you could pay up to a dollar per visitor and break
even. So a good goal would be to pay LESS THAN a buck per visitor. Any ad buy
that averages out to less than a dollar per visitor should be profitable, provided
the traffic is targeted. If you aim to spend fifty cents per visitor you can
double your investment every time you advertise.
Of course there are lots of variables. Things like opt-in email members you
may receive from an ad buy and the repeat visitors that your list generates.
But you get the idea. Until you know the above numbers for your site, you cannot
spend money wisely on advertising.
Once you have a handle on how much a visitor is worth to you, the next step
you must take before your first ad buy is...
2. Set up your email address capture strategy.
If your site is closing one sale for every 50 visitors, you may be satisfied.
But if you are not offering a way for the other 49 visitors to "stay in
the loop" you are making a huge mistake.
And it is simple to keep them from getting away. Just offer them something
of value in exchange for their contact information. An example of one way to
do this is offering a free gift at your site and getting their name and email
address when they request it. Your gift can be a free ebook, an email course
or anything else your visitors would want.
You can get as many as 20% of your visitors to leave their contact info if
you do it right. That's a lot of email addresses when you start advertising
and getting lots of traffic.
But what do you do with the addresses?
You treat them like gold.
Regularly publish an email newsletter to your growing list of addresses. Contact
them and offer your expertise. Give them more free, valuable information related
to what they requested originally. Make them feel special and grow a community.
This is how long-term profits are made online.
Once you have tackled the two items above, there is one last step before you
actually spend money on advertising...
3. Make sure you have a way to measure your results once your advertising starts.
I do this simply by copying my main entry page and using the new URL in the
ad. When I check the stats my web host emails me I can easily see how many visitors
came through that URL. This is just ONE way to track traffic. There are TONS
more. But you get the idea. You need some way to measure the results of your
advertising or you are wasting your money.
OK, once you have tackled the three items above, you're all set up to do some
ad buys.
I have tried many strategies online and here's the straight scoop on what works
and what doesn't. I've ranked nine online advertising strategies as follows...
Poor: Don't waste your time.
Fair: Worth a try at least once or twice.
Good: A solid way to spend ad dollars. Excellent: Should be a regular staple
in any online marketing budget.
OK, here they are...
1. FFA submissions (Free for all links pages)
You know, those interfaces that say "submit to 50,000 websites for a few
bucks. Well, save your few bucks. FFA's had their time in the sun. They worked
great when they were first introduced. Now they are not worth a dime. Heck,
even if you can do a free submission it's probably not worth your time. The
last three tests I ran submitted my URL to nearly a half a million sites. I
got four visitors. 'Nuf said.
Rating: Poor
2. Bulk email
Sure, you CAN get website traffic using bulk email. You can do it yourself
or hire a company to hide behind. But the fact is, you risk your business reputation
and you'll anger a ton of folks. Your domain will end up blocked by many ISPs
and could even get sued. Unsolicited bulk email is not worth the trouble.
Rating: Poor
3. Safe lists
This is a twist on opt-in email marketing where you pay for the privilege of
being able to send email to a list of other marketers who have done the same.
While I have not tried this personally I can comment on it simply because lots
of my subscribers have tried it. And I have not heard one good thing about it
other than from people reselling it. The folks that have used it have found
that while safe list "members" have agreed to be on the safe lists,
most never actually read messages or buy anything.
Rating: Poor
4. Banner Advertising
This is an "old school" advertising strategy that I have been testing
again now that prices are lower. And early indications are that there is a solid
reason for the still-declining prices of banner advertising. My own click-through
rates been less that 1% so far, with a few exceptions. But I do have some decent
size banner ad runs planned for the coming months at some busy, targeted sites.
Time will tell if I'll continue with this strategy. If you DO want to try banner
advertising, ask the site you plan to advertise at what the average click-through
rates are and what banners perform best. That may get you up to two or three
percent. If that will take you into profit, give it a whirl. But most small
and home businesses may be better served using one of the five advertising methods
remaining.
Rating: Fair
5. Opt-in list rental
There are plenty of companies that will rent you email addresses that have
opted in to receive commercial email. And if the recipients are not being paid
to read the messages, that is they are genuinely interested in the offers they
signed up to receive, this strategy can be profitable. The problem is you'll
pay from ten to twenty cents per address and mailing to a list large enough
to get results from can be quite expensive. But if your budget can handle it,
you can generate some great trageted traffic.
Rating: Good
6. Paid Search Engines Submissions
While I highly suggest submitting to all the major search engines that are
still free (AltaVista, Lycos, Google, HotBot, DMOZ and Direct Hit) this article
is about "paying" for advertising. And there are two paid search engine
services I have had very good luck with...
a. Inktomi's Search/Submit at $30 a year, which gets your URL into AOL, iWon,
MSN and the Looksmart directory within 48 hours.
b. Yahoo! Business Express and sponsored site listings. The business express
service costs $199 for non-adult sites, and gets you Yahoo! consideration. While
$199 is a little pricey for some small business owners, a good listing at Yahoo!
brings quite a bit of extra traffic. Once you are listed, consider taking advantage
of the "sponsored site" offering for an additional monthly fee. I
am sampling this currently and it paid for itself within the first few weeks.
My results may decline as more sites are added into the sponsored sites area
but I'll keep an eye on things.
Rating: Good
7. Pay per click search engines
This advertising model offers a way for you to bid on search terms and pay
only when someone clicks through to your site. I've been advertising with www.goto.com
and findwhat.com using this method and have had decent results. It's easy to
control costs and your visitors are targeted precisely.
If you are not in a super-competitive keyword arena you can do well with pay
per click engines. For example, if you sell web hosting, good luck getting traffic
for less than a few bucks a click. But if you have a smaller niche, this strategy
represents a great opportunity and is worth trying.
And if you DO find that this model works well for you, more than 75 additional
"Pay per Click" search engines can be found at Alan Gardyne's super-duper
directory...
http://www.payperclicksearchengines.com
Rating: Good
8. Personalized Email Series
Here's one that many marketers don't talk about much. It's actually a secret
weapon among many of the big name marketers. You offer a freebie at your site
and when your visitors claim it you are not only added to your opt-in list they
are added to a series of personalized follow-up messages that you pre-program.
If you write a powerful and effective series this marketing strategy can be
one of your top sales producers.
Rating: Excellent
9. Ezine Advertising
Still the one. Some people think I recommend ezine advertising because I have
an ezine and I'm trying to sell my own ad space. On the contrary, I've been
trying NOT to sell my ad space for the last few years. That's why my own rates
are so high! I can run my own offers or affiliate offers and make much more
than I can selling the ad space. Many other ezine editors are finding the same
thing. While this has resulted in rising ezine ad costs over the last few years,
one fact remains... ezine advertising is still one of the most effective ways
to get targeted traffic -- cheap. Just visit an ezine directory and search for
ezines in your niche market. Subscribe to a bunch and start reading them. Look
for larger circulation ezines that have a good following. If you like the content
then the thousands of other readers probably do too. Place an ad and you'll
make a profit, nearly every time. Top sponsorships work best if you can swing
it.
Rating: Excellent
About the Author:
Article by Jim Daniels of http://www.bizweb2000.com If you're interested in
starting or growing a business on the Internet, Jim's sites will help you save
time and money. He's been making a living online since 1996 and knows the ropes.
Visit Jim and get your free help! |