Two Worlds of Online Marketing


Once you've got even the spark of a notion to market online, let  that spark ignite thoughts of how you'll promote your site. Have  the insight to know this means thinking imaginatively about  two worlds.
 
 The first is the online world, where you'll think in terms of:
 * multiple links to other sites
 * banners leading to your site
 * search engines directing browsers to your site
 * postings on forums alerting onliners to your site
 * chat conferences heralding your site
 * writing articles for other sites in return for links
 * mentioning your site in your email signature
 * advertising online to entice people to your site
 * preparing an online version of your press kit
 and connecting with as many other online entities as possible,  all in a quest to make your site part of the online community,  an internet landmark to your prospects, a not-be-missed feature  of the web.
 
 The second world in which your imagination should run rampant  in a mission to achieve top-of-the-mind awareness of your site  is the offline world. Most of the population of the real world still  resides there. That's where they continue to get most of their  information -- for now. And that's where you've got to let them  know of your online site -- teeming with information that can shower  them with benefits -- for their business or their lives or both.
 
 Tout your site in your ads, on stationery, on your business cards,  on signs, on brochures, fliers, Yellow Pages ads, advertising  specialties, package, business forms, gift certificates, reprints  of PR articles, in your catalog, newsletter, and classified ads.  Mention it in your radio spots, on television.

More than one company now has a jingle centered on their website.  Never neglect to direct folks to your site in direct mail letters and  postcards, in all your faxes, almost anywhere your name appears.  If the world begins to think that your last name is dotcom, you're  going about your offline promotional activities in the right way.
 
 The insight about content for a website is it should be the  information your prospects and customers want to know the most.  It's not necessarily the content you want to put forth and boast about.  Instead, it's data about how your company can have a positive impact  on visitors to your site.
 
 Guerrillas know well that their sites will succeed or fail based on  how much overlap there is between their content and the needs  of their target audiences. They realize that exquisite design and  spectacular promotion are meaningless if their content doesn't fill  the needs of their market.
 
 To develop that kind of content, answer these questions, for your  specific answers will provide your content:
 
 * What is the immediate, short-term goal of your website?
 * What specific action do you want visitors to take?
 * What are your specific objectives for the long term?
 * Who do you want to visit your site?
 * What solutions or benefits can you offer to these  visitors?
 * What data should your site provide to achieve your  primary goal?
 * What information can you provide to encourage them  to act right now?
 * Where does your target audience look for information?
 * How often do you want visitors to return to your website?
 * What may be the reasons you don't sell as much as you'd like to?
 * Who is your most astute competition?
 * Does your competition have a website?
 * What are ways you can distinguish yourself from your competitors?
 
 Your answers point the way to what competitive advantages to  stress, what to show, what to say, what to feature. Serve up your  content in bite-sized pieces, all valuable -- for it's clear current  content that leads to success on the web. If it's a winner for  your guests, it will be a winner for you.
 
 Adapted from Mastering Guerrilla Marketing by Jay Conrad Levinson

 


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