Archive for the 'Online Marketing' Category

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Monday, February 20th, 2006

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10 Proven Ways To Accelerate Your Profits

Monday, October 31st, 2005

10 Proven Ways To Accelerate Your Profits
By David Riewe

1. Make copies of your web site in many different
languages. This’ll allow foreign speaking people to
read your web site and advertisements.

2. Give your customers a surprise bonus for buying.
When you give customers more than they expect,
there is a good chance they will buy from you again.

3. Send greeting cards offline or online to customers
on holidays. You’ll get the chance to increase your
orders by including your ad inside the card.

4. Market your products or services to your target
audience. For example, don’t try to sell a football
in a cooking magazine.

5. Give people the option of buying other products
or add on products when they decide to buy your
main product or service at the point of sale.

6. Think of new ways to attract people to buy your
products or services. You could add on extra free
bonuses, delivery options, payments options, etc.

7. Give other businesses the option of selling your
product. It could be a simple joint venture deal or
an affiliate/associate program.

8. Follow-up regularly with all your prospects and
current customers. When people see your ad more
than once they are more likely to buy.

9. Learn sales ideas from reading and studying other
business’ advertising and marketing material. It
could be ads, brochures, tv ads, sales letters, etc.

10. Educate yourself with new strategies to increase
your sales. You could take classes, subscribe to
e-zines and magazines, read books or ebooks, etc.


RESOURCE BOX
———————————————-
“Not Only Will I Give You the Secret Blueprint
that I Use to Make Six-Figures Per Year Online,
I’ll Also Provide You with the Products, Resources
and Services Needed to Do It Yourself!”
http://www.push-button-online-income.com/pbi
———————————————-

Avoid Duplicate Content Penalty on PPC Landing Pages!

Monday, October 31st, 2005

Avoid Duplicate Content Penalty on PPC Landing Pages!

Copyright © October 30, 2005 by Mike Banks Valentine

There are recent posts in marketing forums worrying over
“duplicate content” penalties concerns when creating pages
intended as Pay-Per-Click landing pages. First a couple of
definitions:

1. PPC landing page: A page created to perfectly match the
content of a pay-per-click ad so that PPC ad is created
for “IBM Selectric typewriter repair” then the visitor is
directed to a “PPC Landing page” created to exactly reflect
only that brand repair, rather than sending clickthroughs
to the home page which discusses generic typewriter repair.

PPC landing pages should have photos of that brand, maybe
an IBM logo and a link for shipping instructions. You’d
then create a different page for each brand you repair,
switching out the photo and the logo for each brand. This
leads to higher sales conversion and it works very well.
But it has a drawback related to search engine ranking …

2. Duplicate Content Penalty: Repeated pages with keyword
focused phrases created to rank well in organic search
results are seen as a spamming technique. A paragraph with
generic reference to typewriter repair is written so that
the brand name is swapped in and used multiple times on a
single page. Those are seen as duplicate content and are
penalized in ranking algorithms because it has been widely
abused by sites attempting to rank well for each brand by
repeating text on dozens of pages with only the brand and
model different on each page - thus labeled as duplicate
content and seen as bad by search engines.

What do you do to avoid the duplicate content penalty while
creating effective PPC landing pages for higher conversion?

Duplicate content on a single site is a BIG problem if done
in the way a PPC landing page would be - just swapping out
the brand name in a paragraph or two of text and repeating
that same text dozens of times on different pages.

But you are creating those landing pages for PPC and NOT for
organic listings and don’t want them ranked organically. So
make the PPC landing pages all off limits to the spiders with
a simple tag in the of each separate brand page:

That will keep custom tailored PPC landing pages out of
search engine indexes when you only have a few pages. But
if you run an extremely large PPC campaign with hundreds
of custom landing pages, then solve the problem by putting
those PPC landing pages within a single directory like:

http://typewriter-repair.com/PPC/olivetti-repair.html

http://typewriter-repair.com/PPC/smith-corona-repair.html
http://typewriter-repair.com/PPC/ibm-selectric-repair.html

Then create and post a robots.txt file that tells spiders to
stay out of that directory

User-agent: *
Disallow: /PPC/

For organic SEO you would always make brand focused pages
with UNIQUE content about each of the brands by discussing
peculiarities of each brand and specific known problems with
those brands that often require repairs and optimize for
organic SEO and encouraging spiders crawl and index them.

The key is to tell spiders to stay away from the repetitive
PPC focused pages. That way, you have PPC clickthrough pages
that reflect EXACTLY the ad visitors clicked on but won’t
suffer the duplicate content penalty. Because you WILL be
penalized in organic rankings if you put up dozens of pages
with only brand name differences in the text - even if you
didn’t intend it as phony spider food done just for organic
ranking purposes.

Keeping the spiders out of PPC focused pages is wise for
another reason - You may want to create PPC landing pages
for short term sales, close-outs, one of a kind items that
will sell out or if you stop repairing a particular brand.
You don’t want those pages indexed and then later delete
them from your server because when spiders return to find
that page deleted later, you suffer in rankings because you
have missing pages without redirects.

Best to keep the spiders out of PPC landing pages entirely
if they are only there for PPC purposes. If you are using
the multiple page technique for organic ranking purposes,
then you WILL be penalized. Best mark PPC pages with the
tag or…

Create a PPC section on your site within a PPC directory
and then post robots.txt file telling spiders to stay out
of a directory like:

User-agent: *
Disallow: /PPC/

The search engine ranking game gets more complex as your
site grows and PPC marketing campaigns can conflict with
organic search engine ranking strategies. Avoid duplicate
content penalties by restricting PPC landing pages from
spiders and prevent them ever being indexed.


Mike Banks Valentine blogs on Search Engines developments
from http://RealitySEO.com and operates a small business
ecommerce tutorial from http://WebSite101.com and content
distribution site at: http://Publish101.com

Forget Local TV - Advertise on Cable

Monday, October 31st, 2005

Forget Local TV - Advertise on Cable
More about advertising from BIG Mike McDaniel

Cable has grown from 13 houses connected together
in 1948 to coverage of nearly 70% of all
households in the U.S. With dozens, even hundreds
of channels, Cable is now a major player for local
advertising dollars, some for less than 5 bucks.

Cable became a major player in 1972, when Charles Dolan
and Gerald Levin of Sterling Manhattan Cable launched
the nation’s first pay­TV network, Home Box Office
(HBO). Cable was more than an antenna for local
stations.

Today, most Cable companies have the ability to
INSERT your commercial into many of the Cable
networks. The networks don’t stop the show with a
black screen for local commercials, instead they
fill the space with ads that sell something
(exercise machines, fancy knives, or something
from Ron Popeil). “..order now and we’ll make the
4th payment for you!”

Local Cable commercial insertions are available 15
(or more) major networks and the list grows every
month. Local advertisers can no longer afford to
ignore the marketing potential, and lost cost,
available through the use of Cable advertising.

Most offer a package that will put your commercial
into a mix of Cable network programs at all hours
of the day for as little as $5 per commercial.
Yup, $5 for a commercial on ESPN, CNN Headline
News or the Discovery Channel. The premium
channels (those that cost extra above the standard
cable package, HBO, Showtime etc.) do not allow
commercials to be inserted

You can see why this is so by working the math.
Ask the Cable TV salesman how many channels he has
on his system, and how many homes are connected.
Then ask how many channels will have your
commercials.

If there are 10,000 homes connected and the system
has 25 channels and your ads will be inserted into
5 channels you will need a lot of ads to reach
even a small percentage of the people. Ads are
inserted into news and sports channels and
entertainment and super station channels.
Computers do it automatically, so the Cable
company doesn’t have to have people on the job 24
hours a day to run your commercial. Cable
companies can insert one or one thousand
commercials with a few keystrokes and with
thousands of slots every day, they have no problem
selling you a bunch for little money.

Cable can be an effective part of your local
advertising mix at a very reasonable price.

For more about advertising visit our website
http://BigIdeasGroup.com

©2005 BIG Mike McDaniel, All Rights Reserved
BIG Mike is a Business Consultant and Professional
Speaker. His BIG Ideas Group helps business grow
with promotions, special reports, mastermind
groups and seminars.

Subscribe to “BIG Ideas for Small Business” Newsletter
MailTo:SignUp@BigIdeasGroup.com

The Future of Advertising

Thursday, June 23rd, 2005

The Future of Advertising

Advertising is a medium that constantly evolves. It changes
with the times. It adapts to new technologies. It is
unrelenting in its desire to find new and better ways to
reach an ever-growing consumer marketplace.

But its not simply advertising that evolves. Consumers and
consumer behavior are changing too. As we look at the future
of advertising, it’s important to look at how the two
interact and change together over time.

Without a doubt, the Internet has revolutionized the
industry. It has taken the world - and the advertising world
by storm. And it has only just begun to make an impact. The
Internet has become a global medium with massive potential.
Forty years ago, television was considered new media.
Fifteen years ago, it was cable. Today, people spend
increasing amounts of time online at the expense of other
media. The first evidence of this audience migration
appeared in 1998 in a Forrester Research report.

The researchers asked PC users which activities they were
giving up to spend more time on their computers. 75% of the
respondents said they gave up television.

Interactive. That is the real key behind the power of the
Internet in advertising. The Internet is really the only
medium where we see true interactivity. In addition:

o It means greater viewer involvement.
o It means users can access services according to their
interests and their tastes.
o They can request and receive specialized product
information, make an instant purchase, all the while saving
time and expense.
o The effectiveness of Web advertising appears to relate to
the fact that surfing the web is an actively engaging
experience, similar to reading magazines.

Consumers also have the choice to “opt-in” to receiving
additional information on a particular product or service.
In Seth Godin’s groundbreaking book, Permission Marketing,
he said, “By reaching out only to those individuals who have
signaled an interest in learning more about a product,
Permission Marketing enables companies to develop long-term
relationships with customers, create trust, build brand
awareness- and greatly improve the chances of making a
sale.”

All the Rage: Pay Per Click and Natural Search Using SEO

It’s no secret what has taken over the business world, in
industry after industry. Pay Per Click and Natural Search
Using Search Engine Optimization (SEO). Today, being on the
first page for your most popular keyword phrase is like
having the most memorable prime time television commercial
in 1973.

Pay per click advertising on search engines allows you to
choose keywords you would like your site to appear under
when a potential customer engages in a search. You decide
how much you are willing to pay each time a person clicks on
the search results. But it can be competitive - and
expensive if you are trying to use keywords that are very
popular.

Natural Search or Organic Search is the non-biased, non-paid
results that come up when you do a search. This can be
influenced heavily by what’s called “Search Engine
Optimization” - the complex and time consuming practice of
ensuring that your website is doing all the right things in
order to rank high for certain search terms. In this arena,
smaller companies can out maneuver large corporations, so
there’s a lot of excitement generated because of this.

Essentially, that’s where the power of advertising is going.
It’s all about Search. And Search is only going to become
more important over the next ten years. If you can get on
that coveted first page organically, well then, more power
to you!

Web Sites, Banner Ads, etc..

The other forms of on-line advertising vehicles are of
course, web sites, banner advertising placed on others
sites, newsletters, ezines, and email. They are used in many
different combinations, for different purposes at different
times. But most savvy companies are using all of them. The
value of banner ads has been hotly debated for a number of
years. Opponents argue that the click-through rates have
gone down so much, that banner ads are nothing but wasted
money. But research clearly shows that banners are very
effective in building brand awareness. On-line users may not
click on a banner, but if they see it enough times, the
company’s name is drilled into their head. When its time to
shop, that product or service is first in their mind.
Simply being exposed to the brand as one surf’s the web is
enough to make a big impression.

The impact of banners on brand awareness was tested for the
first time in fall 1996 by Millward Brown International.
Three brands were tested including a men’s apparel brand, a
telecommunications brand and a technology company. The
findings were significant and conclusive for each brand.
Awareness was significantly greater among the banner-exposed
(test) group than the non-exposed (control) group.
Specifically, exposure to the ad banners alone increased
brand awareness from 12% to 200% in a banner-exposed group.

The study also compared the impact of the banner ads in this
test to television and magazine norms from prior Millward
Brown studies. The findings were remarkable: Single exposure
to a Web banner generated greater awareness than a single
exposure to a television or print ad. Rather, the
effectiveness of Web advertising seems to stem from the fact
that Web usage is an actively engaging exercise.

Newsletters and Ezines

Most smart marketers out there have either a newsletter or
ezine nowadays. These types of customer communication and
advertising tools will only continue to grow in use and
importance. It goes back to the whole “what’s in it for me?”
issue. The customer wants to be part of the process. They
want to learn something. Or keep themselves updated on the
latest news. Most of all, they want to get something out of
the relationship. They want to do more than buy something,
they want to improve their lives in some small way - and
they want you to help them do that.

Email Advertising

Email is another of the big three Internet advertising
mediums. Companies like Got Marketing, OptinBig.com, and N5R
are providing new and exciting email marketing solutions for
thousands of progressive firms. Their results are
impressive. Consider response rates that average 10 to 20
times those of traditional direct mail. Or campaign Network
marketing referral rates as high as 40%. The bottom line is
that programs they put together have produced millions of
leads for clients. And it’s surprisingly affordable. This
means that almost anyone can now utilize this advertising
medium. But it has to be done smartly, because you don’t
want your emails to end up in spam filters. That is one
inherent problem with email advertising, especially in the
past two years.

N5R in particular is now one of the leading direct marketing
agencies in North America. They develop innovative
one-to-one marketing campaigns that drive a measurable,
positive ROI on behalf of their clients by driving
acquisition and conversion to trial and purchase for their
clients. They have developed award-winning strategies in
five major industry sectors. These include Internet
Marketing and Online Contests/Promotions, Permission Based
Email Marketing, Text Messaging, Success Based Email.

In Internet Marketing and Online Contests/Promotions,
marketers can gather and compile behavior and preference
data from prospects and customers and use this information
to send targeted and relevant information. Developing
ongoing programs of one-to-one communication is cost
effective and measurable. Contests are the quickest and most
effective way to gather this data and build relationships
with customers. It’s very possible to build a
permission-based database of over 50,000 prospects in only 6
weeks, increase web site traffic by 900%, improved online
sales revenue by 1,000%, and achieve $40 million in sales
from leads generated by an online promotion.

With Permission Based Email Marketing, loyal clients are
just an e-mail away. Where traditional marketing campaigns
fail, e-mail can shine through. E-mail marketing allows
companies to speak one-to-one with their audience in a
respectful, intelligent and creative way. It is extremely
cost-effective, provides the foundation for future marketing
initiatives, and delivers measurable results.

Text Messaging or SMS (Short Message Service) is a
technology that allows people to send and receive short (up
to 160 characters) written messages on cellular phones. It
is already hugely popular in Europe and Asia and is growing
rapidly in North America. SMS marketing offers the following
benefits:

One-to-one communication with your target group, anywhere,
anytime reach, low campaign cost, and very measurable data.
Imagine if your mobile phone received an email message,
“You’re only a block from a Starbuck’s; stop in for a 20%
discount on your latte.” The data is available and marketers
are starting to tap into these resources.

Success Based Email is free email deployment where companies
only pay for results. This “pay-per-click” approach is
based on the premise that companies will only pay for each
email that receives a “click-through” from the recipient.
Not only does the new approach enhance the value of
marketing dollars spent on such campaigns, the move will
likely trim total dollars spent.

For example if 100,000 emails are sent, 70% are opened and
15% of the recipients actually click on a link in the email
then clients will only be charged for the 15,000 people that
clicked on the link, not for the other 85,000 that didn’t.
The return on investment (ROI) or cost savings inherent in
this new approach will be very appealing to permission-based
marketers. The bottom line is that marketers will now pay
for real, measurable results.

The Next Step

Compared with other media, the Web is still limited in its
bandwidth offerings. But it’s getting better every day. With
the continued improvement of bandwidth development, we will
soon be positioned well to create full-featured multimedia
advertising on the Internet. Once a majority of consumers
have DSL capability and the computer power to access it,
there will be some incredible things happening. Sites like
tvtonic.com are already offering some very compelling visual
and audio imagery in the form of movie trailers and music
videos.

Market researchers, futurists and industry experts predict
that interactivity through multiple technologies and devices
will change how consumers interact with marketers.
Interactive advertising will soon be everywhere. So, in
effect, it could be considered the age of mass customization
in advertising. Advertisers will have the tools to narrow
their targets and address Web ads to individuals and not to
a demographic or psychographic group. Why market a
commercial to 1 million people, most of who aren’t in the
target audience, when the same ad could be shown to 10,000
people who are very interested in the product or service?
Most of those will even give their name and address.

Interactivity will also be a part of television. Interactive
TV will be the norm in the near future, and this too is
another exciting opportunity. There will be total
integration between TV channels and advertisers web sites.
While we are watching TV, we will be able to interact with
what we are seeing, ordering hamburgers from the McDonalds
down the street or communicating with the local car dealer
that we are interested in buying a car. Clicking on products
we see in TV shows and ordering them will be easy. Your TV
will keep track of what you are watching. Your TV will even
know what kind of car you own because you’ll tell for the
free oil change you’re offered in exchange. The oil change
will be compliments of DirecTV, and it is only good at Jiffy
Lube, which has paid to be the official oil-change provider
for DirecTV.” That’s the way it will work.

Service Initiative Advertising

Another major trend is what I call “Service Initiative
Advertising”. Let’s face it; consumers are tired of
advertising as usual. Many people say they hate commercials.
The success of Tivo and satellite radio can attest to this.
They want more from their advertising. And who could blame
them? People are inundated with advertising today- every
where they go. Service Initiative Advertising takes the
whole process one step further. Essentially how it works is
that it requires advertising to offer some value to the
consumer.

For example: Kraft Foods creates a website that offers busy
mothers a source for quick recipes for the family evening
meal. The idea isn’t to push Kraft products, but to promote
Kraft as a brand that offers a service to customers. There
have been companies who positioned their entire marketing
strategy on this tenant. Now, it will become a key part of
advertising for almost everyone. The consumer wants to know
you care.

It’s important to realize that advertising mediums of the
past will still be here. But, they may look a little
different in the future. Direct mail will always be around
as long as people like to receive mail. And despite external
challenges, the U.S. Postal service will still be around. TV
and radio will be here too.

But the future is here. And advertising will never be the
same.

One thing that is certain is that it will continue to be as
exciting and dynamic as it has been in the past. But now,
the consumer is a part of the process.

(C) 2005 Jon Wuebben. Do you need Search Engine Optimized (SEO)
Web site copy that moves customers to buy? Are you looking
to create an effective newsletter/e-zine article or ad for
your business? We provide world class copy that helps you to
be found on the web. 10 years experience providing superior
copy to businesses nationwide. Contact us for a
complimentary Website Copy analysis. Subscribe to our
Better Business Writing (BBW) Newsletter and receive
2 free reports. http://www.customcopywriting.com/

Search Engine Optimized (SEO) Copy - The Down and Dirty Details

Thursday, June 23rd, 2005

Search Engine Optimized (SEO) Copy - The Down and Dirty Details

Today, being on the first page for your most popular keyword
phrase is like having the most memorable prime time
television commercial in 1973.

Essentially, that’s where the power of advertising is going.
It’s all about Search. And Search is only going to become
more important over the next ten years. If you can get on
that coveted first page organically, well then, more power
to you!
I know you probably have read other articles about writing
SEO copy and how it relates to achieving high search
rankings, there are plenty of them to go around. But some of
the articles are complicated; some are too long, others
boring. Still others don’t explain that great SEO copy is
rarely effective just on it’s own - in order to get those
high rankings (which is the goal after all), you have to do
other things too. So, we decided that what most people
really needed was a “down and dirty”, easy to understand,
ten step method. You ask, and we deliver. Here are the
official ten steps in order:

1) Check your Competitors
Who are your competitors? Do you know? If you don’t, you may
want to go online and do a search for your product or
service. Who is on the first two pages? That is your target.
Those are the companies that you want to compete with.
Because right now, they are getting your customers. Take a
look at their website. Notice the copy. Analyze their
business. Are they successful? What are they not doing
right? Look for the holes. You’re going to meet the needs of
their customers (that they are not fulfilling) so they
become YOUR customers.

2) Research your Keyword Phrases
Remember, Keyword Phrase research is critically important.
It can also be a little tricky. Do you know what keywords or
keyword phrases your customers search for when they look for
you? Are you sure? Se what your competitors are using. You
can do this by right clicking on their home page, selecting
“View Source” and then checking their keyword meta tag.
Next, go on to Overture.com (Now Yahoo), click on “Visit the
Advertiser” section, and use their Keyword Selector Tool.
Its great - and its free. You can also use Wordtracker.com,
but it does cost $7.50/day.

3) Write Good Copy
Now its time to start writing. Or re-writing. And if you
can’t write, you can hire a website copywriter to do it for
you. The bottom line is to write about benefits, not
features. Don’t tell them how great your company is. They
will discover that for themselves when you overwhelm them
with your service and deliver the perfect product that meets
their every need. Make the copy to the point and snappy.
Make it sure it has impact, and asks the potential customer
for their business.

4) Integrate Your Keyword Phrases
After you figure out which keyword phrases you want to use
on your site, you need to integrate them into the copy of
your site. Think Home Page and Services page as the most
important pages to use them on. Essentially, you want to
them to make up 5% of the total words on the page. It’s not
that hard actually. Just don’t use them all over the place
like some stupid copywriters do - you could get de-listed
from the search engines. Definitely use them in your
headlines and sub headlines. That will get you extra points,
so to speak.

5) Check your Links, Build if necessary
Do you have any inbound links pointing to your site? If not,
no amount of awesome copy is going to get your site high
rankings. Links are very important. And even more so for
Google. Go to linkpopularity.com and see what you have. Also
check your competitors. If they have more than you, you need
to get some high quality links. You can either do that
yourself or hire someone to do it for you. It can be time
consuming and expensive. But you gotta do it. It makes you
look important to the search engines. A good way to do it is
to make sure you are listed on directories, including DMOZ
and industry related sites. Go to incominglinks.com to see
which ones you should be listed on. Then write articles and
submit them to article submission sites. That could
potentially give you hundreds of links for free.

6) Use Go Rank’s Analytical Tools
GoRank.com is a fantastic free resource for SEO. They have a
Keyword Density Analyzer, Link Popularity Analyzer, Top 10
Keyword Analyzer, Research, News and lots of other great
stuff. It’s a great tool and something I use every day. It
will help you in your SEO copy efforts.

7) Submit to the Search Engines
After you’ve ensured that your website copy and all the
other important SEO considerations have been completed, it’s
time to submit to the Search Engines. Do it manually. Go to
the search engine and do it yourself. Definitely don’t pay
someone to do it for you. You may have to resubmit a few
times, but eventually, your site will get noticed.

8) Tweak the Copy as necessary, Add New Content
After your site has been up for a while, go back and take a
second look. Ask friends and customers what they think of
it. Can anything be improved? You’ll be surprised what you
may hear. If something isn’t working, fix it. Make it sound
better. The other thing that you should also be doing is
adding content regularly. Build free resources into your
website. This will make your customers and potential
customers happy, and it will make you appear to be more
important in the eyes of the search engines. Adding articles
to your site is a great way to give your customers new, free
content. Write about things that they would find
interesting.

9) Partner with a Great SEO Firm
You may want to also consider partnering with a great Search
Engine Optimization firm. There are probably a hundred very
good ones out there. There are also 1000 bad ones. For the
good ones, check out topseos.com. and marketingsherpa.com.
They both list reputable firms. Whoever you go with, make
sure they have a list of client success stories complete
with stats to back it up.

10) Measure Your Success!
Finally, measure your success. (or progress) Get a software
program that will provide you with some web metrics as it
pertains to your site. WebTrends and Statcounter are great
ones. There are quite a few others as well.
As you can see, Search Engine Optimized copy is only part of
the overall SEO story. There is a lot to it, so make sure
you cover every area. After all, we want to get your web
site to the very top!

C2005 Jon Wuebben. Do you need Search Engine Optimized (SEO)
Web site copy that moves customers to buy? Are you looking
to create an effective newsletter/e-zine article or ad for
your business? We provide world class copy that helps you to
be found on the web. 10 years experience providing superior
copy to businesses nationwide. Contact us for a
complimentary Website Copy analysis. Subscribe to our
Better Business Writing (BBW) Newsletter and receive
2 free reports. http://www.customcopywriting.com/

Is PR Right for You? 6 Questions to Ask

Tuesday, June 21st, 2005

Is PR Right for You? 6 Questions to Ask
Copyright © 2005 Michele Pariza Wacek
The Artist Soul
http://www.TheArtistSoul.com

When most people think about marketing, they think advertising.
While advertising is a part of marketing, marketing is much
bigger than advertising. There are lots of different marketing
methods floating around out there, and the challenge as a
business owner is figuring out when it’s appropriate to use each
one and the best way to use it.

Public relations, or PR, is the art of getting someone else to
write or talk about you or your business. Preferably in a
favorable manner. Traditionally, “someone else” was the media. In
this day and age however, someone else can also be a blogger, a
freelance writer, an e-zine publisher or even an owner of a big
Web site. For purposes of this article, I’m using the word
“media” to refer to all of those folks.

PR is also being able to get yourself on a big talk show to talk
about yourself or your business, or writing your own article
that’s published in a desired outlet. (Not your own newsletter or
Web site.)

PR is one of my favorite marketing methods, but it can also be
one of the more frustrating ones. Even when you do everything
right, you still might not get the publicity you want. Or for
that matter, ANY publicity at all. When a PR campaign doesn’t
work, you can find yourself wanting to pull out all your hair in
frustration.

Even with that in mind, I do believe most if not all businesses
can benefit from some type of PR campaign. But before you launch
into something that could end with you becoming hairless (and
investing in a sizeable hat collection) ask yourself the
following questions.

1. Do I need to see results right away? If you do, better pull
out your wallet and pay for some advertising. PR takes time. And
it’s not guaranteed. You might not see your article for weeks,
months or ever, and there isn’t a darn thing you can do about it.
If it’s immediate gratification you want, don’t look for it in a
public relations campaign.

2. Do I have the time to consistently devote to a public
relations campaign? We’re back to the time issue. PR not only
takes time to see results, but you also have to take time to make
it happen. Either you have to do it or you have to pay someone
else to do it. If you do it yourself, you’ll have the potential
of garnering the equivalent of thousands of dollars of
advertising for little or no money. But it will cost you some
time. If you pay someone else, you’ll save time (which is a good
thing, I’m a big believer in outsourcing) but it can get
expensive. Worse yet, you STILL might not get any coverage for
your money.

3. Do I have enough perseverance to run a PR campaign? PR is
about follow-up. It’s about sending story idea after story idea
to the same reporter before one finally connects (and maybe it’s
the tenth one). It’s about sending a little note or letter to the
same editor for as long as several years before you get a bite.
It’s about reminding your contacts you’re out there until one day
they realize they need you.

If you’re willing to court the media, develop relationships and
do whatever you can to make their lives easier, the rewards can
be huge.

4. Do I have newsworthy events happening at my business?
(Newsworthy is something media personnel feel would interest
their readers.) Or, if I don’t, can I create them?

I’m not talking about making things up here. But there are things
you can be doing to make your business more newsworthy. For
example, you can do a survey and publish the results. You can tie
a feature of your product or service to something that’s
currently happening in the news. You can hold an event. You can
research a newly published study that relates to your product or
service. There are countless ways you can transform aspects of
your business into newsworthy story items — the creativity
exercise below can help you come up with your ideas.

5. Do I want to build my credibility? Develop my status as an
expert? Then get that PR campaign off the ground. Nothing builds
your credibility or expert status faster than having other people
say you know what you’re talking about.

6. Do I want to augment my other marketing efforts? Public
relations definitely plays nicely with the other marketing
methods. You can be building your long-term expert campaign with
PR and building short-term customers with advertising. Or you can
turn your community relations strategies into PR campaigns. It’s
a great way to get the most bang out of your marketing time and
dollar.

Creativity Exercise — How can you use PR in your business?

Grab some sheets of paper and pen (I like the fun gel pens
myself) and get ready for some brainstorming.

Start by listing everything you do or sell. Then write out all
the features or descriptions of your products or services. For
instance, if you have a book, what is your book about? What does
it offer people?


Now see if you can turn those features into something newsworthy.
Is there a time of year when people are interested in your
services? (Accounting and tax season). Are there any studies you
can dig up? Is there something in the news that ties into your
product? Can you turn an aspect of your business into a human
interest story? (Something like fitness tips for busy people or
parenting tips for single parents, etc.) Write everything down
that comes into your head, even if it’s silly. See if you can
come up with 50 story ideas.

Now look at what you wrote. Can you find a few in there that you
think would interest the media? Congratulations — you just came
up with a PR campaign.

———————————————————————
Michele Pariza Wacek is the author of “Got Ideas? Unleash Your
Creativity and Make More Money.” She offers two free e-zines
that help subscribers combine their creativity with hard-hitting
marketing and copywriting principles to become more successful
at attracting new clients, selling products and services and
boosting business. She can be reached at:
http://www.TheArtistSoul.com. Copyright 2005 Michele Pariza Wacek

Marketing is More Than A Token Process

Wednesday, June 8th, 2005

Marketing is More Than A Token Process
By Kathleen Gage
“Necessity is the mother of invention!” The first time I heard this
was nearly twenty years ago when I was introduced to Tony Robbins’
material. I was listening to, and applying, information from his
thirty day series. I have to admit, the first time I heard this it
didn’t quite register.

However, nearly two decades later, it makes all the sense in the
world. In fact, a majority of the things we take for granted were
created out of a need. When the need became great enough, someone
figured out a solution.

Such is the case with a new eBook that just hit the market - Tokens
for TV. The idea for this informative book is the brainchild of
working mom, Lisa Workman. As she explains it, about a year ago, she
and her husband were struggling with how to get their kids to take an
interest in choosing how much television and computer time they were
spending each day. She came up with a system that not only limited
how much TV/Computer time they received, but also took out some of
the parental nagging and placed some responsibility on their
shoulders. She came up with a simple solution to helping children
manage their television and computer time.

Seeing how effective her system is, friends started asking her how it
worked. After numerous requests, she began writing down the system
and eventually fine tuned it to the point it became her now popular
eBook, Tokens for TV.

An exciting aspect of this resource is that the information aligns
perfectly with Lisa’s personal and professional vision and mission.
She is extremely committed to providing quality information to
families while promoting healthy lifestyles for children. However,
something Lisa realizes is that without an effective marketing
campaign to promote Tokens for TV there are many people who will
never know how effective the system can be.

Lisa has put together a very effective campaign which includes full
use of her Tokens for TV website, free reports, and article
distribution both online and off, interviews with the media and viral
marketing. Her marketing plan was developed long before the eBook was
taken to market. Without a doubt, she will be successful in getting
the word out.

Like Lisa Workman, many people have an idea that is a perfect
solution to a common problem. Unlike Lisa, a great majority of people
only think about the solution, yet do nothing about it. Then they
wonder why success happens to others but not to them. Success is
determined by the actions one takes.

As you think of solutions you can offer to your customers or clients,
how would you answer the following questions?

-What is the primary problem that keeps your customers awake at night?
-What products or services do you need to develop that would solve
their problem?
-What do you need to do to market your product or service?
-Do you have a plan put in place?
-Are you willing to invest the time and money into marketing your
product or service?
-Are you willing to take responsibility for all that needs to be done
on a consistent basis?

When Lisa identified a problem that prevails in many families she
could have responded like most and simply said, “Wouldn’t it be nice
if someone came up with a solution?” Rather, she mapped out the
solution, developed it into a system and is now making it available
to those who will benefit from it.

What is the solution you have that people are waiting for?

To find out about Tokens for TV and access a FREE worksheet to learn
how much time your child spends “plugged in” to some sort of
electronic device visit http://www.tvtokens.com .

Kathleen Gage is a keynote speaker, author and business advisor
specializing in marketing and promotions and achievement. Access
Gage’s’s FREE eBook Street Smarts Marketing On the Internet at
http://www.streetsmartsmarketing.com/free-ebook.htm

How To Measure Search Engine Marketing ROI

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

How To Measure Search Engine Marketing ROI
Copyright © 2005 Charles Preston
Click Response
http://www.clickresponse.net/

According to the Search Engine Marketing Professional
Organization (SEMPO), advertisers spent $4 billion in 2004 on
search marketing programs and are expected to spend 39% more than
that this year.

Search engine marketing appears to be a great way to advertise
but is it right for you and your business? If you are not already
employing search engine marketing(SEM) for you business is there
a way to forecast the return should you decide to invest in it?
Is there a way to measure the results you are getting if you have
already invested in SEM?

The answer is mostly yes. By utilizing data discovered in
recently released research surveys and with the help of a few
free online tools you can put begin to take some of the guesswork
out of search engine marketing ROI.

By using Overtureís free keyword suggestion tool
(inventory.overture.com) you can get an idea of how many times a
keyword is getting searched each month. Another free tool to use
is called Good Keywords and can be downloaded from
www.goodkeywords.com.

Letís say for instance that you are a mortgage broker in the
Denver Colorado area and you are interested in getting more leads
for your business. You have a website and are considering search
engine marketing to bring in some new leads. You get a quote from
a search engine marketing provider who can guarantee top 10
positions among the major search engines for 6 months for your
keywords for $1,500.00.

The question now becomes is it worth it to you to spend the
$1,500.00. To figure this out we need to look at some numbers.

Berrier & Associates estimate that 65% of all traffic generated
by a search in a search engine will go to the sites listed within
the first 10 results (first page) returned for that search. By
using Overtureís keyword suggestion tool you discover that the
term ìDenver mortgage brokerî gets approximately 540 searches a
month.

Using this criteria a first page position for ìDenver mortgage
brokerî would bring you approximately 65% of 540 searches a month
= 350 visitors to your site each month. Having a compelling title
tag in your websiteís pages might even boost this visitor number
since the title tag is what appears as the clickable link in the
search results.

The formula we just used would then be applied to all the other
keywords you are targeting such as ìmortgage Denverî which gets
approximately 2,600 searches a month or ìmortgage company Denverî
with 466 searches a month. A first page placement for any of
those would yield similar results.

So letís say we just use the ìDenver mortgage brokerî key phrase
as our example with its estimated 350 visitors a month for a
first page position. You would now need to know what your website
conversion rate is. The website conversion rate is the ratio of
leads or sales you get per visitor amount. The average website
conversion rate is about 1-2% or 1-2 leads or sales for every 100
visitors according to Shop.org.

If your website conversion rate is average then you would expect
on average 2-3 good leads from your site each month for that one
first page listing. Then depending on your sales conversion rate
which is the number of sales per leads you get on average
multiplied by your average sale price you can begin to calculate
what your return might be.

So letís say as a mortgage broker you make roughly $2k on each
deal you broker and your sales conversion rate is 1 sale for
every 3 quality leads. In any given month then you could estimate
1 sale at $2k out of the 3 quality leads generated from your
website which came as a result of the 350 visitors you got from
being on the first page of Google, Yahoo or MSN for the term
ìDenver mortgage brokerî.

You paid the search engine marketing company $1,500.00 dollars
for 6 months of first page listings. From one of those first page
listings you stand to gain $2k x 6 months = $12,000.00. That
sounds like a really good return for money invested.

In closing the methodology outlined in this article to calculate
search engine marketing ROI is by no means 100% accurate due to
several factors but it is a good way to get a ìfeelî for what you
might get back for your marketing dollars. Its also a way to get
business owners to start thinking about how to better track their
e-business.

———————————————————————
Charles Preston is an Austin based SEO with over 7 years of
industry experience. Charles is also the President of Click
Response an internet marketing company focused on teaching small
businesses how to get the most out of their internet marketing.
For a free consultation or more information please visit
http://www.clickresponse.net

How to Build Massive Keyword Lists Part 2

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

How to Build Massive Keyword Lists Part 2
Written by: Rob Taylor
Copyright © 2005 Megastep International, All Rights Reserved
http://www.megastep.com/

Here’s a simple keyword building technique I use to find the
maximum possible variations of a keyword phrase. I use it
predominantly for bidding on keywords at Google Adwords, however
it can also be very useful for building lists for use in search
engine optimization.

For example let’s use the phrase “horses for sale”. Here’s how
the various permutations of this keyword phrase would look. I use
the free Keyword Tumbler tool for doing this. ADDRESS:
http://www.keywordtumbler.com

horses for sale
horses sale for
for horses sale
for sale horses
sale horses for
sale for horses

As you can see there are a maximum of six possible ways a three
word phrase could be entered into a search engine.

Now you need to find out if these permutations are actually being
searched for. This is where the Wordtracker service comes into
its own. You can get a free trial over at
http://www.keywordlistbuilder.co.uk.

Go to Wordtracker now and in the “Keyword Universe” choose the
database called “Precise”.

Then in the right hand panel enter the six different keyword
combinations, and hit the “Proceed” button.

Wordtracker now tells us that out of our six combinations, two of
them appear in its database (NOTE: at the time of writing it
did). They are…

horses for sale
for sale horses

You might be thinking that you could have figured this out for
yourself. But its vital that you understand you need to stop
second-guessing markets and users behaviors based on your own
opinions and assumptions. Use these tools like Wordtracker to
actually tell you how the markets are behaving.

I have sometimes found three and four phrase permutations using
this method. Phrases that to me appeared “stupid” if entered in
the search engines… but someone, somewhere is doing it! This
why you need to do this step and NOT guess the permutations.

Also searchers sometimes enter a keyword phrase using the “space”
and the “+” sign. E.G. “1 2 3″ can be entered in as “1+2+3″ and
also “1 +2 +3″. This is great tip if you want to use your keyword
lists on Google Adwords.

So taking our example keyword phrase let’s see how many
permutations we can now generate.

horses for sale
for sale horses

horses+for+sale
for+sale+horses

horses +for +sale
for +sale +horses

Now let’s use misspellings to come up with even more keyword
combinations. A great tool for this is Misspelled Keywords
available at http://www.misspelledkeywords.co.uk.

Simply enter “horses for sale” and select from six ways to find
misspellings. Dictionary lookup, keyboard mistakes, trim
first/last character, swap character, double characters, and…
add ’s’ ending.

For this example I only selected the “dictionary lookup” and
“keyboard mistakes”. The tool returned 1360 possible misspelling
combinations. If I’d used all the selections, it would have come
back with over 8500. Just for one phrase!

Now let’s enter these misspellings into Wordtracker’s Precise
database like we did above. The results? Wordtracker returns the
following (NOTE: at the time of writing):

horses foe sale
horses fpr sale
horses for sail
horses for slae

Which now get turned into twelve new terms:

horses foe sale
horses fpr sale
horses for sail
horses for slae

horses+foe+sale
horses+fpr+sale
horses+for+sail
horses+for+slae

horses +foe +sale
horses +fpr +sale
horses +for +sail
horses +for +slae

Finally you are going to want to join the words together, so
“horses for sale” becomes “horsesforsale”, and yes this appeared
in the Wordtracker database.

Using the method of keyword generation outlined above, what
started out as one keyword phrase, “horses for sale” has now
turned into 19 keyword phrases you can use on Google Adwords.
Phrases that are actually being used by surfers in the search
engines.

So there you have it, how to build adgroups which are TIGHTLY
focused on the keyword phrase you are wanting to bid on.

———————————————————————
Rob Taylor has been marketing online since 1996. He’s sold
anything from books, debit cards, security products to art
prints. Take advantage of his battle tested marketing strategies
that could quietly make you five figure cash profits every single
month. Free newsletter subscription at http://www.megastep.com