London Ontario Website Design
Dangerous Marketing Campaigns
by Lila Buchalski
Targeting your key demographic online
is getting harder and harder. While new portals that offer
information to niche markets spring up like summer weeds, it
is hard to decipher the legitimacy of not only their readership,
but the depth and significance of their content, the source
of their traffic, and the accuracy of their traffic reporting.
The reasons for this lie in not only the increasing popularity
of the internet for all ages, but the costs and low expected
results now associated with "targeted" marketing
campaigns.
Initially, the online marketing boom mainly changed the daily
habits of adolescents, college kids, and young entrepreneurs.
Now, Grandparents look forward to e-mails with fresh picture
attachments, and more people meet their significant others on
the web than they do at speed-dating convention. If there is
an interest, someone has created a way to profit from it online.
While the readiness of information is a convenience, it has led
to a whole new set of concerns for small business owners.
Who can you trust to get your message
across to the professionals who need your services? I am sure
that there are many websites that consider themselves home
to the community that can jump start your business. Claiming
to be fueled by expert credentials, with an "opt-in" readership
of people waiting to be sold on your breakthrough methods or
product, these websites seem to be the answer to marketing
prayers. For the small fee of $30,000+, you too can speak to
these managers and share your wisdom.
How is this possible for the small
business owner to justify? How can you trust that the website
is representing their credentials appropriately, and that investing
with them will be safe and, most importantly, productive? It
is an excellent possibility their compiled "subscriber" lists
come from others' saleable data. There's also the chance that
many of those e-mail addresses will prove to be invalid.
Unless the World Wide Web takes measures to institute standards
and credential guidelines for information portals, here are a
few tips to help evaluate a site before you invest in their sales
and marketing packages:
• How did they compile their
subscriber list? How do they maintain that list to minimize
the number of invalid e-mail accounts that it contains?
• Where do they get their content?
From other site's feeds, or do they create it in house? How
often do they update this information (weekly, monthly, never)?
Always ask this question, and then complete due diligence to
confirm that the information portal does post in this time
frame, and that articles are not reposted or recycled articles
from another online portal.
• How often do they send out
mass e-mails to their subscriber list? If the website sends
out new information more than two times a week, there is a
lower chance that their messages will be highly regarded or
even noticed.
• Who are their key authors and
senior management? What are their credentials? Make sure that
those writers and managers have a thorough understanding of
the topic they sell, as well as commensurate credentials.
• How long has the information portal been operating under
that domain name and in that in capacity? My "rule of thumb" is
to beware of any site that has more then 8k subscribers per year
in operation.
• Survey your clients and prospective
clients. See where they actually call home on the web. If a
significant percentage (40%-50%) of these clients are at least
somewhat familiar with the information portal you are considering
investing with, it is probably a safe investment.
• Spend some time looking at
the ads that are currently on the site you are interested in.
Are you impressed with the amount of visibility they receive?
Are the posted ads from quality companies that you feel are
in keeping with the message of the site?
• Are their a lot of ads for
one of your larger competitors the may dwarf your message?
What ideas do the sales and marketing team at the information
portal have to keep that from happening?
• Call some of the other companies that are advertising
on the site. A call may come out of the blue to them, but this
element of surprise may create more honest answers, as pre-qualified
references are often a waste of time. Find the decision maker
at the establishment that is currently advertising on the site
and ask them questions like: "What kind of return are you
seeing?" "How quickly do they respond to your issues
or questions?" "Do they seek your approval before issuing
statements on your behalf?" Try to ask these types of questions
as many times as you can without completely agitating the person
on the other end of the phone. It may seem annoying to the person
on the other end, but it ends up being an effective tool for
seeking information.
By performing this kind of due diligence, you will be able to
more easily identify and evaluate information portals that will
help you maximize your marketing investment. Many marketing firms
have already performed comprehensive evaluations of information
portals, so they may be able to relay this kind of information
to you more quickly than performing investigative work on you
own.
Also, if you do not have the staff to accomplish this, many
online marketing firms would be happy to perform this service
for you. Hiring an experienced firm to help your company evaluate
your options for allocation of marketing funds may prove to be
a wise investment. This is especially true when you consider
what can be gained through an effective and targeted online marketing
campaign, as well as what can be lost by choosing an ill equipped,
poorly managed, or over-hyped portal.
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