08 Mar 2008 12:28:06 | Kirk Bannerman
In the early days of developing my home business, I went for
the numbers instead of focusing on targeting prospects. It took
me a while to appreciate the importance of targeting (quality)
instead of just going for the big numbers (quantity).
For online marketing, it helps greatly to get your website in
front of people who are actually looking for the product,
service, or opportunity that you are offering. This refers to
the concept of marketing your sites to your target audience,
rather than wasting your time, effort, and money on people who
are not already interested in what you have to offer.
Be wary of “massive action” techniques in this era when many
ISPs feel their hottest marketing theme is the blocking of
incoming emails, which they decide their customers do not want
to receive (they are the self appointed “information police”).
Many of the sources of cheap, high volume leads supply you with
leads that have absolutely no interest in your particular
business (or product or service) and furthermore, have been put
into the list in such a manner that can get you into trouble
with your ISP because you are unwittingly spamming (many of
these bulk lead lists are created by robots that crawl the
Internet and harvest email addresses) the recipients.
In order to be effective in promoting your particular
proposition, whatever it is, you have to seek out your target
market. This is as true online as it is offline. Just because
you are able to reach huge numbers of people with your message
on the Internet far more cheaply and quickly than you can
offline, does this necessarily mean you should?
What’s the point of devoting your time and energies to marketing
to a massive group of people without first knowing whether they,
as a group, have a general interest in what you are offering?
It is much more efficient and effective to first find out where
your prospective customers congregate, and then target that
congregation, than it is to use a shotgun approach and hope that
one of your pellets will somehow find its target (you know…throw
enough up against the wall and something is bound to stick). You
will find that by selectively targeting your prospects before
marketing to them, your conversion ratio (the proportion of your
target market that takes positive action and actually purchases
your product or service) will be much higher than the results
you would otherwise achieve without first taking the time to
target your prospects. Once again, quality wins out over
quantity.
Many webmasters have not stopped to ask themselves the
all-important question…. What is the purpose of my web site? For
some reason, many of them seem to think that the purpose of
their web site is to give away freebies. Or it could be to be a
“showcase” for their products. Or it could be to create links to
all kinds of resources. Or it could be to have fancy Flash
graphics and build a brand name.
One of the biggest mistakes people new to web design make is
going for more "flash" than substance. They bog down their site
with a bunch of fancy colored backgrounds, 3-D text, flash
presentations, etc. If a visitor to your site is using a 56K
connection and has wait to more than 8 seconds for it to load
(which can easily happen on sites heavy with graphics), you can
expect to lose about 1/3 of your visitors.
If you’re a business, the purpose of your web site is to sell a
product or service. Your web site should have one main focus. It
should not be selling a dozen products, a dozen opportunities,
or linking to a bunch of different affiliate programs.
Presenting too many options has a tendency to confuse your
visitor. When someone visits your site, it should be clearly
obvious what one action you want him or her to take.
About Author :
Kirk Bannerman operates a successful home based business and
resides in California. For more details, visit his website at
http://business-at-home.us