Posts Tagged ‘Creating’

Creating Substance In Your Online Business

When you dive into the online business world there are hundreds of different ways which you can start making money online. The problem is when you create a presence which stands only to make money online people will be turned off. You must find a way to mix content with your monetization efforts not just one or the other. I have also seen websites which have amazing content, but little or no monetization. These may be great when trying to build traffic and could easily be monetized, but a website with content and no monetization links or ads will not make any money. The best way you can begin setting up a successful online business is first learning about the different ways which you can make money then creating a website or blog full of content. Once you have the web presence full of unique content related to your niche and traffic begins popping in through search engines you can add whatever monetization links you would like.

One rule of online business is never allow your greed to overpower your web presence. This means you should hold true to content making sure you leave the majority of your web presence open for content. When a visitor comes to your presence they should be quickly reminded why they are there. Above the fold which is everything your screen shows when you click on your web presence should contain quality content or at the very least a description of what they will find if they scroll down. What you don’t want your visitor to see when they hit your website is ad after ad or banner after banner. If you spam your visitor as soon as they hit your website usually they will click off rather than trying to find out what you have to offer. What this means is you will lose the potential connection, money, and follower that the person may have been. Now on the other hand if the visitor comes to your website and finds exactly what they need you will have a much greater chance of turning the visitor into a reader or selling one of the affiliate products you market to the visitor.

Making sure your website is full of content is what substance is all about. This will usually mean text, but does not always have to be text. You can give your visitor anything from video, audio, pictures, products, and whatever else you can think of. The great websites such as twitter and ebay really did not offer much content and still make millions. They did offer their visitor exactly what they set out to offer which in twitters case is an ease of communication and in the case of ebay the ability for their users to save money by buying items in an auction. This is great for teams of developers, but for a sole individual with little programming knowledge creating these types of presences is somewhat unrealistic. For us we must rely on our knowledge of certain topics and the ability to build an online business on information rather than innovative technology. Even if you are an amazing writer you will need to learn at least a little about internet marketing. The great thing about online business with substance is the need for internet marketing actually decreases because when webmasters see the quality your website or blog offers they will automatically link to you.

Tips on Creating Successful Marketing Projects For Your Clients

More than ever before, companies are hiring marketing consulting businesses with one important criterion in mind: “How can this marketing consultant help me get the most out of my marketing dollars?”

With increasing pressure to maximize the return on their clients’ marketing investment, marketing consultants are all too aware that campaigns that miss the mark cost their clients time and money. And at times, clients will seek compensation for those losses with a lawsuit.

Although marketing consultant liability insurance will protect your consultancy, a lawsuit can still deal a stinging blow to a marketing business’ professional reputation and take away valuable time from client service to focus on defending the lawsuit. To manage this risk, it is important to understand and correctly translate a client’s needs into a successful campaign.

Measuring Success

Most marketing consulting projects are focused on one of two outcomes: building brand awareness or generating leads. Each situation calls for similar assessment tactics, but involve very different execution strategies.

A brand-awareness campaign focuses on building a company’s reputation within a market and growing corporate or product name recognition among a targeted demographic. Because brand awareness can be hard to quantify, this type of project creates unique challenges for a marketing consulting business seeking to justify a customer’s marketing investment. Clearly discussing the project objectives with the client will aid in minimizing marketing consulting risk and liability.

Results for lead-generation campaigns are generally easier to track, as these projects produce tangible, traceable results. These marketing campaigns are designed to generate leads that will in turn help the company to sell a product or service, whether it’s an immediate buy such as a soft drink or book, or a longer-term commitment such as a technology system or membership. But new sales aren’t the only measure of success. Many companies also have business objectives to grow their customer base; convert prospects to buyers; or turn existing buyers into high-volume, loyal customers.

Where Does the Client Stand?

Before a marketing consultant can develop an effective strategy to achieve the desired results, he or she must first develop a comprehensive understanding of the client’s industry and customer base. Most importantly, any marketing strategy must be tied to a company’s strategic objectives to ensure greater success and reduce risk for marketing firms.

To translate a customer’s needs into a viable marketing project, the first step is to achieve the deepest possible understanding of what a client’s business objectives are. In assessing a client’s needs, a marketing consultant must consider numerous factors that will affect the company, long after the marketing campaign has finished. Smart marketing consultants employ an interview process to better define potential opportunities and ensure agreement on the campaign’s objectives. Questions may include:

  • What is the client’s business goal and strategy to achieve it?
  • Who and where are the client’s customers? What are they buying, and why?
  • What markets would the client like to move into?
  • What is the goal of this campaign? (Increase revenue? New customers? Market penetration? Repeat business? Customer loyalty?)
  • What marketing efforts has the client made in the past, and what were the results?
  • What is the client’s marketing budget, or acceptable cost per lead? (This is a key question.)
  • What IT systems and personnel does the client have in place to track campaign results and return on investment?
  • Who are the client’s competitors, and what are they doing right or wrong?
  • What differentiates the client company from its competitors and makes it the best choice for customers?

Typically, gathering the answers to these and other questions can start with an initial meeting with the client. However, to gain more in-depth insight as a project begins, a marketing consultant can interview both internal client contacts and the company’s customers, and assess the market space in which the company operates. Customer surveys, case studies and testimonials are all useful sources for customer perspective into what makes a company stand out.

With all of this information as a foundation, a marketing consultant should be well-prepared to define the vision and scope of a project, research options, develop success measures, create an internal approval process, and formulate tactics to achieve the client’s marketing and business objectives. A good tip to reduce marketing liability is to ensure your project plans include milestone checkpoints and defined success measures.

Incorporating New Technologies

As marketing consultants assess their customers’ business needs, it’s vital to consider how those needs might be served by the latest technological innovations. For example, almost all marketing campaigns now have some online component, whether it’s a landing page that customers can locate using a URL in a print ad or a more advanced interactive campaign with Twitter or Facebook.

An added benefit to Internet marketing is the ability to get immediate feedback on the profitability of a campaign. Using analytics programs, you can count unique site visitors and track click-through rates, providing an immediate measure of customer response. As part of the project scoping process, marketing firms must identify the client’s current platforms, applications and metrics, as well as provide recommendations on new technology to support the business outcomes desired. At the same time, when employing online marketing, the potential for a marketing consultant’s liability may increase because outside applications, functionality and databases may fail to perform or experience security flaws, all of which could pose a situation for litigation.

Today’s client companies are counting on their marketing consultants to help them understand how to integrate the newest technologies and marketing techniques to get the best return on their marketing investment. By combining a thorough understanding of the latest marketing trends with a solid understanding of a company and its objectives, a marketing consultant can create campaigns that will win customers over, while reducing marketing liability and winning their clients’ repeat business.