Months later they are wringing their hands with regret wondering why they've had five visitors, four of which were their friends!
A website does not just automatically appear high in the search engine rankings and get traffic, you have to do some work in order to get this traffic and start making sales. There are thousands, or even more of sites competing for the same traffic you want ? depending on your niche and keywords, there could be millions of sites!
You need to promote your website and get it noticed ? not only in the search engines, but in other places where you will get targeted traffic who are interested in your website.
Strategy 1 - Directories
There are a whole host of directories on the Internet. Just search for your keyword and ?Directory? or ?Link Exchange? or anything similar and you will find hundreds of places to put your links. Yeah, it is hard work to do this, but you will get links and traffic to your site. If it's too much like hard work for you ? hire someone to do it!
Strategy 2 - Articles
Articles are an excellent way to gain traffic and promote your site. Submitting your article to directories will get you backlinks and if they are quality articles, will get you known across the Internet as an expert. Newsletter and website owners will pick up your articles and use them as content. This will help to promote your site to a much wider audience.
Strategy 3 ? Affiliate Program
Running an affiliate program for your product is an excellent way to promote your site. Instead of you working on promoting your site, you have all these affiliates doing the work for you. And the best thing is ? you don't pay them a penny unless they make a sale. Depending on how much you offer as a commission, you could have hundreds of hungry affiliates aggressively marketing your product all over the Internet.
Strategy 4 ? Viral Marketing
Viral marketing is a concept that has been around for some time. It's a very powerful method of getting traffic to your site. You have all seen those cute or funny emails and videos that people send to all their friends? That is viral marketing. If you can tap into this through a book, a video, games or anything people will want to pass on to their friends, suddenly you have a whole lot of people promoting your site ? for free!
Strategy 5 ? Forums
Forums are an excellent way to market your website. As you participate in a forum so you can establish yourself as an authority and trusted expert on your chosen subject, which will make people come to visit your website to find out more information. Be aware though, that if you blatantly promote your business without adding value or spam the forums you will do more harm than good to your reputation and your business.
Promoting your website will get you targeted traffic. It will also allow you to organically move up the search engine rankings through backlinks and the use of keywords. If you are someone who is serious about making money online, then you need to start taking your website promotion seriously. Remember though ? spam and other unethical practises will harm your business in the long term. Promote your site ethically and responsibly, and you can be reaping the rewards for years to come.
This is a favorite topic of mine, since I tend to become heavily involved with promotional activities with clients, as part of my consulting practice. Many of my clients are at a stage where gaining (or regaining) market traction is crucial to moving the company forward. So finding successful, profitable promotional programs is quite often one of the key activities that we're concentrating on early in a consulting engagement.
SAME OLD, SAME OLD DOESN'T WORK
So what's the best way to promote software and other technology products? If you're asking that question, thinking there's an actual answer, you are likely on a path to failure. One-size-fits-all promotional programs rarely work, and if they do, it's probably just lucky. The most important thing to remember about promotion (and marketing in general) is that each company and product line is a unique situation. Even with the exact same company and product line, a promotional program that worked 12 months ago has a high chance of failure today. Markets are not static, particularly fast moving, high growth technology markets. And there is a wide range of market types within the high technology business sector. The proper promotional approach for a $100,000 software package with 1000 potential customers is far different from the best approach for a $49 software package with 5 million potential targets. If you find yourself falling back on some tried and true formula, you're thinking "behind" the market, not "ahead" of it. I always chuckle a bit when I see ads for a new VP Marketing that is seeking candidates only from 10 specific software companies that have had recent success in a particular market. It's very likely that one of those candidates will bring along the "formula" that made "Giant Software Company C" a huge success. Unfortunately, the strategy may be terribly inappropriate for their new company, particularly at a new time/market stage. This is an example of "shooting behind the market"--and with promotional programs, thinking ahead of the market is required.
The reason is what usually works in promotions are novel new approaches (or new spins on old approaches, or approaches from other markets). Once something works, others in the market take notice, and the copy-cat campaigns flood the communication channels, and greatly reduce a successful program's effectiveness. Nothing works forever, so you need to constantly being trying to find the next new promotional program--again, out ahead of the market. It's similar to when the coach of a sports team installs a new system for his team--it throws the competition off balance for a time, but they eventually adjust, and match or counteract what is providing the advantage.
FIRST ART
So how do you approach finding a successful promotional program for your company--do you just guess? Well, not quite. I always say that promotion is a combination of "Art" and "Science"--with unfortunately, the Art coming first. The thing is, you will NEVER know with any level of certainty whether a promotional approach will be successful, until you do it. So there is a bit of Art in formulating the initial "test programs". But of course you don't guess. The initial program is put together utilizing the experience of the marketer, their past experience with programs in similar market conditions, a snapshot reading of the market conditions and product position currently, the amount of budget available, and of course the goals of the company. So up front, the key is to make small, intelligent bets.
THEN SCIENCE
The key word in the above paragraph is "test". This may be the most important concept in the whole topic of promotion--and unfortunately, one that is dramatically underutilized.
Marketing promotional programs are all too often put together haphazardly, without much analysis of the specific situation. Often they are designed in a certain way because the VP Marketing or CEO has always done it that way, or are comfortable with it. Executives without much marketing experience like to see print ads, because in their minds, that's marketing promotion. Of if the VP Sales is involved, Trade shows might be what he's used to. Or seminar promotions might be preferred, if the executive comes from a market with high price points. While all of these methods may be very applicable to an individual situation, they are, on average, some of the higher cost, lower return activities in the promotion bag of tricks. I see thousands (and sometimes millions) of dollars wasted on programs that have been given very little thought, prior to large execution expenditures. Worse yet, these programs are often approved and implemented with no ability to judge whether or not the chosen programs end up being a good investment for the company. This brings me to the measurement part of promotional marketing.
I've never been a big fan of marketing programs which aren't measurable. When measurement doesn't occur, it's often because program implementation just isn't thought through well enough, and accurate measures could have been put in place--but aren't. Some programs however, such as "Image Advertising", just don't lend itself to correlating the program results to the corporation's performance. While there is, again, a place for such programs, I recommend that they be left to those monster corporations who can afford ambiguous results within some segment of a very large budget. For the preponderance of companies out there for which every nickel counts, I highly recommend that you stubbornly stick to programs with results you can easily measure.
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Jason Johns has sinced written about articles on various topics from Lose Weight, Fitness and Writing. Jason E Johns is a successful Internet Marketer & personal coach dedicated to your success. Learn more about , at. Jason Johns's top article generates over 165000 views. to your Favourites.
Phil Morettini has sinced written about articles on various topics from Marketing, Pearls and Small Business. Phil Morettini is President of PJM Consulting, Management Consultants to Tech Companies PJM provides assistance in Management, Product Marketing and Biz Dev. More Articles at. Phil Morettini's top article generates over 22200 views. to your Favourites.