What It Is:
Internet advertising whose goal it is to drive customers to your
website or location(s), or to make a call regarding your products
or services
Appropriate For:
Any business with a tech-savvy owner or an IT person or department
that can handle this form of advertising
Typical Cost:
Free, if you're advertising by sending out your own newsletter
or swapping links with another site, to anywhere from $100 to
$3,000 per ad or per month to advertise on a popular site,
depending on the type of ad you run. As with all types of
advertising, the largest advertising audiences will command the
largest prices, and the size and frequency of your ad as well as
the cost-per-thousand viewers all figure in to the cost. This can
ad up just as fast as any form of traditional offline
advertising.
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How It Works:
While traditional offline advertising is used by many companies to
drive customers to their websites, many businesses are trying
online ads (such as banners, pay-per-click ads, pay-per-call ads
and pop-ups) in e-newsletters, on compatible websites, on search
engines and in online versions of newspapers and magazines as a way
of reaching people who use the internet for shopping or to gather
information.
While online advertising is still new to many, you can take
heart in the fact that the same design and content requirements and
guidelines translate well from traditional advertising to online
ads. In fact, your newspaper print ads can simply be duplicated in
the online version of the publication you're advertising in as
long as you include a link to your website. Color, fonts, the size
of your ad(s) and your message will all play the same critical role
in getting your ads noticed and, more important, responded to. No
one wants to have to wade through too much text to understand an
ad's message. So present your message concisely and clearly,
and relate it to an emotion or a situation shared by the consumers
you're trying to reach.
Many businesses seem to think that a company logo on a banner ad
is enough to get people to click on it. But it's not. A message
that "rings a bell," makes a promise or asks an enticing
question is much more likely to get someone to want to know more.
Think of it as "What's behind door #1?" Hang
something on the "curtain" that makes someone want to see
what's behind it. Remember that an online customer is already
engaged and focused--unlike a radio listener or even a TV viewer,
who may only be half paying attention or out of the room when an ad
appears. You want to take advantage of that focus while web
surfers' fingers are on their keyboards.
As with traditional ads, online ads must be placed where the
right people will see them ("right people" meaning the
consumers you want to reach). So choose your placements according
to age and gender, interests, hobbies, and all the psychographic
(income, education, hobbies, etc.) information you use when
you're buying ads in television, print or radio. It's
especially easy to do this with newsletters and online versions of
popular magazines because they'll each have a particular
audience to deliver, as do websites that cover particular hobbies,
careers, medical information, vacation spots and so on. Remember,
no matter what you sell, you have to find sites that are
complimentary or closely related to your products. If you sell
dishes, for example, you might look for sites about entertaining,
decorating, homes and gardens, flower arranging or distinctive
glassware.
Focus groups can help you determine the look of your ads so they
attract the consumers you really want to reach. Attracting the eye
comes first--keep in mind that what they see reflects directly on
your company. Be sure that when they get to your site or call you,
they're not disappointed with that "next step." Your
site must load quickly, be easily navigated, and not require too
many forms to complete or entail too many steps to get to the final
order or check out or call. People answering your phones must be
informed, helpful, quick and able to accurately capture
information, take orders and offer information on other products or
services you have available.
Pay-per call ads are new, but think of how appealing this is for
a consumer or prospective client who needs an answer now or needs
to make a purchase now to be able to make a quick call and take
care of their pressing need, rather than clicking on a banner and
being led to your website where they may need to fill in a
registration form and then send you an e-mail and wait for a
reply.
Pop-up ads have become more hated than calls from
telemarketers--and like "remove my number" efforts, more
and more people are purchasing pop-up-blocking software to minimize
the aggravation. If you use this form of online advertising, you
risk the transfer of the distaste people feel directly from your ad
to your company. Why would you want to do that? The best way to
decide what type of online advertising to do is to consider your
own experiences with online ads. Which ones made you want to throw
your stapler at the monitor? Which ones did you click on?
And be sure that any sites you advertise on have a good
reputation themselves and aren't selling ad space to unsavory
companies you wouldn't want to be associated with. Don't
forget that your branding efforts extend to your online
advertising, and every contact with the public either builds your
brand or tears it down.
And make it easy on your customers: It's essential that you
allow anyone to easily opt-out of any e-mail marketing you do so
your efforts don't turn into spam. It's also essential that
you provide ways for people to return purchases, either to a
brick-and-mortar location or through shipping it back to you.
Answer complaints promptly and make consumers happy, whenever
possible, with a speedy apology, a refund, a discount on future
purchases or an exchange. Not everyone shops online; many still
don't trust it as a form of legitimate commerce. Like any
emerging venue, online shopping must prove itself to each user, and
where your online ads take them is where it all starts.
Kathy Kobliski is the founder of Silent
Partner Advertising in Syracuse, New York. She is also the
author of Advertising Without an Agency Made Easy.