Dot Who?
When you're doing business online, don't ignore offline methods of marketing.
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http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneursstartupsmagazine/2000/december/34250.html
Doing business on the Internet doesn't mean ignoring offline
methods of steering traffic to your business. In addition to using
banner ads, e-mail and other online marketing tools, savvy
e-business owners are adding broadcast, print and other media to
the ways they advertise and promote their e-commerce sites.
"Make your Web site part of your overall marketing
plan," urges John Ferguson, president of Baron Consulting
Group Inc., an Internet marketing and design firm in Scottsdale,
Arizona. "Unless it's an Internet-only product, you
shouldn't rely on your Web site to provide all your
marketing."
Mixing offline with online marketing is more than a matter of
including your URL on your business card. There are a number of
tricks to making sure your offline marketing efforts turn into real
online sales. For starters, you need to make sure your URL is on
all the printed material of your company. This includes letterhead,
brochures, press releases, invoices and statements. If you
accomplish even this basic integration of online and offline
marketing, you'll be ahead of many e-businesses. If you doubt
that, just check the next few dozen print magazine advertisements
you see for dotcom companies. A surprising number neglect to
include their URLs even in these seemingly essential places.
Take a look at the URL you put in printed materials. While your
precise domain name isn't a make-or-break difference for purely
online marketing-since even hard-to-remember domains are easy to
bookmark with a click-having a memorable domain name is im-portant
for offline marketing.
That's doubly true with broadcast advertising. To be
effective when presented in a TV or radio ad, a domain name should
be short, accurate and describe your offering. Anything over
several letters or including anything at the end other than
".com" will not be remembered. When e-business owners
think of TV advertising, they probably envision some high-profile
dotcom start-up, flush with cash from a stock offering, buying 60
seconds during the Super Bowl for a cost several times their own
company's annual sales volume. But there's more to TV ads
than the Super Bowl. You can cost-effectively ad-vertise on cable
and local TV and radio shows that are rel-evant to your product
category, such as cooking shows for a cookware e-business and so
forth. Broadcast advertising isn't as important for narrowly
targeted e-businesses as it is for traditional marketers, but if
you indulge in it with discretion, it can be a valuable part of
your marketing mix.
Don't forget to promote your site by seeking publicity from
offline media. It's free, and, because editorial endorsements
carry far more weight than advertisements, they're more
effective than paid announcements. Send press releases to
publications alerting them to news about your e-business.
News-worthy events may include celebrity appearances, product
announcements and news on awards you've won.
Be sure to include in your press release full contact
information; dates, times and locations of all newsworthy events;
and, most of all, your Web site. Try to send your release to a
specific editor in the proper department of the publication. Look
through directories such as Bacon's Publicity Checker to
get contact information. Give the publication plenty of time to
react to your news and plan its possible coverage.
Limiting yourself to online promotion makes about as much sense
as a retail merchant limiting promotion to in-store signage. If you
can promote your site using even a rudimentary mix of marketing
methods, you'll have a good edge in attracting attention and
customers.
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| | The Doctor
Is In DOCTOR EBIZ, A site
dedicated to helping e-businesses succeed, has Internet marketing
consultant Ralph F. Wilson answering questions from e-business
entrepreneurs about how to promote, design and effectively utilize
their Web sites. There's a database of previously answered
questions and a free e-mail newsletter included. | | |
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Mark Henricks, author of
Business Plans Made Easy (Entrepreneur Press) and Mastering Home Networking(Sybex Inc.),
writes on business and technology issues.
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