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Beyond Search Engines
Some webmasters report that search engines account
for 75% or more of their total website traffic. However, it's important
not to become too dependent on search engines for new business.
Achieving a top listing from a major search engine is becoming more and
more difficult over time. The competition for top spots is intense and
it's getting harder every day to get listed at all. Also more and more
search engines are moving to a pay-per-click model, and paying for top
listings may not be in your budget.
The major search engine companies tend to be secretive about the details
of their ranking process, so you have to rely on trial and error when
optimizing your site to get a higher ranking. Also, search engines
change their algorithms every now and then, and when they do you might
find your Web pages bumped down to a lower position. To keep up with the
latest search engine ranking procedures you'll either need to spend
considerable time on it yourself or pay for the services of an SEO
specialist.
While search engines can be a great source of targeted traffic, the
visitors they send are not always your best prospects. True, the traffic
is targeted in the sense that the visitor has actively searched for
keywords which your site is relevant to, but that searcher is also
viewing (and presumably visiting) the links of some of your closest
competitors who also appear in the search results. In other words,
they're "shopping around", and your site is a contender but not the only
choice. In contrast, someone who visits your website after reading your
article, seeing your ad in a respected ezine, or being referred by a
friend is interested in your site in particular.
For all of these reasons, your marketing plan should not rely too
heavily on search engine placement. You should never become too
dependent on any one source of website traffic, and search engine
rankings are particularly vulnerable to sudden changes. Being bumped
from the first page of results to the second, or going from the second
page to the third, can mean a significant drop in traffic. You should
diversify your marketing efforts and use a variety of promotional
techniques to bring visitors to your site rather than putting all your
time and effort into getting a search engine listing.
Here are ten other ways you can promote your online business:
1) Get your articles published in ezines and on websites. Find high
quality ezines and websites that offer plenty of useful and relevant
content that would appeal to your target market (but which are not your
direct competitors). Contact the publisher or webmaster and offer free
reprint rights to an article you've written which would be a good fit
for their readers or site visitors. They get extra content and you get
new leads - it's a win-win situation.
2) Exchange links with other webmasters. Go to your favorite search
engine and search for other quality websites with content related to the
theme of your site. Then contact the webmaster and offer swap links -
you link to their site from a resource page on your website and in
exchange they link to yours. You'll both benefit from the extra traffic,
plus you'll be adding useful content to your site.
3) Participate in banner ad and link exchanges. Swap banner or text link
ads with other webmasters who share your market. You could join a banner
exchange network or just arrange swaps on your own, but either way make
sure your banner will be displayed to a targeted audience (those most
likely to be interested in your product or service).
4) Practice viral marketing. Encourage your site visitors and existing
customers to tell their friends and colleagues about your business. Make
it easy for them to email a recommendation by providing a link on your
site and in your ezine that will fill in the URL and other information
in a form which they can personalize and send.
5) Run ezine ads. Place your ad in an ezine that appeals to your
potential customers. If your budget allows consider sponsoring a whole
issue; you get several ads throughout a single issue, which increases
the impact of your sales message.
6) Place print ads. Run a series of classified ads in your local
newspaper or business publications. Also, seek out special interest
publications and trade journals of interest to your potential customers
- the cost is usually reasonable and you'll reach a highly targeted
market.
7) Give away logoware. Print your URL and logo on t-shirts, baseball
caps, coffee mugs, mouse pads, keychains, pens, or other promotional
giveaways. Include them with catalogs, slip them into order shipments,
and give them away at public events.
8) Try mobile marketing. Have you ever thought about how much time you
spend on the road? Putting your URL on a car window decal or on an ad
panel in a bus or taxi reaches a broad audience for very little money.
Put a decal or magnetic sign on your own car and ask your friends and
family members to put your Web decal on their cars, too.
9) Distribute flyers and handouts. A flyer can usually be printed up and
distributed for pennies. Just have a simple one page sheet printed up
with a description of your business and your website URL and other
contact information. Hand them out at a shopping center or supermarket
or during a fair or special events, or pay a flyer distribution company
to deliver them door-to-door for you.
10) Do a postcard mailing. Get some postcards printed up with a
screenshot of your website's home page or photograph of your place of
business on the front and a description of your business and website URL
on the back. Bulk mail them yourself or pay to have them included in a
"card pack" mailer that goes out in your community.
Search engines are clearly too important to ignore, but don't overlook
the many other possibilities for driving traffic to your site. Even if
you succeed in getting your website listed and ranking well, don't
depend on search engines alone to bring you new customers. And if you've
tried repeatedly to get indexed by major search engines only to find
your site rejected or ignored, don't despair - you do have other
options. Don't be afraid to try something new and different. Experiment
with new marketing methods and track your results to find out which
methods work best for you.
Jane McLain is a Web developer and SEO specialist and the webmaster of
EClaunchsite.com, an online resource center for netrepreneurs with tools
and information to help you plan, build, launch and grow your
e-business.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/
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