ADUTAINMENT: Advertising as Entertainment
JellyBasket.com - JELLY by the CASE or as a GIFT BASKET.
SIPA's 32nd Annual Conference Showcases Latest Internet Advertising Trends And Email Marketing Through Client Newsletters
The Specialized Information Publishers Association Will Feature Leadership Keynote Speakers (http://www.newsletters.org/Events/Annual/2008/index.htm), Jay Berkowitz, Josh Macht, Bob Bly, Chris Schroeder And Fredrick Marckini On June 1, 2008 In Washington, DC
Consorte Media Announces New Email Marketing and Video Advertising Solutions
New product offerings from leading Hispanic digital marketing company give publishers additional ways to monetize traffic and help advertisers connect with Hispanics online
Viral Marketing: Internet Marketing Strategies
First of all, I realize that anything with "viral" in the name doesn't conjure up images of something you want close by, but there is a new type of Internet marketing known as "viral marketing" is worth investigating. Despite its unflattering appellation, it is an effective Internet collaboration marketing tool, and one that is important to understand if you want to expand your business.
MJM Internet Adds Internet Video Production to Enhance Dealership Websites With Tactical, Online Video Marketing
Automobile dealership website production firm, MJM Internet, has added Internet video products to enhance their clients' online marketing. Produced quickly, and at low cost MJMI internet video's feature online actors, and dealership personnel. They help bring car dealerships' online marketing to life using the site, sound and motion of video seemlessly added to their websites. Flexible and effective, integrated video should prove to give dealerships a competative advantage.
Internet Advertising: Viral Ads
Viral ads are called so because they are sent through emails, from account to account, spreading like viruses. The negative connotation of the name is merely due to its dispensational nature and not necessarily to any potential ill-effect brought on by its presence or any possible disruptive intent of the Viral Ad?s designer.
Best Email Advertising of 2008 to Be Named by Web Marketing Association
The Best email advertising in 86 industries will be judged as part of the 2008 Internet Advertising Competition awards. Companies or agencies wishing to nominate their work for consideration may do so at IACAward.org (http://www.iacaward.org?gad=CNvQkJkDEgjMICey2iA0NRi6nML_AyCb88Qv) before the deadline of January 31, 2008.
Viral Marketing - The Future Of Advertising?
To understand viral marketing you need to be familiar with social memetics ? the idea of viral marketing is to create a product or advert that encourages the end user and potential customer to also become your promoter.
Viral Video Evolved - Startup LonelyBloggers.com Launches With Viral Marketing Case Study
LonelyBloggers.com is proud to announce a 7 episode, 40 minute viral video series called LBTV that can be watched in it's entirety on YouTube right now. Despite recent reports that a viral video now cost up to $250,000 to produce, LonelyBloggers was able to produce our viral video series with only a $5000 budget. Internet marketers need to understand the growing importance of adding video to your marketing mix as people flock to video sharing sites like YouTube. This means potentially free website traffic as a result, all the time presenting your brand in an exciting manner. Viral Marketing has to be considered as a key part of your future marketi...
Social Advertising Changing Internet Marketing: Moving From Forced Advertising To Opt-In Ads
SplashCast CEO Helps Define The Emerging New Marketing Field At L.I.S.A Conference - First Forum Dedicated To Social Advertising
How to Incorporate Viral Marketing Techniques to Your Internet Marketing Arsenal
Viral marketing is not the last disease found, nor a virus to your desktop
Free Web Advertising: Chat Room Marketing Secrets Of Internet Marketing Gurus Exposed
Have you ever been to a chat room?Have you ever posted a message?If yes, now you may learn some free web advertising
secrets on how to market your products and services
in chat rooms.Chat Room Marketing is the use of online chat rooms to
promote your product or service.
Internet Marketing - How to Make your Online Advertising Business Produce Money on Internet Marketing
The success or failure of your Internet marketing business depends largely on the Internet users. If they are interested on the products and services that you are offering for sale, definitely you can expect hundreds to thousands of dollars in revenues from your online business. On the other hand, if they are just too lazy to hear what you want to say and what you are offering, better shut down your personal computer unit and find some other ways of earning money.
Mortgage Marketing - Viral-Email, Referral Marketing Strategy
This is a devastatingly powerful way
to extend your marketing reach. For this to
work right you need a website that promotes
your business.
Internet Marketing And Viral Marketing
Viral marketing is a unique tool designed to create so much buzz about the article itself that even the largest sites will want to publish it.
Viral Marketing:10 High-Impact, Viral Marketing Strategies,To Explode Your Sales
Hello, do you have any website that is not bringing
in a lot of sales?Would you like to know a few smart and sharp viral
marketing secrets to turn it around and explode
your sales?If yes, may I offer you 10 high impact viral marketing
strategies to increase your sales!Viral Marketing is allowing people to giveaway and
use your free product or service in order to multiply
your marketing quickly over the internet. The idea
behind viral marketing is that you include your ad
with the freebie people giveaway or use.
Myth 1: Marketing is a cost, not an investment
when you spend time and money randomly on marketing, then it probably is an expense because you're not generating a return on the resources invested in it. Many people make the mistake of emulating the marketing tactics of large companies (such as image advertising) that just don't produce good returns for small businesses. The fact of the matter is that small businesses have to produce BETTER marketing than large businesses because they can't afford to make mistakes by dropping hundreds or even thousands of pounds/dollars onto campaigns that don't work. What often happens is that business owners spend lots of money on ineffective campaigns, then erroneously conclude that marketing is an expense, or not worth doing at all.
However, the secret to marketing success is to create a marketing system. A system of activities, strategies, tactics and automation that reliably and predictably create measurable results and positive ROI. I call this the "marketing slot machine". It's a slot machine that for every ?1/$1 you put in, you get ?1.50, or ?2 or ?5 or more back out. Once you've created this system (which requires a small amount of experimentation and testing), you should be able to turn it on and off at will, and invest as much as you can to gain maximum returns.
Myth 2: Marketing is expensive
Marketing is only expensive (and therefore an expense rather than an investment) when it is either unaccountable or ineffective. There are myriad ways to market you business inexpensively that are highly effective, once you know how. The key is to understand the elements or variables that go into each activity or campaign, and how they affect the ultimate outcome. This is where most people go wrong, and that's why their marketing fails to produce the results that they'd hoped for. Often the message is weak or confusing, it's being sent to the wrong people, or they fail to follow up. Get the formula right, and marketing can be very inexpensive - I spend less than ?100 per month on marketing and I'm getting great results.
Myth 3: Marketing means I have to be pushy and sales
Good marketing, done the right way is neither pushy nor sales. It's a complete myth that pushy, "gift of the gab" people make the best sales people. Why? Because they spend most of the time talking about themselves or their products and then manipulating people into buying from them. Whilst this used to work, and still does occasionally, it often results in buyers remorse and a general sense of uneasiness on the part of the buyer. Much of the time it creates resistance and a feeling of wanting to run for the hills - have you ever felt like that?
Ironically, the best marketers and salespeople are those who listen. They listen to what potential clients are saying and see if there's a match between what they offer and what the buyer needs. They build relationships and educate their prospects about how they can help them. The art is to get in front of people who have demonstrated a need or want for what you offer, and who will gladly learn more about what you do and how you can help them.
Myth 4: Marketing produces instant results
Some people believe that if they keep running their adverts/campaigns that they'll "increase their profile", and somehow, magically one day, a stampede of clients will come rushing to their door. I don't subscribe to that theory, because I believe that all marketing should produce a measurable result that can be observed in a fairly short time frame. If you're marketing efforts are not producing obvious, tangible results then you need to look at the elements that aren't working.
Having said that, marketing is not something you can usually achieve overnight success in. It's somewhat like rolling a snowball down a hill - there's a cumulative effect and momentum increases over time. To create the cumulative effect and momentum requires sustained and consistent effort. Marketing isn't something you do occasionally, and then put on the back burner. It's something that you need to do constantly, bit by bit, in the same way that a sportsperson needs to train every day to be good enough for the Olympics.
Myth 5: Once my diary is full, I can stop marketing
It's human nature that once you've got some well-paying work you feel rather pleased with yourself, and focus most of your time on servicing your new clients. However, if you have a sales cycle that's usually more than a couple of weeks long, then you're going to come a cropper once the project finishes. Because if you don't continue to do your marketing whilst you're working on the project, then at the end of the project you may find that your sales pipeline is empty and you have to start up your marketing all over again. It may then be a number of weeks before people start to progress down your sales pipeline towards actually doing business with you. This is what is commonly referred to as the "feast and famine" syndrome.
If you prefer to avoid these peaks and troughs of income producing activity, then you need to think about how you can do a little bit of marketing on a consistent basis. Even better - create a marketing system that easily and reliably entices prospects into your sales pipeline without huge amounts of effort from you.
Myth 6: My business is small, so I don't need a marketing plan
I tried some marketing plan software once. It asked me a lot of questions about market share, mission statements plus product, price, promotion and place. Great fun, if your mind likes to chew on such imponderables. As a graduate of a business studies degree I knew exactly what it was referring to, but had no idea how that was useful to a small business. And guess what - that's because it isn't!
No wonder then, that most small businesses don't have written marketing plans, when traditional style marketing plans seem convoluted and esoteric. However, this doesn't mean that a marketing plan in your head is any better. The question is whether this results in any organized activity.
And to me, that's the essence of a marketing plan - a blueprint for organizing your marketing activities. It doesn't have to be high-faulting' or fancy, or be filled with marketing-jargon, but what it does need to do is focus resources on specific action steps that need to be taken to achieve specific goals. There's a world of difference between carrying ideas around in your head, and writing them down into an organized plan of action.
If you don't have a written marketing plan, then I urge you to consider this: research suggests that businesses that create a written marketing plan increase their revenue by about 30% after having created one.
Myth 7: External marketing help is expensive
If you enlist the help of what I refer to as "traditional" marketing consultants, then it probably is expensive. You're probably looking at thousands down in one shot, rather than hundreds and probably no guarantees of success. It's quite possibly a stark choice between taking the family on holiday, and paying for your PR or marketing consultant.
If giving up your family holiday doesn't appeal, then you may choose to go down the route of taking training courses, reading books, attending seminars, enrolling on e-courses and all manner of other self-study options. The problem with all of this, is that there is rarely any hands-on, customized support for you and your business. And, there's no accountability - or as I like to say - a friendly kick in the pants to keep you on track. It may also take you quite literally years of trial and error to find out what works for your business. And that's assuming that you even implement what you've learnt, which, sadly, most people don't.
However, a new alternative has emerged in recent years - marketing mentoring or coaching. Rather than paying thousands to have a marketing consultant do it all for you, or struggling up the learning curve by yourself, you now have the option to work with a coach or mentor who can advise you, guide you and show you how to do your marketing for yourself. Plus they'll make sure you stay on track. If attracting more clients is important to you, and you haven't yet created your own "marketing slot machine" then I highly recommend you find a marketing coach who will help you create a marketing system that works for you.
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