Web
Business Promotion
How Promoting an Online Business Works: While you may think the hardest part of getting your online business up and running is the planning and
development of your Web site, your battle at that point is really only half won. You still have to get people to visit your
site, and as if that weren't enough -- you also have to get them to buy something once they get there (assuming your site's
purpose is to sell something). According to Media Metrix, the Web saw an estimated $73 billion in retail revenue in
2002, and that number is expected to jump to $118 billion by 2005. So how do you get some of that action for your own Web site?
Well, first you have to get people to your site. But how do you do that? How much does it cost? What works the best?
In this article, we'll tell you how you can
code and register your site so people can find it with search engines, how you can better promote your products within your site, and how you can make some extra money through allowing others
to advertise their products on your site.
Herding Traffic
Some of the ways to bring traffic to your site
include:
q Use
search engines and get high rankings within keyword searches.
q Get
Press Release about your site in local, regional or national press.
q Create
a customer newsletter to keep customers coming back to your site. Encourage readers to pass it along to their friends.
q Visit
newsgroups and becoming an "expert" in your field to subtly promote your site. With this, as well as the customer newsletter, your goal
is not to sell but to become a "voice of authority" by supplying useful information. Your e-mail tag and contact information within your newsletter is what will bring them to your site and sell your products or services.
q Run
classified ads online.
q Generate
some informative articles related to your topic and submit them to at least 10 e-zines that reach your target market. Include
your business information and site URL in your bio data.
q Get
more links to your site, both free and paid, through business or consumer product directories and affiliate programs.
q Don't
forget the power of word-of-mouth (a.k.a. viral marketing).
q The biggest payoff will
come from listings and rankings within search engines and Web directories, so let's focus on that.
Search Engines and Directories: One
of the best ways to get more traffic on your site is to get a high ranking on the top search engines. Search engines are how
most people find the sites they visit. They go to Google or Yahoo! or one of the other major search engines and type in words or phrases that describe what they're interested in. Then they
go through the sites listed on the first page of the 20+ pages that come up. That means that even if you're on the second
of the 20+ pages of search results (which is not bad considering...), you still don't have that great of a chance of getting
clicked.
So how can you get to the top of that first
page of sites? First, let's talk about search engines. Search engines create databases of the information on Web sites across the Internet. They categorize that information according
to keywords so that users can easily find the precise information they are looking for in the more than one billion
Web pages out there. While some search sites are directory-based like Yahoo!, with sites being reviewed and indexed by
real live people, others depend on spiders (also called robots) that constantly crawl across the Web, visiting Web sites and
indexing their content based on the text found on their pages and then following their links to other sites. Still others
rank sites within search categories based on how much the sites are willing to pay for click-throughs. The sites pay nothing
to be listed, but may pay a small amount for every person that clicks on the link to their site.
The current trend seems to be that the true
search engines, the ones that use spiders to index the Web, are partnering with the directory-based sites. Keep an eye on
future developments there. In the meantime, cover your bases by registering with everyone.
Although there are hundreds of search engines
and directories (and new ones every day), there are three or four that you MUST be listed on because they drive the most traffic.
First, you need to make sure you get listed in Yahoo!. The next largest players are Google and Inktomi. These are both true "search engines" that crawl sites and index content and links. Submitting your site to these major players
is still free, although your listing is not guaranteed, and you may also have the option of paying a fee for a premium listing
(or "buying" a keyword) that will put your site at the top of the page or in a sidebar.
Inktomi doesn't maintain its own search page, but it does have many large portal partners, such as MSN, AOL, LookSmart, About, and HotBot, that use Inktomi's search database and technology. Registering your site with one of these will submit your site to all
of them.
Crawling Spider, Hidden Keyword: In
order to get listed with search engines, you'll need to submit your site to them. Yes, those search engines that crawl sites
may eventually find you, but remember that they either follow links or go to sites they've been told about. If there aren't
any links to your site, then they may never crawl it. So, submit your site and submit it often, since so many new sites are
created and crawled every day that many other existing sites are dropped every day. To submit your site to a search engine
or directory, go to its home page and look for a link (usually at the bottom of the page) that says something like "add a
site," "add a link," or "suggest a site." From there, you will be given instructions on how to go about submitting your site.
There are also services that will submit your
site to "hundreds of search engines" -- for a small fee. These are not usually effective, however, and you're better off doing
it manually. When you submit your site to search engines, list your keywords and site description, as well as URLs for specific
pages within your site (unless the site says it's not necessary). You may have to submit the URL for each of your pages, but
it will be worth the effort.
Ramping Up Your Ranking: For
search engines that use spiders to crawl Web pages, you can improve your ranking with them (often called "optimizing your
site for search engines") by making sure the keywords under which you want to be found are located near the tops of
your pages. Remember, the spiders are trying to find out what your site is about. If they only see a word mentioned once near
the bottom of the page, they're not going to think it's very important. Be careful not to overstuff (spam) your pages with
the keywords that don't relate to your business, however, as search engines are getting smarter every day.
You also need to look closely at your page
titles. Every page in your site has a title that shows up at the top of the browser screen. This title can help your ranking
quite a bit, but many companies use the space for their company name or some marketing slogan. That's fine if your company
name is a household word but doesn't match your Web address, meaning people can't just type your company name between "www"
and ".com" and skip the search engine all together. In this case, having your company name in the title of your page is ideal,
because people will be typing that name into search engines. But if your company is not well-known enough to bank on that
kind of search, use the title area to list the keywords and phrases that describe the page. Even "professionals" blow that
one sometimes, and it's a very simple way to improve your ranking.
Use meta tags to put your keywords right
where the spiders are going to look. Meta tags are coded lists of your keywords and company or business descriptions that
do not show up on your pages when viewed with a browser, but are visible within the HTML code of the page for the crawling
spiders to see. For example, you would set up your meta tags like this:
<meta name="description" content="PUT YOUR
COMPANY DESCRIPTION HERE">
<meta name="keywords" content="PUT YOUR KEY
WORDS HERE">
There are also some other meta tags you can
use to tell the spider what type of document it is, how often you want the spider to revisit, and how your content should
be classified (i.e. consumer, business, etc.). This code is then placed right below the <title> of your page, which
falls directly below the <html> and <head> of the page. You can also include a meta tag for your page title to
help reinforce it. Your page should look like this:
<html>
<head>
<title>INSERT YOUR PAGE TITLE
HERE</title>
<meta http-equiv="title" content="PUT YOUR TITLE HERE">
<meta name="resource-type" content="PUT YOUR DOCUMENT TYPE HERE">
<meta name="revisit-after" content="PUT YOUR PREFERRED VISIT INTERVAL HERE">
<meta name="classification" content="PUT YOUR PRODUCT CLASSIFICATION HERE">
<meta name="description" content="PUT YOUR COMPANY DESCRIPTION HERE">
<meta name="keywords" content="PUT YOUR KEY WORDS HERE">
Create separate pages for each
keyword or phrase under which you would like to be found. Watch out for sites recommending that you create "doorway"
pages (pages that are basically just wall-to-wall keywords that are meant for the spiders only). Some search engines are dropping
sites that their spiders flag as having too many doorway pages. Instead, create the separate pages mentioned above for each
of your keywords or phrases and make sure you use the keywords within the title, meta tags, and the "legitimate" content of
the page as much as possible.
The more outside links you have pointing
to your site the higher your ranking will be with some search engines, such as Google. This is seen as an indicator of your
site's value and popularity, thus the higher ranking.
Be very selective about your keywords. Be
your customer. Think of the most likely keywords and phrases that your customers will be looking for, and use them in
your titles and meta tags. Also think about excess words you might be putting in that simply get in the spider's way. For
example, you don't need to use "Services: Lawn Mowing" -- just use "Lawn Mowing" as your page title. Check out the Google Press Center to see lists of the most frequently searched keywords on Google for 2002. Be
careful when writing your meta tag descriptions. For many search engines, including Inktomi and its affiliates, this
is the text they use as the summary for your page when it comes up during a search. Having an incoherent string of search
words, or a general blurb pulled from your home page that doesn't really get to the meat of your business, won't encourage
anyone to click on your link.
Create a "crawler" page to make
sure spiders do find all of your pages, you can create a page of links to all of your URLs specifically for the spiders. This
page should have no actual text to be viewed, just the links to every page in your site. It should be connected to your home
page or one of your top-level pages so the spider can find it easily.
Do you use a database and dynamically generate
product pages? If so, it makes your life easier, but the spiders can't find those pages! Because
the search strings require answers to questions, the spiders get stuck and leave. They can't provide the information the query
string needs. The "?" and "&" characters throw them off. This means the directory-based search engines (which aren't true
"search engines") are the only places those URLs will show up. However, there is a way to rewrite your dynamic URLs in a way
that the searching spiders can understand. See Clickz Today: Solutions for Dynamic Page Registration to learn how this is done.
Submit your site. Many
directories now charge fees to review and list your site. If they decide not to list it, for whatever reason -- the directory-based
sites use live people who make their own decisions about your site -- you won't get your money back, so don't even try. Submitting
your site to traditional search engines like Inktomi or Google can still be done for free if you do it yourself. Many fee-based
submission services get questionable results, but there are a few good ones, like Submit It!. They will register your site with hundreds of search engines and directories and keep your links active for a year for a
small fee, or you can use their lists and do it yourself.
Here are a few more coding techniques
that will improve your site's ranking:
q Add
some "comment" tags within your code that include your keywords.
q Use
your keywords in the "alt tags" for all of your images and links.
q Make
your file names consistent with your keywords.
q Create
a site map and link it to all of your pages
q Check out How Web Pages Work for a detailed look at all of these coding techniques.
Promoting Products and Cross-Selling: So you've followed the recommendations for driving traffic
to your site and have a lot of visitors, but many of them either just browse and move on or buy one product and that's it.
How do you get them to buy more -- or, in the case of the browsers, just buy something?
Suppose you are selling homeopathic and herbal remedies on your Web site. These are things that people don't tend to
know that much about. For this reason, putting informative articles, frequently asked questions, a glossary, and the ability
for visitors to post a question would probably make your site a very "sticky" site. This means that not only would people
come to your site for information, they would stay there for a while and probably return fairly often. Sticky sites are good
sites. Typically, the longer you can keep people on your site, the more they trust you and the more likely they are to buy
and recommend your products or services.
So, make your site a wealth of information about
your product and its related issues. Give your articles and information "printer friendly" links to make it simple to print
a copy. As we mentioned above, make yourself (or your site) an authority on your subject so people will rate you higher on
the old credibility scale.
NOTE: Make sure you have a well-written
disclaimer for any advice or information you give out, particularly if it is health-related. Get an attorney to draft it for
you and make recommendations about types of information you shouldn't post.
Make It Easy For Your Customers To Buy now, how do you get your visitors
to buy your products instead of just reading all of your information and leaving? Make it easy on them. Create sidebars within
your informational sections that list products or product categories that fall within the subject of information that is being
displayed. Create links that allow them to add the product to a shopping cart with one click. Create comparison charts that
help them choose the product that would be best for them.
Use the Amazon.com technique of adding a "Customers who purchased this product also bought these items...." section to encourage customers
to buy additional related products. You can also put customer ratings for products along with the item and even on the informational
pages. Customer testimonials are always valuable, but make sure they look (and are) legitimate. Include as much information
as possible about the customer who is providing the testimonial. The more information there is, the more credibility it will
have.
SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL!
· Have
regular special promotions prominently displayed on your home page in a special area devoted to that. It may keep people
coming back just to see what your current specials are.
· Create
that customer newsletter we talked about earlier and put a link to your specials there. (However, make sure you're
not spamming your customers with e-mail. Let them choose to subscribe to your newsletter, and always give them a way
out.)
· Create
frequent-buyer programs that let people use points or credits to get products for free or at least at a healthy discount.
· Put
together product combos at special prices. This not only sells more products, but also may help create loyal customers
by including a product they might not have thought they needed. Make sure your combos are a "value."
· Have
special Web-only deals. This works well if you also have a brick-and-mortar shop, but it really will work either way.
As long as you have information available that allows customers to buy by phone or fax, you can have specials for those who use the Web.
· Offer
free shipping or handling within the country or a certain geographic area.
· Price
your products competitively. Remember, your visitors are only a couple of clicks away from your competitor's
site, so comparison shopping is really taken to a new level. Something to think about with pricing is to make sure you don't
price your product too low, or people might think it's of a lower quality; but price your products too high, and people won't
buy at all. The moral here: Do your pricing research on your Web competitor's products before you price your own products,
just like you would do in a brick-and-mortar situation.
· Create
a higher "perceived value" for your customers by adding free samples, introductory offers, coupons for future discounts,
etc.
Advertising and Affiliates: Maybe you want the best of both worlds. You want revenue
streams from your products, as well as advertiser revenue. Are there companies out there with whom you and your business could
peacefully coexist on one site? Probably. The important thing here is to stick with advertisers who are offering something
that is at least related to your product line and core business. Going to a medical site and having a banner ad appear for "Free Web hosting -- only $9.95 a month!" probably makes people have a little less respect for that medical Web
site. For more details on getting people to pay you for the spare real
estate on your site, check out How Affiliate Programs Work and How Web Advertising Works.
Tools
· Planning
Online Business Planning Checklist (Microsoft Word format)
· Production
Online Business Production Checklist (Microsoft Word format)
· Promotion
Online Business Promotion Checklist (Microsoft Word format)