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The Genesis for a Successful Online Marketing Campaign
- By Bill Stroll
- Published 11/26/2007
- Search Engine Marketing
Bill Stroll
Bill Stroll is a sales and marketing manager at StepForth Web Marketing Inc.
View all articles by Bill Stroll
I am often reminded how important it is to develop a well thought out
business plan. I speak with numerous clients each day, each having a
passion to promote their service, information or product and yet
although they may be experts in their field, they do not have the
expertise or foresight on how to market the site. Often times the
website is destined to stay in the closet and never get the online
exposure they need and are hoping for. And often times the client lacks
an objective perspective, sort of being amongst trees in a forest and
not being able to see to whole picture.
The internet audience has matured and become more sophisticated in its expectations and delivery of information. No longer can one just throw up a site and expect to immediately generate business. Website readiness for online marketing can take many forms. In this and the articles that follow in the next few weeks, we will examine the building blocks to successful web marketing. We will look at:
The Building Blocks….
The following checklist is an excellent strategy for achieving superb organic visibility and stable placement in the search engines. It will also help increase visitor retention and conversion. This information is portable; it does not matter whether you are in the planning phases of starting an online business, already have an existing website or are in need to redesign your presence. Although many of these stages (phases) can run concurrently the list below is presented as what should be implemented first, prior to moving into the next phase.
Of course, your marketing strategy will be determined on whether you will be intimately involved or delegating stuff in-house or out of house. Do you have the time, energy, expertise for any, some or all of these important tasks? Will you go the consulting route and implement their recommendations? Is your service or product time sensitive? Does it need to be sold by a certain date? Your strategy, timetable and budget will vacillate accordingly.
Perhaps the best actionable word I can offer is to “Focus”. Focus on what it is you are all about and what sets you apart from your competitors. This may sound simple enough, however, try writing down in one sentence w
hat one message you want
visitors to receive when they come to your website. Surprisingly, many
site owners I speak with have not or cannot do this. Determining such
clarity before starting anything else can pay dividends. For example,
organic visibility and placement in the search engines largely has been
considered a game of inches; will you take advantage of this
opportunity and create a keyword enriched domain name?
Market research offers data rich and timely information on what your competitors are doing. This can be approached from two angles and really, it is about how you define your “competition”. Perhaps you are aware of competitor sites from within your industry and want to learn more about how they got to where they are in the search engine result pages. Odd as this may seem, this method for selecting which competitor sites to analyze may not be the most effective route to analyze your competition. These competitors may not be well placed in the search engines and may not be targeting the same keyword phrases that you are. Should this be true, why bother analyzing them. On the other hand, if you have already determined one of your site’s primary keyword phrases you can type it into a search engine and review the resulting index page and choose from the list. The difference here is an important one to consider. Here you select your keyword phrase target and see who is competing for that term. It is not necessarily important who that company is or even what industry they are in. The important consideration is who is on top of the list for the keyword phrase you are shooting for and you are looking for any ammunition you can get to leap frog over their position in the search engine results page.
Market research will produce a blueprint for your web marketing direction.
Not everyone has the budget or expertise for this in depth type of data mining. A more economical approach may be to conduct keyword analysis. Quite possibly developing a realistic set of achievable primary and secondary keyword targets is the most overlooked aspect to any successful web marketing presence. This component will be looked at in the next article.
The internet audience has matured and become more sophisticated in its expectations and delivery of information. No longer can one just throw up a site and expect to immediately generate business. Website readiness for online marketing can take many forms. In this and the articles that follow in the next few weeks, we will examine the building blocks to successful web marketing. We will look at:
- How to work your marketing budget and timelines
- How to work a realistic marketing business
- Pitfalls of optimization
- Most common mistakes
- Optimization complete, now what?
- Tiers for small -med -large business, how we customize them
The Building Blocks….
The following checklist is an excellent strategy for achieving superb organic visibility and stable placement in the search engines. It will also help increase visitor retention and conversion. This information is portable; it does not matter whether you are in the planning phases of starting an online business, already have an existing website or are in need to redesign your presence. Although many of these stages (phases) can run concurrently the list below is presented as what should be implemented first, prior to moving into the next phase.
- Marketing budget and timeline development
- Market research
- Website design
- Competitor analysis
- Keyword research
- Content creation
- Content management system and or shopping cart creation
- Search engine optimization (SEO)
- Link building
- Blogs, newsletters, articles
- Social media
- Website analytics
- Pay-per-click marketing (PPC)
Of course, your marketing strategy will be determined on whether you will be intimately involved or delegating stuff in-house or out of house. Do you have the time, energy, expertise for any, some or all of these important tasks? Will you go the consulting route and implement their recommendations? Is your service or product time sensitive? Does it need to be sold by a certain date? Your strategy, timetable and budget will vacillate accordingly.
Perhaps the best actionable word I can offer is to “Focus”. Focus on what it is you are all about and what sets you apart from your competitors. This may sound simple enough, however, try writing down in one sentence w
Market research offers data rich and timely information on what your competitors are doing. This can be approached from two angles and really, it is about how you define your “competition”. Perhaps you are aware of competitor sites from within your industry and want to learn more about how they got to where they are in the search engine result pages. Odd as this may seem, this method for selecting which competitor sites to analyze may not be the most effective route to analyze your competition. These competitors may not be well placed in the search engines and may not be targeting the same keyword phrases that you are. Should this be true, why bother analyzing them. On the other hand, if you have already determined one of your site’s primary keyword phrases you can type it into a search engine and review the resulting index page and choose from the list. The difference here is an important one to consider. Here you select your keyword phrase target and see who is competing for that term. It is not necessarily important who that company is or even what industry they are in. The important consideration is who is on top of the list for the keyword phrase you are shooting for and you are looking for any ammunition you can get to leap frog over their position in the search engine results page.
Market research will produce a blueprint for your web marketing direction.
- Competitor
analysis reveals information about their keyword targets and how they
are positioned in Google, Yahoo and MSN. In looking at several
competitor sites one can construct a universe of keyword phrases that
have proven successful in the search engines. Understanding this helps
determine your keyword phrases and aid in the creation of textual
content for your site.
- Links can be analyzed for their
reputation and their popularity. Where are they coming from and are
they paid links or from a link farm? Knowing who is linking to your
competitor can make your task an easier one when developing your own
link building campaign.
- An index saturation analysis
will show how many pages a website has indexed in a search engine in
comparison to the number of pages actually existing within the website.
The purpose of the saturation analysis is to evaluate the various
design elements that may be affecting indexing efficiency and to
ultimately determine whether saturation is playing a noteworthy role in
the website’s (your competitor’s) ranking.
- Optimization analysis will determine what (if any) particular optimization techniques are overwhelmingly influencing rankings for internal review pages of each site.
Not everyone has the budget or expertise for this in depth type of data mining. A more economical approach may be to conduct keyword analysis. Quite possibly developing a realistic set of achievable primary and secondary keyword targets is the most overlooked aspect to any successful web marketing presence. This component will be looked at in the next article.
Spread The Word
Article Series
This article is part 1 of a 3 part series. Other articles in this series are shown below:
-
The Genesis for a Successful Online Marketing Campaign



