Courtesy of en.wikipedia.org |
We speak to lots of Entrepreneurs and startup organizations and invariably
many have the same misconception about what successful companies do when starting
a new venture. Many of these companies come to us with ideas that have a good starting
point, but are not fully fledged. Often these entrepreneurs haven't taken the time
to work through their ideas. More importantly, they have not bounced their ideas
off a seasoned professional who could give them advice that is not based on selling
them a final product or service. Most newbies try and get their advice via "free
consultation" from vendors who are there to sell them something (like marketing).
In this episode of Working the Web to Win, we will discuss these 7 common
myths that many entrepreneurs hold when starting a new venture. We will debunk these
myths and give entrepreneurs the knowledge they need to stay on the right path
so that they will avoid making these common marketing mistakes.
Courtesy of www.youtube.com |
7 Common Myths
Myth #1: If you have a great
product or superior service, it will sell online. It is true that almost
any product or service can be sold online. However, some products lend themselves
to online sales better than others. For example: Unique items that you have an exclusive
on, items that can easily and cheaply be shipped, small items that will fit in a
USPS package etc. But the real question is not whether a product or service can
be sold online. The real issue is whether
you can sell them in a high enough volume to make a profit. The emphasis here is
on making a profit. There are hard costs associated with selling anything online.
You have website development costs, marketing costs, shipping and logistic costs,
and labor costs. You may have warranty issues, payment processing fees and other
hard costs. All of these have to be factored in as part of your marketing plan.
Courtesy of pixabay.com |
Myth #2: If you build a
great looking website, customers will come. Don’t get me wrong, having a good looking
website is important. It needs to look professional. The question is whether the
form or function is more important. Many entrepreneurs believe that a cool looking
website with lots of bells and whistles is what gets people’s attention. While it
may be true that the bells and whistles will get their attention, for the most part,
it will not keep their attention. In fact, after a short while, the bells and whistles
become a distraction and even an annoyance. Many companies spend way too much money
on building in the cool factor and ignore the necessities all websites need. These
necessities include:
Courtesy of acreelman.blogspot.com |
- Easy navigation
- Easily
locatable contact information - A video testimonial
- A compelling offer
- A clear call to action
Web pages also need to have focus subject matter if you want
them to rank well organically. A focused page has a single subject matter. This
makes it much easier for a web crawler to read, understand and categorizes the page
and its contents. This is why we like landing pages (often referred to as microsites ,
splash pages or marketing pages). These pages are usually highly focused and generally
will rank higher than pages with mixed content. Don’t spend a lot of money to build
flashy pages. Stick to the fundamentals and make sure your pages are focused.
Courtesy of en.wikipedia.org |
Now let’s talk about the elephant in the room. The offer! Your
offer is only as good as the prospects think it is! Your offer has to take the risk
out of the transaction. It also has to seem like a no-lose proposition. If your
offer doesn’t have these qualities, it’s not a compelling offer. Remember Domino’s
Pizza compelling offer? Hot pizza to your door in 30 minutes or less or its free!
In most instances, if prospects aren’t calling, clicking or filling out the form,
it’s because your offer isn’t a compelling one.
Myth #4: If I write a high
quality blog, people will read it and my audience will grow quickly. The truth is there are
millions of blogs out there with very few readers. Thousands are created every day
because all the pundits are saying “content is king” and “you should be blogging”.
Well, here is the harsh reality. A great blog is just a billboard in the desert
if it doesn’t have good distribution. If no one knows it exists, no one will read
it. And if no one reads it, you can’t use it as an effective marketing tool. So
how do you get readers? That’s the million-dollar question! The best way to build
readership if you are on a budget is to push your blog out to your social nets.
If you only connect with a few people via your social nets, you’re not much better
off than if you had no followers at all.
Courtresy of en.wikipedia.org |
Here is where the big lie about blogging and content marketing
gets buried. You have to have an audience to be a successful content marketer. This
means you have to spend time, energy and money building an audience. Whether that’s
through grass roots efforts, email marketing, buying lists, doing pay-per-click
or hitching your caboose to someone else’s train, you have to have a sizable audience
to succeed. What do I mean by hitching your caboose to someone else’s train? At
Working the Web to Win we spend a lot of time, energy and money building an audience.
We currently have approximately 70k Twitter followers and another 15k in LinkedIn,
Facebook, Google+ followers and about 100k connections through other social groups.
A client that signs on with us can tie their blog to our huge following and we can
push them out to more than 100k+ followers with the push of a button. Great content
is very important for the long haul in any content marketing program. But make no
mistake, the real issue is building an audience and then being able to distribute
your message to them.
Courtesy of en.wikipedia.org |
Courest of en.wikipedia.org |
Having a blog on your site (or using your blog as your website)
is a great way to keep your content fresh and give visitors a reason to come back.
Creating seasonal offers, adding seasonal color schemes, a photo gallery and video
blogs are all ways of keeping things interesting. This is true for your visitors
as well as keeping Google interested in you. Websites are like Fruits and Vegetables;
they are at their best when they are fresh.
Myth #7: My website is all
I need for Internet Marketing. Back in 2000, all you needed was a website and
a search engine. Today content marketing is king and the content I am referring
to does not reside on your website. Your website at best accounts for 25 percent
of the overall ranking score on most search engines. High quality, timely, relevant
and useful social posts, reader comments and reviews, social shares, blog posts,
YouTube videos, rating sites, visitor traffic, and backlinks all have an effect
on website ranking. On top of that, you still need effective webpages along with
a continual flow of traffic to grow your online business.
Courtesy of www.flickr.com |
That’s my opinion, I look forward to reading yours.
Get your FREE copy. |
In this article I have discussed 7 internet marketing myths that entrepreneurs often believe, which in turn lead to big mistakes. I have provided many examples of both the myths and solutions that help entrepreneurs avoid making these big mistakes. I have also listed the internet marketing elements needed and have included links to dozens of articles that provide other perspectives to help you on your journey.
If you feel your business could use some help with its marketing, contact us at 904-410-2091. We will provide a free marketing analysis to help you get better results. If you found this article useful, please share
it with friends, family and co-workers. You can find other articles on our blog
by typing in “marketing” or your desired search term in the search box at the
top of this blog. I recommend reading Marketing 101 – What you need
to Know before Buying Advertising, What Every Business Needs When
it Grows Up, How to Get Fish to Jump in The Boat - A
Social Media Analogy and Seven Habits of Highly
Successful Internet Marketers For starters. Also, don’t forget
to plus us, on Google+.
Hector Cisneros is COO and director of Social
Media Marketing at Working the Web to Win, an award-winning
Internet marketing company based in Jacksonville, Florida. He is also co-host of the weekly
Internet radio show, "Working
the Web to Win" on BlogTalkRadio.com, which airs every Tuesday
at 4 p.m. Eastern. Hector is a syndicated writer and published author of “60
Seconds to Success.”
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