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Your Focus to Broaden Your Sales
An important aspect of marketing online is the fact
that people have the opportunity to effectively
achieve targeted, measurable results. Too often
however, marketers are told again and again by the
Internet establishment that traffic is the solution
to online success.
Based on the law of averages, that premise is not
too far off the mark; the more people hit your site
(or see your offer), the more responses you will
naturally receive. Quantity is therefore an
important aspect of surviving online. And to
accomplish such, he likes of banners, posts, links,
ads, and search engine submissions all over the
Internet.
It is absolutely true that, if you want a lot of
hits, you want your site (or access to it) to be in
front of as many eyeballs as possible. But what
about quality? Would it matter if your site
generates an incredible quantity of uninterested
visitors that will simply never buy from you?
For those who wish to find more effective and
cost-efficient means of selling more successfully
online, then attracting a higher quality stream of
web site visitors -- that is interested,
pre-qualified visitors that are ready to buy -- is
definitely a better alternative.
For example, shots in the dark must be repeated
multiple times in order to finally hit if ever one's
target (or audience, in this case). But when that
target is in plain view, one's chances is obviously
greater. More important, if at the same time the
weapon one chooses to hit that target is a little
more sophisticated and precise, those chances are
even better.
However, the challenge facing most people is the
idea that they feel they must contend with a choice:
Quantity versus quality. But it should not be a
choice -- the ability to achieve both is possible.
It is to simultaneously have a better target and use
a better weapon.
It's called "focused marketing." Focused marketing
is to consistently combine both niche and target
marketing. Applying either one can multiply your
results. But by applying these two simple approaches
together, your results can multiply exponentially
and also quickly.
Niche Marketing
If your online business or web site targets
everyone, then your marketing message must be
therefore painted with broad brushstrokes in order
to appeal to everyone. And the challenge with such
an approach is the fact that you will lose a greater
percentage of visitors.
While they may fall into your target market,
visitors that leave are those who likely feel left
out or become uninterested fast. And there are other
who will simply choose a competitor that might
provide them with greater perceived value since it
caters to them specifically.
In the competitive marketplace of the new
millennium, the demand for specialized products or
services will increase. If your site sells
everything but the kitchen sink, chances are that
your audience will not perceive a value in shopping
from you any greater than from anyone else.
Remember that price is never an issue -- it is the
value behind the price that is. And if your value is
perceived as equal to that of others, naturally the
cheapest alternative will win.
Many business owners tend to fall into the
"trying-to-be-all- things-to-all-people" trap. And
being all things to all people is not a bad concept
-- of course you will likely stumble onto people who
will take a risk and respond to your offer with such
an approach. But what's bad is the fact you must
generate a fairly large quantity of hits to produce
a satisfactory result.
The number of sales you can generate will increase
dramatically if your site is narrowly centered on a
specific theme, idea, or outcome. Conversely, the
need to produce a sufficient quantity of web site
visitors to produce similar results will lessen
considerably.
To illustrate, let's say that your best client is
the corporate executive earning $50,000 or more and
that your site receives 200,000 hits per month. If
your site's message aims for the public at large,
there will only be a small percentage of that ideal
market that will hit your site.
For the sake of example, let's say that the
percentage is 0.1%. That means that, out of 200,000
visitors, only 200 will be executives. And since
your site is too general or too vague, an even
smaller percentage of those 200 executives -- say,
0.5% -- will be interested in your offer and
eventually buy. In this case, 0.5% would equal to a
mere client for an entire month.
Looking at it in reverse, it means that, if you want
to achieve at least 1 sale a day from this ideal
market, your site will thus require 6 million hits
per month. Stated differently, it means that you
will have to laboriously (and expensively) multiply
your promotional efforts.
Now take the example of another web site dedicated
exclusively to corporate executives earning over
$50,000. This site however receives only 5,000 hits
per month -- agreeably, it's not a whole lot,
especially when compared to the other. But the
percentage of those visitors falling into one's
target market will be 100% in this case -- that's a
10,000% improvement.
Furthermore, the percentage of interested leads that
are in a much better position to buy will be far
higher by virtue of the fact that the site caters to
their specific needs, goals, and concerns. To be
conservative, let's say that this percentage is only
5%. It means that, out of 5,000 hits per month, one
can achieve 250 sales -- that's 8 times more than
the other.
The beauty of it all is the fact that it took an
equal if not lesser investment of time, effort, and
money to achieve 8 sales per day than it did to
achieve a single one. Therefore, there is much truth
to the statement that you will definitely get more
with less. By narrowing your market or focus, you
are thus broadening your chances of online success.
People often tend to shy away from narrowing their
focus, for they feel that, by doing so, they will
also narrow their chances of making sales. In the
50's and even in the 80's where competition was
considerably less, this fear was indeed justifiable.
But in today's over communicated, highly competitive
marketplace, nothing can be further from the truth.
The more specialized your site or online business
becomes, the more qualified, interested leads will
come to you and consequently the more sales you will
likely generate.
Target Marketing
If you say that your ideal client is a technical
programmer, between the ages of 25 and 35, and
earning over $25,000 per year, then your chances of
reaching such an audience by plastering your link
all over the Internet will be fairly minuscule. And
even if your message does happen to appear in front
of your specific market, chances are that it will go
unnoticed due to the general nature of the location
in which your message appears. This is not good.
Although most business owners are aware of clear,
target marketing strategies to achieve results that
could be far more effective and cost-efficient, the
ideology remains: To be successful one must be
everywhere. That statement may be true to some
degree and should not be discounted. But it is far
better to be everywhere that matters.
In other words, your message should appear in front
of those people who will likely read your ad and
take action. If you promote your online business in
places in which your target market is likely to
congregate, it is fair to admit that your immediate
costs will likely be higher.
Targeted marketing is not cheap. However, the
bottom-line is the fact that your cost-per-visitor
(or cost-per-lead) and even cost-per-sale will have
decreased substantially as a result. That's more
important. In essence, it will certainly be cheaper
for you to spend the money in these targeted areas
than it would be in trying to find those ideal
clients any other way.
Remember that your goal should be to attract people
to your site who have a genuine interest in what you
have to offer. Targeting as many people as possible
particularly with a message that appeals to only a
portion of them may produce a fair amount of hits.
But it will mostly consist of people who will never
be your clients anyway -- the curious and not the
serious.
For example, banners are reported by certain
research firms as losing their effectiveness. On the
other hand, targeted banners have conversely
increased. Moreover, if your banner not only appears
in front of targeted audiences but also appeals to
them specifically, it is likely that the number of
click-throughs consisting of potential, qualified
clients will be much higher.
With all things being equivalent, if your ad appears
on a site that caters to your ideal market (versus a
more general site like Yahoo!, for example), you may
get less hits but you will certainly get more sales.
(However, it is worth mentioning at this point that
Yahoo! also offers targeted banner impressions on
search result pages based on specific keywords.)
Nevertheless, combining targeted and niche-based
marketing strategies can make substantial
improvements over general, non-focused marketing. By
lessening your market as well as the market to which
you advertise, you will proportionately increase
your sales.
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