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Posts Tagged ‘conversion’


How to Make the Most of Web Ads

September 23rd, 2011 ::

Billboards

We all can’t be part of such brilliant (yet ridiculous) Web marketing as Alex Tew’s million dollar homepage, but we can capitalize on cross-channel marketing by experimenting with online ads. Web ads can be used to promote new products, services, promotions, coupons or anything else you want to publicize.  The key to success is ensuring your online ads generate maximum conversions instead of becoming the joke of a generation.

Here are two ways to make the most of your web ads and get the ROI you expect:

1. Spend time fine-tuning your ad copy and graphics.

Web ads have the benefit of not needing to conform to the cookie-cutter space that a magazine or billboard ad does. They can range from banner ads and pop-ups to pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns and personalized ads.  If you want to get noticed, get creative with your ad copy and graphics.

Spend time writing copy that is fun and engaging but that also gets your point across quickly.  Use a graphic designer to create professional images that are eye-catching and convey your message.

2. Create landing pages that convert.

Even though designing the ad and buying ad space is the most exciting part, don’t ruin your efforts by neglecting the importance of a landing page that will drive conversions.

Don’t direct a potential customer to your general home page. Instead, send them to a landing page–a page on your website that was created specifically to convert them into a new client.  Use the landing page to convince them that they need your product, service, white paper, eBook or whatever it is you are promoting.

If a customer clicks on an ad selling an umbrella, send them to the page with an umbrella on it.  Something that simple can make the difference between a sale and a lost sale.   Also be sure to add a sense of urgency to the copy on the landing page – you want them to take action now, or you will most likely lose them.

Finally, make it easy for them to take action.  Ask them to fill out a form to download an eBook.  Put a giant button on the page that says “Buy now!” so they can quickly and easily buy that shiny new widget you are selling.

These tips seem pretty obvious, don’t they?  But do these two things right, and your Web ads will deliver you the results you want.

Image by Flickr user Ashifeld Haque (Creative Commons)

3 Easy Ways to Measure Online Marketing ROI

September 21st, 2011 ::

Measuring Tape

If you’re not measuring your online marketing results, you really have no idea what kind of impact you are having – are you making an impression, finding new customers, getting some sort of ROI?

The best approach is to connect old and new measurement tools to ensure you are competitively promoting your business.  Try out the following three simple strategies:

1. Measure conversion sources and click-throughs.

Sales leads have been the standard measurement of marketing efforts for a long time, but the development of new technologies and the growth of the Web are making it easier to get a more holistic view of what kind of impact you are really having.

Use Google Analytics and Omniture to keep track of conversion sources and click-throughs  – two very important metrics to track.  They’ll help you understand where your Web visitors are coming from and what links and landing pages they are using the most.

2. Focus on exposure.

Google yourself and your business. Where is your content appearing in search engine results when someone enters keywords? How can you promote your website to get higher and higher listings?

As a small business owner, it is in your best interest to develop new ways to expose your ideas before you even get to the actual sales cycle – you want to get potential customers hooked before you get into their pocket. Your ultimate goal is to make your ideas and content more visible to the public.

3. Measure reach from month to month.

It’s easy to get lost in a jungle of information metrics; don’t ignore important data and let it become a confusing burden instead of a gold mine of information that will help you improve your marketing strategy.

Avoid making this mistake by focusing on a few key basics. Track the number of people reading your blog posts and your performance in search engines. Keep an eye on your Twitter following and Facebook page, measuring your improvement month-to-month. All of these tools are easy ways to determine your reach and how it is growing (or shrinking).

Use these strategies to measure what matters, and you’ll soon find yourself with more business than you can handle.

Image by Flickr user Havar og Solveig (Creative Commons)