AtricleZine
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > SEO > Only Pick A Fight You Can Win - The First Rule Of Successful Web Marketing

Tags

  • specialize
  • chance
  • through
  • there because
  • because theyre
  • ultimate reference

  • Links

  • Why You Need To Carefully Choose Your Outer Banks Realtor
  • Uses of Car Seat Covers Info
  • A Healthy Response
  • AtricleZine - Only Pick A Fight You Can Win - The First Rule Of Successful Web Marketing

    Domain Names & Websites
    Does a website come with a domain name? If not, what comes with a website and how do I get a domain name?New website owners often seem confused about how and when domain names come into play. The questions usually boil down to: "Does a website come with a domain name?" and "If not, how do I get a domain name?"Web hosting and domain name registration are usually separate services. Although your hosting company may give or sell you a domain name with your website, most hosting companies are not domain registrars, and chances are they're procuring it from a third party. (Domain registrars often give you a website, but they're usually not "full featured" websites, and another issue.)What's more, despite the fact that hosting companies will general
    our site.

    Pinpointing your opponents' undefended side

    So how can you find a niche where your competitor is weak? Think about the kinds of things you can do that your competitors don't or can't? If your business is already running, then the chances are, you already have figured out your niche offline. That's your starting point for marketing online.

    Or look towards your business plan. A SWOT (strengths weaknesses opportunities threats) analysis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWOT_analysis) can be applied in the online environment just as well as off-line.

    But commission some appropriate key phrase analysis, researching both traffic levels and link competit

    How Does Industrial Embroidery Work?
    However, how does such an embroidery design get onto caps, pullovers or pockets?At the beginning stands the idea of a design, mostly in the form of a company logo together with a slogan. If the idea only exists on paper, the design must be digitized into computer readable data. This takes place e.g. through reading in with a scanner. Then if the motif is available as a file, it must be converted into vector graphics. In this case, individual pixels are no more determining for the design but the lines, which separate a color field. One recognizes vector graphics also by the fact that one is able to enlarge them infinitely without quality loss, because the dividing lines always remain sharp.These vector graphics are loaded into the punch program. The se
    We're at least a decade into the Internet as a commercial medium. The top sites have been there for a long time, so if you're launching a site now, you have a lot of catching up to do.

    Aren't a great site and brilliant products enough?

    In a word, no. Consider the nature of the battlefield. Google is king of the Web - more than 70% of searches worldwide are on Google. And, in the B2B sphere, probably more.

    Google actually prefers older, established sites - it even largely ignores new sites by 'sandboxing' them for 9 to 12 months. The big hitters have been there for 10 years or more, and they have thousands of mature links, many of them inevitably of good quality. They're the kind of sites that will be entrenched in the top positions on popular searches.

    Now do you want to take them on? Do you have the budget, stamina and time? Or will you find a better way?

    Only pick a fight you can win

    To pick a fight you can win, you're going to have to operate smart. You're unlikely to want to take on Tesco (Wal-Mart, if you're reading in the US) by setting up a small general store next door, so why would you want to take on the Tescos of the online world in a similar kind of contest?

    One of the areas we find people trying to pick the wrong fights is in financial services. From time to time we get an enquiry from someone who wants to rank on the first page of Google for 'home insurance', 'car insurance', 'pensions' and 'mortgages'.

    There's next to no chance (within reasonable budget and patience boundaries) of getting them there because every bank and financial institution has been pouring loads of investment into marketing their sites online.

    Many have been on the Web for years, and just as many of them have thousands and thousands of links. And, for regulated financial products, the poor financial services business will have government sites to contend with as well - Google loves government sites because they're the ultimate reference for so many matters.

    Where's your niche?

    You need to look at what makes you different. Particular product niches or geographical focus, perhaps? That's good basic marketing, not Internet marketing or SEO. Look at your products and services.

    Let's go back to the mortgage example. Do you specialize in self-employed mortgages? Or do you have particular geographical focuses? 'mortgages in West Sussex' would be a much more realistic target than simply 'mortgages'.

    Your Web site needs to reflect what your business, products and services are really about, not what you'd like to be about, or what you'd like to target. Be realistic. The tough targets can come next year, once you've started making some profit from your site.

    Pinpointing your opponents' undefended side

    So how can you find a niche where your competitor is weak? Think about the kinds of things you can do that your competitors don't or can't? If your business is already running, then the chances are, you already have figured out your niche offline. That's your starting point for marketing online.

    Or look towards your business plan. A SWOT (strengths weaknesses opportunities threats) analysis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWOT_analysis) can be applied in the online environment just as well as off-line.

    But commission some appropriate key phrase analysis, researching both traffic levels and link competit

    Achieve Long Term Business Success By Having The Right Reasons / Motives
    What is your reason for being in (or wanting to go into) business as an entrepreneur? Maybe you realised you might never get as rich as you really want to be by remaining in paid employment. Maybe you have some ideas about how to use your unique gifts and/or skills to change the world around you to a better place - among other things - by influencing new ways of thinking and doing things.The point is that you need to KNOW exactly why you want to embark on this kind of journey. Knowing why you want to do it, as Jim Rohn said, makes it easy to know why you cannot give it up – ever! Having reasons helps you achieve your aims no matter how long it takes or how slow or painful it becomes - because your reasons or motives give you CONVICTION. A person who is convi
    ty. They're the kind of sites that will be entrenched in the top positions on popular searches.

    Now do you want to take them on? Do you have the budget, stamina and time? Or will you find a better way?

    Only pick a fight you can win

    To pick a fight you can win, you're going to have to operate smart. You're unlikely to want to take on Tesco (Wal-Mart, if you're reading in the US) by setting up a small general store next door, so why would you want to take on the Tescos of the online world in a similar kind of contest?

    One of the areas we find people trying to pick the wrong fights is in financial services. From time to time we get an enquiry from someone who wants to rank on the first page of Google for 'home insurance', 'car insurance', 'pensions' and 'mortgages'.

    There's next to no chance (within reasonable budget and patience boundaries) of getting them there because every bank and financial institution has been pouring loads of investment into marketing their sites online.

    Many have been on the Web for years, and just as many of them have thousands and thousands of links. And, for regulated financial products, the poor financial services business will have government sites to contend with as well - Google loves government sites because they're the ultimate reference for so many matters.

    Where's your niche?

    You need to look at what makes you different. Particular product niches or geographical focus, perhaps? That's good basic marketing, not Internet marketing or SEO. Look at your products and services.

    Let's go back to the mortgage example. Do you specialize in self-employed mortgages? Or do you have particular geographical focuses? 'mortgages in West Sussex' would be a much more realistic target than simply 'mortgages'.

    Your Web site needs to reflect what your business, products and services are really about, not what you'd like to be about, or what you'd like to target. Be realistic. The tough targets can come next year, once you've started making some profit from your site.

    Pinpointing your opponents' undefended side

    So how can you find a niche where your competitor is weak? Think about the kinds of things you can do that your competitors don't or can't? If your business is already running, then the chances are, you already have figured out your niche offline. That's your starting point for marketing online.

    Or look towards your business plan. A SWOT (strengths weaknesses opportunities threats) analysis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWOT_analysis) can be applied in the online environment just as well as off-line.

    But commission some appropriate key phrase analysis, researching both traffic levels and link competit

    I Finally Get It - The Product You Are Promoting Is Not As Important As The Marketing System
    Take McDonald's Hamburger. The food is not that great for you but it has a predictable and expected taste no matter where you buy it and go to any McDonald’s in the world and it will be the same basic menu. They are selling a duplicatable system.All that matters is that the products hold a real value and provides a solution to the end consumer which is necessary ingredient for long-term success.So, you don't need to worry about the features and price point of the products, and you will not need to worry about "competition".There is none. Why, you ask?First, your real product is not what you think it is! (The tangible products the company manufactures).Second, this industry is all about the marketing.If you don't
    ho wants to rank on the first page of Google for 'home insurance', 'car insurance', 'pensions' and 'mortgages'.

    There's next to no chance (within reasonable budget and patience boundaries) of getting them there because every bank and financial institution has been pouring loads of investment into marketing their sites online.

    Many have been on the Web for years, and just as many of them have thousands and thousands of links. And, for regulated financial products, the poor financial services business will have government sites to contend with as well - Google loves government sites because they're the ultimate reference for so many matters.

    Where's your niche?

    You need to look at what makes you different. Particular product niches or geographical focus, perhaps? That's good basic marketing, not Internet marketing or SEO. Look at your products and services.

    Let's go back to the mortgage example. Do you specialize in self-employed mortgages? Or do you have particular geographical focuses? 'mortgages in West Sussex' would be a much more realistic target than simply 'mortgages'.

    Your Web site needs to reflect what your business, products and services are really about, not what you'd like to be about, or what you'd like to target. Be realistic. The tough targets can come next year, once you've started making some profit from your site.

    Pinpointing your opponents' undefended side

    So how can you find a niche where your competitor is weak? Think about the kinds of things you can do that your competitors don't or can't? If your business is already running, then the chances are, you already have figured out your niche offline. That's your starting point for marketing online.

    Or look towards your business plan. A SWOT (strengths weaknesses opportunities threats) analysis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWOT_analysis) can be applied in the online environment just as well as off-line.

    But commission some appropriate key phrase analysis, researching both traffic levels and link competit

    Auctions: Testing the Waters
    If you are still in the process of developing your online business perhaps you might try using online auctions sites to get a feel for selling online.Perhaps you have an interest in a variety of products and you are having trouble deciding which may have the greatest potential. Maybe you have conducted a degree of market research and you’re still not sure. The use of online auction sites can help you gain a clearer understanding of the response to the products you are most interested in.By purchasing a few of the products you are interested in selling and then ‘reselling’ them online you have a low risk means of learning a bit more about the potential of each product.Now, I’ll be the first to say this is not fool proof and shouldn’t be used as

    You need to look at what makes you different. Particular product niches or geographical focus, perhaps? That's good basic marketing, not Internet marketing or SEO. Look at your products and services.

    Let's go back to the mortgage example. Do you specialize in self-employed mortgages? Or do you have particular geographical focuses? 'mortgages in West Sussex' would be a much more realistic target than simply 'mortgages'.

    Your Web site needs to reflect what your business, products and services are really about, not what you'd like to be about, or what you'd like to target. Be realistic. The tough targets can come next year, once you've started making some profit from your site.

    Pinpointing your opponents' undefended side

    So how can you find a niche where your competitor is weak? Think about the kinds of things you can do that your competitors don't or can't? If your business is already running, then the chances are, you already have figured out your niche offline. That's your starting point for marketing online.

    Or look towards your business plan. A SWOT (strengths weaknesses opportunities threats) analysis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWOT_analysis) can be applied in the online environment just as well as off-line.

    But commission some appropriate key phrase analysis, researching both traffic levels and link competit

    Topic Selection - A Key to Profitable Blogging
    Blogs may have originated as a means of online journal writing and community building, but the use of this model won’t accomplish much for the online entrepreneur. Unless your cats are far cuter than every other bloggers’ or unless you are an amazingly interesting person with some tremendous writing talents, your personal blog will get lost in the chorus of voices that crowd the world of blogs. In order to making blogging profitable, one must select a good topic upon which to focus.Topic selection is at the very root of blogging success. The idea is to choose a topic area in which you can be competitive. Optimally, you can find a blogging niche that is underserved yet has a high level of interest. This will allow you to attract a great deal of visitors
    our site.

    Pinpointing your opponents' undefended side

    So how can you find a niche where your competitor is weak? Think about the kinds of things you can do that your competitors don't or can't? If your business is already running, then the chances are, you already have figured out your niche offline. That's your starting point for marketing online.

    Or look towards your business plan. A SWOT (strengths weaknesses opportunities threats) analysis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWOT_analysis) can be applied in the online environment just as well as off-line.

    But commission some appropriate key phrase analysis, researching both traffic levels and link competition, and your opportunities should be laid out in front of you. By this, I mean higher traffic key phrases that are relevant to your business, and that you should be able secure a first-page listing for on Google because the tougher competitors have ignored those pieces of prime turf.

    These niches are normally there if you look hard enough and in the right places.

    Winning your fight

    Once you've identified your niche, you can attack on two fronts - Organic SEO and PPC. For successful Organic SEO, you need to do three things:

    1. Write the copy with an awareness of your customers' needs and the strengths of your products and services - to be as competitive as possible, your copy should be optimized on your researched key phrases
    2. Build links - one-way, non-paid-for links, so don't go in for link exchanges, and beware of anyone who promises you thousands of links very quickly
    3. Ensure your site is built to enable search engine spiders to read your copy - it's best to use CSS

    For PPC you need to:

    1. Run ads on one system only - unless you have a large amount of time to manage the campaigns (or the budget to employ an expert to do it for you), choose Google Adwords or Yahoo Search Marketing or Microsoft adCentre. In the unlikely event you are profitably buying all the clicks you can and still have some budget, you should try the same profitable key phrases on another system as well
    2. Start with the key phrases you have researched, then use the system's tools to research even more - and keep on researching as your campaign runs. With PPC, you'll almost certainly find yourself targeting more key phrases than with Organic SEO
    3. Set a budget - and make sure you have set that maximum budget in the system to ensure you don't overspend
    4. Set up Ad Groups and write copy - bear in mind you should try testing headline, content and landing page variations
    5. Monitor, manage and test, test, test - keep a close eye on what's working and what's not; monitor bidding levels and CPCs (costs per click)
    6. Work out your break-even point and be ruthless - if you can't make a key phrase profitable after a reasonable time, drop it. It's no use inflicting a hit on yourself through making a loss on PPC

    Have patience and you'll win

    Sandboxed or not, it'll take some months before you really start reaping the benefits of your Organic SEO. And although you can get immediate traffic from PPC, it's unlikely that you'll hit the jackpot right away.

    Have realistic expectations and make a sustained attack on your competitors' weakest points and you'll have won the online fight.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.atriclezine.com/article/74946/atriclezine-Only-Pick-A-Fight-You-Can-Win--The-First-Rule-Of-Successful-Web-Marketing.html">Only Pick A Fight You Can Win - The First Rule Of Successful Web Marketing</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.atriclezine.com/article/74946/atriclezine-Only-Pick-A-Fight-You-Can-Win--The-First-Rule-Of-Successful-Web-Marketing.html]Only Pick A Fight You Can Win - The First Rule Of Successful Web Marketing[/url]

    Related Articles:

    What You MUST Understand About Your Web Numbers

    Autoresponders and Their Necessity for List Building

    Chain of Fools

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com