Outdated marketing methods – the dinosaurs still walk among us
January 6, 2011 by admin
Filed under Internet marketing methods, Small business marketing
It’s my birthday today. I am exhausted as usual. I’ve been in the office for 40 minutes and already my blood pressure is up. The decisions that are made here are based solely on speculation and outdated ideas. One bad decision after the other and a completely reactive environment. Every suggestion I make is shot down, it almost seems deliberate, like no matter what, go against the employee. More wasted money, more sub-par results.
Without going into too much detail, we are working on a project that is potentially really cool, however my enthusiasm has already been squashed because the way we are going about things is wrong, and I am tired of being ignored. The only reason I would make any suggestions now is to have the “I told you so” opportunity at the end.
I could write a novel on the wrong way to go about things. Whether you are marketing your own business or marketing someone elses, the steps that are necessary to succeed are the same.
1. Know your audience
2. Know your content
3. Know what works and what doesn’t
4. Know when to pull the trigger and when to pull the plug
Today I watch a fairly nice budget slowly get chipped away, you could do a hell of a lot with $60,000. Let me give you an example. If you are promoting an event that is recurring, say it’s an annual event. You should set up your marketing methods so that it builds on what you did last year. If you pay attention at all, you should know that 85% of search marketing is reputation. A site reputation is no different than a persons reputation. To make it simple, reputation is based on age, history, and what people are saying about you. Simple enough right?
So, using those 3 pieces of reputation, which would you ithink would be the best idea?
a. Create a solid website that can be modified to fit the event each year. Build links to it, get reputation through social networking, let the site age, use it to showcase the event AFTER it happened so that the site generates traffic through out the year untl the date of the next event year? Oh yeah, and HOST THE SITE???
or would you think it was a good idea to:
b. Build the main (money site) as a profile page on a social networking site, then promote that website with paid search, viral marketing etc. I guess you wouldn’t care that since you don’t own the site, you cannot control the uptime, you cannot harvest the email addresses or contact information directly to your database or email list. The paid search you are doing is actually promoting the network that is hosting the page, not the website, so any links that are built are actually pointed at the social network site that is hosting the page, thereby increasing the reputation of that social network (which is already the top 5 website on the internet). I don’t really need to continue here right? It’s obvious why this is an incredibly stupid idea, right? Apparently not.
There is a reason that Carl Icahn says that all CEO’s are morons. Personally, I am totally OK admitting when I don’t know something, and if I don’t know something, I will defer to someone who does. Never assume you are the smartest guy in the room and there is no room for hunches in marketing. The beauty of marketing is that there is no shortage of stats, plans, metrics and methods that show exactly what you need to do.
Regardless of whether or not you want to be involved in the marketing of your business, you owe it to yourself to at least know what questions to ask.
- What are you going to do to make people want to come to my site?
- What are you going to do to get people to stay?
- What are you doing to make them want to come back?
- Is there a call to action on every page of the site?
- What methods are you using to capture visitor information? Just because they aren’t interested now doesn’t mean they wont be in the future.
- Are you taking advantage of social marketing methods? Do you understand them?
- Are you paying attention to usability?
- Are you leaving room to explore new avenues as they become available? Do you keep up with changing technology and trends?
Obviously, there are more but this gives you some idea. Internet marketing is interesting and fun. The ability to be able to modify campaigns at any time, stop on a dime and change directions, tweak and fine tune. There is no reason to fail.
Writing this rant gave me the idea to write up a list of questions to ask a potential search marketing company. I can give you 10 questions that will immediately tell you if the person is full of it or out of touch. I will try to get that up in the next couple days or so.

