Marketing
Ecommerce Web Sites
How can I make more money from your web
site?
How do I get more site traffic?
What is e-marketing?
How to I market my small business website?
By developing a strategic online e-marketing campaign.
If you have a business in or around the
Boston area and need to get your web site noticed, Oak Web Works
can create and implement your e-marketing strategy. E-marketing
is simply marketing for the Web. It's function is to get more eyeballs
looking at your business website.
There are countless way to increase traffic to your site. Oak Web
Works delivers. One of the aspects that sets us apart is our all-encompassing
approach. We can suggest numerous appropriate way to increase traffic.
But we can also implement the strategies, no matter what they are,
and no matter what technology is needed. Creating and implementing
a Boston e-marketing strategy is an art as much as it is a science.
However, getting more traffic is only
part of the battle. You need to get qualified traffic to
your business website. And once quality, potential customers come
to your site, you then need to have an effective website that converts
this traffic into qualified leads, and ultimately leads. So it is
worth investigating exactly who you nat to drive to your website
and then create an e-marketing strategy based on this target audience.
It is also worth reviewing your website
carefully before you implement an e-marketing strategy so you are
sure to convert new site visitors into leads. There are many ways
to do this. Click here to read a white paper about our one-to-one
e-marketing approach for your website and marketing campaigns.
Building
your small business ecommerce website
Building a small business website is
as much an art as a science. There are a lot of considerations when
building a site. Look & feel, hosting, coding, marketing, site
features, and usability are all important to consider when Web building.
Fortunately, you don't need to do it yourself. We can help. We can
build a site for you from scratch, producing exactly what you need
to succeed online. Or we can take on some of the work involved in
building your small business website. For instance, we can just
do the e-marketing, or just the design. Please consider Oak Web
Works for building your small business website.
What is E-Commerce?
E-Commerce is generally thought of as the ability
for a website to accept and process credit cards in exchange for goods
or services. ECommerce is also sometimes thought of as conducting
business over the Web. In the more traditional sense, e-commerce deals
with both accepting and processing credit cards where e-commerce software
lists prices for products or services, includes a shopping cart and
the ability to accept personal information and credit card information.
The actual processing of the credit card is done by a merchant account
that hooks into the site owner's bank account for the money to be
deposited. The combination of the shopping cart software and the merchant
account make up an e-commerce enabled website.
Business Website Marketing
Here are a few of the things we can do
to drive qualified traffic to your site, increase brand awareness
and create more sales for you:
- Strategic link development
- Internet exploration to discover
where to place your link
- Search engine optimization
- Article writing help and submission
- Newsgroup and forum "buzz"
building
- Newsletter development
- Email marketing
- Banner creation and placement
- Flash movie development
- Forum creation
- Site traffic analysis and reporting using WebTrends
- Site traffic analysis system setup for your
company
Learn
more about all our e-marketing services | Learn
more about our e-marketing strategy
An E-marketing Strategy Story:
Eddie
the Erroneous E-Marketer
Poor
Eddie the e-marketer has been plagued by errors in judgment all
his life. From always picking the longest line at the toll booth
to buying lots of dot com stocks right before the bubble burst,
he constantly struggles with making the right choices. From disagreeing
that a car really needs oil changes every three thousand miles to
insisting that the eight-track is going to make a comeback, Eddie
bumbles through life perplexed. One area that particularly suffers
is his e-marketing efforts.
You
see, Eddie recently got himself a new website for his business.
Unfortunately, he’s been trying in vain to turn it into a
vehicle for getting leads and making sales. He’s confused.
He’s dazed. He thrashes about lost in a maze. Although he
at least understands the importance of e-marketing for driving traffic
to his site, he’s like a hamster running on a wheel, wasting
energy and getting nowhere. Let’s take a look at a few of
the more typical e-marketing errors Eddie regularly makes.
Treat
the Web as a different medium
The other day his business partner, Betty, showed Eddie a recent
half-page ad they ran in one of their industry’s magazines.
Eddie, excited at how pretty the pictures were, wanted it up on
their website pronto. Did he alter it in any way before they posted
it to the site? Did he add a specific call to action hyperlink in
it? Did he optimize the large print graphics so they would download
fast in people’s browsers? Nope. He just took the ad, as is,
and posted it. Eddie has never been able to grasp the idea that
traditional marketing and e-marketing, while related, are not the
same thing. What works in print doesn’t always work online.
Why? Different mediums require different approaches. Look for Eddie’s
static magazine ad in his first TV commercial, just the motionless
ad on the screen for thirty seconds. Riveting.
The
Web is interactive. Site visitors can click buttons, fill out forms,
or post immediate comments in forums or blogs. When Eddie was having
his site built, he really just wanted to have a way to talk about
his business. He wanted to tell the world how great his company
was and the exciting history of its formation. This is called brochure-ware.
It’s just taking a company brochure, posting it online and
adding a few links. To say that Eddie is underutilizing the Web
is like saying the ocean is mildly wet. The Web is extremely powerful
and businesses have a choice of taking advantage of its power, or
just scratching the surface with simple brochure-ware. It’s
similar to buying a tank, climbing in and lifting the hatch only
to shoot spit balls at the enemy. If you have that kind of power,
use it.
Ask
your customers what they want
Since Eddie doesn’t really grasp the interactive nature of
the Web he guesses what his potential customers want and need. One
day in a meeting Eddie was scratching his head, staring up at the
ceiling and saying, “Gee, if there was only a way to figure
out what our customers want, a way we could get in their heads,
and a way to reach enough of them to get a really clear picture,
hmm . . . ?” Thankfully, a timid but sharp junior associate
raised her hand and suggested that they just ask their customers
their opinions and needs directly, and do it online where they could
ask a whole bunch of them.
Eddie
jumped at the idea. Finally he was going make the right choice,
albeit aided by a junior associate, but the right e-marketing choice
nonetheless. They created an html form with forty of the most important
questions he could think of and posted a link on their homepage
called “Customer Survey”.
Offer
incentives
Only three people ever filled the survey out, and that was it. Eddie
was dumfounded. What went wrong? He was hoping for hundreds. The
problem was that Web users are not patient and generally don’t
like to fill out forms, especially long ones. Even more importantly,
they don’t like to do something for nothing.
If
you were jostling your way through a crowded store in a big rush
and a bored teenage clerk asked you to fill out a survey of forty
questions but wasn’t offering anything in return, how likely
would it be that you’d do it? A more effective approach for
Eddie would have been to narrow down his list of questions to four
instead of forty, and offer a coupon for 10% off any online purchase
in return for filling it out. If you want to create leads using
your website, offer something for free and require your visitors
to give you a bit of information first. They’ll be much more
likely to respond if they get something they perceive as valuable
in return. Give the people what they want, an incentive.
Regularly
study your website statistics
Another area that Eddie seems to miss the e-marketing boat is in
analysis. He doesn’t have time for looking at all those pesky
Web statistics. He can’t be bothered with analyzing the number
of visitors who come to his site, or how they got there, or where
they go once they’re there. He’s rendered blind to his
e-marketing campaigns’ successes and failures. It’s
like always ignoring your checking account balance and then despairingly
wondering where all your money went each week. What’s worse,
because he ignores the numbers, he has no useful information to
help plan his next campaign. Numbers help in life.
A
jumbo jet is off course 90% of time. It reaches its destination
successfully by constantly checking the data on its exact position
and continuously making the appropriate adjustments until it lands
on target.
Likewise,
an e-marketing objective can be best reached by analyzing the data
and making the necessary modifications. For example, if your target
is a thousand visitors a week, then look at your website statistics
and learn where the majority of your visitors are coming from. Discover
what type of site, link or search engine is doing a lot of the referring.
Then adjust your time and budget accordingly.
It’s
been rumored around the office that Eddie sometimes locks himself
in his office and counts his new website’s hit counter, prancing
around in jubilation each time the counter goes up by one. Yet he
hates to hunker down and look at all the numbers, all the visitors,
all the referrals, and then conduct a meaningful analysis to help
understand the past and better plan for the future.
Since
Eddie hates looking at his site statistics, he has no idea how well
his last email marketing campaign went. He sent out five thousand
emails to a rented list and then asked his sales people if they
got any more phone calls that day. It’d be like a television
network executive asking his employees if they happened to see their
neighbors’ TV sets on the night before to determine if the
new show did well. Hey Eddie, I have an idea, check your Web stats
for page views and you’ll know exactly how successful your
email was!
Poor
Eddie the erroneous e-marketer, is he condemned to sub-par performances
in life and business? If he tries to learn from his mistakes, if
he starts to treat the Web differently than print or any other medium,
he’ll start to see results. If he uses more of the Web’s
power and potential, tapping into its interactivity and offering
easy ways for his site visitors to communicate with him, and if
he offers incentives to motivate his visitors to take action, then
maybe, just maybe, he may not be doomed after all.
Unfortunately,
after choosing the longest line at the toll booth again, his car’s
engine seized from idling and poor oil maintenance. So to pass the
time waiting for the tow truck, he popped in an eight-track cassette,
flipped open his cell phone and purchased some more Enron stocks.
Jason OConnor
Copyright 2004
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