|
Categories
|
|
|
|
|
Give Your Web Site a Small Business Marketing Tune Up
By
Jeremy Cohen
|
|
Your web site is like your
car. Both are significant investments that require the
right features and regular and proper maintenance to
ensure maximal satisfaction and performance.
Your car is a finely tuned machine. You bought it not only
to get you from point A to point B but also perhaps to
have some fun and look good as you go. If you purchased
your car new its engine had no wear. To keep it running
like the day you bought it you maintain it regularly: you
change the oil every 3000 miles, you inspect its belts and
hoses, you check its fluids and rotate its tires (or at
least you should). Without such attention the money you
spent on your car will eventually seem like a mistake as
it sits idly in your garage because it won’t start.
Your investment in your web site deserves the same care
you give your car. While the purpose of your car is to get
you from place to place, the purpose of your web site is
to help you develop new business and become more
successful. It doesn’t matter if your business is retail
sales or professional services, your web site is supposed
to act as your store front on the Internet. While your web
site doesn’t need its oil changed or tires rotated it
does require maintenance to ensure it performs as the
marketing tool you intended it to be when you paid to have
it developed.
Here are five things you can do to tune up or add to the
marketing function of your web site.
Fresh content
Fresh content will keep your visitors coming back to your
site just like the oil and gas in your car help ensure it
starts every time you put the key in the ignition. If you
neglect to maintain fresh supplies of either, you’re
asking for trouble. Your visitors seek fresh content. Once
your visitors realize they’ve gotten all their going to
get out of your site they will not return.
Add new, relevant and helpful content to your site as
often as you can and you will keep your visitors happy and
returning.
Keywords
Your keywords are the words your visitors use when they
think about the products or services you provide. They are
like the make and model of your car - they are what get
noticed. Your visitors use keywords and phrases to perform
searches at sites like Google and Yahoo! to find what they
need. They recognize and respond to these words when they
see them featured in search listings, advertisements and
other promotional materials. Make sure you know your
keyword phrases and incorporate them into the Title, Meta
Tags and copy of your web site.
Copy
The advertising copy of your web site can be likened to
the amenities of your car. Your car has a stereo, cup
holders and convenient storage space to address your wants
and needs as you drive. The copy of your web site should
do the same thing. To maximize the marketing function of
your web site’s copy make sure it focuses on the
problems, wants and concerns of your clients. Your
visitors will be more likely to identify you as the
solution to their problem if you demonstrate to them that
you understand their needs.
Require Action
Just like your car requires you to step on the gas to make
it go, your web site requires your visitors to take the
action you want them to take in order to function as an
effective marketing tool. No one has to tell you to step
on the gas. Your visitors need to be told what to do. Tell
them to “buy now” or “request our catalog”. If you
don’t they might ever know that’s what they’re
supposed to do.
Get Contact Info
Getting contact information from you visitors is like
remembering the keys to your car. If you can’t get into
you car and start it, you’re not going anywhere.
Likewise, if you don’t learn who your prospects are you
can’t continue marketing to them. Most people who visit
your web site will not buy from you the first time they
stop by. In most cases, it takes between six and eight
marketing contacts with a prospect before they choose to
purchase something. Your prospects are no different. If
you acquire their contact information you will be able to
repeatedly market to them.
Take the steps you need to maintain your web site and it
will run smoothly and get you where you want to go.
|
About
The Author
The
author, Jeremy Cohen, helps small business
owners and professional service providers
attract more clients and be more
successful by helping them deliver a web
site that sells and improve their
marketing materials to generate more
interest in their products and services.
Get his free marketing guide, Jumpstart
Marketing: More Profits, Clients and
Success:
http://www.bettermarketingresults.com/marketing-services.asp |
|
|
|
<< Back to the Article Index
©
Copyright 2005, ArticleJunction.com
|
|
|