Advertising is a Numbers
Game
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by
Michel Fortin
Mr. Ted
Turner once said, "Early to bed and early to rise, work like hell and advertise."
While in our case the first part of Mr. Turner's equation is probably the least
followed (sleepless nights working the Web are too many to count), there is an
immense truth behind it all. To survive and thrive in today's hyper-competitive
online world, one has to both work hard and advertise -- which are in my estimation
two key ingredients of online business success.
Obviously, to
put your site on the "cybermap" you need to promote it. But you also need to know
not only if your marketing efforts are working but also how they are working.
As the old cliché goes, "It is better to work smart, not hard." Well, working
smart is where the "how" comes into play.
Most people wrongfully
tend to make assumptions by looking strictly at the end results (or dollars, in
other words) and not the pipeline results. Pipeline results go beyond tracking
the obvious. You need to know the number of leads a specific ad or marketing effort
produces, the conversion ratio of those leads into customers, the cost-per-lead,
and the value of each and every visitor to your site -- whether they've bought
or not.
Armed with this information, you will obtain at least
3 specific insights into the results of your marketing endeavors.
1) You will know if your ad copy is pulling the numbers you intended for it to
pull.
2) You will know if your Web site copy is converting curious
browsers into serious buyers. And most important, 3) you will know where your
ads are pulling the most leads (i.e., where you're getting the biggest bang for
your advertising dollar).
According to a study conducted by Cognitiative,
Inc., consumers felt empowered by vendors that they trusted and with whom they
had built up an online relationship. Of course, any relationship based marketing
approach requires repetition, credibility, and time, which are virtually impossible
to track. However, some of the study's findings were interesting nonetheless:
- Consumers discover/find new Web sites via:
Word of mouth (100%)
Links (83%)
Advertising (67%)
Magazine articles
(61%)
Newspaper articles (50%)
Conferences (17%)
- And
business users discover/find new Web sites via:
Magazine articles
(94%)
Links (88%)
Advertising (76%)
Word of mouth (71%)
Newspaper
articles (53%)
Conferences (47%)
*Source: www.cognitiative.com
Consequently, if you're going to advertise, particularly if you're
going to invest in paid advertising and take advantage of that potential traffic
mentioned above, you will need to know from where your traffic originates. Tracking
is essential to your online business' health. However, there are a few basics
that need to be considered beforehand. First, realize that the problem in many
cases is that most advertisers use institutional advertising to promote their
site. They also have the tendency to place their dollars on what looks good or
what makes them look good (and not on what offers the best potential results).
Institutional marketing is the kind that simply says "I'm open for business" but
does not invite people to do something. Tracking such an ad is next to impossible.
Direct response marketing on the other hand is the kind that
invites people, directly in the ad, to do something. Whether it's to click on
a banner, buy a product or service, subscribe to a mailing list, call or write
for more information or view a specific page, the ad should lead to a clear and
specific outcome. Thus, it must contain an action-word or verb, such as "click
here," "buy now," "act today," or "call for more info." This way, your advertising
efforts become quantifiable and measurable.
Next, you should
set goals on what amounts of traffic you wish to achieve out of a specific ad
or marketing effort. While you should be conservative, your goals should still
be good enough so that you have a pretty good benchmark against which to compare
your results. That way, if your ad is not producing the quantity of traffic you
originally projected, you will be able to take corrective action along the way
rather than when it's too late.
For example, according to the
latest data from NetRatings, www.netratings.com,
the average click rate of online ads is about 0.85%. If the traffic on the site
on which you wish to advertise is, say, 1,000 visitors per day, that should equal
to approximately 8.5 leads per day of course, with all things being equivalent
and depending on the quality of your ad.
If you track your visitors,
and if your ad is not pulling at east 8 visitors a day from the site mentioned
above, then you know that something's wrong with either the quality of their visitors
(target marketing) or the copy of your ad. Eventually, the more information you
gather, the better equipped you will be to make more profitable marketing decisions.
For instance, if your ad has produced the expected traffic on
one site but the same ad has done poorly on another, then you know that the problem
has to do with the site on which your ad appears. However, if your ad is not pulling
at all, then you know that it may have something to do with the quality of your
ad.
Essentially, advertising of any kind is a risk. But tracking
your results and working around them is to calculate those risks.