What Do You Want to Accomplish in Your Internet Marketing Campaign?

BusinessMarketing & Advertising

  • Author Bill Balderaz
  • Published March 8, 2011
  • Word count 380

You don't want a PageRank of 8, or a 10% click through rate or 1,000 Twitter followers.

Just like consumers in 1908 didn't really want a better horse, they wanted a faster way to travel that didn't poop - thus the whole "automobile" thing caught on. Professionals in 1976 might have thought they wanted a more useful typewriter, but they wanted a box that they could type on, and do math on, and access information from - but they weren't saying they wanted a "personal computer". In 2010, I didn't want a library/music store/movie theatre/magazine stand that fit into my briefcase, I wanted one magic little device that could serve up any media, and here I sit listening to Whitesnake on my iPad.

In other words, we often get caught up in wanting a better version of what we know, versus thinking about what we want to accomplish. Ultimately, your online marketing strategy is probably about generating more sales, leads, voters, donors or members through your website. Things like where you rank on this keyword, or how much your traffic grows, or how many likes you get on Facebook don't keep your shareholders happy.

Every day we get calls from potential clients asking if we can get them to page 1 on Google for this term, or if we can generate 1,000 new inbound links, or if we can increase their page views per visit. The answer to all of this is "yes we can, but we'd rather help you generate revenue."If after six months of a marketing program, your time on site is down, and your traffic is down and you haven't generated a single new link but sales have tripled and you're showing a great ROI, count the campaign as a success.

Don't get me wrong, I strongly believe in measuring everything in an internet marketing campaign. I believe you can build models that show if your website traffic increases by x% your sales increase by y%. I believe you can analyze how YouTube video views correlate with leads. I believe that you can associate longer time on site with more members. But ultimately, I believe the thumbs up or thumbs down on any internet marketing campaign should be decided by answering a simple question: "What did I accomplish for my organization?"

Bill Balderaz is the president and founder of Webbed Marketing, an Internet marketing firm with more than 40 clients, including several Fortune 500 companies. Bill lectures widely on social media, viral marketing and other industry topics, and was a featured presenter at the Word of Mouth Marketing Association (WOMMA) annual summit.

Article source: https://articlebiz.com
This article has been viewed 743 times.

Rate article

Article comments

There are no posted comments.

Related articles