Searching for Free Marketing Tools? You Already Own the Best There Is!

Written by Art Luff


When you first logged on torepparttar Internet, Did you have a clue as torepparttar 121572 education that you were going to get?

I didn't!

It didn't take long for me to realize, "This would be No overnight rocket to Internet stardom."

I also had reservations about being able to learn all this new stuff!

At times I would become almost overwhelmed with terminologies that were as foreign to me as a proposition in nuclear physics.

After all, I'd been a construction worker forrepparttar 121573 past 25yrs. What ever gave merepparttar 121574 idea that I could trade in my Hard Hat for a shot at Internet Marketing?

The answer to that question: "Because I knew I could and because, above all else, I wanted to."

Like most of us I spent countless hours onrepparttar 121575 Web. Searching for effective ways to get my site noticed. Trying everything that seemed to make sense to me.

I wentrepparttar 121576 route of free classified sites, ffa link sites, banner exchanges, link exchanges, and spent a few bucks tryingrepparttar 121577 automated software to submit to those sites. There wasn't exactly a flood of traffic to my site. Although I really had no way of knowing what kind of traffic I was getting since I didn't do any ad tracking back then.

I did an awful lot of reading and discovered that I could get Free subscriptions to online publications that were just jammed with useful information.

Ezine/Newsletter editors and publishers that freely shared their knowledge and expertise with those that would read their publications.

I subscribed to many. There were some that were extremely good and some not so good. After a time It occured to me, there seemed to be a concensus among them about effectively promoting your site.

Writing Articles!

Now don't jump right up and say, "I can't do that!" or "Jeez I don't even have a High School Diploma!" or any of a thousand excuses we can come up with that keeps us in our Comfort Zone.

Don't Duplicate ... Differentiate!

Written by Michel Fortin


In today's increasingly competitive marketplace,repparttar demand for specialized products or services will also increase. If your business sells everything or to everyone, chances are that your audience will not perceive any greater value in buying from you than from anyone else. If so, price becomesrepparttar 121571 only metric by which visitors will compare you to others.

Keep in mind that price is not important. It is an arbitrary figure that merely representsrepparttar 121572 value of an offering. When you compare apples to apples,repparttar 121573 only point of comparison is price since it isrepparttar 121574 only real, visible distinction betweenrepparttar 121575 two. Thus, if *your* value is perceived as equal to that of others, naturallyrepparttar 121576 cheapest alternative will win.

Price is only a metric -- a currency to which most people can relate. Takerepparttar 121577 weather, for example. When you meet someone onrepparttar 121578 street, it will likely be a topic of discussion becauserepparttar 121579 weather is a common denominator. Temperature isrepparttar 121580 same for everyone. "Hot" and "cold," however, are different.

Similarly, price is only used when there's nothing to which one can compare your value. (Of course, price is notrepparttar 121581 only metric. But most people understand units of dollars more than they do value, which is more subjective.) Therefore, if you're too similar to competitors, price will always be an issue.

The more unique you are,repparttar 121582 less competition you will have. Andrepparttar 121583 less competition you will have,repparttar 121584 less substitutable you are (or your product is). Andrepparttar 121585 less substitutable you are,repparttar 121586 less elasticrepparttar 121587 demand for your product will be (in other words,repparttar 121588 less important price becomes, in this case).

So, if you are copying your competition, or trying to promote your offering as one that's better than your competition, like it or not you're only reminding people of that which you are better: your competition. So, don't duplicate, differentiate! Or as Earl Nightingale once said, "Don't copy, create!"

Being all things to all people will likely help you to stumble onto some people who will visit your site and respond to your offer. It'srepparttar 121589 law of averages. Butrepparttar 121590 underlying problem is that, with such an approach, you must generate a substantial quantity of hits in order to produce an acceptable result.

Also,repparttar 121591 more general or broad you are,repparttar 121592 greaterrepparttar 121593 need will be to paint your website, content and marketing messages with broad brushstrokes in order to appeal to everyone. Inrepparttar 121594 end,repparttar 121595 traffic generated will be just as general or broad.

Even if your product is a perfect fit for some, it will only be a fit for a small percentage. Also,repparttar 121596 "generalness" you project will likely convey that your value is equal to that of others and that there's no added value in buying from you. If so, price isrepparttar 121597 metric others will use to measure your value.

Additionally, out ofrepparttar 121598 small handful of qualified prospects that hopefully hit your site, a large number of them -- if not all of them -- will likely leave due to your apparent lack of understanding of their specific needs, goals and concerns.

However,repparttar 121599 sales you generate will increase dramatically if your site is narrowly centered on a specific theme, product, audience or outcome. And niche marketing has an added benefit:repparttar 121600 need to produce a sufficient quantity of website visitors to produce similar results will lessen significantly.

Offline, being everything to everyone is understandable to a certain degree since, geographically, a niche will likely be considerably small. But online, however, niche marketing can work since a market will expand, even if it is a small niche.

However, it's a double-edged sword: sincerepparttar 121601 Internet expands your market, it also expandsrepparttar 121602 competition. Niche marketing is therefore more important online: by narrowing your focus, you both increase your market and decrease your competition!

Here's an illustration: let's say that your best client isrepparttar 121603 corporate executive earning $50,000 annually or more, and that your website receives approximately 200,000 hits per month.

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