The 7 Commandments of Marketing

Written by Michele Schermerhorn


Marketing isrepparttar key to success with any business, online or traditional. You can have a website or business location. You can have a great product. However, if no one has heard about your business or your product, you have NOTHING!

Marketing is everything you do to promote yourself and your business. Without an aggressive marketing effort, your website is just one of EIGHT BILLION listed on Google. Without an aggressive marketing effort, your store better have a location next to Walmart and hope for their overflow. How do you stand out fromrepparttar 119905 crowd?

There are seven (let’s call them) commandments for your marketing efforts. Keep these in mind and you are well on your way to creating an effective marketing machine. Remember, there is only one way to scorerepparttar 119906 effectiveness of your marketing efforts – SALES!

Commandment #1. Use a Rifle NOT a Shotgun

Rifles leave a neat, clean hole where you point them. Shotguns scatter shot inrepparttar 119907 general direction you point them. Most failed marketing efforts are born in a scattered marketing message aimed atrepparttar 119908 world.

Let’s say you were trying to sell a snowboard. To effectively sell a snowboard to a fifteen year old requires an entirely different conversation than sellingrepparttar 119909 same item to his mother. Therefore, commandment #1 directs us to segment our possible customers into different groups who share common concerns. If your product could be sold to a fifteen year old or a 40 year old, you’d better decide who you are going to focus your marketing efforts upon forrepparttar 119910 greatest success.

Commandment #2. KNOW Thy Customer Like Thyself

Following commandment #1, we selected a targeted group of people for our marketing message. Now, we MUST understand that targeted market as well as we know ourselves. We must crawl within their mindset. We must understand what they think about our product, what they want from our product, andrepparttar 119911 alternatives they have to our product.

Customers buy for their reasons, not yours. If you want to sell them your product, you MUST sell to their concerns, not your own. Every piece of marketing copy must FOCUS upon them. If you don’t speak their language, you don’t get their money.

Commandment #3. Be PASSIONATE About Your Company & Your Product

Attitude is infectious. If we are around upset people, we begin to take on that attitude ourselves. If we are with positive people,repparttar 119912 same phenomenon occurs. Most people like to associate with enthusiastic people. And, most of us like passionate people. If you aren’t passionate about your company and your product, why should anyone else be? Commandment #3 means to show passion for your product by speaking and writing about it with enthusiasm. Talk about what your product can help people accomplish in their lives. If you can’t work up enthusiasm for your own product or business, find another business or product.

Commandment #4. Acceptrepparttar 119913 fact that “NO” won’t kill you

Inrepparttar 119914 process of running a business and selling a product, you will hear “no” more frequently than you hear “yes” (if you’re doing it right). What? By “doing it right”, we mean you are TRYING things. Some work. Some don’t.

Whenever you think of a new marketing approach, remember,repparttar 119915 worst that can happen is they say “no”. So, try it! This is not a matter of life or death. This is a great experiment!

DoubleClick's Q3 2004 Report Shows Bulk Email Marketing Eficiency Increase

Written by Iulia Pascanu


Internet marketing company DoubleClick published its final report overrepparttar bulk email marketing evolution this year. The

figures show year-over-year increase in delivery rates (cleaner emailing lists), and a decrease in open rates and

click-through rates. The variations are light, proving a steady and maturing environment. DoubleClick's metrics

The data analyzed were based on more than 2 billion messages sent by hundreds DARTmail customers, measuring bouncebacks, open

rates, click-throughs and conversions (open to sales, or click to sales ratio). The results were reported for 2004 and

compared to 2003.

DoubleClick used unweighted averages for all analyzed categories. This helps eliminatingrepparttar 119904 influence that large email

marketers could have over category averages, asrepparttar 119905 report states.

The email marketing categories considered inrepparttar 119906 study were:

* Business Products & Services

* Consumer Products

* Consumer Services

* Financial Services

* Travel

* Retail&Catalog

* Publisher - Business

* Publisher - Consumer

Email marketing performances

The bounce rates show a slight decline overall, and a more consistent decline inrepparttar 119907 Travel category, down 54.5% from 14.3%

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