You're going to FAIL most of your Marketing Efforts. Why is it GOOD?

Written by Max Clixel


Failure. We all knowrepparttar taste of it. When we fail - we usually have no strength to continue. We place another ad and lose money. But it's good in some way. Let's see.

When you fail - that means you do at least something. And most people do nothing. Being in contact with many webmasters I hear a lot of "I should try to get some links".

Okay, I say - Do It! He exchanges 10-15 links, but they don't seem to be working and he thinks it's a failure. Well, it's not yet. He stops exchanging links and engages in Pay-Per-Click engines. He spends $50 and gets nothing again.

Total failure. He stops and says: "Nah! There's no money in Internet! How do you make money?"

And my answer is somewhat like Edison developed a light bulb: he made 30 000 mistakes or as he said he had found 30 000 ways that don't make light bulb.

How do I make money in Internet? How do I make sites popular? Well, first I have found a thousand ways that don't make money and don't make sites popular. Why?

Because there are much more wrong ways to do something than right ways. And one should try many many things before he succeeds. But it's not "failure"! It's "way to success"!

Made a mistake? You're on your way to make it right. Just stop paying too much attention to mistakes.

People tend to discuss many negative things, because it gets strong emotions. Newspapers help that tendency alot. And sooner or later people start to put a lot of accent into mistakes than to new tries.

Advertising didn't work out like it should have been? Try again! Try sonething different.

Do you want to get new ideas? Go out for a walk. Stop doing anything you did before and go out. As plain as it may sound - it's high tech 22nd century Internet Marketing tool: walking out!

How to Track Online Marketing ROI Using Cost-per-Action

Written by Rick Crosby


How to Track Online Marketing ROI Using Cost-per-Action

Forget clicks, page views, and impressions;repparttar only way to effectively track your online marketing ROI is through Cost-per-Action (CPA) analysis.

By Rick Crosby *

Asrepparttar 124715 online advertising market is poised to grow nearly $10 billion overrepparttar 124716 next six years, it’s essential that we rememberrepparttar 124717 importance of measuringrepparttar 124718 effectiveness of that spending. There’s no point undertaking any marketing or advertising campaign unless you can measure its results. And results are best measured in terms of return on investment (ROI).

Unfortunately, inrepparttar 124719 world of marketing and advertising, many businesses seem to be losing touch with their general objectives. The tools may have changed, butrepparttar 124720 principles remainrepparttar 124721 same – Your advertising campaigns are only successful if they meetrepparttar 124722 objectives you set out to achieve. So if you’re after increased sales, you need to measurerepparttar 124723 cost of each sale generated to determine your return on investment.

Fortunately for advertisers, tracking ROI for online advertising is much easier than it is for traditional forms of advertising, such as TV, Radio, Newspaper, Magazine, and Billboard. When you market online, every advertising campaign can be tracked and measured allrepparttar 124724 way down torepparttar 124725 penny. This is why more and more advertising dollars are being spent online every day.

Why Not Cost-Per-Click or Cost-Per-Impression?

When it comes to tracking campaign effectiveness, many businesses rely on Cost-per-Click (CPC) and Cost-per-Impression (CPM) statistics. But what many people forget is that for most businesses, clicks and impressions don’t earn you money. So by tracking clicks and impressions, you’re not really tracking return on investment. The same is true of page stats.

If you’re like most businesses, impressions, clicks, and page views are simply a means to an end. (In fact, without corresponding sales conversions, they’re nothing more than unjustifiable expenses.) If you only earn revenue from sales, you need statistics linking costs and sales. In other words, you need to measure cost-per-action (CPA).

Cost-Per-Action (CPA)

In a CPA campaign, you run an online ad on third party sites and they charge a commission when a lead is generated or converted. It’s performance-based pricing. This meansrepparttar 124726 publisher wears most ofrepparttar 124727 advertising risk, as their commissions are dependent on good conversion rates.

Perhapsrepparttar 124728 most widespread use of CPA is affiliate marketing. With affiliate marketing, you determine what actions you will reward and how much you’re willing to pay per action. For example, you might engage an affiliate site to promote your business. If they generate sales for your business, you can pay them a commission. Your cost-per-action would then berepparttar 124729 cost per sale or lead generated.

Tips on Conversion

The following conversion tips will help you plan your CPA campaign and avoid some common pitfalls.

1) How are sales and leads recorded?

For many businesses,repparttar 124730 obvious result which constitutes a conversion is a sale. If your sale is recorded or registered online (e.g. e-commerce), it can be considered a measurable action. This means you can choose a sale asrepparttar 124731 desired action in your CPA campaign.

Depending onrepparttar 124732 aim of your campaign, you may want to measure other outcomes in addition to, or instead of, sales. For instance, you might measure leads inrepparttar 124733 form of membership registrations, newsletter subscriptions, software downloads, or just about any other activity beyond simple page browsing. So when your customer clicks register, or subscribe, or download, etc.,repparttar 124734 conversion is automatically registered andrepparttar 124735 details are fed back you’re your CPA campaign.

In either case, at any time, you can log in and view your campaign results in real time.

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