Placing Banner Ads Online: Look Before You Leap!
by Chris Ayers
http://www.webmasteroutpost.com/articles/placing_banner_ads.html
You've decided on an idea. You've picked out some bright colors. Your banner
ad uses animation and includes the magic word, "Free." Only one decision left to
make ... where to place the ad? Look before you leap... where you place the ad
can make all the difference!
Let me tell you a story that clearly illustrates the point. I recently designed a series of banner ads for a small company that provides employee benefit services. They have a great concept but need more exposure on the web.
After completing my design work and posting the ads online for the owner's review, curiosity got the best of me and I asked him where he was placing the ads. He responded that he had heard from some friends that if I want to generate real traffic, he needed to be on Yahoo or one of the other big search engines. Again, my curiosity got the best of me and I had to ask the next logical question ... namely, "Do you know how much they charge for banner ads?"
He replied that he had done some checking into it and thought that he could place an ad with one of them for about $2000 a month. "That pretty much shoots my advertising budget for the year, but I'm banking on the results," he reluctantly added. Well I really liked this guy and do think that he has a really great idea. So I couldn't let him put all his advertising "eggs in one basket." I asked if he had checked into placing ads with other websites where his potential customers might visit. He shook his head no, and I told him to give me a week and I'd get back with him.
Before I go any further, don't get me wrong. I think Yahoo and other big websites are great places to advertise if you have the funds to support your efforts. I just think that for many small companies, these are not the best alternatives. So back to my story. While traveling on business, I spent a couple of hours online searching for websites dealing with human resources, retirement planning, group health insurance and other employee benefits.
After sorting through the results, I narrowed my list down to 10 sites that offered online advertising. I sent emails to each site, explaining that I represented a client who was interested in advertising on their site.
HOT TIP: I refrained from sending the business owner the list directly because I knew that I could negotiate agency discounts with many of the websites. In fact, I was able to negotiate a lower rate with all but one of them :-)
I then called my client and arranged a meeting. I gave him the list of websites with their advertising rates and told him that I thought advertising with some of them would be a much wiser use of the limited funds at his disposal.
Noticing that he looked unsure, I explained that most of the people visiting these sites would be interested in what he had to offer. In other words, his ads would be targeted much more closely to his potential customers. The more we talked, the more he smiled. By the end of our conversation, he was grinning from ear to ear.
Now for the $50,000 question: How did it all turn out? I got a call from the young man a couple of weeks later thanking me over and over for the help. He couldn't believe his results (nor could I). He had placed banner ads with three of the websites that I had located for a total of $400. And his traffic had already tripled ... in just two weeks time! How can you use all this when promoting your website? I've outlined each of the steps in the list below. Now I can't promise you the same results, but I think you'll be very pleased.
Chris Ayers is a promotional consultant and publisher of the weekly newsletter, "Unlimited Traffic." To subscribe to his free newsletter: send any email message to traffic-on@mail-list.com.