The New Marketing Landscape!
by Lee Traupel

Many of us in the marketing services and/or agency business are
starting to see some real tangible marketing patterns emerging
that businesses need to be aware of if they want to leverage
their marketing dollars in this "post .com implosion economy."  

Good Web Site Design Increasingly More Important 

It's imperative for a company to have a quality web site today -
but many firms are still throwing up web sites that are just
poorly designed or overly complex. Poor navigation (menus and
overall site structure) when coupled with low quality graphics
is really problematical (!) - online visitors think less of your
company as a result which will hurt revenue in the long run.
Many think just doing a minimal job is sufficient but they
aren't factoring in how close the competition is! On the Web
any potential customer is only one click away from seeing a
high quality web site that is well designed and conveys a
quality image. 

A good rule of thumb when budgeting for a web site is to assume
you will pay approximately $250-$300 USD per page - this should
include your graphics design, content development, setting up
registration forms, etc. This may sound too expensive for many
companies but, for better or worse, perception is reality in the
online world! So, don't short change yourself, put some
resources into your web site and be prepared to continue to do
so - it's now a vital component of any company's ongoing
marketing processes that needs constant upgrading like 
traditional marcom (PR, print, etc.) materials. 

Opt-in E-Mail Trending Down but still Viable 

Opt-in or permission based e-mail (meaning people give you
"permission" to  market to them) response rates for
Business-to-Business and Business-to-Consumer are dropping
below where they were a year ago by 30-50% on average. What's 
happening? The ever-increasing deluge of Spam is negating the
throughput (response rates, purchases, etc.) of quality opt-in
e-mail. 

Opt-in e-mail is still a viable and excellent way to market your
company but expect less results, lower costs/fees (more vendors
equals more competition which is good) and the need to repeat
your campaigns if you want to see tangible results. And don't
get dazzled by a design firm or your in house marketing staff 
that wants to design a fancy HTML e-mail message for you -
65-75% of the market today still doesn't want fancy graphics,
they want a short message, delivered concisely with short
paragraphs in a text format. Less is more! 

Performance Based Marketing on Upswing 

Publishers and advertisers are more and more willing to accept
advertising which is "performance based" and/or based on a
"cost per click" or even a revenue share basis. Meaning, it's
not like putting an ad in the USA Today and hoping people
respond to the publication - you can now work with list brokers,
online publishers and marketing organizations to setup very
targeted campaigns that are  based on your paying a small cost
for an actual response to your message via an opt-in e-mail
campaign, text link ad on a web site and/or an insert in a 
newsletter. 

Case in point, companies like Virtumundo, Inc. (they are a
pioneer in the performance based market) are now willing to
charge nothing upfront in many cases for an advertising
campaign and to just do a revenue share with you on the back
end; this is typically 20-40% of your SRP, but will vary depending
upon your goods and/or services. And, they will do a test
campaign prior to a full-bore campaign to make sure that the
response rates will be worth their investment. 

Another key benefit to any business that wants to leverage the
shifts occurring  in performance-based marketing is its inherent
ability to be highly targeted. You can tie a marketing process
(campaign) to a web site, newsletter or pay per click search
engine (Overture and now via Google's Ad Words Program) with 
specific demographics that are highly qualified and targeted.
Contrast this again with the traditional print medium where you
can target to a certain extent; but not like performance-based
marketing. Consider an ad again (for example) in the sports
section of the USA Today - it will clearly deliver a sports
enthusiast, but not a male who plays tennis that lives in the
Western US, etc. And, better targeting will always deliver
better results, assuming all other issues are on a level
playing field. 

Search Engine Marketing still a Mystery to Many 

I hate to say it but most of the web sites we analyze still
don't have the basic HTML fundamentals (Title, Keywords,
Description) in-place so their sites can/will be indexed
(reviewed by an automated bot/software agent) properly. Their
title is wrong (don't repeat your company name), there are too
many keywords (you want 8-12) or the wrong keywords and the
description of the company is either poorly written or reads
like yet another "mission statement" that has been developed by
the CEO/CFO and three Senior VPs. This is basic block and
tackling marketing and should be setup properly when a web site
is designed. 

Be prepared to deploy some marketing resources for quality
Search Engine Marketing - it's fiercely competitive for web
site rankings; you've got 3-5K web sites coming online every
single day of the week and many are trying to drive market
awareness via S/Engine ranking. What's a rule of thumb of what
to pay for standard S/Engine Marketing Services: i.e.
Title/Description Development, Keyword Analysis, Content
Rewrites, etc.? Costs can vary tremendously, depending on your
market segment, web site size, what type of services you
outsource, competitive issues, etc. Generally expect to pay
$3-6K for a basic 3-4 month campaign and then some modest fee
for ongoing maintenance (say $200-$500 per month). There are
alternative sophisticated S/Engine processes that cost much 
more than this, but these are typically suited for companies
that have a good sized marketing budget and or a large web site
that necessitates a different approach. 

================================================================
Lee Traupel has 20 plus years of business development and marketing 
experience - he is the founder of Intelective Communications, Inc. 
http://www.intelective.com, a marketing services and software 
company which provides strategic and tactical marketing services 
exclusively to small to medium sized companies. Lee@intelective.com 
Reprinted with permission from Intelective Communications - this 
article may be reprinted freely, providing this attribution box 
remains intact. (c) 2001-2002 by Intelective Communications, Inc.
================================================================