Good Traffic
is Targeted Traffic
by Harley Barnett
Targeted traffic: the demographic
Assuming your business is motorcycles, my first guess at
your target demographic would be 16-25 year old males and 50+ year
old wealthy retired couples. Breaking it down further, if you sell
Suzuki crotch rockets, you can safely discard the wealthy retired
group. Narrow the demographic as best you can to target potential
customers. Paying for traffic that isn't dense with people interested
in what you're selling is a waste of your advertising dollar.
Once the demographic is well defined, you can begin identifying
and sorting out perspective advertisers. Determining whether a particular
advertiser or marketing group is going to work for you can be rather
difficult, unless you've personally used them before. This is where
experience and networking with other webmasters comes in very handy.
Talk to other webmasters who've advertised with the company, find
out what they were advertising, and ask them how the campaign went
and if they plan to advertise on that website again. I don't generally
use an advertiser unless I've heard very good things from other
webmasters or they have a trial ad setup, where you can commit a
small amount of money to testing out the traffic before you make
a real investment and buy several weeks or months of advertising
with them.
An important consideration when buying ad space on a specific website
is the focus of that website. If you're considering advertising
on a service oriented website, make sure your product or service
compliments that website's service. For instance, if you sell shoes,
advertising on hotmail.com is going to be very inefficient and expensive.
You'll be paying to advertise to a bunch of people, the mass majority
of which aren't looking to buy shoes. However, if you're selling
a spyware removal tool, email services could be a great place to
advertise. Most internet users have spyware on their computers,
and most are aware of and concerned about spyware.
Advertising on content based sites
When I need to advertise, my favorite place to go is still
a content oriented site with a close relationship to my product
or service. If I'm selling Gregory backpacks, I'll look for advertising
opportunities on websites related to backpacking and hiking, such
as outdoors guides and wilderness survival websites.
Web traffic at some content based sites is not particularly targeted,
while others have a specific topic, like a gardening tips website.
Finding a website with a very specific interest may or may not be
as important, depending on what product you're selling, or what
service you offer. T-shirts may sell well on lots of different content
based sites, while the gardening weasel isn't likely to do well
on places not related to gardening.
An update schedule of content based websites you're considering
advertising on is rather important, depending on how you advertise.
A website that updates every other day or weekly will have many
visitors who come for the updates and leave. A website that updates
sporadically will have more people who come just looking for something
new. When there is nothing new they're more likely to look for other
related links, which is where good advertising kicks into high gear.
Of the three major advertising types, I tend to believe in doing
my homework and paying flat rates for given periods of time. This
seems to work best, because it depends more on you to build an intriguing
advertisement, and rewards you for doing so.
Buying ad space on a per click basis can be a better bet if you're
trying to build a brand name, because your ad might get 50,000 impressions
before the 1,000 click-through you paid for happen.
Conversion rates are key
For most of us on the web though, our main goal is to sell
the product or service. This is why I contest doing your research,
finding the best websites, and purchasing ad space on a weekly or
monthly basis is the best method of promotion in the long run. If
you're smart, you'll monitor your traffic from different sources
and determine the cost per sale to see which sources are providing
the best conversion rates. In the case of buying click through traffic,
the monitoring program should give you the traffic conversion rate.
More targeted traffic suggestions
Additional information can be found in the subscribers
area of www.webmasterarchives.com, specifically information on what
to look for when considering traffic trades with other websites,
where to get started with traffic building, good approaches when
requesting a link trade, how to jump start your traffic building
efforts with very minimal cost, and methods to making your website
so attractive webmasters will be knocking down your door with link
trade requests.
Copyright 2004 Harley Barnett Some Rights Reserved This article
is licensed under the Creative
Commons License, which allows for non-commercial use under conditions
of attribution and share-alike. For more articles like this check
out the author's website: Webmaster
Archives.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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