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An Action Plan For Marketing Your Web Site (Part 1)
Build it and they will come. That might have worked in 1995 when the Web was new, but today that's a fallacy. With more than 3.2 billion Web pages competing against yours, if you don't promote it, no one will come. Outlined below are some tasks to...

Google Bring Deskbar Search To Windows Desktop. Now Any Website Can Take Advantage Of This Search Technology
Google's premier of desktop search proves that the desktop is an extremely valuable marketing real estate. Google, which holds about 75% of the Internet search market, just introduced "Deskbar" – a small desktop application that allows users to...

Three Types Of Websites That Can Make You A Fortune
One of the best things about making money on AdSense is that anyone can do it - and with just about any type of website. You don't have to own a mini-Amazon or build a budding Ebay to make big stacks of cash on the Internet; you just have to have a...

Want Bigger Profits? Think of Your Web Site as a Catalog, Not a Store
For years people have been talking about web sites being storefronts. The truth is, web sites have little in common with traditional stores. Thinking of your site as a web storefront can take you down the wrong path from the start. This is a topic...

Website Traffic: Build It and They May Come Back
Copyright 2005 Kinesis, Inc. Keep the Content Coming! Your website is finally built. It's professionally designed, has compelling content, and it has vast amounts of helpful information about your products or services. But, and this is an...

 
Google
7 Ways to Increase Web Site Visitors and Boost Sales

Have you spent a lot of money on advertising with the
expectation that you would get many sales from the 1000s
of web site visitors that read your ad?

Have you poured money into driving traffic to your web
site, only to have no one buying your product?

Maybe you have seen the ads, “Get 10,000 visitors to your
site, for only $20” . Wow, you think, that’s a great
bargain, I’ll go for it. The result – 10 people visiting
your site and no one buying. What’s the problem? You have
not effectively targeted your customers. Your field of
customers is too large. Most of them are not interested in
your product. You need to zero in on the person that wants,
needs and thirsts for your product.

How do I find my targeted customers?

1. Place yourself in your customers shoes. There’s an
Indian saying that goes something like:

“You must walk a mile in my shoes, before you can
understand me".

For example, if I am selling a weight loss product, I would
not be targeting skinny people, but targeting those that
are overweight.

2. Make a thumb nail sketch of this person

Who is your customer?
What are her wants, needs and desires?

Try to understand how they think. Understanding what
problems they have, will give you a clearer idea of what
to offer them.

For example, let’s make a sketch of a typical overweight
person:
30-50 years old
Out of shape
Probably married with children
Under a lot of pressure, tight for time, stressed
Looking for ways to improve health and wealth
Lack of self esteem

3. Develop a product that addresses one or more of their
needs. Always refer back to your thumbnail sketch as you
write for your site. Elaborate on the points that fit your
product and what it delivers. As you start writing, new
ideas will naturally emerge, but always keep them focused
on your targeted customer so you won’t go off the track of
what your


customer wants.

Based on the profile I outlined above, you may sell them
products that help them lose weight, improve their health,
look good, spend more time with their children and get wealthy.

4. Write your copy to sell - when you write the copy
for your site, always stress the benefits. Develop a theme
for your site that focuses on this benefit and don’t stray
from it. for more indepth information on this topic, read my
article:

“How to Get Listed in the Search
Engines – Developing a Theme-Based Site”
(www.isitebuild.com/searchengine.htm)

5. Make sure each page sells. - each page should emphasize
the benefits in the headline, to pull the reader into the
contents of your page. It should ask the question:

What’s in it for me?
Why should I spend my precious time reading this page?

6. Write as if you were talking to your friend - your copy
should be conversational, friendly and personal, as if you
are sitting next to the person. Write from the viewpoint of
what your customer wants to buy, not what you want to sell.

7. Deliver the contents in a clear, crisp way - be careful
not to stray from the central purpose of what you promised
in the headline. Make sure your customer wants to click
through to the next page or your order page. Don't be
afraid of clearly stating the price of your product.

Clearly identifying your customers and writing copy
tailored to solving your customers problems, places them in
a buying mood. Converting these visitors into buyers should
now increase the amount of sales from your web site.

About the Author

Herman Drost is the Certified Internet Webmaster (CIW)
owner and author of http://www.iSiteBuild.com. Affordable
Web Site Design and Web Hosting. Subscribe to his
“Marketing Tips” newsletter for more original articles.
mailto:subscribe@isitebuild.com. Read more of his
in-depth articles at: http://www.isitebuild.com/articles