|
| Recent
Articles |
Selecting The Best Marketing Tool For You The fact that there are so many different ways of marketing and several online marketing tools available can also mean total confusion and uncertainty on on the side of the site owner. It becomes very difficult for...
Proven Ways To Waste Money With PPC Advertising Pay Per Click (PPC) advertising is the biggest lead generation breakthrough to come about in a long time. For the small and midsize company in particular - and thanks to its ability to narrowly target prospects...
Advertisers Not Ready Yet For Video, Mobile Traditional search advertising with its contextual relevance and cost effectiveness still has the hearts and wallets of marketers according to the latest survey...
The New Frontier: YouTube Optimization Search engines have been around long enough for traffic-minded marketers to whittle down SEO and SEM to a near science – okay, an exact science sans the key algorithm variable. But what is known about...
Place Your Brand Above Others When submitting to directories, buying paid search ads, buying display ads, or ranking in organic search a small company with a smart marketer can seem like it is...
Marketing Lessons From Skype The story of Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, the men behind Kazaa, Skype and now Joost, is a remarkable one that writes large so many lessons about the modern web and its impact on business. There are lots of...
New Ideas For A New Market Time Magazine made me Person of the Year. It made you Person of the Year too. Now that we are all famous, what happens when we all have access and input to the same data? How do we find our target markets?
|
|
|
04.03.07
Don't Market to Ignorance!
By
Michael Jensen
“Plop, Plop, Fizz, Fizz, I don’t know what’s in it?”
Just 2 minutes ago I heard a radio commercial from Alka Seltzer. They put their
whole radio ad message into a jingle (clever…) with the line “Plop, Plop, Fizz,
Fizz, I don’t know what’s in it”.
They are betting on my ignorance to sell their product, and that does not make a customer out of me. They want me to use it without even knowing or caring what is in it.
This is 2007, not 1907. Back then you didn’t have ready access to all the information you wanted even if you wanted it.
Big difference, no Internet (and obviously no Google et al.).
Today’s average person is information-oriented. They aren’t going to just go on the advice of some celebrity spokesperson (okay, some people still do). The customers that I want to serve love information and want to know as much as they can before making a decision.
I’m building a new house right now. I feel bad for my sales rep and the builder because I am so information and detail-oriented.
Sure you can offer me a water softener, but I want brand, price, any other options, and contact information for the installer.
I don’t want to just look at the fireplaces I can install, I want to know what company makes them, what kind of finishes are available, what else can I customize, and I want to know who the vendor is.
Give them information, they want it and will ask for it, now just give it to them.
Case in point. We run Applied Content, a well known company that writes content for large and small web sites. For almost a year we went without displaying pricing on our site. So much of our time was spent informing our contacts of what our pricing
was.
We of course got clients from it, but obviously just a small percentage. Now we display our pricing on our homepage. The conversion of those who actually call or contact us? Nearly 90%. Now that’s efficient. Information is powerful.
Oh, you wanted to know what’s in Alka Seltzer. It’s made by Bayer, so it of course has Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) as a pain reliever, but it also has citric acid to neutralize stomach acid and baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) to react with the acid and dissolve it all (and make it fizz fizz).
I for one will probably go with Tylenol (pain reliever), some oranges (citric acid), and some fresh cookies (baking soda).
Comments
About the Author: Michael Jensen is a co-founder of SoloSEO.com, an online service for SEO project management and do-it-yourself SEO tools. SoloSEO.com allows web marketers of any skill level to manage keywords, content tracking, link building, and competitor data.
Michael started as a web application programmer, and has since managed, developed, and co-founded several web technology companies. His applications are providing document and workflow management solutions to businesses in various industries, from small businesses to large corporations, including several Fortune 500 companies.
|