Week 6

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Week 6

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Behind that growth is affiliate marketing's ability to leverage the power of the ... An affiliate program run 'in house' by a particular merchant. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Week 6


1
Week 6
  • Promoting Our Web Site

2
Promoting Your Web Site
  • General Web promotion options
  • Evaluate search engines as web site promotion
  • Review search engine use and value as promotion
    option
  • Evaluate banner advertising as a way to promote
    the web site
  • Discuss banner advertising pros and cons
  • Affiliate Marketing

3
Web site promotion
Banners
Affiliates
Links
Partners
Community
Search Engines
Email
Promotional Materials
Printed Materials
Print Advertising
PR
Broadcast
4
Search Engines
5
Search Engine Tips
  • Things that are important to search engines are
    titles, page content, metatags, Page popularity
    and design issues.
  • Most search engines get primary results from one
    source and secondary results at AOL, Goto,
    Hotbot, Looksmart and MSN.
  • More isnt necessarily better.

6
  • All search engines have the basic parts
    described, but there are differences in how these
    parts are tuned. That is why the same search on
    different search engines often produces different
    results.

7
Search engines use software called spiders, which
comb the Internet looking for documents and
their web addresses.
8
Indexing Software
The documents and web addresses are collected and
sent to the search engines indexing software.
9
The indexing software extracts information from
the documents, storing it in a database. The kind
of information indexed depends on the particular
search engine. Some index every word in a
document others index the document title only.
10
When you perform a search by entering keywords,
the database is searched for documents that
match.
11
The search engine assembles a web page that lists
the results as hypertext links
12
Search Engine Tips
  • Develop a strategy.
  • How much can I spend?
  • What is working now?
  • How do I get the biggest bang for my buck?
  • Then make a spreadsheet because you are going to
    need one.

13
Search Engine Tips
  • Your plan of attack starts with checking where
    your site is already listed.
  • Choose your category and submit.
  • When choosing your category you only have one
    chance to get this right.
  • You should try to submit to regional categories.

14
Search Engine Tips
  • Keywords are very important.
  • Make a list of the top 20 keywords or keyword
    phrases you want to be found for in rank order.
    Web design is a keyword, web is a key word
    design is a key word.
  • Make sure that your keywords appear in the top 25
    words of your site. They can be in a headline or
    in the body copy.
  • Repeat your keywords at the bottom of your site,
    especially if you are in a banner program.

15
Search Engine Tips
  • Titles are very important.
  • Titles should be 8 ish words. You should build
    your titles around your keywords and words in
    title must be repeated on the page.
  • Page content is crucial.
  • Your page words must match your search words.
    Focus each page to one topic.

16
Search Engine Tips
  • Meta tags are text elements embedded in the
    header section to specify further/additional
    information about the page.
  • Meta description tags gives you control over what
    is said. If you dont make descriptions for your
    pages the search engines will. Design around your
    keywords and keep them to 250 ish
  • Here are a couple of actual sample tags
  • ltmeta name"description" content"Beginners
    Central is an online tutorial offering step by
    step instruction to the new internet surfer.
    Beginners Central is perfect for the first time
    internet user. Use our free ASK US! service if
    you can't find the answer you need."gt

17
Search Engine Tips
  • Build a summary paragraph into your web page
    which can be used by the Search Engines which do
    not use the meta tags.

18
Search Engine Tips
  • Robots Meta tag
  • The primary purpose behind the robots meta tag is
    to control which pages get indexed and which do
    not.
  • The format for the robots command is as follows
  • ltMETA NAME"robots" CONTENT"noindex nofollow"gt
  • This tells the spider not to index the page, nor
    follow any links which they might find.
    http//www.northernwebs.com/set/design_notes_0.htm
    ldesignnotes

19
Search Engine Tips
  • Clickthroughs are important.
  • The more people click the higher you move.  
  • You will need to pay for some if the sites.
  • Goto and About.com do keyword auctions
  •  

20
Search Engine Tips
  • Remember that CGI scripted pages are not visible.
    Also remember that search engines cant read
    graphics. They can only read text. Do not use
    symbols like
  • Use links within your site. Adding links to your
    entry page helps. You should also submit the site
    map

21
Search Engine Tips
  • Know your host.
  • If the hosting service is hosting many
    individuals/companies with bad behavior you may
    be associated with that behavior.
  • Check to make sure that your domain server allows
    your users to drop the www prefix..
  • If you need to attract foreign visitors, you need
    to use foreign keywords.
  • Make sure to apply to the international sections
    of the directories and search engines.

22
Search Engine Tips
  • Do not Spam.
  • Submitting too often especially to fine tune a
    position will usually get you in trouble.
  • Do not keyword Spam.
  • Repeating words sex, money, free, mp3.  
  • If for some reason your listing in a search
    engine is incorrect or you just dont like it
    than look for the change forms. They are posted
    on most but not all sites. Do not assume that you
    should resubmit.

23
Search Engine Tips
  • Look at the source code of the for the top 10 20
    sites in the category you want to be listed in.
    Examine the code to find out what the common
    elements are. Metatag and meta description,
    layout and keywords.
  • Get an intern to submit your web site.

24
Search Engine Tips
  • Use of a descriptive URL will help boost your
    relevancy in the search engines.
  • a web page with the URL of http//www.mysite.com/p
    roduct.html doesn't help as much as making the
    URL of http//www.mysite.com/widgets.html.

25
Search Engine Tips
  • Naming the file something descriptive, and
    perhaps using a keyword as a file name, help your
    site achieve a higher rating and relevancy with
    the search engines. Below are some valid URLs
    which help influence their ranking because they
    include keywords right into the URL.
  •        http//www.homes-fairfax-ounty.com/reston/
    homes.html
  •        http//www.homes-mont-county-md.com/kentla
    nds/homes.html
  •        http//www.kefco.com/steelpipe.html
  •        http//www.bajaseafaris.com/boatcharters.h
    tml

26
Search Engine Tips
  • Below are some valid file names
  • homes-for-sale.html
  • miniature_widgets.html
  • late_model_used_cars.html
  • surgical-instruments-page1.html
  • Adding additional directories is also a great way
    of sneaking in a keyword or two. ie.
  • www.marylandrealtor.com/baltimore/homes.html
  • www.hollywoodstars.com/gossip/tom-hanks/tom-hanks.
    html

27
Web Rings
  • Web rings link sites with similar content
    together.
  • There are a couple of dozen major categories and
    thousands of subcategories.
  • Rings are generally started and maintained by one
    person.

28
Web Rings
  • Rings must obtain a minimum of 5 sites
  • The average ring has anywhere from 10 200 sites.
    There are about 100000 rings in existence.
  • They are free of charge to both visitors and
    members.
  • Seem to be working well.

29
Web Rings
  • Benefits
  • Free
  • Most rings have free traffic reports
  • Quick and easy to use
  • Avoid duplication (Each site is listed once)
  • Often more accurate than search engines
  • Examples
  • www.webring.org
  • Looplink.com
  • GO TO GOOGLE AND TYPE WEB RING

30
Cool Sites
  • They are definitely worth submitting to as they
    get lots of traffic and exposure
  • www.cool.com
  • www.coolsiteoftheday.com
  • Yahoo.com/picks

31
(No Transcript)
32
Online Advertising
33
Banners
  • Simple Banners
  • Animated Banners
  • Streaming Banners
  • Streaming Audio Banners
  • Pop-Ups
  • Interstitials

34
Banners
  • Arent they dead?
  • Banners still make up the majority of online ad
    spending
  • CTR are lower than low in most consumer
    categories.
  • Audience reach often improves regardless of
    whether the banner was clicked or not.

35
CPs
  • Cost per Click (CPC)
  • of times your banner is clicked on
  • Cost per Sale (CPS or CPT)
  • Usually paid as a percentage of a sales(excluding
    tax and shipping)
  • Cost per Action
  • Set fee based on the number of times a game was
    played, software downloaded etc.

36
Before you buy
  • What are your goals
  • Generate Inquiries
  • Generate Sales
  • Branding and Awareness
  • Driving Traffic
  • Research/Surveying

37
Before you buy
  • Do a through analysis of Inventory and your
    campaign.
  • Which pages will you be on?
  • When?
  • What is your budget? How does this ad fit in?
  • Who else will be advertising at the same time?
  • How are you supporting this online? Radio, TV,
    paper?
  • Who is serving your ad?
  • How will you be tracking the results?

38
Plan and Contract
  • Plan what you are going to test
  • Make sure you have a good contract.
  • Outline dates and times
  • Costs

39
How to Choose
  • Referring URLs
  • Personal experience
  • Good Fit
  • Editorial relevance
  • Right Market
  • Amazing deal
  • Because you want to do it.

40
Banner Tips
  • Someone famous said Nobody reads ads. People
    read what interests them. Sometimes it is an ad
  • People dont click on great copy and design
  • They click on something that interests them
  • Unless you are a fortune 250 company you cant
    afford to be doing banners just to improve image.

41
Banner Tips
  • Make sure that you drive the traffic from the
    banner directly to the page
  • Carefully plan the alt text for each banner as
    well as the text underneath the banner

42
Banner Tips
  • Develop a campaign not a unit (15 days)
  • Using questions can raise CTR by about 15
  • Free works best
  • Free Information, free white paper, free whatever
  • Thank you page banners tend to work best.

43
Banner Tips
  • Use 25 of the space for your logo
  • Phrases such as click here Now improve
    response

44
Banner Tips
  • Negotiating
  • Tell them what you want to paythey will get to
    it
  • Remember that the 80 of space goes unsold
  • Start with 10 what they offer

45
Banner Tips
  • Best times to negotiate
  • Timing
  • End of Month
  • End of quarter
  • End of year
  • Great deals when you purchase space for an entire
    year (this should be your best buy)
  • USA Today.com great site to consider

46
  • If we are going to sell sport outfits
  • We should pay a premium to advertise on a web
    site devoted to sports
  • Is this the right way?

47
Test
  • Testing is Critical
  • You should test the following
  • Creative
  • Offer
  • Ad Units
  • Sites
  • Reach vs. composition
  • Targeted content v.s. targeted demographics
  • There should be about 20000 impressions behind
    each test cell.

48
Ad Networks
  • Ad networks offer one stop ad shopping
  • Great for testing
  • Save time
  • Expertise
  • Service
  • Carry premium properties

49
Web Advertising Networks
  • Offer single point of access to advertisers that
    want to reach millions of consumers quickly and
    easily.
  • They acquire impressions given to them by their
    web site affiliates and sell the aggravated
    inventory.
  • This process simplifies the acts of buying and
    selling for both the advertiser and the web
    publisher.

50
Zero Based Media Buying
  • Testing using RON (Run of Networks)
  • Do, no targeting at all.
  • Just throw ads out there and see where you get
    responses.
  • Within a few days you can figure out where your
    responses are coming from.
  • Group your responses by category (sport,
    business, entertainment or people who respond to
    ads about my product.
  • You can not do that with any other media

51
  • He (Flycast President) recommends to his clients
    that begin with advertising on all Flycast sites
    ( close to a thousand) for a week and compare the
    response rates.

52
CASIO
It ran a banner ad for a digital camera. The
best category for Casio digital camera ads is
travel. This test can be conducted in a
week sites aimed women, games and sports are
definitely not winners for the product. Would
anyone guessed this without the test? In a week?
53
Internet Advertising Bureau
  • IAB.net
  • Are the new banner sizes successful?
  • http//www.iab.net/iab_banner_standards/bannersour
    ce.html

54
Next-Generation Banners Rich MediaInteractive/Ani
mated Banners
  • Features-
  • In-the-banner interactivity
  • Deliver live content such as news, daily messages
  • Rich media contains for any bandwidths without
    plug-ins such as streaming audio, animations,
    quizes, and games
  • Effectiveness-
  • Increases (CTR) click-through-ratio
  • Improves brand recognition
  • http//www.freestyleinteractive.com
  • http//www.freestyleinteractive.com/clients/ifuse/

55
Enliven and Types of Banner Ads
  • Enliven.com
  • http//www.enliven.com/campaigns/recent_campaigns.
    htm
  • Please select from ad goal and see how banners
    change according to your marketing goal.

56
Next-Generation AdvertisementsDownloadable and
interactive advertisement
  • Forwarding Advertisements
  • Effective and free advertisement that is
    guaranteed to reach the targeted audience
  • Word of mouth or email promotion reaches a larger
    number of consumers
  • Brand name is re-enforced by interacting with the
    ads

57
Banner ad presentation methods
  • A. Pay per Click - Pay a web site every time
    someone clicks on your banner.
  • B. Pay per Lead - Pay a web site every time
    someone signs up for a service or free
    subscription (Sales leads)
  • C. Pay per Sale - Pay a web site every time
    someone actually buys the product or service.
  • D. Pay to View - Pay a web site to show your ad
    by category or randomly.
  • E. Banner Exchange - Display banner/button on
    your site in exchange for displays on others

58
Where should you place your banner ads?
  • In traditional advertising you use media expert.
  • Study demographics
  • Figures out which media they pay attention to.
  • Places ads based on careful targeting and cost.
  • Media targeting has been a science for 30 years
  • Should we (modern marketers) use the same
    techniques for the web?

59
4 Steps in making a purchase
  • Impression The customer clicks on a web site
    that has banners displayed.
  • 5 to 40 per thousand impressions
  • ResponseThe person clicks on a banner in the web
    site, which transports the clicker to your web
    site
  • Lead The prospect views your offering and fills
    out a form
  • Sale The clicker buys the product

60
Objectives in Web Advertising
  • There are two objectives in web advertising
  • Image advertisers are trying to create an image
    in the mind of the viewer.
  • Response advertisers are trying to get the viewer
    to respond.

Year ImageAwareness Response
1 80 20
2 60 40
3 40 60
Creative should always mirror the program
61
How web advertising differs
  • On the web you can change your message every hour
    every day
  • Expose one customer to many different approaches.
  • Rich media ads utilizing high involvement and
    interactive formats, hold the promise of
    increasing the impact and overall effectiveness
    of web advertising.
  • You get immediate feedback on what is working and
    what is not.

62
Ad Performance Evaluation
  • Lycos and Yahoo Spreadsheets.
  • Please take a look at those sheets.
  • We will discuss the dynamics during our Thursday
    chat.
  • I am using these worksheets with permission from
    BMG Direct.

63
Affiliate Programs
64
Affiliates
  • Partners help drive revenues

65
Banner Ads
66
  • In an effort to simplify the production of
    multimedia banner ads, Enliven has developed a
    set of preassembled ads it calls "Enliven Effect"
    that offer opportunities ranging from driving
    traffic to conducting transactions within the
    banner.

67
Affiliate Marketing
  • Affiliate marketing may be the fastest-growing
    form of online marketing today. Driving about 13
    of the current online sales market, it's forecast
    to reach 21 by 2003, according to a report by
    Forrester Research Inc.
  • Behind that growth is affiliate marketing's
    ability to leverage the power of the Web and
    direct customers to partners on a
    pay-for-performance basis, said Robert Levitan,
    CEO of Flooz.com, New York, an online gift
    currency provider with an extensive affiliate
    network.

68
Vocabulary
  • Affiliate An individual who contracts with a
    merchant in order to help sell that merchants
    product.
  • Associate Another word for an affiliate.
  • Merchant An individual or business who has a
    product and, in this case, uses affiliate
    programs to sell this product.

69
What type of merchandise can I sellthrough
affiliate marketing?
  • The product may be anything someone
  • will pay for
  • Tangible (such as clothing),
  • Virtual (such as electronic books or
  • Downloadable software), or
  • Information (such as expert advice).

70
Where do I get the merchandise?Where do I store
it?
  • In most cases, the merchant handles
  • the merchandise,
  • actual purchase,
  • packing, and
  • shipping,
  • so you usually never see the actual merchandise.

71
What are my responsibilities as anaffiliate?
  • 1. Represent a product or service
  • Represent the merchants product or service on
    your site through the use of links.
  • These links may take the form of
  • a banner,
  • a text link,
  • a search box, or even
  • a JAVA applet.

72
What are my responsibilities as anaffiliate?
  • 2. Drive traffic (get visitors) to your site.
  • Establish a steady flow of targeted traffic to
    your site in order to increase your potential to
    earn commissions. Different merchants specify
    what constitutes an action worthy of
    compensation, and these can range from a
  • Customer just seeing the ad
  • Actually purchasing the product.
  • How much you get paid will also differ from
    merchant to merchant.

73
What are my responsibilities as anaffiliate?
  • 3. Read the contract
  • Information should be stated clearly in a
    contract. It is your responsibility to read the
    contract, even if it is
  • long,
  • convoluted, or
  • boring.

74
What are my responsibilities as anaffiliate?
  • 4. Monitor your site and links.
  • You must check your site and links regularly to
  • make sure everything works properly.

75
What are my responsibilities as anaffiliate?
  • 5. Monitor your statistics.
  • The merchant should provide you with statistics.
  • You need to monitor your statistics to make sure
    you are being credited properly.
  • Your statistics reflect the success of your
    merchandising plan and allow you to tweak your
    selling process to increase your profit.

76
How Do I Choose a Merchant?
  • Stand-Alone Affiliate Program (independent)
  • An affiliate program run "in house" by a
    particular merchant. This merchant handles the
    contracting, sale, record keeping, and payment
    process.
  • Solution Provider
  • A company, such as Commission Junction or BeFree,
    that assists merchants in the affiliate marketing
    process.
  • Usually, the solution provider acts as an
    intermediary between the merchant and affiliate,
    and handles most business matters such as
    regulating contracts and cutting checks.

77
Reasons to use a stand-alone affiliateprogram
  • 1. Access to unique items.
  • Artists and craftspeople frequently cannot
    generate the volume of product to support a
    large affiliate program. However, these merchants
    can benefit from highly targeted affiliate sales
    made by a select group of affiliates.
  • If you have a site dedicated to Shaker
    craftsmanship, for example, and want to sell
    hand-made Shaker-style chairs, then you should
    consider finding a quality artisan with a highly
    selective group of affiliates.

78
Reasons to use a stand-alone affiliateprogram
  • 2. Access to non-traditional items.
  • Some items, while mass-produced, do not always
    appeal to the majority of Web surfers.
  • However, if your highly targeted niche site
    focuses on a sub-culture, such as role playing
    gamers, then you should work with a merchant who
    caters to this community.

79
Reasons to use a stand-alone affiliateprogram
  • 3. Ability to work more closely with a merchant.
  • Independent merchants, especially those with
  • highly selective affiliate programs, work with
  • fewer affiliates, and are therefore often more
  • accessible than the large solution providers.

80
Reasons to choose a solution provider
  • 1. Variety
  • Solution providers offer access to a wide range
    of programs and an extensive array of products.
  • 2. Time management
  • Solution providers consolidate the tracking and
    payment for a number of merchants, making
    tracking a one-stop experience for the affiliate.
  • 3. Reliability
  • Reputable solution providers have the experience
    and funding to reliably serve their affiliates.
  • 4. Grievance and mediation
  • Solution providers sometimes act as mediators
    between merchants and affiliates, providing a
    more impartial way to settle grievances.

81
Reasons to avoid solution providers
  • 1. All of your eggs are in one basket.
  • In the unlikely event that your solution provider
    would shut down, your entire affiliate marketing
    framework will crumble.
  • 2. Merchants are less accessible.
  • In a large solution provider organization, the
    individual merchants and affiliates can remain at
    a distance.

82
Qualities of a good affiliate program
  • 1. The affiliates responsibilities.
  • A clear description of what you, the affiliate,
    must do and what you are prohibited from doing.
    These are the program rules and will dictate what
    youll have to live with during your relationship
    with this merchant.
  • 2. What designates an action worthy of
    compensation.
  • As an affiliate, you must understand what must
    happen in order for you to get a
    commissionwhether you must deliver impressions,
    clicks, leads, or sales.
  • 3. How the compensation will be rendered.
  • As an affiliate, you must understand the
    merchants plan for compensation. Make sure that
    the merchant will pay you in money, and that you
    can use the particular currency in your country
    of residence.

83
Qualities of a good affiliate program
  • 4. When will you be paid?
  • Merchants payment schedules vary.
  • A few merchants pay every two weeks,
  • many pay every month, and a few pay quarterly.
  • Others only pay when you reach a minimum amount.
  • If you have not reached that amount, then the
    payment is rolled over into the next pay period.
  • Also, be aware that a significant lag time for
    processing will almost always delay your payment.

84
Some guidelines
  • 1- Merchant logos.
  • As an affiliate, you should not be required to
    display a merchants logo on your site.Merchants
    who force affiliates to display their logo often
    use that logo as branding or free advertising.
  • 2-Sign-up fees.
  • As an affiliate, you should never have to pay a
    fee to join an affiliate program. You should
    recognize that merchants who require you to pay
    any kind of start-up fees operate on the edge of
    the legal definition of pyramid schemes.
  • 3-Confidentiality.
  • As an affiliate, you must ensure your customers
    confidentiality. Make certain that the merchant
    has a privacy policy in place that will
    sufficiently protect both you and your customers.

85
5. Affiliate agreement.
  • As an affiliate, you need to be able to access a
    merchants affiliate agreement easily.
  • The full agreement must be
  • posted on the merchants site, and
  • you should have access to it, for free, and
    without having to give out personal information.

86
Parts of a good contract include
  • How the merchant will approach contract changes.
  • A good merchant should inform the affiliate of
    any upcoming changes, both on the site and by
    email.
  • Legality.
  • You should be assured that the merchant operates
    within the law, is permitted to sell its product,
    and does not violate the pyramid scheme laws.
  • Contact information.
  • A good merchant will provide multiple, reliable
    methods by which it can be reached. These include
    email, postal address, and telephone numbers, and
    they should be displayed on the merchants
    website.
  • Contact permission.
  • A good merchant will ask your permission to
    contact you via email with promotional messages,
    newsletters, and the like, on An opt-in basis.

87
6. Grievance policy
  • As an affiliate, you need to be clear on a
  • merchants grievance policy. The merchant must
    clearly state how grievances and disputes are to
    be handled. This disclosure includes
  • Who is tracking your results? Many merchants use
    third-party companies to track performance. You,
    the affiliate, must be clear on this issue.
  • Who handles disputes? Merchants must inform
    affiliates how to register a complaint, and how
    this dispute will be arbitrated.

88
7. Termination
  • As an affiliate, you need to understand the
    program rules, and recognize that violation of
    these rules could lead to termination of the
    contract. A good merchant will spell out all the
    reasons that you can be terminated for cause.
    Usually, these reasons have to do with illegal
    activity or with cheating to improve your
    statistics.

89
8. Tracking statistics
  • A good contract will provide you, the
    affiliate,with information regarding how your
    account will be tracked, as well as how you can
    access your statistics. This contract should also
    explain how frequently the statistics will be
    updated.

90
9. Clarity
  • A good contract should be written clearly and
    with limited legalese, in order to facilitate
    communication between you and the merchant.
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