|
Check out our eMarketing Tools
- Blacklist
Monitor- Want to get off a blacklist? We tell you
how.
- Ad Tracking - Track all of your online
advertising to ensure it is working for you.
Email
Marketing - #1 method of marketing today. Download your free
trial.
- Search Engine Positioning - Get top-10 search engine ranking
with WebPostionGold. Download your free trial.
|
|
Archives eMarketing Tools Advertise Unsubscribe Subscribe
Today's
Article: Wonders of Word Tracker
Today's Ask Dr. Ebiz:
The Death of Affiliate
Marketing?
Wonders
of Word Tracker.
by John
Alexander
For
me personally, Wordtracker.com is
not just a tool for looking up keywords. Sure, that's one good use
for it, but what I want to distinguish is another influential and
exciting use for Wordtracker as an SEO resource.
"Keywords" for use in your Meta tags are probably
the least influential element in search engine optimization these
days. However, hunting for keywords still seems the most popular
use for Wordtracker. After all, it contains over 336 million queries
within its database, which is no older than 60 days. An SEO can spend
long periods of time doing research and hunting for keywords. But
let's really try and get our minds around the keyword hunting issue
for a minute, and I'll explain a few other tips for using Wordtracker .
Identify your target audience's "surfing behavior" Is
there any greater discovery than having an understanding of a target
audience's "surfing behavior?" It's like a light coming on in your
mind. It's like flipping on a switch to an idea generator! Wordtracker
will give you absolutely AMAZING detail if you take time to think
about it laterally and outside of the context of just a "keyword
hunt."
Later in this article, I'll explain how you
can use WordTracker to identify your audience's surfing behavior.
Move beyond the "keyword universe" function.
In speaking with many search engine optimizers, I
have learned that so many seem to get stuck in the "Keyword Universe" feature.
The ability to generate lists of keyword phrases using the built
in thesaurus is nice, but you must not get stuck there and let it
do all the thinking for you. As you move on to discover other features
within Wordtracker, you will also have the opportunity to perform
a "comprehensive search" or an "exact search" or utilize the "top
1000" report.
Tips to identify human behavior?
Where you'll find most of your "revelations" or "insights" are
in the "comprehensive search" feature of Wordtracker. Try entering
one part of a search phrase and letting "comprehensive search" figure
out the best "full use" of the phrase. Another technique I like to
use is to examine the top reports for a "high performance" keyword
or topic related to my client and then cut and paste it into comprehensive
search to get streams of currently "hot topics." I define a hot topic
as a popular topic in high demand, which may also have lists of related
keyword phrases also in high demand.
Let's study a real life example . . .
Now let me give you a recent example of understanding
behaviors. I wanted to pull additional traffic into a site selling
baby furniture. The site sells strollers, baby furniture, cribs and
other baby products. The client explained that they wanted me to
find ways to pull in their true audience. Sometimes you'll discover
the true audience is not what it first may seem. By true audience....I
mean "targeted audience" or the folks most likely to "BUY" or "respond" to
the Web site.
If you just think only in "keywords" mode, you
may miss this.
Performing a comprehensive search within Wordtracker
by typing in the word "baby," Wordtracker returns interesting results.
Do you know what I learned? The target audience for baby strollers
is NOT people who have babies! You heard correct. The "true audience" for
those buying strollers and baby cribs ARE NOT "folks who have NEWBORN
BABIES!" Here is the catch....if you are targeting folks with newborns,
to sell them a stroller....you're too late! The true audience are
people who are "soon to become parents."
Once Mom and Dad know a new family member is
on the way, they start buying BEFORE the baby arrives. Better yet...often
it's not even the parents who are buying...it's the grandparents.
Perhaps you have pages scoring tremendously well for things like
babies, strollers, cribs and baby furniture...... but now your client
wants even more.
Here's an example strategy:
One behavior of the true target audience which
I discovered by using Wordtracker was as follows. As I entered the
term "baby" into "comprehensive search," the first thing I noticed
was the top phrase "baby names" which had been requested on major
search engines over 34,350 times in the last 60 days. It became very
obvious when I noticed the incredibly high demands on major search
engines for the phrase "baby names," or how about "meanings of baby
names."
This was indeed like a light coming on! I thought,
imagine this, "soon to be parents" are researching their unborn child's
name by using the Internet. What better time to connect with folks
than before the baby is born.
Finally, build a strategy based on the identified
behavior
Suppose we were to build a little library of
themed pages right into your client's site to attract the TARGET
audience. They are searching for baby names so it is essential that
this is what you MUST give them. Give them lists of baby names to
choose from, right? Don't ever trick your audience or they will simply
never buy. Give them exactly what they are looking right up front.
In this example, you could create pages that offer baby names and
meanings of baby names AND subtly offer a few product listings or
links to your client's store front. It is essential that you always
provide content related to their search first, and then you might
offer some links to other appropriate products within your client's
site.
Test these unique ways for using Wordtracker yourself,
and learn how effective they can be.
Good luck!
About the Author:
John Alexander is the Co-Director of Training
of Search Engine Workshops http://www.searchengineworkshops.com with
Robin Nobles. Together, they teach 2-day beginner, 3-day advanced,
and 5-day all-inclusive "hands on" search engine marketing workshops
in locations across the globe. John also teaches online search engine
marketing courses through http://www.onlinewebtraining.com,
and he's a member of Wordtracker's official question support team. john@searchengineworkshops.com
"Dr
Ebiz"
"David Garfinkel told me the affiliate model is disappearing in
favor of list swapping, Search Engine Optimization (SEO), and Pay
Per Click (PPC) advertising. Do you concur?" -- Chris Marlow, Superior Sales Copy
I called David
Garfinkel, publisher of World Copywriting Newsletter and asked
him about this. He told me, "I don't think affiliate marketing is
disappearing entirely. But for Internet information marketers it has
reached the saturation point, the point of diminishing returns." He
cited affiliate problems with e-mail marketing, fraud, hijacking of
sales, and deleting cookies. "It needs to evolve to where the
channel is better protected for the affiliate, and there is some
level of exclusivity," he said. "After a while you get tired of
competing for the same customers. I wouldn't want to base my
business model on affiliate marketing going forward."
I agree that in the field of selling information on Internet
marketing, so many people are trying to hawk so many info products
that it's difficult to get the advertising traction you require by
relying on affiliate marketing alone.
The big question when considering affiliate marketing is: Where
will you find affiliates related to your particular business niche
that will feature your products or services on their sites? My own
experience is that only 1% to 2% of my affiliates really have enough
traffic to sell my products effectively. I think this is
typical.
Having said that, it's pretty clear that affiliate marketing is
far from dead -- it's just not the single magic bullet for success
that it was claimed to be a few years ago. To look at the success
and growth of affiliate network companies such as Commission Junction and MyAffiliateProgram, it's obvious to me that
a number of companies are finding affiliate marketing quite
effective as one of their advertising channels. You can learn more
in the affiliate marketing section of the Web
Marketing Info Center. http://www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=em_Associate
The key here is to use several advertising channels,
rather than rely on just one.
PPC advertising is probably bringing in more advertising revenue
than any other Internet advertising channel at this point. Though
rising bid prices for keywords may eventually cause PPC to lose its
luster, text ads through Google AdWords and Overture.com can be
quite cost-effective when pursued with a wise strategy -- and new advertisers
sometimes receive a bit of free credit to get them started. More info
in the Web Marketing Info Center. http://www.wilsonweb.com/cat/cat.cfm?page=1&subcat=mp_PPC
I also recommend search engine optimization (SEO), that is,
getting your webpages to rank high on the search engines. Dollar for
dollar, this is probably the most cost-effective advertising
investment I know.
Be careful of actually swapping lists with other e-mail
newsletter publishers since it may violate your privacy policy. But
if you can trade ads or endorsed e-mailings with other list
owners who have similarly sized lists, the cost can be
extremely small and the upside potentially large. Just don't
mistreat your subscribers to earn a quick buck. Your credibility and
reputation are the most valuable business assets you possess.
"Copyright 2004, Ralph F. Wilson. All
rights reserved. Used by permission."

Return to
Top of Newsletter

Mailworkz Home Archives Submit
Articles
|