Simplify Your Marketing Research
I was surfing the net, hunting for new forum activity, when I
came across a small forum site. It wasn't anything to write home
about. There weren't too many postings in any of the discussion
lists. Except for the Business opportunity section. That made me
laugh.
The most that one had was 7 postings. And yet the Business
opportunity section had 50 postings. Probably more by now. So
many people trying to market stuff in a forum that almost no one
is monitoring.
Out of curiosity I clicked on the business opportunity link. I
was scanning the links and one stood out to me. In amongst the
offers and get rich quick schemes, there was actually someone
asking for advice!
My curiosity was piqued! I clicked on the link to see who this
was. This is what he posted in the thread:
"Hi. I'm new to the internet and am looking for a good business
opportunity. Does anyone have any advice."
Suprisingly, after a month of being listed in the business
opportunity section, he had only gotten one reply.
Actually, I suppose it's not that wierd if you think about it.
Many people are willing to peddle their wares to forums but not
too many are willing to become an active participant.
One person responded with a short and simple message telling him
to go to the website of some MLM program. Some MLM program that
he was probably a member of.
Not that I'm against MLM programs, mind you. Some people swear
by them. I don't, but some people do. (If you don't know what
MLM is, just do a quick search on google for it. You'll find out
right quick.)
Anyway, I just had to reply. Maybe it was because this kid
reminded me of me when I first got involved in internet
marketing. Maybe it was because I hate seeing another human
being lead like a lemming down a path where 95% of them wind up
falling off of a cliff.
Anyway, I finished typing my reply and sat back and looked at
it. I realized that this was the kind of information I wish I
had before I got started in internet marketing.
So with that being said I have posted my response to his query
below.
Enjoy, Shaun
========================================
Hi,
I just saw your posting on the forum.
My name is Shaun and my handle in the forum is FoeHammer. Feel
free to look up my profile.
If you are looking for a good business opportunity I'd actually
suggest staying away from what looks too good (at least to
start). And I'd definitely suggest you stay away from anyone who
would just throw out the name of an "opportunity" without giving
you one scrap of advice or direction afterwrads.
The worst thing a marketer can do is push what "looks good". You
need to do a little marketing research first. And it's not that
difficult to do. I know of a program that can get you off to a
great start. (Bear with me. I can go on when I get on a role).
Follow this URL:
http://our.affiliatetracking.net/wordtracker/a/9593
This will take you to a site called Word Tracker. This is an
awesome utility for marketing research. It is essentially a huge
database with every search that has been done within the last 60
days on every major search engine by anyone who uses the
internet. That means that you can enter any term and see exactly
how many people on the internet are intrested in it by how many
searches they did for that and similar keywords.
I would suggest a topic that you are personally interested in.
Let's face it, if you like golf then you are probably not the
only one who likes golf. (Well, maybe you are. I've heard it
said that men never really play golf. They just use it as an
excuse to leave the house and swear. ;) Anyway, just market to
people like you.
So, first compile a list of the most searched for terms in their
database. I personally would discard any word with a count of
less than 500 searches. But use your own judgement. (P.S. They
also have a weekly newsletter with the top searches done on the
net in that week. They offer this service to people who
subscribe to their wordtracker service.)
Next you run what they call a KEI analasys. (Don't worry, they
have manuals for this kind of thing too.) You don't have to do
anything, they'll do it for you.
Basicaly they score every keyword on a scale from 1-400+ based
on a) How many searches are done for that keyword and b) how
many other businesses are competing for that keyword.
This is how the keywords are scored.
1-10 is a terrible keyword. Just throw those out immediately.
10-100 is a decent keyword. You have a fair shot at having your
web page seen in a web search. But so do all of your
competitors. 100-400 is an EXCELLENT keyword. Jump on these. And
anything 400+ is just a gift. If you land any of these (and I'm
sure you will) YOU will be just about the only person who a
surfer will see when they use that particular keyword. Does that
sound valuable?
This KEI analasys has two purposes.
One, it helps you target your niche. Your "niche" is a small but
potentially profitable corner of the market that you can
DOMINATE if you play your cards right.
For example, you might search for "golf". One of the terms you
get back that has the highest count AND the highest KEI (note
that most words with high KEI have very low search counts.
Remember, no one's using them for a reason. But there are a few
gems in there.) might be "golf bags" (guessing). You might then
want to target your marketing efforts on "golf bags." Give links
for golf bag and golf bag accessories. Tips on taking care of
your golf bag. An ebook on how to design your own golf bag. I
don't know, I don't even play golf! But the point is you have
just targeted your niche.
The second reason is because it helps you pick out the name of
your future website. You will be ranked much higher in the
search engines if your keywords are a part of your title and/or
your description. Plus use as many of these high count, high KEI
words as you can in your links, articles, as alt text for your
pictures, etc. The search engines will love you for it.
So, the name for our ficticious site might be "The Golf Bag
Store.com" or "Golf Bag's R'Us.com" or "The Golf Bag
Emporium.com". Whatever. I don't even play golf!
I suppose a real life example would be a website of mine. When I
was doing marketing research for my next site I noticed that the
keywords with the highest count and the highest KEI (within the
field of internet marketing) were "work at home" and "work from
home". Therefore I named my new site
http://www.work-at-home-help.com.
Also, when the keywords are in the title they stand out in bold.
When they stand out in bold the surfer will think that the site
is more relevant (which it may or may not be) and visit.
One thing that I think I have to warn you against is word
stuffing. "Word stuffing" is when you pack your site with
keywords at every possible turn. Some people have paragraphs
with just nonsense. Inane babble filled with their keywords.
Like this for example:
"When you download Brittany Spears .Mpg .Avi .MP3 be sure to
upgrade to the FREE trial verson of the Paris Parus Hilton
Haltun Video. Make money by becoming an affiliate with KISS and
Pamela Anderson's golf bag..."
And on, and on.
I'm sure you've seen this. People do it all the time to increase
their ranking in the search engines.
There are many forms of word stuffing. Another form of stuffing
is having a back ground that is all one color (say white, for
example). You then take as many keywords as you can think of and
have them at the bottom of the page or in the margins and have
them the same color as the background. The effect is that people
never see the keywords, but the search programs (bots, spiders,
etc.) do. And they rank (or ranked) you accordingly.
I say "ranked" because these forms of word stuffing DON'T WORK
ANYMORE! In fact they can get you penalised with a lower listing
or even have you booted out of the search engines database all
together.
But there are two simple things you can consider to avoid these
problems.
1) Keep it relevant and 2) Keep it timely.
If you want to add alt text to a picture of a golf bag, for
example, just title it "golf_bag.txt". If you want to use your
keyword with your description or articles just use it wherever
and whenever it's appropriate. You'll come out ahead in the end.
Anyway, we went on a bit of a tangent there but we're back.
Next all you have to do is get a product to sell. That's not too
difficult. You can join an affiliate program. You can start your
own newsletter. You can write an ebook or a course (downloadable
products do well on the internet.) There are many "businesses in
a box" you could try. These are usually free and offer some
products that are already selling like hot cakes on the net.
It's up to you.
Anyway, I went on for a lot longer than I thought I would. I
hope I didn't bore you.
It's really not that difficult. The hardest part is just sitting
down and doing it.
Keep in touch and visit http://www.work-at-home-help.com. It has
more resources for you to consider there.
To your health, Shaun
P.S.
When you do get your own site/newsletter/whatever create a sig
file and attach it to ALL of your email and forum postings. It's
free advertising.
P.S.S.
I really don't play golf.