Internet Marketing Course -
Offline Marketing
There are a large number of "off-line" marketing techniques
you can use to drive traffic to your Web site. I will list a number
of them below - please feel free to email me with any I've forgotten
to include in this list.
The offline effort should focus on getting your Web site Home
Page address seen and remembered by as many potential Customers
as possible. This is a very good reason to try to keep your Home
Page address as easy-to-remember as possible. Ideally, it would
be your business name.
The best way for small/midsize businesses to do this is to register
an Internet domain name for $10-$35/year (price depends on registrar
used). ".COM" is the most common domain name extension
(top level domain or TLD), but don't forget the relatively new
".BIZ" top level domain, especially if all of the best
".COM" domain names for your business are already registered.
Once you secure your own domain name, finding an online service
to host your site "virtually" is very inexpensive and
easy to do.
If your business must be a sub-directory on a mega-site unless
(for example, you're a franchisee of a very popular, well-known
brand), then the your task is to make sure that your information
is accurate and easy to find on that mega-site (ex. if you operate
a bricks and mortar retail location, make sure the mega-site "store
locator" information for your location is up-to-date and
accurate).
Here's my list of offline promotion ideas:
- Include the Web site Home Page address:
- On all company printed material - brochures, catalogs (on
every page in the page footer info), letterhead, envelopes
(example: on back flap of a #10 envelope), fax forms, invoices,
direct mail pieces, business cards, data sheets, annual reports,
quotation and proposal forms, white papers, company-sponsored
books, press releases (product, financial, etc.), product
containers (wrappers, bags, cups, napkins, plates, etc.),
POP (point-of-purchase) in-store displays, doorknob hangers,
flyers under windshield wipers, etc.
- On all pages of company-published magazines (examples include
industry-specific weekly or monthly "vertical" magazines)
- On all company garments (lab coats, costumes, uniforms,
etc.)
- On bottom of all cash register receipts
- On all company vehicles (include with "800" number
info)
- On all product tags - serial number tags, consumable product
re-order info, etc. (include it wherever company contact info
is placed on the product)
- On all company name signage at company facilities
- In all print ads (newspaper, magazines, billboards, etc.)
- In all TV commercials
- In all radio commercials
- In your automated company phone greeting
- In all signage at trade shows (including the shirts worn
by booth personnel)
- On all company giveaways ("freebies"). Examples
include mouse pads, coffee mugs, hats, shirts, pens, bumper
stickers, etc.
- In all employment ads
- Direct Mail Promotions - most helpful to Web site exposure
if recipients are given a Web site mechanism to respond
to the promotions. Be sure to ask each recipient for his/her
email address in the online form.
- Create low cost in-store handouts highlighting Home Page address
(business card size, multicolor if you can afford it); have
them readily available at all cash register locations, Customer
Service booths, etc.; ask that store staff hand out one of these
cards with every cash register receipt, charge slip, etc.
- Telemarketing - be sure that your telemarketers (in-house
or contractors) do as many of the following as possible during
every outbound call: inform clients of existence of your Web
site; give them the Web site Home Page address; ask for the
contact's email address (in order for you to contact in future
re. new products, promotions, etc.)
- Your Distributors: if you sell your products through distributors,
get as many of them as possible to include your Web site Home
Page address in all of their printed material, especially in
product catalogs.
- If you sponsor a float or a booth in a local Memorial Day,
July 4th, etc. celebration, make sure that your Web site Home
Page address is prominently displayed. If you sponsor a band
or cub scout pack in a parade, make sure your Home Page address
is included on the sponsorship banner.
Online Opportunities (low cost/no cost):
- Create a standard company "signature" that includes your Web
site Home Page address and add it to the bottom of every email
that is sent out from your business
- Distributors: be sure to have them include your Web site Home
Page address (ideally linked to your Home Page) on their Web
sites
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