Friday, January 4, 2008

The Three Biggest Internet Marketing Time Wasters

The Three Biggest Internet Marketing Time Wasters


Buliding a great website / blog / brand takes time and hard work. Unfortunately, many aspiring web entrepreneurs put too much emphasis on these three time-wasting activities:

Changing the layout, colors and general appearance of their site

Designing our website is one of the first steps in our long journey to build a small business brand. Just when we thought we had everything figured out, the little artist in our head keeps second-guessing everything we just did and we start changing colors, moving the position or our logo, changing the font, messing with our navigation options, etc. This is a mistake for two reasons:

  1. Your site will never be perfect. However, if you followed a few basic web design guidelines at the beginning, chances are your site is already good enough and ready to be enhanced with useful, valuable content.
  2. Once you build a strong readership base, constantly changing the appearance of your site will negatively affect your brand. Customers like consistency and familiarity. If as a result of your constant changes customers can’t find what they want or don’t recognize your site you’ll end up losing brand equity.

The best strategy is to make very subtle changes to your site once a year or so. In other words, make your web design changes few and far between and keep your branding consistent.

Believing that Search Engine Optimization is the be-all and end-all of your marketing

Preparing and optimizing our site for the search engines is just one of the many tactics at our disposal to promote and build our brand online. Putting all our eggs in the SEO basket is risky, since search engines keep changing their ranking formulas on a regular basis, and what works today may not work tomorrow.

If we find ourselves spending too much time fiddling with page titles, changing the wording in our headlines or worrying about our keyword density, it is time to stop and ask ourselves if that time wouldn’t be better utilized creating useful content and building a loyal customer / reader base.

If you are just starting out, you may want to check the SEO advice coming straight from the horse’s mouth and read the design and content guidelines of the offered by the the main search engines. You can then read some online tutorials and a few good ebooks on the subject.

I would suggest, however, that you focus on the basics and don’t get tied up by the extremely technical stuff. As with any other topic, the law of diminishing returns applies here, and you don’t want to spend more time chasing Google’s tail than building and improving your site.

Obsessing with Adsense ads and revenue

Unless you run a purely informational site, Google Adsense shouldn’t be a significant part of your business model. If you sell something and are trying to build your brand online, Adsense ads will be a distraction from your core offering, where you can make more money than the few cents per click you would be getting by plastering Adsense code all over your site.

Additionaly, Adsense ads are detrimental to the user experience (especially if placed in the prime areas of the page) and make your site less likely to be linked by others. In the crucial early stages, plastering your site with ads is branding suicide. Your main focus should be in building a loyal following of people who visit your site regularly, subscribe to your feeds and link to you.

Even for more established sites, or sites that are purely informational in nature, some experts suggest to wait until a site can draw around 1,000 visitors per day before placing ads.

In summary, build value first, tell people about it, and tell them to tell their friends. Everything else will fall into place at the right time.

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