Internet marketing tips for Quixtar

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Tuesday, August 30, 2005

What If Hot Quixtar Customers Wore Brilliant Yellow Jerseys?


For years, I have repeatedly had the enjoyment of acting as a consultant directly with Quixtar independent business owners. Regardless of all my attempts to explain, I still often get entrepreneurs that say, "search engine campaigns might be good, but not necessarily for my health-fitness-wellness, telecommunications, financial services, books, food-beverage, house and kitchenwares."

While this still shocks me, I'm certain that one of the reasons I hear this is because the "concept" of search engine campaigns is still not understood. Perhaps an analogy will clarify.

What if you could stand at the front door of a Wal-Mart or CompUSA and immediately spot customers who were looking for your product? Lets say they wore brilliant Yellow shirts stating what they were planning to purchase at the store. Imagine if these shoppers knew to go straight to you rather than wander the store aimlessly looking?

With Yahoo's Sponsored Search, Google AdWords, or any of the top 10 pay per click search engines, you connect with your prospects immediately, the second they want to hear from you.

Now let's dig a bit deeper into this idea. What if you could have a thousand college students at the door of every market center in the country. What's more, you'd have to pay them only if they located an intersted customer and began promoting to them your health-fitness-wellness, telecommunications, financial services, books, food-beverage, house and kitchenwares.

Now, even if other 'big dog' companies have displayed giant advertisements, hovering over everyone, it doesn't matter. Few shoppers care for a general ad when something more targeted to their wants and needs is more readily available. All the while, your "agents" are continually monitoring every single prospect that seems targeted for what you have.

Using search engine ads is like deploying a team of super sales "agents", except that these search agents won't require breaks and they require no pay unless they produce results. Your "agents" will be waiting 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for customers looking for your products or services. As soon as prospects start search, you'll be the first to know.

Search engine marketing will grow by 33% this year, with growth slowing to 10% annually by 2010, when spending will hit $11.6 billion. (Source: Forrester Research 02/2005)


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Other recommended blogs:
Tastefully Simple | The Traveling Vineyard | Tomboy Tools

posted by Dan Hollings @ 5:14 PM 3 comments  

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

If your a Mom can Quixtar help make you a Mompreneur?


DSA Statistics (Female vs Male)
Source: Direct Sales Association

According to the most recent statistics available from the Direct Sales Association, 79.9% of people in "direct sales" are women. Any way you look at it the men total a paltry 20.1%. Many of the women in our industry (and customers we seek) are current or future moms. Just when we thought the dictionary had all the words we needed a new term has appeared on our horizon known as Mompreneurism.

Books About Mompreneurism Yes, you're reading it right. According to authors Patricia Cobe and Ellen Parlapiano, who trademarked the term "mompreneurs" and were recently featured in Time magazine and various other programs like CNN; their mompreneurs online site draws millions of visitors each month.

In reading through the Mompreneurs Online web site you'll find that they've interviewed hundreds of "at home" business moms. Their interviews revealed that these special women share certain secrets for their savvy web strategies. Of the many things mentioned, below is a sampling of why and how mom-owned businesses are surviving and thriving on the web according to Pat and Ellen:

  • Web Wisdom. Work-at-home moms understand that a dot.com name alone is not enough to power success. But the Internet can be a very valuable tool when used in conjunction with more traditional business strategies.
  • A Natural Niche. Cyberspace opens up a wealth of business ideas, allowing moms to tap into their talents, skills and passions to create products and services for highly targeted audiences.
  • Money Smarts. Moms don't overextend their financial resources and are less likely to use outside funding during start-up. So they don't have to worry about venture capitalists pulling the plug on their businesses.
Perhaps you think Quixtar is a perfect spot for moms? Maybe you're hoping to attract "at home" business moms to your site, blog, product or business? Or, maybe you already have lots of moms and a true mompreneurial mindset?

Whatever the case, these "mompreneurs" working from home are an important niche and your pay-per-click marketing strategies can target these moms. Moms are both a consumer and a business force to be understood and admired.

Perhaps your health-fitness-wellness, telecommunications, financial services, books, food-beverage, house and kitchenwares will be just the thing these mompreneurs are seeking? Now, let's continue (below) with more tips in our series on pay per click strategies for gaining highly targeted traffic. Maybe you can get some moms clicking!

PPC Tips list continued from previous weeks:


  • Sometimes people type in web addresses in those search boxes! So bid on those if the search engine allows it: 'www.website.com', 'website.com', 'http://website.com' and every combination full or partial you think a searcher might actually type.
  • Match up keywords with words in your ad copy. Even though a 'spa', a 'hot tub', and a 'whirlpool' might mean the same thing in your mind, if a searcher types in 'hot tub' and your listing says: "Relax and save in your new Spa", you will miss out on many interested customers.
  • Think negative... yes, people search for herbs that can kill, plastic surgery pitfalls, mlm scams and sundry other peculiar things. Invite them to explore your related listing. Do you offer cosmetics or skin car as an alternative to plastic surgery? Is you mlm a beacon of light in a sea of seemingly dubious scams?
  • Get creative with interest spikes in the news. 'Mad Cow' might be a great keyword for your all vegetarian product line. The 'SARS' outbreak might have generated millions of searches that your 'immunity booster' could have benefited from (just don't make any false claims). And where were all the bra ads when a gazillion people typed in 'Janet Jackson' after the 2004 Super Bowl surprise?

Can You Be Compelling to a Mompreneur?

Here's one way you can be relevant and compelling in reaching out to "at home" business moms:

MAKE IT VIRAL: Viral marketing is huge among mompreneurs. Easy-to-forward articles, mini-ebooks and cards are perfect. But low-tech solutions can be equally effective. For example, Clorox offers a new mop which includes several postcard-style coupons that let happy customers share the handy product with their friends.



For additional marketing help visit:
Internet Marketing Tips for Quixtar

Check back next week for the next in this series of pay per click marketing tips...


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Other recommended blogs:
Stanley Home Products | Sunrider | Tahitian Noni

posted by Dan Hollings @ 10:51 PM 0 comments  

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Health-fitness-wellness, telecommunications, financial services, books, food-beverage, house and kitchenwares. Can these type products be sold online via AdWords or Sponsored Ads


Quixtar is a web-based business that pioneererd a combination of shopping, membership benefits and business ownership. Quixtar offers a world of choices in health, beauty, and home products from new and exclusive brands. In addition, by partnering with other stores, Quixtar offers expanded quality, variety, and convenience. The categories of products found at Quixtar include:
  • Health
  • Beauty
  • Personal Care
  • Home
  • Electronics
  • Apparel
  • Food
  • Baby
  • Gifts
  • and more
The Quixtar product selection provides everything one might need for health, self, and home.

As A Quixtar independent business owner you know your product and you've set your goals. Your web page, site, or blog is up and you're pondering methods to get search engine traffic.

Can your health-fitness-wellness, telecommunications, financial services, books, food-beverage, house and kitchenwares be sold via AdWords or Sponsored Ads or not? That's question #1, right? But equally important, can you come up with a pay per click campaign that creates more measurable results than promotional expense?

Promising news, the answer is: "definitely yes."

Tips, Tips, Tips... They just keep on coming!

  • When thinking up keywords, use examples of specific things your product is used for: 'clean floors', clean countertops', 'wash floors', 'mop floors', 'polish stove top', 'remove grime', 'shine appliances', 'disinfect bacteria', 'hide furniture flaws' etc.
  • Explore variations: 'soy milk', 'soymilk', 'soy-milk'
  • Add plurals: 'protein bar' and 'protein bars'
  • Use abbreviations and acronyms
  • Use US and UK spellings
  • Keyword phrases may be questions: 'how to repair bad credit', 'when should I diet', 'how do I lose weight', 'where are discount cosmetics', etc.
In earlier blog posts you'll find several installments of my PPC tips.


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posted by Dan Hollings @ 11:42 PM 0 comments  

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

How to Run Ad Campaigns with Yahoo or Google: Tutorials for Quixtar.


Sometimes you feel like flipping a coin when choosing a pay per click search engine. Which one is really best for you? The top two are Google AdWords and Yahoo Sponsored Search. It's a good idea to start your advertising effort with a small budget, spreading it out over a few different search engines to experiment and see where your target market may be lurking.

We recommend you begin by viewing the wonderful tutorials and flash overviews offered by Google and Yahoo. Start your exploration below, you'll find others at Google and Yahoo:





Google Vs. Yahoo? Do the bidding policies make a difference?


Yahoo Ad Sponsoring Rules (bidding)
  • Yahoo adjusts your bid to 1 cent over your next lowest competitor. Thus, if you bid $3.00 per click, and the next highest bid is $1.95 per click, you will only pay $1.96 per click.
  • Yahoo allows you to see who you are bidding against and what they are bidding, so you know exactly where you will rank, and how much you will pay.
  • Yahoo's maximum bid is $999.99
  • Yahoo's minimum bid is $0.10
AdWords by Google
  • Google doesn't tell you how much you will pay per click. Thus, if you bid $3.00 per click, you will pay anywhere from $0.05 to $3.00 per click.
  • Google does not allow you to know how much your competitors are bidding per click.
  • An advantage with Google is that you will rank higher if your click-through rate (CT rate) is better (a CT rate is the ratio of clicks on your ad to the number of times your ad is shown). Thus, you may have a better rank than your competitor, even if he or she bids more than you (because of your CT rate).
  • Google's maximum bid is $100.00
  • Google's minimum bid is $0.05


New Google AdWords keyword status changes: Simplified keyword states and quality-based minimum bids.



UPDATE: Google announced in early August 2005 that they will simplify their keyword status system and introduce quality-based minimum bids, giving us more control to run all keywords we find important.

Understanding Google's New Quality Score

Each keyword will now be assigned a minimum bid that is based on the quality (also called Quality Score) of your keyword in your account. If your keyword or Ad Group's maximum cost-per-click (CPC) meets the minimum bid, your keyword will be active and trigger ads. If it doesn't, your keyword will be inactive and will not trigger ads.

Previosly, keyword statuses were called normal, in trial, on hold, and disabled. Under the new rules, this will be replaced with active (triggering ads) or inactive (not triggering ads). No more slowed or disabled keywords if no do not have a minimum clickthrough rate (CTR) threshold.

Tips, Tips, Tips... They just keep on coming!



Pay-per-click advertising tips for the Quixtar independent business owner continue below:
  • If your product or service is something that can be related to a locale, like a city, state or region you may be able to find some ripe tomatoes in phrases like: 'retirement homes in Florida', 'Mississippi flat rate phone service', 'herbal sunscreen for southwestern sun', 'indoor air filters for Los Angeles'.
  • Discover more keywords by narrowing down to extreme specifics. People can be VERY specific when they search. Use names of months and years like '2004 tax savings', 'May flowers', 'Christmas of 2005' or 'September back to school supplies'.

    Let's say you are marketing a broad line of herbal products... why not get a list of all herbs (there may be thousands) and use that list as a keyword list. Maybe your product doesn't contain every herb on the list, but people searching for any ONE herb specifically may be interested in others. Try specific model numbers, makes and designs if your products are sometimes referred to this way: 'Epson stylus CX6400', 'Apple G5', etc.
  • Add adjectives to your keywords like: big, purple, new, cheap, affordable, soft, aromatic, healthy, etc.
For additional tips that might improve your pay per click ad campaign review the tips in my previous posts.


Check back next week for the next in this series of PPC tips...


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posted by Dan Hollings @ 7:51 PM 0 comments  

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Quixtar? What's the public's impression?


Have you ever thought about the public's perception of what you do?

Quixtar
Quixtar is a web-based business that pioneererd a combination of shopping, membership benefits and business ownership. Quixtar offers a world of choices in health, beauty, and home products from new and exclusive brands. In addition, by partnering with other stores, Quixtar offers expanded quality, variety, and convenience. The categories of products found at Quixtar include:
  • Health
  • Beauty
  • Personal Care
  • Home
  • Electronics
  • Apparel
  • Food
  • Baby
  • Gifts
  • and more
The Quixtar product selection provides everything one might need for health, self, and home.


Do you expect that people visiting your web page already know this about Quixtar?


What do customers think?That's an important factor in any search engine marketing campaign; you must decide upfront (as you are preparing your keywords, your ads, and your landing page) what the majority of visitors already 'have heard' about you and the health-fitness-wellness, telecommunications, financial services, books, food-beverage, house and kitchenwares you offer. In most cases you are best to assume they've never heard of you. That's always the safe bet.

If you're selling iPODs or something very well known, you can approach things much differently. Less time explain 'what' you've got and more time explain 'why' they should buy from you.

If your selling something that appears to be a common commodity (vitamins, shoes, cosmetics, telephone services, etc), then you must differentiate your product from the other seemingly similar things the public possibly will associate you with.

Much of these consumer 'mindset' conflicts should be handled on your landing page, that is, the page where they land after clicking your ad; so before you start any contextual ad program, put on your visitors shoes and take a fast walk to your landing page.

Pay per click tips for this week:

Below are this weeks tips for better search engine marketing (using pay-per-click):
  • Expand your keywords by asking your spouse, friends, neighbors, relatives, existing customers and strangers to look at your web page and offer their keyword suggestions. In this phase you cannot have too many cooks in the kitchen.
  • Put your biscuits in the oven and watch'em rise... That is, use web based 'keyword expanders' and research tools to expand your keywords beyond what you can come up with on your own.
  • Remember, searchers may type in something that describes your product, but more often than not they will be typing in words describing their problem. If your product or service solves, fixes, heals, masks or even distracts them from their problem, you want those keywords on your list.
  • "In-house" keywords (those used frequently by others in your industry or business) are often the most costly because lazy business owners don't often think beyond their own nose. The result is these limited keywords get bided-up sky high. Customers on the other hand seldom search using "in-house" keywords. Your goal is to find keyword niches popular with customers but less popular with your competition.
Check back over my last several blog posts for many more sets in this series of PPC search engine tips.


Check back next week for the next in this series of PPC tips... Until next week, happy PPC campaigning...


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posted by Dan Hollings @ 3:35 PM 0 comments  

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

"Google Trotters?" Yea, get a pair of those FadSense Sneakers and you'll fetch $100,000 on eBay.



Fadsense: Google Trotters (FS Sneakers)

It might sound fantastical, but if you could get your hands on a pair of those "Google Trotters" and sell them on eBay... I'm almost certain you'd fetch over $100,000. But if Google ever gets this FadSense thing really going, I guess everybody would be wearing them.

Visit Google FadSense

As A Quixtar independent business owner, you might be wondering why I'm talking about a futuristic contextual AdSense (AdWord) program like FadSense. It's partially because it's funny, but more importantly, it's because I feel the type of advertising we have been discussing here at my "Internet Marketing Tips for Quixtar" blog, is critical to your future. What I'm hoping to teach you are skills and tips that will not only work for Google today, but for any similar type advertising in the future. Google FadSense, real or not!

Before we continue with this week's tips, let's look at what we must concentrate on:
  • How to determine "tags" that help categorize your content.
  • How to prepare your marketing campaign from the ground up.
  • How to track your traffic, results, and advertising ROI (return on investment).
  • How to create a destination or landing page that works.
  • How to write effective ads.
  • How to manage your advertising budget.
  • How to create eye catching headlines for your ads.

My Continuing Tips To Help You With Quixtar...

Over the past few weeks we have hammered away with dozens of valuable tips. This week we continue.
  • When cooking-up your keyword phrase list, use an extended "keyword discovery" phase. Your competition, like you, will do basic keyword research. You can only beat them if you take it to the next level, and that won't happen in the first day. Having a large number of targeted keywords in your campaign is a side effect of an extended period of brainstorming, discovery, research, or whatever you want to call it.
  • Not very wood with gords? There is a hidden target market of quality visitors who type in incorrect spellings of what they are looking for. Site owners often overlook this. In a recent 30 day period on a major search engine at least 108 people where searching for a 'buisness'? Hundreds more were searching for: 'vitiamins', 'vitimans' and even 'vitamens'... You can bid on misspellings and have very little competition on the search results page.
  • Assume that at least half your keywords will be rotten eggs, that is, no one will ever look for them and end up at your site. Because there is no extra cost to add as many keyword phrases as you can think up, treat them like biscuits and bake-up as many as you can... 100 or more keyword phrases for each destination page you list in any PPC search engine.
Looking for more search marketing tips? Check my posts from previous weeks for more ideas and strategies.


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posted by Dan Hollings @ 6:04 PM 0 comments  

Sunday, July 17, 2005

After a Googol of Searches, Google Finally Closed Its Doors; It Took a Mere 118 Years. Fantastical?


www.flickr.com
What started as a search engine using a unique approach to link analysis (initially called BackRub) and grew to become the "five-and-dime" of pay-per-click search engines, pulled the plug on the last server on this date in Mountain View, California. It's a story of a future time that could be soon, or beyond our horizon.

If anyone back in the late 1800's or early 1900's had been thinking ahead to the future of Woolworth Corp., it's unlikely they would have ever predicted that the famous five-and-dime would be a line item on a "Today in History" script published to millions of readers across this thing we call the internet.

Yet today, has I opened my RSS News Reader, there it was. I can recall shopping at the five-and-dime as a kid. It was the "best" store in town. Just like Google; the best. Now, its history. Perhaps the best is not good enough?

On this date...
After 118 years, the Woolworth Corp. closed its last 400 five-and-dime stores. Most of today's successful discount retailers began life as five and dime stores. In 1962: Kresge's opened its Kmart stores, Sam Walton turned his five and dime into the first Wal-mart, Woolworth's opened Woolco and Dayton Hudson opened Target stores.

Could this happen to Google? Well, yes. Simply put, Google has become a new kind of foe, and that has Bill Gates riled. Google has combined software innovation with a brand-new Internet business model and it wounds Gates' pride that he didn't get there first. It's an eye opening article from Fortune magazine: GATES VS. GOOGLE. For now however, it's all fantasy thinking as the titans of search (Google, Yahoo, & Microsoft) battle it out in cyberspace.

People searching for information on the Internet are driving some of the fastest-growing profits on the Web, whetting advertisers' appetites by signaling what they want.

By typing in search terms, users are also sending advertisers a clear message about merchandise they might be interested in buying, and search providers like Google Inc. (Nasdaq:GOOG - news), Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) and Microsoft Corp.'s (Nasdaq:MSFT - news) MSN are cashing in. (Source: Reuters 2005)

Good news for the Quixtar independent business owner


The Cost Per Lead using Pay-per-click is Cheap Compared To Other Ads

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know where to spend your advertising dollars... $8.50 for search, $20 for Yellow Pages, $50 for online display ads, $60 for e-mail and $70 for direct mail. Those are the average cost-per-customer numbers based on research by Piper Jaffray.

"Paid-search advertising has become a do-or-die proposition," says Jeff Saville, a consumer direct marketing manager at Deckers Outdoor Corp. "The market is growing fast, primarily because the ads are trackable and target people who are already interested. The medium is also inexpensive compared with television, radio, direct mail and Web banner ads." (Nasdaq:DECK - news)

Are there dangers or flaws in search advertising?

  • At times, advertisers and their online business affiliates find they are competing with each other in auction-style bidding for key words and pushing up their own costs.
  • Some worry that new advertisers are rushing blindly into paid search and inflating key word prices -- a concern underscored by WebTrends data.
  • Certain campaigns fail because they are ill-conceived or unsuited to the medium.
Adding all this up, we come to two conclusions: 1) It pays to get good at pay-per-click advertising if you plan to do business online and 2) we may only have 118 years left with Google :-)

Pay per click tips for this week:

  • Remember that with PPC campaigns, you are not sending search visitors to a site, you are sending them to a web page (called: a destination or landing page). You must discover keywords and set-up ONE page at a time.
  • Remember that people search by typing in more than one word:
  • The 7 most used word phrases in search engines according to OneStat.com:
    • 2 word phrases 32.58%
    • 3 word phrase 25.61%
    • 1 word phrases 19.02%
    • 4 word phrases 12.83%
    • 5 word phrases 5.64%
    • 6 word phrases 2.32%
    • 7 word phrases 0.98%
  • Start your "keyword discovery" process by visiting the destination page you intend to send your search engine visitors to. Put on the 'reading glasses' of a customer and look at your page through their eyes.
  • Ask yourself this: "What keywords might a person type in a search box where when they arrived at this destination page, they'd say 'BINGO' this is what I was looking for?" Find these keywords and you've discovered your best keywords.
Check back over my last three blog posts for the first, second and third set in this series of PPC search engine tips.


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posted by Dan Hollings @ 3:30 PM 1 comments  







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