Short Term Vs Long Term Marketing
In order to create consistent sales cycles
and a positive growth trend businesses usually engage
in both short and long term marketing efforts.
Short-term marketing efforts tend to
cause sudden sales spikes which rarely last. These
sharp sales increases are usually the result of a
targeted marketing campaign or time limited offer.
While short-term marketing produces sales, long-term
marketing efforts must be mixed in to sustain sales.
Short Term Online Marketing
Mentions
Positive product mentions in forums, newsgroups
or within trade organizations can result in a traffic
or sales surge. Product endorsements and newsgroup
conversations are difficult for marketers to control
and time, so while product mentions in forums are
short-term marketing, they lack the organized exposure
necessary to maintain sales momentum.
Discounts
Marketing campaigns that involve coupons,
discounts or time-limited offers can also generate
product interest. It is important to use promotional
offers sparingly or long-term sales could be jeopardized
by having customers "wait" for the next offer to purchase.
PPC / Advertising
The easiest and fastest way to generate product
interest is, of course, to pay for it. Pay-per-click
campaigns are known to drive significant targeted
traffic. Sadly, when the campaign funding ends, the
traffic and sales generally do, too. Regardless, it
is important for marketers to realize that with short-term
marketing, sellers can often control sales and infuse
cash into a fledgling product, service or business.
Short-term marketing is also useful
for test-marketing new products or split-testing to
find the appropriate price point. With pay-per-click
advertising marketers can control the ebb and flow
of site visitors and make a determination about what
banners, keywords, text copy and graphics convert
at the highest rate. The lessons learned in short-term
marketing can then be implemented in the long-term
marketing strategy. Marketers can determine the effectiveness
of sales copy and landing pages, implementing them
in a long range of marketing activities.
Long Term Online Marketing
Search Engine Optimization
Undoubtedly the most time consuming, yet important
aspect of long-term marketing involves preparing and
optimizing a website for search engines. Currently
the majority of Internet surfers seeking a product
or information look to search engines. Most Internet
surfers use keywords to search for the product, service
or information that they are looking for. Knowing
your audience and optimizing a site for keywords and
phrases that potential consumers would use in their
search for a product or service is critical to being
found on the Internet.
Search engine optimization pays long-term
dividends, but is an ongoing process, as the search
engines themselves are constantly evolving their algorithms.
The goal of search engines is to provide web surfers
the best sites suited to the web surfers' search terms.
Often, changes implemented will not
be "seen" by search engines for several months. It
is important to follow search engine guidelines and
be patient.
Fresh Content & Communication
A stream of fresh content like newsletters, tips or
blog posts will result in long-term quality traffic.
Fresh content that is posted and updated on a regular
basis will encourage visitors to return. Archived
content will build a base for a variety of related
keywords.
Syndicated Articles
Related industry articles will result in genuine
interest from a very targeted audience. Providing
related content articles that are available for syndication
will result in links back from websites that contain
similar content. Over time, articles can define a
company's expertise on a subject area. Ultimately,
syndicated articles can build confidence with prospective
customers and a level of trust.
When designing a marketing campaign,
consider threading long-term and short-term marketing
efforts so that sales are stable and consistent. By
implementing a marketing plan that involves both short
and long-term efforts, sales success can be achieved.
About the Author:
Sharon Housley manages marketing for FeedForAll http://www.feedforall.com
software for creating, editing, publishing RSS feeds
and podcasts. In addition Sharon manages marketing
for NotePage http://www.notepage.net
a wireless text messaging software company.
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