(c) Jim
Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
=====================================
As the Internet
continues to populate with websites trying to
turn a buck, two drastically different schools
of thought have developed on how to advertise
online - "Push" and "Pull."
"Push" advertising
involves the use of "in-your-face" advertising
tactics such as pop-up windows and direct
email. "Pull" advertising entails using search
engines and posting articles that literally
"pull" interested consumers to a website on
their own terms.
As web surfers revolt
against pushy advertising, site owners who
understand how to pull consumers to their sites
will come out the long-term winners.
"Push" advertising
tactics worked in the past because they had not
reached a saturation point. Since not everyone
used pop-up windows, a site owner could use
them without fear of backlash. Now it seems
pop-up windows hit consumers from every angle
and even multiple times from the same
sites.
The cycle of events
with online advertising always unfolds the same
way. Someone finds something new that works and
people immediately jump on the bandwagon. As a
technique saturates the 'Net and loses
effectiveness, instead of finding an
alternative, site owners just do it
more!
Result: instead of
pop-up windows going away, many site owners
just run more pop-up's - more often!
Well, if recent
developments indicate anything, they show that
consumers have said "enough" to pushy
advertising.
AOL, infamous for their
pop-up ads, has agreed to cut down on the
intrusions even though their earnings could use
a boost right now.
Major ISP (Internet
Service Provider) Earthlink even offers a
"pop-up killer" feature on their new
service.
Almost all email
programs come with filters to fight unsolicited
email and many email add-on services have
sprung up to help consumers eliminate the
unsolicited offers for pornography, business
opportunities, and promises of instant
riches.
This "anti-spam"
sentiment has also caused an unintended
consequence for legitimate marketers. Many
major newsletters have found their emails
blocked by spam filters intended to stop
unsolicited email. Through no fault of their
own, legitimate email marketers have found
themselves casualties of the war on
spam.
The future of the
Internet lies in "Pull" advertising driven by
consumer wants and needs.
The successful Internet
companies of the future will invest in search
engine promotion and in providing valuable,
on-demand information consumers receive only
when they ask for it and want it. When a web
surfer goes to their favorite search engine and
enters the keyword phrase "MP3 Player" or "tax
advice" that means they are receptive to
information on those subjects.
If they read an article
about using vitamins to improve health and
click a link for more information, only then
they will they be truly receptive to a
marketing message about vitamins.
Consumers have taken
back control of Internet!
Not with laws or more
regulations, but simply by flexing the muscles
of their wallets. By pulling money away from
advertisers who annoy them and putting it with
those who meet their needs, the average web
surfer has brought the Internet powers to their
knees and will continue to reshape the Internet
into an effective, consumer-driven
communications vehicle.
Any site owner who
wants to have a thriving online business and
survive the next year had better take this fact
to heart!
About the Author
Jim Edwards is a
syndicated newspaper columnist and the
co-author of an amazing new ebook that will
teach you how to use fr^e articles to quickly
drive thousands of targeted visitors to your
website or affiliate links...
Simple "Traffic
Machine" brings Thousands of NEW visitors to
your website for weeks, even months... without
spending a dime on advertising! ==>
http://www.turnwordsintotraffic.com
|