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Phone: (310) 649-4434
Email: robin@sagaradevelopment.com |
Read back issues and other bits at the blog.
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Affordable Web Sites, Online Marketing, & Marketing Materials That Really Work For You - Part 1
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Your website, online marketing, and printed marketing materials
are just part of your total marketing efforts, you shouldn't have to go
broke just to get them and keep them updated.
Deciding where, and when, to spend your time and money on
marketing can be confusing and scary. Costs can escalate quickly. How
do you know what you need and what you don't?
I can help you unravel the mystery and confusion of website and both
online and print marketing so you can make informed decisions. After
ten years in the internet trenches helping clients figure out what they
want to do, and then helping them get it done, it's a bit of a personal
mission for me. It doesn't have to be oh so expensive or terribly
time-consuming. I mean, you've got other things to worry about, right?
This week's blog post is the the first of an eight-part series covering:
- Why a Web site, online marketing, and digital AND print
marketing materials are now necessary to successfully market yourself
and your business.
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What a Web site, online marketing, and marketing materials can, and cannot, do for you.
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How you can get a great Web site, and update it often, without going broke.
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How to cost-effectively create marketing materials for online and print use.
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How online marketing and social networking sites fit into your overall marketing plan.
- When to "do it yourself" and when to invest in getting help.
- Myth busting: "If you build it, they will come."
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Search Engine Optimization: what's all the buzz about.
Read
the first installment below, and if you're in the Los Angeles area you
can hear it all in person at The Learning & Product Expo: Art! in
Pasadena on Saturday October 17th at 4:00 p.m. when I'll be working
with Aletta de Wal of Artist Career Training to present all this as a
class for fine artists. But you don't have to be a fine artist to
attend, it's all sound business strategies and information applicable
to any endeavor. Read about it here: http://www.learningproductexpo.com/pas/classes.cfm
Can't make it? Sign up for the mailing list at
www.artistcareertraining.com and we'll notify you when the digital
recording is ready. Then you'll have the info to listen to 24/7 and you
wont' have to go anywhere: http://www.artistcareertraining.com/artmatters-newsletter/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1. Why a Web site, online marketing, and digital AND print
marketing materials are now necessary to successfully market yourself
and your business.
It seems obvious but, hey, we have to start somewhere. And still I
get arguments from people about how websites and internet stuff doesn't
work or how it doesn't apply to them.
Back "B.W." (Before Websites), before the internet, there were
plenty of ways to market a business, and those ways still do work: Ads
in magazines, catalogues, postcards, brochures, word-of-mouth, social
and networking events. Lots of ways.
Then came the internet. That's where everyone IS these days, as you
know. They're at their computers looking stuff up, reading, writing,
socializing, buying, selling, and working. All the stuff we used to do
BW, now it's online as well.
It's just a reality now, it's part of your success (or failure). At
the very least you'll need a website as an online brochure so your
potential clients and customers can get information on you and your
company. Because whether YOU think you need it or not, lots of other
people will be online Googling you for information. You might as well
have some control over what they see. What if they Googled you and you
weren't there?
But you'll need more than that, you'll need a well-round assortment
of marketing strategies combining both online and more traditional
methods. A multi-faceted approach because each facet supports and
reinforces the other and it gives you more exposure. You want to be
remembered, and it takes more than one, or two, or even ten
"impressions" before you really stick in someone's brain. And then
you'll want to stay visible so they don't forget about you the next
time they want, well, whatever it is you have.
Here's an example of how this all works. Let's say you're a fine
artist wanting to sell your art. There are lots of ways to do that (both
online and traditional ways). But let's be realistic. I mean, it's not
like people are sitting around on a Saturday night saying to
themselves, "Hey, I think I'll go online tonight and spend thousands on
some fine art." Doesn't really happen like that.
More likely it happens like this: People who like art like to
attend local shows and galleries where they see some of your work.
You're there talking to people and demonstrating how you create your
work. You have business cards, of course, and some colorful postcards
of your work, both have your contact information and website address on
them. You also have a signup sheet for your mailing list. The people
who saw your work, and hopefully spoke to you, take some of the info
and go home where they go online and look through your website. Perhaps
they sign up for your mailing list there, if they didn't at the show.
Maybe they Google you, and see other website where people have included
you and your work. Then maybe they go get a pizza. "Oh darn, they
didn't buy anything" you say? Well, no they didn't buy anything YET.
Patience, Grasshopper, we're just getting started!
So, anyway, in a month or so you send out a postcard and an email
newsletter announcing your new work now on your website, and maybe
you've got some shows and events coming up. They see the card, remember
how nice you were at the art show, and remember that one piece they
liked so much. That night on the computer they go to your website again
and see your twitter link and they start following you (or facebook,
whatever). They begin to feel that they know you. They like you, and
they like your work. Then they go get a pizza.
Still, no sales, but that's okay. You're out there, you're marketing
in a variety of ways and you're staying on their radar. Eventually,
they may buy. They may not, but someone else will and maybe they'll
come to another show and bring friends, and so on.
In the above example there are 16 different marketing strategies
there, all working together and reinforcing each other. What are the
16? They're there, really, I counted on my fingers:
1-Participating in a local art show
2-Talking to potential customers
3-Demonstrating what you do
4-Business cards
5-Postcards
6-Mailing list signup sheet at event
7-Website showing your work
8-Mailing list signup on website
9-Listing in Google and search engines from links to and from your site
10-Inclusion on other's websites showcasing your work
11-Postcard mailing
12-Email newsletter
13-Events page on your website
14-Twitter, Facebook and other social networking sites
15-Personal referrals
16-Oh, missed one, but you get the idea. Or just count Twitter and Facebook as two separate marketing strategies. ;-D
Next week: Part 2 - What a Web site, online marketing, and marketing materials can, and cannot, do for you!
All my best to you and yours,

Email me: robin@sagaradevelopment.com
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STEAL from me and you'll get really bad karma. Worse, I'll come after you. Seriously.
Copyright © 2000-2009, Sagara Development & Robin Sagara. All
rights reserved. You may reproduce this article by including this
copyright and, if reproducing it electronically, including a link to
www.SagaraDevelopment.com.
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