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You don’t have to patronize the hottest joint in town to get value for your marketing dollar either. But how much you spend to “get more traffic” depends on where you are coming from and where you want to go. Search visibility, content development, and usability are all equally critical to the success of your online marketing strategy. If you’re starting from ground zero (and let’s face it, most websites are), paying a professional a modest sum to refine even one aspect of your online mix is going to help your cause. Just don’t expect it to revolutionize your business. It won’t. Most in-demand marketers won’t take on such small projects anyway. They’re too interested in earning a living and yes, helping you get results before you retire.
So, let’s say you sell widgets for ten dollars a piece. How many sales would you have to make to pay for the investment you and your marketer have agreed upon? If the numbers sound reasonable, that’s a good sign. If the numbers make you feel like throwing up, keep looking. If the next three quotes you receive also make you feel like throwing up, you might want to reconsider the whole entrepreneur thing.
A good marketer will evaluate your online venture holistically and then allocate finite resources to those tactics that will have the most impact toward an agreed upon end. Just know that the “end” does not suddenly arrive one day like a freight train roaring through your home office. And the “end” cannot always be accurately quantified either. Good marketing is more like a constant upward evolution with a few inevitable pitfalls along the way. There are no guarantees, just choices. The strategic ones are what you want to pay for.
Not the definitive answer you wanted to hear, I know. Get used to it, my friend. That’s business on the web. Actually, that’s just business, period.
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Karri Flatla is a business graduate of the University of Lethbridge and principal of snap! virtual assistance inc., a small business consulting firm providing on-line marketing services to the progressive entrepreneur. Karri also produces Outsmart, a small business newsletter full of practical tips and fresh insights.
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