|
Copyright © Stone Evans, The Home Biz Guy
Plug-In
Profit Site
Are you an online marketer? Or do you simply
promote affiliate programs? Marketing is truly the most misunderstood
word in use today on the Internet. Let me see if I can clarify this
issue just a bit.
In Marketing 101 at your local university,
marketing is actually the process of Product, Place, Price and
Promotion.
PRODUCT
No business can exist without a product or
service to sell.
In a nutshell, entrepreneurs are the people who
believe in a product, service or idea, so much that they are willing to
invest their lives into the development of their dream.
Historically, every major corporation in the
world was started by an entrepreneur with a dream and the drive to make
it a reality.
However, there comes a time in the life of every
corporation when those who fear the gambling nature of their founder,
squash the entrepreneurial drive that made the company a viable concern
in the first place. The entrepreneur will either submit to the careful
nature of the stockholders, or he will be forced to leave the company
he created.
The only entrepreneurs who withstand the
pressure to move more carefully are those who have maintained majority
control over their companies.
PLACE
In the offline world, place is defined by
location. On the Internet, place is defined by domain name and the web
hosting service chosen.
Both online and offline, place can make or break
a company without respect to the quality and value of the product,
service or idea.
PRICE
Selecting a price is determined first on a basis
of whether the company wants to be seen as a discount or a value
company.
Take for example Wal-Mart and Staples.
Wal-Mart is the lead discounter in the
marketplace. Staples on the other hand is the specialist in office
supplies.
Both sell a significant number of office
supplies despite the fact that the lowest price can usually be found at
Wal-Mart. As a value dealer, Staples can afford to charge more for
their products than Wal-Mart.
So the question for you is whether you want to
position your company as a discount or value company.
Testing has shown that products and services can
be sold at any number of prices and still reach a significant number of
people.
The challenge of selecting the best price for
your product or service will require a certain amount of testing.
UNDERSTANDING THE PRICING EQUATION
Let`s assume we are selling a product. Let us
also assume that we know that the product can be sold for $10 or $50.
Let us also assume that if the price dips below $10 or rises above $50,
then the product sales fall off significantly.
Our challenge is to determine the best rate at
which to sell our product.
Testing has shown us that we can sell 1000 items
a week at $10. Testing has also shown that we can sell 500 items per
week at $50. And testing has shown that we can sell 650 items per week
at $45.
At $10, our projected weekly earnings are
$10,000. When we sell the product at $50, we know that we can earn
$25,000 per week. Most importantly, we know that we can earn $29,250
when our product is priced at $45.
With the imaginary testing we have done on our
imaginary product, we can easily see that selling our product at $45
per item will earn us more money over the long haul.
Thus, when we make the decision for a national
rollout of our product, then we will price our product at $45.
Of course, this is a very simplistic analysis of
the point I am trying to make. Though simple, I believe this analogy
will help you understand the methods of developing a product`s prices.
PROMOTION
Promotion, on the other hand, is the process of
notifying the consumers for your product or service of your
availability to serve them.
Methods of promotion vary distinctly and should
be arranged to meet very specific goals.
As with product, place and price, promotion
should not be left to chance. You should test every ad, every media,
and every price point to determine the best bang for your promotional
dollars.
HEADS UP!
If you are an online promoter or marketer,
please factor in the most important element concerning the cost of your
promotions.
What element is that? Your time!
Value your time at a certain dollar amount, and
figure in your time into the cost of your promotional accounting.
I say this because too many online promoters
lose sight of this concept and spend 20 hours to generate one sale
while using free advertising. Even if you rate your time at the federal
minimum wage, then you will have invested $105 of your time for one
sale that might only net you a gross sale of $45!
ARE YOU TRULY A MARKETER OR ARE YOU JUST A
PROMOTER?
Most people who run a business on the Internet
call themselves marketers. Yet, most of these same people are really
just promoters wrapped in the label of a marketer.
True marketers do not promote without a lot of
advance work. They spend time planning, testing and measuring their
actions and results to get the most out of every dollar spent and
earned.
Entrepreneurs finesse the art of marketing as
they build their company into a major enterprise.
If you are a promoter who does not keep an eye
on the total marketing equation, then you are bound to fail.
If you do call yourself a marketer, then do what
a professional marketer does. Make sure that every dollar spent is
spent well. Make sure that every dollar earned is put to good use.
Market well so that when the people of the next generation look at your
life, they will see a fine example of a successful entrepreneur that
they will strive to emulate.

|