Grassroots Internet Marketing Campaign
by Isaiah
Hull
Published on this site: August 25th, 2004
Many people, in a rush to spike sales through the roof, think too big and end
up completely missing out on one of the best free marketing opportunities on the
net: discussion forums. Instead of focusing on individual sales, they go immediately
for ads that promise thousands of visitors, pay-per-click search engines that
could potentially expose them to thousands, and even sloppily-produced and sometimes
fraudulent spam submission programs.
Even though it is essential to increase
your rating with search engines, to purchase pay-per-clicks, and to participate
in link exchanges and banner exchanges, discussion forums can often provide an
extra, non-conventional sales medium to your campaign that allows you to quickly
pull in customers with personal contact and conversational presentations of your
product.
You can find these boards by searching for the specific product
you sell and then adding the word "messageboard"
or "forum" or "discussion forum" after
it in quotations. For instance, I sell marketing tools and
online business-builders on one of my websites, so when I
look for forums to market my products in, I go to google or
overture and type in "business messageboard" or
"marketing forum." Find as many of these highly-trafficked
forums as you can and sign-up. Some of them will require you
to confirm it through your email address.
Before you begin actually
posting on the boards, you need to lay down some general rules of approach. I
would suggest the following methods, but you can decide for yourself what you
think is appropriate for your business and situation.
These are my rules:
When
I market on discussion forums, I always try to provide more for the board than
I take away from it in potential sales. Not only is it ethical, but it's also
good business. When people ask questions, I use the expertise I've gained from
Internet business-building and marketing to legitimately answer their questions.
If I signed up for every board I could find, and then slapped a boilerplate marketing
pitch on every site, I'd just get ignored or banned.
I cannot stress enough how important it is to legitimately
get involved with the forum community. It is definitely a
goldmine for highly-targeted customers and it is possibly
the fastest marketing medium on the Internet, but it is also
very important to respect that it doesn't primarily serve
as an ad host. If you stay low-key and helpful, people will
respect your opinion more and will want to see what you have
to offer. This is where your signature comes in...
When you create your
account for most boards, they will give you the option of creating a signature,
which they will attach to the bottom of every post ou make. This is the best way
to pull customers from messageboards--by alluring them with your ignature. Write
something catchy or intriguing and then slap a link to your site or email address
on it. Remember: the more helpful you are (the more times you post advice/hints),
the more times your signature appears... and the more potential hits you'll get
to your site.
Next, you'll want to decide when it's appropriate to market
outside of your signature. I personally only market in three
situations outside of my signature in forum discussions. If
a person asks a question about a specific product or service
I market, then I'll respond because I'm qualified to do so
and because I truly believe they should use my products to
achieve the best possible results. If there's a discussion
thread where everyone is marketing products and it is generally
accepted, I will market my product if a) it is related and
b) I have already posted several times on the messageboard.
Also, I will market my product whenever there is a forum solely
dedicated to marketing your products.
Last, you'll want to decide how much original content you
want to post and how much you want to be boilerplate. You'll
want to find a healthy combination of the two to avoid being
called a spammer or wasting too much time marketing on forums.
I personally have several boilerplate ads that I have saved
for signature files, ad-only forums, and personal product
marketing discussions. I keep them all saved on a word file
and I pull them up to copy-and-paste when I'm spending a night
of advertising on messageboards.
Discussion forums can drive buying
customers to your site faster than any other marketing medium. Do not abuse them,
establish a reputation in your forums, streamline the process. . . and your work
will come back to you quickly in profit.

Isaiah Hull publishes Work At Home Right Now, a fresh
fresh and informative newsletter about making money on the
internet and using proven methods to increase your site's
traffic and profitability. If you're looking for time-saving
and money-saving tools, as well as honest business advice,
come by and subscribe at http://www.workathomerightnow.net.

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