| TDavid
explains in depth how to market your site
without being too aggressive in your approach.
He shows you how the "soft sell" approach
works effectively in offline sales as well
as online, and much more! |
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There are literally tons of opportunities across almost
every board on a daily basis to market specific products
and services and yet not be clearly labeled a spammer
and I\'m going to share 11 specific tips in this article.
If you want more traffic, better quality traffic, and
less webmasters flaming you/your company, then try some
or all of these things out.
1) Do not start the very first post
you make at a new board with spam. This is not good
on any board except for a spam/announcement board where
those type of posts are allowed/acceptable. Instead,
you should introduce yourself on the main/general boards
and not leave your URL, just mention what you do, who
you are, your experience if any, and how you came to
the board. By all means thoroughly read and follow the
rules at the board before submitting your first post.
2) Consider avoiding the use of taglines
(also known as signatures) for the first few posts.
This shows you are there to check things out and test
the waters and not just there on a one time, drive by
marketing mission.
3) Be interactive with every post
you make, especially in the beginning. This means that
if someone/anyone responds to you -- positive or negative
-- then you need to reply back right away. This shows
you are responsive and not just cut and pasting things.
4) Avoid at all costs posting identical
messages at the same board or different boards. You
can probably get away with slight modification on spam/announcement
boards, but you cannot do this on the main/general boards.
You will at the very minimum have your post removed
and likely be torched by one or more board regulars.
You should also realize that most webmasters who follow
the messageboards tend to read multiple boards, so it\'s
almost guaranteed to make a potential business contact
groan if they see your name associated with an identical
post in multiple places.
5) If you must make a post that is
spammy and it leads to a site with webmaster resource
buttons or links, then by all means make sure the place
that you are posting at has a recip listed too! Very
little is worse than seeing spam show up on a webmaster
resource board and then the owners / moderator\'s of
that board go to the spammed site and see all their
competitor\'s banners/buttons and yet not theirs.
6) put up a recip link/button and
then post a question about if there are other ways to
link services at the webmaster resource site. Those
who *ask* before making assumptions always fare better
with board moderators and regulars than those who don\'t.
7) Consider writing articles or contributing
content of some sort relative to your business. Then
when you go to that specific board and there is a relevant
post or question, then you can post links to your own
articles on that webmaster resource site. It seems a
bit bold but it works very effectively and it helps
you because you are promoting the webmaster resource
as well where you are posting and moderators (and board
participants) like that. Almost all articles have links
back to the author\'s website so chances are good that
you can get traffic from that -- and good traffic if
your article is well written. As for contributing content,
perhaps if you are a designer then maybe you could do
buttons or graphics to showcase your work? Some boards
allow you to embed images in your post. This can be
an effective and yet subtle way to share your artistic
talents (and get feedback) and can also open the door
to future business.
8) if you have a marketing person,
then it is really important to have them stop by webmaster
resource boards on a daily basis and comment on the
existing \"threads\" of conversation. When there is
a business-specific question (and there usually are
on numerous boards daily) this marketing person can
answer the question with relative links to your website.
The rule of thumb here is not to just put up a URL,
add a text explanation that does not require going to
the URL, but rather makes the URL a supplement to the
helpful/useful post itself. This is smart marketing,
too.
9) you don\'t *always* have to sell
something! I realize that this sounds odd, and perhaps
even a bit controversial, but does anybody really like
being pitched all the time? Think about it. If all you
ever do is work the boards to sell something, then you
are missing the point of developing relationships and
long term marketing. You wouldn\'t always talk to your
friends (or even clients) about buying something from
you or you\'d never have any friends (and few clients
that wanted to talk to you for any length of time).
Business on the messageboards is essentially the same
thing, although having a friend relationship with every
customer isn\'t always going to happen, nor does it
need to. Just don\'t *always* talk business. Comment
on things besides your target relative business, but
comment most often on subjects directly related to your
business or defining who you are and what you do on
the web. For example, if you are a designer and people
ask questions about how to use Photoshop, then share
some of your knowledge.
10) Fill out your profiles! These
are free marketing opportunities and some boards like
YNOT http://www.ynotmasters.com/wm_directory/profiles/TDavid.html
and Adult Netsurprise: http://www.adultnetsurprise.com/view-webmaster/tdavid.html
have SE-friendly profiles. Why let a good opportunity
for others to find more out about you go to waste? Fill
out as much information as you feel comfortable sharing.
Most messageboards automatically link your profile with
every post you make so again, this is free additional
advertising. In fact, register at as many different
boards as you can find and put your profile in them
all. You just never know who will \"find\" you through
these excellent built-in directories.
11) Use the search engine function
of the various boards to find relevant business-related
posts that you can reply to and position yourself as
a \"source\" for a specific area of business. You want
webmasters to be able to put your business and you in
one to three keywords (and if you do your marketing
right, then \"spammer\" will not be one of them). There
you go, 11 ways you can better market your business
using the various messageboards. I should add that not
all boards are equal. Some boards are primarily entertainment-based,
some are more business-oriented, some are a blend of
the two, some are strictly for a specific niche (like
Greenguy\'s Links Messageboard http://www.adultnetsurprise.com/message-board/linkmsgboard/
which helps folks understand why they aren\'t getting
listed at some of the major link list sites). And then
there are boards where the topic and climate can change
from month to month, or perhaps even day to day. Choosing
the right board for the right type of marketing is almost
as important as how you market on/at them. For example,
it wouldn\'t make a whole lot of sense trying to work
a board where the primary focus is on marketing gay
sites if you only sell straight/heterosexual content.
Hopefully some or all of these tips will help out with
your messageboard posting and marketing. There are many,
many opportunities on the boards and new boards popping
up almost daily, with practically all boards vying for
new posts from you -- the webmaster. Since the board
moderators all want quality posts (the posts are the
content), and you want more business, it\'s just a matter
of making both desires a common goal for a true, mutually
beneficial relationship.
| TDavid is co-owner, programmer and webmaster for several sites devoted to programming including his own http://www.tdscripts.com/. He has done custom programming in various programming languages for companies all over the world. Every Friday at 2pm PST you can catch his weekly radio show dedicated to the technical side of webmastering and programming at http://www.scriptschool.com/radio. |
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