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08
Jul
2003

Internet Marketing, Site Promotion And Etiquette

With so many cutting edge marketing and promotion methods coming into practice these days, it’s easy to forget the basics. A few good manners go a long, long way – an old concept but very applicable to modern Internet marketing and web site promotion strategies.

Introducing my new soap-box – the “Common Courtesy Strategy (CCS)” series!

When you first launch your site, the chances are that traffic will not start flowing immediately, and perhaps never – it’s not just how your site looks or operates that will ensure it’s success or failure. According to numerous sources I’ve come across during my research, the average web site only receives around 3 unique visitors a day!

So how do you get well above this average? A lot of please’s and thank you’s to begin with, I assure you. It would seem to me that a number of web masters and site owners leave a lot to be desired in their approaches to marketing and promoting their sites.

Most of us realize that the best way to get traffic while waiting to be listed by search engines is through being linked to by other quality sites. This also assists with increasing search engine rankings.

What many new web masters don’t readies is that a request for a link will probably meet with a negative or no response. The reason why is simple – it’s back to the WIIFM principle – What’s In It For Me – the most basic of motivators in the human psyche. If you approach a well established site to link to you, there has to be a good reason for them to do so. I have received a number of emails simply stating “link to me – http://www.jdfjkdfjjdkdfjdjkfjk.com”. That kind of promotional strategy gets you nowhere.

Hints & Tips
Here are a few hints and tips for beginners through to more experienced site owners as to how you can persuade an established site to link to yours.

1. Most Important! Be Polite.
When you send your email for a linking request, ensure that the tone of it is extremely courteous and not demanding. If English is your second language, run your promotional note by someone who is familiar with the complexities of the language. The way you word your note is the most important factor as to whether another web master will even bother with taking the time to take a look at your site.

2. Grammar and Spelling
Also very important. Your canvassing note is your official representation – if you don’t take the time to spell correctly, other web masters may believe that your site will be of the same quality, and discard your request immediately.

3. Ensure your site is complete.
A half finished site will not gain you any links!

4. Respect that many web masters are busy people
Don’t expect an answer straight away and harass the site owner with countless follow up emails. Leave it for at least 2 weeks before second contact and ensure that the second note is equally as polite as the first.

5. Read the site
Ensure you take a good look over the site you wish to link to you, be familiar with it’s content and mention some of the content in your request for linkage. Identify the common theme between the sites. If the site has a “Submit your URL” page, ensure that you use it and read the guidelines for submission carefully.

6. Appeal to the owner’s WIIFM (What’s In It For Me) motivator.
Experienced site owners can pick a new web master or site a mile off, so don’t misrepresent your site or it’s traffic levels if you propose a reciprocal (swap) links agreement. Point the web master to a section of your site where you provide content or tools that are original and would be of use to their site’s visitors. If you have a banner rotator, you could offer the site owner a few thousand impressions as a sweetener for him in linking to you. Very few web masters will give you a link if they receive nothing in return, especially if they are earning money or gaining traffic from the links they already have in place. Even just making an offer of an exchange of services, no matter how small, will motivate the web master to at least consider a link – they may not even take you up on the offer.

The Link Request Note
There are a number of examples of link request emails on the Internet, but my advice is that if you are going to use them, ensure you modify them each time they are sent to different sites so they at least appear original. I receive a certain template note regularly and disregard it as it appears to me that the person sending it has not reviewed my site properly and really doesn’t take the process seriously. If another web master points towards a certain article or section of Taming the Beast.net, it motivates me to review what the web master has to offer my site visitors.

Bearing that in mind, here’s a sample note that you can base your approaches on:

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Greetings [Name], I visited your web site, [Web Site Name Here] and found some great information regarding [Insert Subject Here]. I thought you might be interested to know that we have a web site dedicated to [Your Site Details]. This kind of information would be a great addition to your resource center and I’m sure your visitors would gain from it. [If you have linked to the other site already, mention it here and give the URL of the link]

We were hoping that you might consider linking to us and invite you to review our site at your convenience. [Depending on situation, insert further offer of reciprocal linking, banner impressions or exchange of services here]

If you determine that a link to our site is appropriate, please add it at your your discretion, or might we suggest the following link and description:

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[Your site name and URL] – [Your site description – keep it brief, focused and not too much hype]
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If you’d like to discuss this further, please feel free to contact us at [Your contact details].
Thanks!
[Full official signature lines here]
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This example is brief, to the point and courteous. It respects the other site owner�s time and intelligence. Remember to modify each note slightly to avoid the “template” stigma.

Be Prepared For Knockbacks
If you are officially denied a link, don’t get too upset – even if the response is rude, as they sometimes can be. If you do receive a nasty email back, be happy in the fact that you went about promotion in the right way, and perhaps that web master was having a really bad day as we all do at times. Leave it for a few months, then try again, outlining some of the improvements you have made in your site that are relevant.

The promotion strategies you put into action from the outset define your standing in the online community in the time ahead – don’t blow it. Be careful in using the hype marketing techniques offered by some – they may have worked for them, but they may not work for you.

The “Common Courtesy Strategy (CCS)” is a topic that I will expand greatly upon in future articles, but it is a theme that is interwoven through many of my writings. The “Common Courtesy Strategy” is economical and can be applied to all forms of Internet marketing and web site promotion. Treat others the way you would like to be treated and you will reap the benefits – a good blueprint for life in general don’t you think? You catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar!

Don’t let dollar signs get in the way of basic human consideration.

Author Bio:
Michael Bloch michael@tamingthebeast.net Tamingthebeast.net Tutorials, Web Content and Tools, Software and Community. Web Marketing, eCommerce & Development Solutions.