Online Advertising Campaign

What Makes A Great Online Advertising Campaign?

Trying to sell your product or service online differs from all other forms of advertising, and very few people seem to realize that an online advertising campaign is completely different from all other traditional forms of advertising. Print media allows the use of attention getting graphics. Radio allows music or jingles and of course TV provides both visual as well as auditory stimuli.

Now a Web Page can also do this, but you have to get people there to see and/or hear your message. Spending a lot of money for a Web Page that no-one sees is like putting a note in a bottle and tossing it into the Ocean. Sure you may get an occasional person who finds it, but you are not accomplishing your purpose.

Online Advertising Campaign 101

You, of course, can send out your email as an HTML document that looks like a web page as your online advertising campaign. The spammers do it this way, and many people automatically delete any email that looks like this. Face it – most people communicate in text, and when something flashes out of your inbox with graphics and huge headlines, you know it’s not from Aunt Tillie.

The bottom line on any advertising campaign is to design your ad so that it gets attention. Classified Ads in the Newspaper are a good place to start in designing your online ad. In order to do this, you will have to examine the classifieds for a few days. Which ones run day after day and are really commercial in nature. They all have something in common, and after a while you can get to spot them.

OK – with that behind us, we have to get our message across with words – and only words. All “great” ads have three things which make them work. The first is an “attention getter”, the second is the “tease” and the third is the “call for action”.

The Three Important Values

A great ad will first get someone’s attention. If it doesn’t do this, you are wasting your time and advertising dollars. An “attention getter” is basically the title of your ad – you must use powerful words here – FREE GIFT, EARN WHILE YOU SLEEP, I WAS REALLY STUPID etc. are just a few examples. Don’t forget that FREE is one of the most powerful of these words. Titles that promise BIG EARNINGS or $$$$ EARN THOUSANDS $$$$ have become passé, and should probably be avoided.

Next, we have the “Tease” – your purpose here is not to sell them something immediately. If we were selling a used refrigerator, we might say something about it to get them to call. Our purpose here is to get them to contact us for further information. You give them enough information to pique their curiosity. Don’t try to sell them here – you simply don’t have enough space to present your offer properly – in fact you could turn off a prospect if done improperly.

For the third part of an online advertising campaign, we have the “Call to Action” – this is what you want them to do. Online, we only have a few options, but they are very powerful. E-mail to you is one and a visit to your Web Site is another. If you have an 800 number, that could be included, however you will get a lot of “tire kickers” who may not be serious.

Now how do I know I have a “great” ad? That’s easy – you get responses. Does that mean sales – no. It means responses. The sales part is a whole different animal.

Be Consistent

Remember that it takes at least 5 to 7 exposures, on the average in traditional advertising, to get a customer to “walk through your door”. An online advertising campaign is the same. You cannot expect your ads to generate leads if they are only done once or twice, or by using a shotgun approach. Consistency here is the key. Keep your offer in front of your prospects on a regular basis.

Don’t be afraid to experiment with your ad copy. Keep a notebook which has copies of your ads with one per page. When you get a response, make a note there and include their E-mail address. Rotate your ads on a fairly regular basis to ensure they are all getting a fair chance. After a while, you will see which ads are generating the most responses. Discard those that are not, and concentrate on improving those that are.