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A marketing rip-off that makes me sick! If you are interested in learning how to better promote your business, there are hundreds of "gurus" out there ready and eager to RIP YOU OFF! These "con artists" are savvy, slick, and highly skilled in the area of emptying your wallet! Fortunately, with a bit of education, you can avoid being their next victim. For example, recently I received a phone call offering to help me make my site #1 on google. Intrigued I continued to listen. The caller told me that his company has "cracked the google code" and can easily make me #1 - leaving all my competitors in the dust. Well, "cracking the google" code was the first tip-off - if these guys were so good at being found on google why the hell are they still cold-calling me? I kept on talking, but now I started asking questions. "That sounds interesting. What's your website?" Knowing a little bit about what a marketing savvy website might look like, I new that a peek at their site would help me get a better feel if this company is for real. But instead of getting a domain name, the caller told me to go to google and type in specific keywords. He said his company would be in the top three spots. I followed his instructions... Well, with some minor modifications... Instead of heading straight to google's search page, I stopped by Overture's Keyword Suggestion page to find out how popular that keyword is. Do you know what I discovered? In the entire previous month only 17 people used that phrase to search the Internet! Now, being in the top three spots for these words suddenly didn't seem like a very big deal. The caller seemed a bit unhappy about my discovery. But still, he offered that I search a different phrase. Following the same routine I found 42 searches in the past month. Whoopi! What a deal, right? At this point the caller simply hung up on me! But several of my friends were not so "lucky". They are now two or three thousand dollars in the whole. And unfortunately for them - they will never see this money again, and their site will keep getting the same lousy traffic it was getting before! What saved me was a bit of know how to properly evaluate the offer. Because there are so many professionals and business owners who want to achieve "cheap and instant marketing miracles" the most popular scams seem to offer driving traffic to your website, helping you achieve good positioning in popular search engines, showing you how to build a massive email list, and revealing secrets to quickly making a lot of money with your own information products. These are all needed services and good information on these subjects is invaluable to your success. Problem is how to evaluate if what you are getting is the real stuff or a bunch of bologna? Here are a few clues to look for. 1. Use your common sense. If the offer is too good to be true - it probably is! It never hurts to ask a few of your trusted businesses advisors to take a look at it before you commit to pay any money for it. 2. Do you own homework. Don't take what the company or person tells you for granted. Heck - we all put our best foot forward in our marketing materials. Research both online and offline. Take a good look at the website. Does it follow the basic rules of good marketing design? Does it have good Alexa ratings? Has it been online for a good length of time? 3. Ask a lot of questions. Don't let them intimidate you with pre-canned answers. You are about to part with your money - make sure you know exactly what you are getting. If the company is offering you search engine positioning - check their own results for popular and competitive keywords. (You can easily find this out with free tools like the Overture keyword popularity at https://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion or this simple free software at https://www.goodkeywords.com ) 4. Can you easily find the contact information? That's a big red flag for me. When I find great deals online but I can't seem to find the company's mailing address or a phone number and all I get is an email - I typically walk away. I want to know that if anything goes wrong I can find the person, and pick-up the phone and try to resolve it. But it's hard to do if they hide behind just an email. 5. Trust your instincts. OK, I know this one is highly un-scientific. But if things just don't feel right - it doesn't matter how good the offer is - give yourself some time to cool off and take a second look at it when you can actually think logically about it. Fact is, because there is a huge need for marketing information and marketing help, this market attracts a lot of people who couldn't spell "marketing" yesterday but today are eager to share their advise with you - for a lot of money. If there is one simple answer to help you stay safe and avoid being ripped off, I believe it can be summed up in two words: COMMON SENSE and EDUCATION. If it looks and feels unreal - it likely is. And the more educated you are about good marketing and how it works, the less likely you'll be to waste your money on shady offers. � 2006 Marketing Mentors. All Rights Reserved. The author, Adam Urbanski, Founder and President of Marketing Mentors, teaches service professionals and business owners how to develop strategies that increase sales and profits. His website offers free promotional ideas, marketing tips and information about free teleclasses and workshops that show you how to create a winning Business Marketing Plan (https://www.themarketingmentors.com) |
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