What_Exactly_Is_Internet_Marketing
| What Exactly Is Internet Marketing?
The internet, like every other field, has a language all its
own. And when it comes to marketing on the internet, the labels
proliferate rapidly. Can you tell “search engine marketing” from
“search engine optimization?” How about “website promotion” from
“online promotion?” Can you tell your Yahoo Yellow Pages from
your Yahoo Local? Or “pay-per-click,” from “pay for
performance,” not forgetting “paid inclusion?” Is it any wonder
people are confused? Adding to the confusion, many of these
phrases are shortened to acronyms (SEO, PPC, SEM, to name a
few). Next week, at a seminar for professional marketers,
participants will wrestle with the issue of SEM for SMEs. This
rapidly growing field is in dire need of simplification and
organization. As a starting point, it would be good to just have
a name for all of it. And that’s where the term “internet
marketing” comes in.
Consider this: twice in the past week I have seen an online
press release turn into an offline publicity placement. In the
first instance, an online press release about an
antiques-related website was picked up by a leading consumer
magazine, who wanted to use images from the client’s website in
an upcoming article. Full credit, of course, goes to the client
and their website. In the second instance, an online press
release about marketing was picked up by a writer for an offline
business magazine. The writer wants to interview the creator of
the press release for an article about the migration of local
print advertising onto the internet. I especially love the irony
of the second one – an online release is picked up by an offline
magazine for a story about how advertising is moving from the
offline to the online space.
But are these example of traditional P.R? Or is it online P.R?
Perhaps it’s website promotion? The answer, of course, is that
in this amazing new world of interconnectivity, a P.R. campaign
can be any of these things, often more than one thing, and it
can frequently morph into something unexpected. That’s the
beauty of the internet. And because the internet is the cause of
this phenomenon, the most obvious choice for an umbrella term,
under which a growing variety of promtional techniques can be
organized, is “internet marketing”.
The term “internet marketing” is still somewhat slippery, and
may mean different things to different people. But as an
umbrella phrase it is very useful because it’s so comprehensive.
It is clear that a broad new discipline is emerging, one which
crosses media lines in many directions. As this broad discipline
emerges, its various subsets - “search engine optimization,” for
example, or the rather ambiguous “search engine marketing” -
should be seen as tools within the larger framework, components
to be utilized, with or without other components, depending on
the marketing needs of each project.
A working definition is that internet marketing is any kind of
marketing that begins on the internet and promotes something.
(Usually it will promote a website, as a destination in itself
or a gateway to further interaction, but it doesn’t have to
follow that route.) And of course, just because a promotion
begins on the internet, it doesn’t mean it will end there. Under
the umbrella term “internet marketing,” exists a wide array of
options: search engine optimization, pay-per-click,
paid-inclusion, search engine submissions, directory
submissions, link campaigns, online press releases, website
copywriting, internet yellow pages, email campaigns, newsletters
and ezines, and recently, blogging and RSS feeds. The list is by
no means exhaustive. These promotional methods all fit under the
broad umbrella term, internet marketing.
How does this help a typical marketer? To illustrate, let’s use
the case of a client whose website is languishing on the web –
it needs more traffic. It’s the most common request to our
internet marketing company, SmallBusinessOnline.net
. Should the website owner go directly to a search engine
optimization specialist? Not necessarily. Search engine
optimization may not be the answer at all. The client is better
served by having the project assessed by a company with a broad
approach to internet marketing, rather than to a niche
specialist. The work may involve an email campaign, or
development of a newsletter, or an RSS solution, or an IYP ad,
or whatever the solution may be – and frequently the solution
involves a combination of activities. It all depends on the the
nature of the website, and how that site may best be marketed.
Every client is unique, and every project has a unique solution.
This is not to say that the search engine optimization
specialist is irrrelevant. Far from it. But the initial
assessment is best made from the broadest perspective.
Today, the field of internet marketing is a crazy patchwork
quilt of competing claims and shrill promises. This is not good
for anybody. As the internet matures, a true framework will
emerge giving structure and definition to the new discipline of
internet marketing. This will help to build the trust of
advertisers, and the process will eventually weed out the
fly-by-night outfits who are muddying the waters today. In the
end, for business and consumers alike, that’s a very good thing.
About the author:
Neil Street is co-founder of Small Business Online, based in
Westport, CT., a web design and
internet marketing firm for small business. Their website is
at www.SmallBusinessOnline.net. Send email to neil@smallbusinessonli
ne.net He can also be reached at (203)761-7992.
|
|