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Internet_Marketing_or_Whats_That_You_Said
| Internet Marketing or Whats That You Said?
Planning an Internet marketing strategy? Will you get the best
ROI from a CPA, CPC, PPL, or a hybrid model? And how will you
track your CPM and determine your CTR?
HUH?
If you're new to business and trying to learn how to market on
the Internet, your first reaction will be complete bewilderment.
Come to think of it, why am I suggesting this happens only to
people who are new to business? I'm betting you'd find Fortune
500 CEO's who don't know their PPC from their CPA. Egads! And
they say government employees talk in acronyms and jargon. They
never came up with anything close to what you'll find on
Internet marketing forums and bulletin boards.
Daunting as it is, you'll need to know this stuff eventually.
So, pour yourself a strong cup of something and plow through
these definitions:
ROI (Return on Investment) If your $1000 advertisement results
in $1500 in sales, your ROI is $500.
Impression The number of times a banner or advertisement is
served (displayed) on a web site. If 10 people visited the web
page containing the banner, you would have 10 impressions. If
one person viewed it 10 times, you would still have 10
impressions.
Hit This is a (poor) method of measuring web site traffic. A hit
is registered each time a browser request is made from a web
server. If you have a web page containing four graphics, each
page display will count as five hits.
Page View This is a more effective way to measure web traffic. A
Page View refers to each time a page is displayed. So, if you
have a web page with four graphics, each time the page is
displayed counts as one page view but five hits.
Unique Visitors This is the number of individuals who visit your
site in a defined time. If 200 people visit your site this week,
that is 200 unique visitors. If one person visits your site 200
times, that is one unique visitor.
Stickiness This refers to the length of time that a visitor
spends at your site over a given period of time, or sometimes to
the number of web pages that your visitors typically download.
CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) This is the cost of obtaining a
new customer. You divide your total acquisition expenses by your
total number of new customers. For example, if your $100 ezine
ad produces 30 new customers, your CAC is $3.33.
CPM ) Cost Per Thousand) This is an advertising model based on
the cost of 1000 impressions of your ezine or web ads. If a
publisher is selling advertising for $45 CPM, you would pay $45
for one thousand impressions of your advertisement, or .045
cents each per impression.
CTR (Click Through Ratio) The number of people who click through
a link or banner compared to the number of people who view it.
If 2 site visitors out of 100 click through a banner, you have a
CTR of 2/100=.02 or 50:1 (or 2).
Conversion Rate The percentage of visitors to your site who
perform your Most Wanted Response -- subscribe, register,
purchase, etc. If 10 out of 100 unique visitors perform your
MWR, your conversion rate is 10/100 or 10
CPC (Cost Per Click) This is the cost of attracting a visitor to
your web site. You calculate it using the following formula:
CPC=CPM/(CTR x 1000)
If you paid $45 CPM for a banner ad with a CTR of 1, your CPC
would be $45 / (.01*1000) or $45/10 = $4.50
Each site visitor is costing you $4.50.
CPA (Cost Per Action) This is an online advertising model in
which the advertiser's payment is based on the number of people
who perform the Most Wanted Response (i.e. subscribe, register,
purchase, etc.)
PPC (Pay Per Click) In this advertising model, payment is based
on qualifying clickthroughs. The publisher delivers your
advertising material to qualified viewers. You are charged for
each one that clicks through the ad.
PPL (Pay Per Lead) In this advertising model, payment is based
on qualifying leads supplied. For example, a publisher might pay
you a set amount for each visitor you send who subsequently
provides contact information or subscribes to an ezine.
PPS (Pay Per Sale) This is an advertising model in which you are
paid a commission for each qualified sale that results from your
activities.
Hybrid Model This is a combination of two or more marketing
models. It might, for example, combine CPM and CPC models.
Got it all sorted out? Good. HAGD. (Have a Good Day!)
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