5 Myths of Internet Marketing for Professionals
There’s more marketing hype published on the Internet in one day than P.T. Barnum generated in his lifetime. Like a worm swallowing its tail, the Internet marketing beast feeds mostly on itself. The vast majority of what appears on the Internet about marketing is designed to help you market products and services sold and delivered exclusively on the Internet.
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So what does that mean for the independent professional whose web presence is primarily aimed at selling his services? You know, services delivered the old-fashioned way, by humans interacting face to face or at least voice to voice. At best, the average professional is likely to be overwhelmed by the sheer volume of Internet marketing advice available. At worst, he is seriously misled by it.
The problem is that marketing your professional services is simply not the same as marketing a retail product or an anonymous business service. You can’t sell management consulting like you sell web hosting, nor can you sell executive coaching the same way as an ebook. If you try to market yourself by following advice designed for marketing Internet products and services, you’re likely to make some serious mistakes.
Here are five Internet marketing myths that may be hazardous to the health of your business.
Myth #1—It All Starts with A Great Website
Actually, the place where it starts is with a well-defined service. If you don’t have a crystal clear picture of whom you are marketing to and exactly what you’re selling, the best website in the world won’t get you clients. Before you even think about building a website, you should know who your target market is, how to describe your professional specialty, and what specific benefits your work provides for your clients.
You’re site’s content is much more important than its design. Yes, you should have a professional-looking site, but a brilliant design and dazzling graphics won’t pay off anywhere near as well as a clear explanation of why a client should work with you. Useful material such as articles, assessments, and other samples of your expertise will go much further to persuade prospective clients than flash intros and interactive menus.
Myth #2—More Traffic Translates to Increased Profits
The only result guaranteed by more traffic to your website is increased bandwidth use on your web hosting account. Before spending money on banner ads, web directories, or pay-per-click listings to drive visitors to your site, make sure the people you’re attracting want to do business with you once they get there.
Ask your colleagues and clients to critique your site. Do they understand what you offer? Can they see concrete benefits to your target audience? Revise your site based on their feedback. Then invite some prospective clients to visit the website and talk to them afterward. Do your prospects seem more inclined to do business with you after seeing your site? If so, you’re on the right track. If not, you still have work to do.
Myth #3—Do Whatever It Takes to Build Your List
There’s no question that a substantial opt-in mailing list is a valuable marketing asset, but the quality of names on your list is much more important than the quantity. Acquiring names through giveaways of other people’s material, trading lists with joint venture partners, or purchasing lists from a vendor rarely provide qualified buyers truly interested in your services.
Ask your site visitors and people you meet to join your mailing list and offer them something of value in return. A well-written ezine, helpful report, or informative audio are all effective premiums. But, your premium should directly relate to the services you provide and should serve to increase your professional credibility. Names acquired from promotional gimmicks or unknown sources seldom turn into paying clients.
Myth #4—Killer Copy is the Secret to Sales
Hype-laden web copy may be effective in selling products or home-study courses, but it hardly inspires trust. You’re not going to persuade anyone to hire you as a consultant, coach, trainer, designer, or financial advisor by offering “not one, not two, but three valuable bonuses” as if you were selling steak knives on late-night TV.
Your Internet marketing persona should reflect the same professionalism as the work you do with your clients. If writing marketing materials isn’t your forte, by all means hire a professional copywriter. But be sure you hire one with experience writing for professionals like you. The copy on your website should inspire feelings of confidence about your abilities and communicate your reliability and solid qualifications.
Myth #5—Just Follow the Winning Formula and You Will Get Rich
There’s only one surefire recipe for Internet wealth that I know of, and that’s the business of selling surefire recipes. There seems to be an infinite number of buyers for every new get-rich-online scheme invented, but paradoxically, precious few people successfully making money on the Web.
The Internet may be a different medium for marketing professional services than traditional approaches like making calls, writing letters, or meeting people in person, but the same time-honored principles still apply. There is no winning formula for overnight success. The secret to landing clients remains what it always has been—build relationships and get people to know, like, and trust you.
If your website, ezine, social networking, and other Internet-based activities contribute to building long-term, trusting relationships with prospective clients and referral sources, you’ll get business on the web. But if you blast your message out to anyone who will listen, aiming for a quick profit, the Internet won’t bring you any more business than standing on a street corner with a megaphone.
C.J. Hayden is a Contributing Editor for RainToday.com. She is also the author of Get Clients Now! Thousands of business owners and salespeople have used her simple sales and marketing system to double or triple their income. Get a free copy of Five Secrets to Finding All the Clients You’ll Ever Need at Get Clients Now. You can reach C.J. by email at: info@getclientsnow.com.
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One Response to “5 Myths of Internet Marketing for Professionals”
professional internet marketing
February 3rd, 2010



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