Two Completely Different Types Of Marketing
by Jason Ryan Isaksen
Now I'd like to take this time to go over two major
different types of
marketing and advertising. Direct Marketing is my favorite type of
marketing. With Direct Marketing, you are talking directly to your
prospect
through things like magazines, ezines, direct mail, post-cards, and
even
search engines.
Then the idea behind Direct Marketing is to get the
reader (your prospect) to take an action and do something immediately.
Such as call a phone number, mail in
an order form, visit a website, request a free informational report by
email, etc. In my opinion, this is the best income generating kind of
marketing because it's very specific and tells the reader exactly what
to
do. And believe it or not, readers love to be told what to do. Yes,
readers want to be told exactly what to do!
Readers don't like being confused and don't like reading
un-clear materials
or advertising. Readers want you to get right to the point and tell
them
exactly what you are suggesting they do right NOW! You'll find that the
people who read your ads don't like playing guessing games and wasting
their
time trying to figure out what it is you are trying to get them to do.
If
you want the sale, you better just come right out and tell the reader
the
next step you want him/her to take!
There is another type of marketing that doesn't really
have a specific name
but I'm sure you'll recognize it when I describe it. This other kind of
marketing is the stuff you mostly see on T.V. but also in some
magazines and
newspapers. It's a "Get your company brand name out" kind of
advertising
like when you see an ad that just says "Ford Tough", or a full page
magazine
ad that just says "Nike..Just Do It" in big black bold letters. Or it
could
be an ad that just says "We do it your way at Burger King"
I'm sure you've seen that type of advertising around in
your day-to-day
life, and I'm sure you know exactly what I'm talking about. It's
non-specific, plain as you can get, advertising. It's purely meant to
build
brand name recognition so you'll choose their product later on when
you're
out shopping. They know if they can blast their name in front of your
eyes
enough times, you'll eventually feel like you know them and can trust
them.
They know this gives them extreme credibility and trust among
consumers.
But that type of "Brand Name" advertising is also hugely
expensive and can
be a big gamble for the companies doing it. They usually need the help
of
an expensive, top-notch ad agency to give their ads the right kind of
look
and feel. The names I mentioned above are the type we typically see
involved in that kind of advertising. It's usually major corporations
that
do that type of advertising. And the main objective of these major
corporations is to simply get an idea into the heads of the people who
see
their ads.
Since me and you are not major corporations, it just
makes sense that we don't
want to do that type of advertising. We want to do just the opposite.
As
smaller internet marketers working out of our homes, we don't want to
just
get a basic brand name or idea into peoples heads. We want them to take
action right this minute and make some sort of contact with us right
now!
We want to do the first kind of marketing I described
above called "Direct
Marketing" because this type of advertising gets things to happen and
orders
to occur immediately. As a small internet marketer working out of our
home,
we need to know as quickly as possible which ads are working and which
are
not. The best way to do that is to be very specific in your ads as far
as
what you want the reader to do.
This type of specific direct marketing is
what makes testing your ads more simple. When you are telling your
readers
(prospects) exactly what you want them to do, it becomes very simple to
find
out whether or not they actually did it. And of course this is called
"Tracking your ads" or "Ad Tracking." And I'll be teaching you the best
techniques for Ad Tracking later in this course. But first, lets talk
about...
Copyright Jason Ryan
Isaksen
2009 All rights reserved
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