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Joined: 6-March 03
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From: Langley, British Columbia, Canada
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Oct 13 2008, 06:16 PM |
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As I suggested in the MRN - The Customer Is The Boss article, this needs to be looked at from the point of view of the best possible prospect for the product. Ideally, try to think of prospects who are "suffering pain", which is an old selling trick. How would they be looking for solutions to their pain? How might they Google a solution?
Of course if this is not a solution to someone suffering pain, but merely a "nice to have" thing, then the selling job is very much more difficult. |
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Oct 18 2008, 03:31 PM |
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Thank you everyone who has posted here. What a great read!
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Oct 22 2008, 07:24 PM |
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Michael Martinez has enlarged upon his advice in this thread in his latest article, How To Build A Query Space.
QUOTE Your Web site could be all about horses, and there are plenty of horse sites out there, but you show people that you look at horses in a new and different way. You define a niche and tell people about the niche, as well as why your Web site leads the niche (without claiming to be the niche leader). So whether you’re promoting something no one has ever heard of before or just helping a small site compete with the big boys, you want to follow the same principles and apply similar strategies. You want to build a new query space where there is no competition to begin with (and perhaps always if you can establish a protected name space, as with a very special trademark). Here is how you build a query space: [subheadings: lots of detail under each] 1. Pick your keywords 2. Build your flagship Web site 3. Rank for the targeted queries 4. Create an advertising campaign 5. Stimulate buzz 6. Announce the site 7. Advertise your site and the query space 8. Measure your success Do people find your site through the search engines? If so, what are your metrics for determining search engine success? You need to understand why people search for your site to ensure that they are looking for the right reason. Just creating curiosity about a site doesn’t mean you’ve achieved your objective. They need to be curious about the topic of the query space and your site needs to satisfy their curiosity while intriguing them further. As usual with Mr. Martinez, lots of meat to chew on. |
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Joined: 6-March 03
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From: Langley, British Columbia, Canada
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Oct 22 2008, 08:12 PM |
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Perhaps I can comment from the other side of the church.
I am from the other school that suggests you should be customer centric. I have described this in the MRN article on the customer. Basically you start and try to figure out how a particular customer might look at the world and what he or she is looking for. If you can find potential customers who are almost feeling pain because they need a solution that you can provide then that is the ideal customer to have in mind. I believe if you adopt that customer viewpoint you can better target your efforts in being highly visible for that customer and in presenting an image of your product that will be highly attractive to them. JM2C |
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Joined: 15-January 04
Posts: 4,736
From: Rimouski, Canada
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Oct 22 2008, 08:18 PM |
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Very, very good stuff from Mr. Martinez. Just had to add my appreciation.
As for the initial questions, I couldn't help but think of Duma Key (by my favorite storyteller; Stephen King) where the lead character suffers some memory problems after having been involved in a serious accident. At first his reaction is one of rage but slowly he learns to approach the problem sideways, crab-walk style. Think of blue which makes you think of New York which leads you to Frank Sinatra. I would approach the query sideways. The product, as iamlost points out, does something for someone in some space. These people do searches about somethings in their space. Some of those searches are directly or indirectly related to your product: this is where you jump in. For example, you're not aware that you need the Home Projector Bark Lightly. I do. What can you do with a Home Projector Bark Lightly? Well, in October you could project scary patterns on the outside of your house! What else? Well, if you're into advertising you could make a HUGE blast with the Home Projector Bark Lightly by projecting the name of your new product onto the clouds! Woooh!! Hug other searches, other problems; inject your product as the (better) answer. |
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