Top 10 Benefits of Online Marketing versus Traditional Types of Advertising
An old school marketing tenet says that you have to spend money to make money. Sure, when putting up a new business or expanding an established one, you have to spend on additional capital as well as advertising. But in the current state of economy, you have to think a lot before spending. So, when it comes to advertising in this technology- driven but sagging economy, it is best to put your bet on online marketing than traditional advertising types- and here are ten reasons why:
1. “Branding” is out, and measurable return of investment is in. Traditional marketing is great for building brand exposure, that is, if you have a large budget for marketing. But for the small- to mid-sized businesses, online marketing is the smart way to go. When you put an ad on TV, radio and newspaper, you have to wait for certain period of time before you can tell whether your product or service is doing well. With online marketing, you can have a daily reading of how much of the traffic you get is actually converting to sales or not. With that, you can make immediate business decisions for your company.
2. Information in a flash. One major benefit of online advertising over traditional advertising is that you don’t have to wait for months before you launch your product or service. In fact, you can publish any information and content immediately and not limited by neither geography nor time.
3. Quality exposure. When a person passes by a billboard or sees an ad on TV, you cannot tell whether he or she is interested in what you are selling at that time or whether they will be interested in the future or whether they even noticed the campaign. However, a person clicks on an ad in the web when he or she is interested. With online marketing, you actually get your target market.
4. Cost-effective exposure. How much does a TV spot cost these days? Running a small ad in a paper for a day can already cost you a couple hundreds dollars – more if the paper has a wider circulation. However, not all of those who read the papers even read your ad. Some people just click to some other channel on TV when the commercials come on. However, you still have to pay for their viewing your advertisement. Even with pay-per-click (PPC) and other forms of paid online marketing you only pay for the views of people who are interested in your service/products. SEO is even more cost-effective in the long run because it could give you quality exposure for a relatively small financial investment.
5. Prime position. With traditional advertising you pay more to have your ads displayed in a place where it can be seen by the most number of people (Prime time on TV, for example or a billboard on a busy highway, etc). With successful online marketing your position is always prime position. Good SEO will help you rise in the search engine results pages for relevant searches, making sure you’re right there when people want you.
6. Long-term exposure. You can only place a certain amount of advertisement on TV for a few weeks, on the papers, for a day – but with good SEO, you can maintain the same site for years. However, online marketing can complement traditional media by providing directories towards previously made advertisements or those of other brands.
7. Online marketing is best for brand engagement. Studies reveal that among customers, particularly non-techie female internet users with children under 16, the Internet has a greater effect on brand engagement than print media, TV and outdoor advertisement. Brand engagement is one of the factors that ensure brand loyalty among customers. And in this time of recession, it is important to maintain buyers.
8. Online marketing provides insight and other interactive mediums. Studies also show that the internet also has a crucial role in the propagation of indirect experiences of brands through customer reviews. Online video directories for brands are a good example of interactive advertising. Customers can also choose to visit the brand’s website, or interact with the advertiser through other channels such as email, chat or phone. Response to brand communication is instantaneous, and conversion to business is very high.
9. Website users buy more online than average newspaper users. In Germany, Internet users are enthusiastic online shoppers, as well. Before making a purchase, either online or in a store, many German consumers research the product on the Internet. By 2005, online buyers rose by 7%, taking the total number of online shoppers to 27.4 million.
10. Product information. Almost as important for consumers was the search for product information. Research online was particularly popular wherein it came to slow moving consumer goods such as cars, domestic appliances, consumer electronics, mobile phone contracts and furniture. During this time of recession, people think a lot before they spend their money. With free and rich information online, people don’t mind doing a little research and reading some reviews and recommendations before they go and buy certain products.
Watch the video related to communication marketing
2015 scenario: Future by 2020. www.globalchange.com communications, marketing, management, leadership, virtual teams and virtual organisations. Customer focus in product design, advertising, brand development, software and hardware. Mobile marketing and positional advertising trends. Consumer use of personal organisers and mobile devices, mobile phones and other technology. Virtual switchboards, virtual meetings and distance learning. Future bandwidth, video streaming demand, convergence …
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How does advertising complement other elements of marketing communication?How does advertising complement other elements of marketing communication?
About Author
Dr. Keith Webb, of Assassin Marketing, a Dallas marketing company which created the Online Domination System, an online marketing system which allows businesses to dominate the front page of the search engines. Visit http://assassinmarketing.com or contact us at 866-998-8641
Great presentation and honest, realistic views. No glossy slideshows and glossy sales bull. Open minded & forward thinking. Disagree with reliability of computers back in 70’s though.
please tell more im only a 12 year old and look up this stuff very interasting….
Advertising is usually the introduction to other elements of the marketing communication process. For example, if you come across a video on advido.com that seems interesting, you will usually click away to their landing page which is where they usually get you in the marketing funnel with an opt-in or a sale.
IC and IMC are very similar but IC is more of an umbrella term. IMC is IC being applied to the promotional aspects of a business to ensure that everyone involved in a campaign is working off of and communicating the same message. Does that make sense?
VERY long story short…
A company needs strong leadership at the top that supports IMC, and that develops company goals, outputs, quality requirements and incentives that allign consistently across all departments (very simple example, profit or volume, pick one.)
After the company has the c-suite interested in IMC, they still need to develop cross-functional teams and comprehensive communication systems between internal and external stakeholders to create strong horizontal allignment. It often takes a lot to break down corporate cultural barriers (sales and marketing tend to view each other as the enemy, so do competing ad agencies). Strong leadership, communication and consistent goals and incentives are essential for successful IMC.
Making a company TRUELY IMC is very complicated. That's a really quick and dirty summary. I would recommend picking up some books from Kellogg School of Management or Don Schultz if you want to learn more.
Hi Patrick, University students here!
Are you trying to say Vodafone should start a bank on it’s own or Vodafone and a bank merge together?
Also why American Express? Why not HSBC or Barclays? What are the benefits of first mover advantages for mobile operators?
Hi Chris,
Try reading some good books of famous authors.
When comes to your question, you will learn it more effectively in practical only.
This guy is making some fundamentally wrong assumptions. Hope he doesn’t actually work for Nokia?
An example of a marketing communication objective is to send 10,000 emails and get 2,000 people who reply and then get 100 sales from the 2000 people.
u dont live in JP i take it… yea they have 5 yrs ago
Ummm….not REALLY sure what you're asking, but I do know that 1.) Starbucks does not franchise, expect in rare cases like at airports.
2.) Starbucks will look for "new markets" in highly profitable areas (ie rich neighboorhoods, will usually not open stores in poor retail areas). They will look for high-traffic areas, and areas where other coffee shops do well.
BC has a Communications major be be aware that 90% of the football team are Communications majors there in no small part because it is very easy to pass with little chance of failing so you will be surrounded by a lot of non serious students more interested in football than the subject.
AWESOME ideas for the future of NOKIA or any other company! Beautiful!
sounds cool!
So like NONSESE to me!
http://www.apnet.com/bookscat/samples/9780750663618/9780750663618.pdf
Information from this site may help
thats right…