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10 Opt-in Incentives to Build Your Lead and Future Customer Base

Birgit Olson - Friday, April 08, 2011

For your inbound marketing to succeed, a call to action is a necessity.  Without it, how will you build your lead and future customer base?  An opt-in incentive gives your readers the option to stay informed by being added to your mailing list.

Opt-in incentive is often referred to as ‘bait’. For you to convince visitors to your website to hand over their name and email address to you, you need to give them a good reason. There is one common trait among computer users... they REALLY LOVE FREE INFORMATION and other freebies.

Online freebies are common and they leave the visitor wanting more when they are well written and present themselves as informative introductory materials. Consider such freebies as:

  1. Giving away an eBook with your ad on it. Allow your visitors to also give the freebie away. This will increase your ad exposure and increase web traffic to your website at the same time.
  2. Holding free online classes or seminars. They could be held in your website's chat room. The idea of "live" information will definitely entice people to visit your website. You will become known as an expert on the topic.
  3. Giving visitors a free entry into your contest or sweepstakes. The prizes should be something of interest or value to your visitors. Most people who enter will continually revisit your web site to get the results.
  4. Letting visitors download free software such as freeware, shareware, demos etc. You could even turn part of your site into a free software directory. If you created the software, include your ad inside and let other people give it away.
  5. Targeting specific groups who might worry about using the Internet with free lessons in using it on your site – senior citizens, busy workers etc. might find these convenient and alluring.
  6. Offering free online services or utilities from your website.  For instance, they could be search engine submitting, copywriting, proofreading etc. The service or utility should be helpful to your target audience.
  7. Giving free consulting to people who visit your website. You could offer your knowledge via e-mail or by telephone. People will consider this to be of tremendous value because consulting fees can be very expensive.
  8. Offering a free start-up package that has a finite time; enough time for the customer to practice with your online product and like it enough to pay for continued use.
  9. Sending out free CD-Roms, CDs, DVDs etc. that contain starter packs or teasers to encourage the customer to use your site more.
  10. Offering free screensavers or templates for business cards, cards, writing paper, etc., anything that a customer can print out.

Being creative with your ideas and putting strategies in place will grow your customer base.  It is only a matter of time!

We’d love to hear from you – what has worked for you in the past?  Feel free to share your success stories with our readers.

Microsoft versus Google

Doug Schust - Tuesday, June 09, 2009
A week ago at the Wall Street Journal’s D: All Things Digital conference in Carslbad, California, Microsoft launched Bing, their new search engine.

The reviews are mostly positive. One reporter said it was “cool” and no less than Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak proclaimed himself a “big fan.” However, Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz, obviously an unbiased person, forecast that Bing won’t gain any market share and will only generate “temporary interest.” Personally, I like Bing.

It pains me to support anything Microsoft produces since I have a deeply held belief that they are, indeed, the Evil Empire. I’m not alone. Many bloggers are saying Bing stands for But It's Not Google. That’s rough but hey, this is Microsoft we’re poking and if a fight between two giants can be instigated then let’s stir it up.

On June 3, Microsoft kicked off its $100 million Bing marketing campaign. One hundred million bucks! This is a well-funded war. But Microsoft will lose because they are fighting tactically, as a wannabe, not strategically, as a leader with a vision.

Microsoft is trying to become Google and that’s why it will lose. Google’s search engine has 73% market share and no one is complaining. So what problem is being solved? Where’s the need Microsoft? Will $100 million or even $200 million convince us otherwise? I think not.

Google, on the other hand, believes that universally accessible online software is better than expensive, bug infested, virus prone desktop software. Many of us agree that expensive, buggy and infected (software) are problems. A problem Google aims to fix. Enter Google Wave.



I won’t describe Google Wave here but encourage anyone interested in some new and very cool software to visit http://wave.google.com and watch the first 40 minutes of the video presentation.

The video is a little long but, hey, it takes time to destroy evil.

Steve


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