10 Tips for Successful Ezine Advertising
by: Michael Southon
If you're like most people starting out on the Internet,you've
been along this well-worn path:
You try free classified ad sites and get bombarded
with spam by people trying to sell you stuff.
You try banner exchange programs and get a handful
of click-throughs.
You finally get into the top twenty results in the
Search Engines, and then a week later your site has
dropped back to number 150.
The Internet may the largest market in human history,
but how on earth do you reach those millions of people?
Well, the answer is ezine advertising.
Its the surest way on the Web of reaching your target
audience.
Ezines (short for 'electronic magazines') are email
newsletters that are sent out regularly to subscribers,
like the one you're reading. They're sometimes called
'opt-in' lists because everyone who receives an ezine
has chosen to do so.
And that's why ezine advertising gets results. People
read ezines and they'll read your ad. And if you've
matched the ezine to the product you're selling, you've
reached your target audience.
Have a look at the ads in your favorite ezine - why
are they there? Because they get results.
There are currently around 90,000 ezines being published
every month. So whatever you're selling, there's more
than likely an ezine that will take your ad straight
to the audience you want to reach.
Ezine advertising is not only effective, its cheap
as well. A 5-line ad in an ezine that goes to 3000
people will cost you between $5 and $20 per issue.
As a general rule, you'll always get back at least
the cost of the ad, and usually much more. So there's
very little risk.
But there are some tips for successful ezine advertising.
Here they are:
1. The first and most important rule in ezine advertising
is: "Track your Ads!". You might place your
ad in 5 different ezines and get a hundred responses,
but if you don't track your ads, you won't know which
ezines were pulling responses and which weren't.
To advertise effectively in ezines, you must learn
from experience - its a process of trial and error.
Eventually, you'll end up with a handful of ezines
that you know are bringing you a high response rate.
After that, just keep placing your ads in those ezines
and you'll have a guaranteed stream of customers.
But how do you track your ads?
The simplest method is to place a key or a code at
the end of your email address. If your ad was in this
ezine (for example), this is the email address you'd
place with the ad:
yourname@yourdomain.com?subject=freezine
Then, when you get a reply with 'freezine' in the
subject field, you'll know which ezine it came from.
For a URL, it's the same principle:
http://www.yourdomain.com?freezine
However, if you're going to code your URLs, you'll
need a sophisticated webstats program to track the
coded URLs. Here are a couple of free ones:
http://www.hitbox.com. http://www.openwebscope.com.
Here's another way to code your URLs : for every ezine
ad, create a duplicate of your homepage and name the
page after the ezine that your ad will appear in.
So, if the ad is appearing in Ezine A, this is the
URL you'd place in that ad:
http://www.yourdomain.com/EzineA
Again, you'll need to use a good web stats program
to track the hits to your coded URLs.
2. The second rule is to target your audience. It
may seem obvious but some advertisers overlook this.
If you're selling a web-marketing course, don't advertise
in an ezine that deals with stock options; they probably
won't be interested.
Use the 'subject categories' in any ezine directory
to find ezines that relate to the product you're selling.
You can find a list of 60 ezine directories in 'The
Free Directory of Ezines' at:
http://www.netmastersolutions.com/more-directories.html
3. Once you've chosen a number of ezines that target
your audience, subscribe to them and examine the ads
closely. If you see an ad that keeps repeating issue
after issue, you can be pretty sure that its getting
results. You've found a good ezine to advertise in.
4. Check to see how many ads are in the ezine. You
don't want your ad lost in an ezine farm at the bottom
of the newsletter. You probably won't get much response
from an ad in an ezine that has 15 or 20 ads per issue.
Readers of those ezines have become hardened to the
ads and have learnt to skip them.
5. Check to see if the ezine publisher has a policy
of never running ads for two similar products in the
same issue - your ad will be much more effective if
its the only one of its kind in that particular issue.
6. Small ezines vs. Big ezines: bigger is not always
better. The big ezines with 1000's of subscribers
tend to have more ads than the small ezines. Also,
small ezines with only a few hundred subscribers often
have a much more targeted audience than the big ezines.
7. Repeat your ads. Research shows that off the Web,
an ad has to be seen about 21 times before someone
acts on it; on the Internet its about 9 times. If
your budget allows, try and have your ad repeated
at least three times in a particular ezine. Most ezines
offer discount packages for bulk advertising.
8. Email address vs. URL. Opinions are divided on
this; some people prefer to give an email address,
others prefer to give a URL. The advantage of giving
an email address is that it gives you the opportunity
to send a powerful sales letter to the person who
responded to your ad. Its also much easier to track
your ads with an email address than a URL.
9. Offer something free in your ad copy. It'll often
tip the balance between a response and no response.
10. Keep your ads short, even if you're not using
the number of words you're allowed. Short ads are
more likely to be read. Keep your sentences short
too; they pack much more power. Use the word 'You'.
Don't describe your product but tell the reader what
your product can do for them.
(c) 2000, by Michael Southon
About The Author
Michael Southon has been writing for the Internet
for over 3 years. He has shown hundreds of webmasters
how to use this simple technique to get massive free
publicity and dramatically increase traffic and sales.
Click here to find out more: http://www.ezine-writer.com