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What's your favorite search engine?
Mine used to be Infoseek. For a while Infoseek was the only search engine
I used, and the name "Infoseek" was fixed on my mind as the place
to go whenever I wanted to find something on the Internet.
(article continued below ...)
But I could care less about Infoseek nowadays.
I never use it anymore.
After Disney bought Infoseek in 1998, they changed the name to Go.com.
"Alright", you might say, "can't you take a name
change?" Well, problem is, it wasn't just a name change, it was a total
elimination of the Infoseek brand.
The whole visuals of the site were changed, and what's even worse, the
Go.com site became an entertainment oriented search engine. It was still a
search engine, but it neither looked nor felt the same as good old Infoseek
(and the search results were not the same as before).
Infoseek was struggling, which is why Disney bought it. But it was still
a heck of a brand name, an asset which Disney completely neglected. The
result is that a lot of people who used Infoseek before have now switched to
other search engines.
In fact, the brand kill was so destructive that Go.com doesn't maintain
its own index anymore (it serves results from GoTo.com). Infoseek/Go.com is
as good as dead, and the brand change by Disney had without a doubt a
profound role in the failure.
What can be learnt from this? Well, first point:
branding is very important. It can make or break a business
venture.
Second point: branding is psychological.
It exists in the minds of customers and prospects. When I say, "Image
is nothing. Thirst is everything", I can bet that the name of a popular
fizzy lemonade will pop up in your mind. That's the power of branding for
you.
And third point: repeated exposure to the brand
is vital to producing a successful brand. When the Infoseek brand
was gone, the search engine somehow lost its "meaning".
And just to make it absolutely clear what Web branding really is, here's
a short definition:
The purpose of branding is to get people to recall your
company/product/service from memory. The ultimate aim is to get people to
trust you more than the competition, and to think of your Web site before
they think of the competition's Web site.
Branding isn't just for the big companies. It's just as important to the
small business entrepreneur, especially online business owners. With
cutthroat competition on the Web, those who don't brand will probably go out
of business.
Here are several hands-on branding strategies for you to apply to your
own Web site, using your business name and your own name:
1. Repetition
- This is very important: keep all of
your design elements the same from page to page. Most importantly, display
your logo at the top of each page, consistently throughout your Web site.
Your Web site must have its own distinct "feel".
2. Newsletter/Ezine
- Use your mailing list to push your
domain name and slogan (consisting of your Unique Selling Proposition). If
you have an ezine, create a header that contains your domain name and your
slogan. Use this same header in all issues of your ezine.
3. Domain name
- Use your domain name as your brand.
Put it on all of your stationary (letter heads, business cards, post cards,
statements, etc.).
4. Signature
file - Implement your USP
into your signature file, so with every email you send visitors will be
further exposed to your brand. Check out the help file of your email
software for more on setting up sig files.
5. Thank you
pages - If you have online
forms (for visitors to contact you, request more information, subscribe to
your newsletter etc.), you most likely have a "thank you" page
where you thank visitors for using your form. This is an excellent place to
position your logo and slogan. Don't clutter with lots of banners and
marketing material. Keep it plain and simple.
6. Ebooks
- Create free books on subjects of
interest to your visitors and allow them to re-distribute to their own
visitors. Brand your ebook with your logo, domain name and slogan on every
page of the ebook (also consider including your own name).
7. Publish free
articles - With thousands
of new Web sites and ezines popping up in Web land every month, the demand
for high quality content is immense. You can provide articles for other
webmasters/editors to publish on their Web sites/ezines. At the end of your
article put your name and a link to your Web site, with short teaser copy to
get people to click on your link (offer a free book, subscription to your
ezine or some other enticing offer - see my resource box at the end for an
example). This is free publicity at its best - not only will you get traffic
back to your Web site; you'll also add status and credibility to your name
(provided your article is of high quality). Visit the following sites to
submit your articles:
- http://www.e-zinez.com/articles/index.html
- http://www.ideamarketers.com/
- http://www.ezinearticles.com/
8.
Autoresponders - These are
emails that are sent automatically to anyone who requests them (triggered by
sending them an email). Autoresponders are great as they work 24 hours a day
without any intervention on your part. Use them to send visitors free
reports, articles, list of links, etc. And add your branding copy (logo,
name, slogan, USP etc.) at the top and bottom of the autoresponder message,
with a link back to your Web site. Nowadays all good Web hosts provide their
customers with free autoresponders.
If you don't brand, you'll have a hard time surviving on the Web. If you
do brand - properly - you'll have a hard time not laughing all the way to
the bank. And as shown by the above tips, online branding is not hard to do.
Just implement the tips and you'll be well on your way.
About the Author:
Said Rouhani is the editor of the
All-About-Making-Money-Online Ezine. Subscribe now for FREE ebook containing
50 home-based businesses you can start for under $500 (click below): http://www.all-about-making-money-online.com/newsletter/
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