I love those “full service ad agencies” that try to specialise in everything and excel at nothing. My favourite are those that try to embrace online marketing/conversion through offline advertising and getting it oh-so-wrong. As an affiliate, these lapses in judgement can become a big money maker if used and abused correctly.
Have you ever seen an advert for an online product/service on a train, tube, bus or plane that hardly even mentions the web address? As I now live in the sunny beach resort of Southend, I travel for 50 minutes into London each day, surrounded by advertising that everyone ends up reading (it’s the only way to avoid eye contact and social interaction on public transport). I then travel for a further 5-10 minutes into Farringdon on the Underground, where the Ayima office is based. In the train carriages, I’d estimate that at least 75% of the ad posters are looking for people to convert online. This makes sense as 99.999% of people travelling into/out-of London will use the internet regularly and most likely go online within minutes of leaving the train, at either work or home.
The part that the ad agencies get wrong, is the emphasis on brand and slogans over URLs and contact details. They take for granted that the brand they’re promoting has a strong SEO and PPC presence, as a badly constructed ad will result in people Googling the slogan or brand, rather than recognising and responding to the URL. If an affiliate notices an offline ad early enough and reacts to it immediately, big money can be made.
In the UK, many slogans and marketing messages aren’t trademarked as they’re too generic or it’s seen as a waste of budget. This leaves affiliates open to use them for their own means. Is the slogan and brand variations registered as a domain? How many links does the brand have with these phrases in the anchor text? How many links with the right anchor text would it take to compete with the brand for their own brand terms and marketing messages?
If Acme Co. created a “widget” and then launched an offline marketing campaign of “got widgets?” and a discrete web address of www.acme.com/widgets, imagine how many searches there would be for “got widgets”! Imagine if you got in early and registered gotwidgets.com (or any other gTLD) and then set-up an affiliate site on that domain to sell Acme Co’s products. If you bought enough links with the right anchor text in, you could easily outrank the main brand site and also get direct traffic thanks to Acme Co’s ad agency spending $$$’s promoting the term that you rank #1 for. You’d be surprised how well it can work and how many ad agencies are continuously getting it wrong.
Can’t wait for your new domain to rank naturally? I usually do a nice PPC campaign for their brand terms during the weekend until I get good listings. Because commuters will recognise the slogan in your domain, you’ll get massive clickthrough and conversion rates.
You may find this a little sketchy on the legal side of things though, so make sure you consult a lawyer before using any of these ideas.
June 7th, 2008 at 3:31 am
Ah yes, oftentimes people mess up with their offline ads rendering their online efforts ase useless. Great article!