Online Techniques for Marketing Your Business
Reference | in reseller hosting guides
The Web hosting industry is both crowded and highly competitive, making the task of getting your Web hosting business stand out in a sea of companies a difficult task. To properly market your company, you'll need to put a lot of thought in to how, where and when you spend the money you have allocated to marketing.
Your first step in marketing a hosting business should be to take advantage of free advertising opportunities. First and foremost, make sure your site is listed with all of the Internet's major search engines and directories. These include, but are not limited to:
- Google (google.com)
- Altavista (www.altavista.com)
- Excite (excite.com)
- Hotbot (hotbot.com)
- Alltheweb.com (alltheweb.com)
- Open Directory Project (dmoz.org)
Submitting your site to the Internet's major search engines and directories will take less than an hour, and is a must for anyone truly serious about success. Try to avoid using "autosubmitters" when submitting - many search engines won't recognize them. Instead, submit each manually. Check back in a few weeks, and if you're not yet listed, submit your site again.
If you have a few dollars available, you should also consider paying for inclusion into major search directories as one of your first marketing tactics. Like DMOZ, paying the $299 to be listed in major directories like Yahoo and Looksmart will ultimately boost your search engine rankings. If your budget is a bit smaller, consider at least opening an account with a popular Pay-Per-Click directory, where accounts start for as low as $25 and you only pay for the traffic you receive.
Some of the more popular pay directories include:
- Overture (formerly GoTo) (overture.com)
- Sprinks (an About.com property) (sprinks.com)
- Search123 (search123.com)
You can learn more about getting listed with major search engines and directories at Traffick (traffick.com), Search Engine Watch (searchenginewatch.com) and Spider Food (spider-food.net).
Of course, search engines aren't the only place to market your business. Hosting directories like Hottest Hosts (hottesthosts.com) can be an economical source of traffic and exposure, as most are geared toward consumers in search of Web hosting services.
Also be sure to take advantage of free communities. Places like Virtual Promote (virtualpromote.com) and SitePoint (sitepoint.com), where Web site and business owners gather can provide you with a wealth of free information.
Lastly, stand behind your guarantees - doing so will often lead to customer referrals. Many companies will tell you that price usually isn't the deciding factor when a customer chooses a company to host with; it's service. In fact, according to marketing guru Chris Knight, ISPs and hosting companies can control up to 85 percent of their customer turnovers simply through solid customer service. This means if you manage to establish a reputation as a reliable host and spend your advertising dollars wisely, success is likely to soon follow.
- Overture (formerly GoTo) (overture.com)
- Sprinks (an About.com property) (sprinks.com)
- Search123 (search123.com)
You can learn more about getting listed with major search engines and directories at Traffick (traffick.com), Search Engine Watch (searchenginewatch.com) and Spider Food (spider-food.net).
Of course, search engines aren't the only place to market your business. Hosting directories like Hottest Hosts (hottesthosts.com) can be an economical source of traffic and exposure, as most are geared toward consumers in search of Web hosting services.
Also be sure to take advantage of free communities. Places like Virtual Promote (virtualpromote.com) and SitePoint (sitepoint.com), where Web site and business owners gather can provide you with a wealth of free information.
Lastly, stand behind your guarantees - doing so will often lead to customer referrals. Many companies will tell you that price usually isn't the deciding factor when a customer chooses a company to host with; it's service. In fact, according to marketing guru Chris Knight, ISPs and hosting companies can control up to 85 percent of their customer turnovers simply through solid customer service. This means if you manage to establish a reputation as a reliable host and spend your advertising dollars wisely, success is likely to soon follow.
- Google (google.com)
- Altavista (www.altavista.com)
- Excite (excite.com)
- Hotbot (hotbot.com)
- Alltheweb.com (alltheweb.com)
- Open Directory Project (dmoz.org)
Submitting your site to the Internet's major search engines and directories will take less than an hour, and is a must for anyone truly serious about success. Try to avoid using "autosubmitters" when submitting - many search engines won't recognize them. Instead, submit each manually. Check back in a few weeks, and if you're not yet listed, submit your site again.
If you have a few dollars available, you should also consider paying for inclusion into major search directories as one of your first marketing tactics. Like DMOZ, paying the $299 to be listed in major directories like Yahoo and Looksmart will ultimately boost your search engine rankings. If your budget is a bit smaller, consider at least opening an account with a popular Pay-Per-Click directory, where accounts start for as low as $25 and you only pay for the traffic you receive.
Some of the more popular pay directories include:
- Overture (formerly GoTo) (overture.com)
- Sprinks (an About.com property) (sprinks.com)
- Search123 (search123.com)
You can learn more about getting listed with major search engines and directories at Traffick (traffick.com), Search Engine Watch (searchenginewatch.com) and Spider Food (spider-food.net).
Of course, search engines aren't the only place to market your business. Hosting directories like Hottest Hosts (hottesthosts.com) can be an economical source of traffic and exposure, as most are geared toward consumers in search of Web hosting services.
Also be sure to take advantage of free communities. Places like Virtual Promote (virtualpromote.com) and SitePoint (sitepoint.com), where Web site and business owners gather can provide you with a wealth of free information.
Lastly, stand behind your guarantees - doing so will often lead to customer referrals. Many companies will tell you that price usually isn't the deciding factor when a customer chooses a company to host with; it's service. In fact, according to marketing guru Chris Knight, ISPs and hosting companies can control up to 85 percent of their customer turnovers simply through solid customer service. This means if you manage to establish a reputation as a reliable host and spend your advertising dollars wisely, success is likely to soon follow.
- Overture (formerly GoTo) (overture.com)
- Sprinks (an About.com property) (sprinks.com)
- Search123 (search123.com)
You can learn more about getting listed with major search engines and directories at Traffick (traffick.com), Search Engine Watch (searchenginewatch.com) and Spider Food (spider-food.net).
Of course, search engines aren't the only place to market your business. Hosting directories like Hottest Hosts (hottesthosts.com) can be an economical source of traffic and exposure, as most are geared toward consumers in search of Web hosting services.
Also be sure to take advantage of free communities. Places like Virtual Promote (virtualpromote.com) and SitePoint (sitepoint.com), where Web site and business owners gather can provide you with a wealth of free information.
Lastly, stand behind your guarantees - doing so will often lead to customer referrals. Many companies will tell you that price usually isn't the deciding factor when a customer chooses a company to host with; it's service. In fact, according to marketing guru Chris Knight, ISPs and hosting companies can control up to 85 percent of their customer turnovers simply through solid customer service. This means if you manage to establish a reputation as a reliable host and spend your advertising dollars wisely, success is likely to soon follow.
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OLDER: Building Your Web Hosting Brand | | | NEWER: The secrets of SEO | ![]() |
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This has been, for us, one of the most interesting, exciting and challenging build-ups to an issue of the magazine yet, Web Hosting's All Star Team. The balloting process was our first experiment with a kind of user participation we're planning to do a lot more with in the months to come. We had thousands of ballots submitted, with hundreds of write-in suggestions and a demonstration of user engagement that has us feeling super positive about the project.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition
July 2009 - What am I Worth?
One of the interesting luxuries of working on a project like the printed WHIR magazine is that it allows us to play with things like our point of view from one issue to the next. In recent months we've been giving added attention to the kind of practical and applicable advice aimed at smaller hosts and resellers. This issue carries on with that point of view, asking, in our cover story, "what am I worth?" It's a complicated question without a clear-cut answer.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition
May 2009 - The Blueprint for a Small Web Host
I was a little surprised by how difficult it became to see this idea through. We set out to assemble a blueprint for a small hosting business, but butted up pretty quickly against the general impossibility of covering all the territory that was out there to be covered. The basic constraints of a printed magazine, and the less-than-infinite amount of time we had available forced us to face the fact that we could never produce an exhaustive guide to starting a hosting company.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition






















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