Advertisers these days have many options for advertising, but Mobile Advertising and Internet Advertising are the two most thrilling, as advertisements look very attractive when displayed on phone screens and on computer/laptop screens. Since much potential and scope lies in mobile and Internet advertising and it tends to deeply appeal to the viewers. Mobile Advertisement and Internet Advertisements have come in focus.

Mobile Advertising is closely related to online or Internet Advertising, though its reach is far greater – mobile advertising’s estimated targets say that by end 2008, there would be global total 4 billion. Global estimates of computers, including desktops and laptops, is at 800 million. Therefore exclusive advertising on web pages meant for access by mobile phones is a great idea.

It would be easier for an advertiser to convince people to buy their product when people would receive and view ads while there are already out for shopping. Giving them the relevant information needed can do this and supplying them with added details could also influence them to the extent that they straightaway proceed to buy product after seeing its ads.

As essential needs of all humans are very similar, a person who has received an advertisement through Mobile or Internet may not be in need of the service or product advertised but might know someone who is in need of it and so can pass on the advertiser’s message through word of mouth, forwarding the link or the advertisement. A major benefit of Internet Advertising is that the information and content can be accessed in any country even at late odd hours. Internet Advertisements are often interactive advertising so if the Internet Advertiser opts for a response, the viewer may like to visit the brand’s website, or try to contact them through email, phone, etc.

Mobile Advertising and Internet Advertising in future are predicted to become the major sources of advertising.

Sanjay Sharma, Global Head – brings with him TWENTY LONG YEARS of a multi faceted rich experience of Technology, Operations, Commercial, Sales, Business Development (Domestic & International), Customer Relationship Management & Strategic Alliances. During these years, he has worked in organizations like BPL Telecom Limited, Reliance Communications Limited, Bharti Telesoft Limited.


A graduate in Electronics & Industrial Electronics from University of Pune, Sanjay Sharma is endowed with excellent academic record from a young age being the recipient of National Merit Scholarship School Certificate. Sanjay Sharma also underwent the Residential Management Programme for Business Managers from Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore (IIMB) and was honoured with the Best Project Award presented in the partial fulfillment of this Programme.


Within a short span of time with TDI International India Limited, Sanjay Sharma has been single handedly responsible for recruiting a Highly Professional Team of experts that is fully equipped with state-of-art electronics and successfully commissioned the Internet and Mobile Advertising Division which is already producing excellent results.

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Even if you rank number one in the search engines for a specific keyword term, you?re not doing all you can to maximize the probability that searchers will select your listing. There are, after all, nine other optimized webpages listed on the same page, any one of which could catch your potential customer?s eye. Unlike organic listings (unpaid search results), pay per click advertising (also known as cost per click advertising) is just that ? paid inclusion in search results for the sponsored links section of the page. Leading search engine optimization company CyberMark International has been doing pay per click marketing since the model began, and considers it an essential part of any search engine optimization strategy.

Imagine the impact on a potential customer when they not only see your website ranked number one in the organic listings, but also first in the sponsored links. Even though one of these listings is paid for through cost per click marketing, research shows that you?re still perceived as an expert in your field and that searchers click accordingly. And even if your site appears further down in both the organic listings and paid inclusion listings, you?ve still doubled the chances that searchers will find you.

Pay Per Click Checklist

Bid on relevant keywords that get searched most. What?s the point of launching a pay per click marketing campaign if you?re bidding on keywords that nobody looks up? Let?s say you sell recycled glass wind chimes. If the keyword phrase you place in the ad is ?recycled glass wind chimes,? you?re not going to like the results. Why? Because keyword research reveals that no one searches that way, so your ad will never turn up. In fact, you?d be better off bidding on ?glass wind chimes? or ?wind chimes recycled.?

Write ad text with quality conversions in mind. If someone clicks on your ad only to find that your product or service is different than what they expected from the ad text, you?ve just paid for a lead that is not going to convert. Let?s say the ad text for your recycled glass wind chimes reads ?Eco-friendly wind chimes handmade in the USA.? What this ad text does not reveal is that the only wind chimes you sell are those with a hummingbird theme. The searcher is looking for wind chimes with a butterfly theme, only she doesn?t know you don?t have those until it?s too late, and she?s already become a non-converting click-through.

Link your ad to a pay per click-friendly landing page. Countless people make the mistake of linking their pay per click ad to the home page of their website. This poses a problem to your search engine optimization strategy for two reasons.

First of all, searchers who click through to your home page are likely to browse around the website and fail to immediately (or ever) convert into a sale. Secondly, linking to a home page is likely to lower your ?quality score? with the search engine. Let?s say the keyword term you bid on is ?wind chimes recycled? but these words do not appear in this order anywhere on your site. Your quality score could be low because the search engine assumes the content is not relevant enough. And the lower your quality score, the higher the minimum bid for your keyword phrase. Certainly you could edit the home page text accordingly, but that?s a risky move if your website is already ranking well in the organic listings.

Instead of linking your pay per click ad to your website?s home page, it?s best to create a micro-site specifically for your cost per click marketing campaign. These micro-sites with optimized webpages not only have text targeted to the term you?re bidding on, but also one single call to action. It?s impossible for the searcher to get lost on the site and miss your offer because every page encourages readers to do the exact same thing ? whether that means buying a wind chime or simply filling out a form requesting a free catalog.

Test your pay per click advertising. If you limit your pay per click marketing to just one ad, you?ll never know if something different could have worked better. That?s why it?s a good idea to always have more than one ad running at once ? ideally five to ten different ad groups. As conversion success rates come in, you can adjust your investment accordingly.

Plan your PPC campaign with SEO experts. Anyone can launch a pay per click campaign, which is not to say that just anyone should. Only an SEO expert can ensure that your cost per click marketing strategy is sound. For instance, CyberMark International has been using the PPC model for its clients since Yahoo! first introduced it back in 1998. CyberMark?s cost per click marketing services include extensive keyword research, the creation of targeted text and ongoing testing. They even build and write text for micro-sites, which have increased client conversion rates for PPC clicks by as much as 25 percent!

As with any other advertising medium, simply placing an ad for paid inclusion on a search engine is not enough to expect results. Only those who understand the intricacies of pay per click advertising are able to turn their ad investment into the quality customer conversions you want and need.


Kimberly Judd is the owner operator of Cybermark International. CyberMark is an Internet marketing firm which specializes in search engine optimization and other online specialty advertising techniques.

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Times are tough all over.

Small businesses especially are feeling the squeeze as credit dries up, and customers stash their wallets under lock and key.

Yeah, times are tough.

And when times are tough, one of the first things to happen in the small business world are budget cuts.  Guess which line item is one of the first to get cut? Yup…advertising. (How’d you guess?) 

It’s understandable…you have to cut somewhere.  But when you cut your ad budget, you may be cutting in the wrong place.
In the 25 years I’ve worked in the advertising and marketing business, I’ve seen several recessions come and go.  And I’ve seen lots of ad budgets cut because of it.  But one thing I’ve learned is the company that seriously cuts its ad budget often lives to regret it. 

Think about it.  Why do you advertise in the first place?  To increase sales.  Doesn’t it make sense, then, that during tough times when sales go down, you should advertise even more?  Besides, what do you think happens if you cut your ad budget, but your competitors don’t?  They get the sales you might have had if you hadn’t cut your advertising budget.  When you stop advertising your sales go down.  That’s on top of your sales going down because of the recession in the first place. 

So what do you do?   You lose business if you stop advertising, but you really need to save money any way you can.   I have two pieces of advice.  The first is to go into recession advertising mode.  Tighten up the things you can tighten.  Maybe even start looking at advertising in ways you haven’t tried before.

Here are some ideas to get you started.

1.  Know your target customer. When the string’s pulled tight on your advertising budget, you don’t have any wiggle room to chase customers who will never buy from you, or hire your services.   The idea here is that knowing your customer means you also know what newspapers they read (and what sections), what radio stations they listen to, what tv channels they watch, what interests and hobbies they have, etc.  All of which helps you narrow down the best media channels in which to reach them. If you’ve never taken time to determine who your target is, go to my website (www.businessburrito.com) and click on “Marketing.”

2.  Target your message. What is the one thing you do better than your competitors?  Centering your marketing and advertising messages around your one thing is always the best way to get the most bang for the buck, but this matters even more is recession advertising.  If you’re advertising to the right target, with the right message, in the right media outlets, you are going in with surgical precision, not with a shotgun blazing everything in sight.  And that means you get a better return on your investment.

3.  Negotiate your media buys. If times are tight for you, chances are they’re pretty tight for the media outlets as well.  Which means they may be even more willing to negotiate deals, as well as offering more specials. Even in good times, don’t ever pay media retail.  Media reps will usually negotiate in some way for your business.  This may take the form of throwing in more insertions, better time slots, sponsorships…sometimes even reduced prices (especially if you sign a 12-month contract).  Don’t be afraid to ask for what you need.

4.  Advertise on the Internet. This works best if you have a website and use it to sell products, information, or services, or if you use it to direct your customers to your bricks and mortar business.  Google AdWords program lets you target specific keywords and place ads that direct your traffic to a specific landing page.  Whenever anyone “clicks” on your ad, you pay a specific amount of money.  This is called “Pay Per Click” advertising, or PPC.   In essence, you are pre-qualifying your traffic, so all you pay for are people who are looking for what you are selling.  There are all sorts of other advertising opportunities on the Internet:  From PPC to banner ads to ezine advertising.  Search “internet advertising” and see what you find!

5.  Consider radio. Radio can be one of the most cost-effective mediums out there.  Why?  Because it can effectively target your consumer, usually for less money than other mediums.

6.  Email. Guess what…email costs almost nothing except time!  If you have an email list, all you have to do is start emailing your customers with specials, coupons, news and info…the possibilities are endless.  If you don’t have an email list, start building one today!  Collect email addresses as you check customers out; keep a pad by the cash register for them to sign up in exchange for 10% off their next purchase (or some other incentive).  There’s no excuse NOT to be doing this.

7.  Co-op advertising. Is there another business that is compatible and complementary to yours with which you could team up to advertise, and thus share advertising costs?  A strategic partnership with other quality businesses can create a win-win situation.

Okay, I said I had two pieces of advice.  The second one is…increase your advertising!  I know…you were about to cut your advertising budget out entirely until you read this article.  But if you are thinking of cutting it, doesn’t it stand to reason that your competitors are considering the same thing? 

If you increase your advertising at a time when your competitors are cutting back, just think how much more visible to the consumer you’ll become!  You didn’t become a small business owner by not knowing how to take calculated risks.  This is one that could pay off big-time.

When you advertise, you are building your brand.  When you stop advertising and putting your brand in front of the consumer, your brand starts losing its power.  Therefore, when you stop advertising during rough times, you are throwing away an investment that may have taken you years to build.

(c) Copyright 2008, BusinessBurrito.com.  All rights reserved.

Donna Williams is the founder and creator of BusinessBurrito.com – a website dedicated to helping small businesses grow to their maximum potential. She is also a 25-year advertising / marketing executive, creative director, writer, and producer. Together, Donna and her husband currently own and co-own five small businesses. To read more of her articles, or to sign up for her free weekly e-newsletter, visit her website at www.businessburrito.com

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