THRIVEPOINT


How much should I spend on Google?

The age-old marketing question “How much should I spend on Marketing?” has recently turned into, “How much should I spend on Google?” Over the years, many different methodologies for determining budgets have been promoted, discussed and employed as different businesses try to perfect their marketing. Some of the most popular techniques are to allocate a percent of sales or an overall percent of total budget. Others go with gut instinct or a shoot-the-moon approach to maxing their credit card out. In search marketing, people often promote building a big keyword list, setting it live and ‘optimizing it to results’.

Whatever approach you have heard in the past, its worth considering a completely unique approach to Google budgeting - demand-based budgeting.
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Guaranteed SEO*
July 7, 2008, 9:03 am
Filed under: Ask Thrivepoint, Search Engine Marketing, Viewpoints | Tags:

Dear Thrivepoint,

We have received several proposals from search engine optimization providers who gurantee our listing will be ranked in the top 10 or our money back. This type of offer is very appealing because we have tight marketing budgets that need to be squeezed for maximum results. But, can SEO results be guaranteed?

-W.B.

Thrivepoint: SEO rankings are not something that can be guaranteed very easily. Beside the fact that the SEO does not own or control the search engines, there are a number of important reasons why you should dig deeper into the SEOs guarantee before buying. Here is how to get started with evaluating the guarantee.
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Ask Thrivepoint: Do I need marketing in a Web 2.0 world?
June 23, 2008, 10:46 am
Filed under: Ask Thrivepoint, Digital Marketing | Tags:

There is a popular misconception in the Web 2.0 world that if you build it, they will come and that marketing is not necessary because the web gives everyone a platform to launch an app, tool, product, service, whatever. The team at Thrivepoint has worked with hundreds of startups and growing businesses, and it says here:

Very little in life is guaranteed but if you fail to recognize the importance of sales and marketing to your business, your business will fail.

Marketing is the sum of all activities that a business does to put the product in the customers hands. It starts with the customer and ends with the customer. And if you ignore the customer, you will find yourself without them.
So if marketing is necessary, why are successful business people claiming it is not?

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