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Surviving the Dot-Com Shakeout: Strategies to Keep Your Beauty Business Booming

Beauty Online 2001 — San Francisco, CA

March 26th, 2001

Seminar by Stephan Spencer

One of the secrets to staying viable in the fickle online beauty marketplace is to slow your burn rate through the following low-cost, high return marketing strategies and tactics:

  • Email marketing
  • Viral marketing
  • Link building
  • Search engine optimization
  • Pay-for-performance advertising (i.e. an affiliate program)
  • Content distribution

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Mining for Sales in the E-mail Minefield

September 1st, 2000

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Building Online Business

E-mail is one of the most important and effective tools in an Internet marketing campaign, but it will only work if it’s done right. And doing it right isn’t easy–e-mail marketing can yield spectacular successes, but companies must be extremely careful about how they do it.

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Applying Project Management to a Website

August 1st, 2000

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Building Online Business

A website is no different from any other project: It must be thoroughly planned and managed throughout. Anything less than 100 percent effort in building a website is a sure-fire recipe for disaster. Objectives must be defined, briefs written, milestones set, and tasks assigned.

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Evolution of Web Site Strategy

eFoodservice — Chicago, IL

July 26th, 2000

Seminar by Stephan Spencer

Let’s face it, there is no need for eBusiness unless you have created a web site strategy. And creating it right is the key. This session will give you a step-by-step guide in order to make your strategy a success! After attending this presentation, you will know how to:

  • Create a site that is easy to navigate and compelling to the customer
  • Market through direct email response
  • Acquire the proper lists of names
  • Put together a permission based email marketing plan
  • Survey users to see what’s right and what’s wrong with your site
  • Increase response rates
  • Decide what kind of manpower you need to create a full time website
  • 24 hour, 7 days a week work force vs. outsourcing

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Driving Traffic to Your Website (Part 2)

July 1st, 2000

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Building Online Business

The Internet’s top engines and directories account for more than 95 percent of all search traffic. Yahoo! alone commands more than half the market, and a Compaq study found that 68 percent of 500 million users only looked at the first page of results. For a top 10 search results position, the focus must clearly be on the big players. A company should start with its existing website.

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Driving Traffic to Your Website (Part 1)

June 1st, 2000

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Building Online Business

What’s the point of spending money on a great website if no one visits it? In part
one of this two-part series, the basics are covered: making the most of domain names, directory listings, and search engine rankings to improve a website’s traffic.

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Make It Easy For Your Web Site Customer To Do Business With You

February 8th, 1999

by Stephan Spencer

Originally published in Madison Business Journal

You compete online against every website that could possibly be of interest to your customers. So how do you satisfy–or better yet–dazzle your customers? Creating a personalized, interactive online experience will pay dividends in customer loyalty. Rise above “data smog” on the Internet to help customers deal with information overload, solve their business problems, and become more productive. Above all, make it easy for them to do business with you.

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Advanced Usenet & Email Marketing

Value-Added Marketing on the Internet — San Francisco, CA

April 29th, 1997

Seminar by Stephan Spencer

An often overlooked marketing opportunity on the Internet is Usenet and email. There are over 10,000 newsgroups, each one on a distinctly different topic. In addition, there are many thousands more discussion groups conducted over email. At the most basic level, businesses need to be aware of where their company, products, services, or competitors are currently or might in the future be discussed, and how they can conduct business effectively in these discussion groups.

A company can create newsgroups, moderate them, archive them on their Web site, and write FAQs for them. Being “first to market” with such services could provide you a great deal of visibility to your target audience, and best of all, will practically “lock out” your competitors. In this non-technical, information-packed session, you will learn about:

  • Discussion groups: on email “listservs”, Usenet newsgroups, and the Web
  • Setting up a Usenet newsgroup
  • Moderated vs. unmoderated discussion groups
  • Driving traffic into your Web site with discussion group archives
  • The benefits of writing a Usenet FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
  • Email newsletters/announcements
  • Personal Notification Services

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