Many of us, are not the Albert Einstein's of e-commerce.
There is good news, and there is bad news. The good news is that there are so many very reputable firms who will provide you with not only search engine optimization, but also with setting up the pay per click budgets and campaigns which will help to move you the rankings very quickly.
The bad news is that there are dozens and dozens of other un-reputable firms that promise results, charge very high fees, and deliver very little.
That is why it's important that you use trusted resources that can offer references from folks you know and trust that had a good experience with a search engine optimization or Internet marketing company.
It is equally important that your web presence and marketing are integrated into your entire sales and marketing efforts.
Once you have been able to attract a visitor to your website, getting them to pick up the phone and call you, or transact over the web by renting space directly from your website, is the key to making your Internet marketing budget pay for itself. This process is called a conversion.
You absolutely must, beyond a shadow of a doubt, follow-up on each and every lead with an immediate e-mail, and a telephone call, if possible, as quickly as you are able.
Web surfers are looking for immediate gratification most of the time.
Therefore, time is very precious and you must act quickly to respond to the needs of a web surfer.
By partnering with a marketing firm, or by creating an auto responder to an e-mail address that thanks the visitor for spending time on your site, is a key an important part of the sales process.
You may even want to integrate those leads with a call center who makes outbound phone calls so that each and every web visitor is called, even if your store is closed. For example, if you do not use a call center, and you close at 6:00 p.m. Florida time, in California the afternoon has just begun where it is 3:00 p.m.
That means you must address the needs of Web visitors in other time zones during the same day, as opposed to waiting for the next day when it is 9:00 a.m. Florida time and 6:00 a.m. on the West Coast.