Regardless of whether you conduct your marketing online or offline, it’s all the same. You’re still the problem-solving middleman. A marketer who works “offline” tends to work as part of a team. They might be charged with the task of trying to sell a product and finding the group of people who the product is best suited to.
This may involve surveys, giving out free samples and getting people to do short questionnaires. At any rate, it’s pretty time consuming and a lot of it involves the marketers themselves having to go out and collect this data.
The great thing about the Internet is how everything is networked together. You can be on different sides of the planet and still talk to someone thousands of miles away.
The next best thing about the Internet is that people go on it predominantly to find information. There are numerous ways to do this. One of the most popular is to type your search query into a search engine, such as “Google” or “Yahoo!”.
In other words, information is being virtually force fed into this search engine on a daily basis, every second. This is a marketer’s dream come true; gone are the days where you have to go out and painstakingly collect data. All the data that is needed is right there in front of you, on your computer screen.
Think about it. If someone is typing in the phrase, “how to lose weight”, what do you think that person is after? Information on how to lose weight, of course. Then again, they might be after a diet, an exercise or a liposuction clinic in their local area. Whatever they are after, they will type it in.
Someone who types in, “how to lose weight by skipping rope” has a clearer idea of how he or she wants to lose weight than the first person. If you provide them the means of “how to lose weight by skipping rope”, what do you think you’re doing?
Being a marketer, of course!