Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

Traffic Building If you build it, will customers come? Follow these simple tips, and they just might.

By Robert J. McGarvey

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

If you build it, will they come? The grim reality bite is this: There are millions of lonely Web sites out there recording single-figure visitor counts daily-with plenty of days showing no visitors at all. How can you make your site one that surfers will rush to? "Putting up a Web site can be like opening a store in a back alley," says Jim Datovech, president of ComVersant LLC, an e-commerce consulting firm in Gaithersburg, Maryland. "You've got to work to win visitors."

What's more, traditional marketing campaigns don't necessarily produce results for Web sites, warns Mark DiMassimo, president and creative director of DiMassimo Brand Advertising, an agency in New York City that handles many dotcom clients. A case in point: "Generally, television advertising for dotcoms, though expensive, has been very ineffective," says DiMassimo, whose agency surveyed consumers and discovered that only 6 percent of heavy Web users said they'd visited a site due to a TV ad. "Offline advertising hasn't worked like the dotcoms had hoped."

That's because these companies are ignoring the cardinal rule of marketing: "Put your dollars where your customers will be," insists DiMassimo. Does that seem too basic? Not to the numerous dotcom companies that plunked down tens of millions of dollars to buy Super Bowl ads. "Having money is no excuse for spending like a drunken sailor," says DiMassimo, who adds that the critical test should always be this: Will my potential customers (not just Web surfers in general) see the material? "Many dotcoms forget this, but it's basic."

Robert McGarvey has covered the Web since 1995 from his home office in Santa Rosa, California. Visit his Web page at www.mcgarvey.net .

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Celebrity Entrepreneurs

9 Billionaires Who Didn't Graduate High School

High school dropout is usually synonymous with impoverished but no diploma was no barrier for some of the world's most successful people.

Travel

Save on Business Travel for Life This Memorial Day with an $80 Deal

OneAir Elite uses AI to search the web around the clock for flight deals.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Apple iPhone 7 Users May Be Owed a Slice of a $35 Million Settlement — Here's How to Claim Your Share

Previous (and current, no judgment) iPhone 7 users may be entitled to up to $349. The deadline to file a claim is June 3.

Devices

Keep Business Private with a Second Phone Number for $20

Hushed offers users a virtual number that can take calls and messages privately from their personal number.