SoftwareMarketingResource

Software Marketing Resource Articles: February 2004

You wrote the code, now how do you sell it?

Saturday, February 28, 2004

Software Marketing Tips

Instead of an article this month we decided to provide some marketing tips!

1.) Anticipation - create anticipation for new products

2.) Naming contests

3.) Giveaways / specials / promos

4.) Radical advertising

5.) Co-partnering w/large sites

6.) Bundle w/magazines

7.) Register url of product name

8.) Use *free*

9.) Newsletters

10.) Complimentary product bundles and partnerships

11.) Bid on keywords

12.) Free copies for reviewers and journalists

13.) Buy now buttons (in software)

14.) International considerations

15.) Co-advertising / bartering

16.) Beta testing and promotion
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Saturday, February 21, 2004

Vertical Marketing

What is vertical marketing? Simply put vertical marketing is promotion targeted at specific industries. The benefits of vertical marketing are immense. Vertical marketing can open new doors and touch niche markets, where there maybe little competition. Often niche markets are ignored by software giants. A creative developer and marketer may find it easier to establish brand recognition in a specific industry. In addition, users are frequently willing to pay a little more for an industry specific program, not to mention the unique benefits they experience with the more personalized software support of the smaller company. Users welcome the opportunity to purchase from a company familiar with their industry and needs. Industry professionals also tend to listen to their peers, and a recommendation or endorsement can help spread a programs popularity within a specific market or industry segment With a little forethought, minor changes to a basic press releases can change the focus of the release, and target it to a specific industry. Trade publications are also more likely to give ink to an application, that targets the magazines focus. There are numerous link opportunities if you are able to illustrate, why your application appeals to a specific industry. Numerous opportunities exist by targeting traditional marketing methods at specific industries and niche markets.

While some applications have an obvious vertical target, most general applications can be effectively targeted at specific industries or verticals, with just a little creativity. An example of vertical software is MSA Herp. MSA Herp is herpetology software, which catalogs the eating and mating habits of snakes and lizards. Obvious markets include pet stores, zoos and state parks, it obviously satisfies a very specific audience and does not necessarily have mass appeal. By catering to specific audiences, this program has become a clear leader in a very specific field. This can be done with "general" applications as well. Software that has broad appeal can be targeted at specific audiences or verticals. An HTML editor can easily be targeted at the education market, or a general accounting program can be targeted at a specific industry like retail stores or law offices.

Frequently minor code changes and the use of programming tricks like "conditional compiles" can create an application that caters to a specific market. It could just be a change in terminology, or the graphical presentation of the program. The idea is make an application that is unique or beneficial to a specific group of people. If you can't think of a niche, create one. Take a look at the type customers that you sell to, pick a handful and ask them what they use your application for. Their answers may surprise you. By talking to existing customers, you can extract a profile of a user, and determine ways to reach potential customers that had not previously been considered.

In order to effectively target vertical markets, often all that is required are changes to ad-copy and presentation. Pursue link exchanges and directory listings. Vertical.net and Global Software Solutions are both industry specific virtual communities through which you can promote your products. Consider becoming active in online communities that cater to your audience or even creating one if your research indicates a strong enough user base. Consider targeting web pages at specific industries; offer industry groups promotional specials or discounts. Provide white papers, customer profiles or endorsements that detail how applications can be used in a specific industry. Explain how the application will solve a specific problem or save time, in a specific industry. By providing a real world solution to a real world problem, customers are able to see how specific programs can resolve their day to day problems.

Sharon Housley is the VP of Marketing for NotePage, a leading wireless messaging software company.
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Sunday, February 1, 2004

Tools to Help Save Time

Distributing and supporting software can be extremely time consuming. Be sure to consider these two innovative tools that can streamline software distribution and technical support issues.

PAD - Save time in software submissions!
Download sites are a source of excellent referrals and can drive significant traffic to web sites but the submission process can be very time consuming. As a result, the Association of Shareware Professionals (ASP) developed PAD. PAD (Portable Application Description) is the newest, and easiest way to submit software to download sites.

PAD is a formatted XML, which contains all the information about the software developer, program, and relevant program information that should be included with applications or libraries. Place the PAD file on your web site and submit the url of the PAD file location to the download sites. The download sites poll the PAD location and extract the information required to add the file to the download site. A list of sites that support PAD submissions can be found at http://www.softwaremarketingresource.com/softwaresites.html .

Once the software is listed on a PAD enabled download sites, a number of them will poll the PAD file location and automatically update database information if there have been any PAD file changes.

PAD is a free and literally save hours of time in software submissions. The download sites extract the information in the PAD file and in many cases, immediately create an html page. Additional information and a free fully functional copy of PADgen can be downloaded from http://www.asp-shareware.org/pad additional software sites are expected to adopt the PAD standard in the very near future.

Help them help themselves.

ViewletBuilder lets you create animated online demos of how software works. Viewlets can be created to explain how specific features are used, or how technical issues can be resolved. Its an effective tool for marketing and teaching software.

Screen shots are captured and mini-movies can be created to enhance employee training, or to market products more effectively. It is extremely easy to implement training and product demos that teach how the software is utilized.

Users can easily resolve technical issues instantly, by browsing viewlet libraries and viewing solutions. Web browsers must be java enabled to utilize viewlets, but no additional plug-ins are required and the file size is small, so slow modems are not a problem.

Additional information on viewlets and a free download is available from http://www.qarbon.com
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Tune Up Your Web Site

Once you have gotten your web site up and running, you should start to think about what your customers are experiencing when they visit the site. How well does your site really work? Is your site making sales for you, or is it driving your customers away? And is there any way to improve your site? Can you improve your site's: download speed, html code, and navigation? Can you increase sales at your site by simple changes in its design? I have spent a fair amount of time tuning up my web site of late, and hope you can benefit from my experiences.

The first thing to ask yourself is, what factors influence your customer's web site experience? How fast your first web page loads is a major concern. If the first page takes too long to load, your potential customer might leave before ever seeing any of your site. Building a small first page is important. The first page of your site is an introduction to your firm. It is not the right place to describe your products or their features in detail, if at all. Ideally you would like the first web page to be limited to a single screen. You also need to minimize the number and size of the graphics on this page.

Reducing the size of your graphic images is fairly easy to do. First trim all your images, removing any extraneous portions that don't contribute to your site. Then make sure that the html code that displays those images has the width and height defined. (That speeds up page display.) For example, use:

<img src ="complogo.gif" alt="Elfring Fonts, Inc." width="150" height="98">

Next you need to reduce the amount of memory each JPG or GIF requires. There are a number of web sites that will reduce image size by removing extraneous data and by reducing the number of colors in the image. Try the WebSiteGarage at: http://websitegarage.netscape.com. You can upload an image through your browser or have the WebSiteGarage download a copy from your web site.

Once the WebSiteGarage has your image it will process the image and show you a number of different versions of the image. Each successive version will require less memory, since it has fewer colors. At some point, this process will degrade the image and become noticable. Back up a bit and save a better looking (but smaller than the original) image by right clicking on it. The WebSiteGarage will tell you exactly how much memory you save for each individual image. You can typically cut from 25% to 50% of the memory requirement for each image. That means each of those processed images will take 25% - 50% less time to download! The end result is faster page display for your customers. This is especially important on your web site's first page.

Next on the list of web site tune up tips is basic html code checking. Small errors can creep into your web site each time you change the design, or even update it. This is especially true when you hand code your own html. The Dr. Watson web site, http://watson.addy.com, can check the html code at your web site for basic errors.

Once identified, you can correct the errors. Why fix the errors if the web site looks ok? Even small errors can slow down page display in both IE and Netscape. In addition, the errors can contribute to differences in the way pages display between IE and NetScape. Once the html errors are fixed, it is time to carefully check how each page displays in both IE and NetScape on your system. It is important to have current versions of both IE and NetScape installed on your computer and use them both to check every single page of your web site. You need to ensure that all web pages display properly, and hopefully look the same in both browsers.

Now it's time for another major portion of your web site tune up. Does your web site have more than one page? If so, then how do your customers find out what is located on each page? How do they get to those pages? If you limit your customers to a few static or graphic links to your site's other pages, you are forcing your customers to think the way you do. That is probably causing you to lose sales. Why not let your customer search your site on their own terms? You do this by adding a search engine directly to your web site. You don't need any programming knowledge to do this, other than a little html copying. There are a number of different web sites that offer search engine service. Try http://www.atomz.com for an easy-to-add web search engine. You copy some simple html code to your web site. This places a short search form on your main page. Your customer enters any search terms he or she might desire. When they click on the search button, they get a list of your web pages that match the search terms, (if any). The Atomz web site indexes your entire web site, handles all the search tasks, and presents search results directly to your visitors. Your visitor sees only search results related to your site, plus a small Atomz logo. You can customize the way the search result pages look to match your own site, adding background and logo graphics, changing colors, etc.

Once you have added a search engine, you can view search reports at the Atomz web site. These reports will show you the search terms your customers are using to move around your web site. If they consistently use terms you don't use, you can add those terms to your web pages and your meta tags. This is a great way to peer into your customer's mind. You should now have a good idea of what it is that your customers are looking for. So it's time to consider site navigation. A search engine is just a small portion of overall site navigation. How many mouse clicks does it take your customer to move to any given page? How many clicks to buy your product? It's a good idea to let your customer move to any page on your web site within one, or possibly two mouse clicks. (Never more than that!) The more pages a customer has to wade through, the more likely that customer is to leave before even getting the chance to buy your product.

I visit a lot of web sites, sometimes as a customer, and sometimes just to try and see they do well and what they do poorly. There are a few simple things that all the good sites have in common. Good web sites are designed to sell something. Sure there are other types of web sites, designed to do other things. But that's not why you are reading this article. You want to make money. You do that by selling products to your customers.

Your potential customer wants to buy something. If you make it easy for the customer to buy you have a good chance of making the sale. If you make it difficult for your customer, they will go to your competitor's site. How do you make the customer's buying job easy? First, you need to remember that your job is to sell a product. You aren't a shareware distribution site. The point of your web site is not to emphasize shareware downloads. The point of your site is to sell things. You sell things by presenting useful information about a product to your customer and by making it easy for that customer to buy your product. That means every product description page needs to have a Buy Now button. Don't make your customer hunt around trying to find a way to buy your product. Make it obvious. (And this also means you must offer automatic electronic purchase and downloads. Unless you can do this yourself, you need a registration service.) A very large portion of my sales are people who want the product now, not tomorrow or next week, but now. If they can't get the software from me now, they will go elsewhere.

You also need to make it easy for your customers to download the shareware or evaluation version of your product. Once again- every product pages needs a Download Evaluation Copy button. Don't make the customer hunt around your web site for this. The last major point is file size. Never make your customer guess how big the sample version or the retail version is. Those buy and download buttons need to have file sizes posted next to them. Many of your customers only have a 56K modem. Rather than risk that your product is small enough to download, these customers may just move on to a competitor's site. Tell them just how big that product or shareware file is. Hopefully, if you follow these tune up instructions, you can increase your sales and make your customers happy at the same time.

Copyright 2000 by Gary Elfring

article provided by Elfring Fonts

Gary Elfring has been developing both shareware and retail software since 1985. He has been chairman of the ASP board of directors, on the board of directors of STAR, and is currently on the board of the SIAF. His top selling retail program made PC Magazine's best selling application list 3 times in a row. Gary currently has 20 separate shareware products available for sale.
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