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Let the Customers Find You Bismarck ND

The use of language on your Web site may dictate how many Googlers find you. Go on and find out more about it.

His Resources Engineering & Management Inc
(701) 323-0723
1720 Burnt Boat Dr
Bismarck, ND
Deisz M V Consulting
(701) 222-4168
200 E Main Ave
Bismarck, ND
Nygard Al Consulting
(701) 250-6825
7506 Twilight Rd
Bismarck, ND
Great Plains Consulting Group
(701) 222-8080
Bismarck, ND
Maier Appraisal & Consulting
(701) 255-2324
3917 Kingston Dr
Bismarck, ND
Rainmaker Group Inc the
(701) 530-0806
2718 Gateway Ave
Bismarck, ND
Fischer Associates
(701) 222-8450
Bismarck, ND
Pearson Professional Centers
(701) 223-8737
919 S 7th St
Bismarck, ND
Telephone At & S
(701) 250-7911
1615 Capitol Way Ste 204
Bismarck, ND
Schells John
(701) 223-1717
207 E Broadway Ave
Bismarck, ND
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Let the Customers Find You

Posted by : Chris

The consumers of America have spoken, and they do not want to be bombarded with intrusive advertising. Unwanted advertising has become such a problem that the government has stepped in and created laws against it. With the government spam ban and the National Do Not Call List, our government is telling marketers: Respect consumer's boundaries or else! So what is the honest business owner to do? How can we get our message out to potential customers? The answer is simple: Use the search engines to bring the customers directly to you.

With people buying everything from shoes to yachts online, it has become obvious that in order to do business in the new millennium, your customers must be able to find you online. Search engine traffic is a non-intrusive method of Internet marketing. The majority of online and offline advertising intrudes on the audience, interrupting their activities. Search is unique in tapping a searcher at the exact moment they are seeking knowledge or a solution. Searchers are on a mission--it's "just-in-time" marketing.

According to the Georgia Institute of Technology, 85 percent of qualified Internet traffic is generated through search engines. Seventy-five percent of searchers never look further than page 1.

You can't argue with numbers. So what does this mean for someone who comes up 100,000th out of 4 million for their key search terms (or even number 20)? ...

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