How do I Market My Daily Deal Website?
Marketing is possibly the hardest part of running a daily deal website. There are two parts to marketing a daily deal website: 1) sourcing for merchants/deals and 2) getting subscribers and social media followers in order to build traffic. A great deal of the daily deal sites that we host are operated by owners who are aware that differentiating themselves from Groupon and LivingSocial is a business priority – and they are right. Marketing may be a good place to start differentiating.
The key idea that I am putting forth in this article is to market through channels that are less utilized by your established competition. The most obvious tactic is to use offline marketing more where online marketing has been used to death, and vice-versa. In other words, start thinking of ways to use offline marketing to reach your end consumers and online marketing to reach your merchant suppliers.
Using offline marketing tactics with your end consumers make sense, because, at any given time, a bigger proportion of them are likely to be at eateries, supermarkets, shopping malls, the streets, bars, etc. than behind a computer burning hours online. The product that you are selling is to be consumed offline anyway (by the way, the “product” is the voucher, not the underlying goods or services). So going directly to them may be an opportunity to see what they are like in real life, so that you can source for deals based on their consumption patterns. Heck, you can even talk to them to understand what they are like. That is something valuable that online marketing cannot offer.
Here are some offline marketing tactics that you can use with end consumers: http://www.bootstrappingblog.com/50-guerrilla-marketing-tactics-you-should-be-using/.
As for online marketing with merchant suppliers, one possible way to do it is to put up a page on your daily deal website that shows off your past successes in bringing in customers through the door by the dozens as well as the burgeoning size of your subscriber list. Selling to merchants is a B2B affair, thus ROI marketing needs to be your core strategy. You can then promote your page in forums in which your merchants participate, which would be easy to identify if you begin with a niche. If you do not begin with a niche, you are possibly committing a fatal mistake already.
What if you are new and you do not have past success stories on which to leverage (yet)? There is no silver bullet here, but working from within your current network may be a good idea. Offering a limited-time substantial discount may be another, sprinkled with the sweet promise that your subscriber base is “healthily growing.” Call me radical, but being a decent human being and asking nicely for a pilot deal may also be a viable strategy to employ.
As the saying goes, “marketing is a tax you pay for being unexceptional.” The fact is that marketing becomes a whole lot easier when you start with a compelling idea that it sells itself, i.e. niche targeting. When you claim to focus only on a certain geographical area, interest group, age group, or gender group, people within that niche feel special and are more likely to be captivated by your basic premise. The belief that niches are limiting is false and silly – nothing stops you from leveraging upon the success within your initial niche to enter another niche market.
Ultimately, marketing tactics may allow people to know about your business; getting people to care about it, however, starts earlier – much earlier. It begins at the conception phase of your business.
