How to Get More Clients from Online Discussion
Lists and Forums
If you dislike face-to-face
networking as much as I do, perhaps networking online might
be more your style. I'm still trying out some online
networks like Ryze and Open BC, so the jury is still out on
those. What's bringing me the most success at the moment is
online discussion lists and forums.
The discussion list, also called a LISTSERV, comes in the
form of an email broadcast to which you subscribe. You can
elect to receive each message as it's posted, or receive a
daily or weekly digest of all messages posted to the list.
To keep myself sane, I typically subscribe to the daily
digest version to reduce the volume of emails I get every
day. This is my favorite, as I love the immediacy of email,
rather than having to take a few additional steps to
participate in a forum. Unfortunately, with the
ever-increasing problems of email delivery, I have seen the
use of this tool decline over the last few years. Many of
the discussion lists to which I belong have been replaced by
online discussion forums.
The discussion forum is typically hosted on a web site, and
it might also be referred to as an online bulletin board or
message board. The messages and replies are referred to as
"threads", and all posts are maintained on the forum so that
you can go in read the threads at any time. Some forums
offer you the option of being notified when there are any
new posts to the forum, or you can select to be notified
only if there are posts to topics of interest to you or just
to questions or replies you have posted in the forum. I
prefer the forums in which I can see a short description of
the original post and short descriptions of the replies so I
can quickly determine which threads I want to open and read
and perhaps respond.
How do you find discussion lists? Scott Stratten maintains
a great list of good business-oriented discussion forums at
http://www.un-marketing.com/index.php?p=u. Many
professional associations run their own discussion lists and
forums, which is helpful if you're coaching or consulting
with others in your own industry.. And, there's always
Yahoo
and Google
groups, ForumHaven.com,
and another comprehensive list at QuintCareers.com,
http://www.quintcareers.com/Internet_networking_sources.html.
Here's what you need to consider to make the most of your
online networking and ultimately get more clients online:
1. Lurk on the list for 3-4 days before you post
anything. You'll want to ensure that the list is
active (with daily posts) and that your target market is
represented before investing a great deal of time and effort
into the list. Read prior posts and determine the posting
protocols, what kind of information is shared, as well as
"who's who" on the list. I've joined a number of lists and
discovered that they weren't as active as I require and so
left and found more active lists. In this "lurking" period,
you'll also want to get a sense of the tone of the list --
are their posts on-topic and relevant, or are there a lot of
self-promotional advertising emails and off-topic posts or
"flaming" (derogatory remarks) among the members?
2. Review the rules of the list. The best
lists and forums are moderated, which means that there is a
real person who volunteers to ensure that the posting rules
are followed. Before you post, be sure you read the list or
forum rules, which will give you guidelines about how to
post or reply to a question and whether or not you can send
any promotional emails to the list. Effective list
moderators ensure that spammers don't slip onto the list
with spam comments, keep the discussion on-topic and
relevant to the purpose of the list, gently remind posting
violators of the rules, and ultimately ban repeat offenders
from a forum or list.
3. Prepare an effective email signature.
Typically lists or forums will permit you to include an
email signature as part of your post. There may be a rule
about what can be included in the content of your signature
or a limit on the number of lines that a signature can
contain, so be sure and review the list rules as your craft
your email signature. Since most lists prohibit blatant
commercial postings, your email signature will serve as your
advertisement every time you post to the list. The most
effective email signatures have a call to action, typically
for a free offer, that a visitor can get by visiting a web
site. My email signature contains an offer for a free online
marketing toolkit that visitors to my site receive when they
subscribe to my email newsletter.
4. Practice good list etiquette. Good list
etiquette includes following the posted list and forum rules
and being considerate of members. One annoying thing that
list newbies will do is include the entire body of the
message to which they are responding in their actual
response message to a post. If you're on a discussion list,
scanning through a bunch of info that wasn't deleted from
prior posts makes the list reading process very tedious. In
your reply to a post, delete all but the relevant sentence
or portion of a sentence that is most applicable to your
reply, and post your reply under that original text so that
the reader who has elected to receive individuals posts can
easily follow the conversation thread. Just as in
face-to-face networking, you want to be courteous and
professional to all of your new virtual contacts.
A second major list and forum faux pas is to send a
personal response to the list, instead of to the individual
for whom it's intended. If someone has asked for replies to
be sent "off-list", or if you have a question or comment
that doesn't relate to the overall topic and focus of the
list or forum, send the information to the person directly,
instead of via the discussion list.
5. Integrity of your posting is important.
I've been on lists in which a list member has posted a
question, followed by an immediate reply from someone else
on the list whose service or product perfectly matches the
initial request. I'll then receive an email from the
moderator reporting that both of these people have been
banned from the list. Why? Because the poster and
responder were the same person. This most often happens on
lists where commercial posts are prohibited, so someone will
create two identities on the list. The person uses one
identity to ask the question on the list, and then log in or
respond from the second identity, who can post a
self-promotional email to the list, within the rules of the
list, because it's a response to a direct request from
another member. Don't get caught being duplicitous -- the
Internet world is much smaller than you might think, and
word travels quickly here.
6. Become the expert on the list. The best
way to become a major player in a discussion list or forum
is to actively add to the discussion. I don't mean to
simply send a post that says, "Yes, I agree" and that's it.
If you have an answer to a question or a point of view that
will contribute to the knowledge being shared, that's the
time to post to the list or forum. By freely sharing your
knowledge, information, and expertise with the group, they
will come to like, know and respect you, which is the path
that needs to be followed before someone will decide to buy
what you offer. Remember, the best way to get what you want
is to help others get what they want -- practice giver's
gain in your online networking. Every contact could be a
potential client or customer.
Becoming a regular participant in just a few relevant online
discussion lists or forums can be a very effective way to
get more clients online. Follow the list/forum rules, share
what you know, have a great offer in your email signature,
and watch the new visitors come to your web site, subscribe
to your blog or email newsletter, and ultimately become new
clients.
(c) 2008 Donna Gunter
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Online Business Resource Queen
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on the Internet, and get more clients online. To claim your FREE gift,
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Ask Donna an Internet Marketing question at
http://www.AskDonnaGunter.com. Read about running an online biz at her blog,
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