Internet Psychologist Graham Jones
From the media? CLICK HERE FOR MY MEDIA INFORMATION

Search this site


 

Get these
articles sent
directly to you
each day

Your Email Address:

 

RSS Feed RSS Subscribe

Add to Google

Add to My Yahoo

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add to Technorati Favorites

Link With Us - Web Directory

blogoriffic.com

BRDTracker

Add to Pageflakes

http://www.wikio.com



Add To Google Toolbar

 

Previous Articles

Internet Marketing :: Your site needs to be secure...


Internet Psychology :: People focus on the negativ...


Internet Marketing :: It's all about psychology


Internet Marketing :: Take a tip from Google


Internet Psychology :: Sailors' stories rule the a...


Blogging :: Don't write - listen instead


Internet Marketing :: Don't look at the obvious


Internet Marketing :: How to improve conversion ra...


Online Business :: We are not alone


Blogging :: Shock news from Microsoft on blogging...


 

Archives

 

Topics

Internet Marketing

Blogging

Social Networking

Internet Shopping

Online success

Internet Psychology

Future of the Internet

 

 

Your Free Guide
to Internet Success

 

Free Guide To Internet Success

 

Claim your free guide to success in the age of the Internet

 

Name

Email

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

What Yahoo and Tesco can teach Internet marketers about your online business

In the past 24 hours we have seen record profits of £2.6 billion announced from supermarket giant Tesco yet Yahoo has posted an 11% fall in profits at a mere £71m. Google, on the other hand is making around £525m every three months. Tesco's main competitor, Sainsbury's, only managed "a sharp rise" in profits of £267m last year - one tenth of Tesco's. So here we have it - Tesco is clearly beating Sainsbury's hands down, while Google is doing the same to Yahoo. But look at the market shares. Google gets 48% of search engine traffic while Yahoo gets 28%. Meanwhile, Tesco gets 31% of supermarket shoppers while Sainsbury's gets 16%. In both these cases the successful company (Tesco and Google) gets around twice the market share of their main competitor, yet in both instances they are getting around ten times the profits. In other words, doubling your market share doesn't double your profits, it clearly has a much more substantial effect. So, one way of helping boost your online business is to look at your share of your market place and then work out some steps which will help you increase that share. Small increases in market share can have substantial effects on your bottom line.

Labels: ,


Add this story to:

| BlinkList | BlogMarks | del.icio.us | Digg | Furl | Google | LinkRoll | Lycos |

| ma.gnolia | Netscape | Newsvine | Ning | reddit | Simpy | Spurl | Squidoo | Wink |


Email this story to your friends:

 

Readers' Comments:

Post a Comment

 

 

Permalink: What Yahoo and Tesco can teach Internet marketers about your online business