Skyline of Richmond, Virginia

24. Januar 2008

Online Marketing, the ‘Ifficient’ Way Entrepreneur Helps Companies Optimize Their Online Marketing

Sean McCormick started his this past September, but is already looking ahead five years when he hopes its revenues top $25 million. Then he’ll sell it and start a new - although he doesn’t know what that one will be quite yet. “Six years from now I’ll have another idea,” he said. “There’s so much developing in the interactive space every day that the next thing isn’t close to being created yet.”

Norwalk, CT January 24, 2008 — Sean McCormick started his this past September, but is already looking ahead five years when he hopes its revenues top $25 million. Then he’ll sell it and start a new - although he doesn’t know what that one will be quite yet. “Six years from now I’ll have another idea,” he said. “There’s so much developing in the interactive space every day that the next thing isn’t close to being created yet.”

Right now, - sending text messages to cell phones - “is kind of a buzz word when it comes to a strategy,” he said. “I think that in the next five years it won’t be just a buzz word, but will be a mature industry. And it might be the next thing for me to get into after this .”

His idea for his current came last when “I started reading articles and saw that a lot of companies being purchased by , and were -based companies,” he said. “I saw a large rift in the for mid-level companies - companies from $5 million to $30 million in . The companies and bought were only servicing the Fortune 500 companies, which left a huge rift in the for small- and medium-sized businesses to engage in .”

That’s where he’s focusing his 4-month-old that, he said, achieved profitability at the end of December, just three months after he started. “My goal was to break even within the first year and have 10 employees to our clients, but I’ll have 15 to 20 employees by then,” he said. “My goal was to have revenues around $2.5 million the first year, but we’re on pace to surpass that - it’s hard to say by how much right now.”

The 26-year-old McCormick calls his Ifficient because, he said, he’s ensuring his clients’ budgets work in the interactive space (the “I”) efficiently. “Companies are buying banner without optimizing their to ensure the highest click-through rate,” he said. “Everything we do has a initiative behind it, and if our clients aren’t happy with the results, they’re able to cancel the at any moment.”
So far, none of McCormick’s 35 clients have canceled their campaigns, he said. Those clients range from universities to package goods to clothing retailers. “We’re helping them increase their prospect database by putting targeted campaigns on sites that allow a user to request more information about a product.”

To do that, McCormick has merged with some spiffy technology that he said does two things. “The first is that it monetizes sites, which means sites can earn additional by partnering with us to integrate our ad serving into their page,” he said. “The second thing is that the technology validates the user that signs up for one of our . It checks the e-mail address to make sure it’s valid, matches up with the USPS database to ensure the address is valid, and validates the telephone number to make sure it’s a real number.”

Competitors “are doing this, but not the extent that we are,” he said. “We have a bunch of different databases that we subscribe to that allows us to check e-mail addresses, addresses and phone numbers.”

Lifestyle
McCormick grew up in Wilton, working in his parent’s small chain of pet stores in New Canaan, Darien and Stamford “doing anything from cleaning fish tanks to closing the books at the end of the day to managing a staff of seven employees in the Darien store.” What the experience taught him was that “I didn’t want to be in retail,” he said. “It’s really hard to build a when you’re competing with large department stores. I would prefer to build something that’s unique and really provides a to clients.”

He got a taste of that while he was attending the University of Rhode Island and started two small businesses with friends. “One was an odd-jobs here in Fairfield County, raking leaves, dump runs, doing cleaning-up projects.” The was called The 25th Hour, “that last hour you wish you had in the day to get everything done.”

The other he started with one of his college buddies was building sites for small companies. “We realized in 2003 and 2004 that the was starting to be a large component of small , but that small didn’t really have a lot of to spend. We created the sites for them that would include the copy and creative along with programming the site and getting it live.”
That still perks along, managing the portfolio of a dozen or so clients. “This is more of a lifestyle , one that you’re not building to sell, but building because you have a passion to continue doing it,” he said. But the effort led him and his buddy into their first after-college jobs. “We wound up at Market Models in Rhode Island, that did data modeling, building statistical models to predict where and when a would buy a product.”

McCormick was in the small ’s development efforts, generating leads and “hand raisers” to complement the predictive modeling done for clients. Hand raisers, he said, “are who want to find out more information about a product, asking to be contacted by direct mail, e-mail or by phone.” He stayed with the for three years between 2004 and 2007, when it was sold. He took his financial stake - “I owned a percentage of the ” - and invested it in Ifficient in Wilton to go after those hand raisers for his new ’s clients.

The sport of
That seed wasn’t quite enough to grow the as McCormick planned, so he began looking around for some angel , putting together a plan and “meeting with a lot of individuals I knew who had started their own ,” he said. “Everyone I met with was excited about the I was creating, but I only wanted one angel investor.”

Two months into his he found one, an he had visited while working for Market Models. “I showed him a demonstration of the ad we had created, and he agreed to invest in the ” - to the tune of half a million dollars. “He owns 15 percent of the ,” said McCormick, who owns a sizeable of the while his employees have different equity stakes, based on what they do.

Ifficient has seven employees in the 1,500-square-foot Wilton office. “I think we’ll outgrow our space within two years when we have about 12 employees. In five years we’ll have 25 to 30 employees,” McCormick said.

“The has been growing and expanding, surpassing my goals and vision for the ,” he said. “My goal is to build a that is the leader in lead generation and , and I’m going to do that within the next three years by building the best team, the most proficient and planners, and using the technology that we’ve already built that is better and stronger than any other.”

After he accomplishes all that, he’ll move on to create another . “I think with every you want a finish line where you say ‘I’ve achieved everything that I’ve set out to achieve with this , and it’s time to move on,’” he said. “I’m a lifetime . I don’t think I’ll ever hang it up. I love it too much. It’s the sport of .”

: www.ifficient.com

Provided by gh consulting - gordian hense

net-com
Stumbleupon Stumble it!

Similar Articles

Keine Kommentare bis jetzt



Einen Kommentar schreiben
Zeilen- und Absatzumbrüche werden automatisch eingefügt. Ihre E-Mail wird nicht angezeigt. Erlaubtes HTML: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

(benötigt)

(benötigt)