Article: Make sure your website is up, working well and very attractive before you invest in pay-per-click marketing, social media managers or anything else that is designed to funnel traffic to your website. If people are unable to use your website, they will not buy. Post free content on your website, such as short video clips, tutorials, interesting articles, blogs, advice or a free e-book. Make a landing page, so that they you can get their contact information to offer them specials and promotions in the future via email. Facebook, Foursquare, Pinterest and Twitter are valuable ways to attract new customers. Post sales, new products and links to sign up for your free content on the social media pages.  Social media accounts are free; however, there is some cost in time and expertise in maintaining them consistently. Just like blogging, the value is in frequent use. Follow other businesses and try cross promoting on Facebook or other accounts. Blasting your followers with specials every day may not be the best way to get regular readers, but posting other interesting content between sales posts is a good marketing strategy. Try the Facebook ads and promoted posts to get new people interested in your site. You can use behavioral marketing to target your ideal customer demographics. Think of social media as a way to connect with your customers. You will attract reliable, repeat customers if you develop a relationship with them. You will increase the “instant gratification” of the purchase and convince potential customers of the value they are getting.  Make sure you can afford to offer the shipping. Consider that sometimes adding a free product or shipping will work just as well as taking a discount. People like to have value added to their purchase, but still feel like they are getting a quality product. Give something to people who purchase your product via email or Facebook. They are likely to be more pleased with their purchase and refer others. Search engine marketing requires you to create an account with Bing, Google, Yahoo or another engine and pay a small fee to have results on the first page. Use your products and customer preferences to choose your keywords.   PPC marketing asks you to bid for a per click price. You may be outbid by other companies for the same keyword or keyword combination. Your website will appear higher and attract more customers and clicks if you fine-tune your keywords over time. Remember that very common key words may be too expensive to justify with a small business marketing campaign. Try long-tail keywords (2 or more words) that are more specific to your region, products or brands. Use WordStream’s free keyword tool to research popular keywords before you bid for them on Google AdWords or Microsoft Ad Center.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Spend money on the back end of a website. Offer them something for free. Start social media accounts. Consider offering free shipping. Give a well thought out loyalty bonus. Buy pay-per-click (PPC) marketing.

Pour a few tablespoons of dishwashing liquid in the bucket, until the water is soapy.  Use a professional-grade cleaner, such as Vinyl Renu, if the siding surface shows excessive signs of oxidation. Soapy water may not be adequate to rub the vinyl siding clean on it's own. Other cleaning mixtures include:  2/3s water, and 1/3 white vinegar makes a gentle, natural, and safe cleaner. For tougher jobs, 2/3 cup powdered detergent, 1/3 cup powdered household cleaner (TSP), and around a quart of bleach with a gallon of water. (Note -- not safe if you have animals!) Natural cleaners like Simple Green, or oxygen bleach, can fight tough stains without damaging your lawn and landscaping. The best way to clean siding is by hand -- but you won't be able to reach without an extending pole. They are available at hardware stores, such as Home Depot in the U.S. You can also find a pole online on popular retail websites, such as Amazon. A typical pole costs less than US $50. The brush will be attached to your extending pole. To make sure the sizes match, you may prefer to buy the pole and the handle together. Don't use the rough or course brushes -- you want something soft to prevent scratching. Wash what you can reach from the starting point, re-dipping your brush whenever it starts to dry. The brush should be dripping wet at all times. Don't worry about the streaks yet -- this is why you work from the bottom up -- it keeps everything wet for the eventual rinse off. For serious cleanings, you can load a pressure washer with your soap mixture first, spraying the whole house down before attacking with the brush. Once you have washed all the areas you need to, clean your equipment, put them away, and leave your house to dry on its own.
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One-sentence summary --
Fill a large bucket with warm water and dissolve soap or cleaner in it. Buy a long extending pole, if you do not already have one. Get a soft-bristle brush with a screw-on handle. Soak the brush into the warm, soapy water and scrub from the bottom up. Let the house dry on its own.