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8 Reasons To Get Your Local
Business Online
by Sharon Fling
If you're a local business owner, you've
probably been wondering what to do about the Internet.
Maybe you already have a website, sitting out in
cyberspace, dead as a doornail.
Or maybe you're thinking of getting your
business online, but you've heard it takes too much time
and money. It's tempting to ignore the issue and hope it
goes away, but there are some very good reasons
to get moving - and here are 8 of them:
GEOGRAPHIC TARGETING Geographic
targeting, or geotargeting, is the ability to target
consumers by geographical location. Using a combination
of I.P. address and/or zip code, ads can be presented to
only those consumers to live in certain geographic
locations. Localized advertising allows is very
targeted, and can be used to quickly and cheaply test
online campaigns. With the increasing availability of
demographic data, the targeting capabilities and options
are endless.
Geographic targeting, or , is the ability to target
consumers by geographical location. Using a combination
of I.P. address and/or zip code, ads can be presented to
only those consumers to live in certain geographic
locations. Localized advertising allows is , and can be
used to quickly and cheaply test online campaigns. With
the increasing availability of demographic data, the
targeting capabilities and options are endless.
IT'S A GREAT COMMUNICATIONS TOOL
The Internet is the ultimate communications
tool - fast and cheap. You can use it to communicate
with suppliers, resellers, and of course, your
customers. Some uses include: Send
discount coupons by email, reducing direct mail
costs.
Get customer feedback through email or
feedback form on website -- it's quick and it's easy, so
you're more likely to get customers to participate.
Send product information or
announcements via email or posted on website.
Send periodic newsletters with useful
information and special offers, or just to stay in
touch. To follow up with 1,000 customers through
direct mail would cost $340 or more for the
postage alone ... but with email it's virtually
free. And being able to interact directly with a
customer on a regular basis is priceless.
Put your brochure or catalog online, reducing
printing costs.
For some businesses, simply putting their catalog
online has saved them thousands of dollars a year in
printing and mailing costs.
Of course there will
always be people who want printed catalogs, and not
every customer will have email. But in terms of cost,
you simply cannot beat the economics.
TO MAKE CONNECTIONS
There are lots
of business people online, including people from your
local community. People from the same communities
have a way of finding each other online... and as
always, it's not what you know, but who.
Just as
you might pass out your card at a local chamber meeting,
you can do the same thing online with your signature
file - and a lot more people will see it.
It's also a lot more time-effective than
face-to-face networking. Rather than driving somewhere
and sitting through another boring chicken dinner, you
can get online and meet prospects and colleagues at
any time of the day or night.
Also, you
can develop a reputation very quickly online, adding to
your credibility and opening even more doors for
yourself - all without setting foot outside the house.
TO SERVE YOUR LOCAL CUSTOMERS
A
website can be a worthwhile investment even if it's just
an electronic version of the Yellow Pages: street
address, phone number, business hours, forms of payment
accepted, contact information. Put this same information
in the Yellow Pages, and guess what happens if you move
or change your hours or get a new area code? You know
the answer to that one.
But a website is dynamic
-- information can be updated at any time, plus
you're not limited to 2 or 3 lines worth of information.
And there are so many great ways to interact with your
customers, which is more interesting for them and
potentially very valuable to you. Here are some very
low-tech examples, very easily added to your website:
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions or
FAQ, is a popular term on the Internet. And in real
life, there are always questions you hear over and over
from your customers. These are the questions people have
about doing business with you, and you certainly want to
make it as easy as possible. Why not save everybody some
time and post often asked questions - and their answers
- on your website?
Visitor Polls
Invite your customers
to give their opinion about something of interest. For
example, a business that caters to parents who home
school their children posed the question: "Which
question are YOU asked the *most* about home schooling?"
This question is relevant to the target market and
something they most likely have experienced. It invites
them to participate and along the way, give their
opinion about something. But most important to the
business owner, it can be a source of incredibly
valuable information about the customer - and it's free.
It also makes your website more interesting (as long as
the poll changes often enough).
Discount Coupons
What better
incentive for someone to visit your website than to save
money? Customers love getting a bargain, and the great
thing about coupons is the customer usually has to buy
something to get whatever goodies the coupon offers.
Your coupon will especially motivate the prospect that
was already thinking of doing business with you. If
you're using a website building tool, it can easily be
added at the click of a mouse, and unlike a yellow page
coupon, you can change it anytime. These are a few
simple examples, and this list can easily be expanded:
order status, press releases, product information, a
searchable product database. Again, the possibilities
are endless.
TO GET PUBLICITY
Every business
needs exposure, and one of the best kinds is
media attention. If your business is
something new and different, send out a press release
that includes your URL -- you could get written up in
the local paper.
Even an ordinary business can
get media coverage if you can come up with the right
angle - perhaps a follow-up to a previous article? A
human interest story? The media is always looking for
interesting stories and if you're creative enough, maybe
yours could be one of them. And what better place for
the public to get more information than from your
website?
Perhaps you could sponsor a local
event, or do some volunteer work. Your business will get
the credit, along with a mention of the website URL.
The more places the public can find information
about your company, the better off you'll be. In our
increasingly wired society, having a website
makes it easy for more people to get information about
your company. And they can get it more quickly and
easily online.
BECAUSE YOUR CUSTOMERS ARE ONLINE
Did you know that 40-48 million adults went
online last year looking for local content? The average
local user is college educated, makes good money, and
likes shopping online. They are more likely to make
purchases than non-users of local content, either online
or offline. This demographic market is every business
owner's dream.
As more local information becomes
available online, people are starting to look at the
Internet as something useful instead of a passing fad.
Consumers are getting online in record numbers,
resulting in a critical mass of local users in top
markets, and spreading across communities of all sizes.
Chances are a number of your local prospects and
customers are part of this desirable demographic - and
that number will only increase.
SO IS YOUR COMPETITION Seventy-eight
percent (78%) of all U.S. small businesses are connected
to the Internet, and nearly 50% will continue to
maintain active, purposeful Web sites this year.
Analysts at http://www.emarketer.com
have predicted that 72% of small businesses will engage
in e-commerce by 2002, racking up an impressive $230
billion in total revenues. Maybe you think
nobody in your industry is using the Internet. But I
guarantee you, whatever your business, one of your
competitors is online and using the technology to
promote themselves - perhaps not locally yet, but it's
just a matter of time. If your competition is there, you
should be too.
So there you have it - 8 good reasons to get
your local business on the Web. (Notice I didn't
include the reason "to sell something". Too many
business owners have made that mistake - putting up a
website just to sell something. You have to give before
you receive. Nowhere is that more true than online.)
If small business is to survive, business owners
must learn to harness the power of the Internet
... or risk losing their remaining market share to
competitors that "get" technology. For those who
choose to ignore the "elephant in the living room",
hoping the Internet will go away, it's only going to get
worse in the days ahead.
Sharon Fling is the author of "How To Promote
Your Local Business On the Internet", and publisher
of "Local Business Today", an ezine that gives business
owners tips, tools and resources for targeting local
customers. Subscribe today and get a free re-brandible
ebook on local online marketing. Visit http://www.geolocal.com
or send any email to: subscribe@localbizpromo.com
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