Marketing Articles
4 ways to market your business online
You can't expect to compete as a small business today without taking advantage
of online marketing tools. Here's how to get started.
By Susan G. Hauser
June 5 2007: 6:10 AM EDT
(FSB) -- When Mark Bitterman, who calls himself a "selmelier," was trying to
pump up sales at his gourmet salt shop, he knew standard marketing techniques
such as radio ads and direct mail wouldn't be enough.
Seeking to capture the imagination of educated, adventurous gourmand
prospective customers, he instead set out to draw more people to his Web site
and his Portland, Ore., shop by writing an informative, entertaining and
provocative blog, "Salt News."
Bitterman knows that people, including reporters, visit both the site and the
blog, and many eventually come through the doors to see the 60 or so varieties
of salt.
"You can't tell if it gets you new traffic or if it just shapes the
expectations of those who come to the shop," he adds.
There are probably as many varieties of marketing a business and increasing
sales as there are versions of high-end salt. But you can't expect to compete
as a small business today without choosing from a growing arsenal of online
marketing tools. Here are four smart ways to get your business noticed on the
Internet.
1. Create a simple, effective Web site.
Does your Web site describe your product or service in a succinct, compelling
and visual fashion? Does it answer potential customers' needs in, say, less
than 10 seconds?
"Once they click to your Web site, you have between 5 and 8 seconds to
convince them you can help," says
Larry Bailin, CEO of
SingleThrow Internet Marketing in
Wall, N.J., and
author of the soon-to-be-published Mommy, Where Do
Customers Come From? (Larstan
Publishing).
Your home page should include the bare essentials, Bailin says. "People are
looking for exactly what they typed in, with calls to action," he says. "It's
critical that you address their issues on your home page. Get to the point and
get rid of anything that doesn't need to be there."
Your Web site should be easy to navigate and right on target, and a "Contact
Us" button should be prominent.
Also, make sure your site appears high on search engines' results pages. By
including keywords and terms in the code, your site will appear higher up on
Google and others. These days, any good web designer will be able to handle
such search engine marketing as part of the design and programming package.
Still, it's up to you to know the best way to describe your product and
service to potential customers and then turn them into qualified sales leads.
"Don't think too much about the bells and whistles," warns Bailin. "Think
about the connection that you're going to make and the way you're going to
help people. Make it clear to them and you'll win every time."
2. Become a blogger.
Entrepreneurs who
blog can reach a new audience by writing in a conversational way and
showing the human and personal side of their business, according to William
Beutler, senior online analyst for New Media Strategies, a Web 2.0 marketing
firm in Arlington, Va.
"Make your industry interesting to people by writing in a conversational
manner," he says. "Give people a glimpse into a world they don't know."
Beutler believes new businesses can benefit greatly from blogging. "There's
still an untapped audience in a lot of industries that are just starting to
grow," he says. "You have the potential to establish yourself as an expert in
the field just by being the first person to write something interesting about
your field."
3. Try podcasting.
Podcasting is a relatively simple technology that is being taken quite
seriously by some Fortune 500 companies. And all you really need to get
started is a decent microphone, a digital recorder and editing software.
Podcasts allow
you to make the most of your inner impresario, plus, your show and the
subscriber audience it may lure can give you an edge over competitors.
"Podcasting is still unique enough in many industries that it can allow you to
stand out a bit," says John Jantsch, a Kansas City, Mo., marketing coach and
author of Duct Tape Marketing: The World's Most Practical Small Business
Marketing Guide (Thomas Nelson).
"Podcasting makes a ton of sense for many small businesses for several
reasons," says Jantsch. "A voice, rather than simple words on a paper can
convey emotion and personality. It's much easier to connect to that."
Jantsch offers this tip for the podcaster trying to bring attention to his
business: "Invite a key strategic partner to be a guest on the podcast and
you're likely to get the attention of high-level experts, authors and even
prospects."
4. Smile, you're on YouTube!
YouTube is not just for classic media clips, cute pet tricks and bizarre dorm
antics anymore. With a YouTube link on your Web site and vice versa, you have
a new marketing tool. But don't be so crass as to post blatant infomercials
about your small business.
"What you want to post is something that the people on YouTube will find
interesting or useful and will therefore watch," says Michael Miller, the
Indianapolis-based author of YouTube 4 U (Que Publishing).
In his book, Miller cites the example of a pottery business that posted a
how-to video on throwing pots on a pottery wheel. "That's what gets them in
the door and then you direct them to your Web site from there."
Resources:
Online marketing
Original Article
Copyright 2007 Single Throw Inc.
Larry Bailin is a sought after public
speaker, author of the Internet Marketing
Book, “Mommy Where do Customers Come From?”® and CEO of Single Throw, an
Internet Marketing
consulting firm that has helped hundreds of businesses develop successful
Internet Marketing strategies.
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