Getting Your Small Business Online
considered as a separate profit center. Maintaining, promoting
and running a web store requires many man-hours and certain amount
of specialty knowledge. Very likely a small percentage of your existing
customers will shop online. They know you and are comfortable with
your physical setting. The web store would be an added convenience
rather than main shopping venue for them especially if you allow in
store pickup.
On the other hand, you're likely to attract a new set of customers
such as those out of town or state. They might also have different
income or education levels compared to existing customers who'll
respond to different marketing techniques.
Brochure Ware
Ford.com (http://ford.com/en/default.htm) is a type of brochure ware website. They don't sell directly
on online but fill it with information to educate buyers and help
find a suitable dealer. The website also serves investors, job seekers,
press or anyone interested in the company. This is very typical of
companies who sell their products through franchisees, agents or dealers.
On first impression, brochure ware sites do not seem to be a powerful
reason to be online. That was true of many early websites. However
businesses are realizing the Internet is a fairly inexpensive way
to educate customers. Buyers also like the feeling of first hand contact
with the manufacturer especially if the product is of significant
value like a car.
More websites are also beginning to utilize their website as an outlet
to gain feedback, announce jobs, post press releases, give investors
up to date information and even as a marketing channel. Consider M&M's
(http://www.mms.com/us/bw/).
While they do have a web store, their main website has a lot of marketing/advertising
related activity such as games, e-cards, wall papers, screensavers
all around their latest commercial, a clever way to increase an advertising
campaign's effectiveness.
Customer Service
These are websites that exist as a contact point for your customer.
Typically utility companies and software developers have such a website.
These websites offer the customer a convenient way to review their
account, pay their bills, and ask for help or request a quote.
In most cases, a website will have a combination of these elements.
Usually, the main reason for a company to be online determines the
website's theme.
After considering your reasons and responsibilities, you are ready
to assemble the parts and start getting your website off the ground.
Domain name
Your domain name is like your online address. Domain names need to
be registered through an ICANN accredited registrar such as GoDaddy.com
(http://godaddy.com). Domain names
cost anything from $8.95 and up, depending who you register with.
How should you choose your domain name? Typically, businesses use
their company name; example Microsoft.com that+ instantly identifies
the business. Sometimes, your product or brand name is more prominent
than your business name so you'll want to use the brand name.
Or you could register it all. It could pay to register more than one
domain name and routing them all to a single website. Doing this will
ensure that you get maximum exposure and coverage, making it easy
for your market to locate you online with a name that they best remember
about your business.
Some experts advise to register a keyword rich domain name. This
means a domain name that is composed of likely words someone might
use when searching for a product similar to yours. For example if
you sell work boots, steel-toe-boots.com is a keyword rich domain.
The idea is, search engines are more likely to pick up and position
your website fairly high in a search. However, search engine technology
is focusing more on website content. We'll cover more about
search engine positioning later.
Domain names are universal, meaning anyone in the world can register
a name and it is first come, first serve. Many common English words
and terms have long been registered. Often, you'll find the
domain of choice is already taken. If so, you'll have to modify
or rethink your name. You could try to approach the existing owner
of the domain to see if they'll sell it to you. This is however
unlikely if the domain is a highly desired one or is home to an active
website.
Another alternative is to look for expired domain names. These are
names that have previously been registered but been 'released'
either due to closing of the website or failure to renew on time.
Some believe if you find a popular existing domain name, you would
jumpstart the hits to your website. Sometimes you'll find gems
among expired names but you'll have to exercise caution particularly
if the domain is a misspelling or very close to a copyrighted name.
A good place to search for expired names is DeletedDomains.com (http://www.deleteddomains.com).
Web Hosting
Just like your business needs a premise to operate from, your website
needs to reside on a web server. There are numerous companies who
rent out computer space to businesses and individuals to serve web
pages therefore known as web hosts. They provide and maintain the
hardware and software to run and present your website online. You
can also host your website from your own computers however there is
extensive cost involved and rarely do small businesses benefit from
doing so, especially if the website is new.
Many designers offer web hosting as a package. Remember, if you decide
to change designers or bring it in house, you'll have to rely
on the designer's good faith to access your website files while
you move your website. Though not always a problem, moving web hosts
can be stressful. Be sure to read our exclusive on changing web hosts
(http://www.hostvoice.net/?art-move)
and our article, "Don't Make These Hosting Mistakes!"
(http://www.hostvoice.net/?art-mistakes).
Finally, when ready to purchase web-hosting plans, you can quickly
find them in our top
web hosting showcase.
Now that we've covered the basics, it's time to develop
the website itself. Join us in our next installment, when we'll
go through
The development process
Managing your website
Getting Your Business Online - Part 2
In Getting Your Business Online - Part 1, we discussed
The importance of planning of your website, the reasons for getting
online and the type of websites a business has.
We also discussed choosing and obtaining a domain name and Web Hosting
This installment, we continue with Developing your website and Managing
and Maintaining your website
Developing Your Website
This is probably the most exciting part, you finally see your website
taking shape. Before jumping in, who's going to build it? Getting
your business online requires a certain amount of time, expertise
and money. Most of us would rather have a hands-off approach and outsource
the job of creating and managing our businesses' online presence.
Cost is on the other hand important to small businesses. To save money
most will try to do it themselves. Each approach has it's own
plus and minuses.
In-House vs. Outsource
When you outsource to a web designer, you are bound by their knowledge
and capacities of handling the job. Not all designers are created
equal. Consider how much they know about e-commerce if that's
your plan. How much to they know about business in general? Some designers
are excellent in programming and design but fail to understand your
business. One design and development company to look at would be Design
Velocity (http://designvelocity.com). Their team consists of designers
and marketing professionals so you get to tap the expertise of both.
Consider also how involved you want to be with your website. Do you
want to be able to update it yourself such as news and announcements?
Do you want to be able to maintain your inventory yourself? There
are many solutions out there that allow businesses to post news or
update their catalog without the need to extensively involve the designer.
In this case, a good solution is to outsource work that is time-consuming
and what you are not familiar with such as creating the website interface,
scripting and the underpinning software applications and website hosting.
If you choose to do it yourself, remember to factor in the cost of
software and time to learn the application, time to install, build
and manage the website. Also time to learn about keyword optimization,
security and other technical items. If you are familiar with them,
chances are your time cost to do it yourself will be low. Otherwise
the cost becomes more than it would to outsource because it'll
take you away from doing what you do best.
In almost all cases, it's best to manage customer interaction
in house to build customer confidence. The rule of thumb is to let
professionals handle the technical details of creating your online
presence and keeping in house your core business operations. Think
of it this way. If you build a new store, you would hire a building
contractor. In this case, your web designer would be your building
contractor.
Site Map
In beginning the design process it's best to draw up a site
map to guide yourself. The site map relies heavily on your objectives
(More on this in Part 1 - Why are you getting online?) and illustrates
how your pages link together. Decide what your visitor sees on the
main page. Should there be an introduction page, company page or a
news and specials page? Regardless what your focus is, your pages
should be simple to navigate. A quick draft will give you a bird's
eye view of the site and helps to pull the pages together.
This map should also be made into a page on your website to aid search
engines as their robots visit the site. More on this in Part 3.
Design
Many times new websites strive so hard to achieve their individual
look or design that they lose sight of the fact people online are
used to finding what they want instantly. Unlike a brick and mortar
business, there's no one to help them as they enter the premises.
Some key things to consider when designing your website:
Familiarity
Ease of Navigatio
Speed
Familiarity
Many websites on the Internet have a common way to display pages (Fig
1). If a designer gets too creative it disrupts the visitor's expectations.
If they don't find it in a few seconds they'll leave and the business
loses a sale.
Fig 1
Logo |
Advertisements,
Shopping Cart, Customer Service or Important Links |
Main Menu and
important links. If it's a store you'll find store departments
or product category links. |
The main body of the page is usually dedicated
to product, news, deals, announcements and so on |
Company
information, Privacy Policy, Terms of use |
Ease of Navigation
If you have to make the layout drastically different, keep your key
links highly visible or available. Put the most important links as
high up on the top of the page as possible because many people still
don't scroll.
Don't clog your pages with advertisements, yours or others.
That is a major put off and just looks unprofessional. If you participate
in affiliate programs, use your banners wisely; set a section in your
side bar for partners and affiliates. It's easy to clog your
pages; there's so much to tell but remember to focus your website.
Keep the most important items the most visible. Review your objectives.
What do you want the site or page to achieve? Buy your product, read
your article, buy your affiliate product, give you their email?
Don't make your fonts too small; the computer monitor isn't
conducive for reading. Don't make it too large either. Use headlines
to emphasize the most important points only.
Keep text length to a minimum. People don't have time to read
through a web page where there's endless scrolling to be done.
Learn how to write effectively for the website (http://www.webreference.com/content/writing/).
Learn what the elements of good web design are. Vincent Flander's
Web Pages That Suck (http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/) is a great
resource to help keep you away from what will hurt your business.
Speed
It goes hand in hand with ease of navigation. Despite the growth of
high speed Internet access, the majority is still on dial up. If your
web pages load too slowly, your visitors leave and you lose. The biggest
way to ensure your website loads quickly is less graphics, less audio
or flash extensive website. Websiteoptimization.com (http://www.websiteoptimization.com/services/analyze/)
has a very handy tool to help evaluate how quickly your website loads
at different speeds. It also gives you summaries about the size and
number of images all designed to identify your speed blocks.
Managing & Maintaining Your Website
So! Your website up and running. Your work is far from done. A website
is a live thing and requires a fair amount of maintenance.
New Content
The biggest thing to keeping a website alive is the freshness. People
are easily bored. If your content hasn't changed in as little
as a few weeks, they make the assumption they've seen all there
is to see and won't be back. Some ways to keep your site fresh
new are
Adding new products
Announcing company news
Featuring one product per week
Give a new hint each week how to use your product
Technology & Security
As technology advances you'll also want to adjust the site so
it will load properly. Hackers and viruses also unfortunately exploit
technology advances. You'll need to close the gaps or be aware
of them. If you outsource your web development, the company you hired
should take care of software updates and security patches. If they
don't, you should consider looking for one who does. Try HostVoice
(http://hostvoice.net) to obtain quotes from reliable web hosts. It
only takes a few minutes and one form. If you use email, you're
open to all sorts of viruses pretending to be customers. Be informed.
Keep up with security threats and virus warnings even if you've
got someone to handle it for you.
Customer Privacy
Keeping your customer information private is not only a good idea
but also a must according to the law. If you collect customer information
even a simple name & email database, you should have a privacy
policy (http://www.internetbasedmoms.com/articles2/privacy-policy-creating.html)
in place.
Privacy policies are only a start. You need to ensure you do all
you can to protect your customers information. Again, you need to
be sure your web host or designer is up to date with website security
issues and they plug the hole in a timely manner.
Data Integrity
Last but not least, always prepare for disaster. After you've
worked hard to build your site, traffic and customer base, what happens
when you visit your website one day and find you cannot access it
at all? Worst still, you're told all data has been wiped out.
You not only lose business, you lost a lot of time and effort. Hackers,
viruses, hardware failure, natural or unnatural disasters and so much
more, can easily corrupt data.
The key? Backup frequently and don't rely solely on your web
host's backup. Learn how to make your own. If you hire a designer,
include in your service package a scheduled backup routine. Get a
copy of that backup so you'll always have two sets in two different
places.
By now you've thoroughly planned and built your website, it's
time to promote. Join us in our final installment when we cover the
different ways of website promotion including:
Pay Per Click Advertising
Linking
Search Optimization
Newsletters
Banners and Offline Advertising.
Getting Your Business Online - Part 3
In Part 1 and Part 2, we walked through
· The importance of planning of your website, the reasons
for getting online and the type of websites a business has.
· We also discussed choosing and obtaining a domain name and
· Web Hosting
· Developing your website; doing it in house or outsourcing
it, good design practices and
· Managing and Maintaining your website
As promised, in our last installment we'll help you through
the basics of Promoting your website using:
· Search Engine Optimization and Linking
· Pay Per Click Advertising
· Newsletters
· Banners
· Articles
· Offline Advertising
Search Engine Optimization
It's every web master's dream to be on the first page
of a search result and rightfully so. Searching is one of the most
frequent activities on the Internet (http://www.spiderhelp.com/)
but most websites never make it near the top 5 pages. According to
the Association for Interactive Marketing (http://www.interactivehq.org/industry/glossary.asp),
Search Engine Optimization is "the process of choosing targeted
keyword phrases related to a site, and ensuring that the site places
well when those keyword phrases are part of a Web search."
To do that, you'll need to review (again) your objectives and
your product. You might find there is more than one relevant keyword
or key phrase you think best relates to your website. That is ok but
avoid ending up with a huge list. How do you narrow them down to the
most relevant? This requires a combination of discipline, keyword
research and good old trial and error.
Look at your list of keywords. Do they include typical marketing
speak? Industry jargon? Leave them out. No one ever uses them and
marketing speak just doesn't sell. Here's a short and
sweet article at SearchEngineGuide.com about buzzwords vs. effective
keywords (http://www.searchengineguide.com/goetsch/2003/1204_dg1.html).
Think natural language. How they would express themselves if talking
to friends, family or someone on the street.
Once you cut out the tech and marketing speak, research it to find
out how often the keyword is being used. The more often tells you
the keyword is popular and is a good keyword. On the other hand, it
also means more websites are competing for the searcher's attention.
Many webmasters have resorted to optimizing using a less than first
place but still very popular keywords.
Now you got some solid keywords, apply them in your Meta tags such
as title tags, description and even Alt tags. Also don't forget
to use the effectively throughout your content. Search Engine Watch
(http://www.searchenginewatch.com/webmasters/index.php)
is a resource to help get started on optimization and search engine
submission.
Linking
Search engines today put a good amount of weight on links. Not links
from your site but links to you. This is based on the popularity principle;
the more people talk about you or find you interesting enough to put
a link on their website, the more likely you have something really
good to offer.
Of course, your site has to be worth linking to in the first place.
Then you need to find websites who are willing to link to you. Visit
the sites and politely ask the webmasters if they'd like to
trade links with you. Now you might think, there are so many out there!
I'll just harvest the emails and put them on a one shot mailing
list. No go! This could land you in a spammer's list. Reciprocal
link requests by email are a very touchy thing because of so much
spam going around. Spend time to visit and research the website and
craft a personal email. This makes them more likely to read your email
and hopefully more willing to responding.
Beware of wrong ways to find link backs such as free for all pages
and link farms. Spider Food (http://www.spider-food.net/link-popularity.html)
has an excellent tutorial on this issue. Learn them lest you do your
website more harm than good.
Pay Per Click Advertising
It might seem at this point optimization and building links takes
a lot of hard work and time. What can you do if you need your website
to be seen right now? As with most any promotion, paid placement can
get you there. Pay Per Click Advertising (PPC) is paying to be included
in a search based on your keywords. Depending how much you're
willing to spend, you be very visible in a search result every time
your choice keyword is utilized. Most popular search engines clearly
distinguish these under a "Sponsored listing" section.
The best thing going for PPC advertising is you pay only for visitors.
It is assumed if someone searches for something they're a pre-qualified
target, not casual surfer. The not so hot part is the most popular
keywords such as "hosting" can cost $10 per click. It's
pretty much like paying a guy on the street $10 to visit your store
and he may not even buy anything.
So how could a small business afford this? For one, you might want
to use it as a kick-start campaign or seasonal according to the season
of your business, or holiday seasons. Another way is to buy the lesser-used
keywords, those usually cost less or very specific key phrases that
only a person who's truly interested will use. Sound contradictory?
Yes and no. You can use different keywords for optimization and pay
per click. Site Point (http://www.sitepoint.com/article/417)
has some good points about building your PPC strategy.
You might also want to consider paid inclusion (http://www.spider-food.net/paying-to-play.html)
but this can be very costly for a small business. If you do, choose
the one search engine you think is most promising. Remember, a combination
of optimization and wise pay per click strategy works better than
relying on one method alone. For further reading, visit Pay Per Click
Search Engines (http://www.payperclicksearchengines.com/search-engine-tips.shtml)
Other Online Advertising
So far, we've concentrated on search engine related promotion
tactics. Some other ways to promote online are,
Banners
Probably the oldest form of online advertising. Banners have been
deemed distractive, ineffective even downright rude when it appears
as pop-up, pop-under, fly-in and every imaginary form that's
in your face. The demise of banner advertising has been predicted
over and over but banners still command a huge section of the online
advertising market (http://www.internetnews.com/IAR/article.php/3293321).
Since most small businesses don't have a very large budget,
how do you maximize your banner advertising dollars? Don't advertise
where it's not relevant. It's tempting to advertise on
large popular websites or portals but you run the risk of casting
your net too wide. In the end your ads fail to impress the viewer.
Choose the sites wisely, such as those where your target is most likely
to gather. You could also barter for advertising space with other
complimentary websites. Whether you use pop-ups or other interactive
ads, keep in mind these usually frustrate viewers. Some even see it
as trickery because they happen to click on your ad as it pops up,
not the link they wanted. Weigh the return and objectives of your
advertising campaign carefully.
Newsletters
Again, be sure to choose the right newsletter, and consider the readership.
Also look at frequency and placement. Will one ad bring you results?
The placement of your ad is also important. Does the newsletter cram
all the ads in one section where it's easy to skip over or is
it well distributed over strategic parts of the newsletter? If the
newsletter is formatted well e.g. requiring readers to scroll to the
bottom to obtain a weekly giveaway, then a lower placement can work
yet save you money.
You might also want to find out the publication schedule. Using this,
you can tailor your ad to the topic, increasing the ad's effectiveness.
Next, look at the number of ads per publication. The more there are,
the easier you get lost.
Articles
Contributing informative articles to newsletters or websites is a
good way to get your name out there too. Not only is it easier on
the wallet it can establish your business as an expert. Do remember
to write good articles the reader can use and benefit from rather
than making it sound like a brochure.
This concept can even be carried a step further into a workshop or
tele-seminar.
Offline Advertising
Just because your website is online doesn't mean it must be
confined there. Include your website as much as possible in other
parts of your business. If you have a physical presence, display banners,
signs and posters in store. Have your URL printed on promotional items,
carry out bags, shirts, business card or on your vehicle.
If you advertise in the traditional media like newspapers don't
forget to include your URL too. Be creative. Tie in your offline campaigns
with your website for example giving an incentive for customers to
utilize a feature on the website, encourage asking for help online,
telling your customers you have a wider selection in your online store.
You could even have web only specials. Do keep in mind; you'll
be limiting your reach to those with Internet access in.
As we close this three part series, we hope we've given you
a meaningful kick-start to putting your business online. It is a large
project on all counts but with knowledge, research and perseverance,
we'll see you online soon.
Contributed By Boris Mordkovich, Director of Operations at MordComm,
Inc. (HostVoice | AdWatcher | PPCUniverse)
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