Archive for the ‘Online marketing’ Category


What is so special about small business blogs?

Small businesses have special reasons to consider blogging. A business blog is a special tool for small business in particular – is it relevant for yours?

Something very significant happened with the Internet.  Businesses can only sell to customers in their addressable market.  Usually, this is a geographic distance from your outlet, and expansion means branch offices, distribution centres, franchises – whatever it takes to get your product or service in front of your customer.  Trouble is, our customers aren’t necessarily evenly spread (so surf stores are in range of a beach, in other words, near where their customers are).  The range of products and services that could be profitably carried depended on having enough customers within your addressable market. You don’t see surf stores in Alice Springs, and you don’t see book stores that sell just Noddy books.

The Internet really changed things for small business. A lot of the change is to do with the size of market that can now be addressed.  Small business has the opportunity to choose its audience – the more specific, niche and high value the better.

Interest in blogging is rapidly growing, and in all the rush its possible people aren’t tuning into the extraordinary opportunity that business blogging represents for many small businesses. Why is it an opportunity?  Well, Business Week describe why  it in Blogs Will Change Your Business.

You have an amazing advantage. Seth Godin makes the case that small is the new big so well that I suggest you read it right now.

A blog is a way to establish a conversation with your audience. Five years ago, even though the Internet let you establish a ‘global’ presence, acquiring a customer base was tough. Blogging has changed the game – cost is no longer the barrier to entry, content is.

So, you need to find out about business blogging. If you have a small business with a product or service that is of interest to a market outside your own geographic area (and you can see a way to sell your product / service to them), then you will be amazed at what you find.


Great example of email marketing

I was in Borders on Saturday, first time in their new store. What they do with email marketing is a great example for any business.

At the checkout, I was asked if I wanted to join the email list as they sent out offers from time to time. Simple, and effective.

On Monday morning, this arrived in my email:
Borders Email Coupon

What I really like about this approach is:

  • it was quick and easy to get involved (I just told them my email address and they wrote it down for me)
  • the turnaround was excellent
  • the offer itself was simple and powerful – 20% off another book, if I update my profile with favourite subjects

So they make me an offer in return for getting better information, that they will use to personalise their email in the future.

And if you think this type of email marketing must cost a bomb, it doesn’t. Small companies can start using email marketing just as effectively. Sure Borders have some fancy graphics, but that isn’t really that important. They’ve put together a good offer, targetted at the right person (me!) and executed with speed.

Small business has a fantastic opportunity with email marketing – are you building your own verified opt-in email lists and using email marketing effectively? If not, its a great time to look into it and perhaps start a trial.


Online marketing

I’m really excited by the opportunities the Internet offers small business. What’s changed in the last decade? It’s the ease with which we can now offer goods and services to broader markets. What’s changed just in the last few years? Well, the investment required has dropped, and is now easily within reach.

So many small businesses have responded to the opportunity by getting out onto the web. But what are the results? Effective marketing has such an influence on ANY business. So if the results from a web presence aren’t strong enough, sooner or later the conversation turns to … online marketing.

Marketing online is similar to marketing ‘offline’ in some ways, and very different in others. One familiar truth remains – there are a seemingly endless variety of marketing strategies and tactics that can part you from your cash (at an alarming rate).

For example, could your business gain from effective use of … pay per click advertising, search engine optimisation and organic search rankings, link-building, email autoresponders, web copywriters, affiliates, keyword analysis, content marketing? The list goes on, and you can spend a lot of time just trying to figure out what is involved, let alone how much it costs and what benefits it might offer you.

Its not even a case of some marketing approaches are better than others – like any marketing, it depends on what you want to achieve and how you go about it. There is also a strong element of personal choice. For example, some business owners instinctively avoid the more direct forms of marketing, and prefer to focus on permission based marketing or influencing based strategies.

Whatever your personal preferences and circumstances, small business owners are going to benefit if they can sift through the options and identify what will work most effectively for them. The good news is, just because you are online you don’t need to be a technical guru, and you don’t need to learn everything at once.

Overall I’m asking you to consider this question – are you marketing effectively online? If not, could you benefit by learning more and applying specific strategies and tactics to improve your business? My take is that as the Internet continues to mature, the businesses that are good at online marketing will reap substantial benefits. So its worth putting in some effort in this area.

No doubt you’d like to be inspired rather than confused. To understand complex areas, I always find it useful to have a strong framework to organise my thoughts. So for online marketing, I propose this framework to you:

Presence Optimise your presence on the Internet.
Traffic Build traffic for your web presence.
Interest Interest your prospects and engage with their buying process.
Conversion Convert interest into sales.
Follow Up Follow up your customers and prospects appropriately.

You won’t find this approach in any marketing text books. I’ve developed it because it helps a small business owner to look at their business online, while mapping strongly to the way ‘offline’ business works.

For example, your business will have some kind of presence (such as retail premises, office or physical catalog), and you need traffic. Once potential customers express interest in your product or service, you need to respond with appropriate information to help them decide. At some point, you succeed in converting interest to a purchase. Following up includes both customers (for after sale service or referrals) and prospects (who may still be interested in your products). The same model is very useful for an online business, although the strategies and tactics at each stage may vary substantially.

I’ll be posting more about online marketing for small business, using this 5 part model to put it all in context. Perhaps you will be inspired to step back and update/develop your Online Marketing Plan (or e-Marketing Plan). Or perhaps you’ll identify a few tactics you want to start with right away.

For those interested in going into this in more detail, I’m cross-posting to my blog at PublicityShip. At some stage I plan to offer an email based course for small business owners – if you have ideas on what you’d like to see covered, please leave a comment or send me an email.


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