Using the Internet is crucial to the well-being of just
about any business, and that will be proven again during the
final quarter of the year.
I have written before about the value of using the
Internet to further your business goals, and that is going
to ring especially true during this final quarter of the
year.
Some of you will be skeptical since I work for a company
that makes its money from people going online. That,
however, does not make the point any less valid. Sometimes,
the numbers speak loudest:
- The US Commerce Department says that, last quarter,
online sales posted their highest increase in three
years
- Forrester Research and Shop.org predict that web sales
will go up by 22% this year
- Digital cash registers will ring to the tune of more
than $170-billion this year
“That’s just great, Alex,” you say. “But my
clientele is local; the Internet is for people who want
things that are not available here.” There is some
validity to that argument, but it is an incomplete answer.
Pick a business and there is an online application that will
help in some way. Take food delivery, for instance, not an
enterprise typically noted for using the Internet. Would it
help your eatery if hungry diners could go to your web site
and see an online menu instead of calling so your staff can
walk them through the options? What if they could email an
order? What if they could also pay by credit card? All of
this without your workers having to break stride, without
the risk of someone’s bad phone manners chasing away
business, and without the possibility of a customer being
stuck on hold.
This scenario can be extended to almost any other
industry, especially the ones that, at first glance, seem
poorly suited to the Web, such as service-based companies.
For example, a homeowner who needs an exterminator or wants
lawn care will have dozens of options. It is not likely that
this consumer will contact each service provider, so your
business may be eliminated before it even has a chance to be
considered.
Simply going online is no guarantee that consumers will
find you, but increasingly, people turn to the Internet when
looking for services of all types, even services that are
available locally. Let’s say the homeowner mentioned above
types “pest control, my city” or “lawn care services
my community” into a search engine. If you have a website,
it should come up in the results. Prospects can see what you
offer, compare your services versus the competition, even
fill out an online form with contact information. The
salesperson in each of you will see that a lead, and a good
one at that. The website didn’t close the deal, but it did
open the door.
Still, you’re not convinced. Business has been good and
local customers already know how to find you and are
familiar with the product line. Does that mean you don’t
want more business? And, how do newcomers to town learn
about you? Let’s take that a step further; is your product
limited to a locale clientele? The food delivery and
homeowner examples above are, by nature, going to be
geographically restricted. But, what if the food company
carries certain spices, sauces, or marinades? What if the
exterminator sells pest control products? What if the lawn
care company also carries a line of fertilizers or
herbicides?
Anthony Jordan is a plumbing contractor in South
Carolina, but has regular customers in the Midwest, Rocky
Mountains, and West Coast. Obviously, those customers
don’t expect Jordan to make house calls, but when looking
for drain cleaners and related products, they go online and
that’s where they find Jordan. Online sales are not the
biggest portion of Jordan’s business, but they are sales
he would not otherwise make.
If there is a ‘but’ in this, it’s that designing
and marketing a website takes time and money. Customers
won’t show up just because your website was built. Whether
it’s through paid advertising or including your web
address on letterheads, business cards, and all other
printed materials, you have to get the word out. You also
have to do it consistently because the Internet is a crowded
marketplace. Then again, isn’t that where your business
should be? As the famed philosopher Yogi Berra once said in
describing a restaurant, “Nobody goes there anymore
because it’s too crowded.” Think about that for a
second.
The coming holiday season is likely to notch a new set of
online sales records and if you don’t already have a
website, that spending will pass you by. That’s okay; the
online business doesn’t end with holiday buying. The fact
is that, with each passing month, people are spending more
and more online. How many more months are you willing to let
pass your business by?
|
About The Author
Alex Lekas is VP / Corporate Communications for AIT
(www.ait.com),
a web hosting company serving 191,468 business domains
in 107 countries
|
This article was posted on October 08, 2005