| |
> Get Articles > Internet Marketing > A Web Based Marketing Strategy For Your Bricks and Mortar Business.
A Web Based Marketing Strategy For Your Bricks and Mortar Business.
Download as PDF
Robert Hopper
RoberttheBestOfBreed.com
The Best of Breed
http://www.theBestOfBreed.com
A Web Based Marketing Strategy For Your Bricks and Mortar Business.
By Robert Hopper
Let's imagine for a minute that you own a hardware store in
whatever city you happen to live. Now, this is a nice hardware
store, good product selection, friendly service and reasonably
successful. But…it's just one of a dozen or more hardware
stores in your town. And, if your town has a population of,
say 100,000 or more, yours is probably one of several dozen.
So, here's the problem. How do you set your business apart
from all the rest? How do convince prospective customers to
do business with you instead of your competition?
With the traditional linear marketing model, you would
advertise in things like newspapers, TV, radio, direct mailing,
bill boards, etc. If you've done any of this kind of advertising
you know how expensive it can be. And, you only have so
many column inches or so many seconds to make your case.
Because of the space and/or time constraints with traditional
advertising, people would try to at least drive a prospect to a
telephone number where somebody could provide more
information or mail out a sale brochure.
What if you wanted to run a different featured product or
service on a regular basis? Your advertising costs would eat
you alive unless you have some impressive profit margins, and
most retail businesses today don't. And, to make matters
worse, the Internet is quickly transforming people's shopping
and buying patterns.
I talk with retailers and small business owners almost daily.
And, not surprisingly, most of them think the Internet is the
biggest curse ever visited on their business lives. They think
that people are just logging onto the net, finding the cheapest
bargain out there and ordering it. In many cases that's true, but
in many cases it's not.
The problem is that most of these business owners are still
thinking in terms of the old linear marketing model. And
because they have been so embittered by what they perceive
the Internet to be doing to their businesses, they're ignoring it
instead of embracing its promise.
Many recent studies have shown that, by and large, shoppers
want to support their local merchants. They still enjoy the
human interaction, and they would like somebody locally to
hold accountable in the event of questions or problems.
There is also another interesting characteristic of online
shoppers today that, although not unique to the times, the
Internet has given them the opportunity to express it like never
before. And that is the desire for anonymity, or privacy, if you
will. And believe me, they will take full advantage of it. They
don't want to talk to a human until they are close to making a
buying decision. Shoppers today, and particularly those on the
Internet, are far more sophisticated shoppers than you are a
sales person.
These people have access to a vast array of information
resources, from email, to Usenet, to rebel websites, to
competitors, to whatever.
In short, your job is not so much to "sell" these people. Your
job is to make it as easy as possible for them to do business
with you. Forget the old linear model. There's a new kid on
the block. He's called "The Web-Centric Marketing Model."
While this model is similar in many respects to the linear
model, its focus is different and it offers much greater
economy.
Like the linear model, the same advertising channels are still
utilized, however the focus of your advertising isn't so much
to get people to buy your product or visit you store. Your
focus is to get them to your website; A much easier task than
trying to sell them, and one requiring much less expensive
advertising.
Your website is where a prospect can gather a great deal of
information about your products and services, and learn more
about you. And, because they're not being shadowed by a
sales person, they are likely to be more relaxed and to take
more time to shop.
If done properly, your website can be the most cost effective
marketing tool you'll ever have. Your customers can shop or
get information 24 hours a day. They're not tied to your
business hours. You can feed them with more information
about your products and services, and what makes you special
among your competition than you would ever be able to in
person.
Now, all that said, there are some definite do's and don'ts:
Don't get your 15 year old computer whiz nephew to design
your website. After all, you wouldn't let him design your TV
commercials would you?
Do have your website designed by a professional. It's not that
expensive, and it will pay you back many times over.
Don't skimp on the information. Information is what the
visitor came to your website to get. Don't disappoint them.
Do be sure the information you provide is solid, to the point
and helps your visitor make an informed buying decision.
Here again, you might want to hire the services of a
professional copywriter.
Don't oversell. After all, one of the main reasons they came to
your site in the first place was to avoid the hype and the high-
pressure sales tactics.
Do provide compelling reasons why the visitor should do
business with you rather than your competition. This is where
you set yourself apart from all the rest and establish your USP,
or Unique Selling Proposition.
Don't leave your visitor hanging once you've convinced them
to do business with you.
Do make it as easy as possible for your customers to do
business with you. Accept online credit card transactions,
electronic and fax checks, phone orders, mail-in orders, etc.
Give them as many choices as possible.
If you thought Internet marketing was just for the virtual
businesses or the Wal-Mart's and Sears and businesses with
multi-million dollar ad budgets, you're wrong.
Although we used a hardware store in our hypothetical
scenario here, I can show you how take any local business and
simply by refocusing their marketing strategy, increase their
business and profits significantly.
Put me to the test. Go to my home page and fill out the simple
form for your FREE initial consultation. But, do it before your
competition catches on.
Copyright 2001 by Robert Hopper
Robert Hopper is the CEO of theBestOfBreed.com and the
managing partner at JPR Marketing Group, LLC, a leading
ecommerce software and marketing solutions provider.
If you're tired of all the hype, dead-ends and empty promises,
come talk with us. You'll find real people willing to have a
real conversation with you, and it won't cost you a dime.
http://www.theBestOfBreed.com
How useful did you find this article?
This article can be downloaded freely from http://www.get-articles.com and used on your website or in your ezine so long as the author is credited and their resource box left intact. You should not change any links in the article, and where the article is used on a website it's links should be clickable. Please see our terms and conditions page for more information: http://www.get-articles.com/authors-publishers-terms.php
|
|