Tag archive for "local business marketing"

Where to Find the Low-Hanging Fruit in Your Local Business

E-mail Marketing, Facebook, LinkedIn, Marketing, New Media, Small Business, Small Business Marketing, Social Media, Twitter, Urban Spoon, Video and YouTube, Yelp

Where to Find the Low-Hanging Fruit in Your Local Business

3 Comments 06 August 2010

In case you missed it, local customers are on-line. I believe there is a lot of low-hanging fruit out there still for local small businesses who play it smart when it comes to web-based or on-line marketing – whether it be via web sites, e-mail marketing, social networks/media, or web-based advertising. Here are some places where I often see huge gaps in what local businesses are doing to capture search traffic looking for what they’re selling. Maybe you can close some of these gaps in your own small business’ on-line presence or marketing by the end of today.

Web Sites

  1. Small business owners can make more money by giving customers and prospects more reasons to buy. Being able to update your own web site (content, photos, and links) should be as easy as writing an e-mail to a friend. If it’s not, you have room to improve.
  2. Small business owners should know who is visiting their web site and how they got there. Web site traffic is like a focus group of valuable information – without the expence. If you don’t have this data from your web analytics (which should be basically free to access), then you’ve got room to improve.
  3. Small business owners should be able to understand and implement (or have someone who can) basic search engine optimization techniques for their local web site. If you don’t know what searches are popular in your local market in your category, and how to optimize your site to grab that traffic without breaking the bank, you have room to improve.
  4. If your local business web site isn’t the center of your marketing universe and isn’t well-positioned as an extension of your brick and mortar customer experience, then you’ve got room to improve.
  5. If your web site doesn’t provide a way for customers to sign up automatically for your e-mail communications, then you’ve got room to improve.
  6. If your web site doesn’t provide a way for customers to connect with you via social media (and vice versa), then you’ve got room to improve.

E-mail Marketing

  1. If you aren’t using e-mail marketing to promote your business, you’ve got a huge opportunity awaiting your local business marketing program!
  2. If you aren’t using an e-mail marketing program that allows you to split test, segment lists, trigger an unlimited amount of e-mail communications and measure who opened what when and how often – then you’ve got some serious room to improve – and sell more stuff for your local business!
  3. If you aren’t consistently sending e-mails to your list – you aren’t staying top of mind, and you’ve got room to improve. If you think “regularly” is less than once a week, then you have room to improve.
  4. If you aren’t collecting e-mail addresses aggressively in your business (collecting better than 80% of everyone that walks into your business), then you aren’t doing enough. E-mail addresses are worth gold to your business, and you’ve got room to improve your local marketing!
  5. If you aren’t sending a series of thank-you e-mails to new folks on your list to train them to read your e-mails for the rest of your customer relationship, you’ve got room to improve your local e-mail marketing program.
  6. If you aren’t using your social media, off-line and web site interactions as a way to gather e-mail addresses straight into your database, you’ve got room to improve your local business marketing.
  7. If you aren’t using e-mail to drive traffic to your web site and to learn more about what interests your customers by having multiple options available for their “click,” you’ve got room to improve.

Social Networks or Social Media

  1. If your local business doesn’t have a YouTube channel with a username that matches your other social network usernames, and if you don’t have a way to create video quickly and cheaply to share your customer experience and to educate your customers – you’ve got room to improve your small business marketing.
  2. If you don’t measure video views by posting a link to the same video link  (usually on YouTube) across all social media and on your web site to replicate your efforts using video, then you have room to improve.
  3. If you’re not showing not telling by using a social photo sharing site like Flickr to both show your customer experience, give samples of what’s inside the store and to create inbound links to your web site – then you’ve got lots of room to improve.
  4. If you’re not getting a lot of business out of Facebook for your retail business, you’ve got room to improve. Think about how photo albums, video, wall posts, custom tabs, notes and Facebook messages can help you share your customer experience and sell things at full price. Facebook is a powerhouse – if it’s not being one for you, then you’ve got low-hanging fruit to go pick…on Facebook.
  5. Don’t get Twitter? Don’t know how to pick customers up – as easily as you’d hail a cab in the city? It’s just that easy… If you’re not listening on Twitter and using Twitter to drive traffic to your web site, you’ve got serious room to grow your local business.
  6. If you’re a restaurant, coffeeshop, café or local commercial district and aren’t on Foursquare, you’ve got to get with the program and you’ve got room to grab customers for your local business or business district! If you haven’t claimed your business on Foursquare and haven’t posted offers for folks who are nearby or to reward loyalty, you’ve got some low-hanging fruit ready to pick!
  7. If you’ve never heard of Google Buzz – or don’t know how it can help your business strategically get the word out, then you’ve got room to improve.

Ratings & Review Sites

  1. If your pin isn’t on the Google Map, you’ve got room to improve your local business marketing.
  2. If you haven’t claimed your business on Google Places and optimized your Google Place Page with current status updates, coupons and offers, then you’ve got room to improve your local business marketing.
  3. If you haven’t claimed your business on Yelp and if you don’t check it regularly and stay in touch with your customers there and keep your information up-to-date and if you don’t have a system in place to encourage positive reviews on this site, then you’ve got room to  improve the image of your locally owned small business online.
  4. If you are a restaurant and you haven’t optimized your business’ presence on Urbanspoon, and if you don’t check it regularly and stay in touch with your customers there and keep your information up-to-date (including menus, food photos, Twitter connections, and comments back to customers), then you’ve got room to improve your small business online reputation.
  5. If you don’t know about CraigsList, Thumbtack, Ebay, Angie’s List, Judy’s Book, Merchant’s Circle – or how they can help you sell more stuff for your business of nearly any sort – then you’ve got some serious room to improve your small business sales.

Maybe the easiest way to close the gap is to engage someone who makes it simple and easy to get help with new media and social media marketing  - and grab some easy wins for your local business in the sales department – an expert that really understands locally owned businesses. Get in touch with us directly if you have such a need…

I bet you didn’t know there was so much low-hanging fruit out there, did you? I bet you didn’t know that HOW you did all of these tools mattered so much – but it certainly does. Where will you start today picking low-hanging fruit for your local small business?

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Why You Need Help with Your Local Marketing

Marketing, Measuring Marketing, Small Business Marketing, Social Media, Web Sites

Why You Need Help with Your Local Marketing

1 Comment 05 August 2010

Why do you, as a local small business owner need help with your local marketing? Because you want some cars to pull up in front of your business. That’s why.

Because as of last April, 63% of all American consumers across all demographics, looked on-line before making a brick and mortar buying decision. (via USA Today/Neilson poll, April 2009). The same data showed that while America was shopping or making decisions WHERE to shop online, less than 80% of American small business owners were spending less than 10% of their marketing budgets online.

Here we are 18 months later, and Citibank has released data. The statistics show there’s still plenty of room for improvement when it comes to local business marketing:

  • 40% of small businesses don’t have a web site
  • 81% of entrepreneurs still don’t take advantage of social media
  • 47% don’t think that Facebook, Twitter or even LinkedIn are beneficial to their business
  • 84% don’t provide for e-commerce
  • 62% don’t use email marketing

Local customers are online doing research and making buying decisions. If you aren’t there – or aren’t there to your full potential – you are leaving money on the table. Period.

For those of you that are defying the odds and actually spending on-line, how do you know that you’re doing it best? Or even good enough? I wonder how you can be an expert at all things about your business, your inventory, your payroll, your employee policies, your customer care, your brick and mortar store maintenance, insurance, and payments while making sure you comply with IRS policies and paying your other bills and making sure your windows and every other aspect of your brick and mortar customer experience is great……… all while being a marketing expert in a world where marketing has changed so fast that even the heads of the brightest experts are spinning and it takes the lion’s share of an expert’s professional life just to read and experiment enough to keep up with the pace so when we recommend something – it works and it works well? Can you know confidently that what you know about the world of web-based marketing is even “good enough” to not be leaving the money on the table that would send your child to college or pay off your mortgage five years early? What is “good enough” for you?

As for me, I don’t try to do everything in my business – I pay the bookkeeper and CPA to do their thing that they do well and a WordPress expert to do her thing and a graphic artist to do her thing. I can’t do it all in my business – and if I tried, my business would be mediocre at best – close at worst. But I do know social media and on-line marketing. And I know that your customers are there, and they’re asking for your stuff – where are you? Maybe we can help each other out.

Is this an eye opener for you? What’s your next move?

Photo Credit: dave_mcmt

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Why Online Matters

For Main Street or Downtown Programs, Getting Results, Hotel Marketing, Main Street & Small Business Web Sites, Marketing, Marketing Main Street, Marketing Mistakes, Measuring Marketing, Restaurant Marketing, Small Business Marketing, Small Retail Business

Why Online Matters

2 Comments 03 August 2010

Chatting with my BFF the other day about how best to convince small business owners and restaurateurs that online marketing was worth paying money for. The conversation went something like this:

Me: Well, I dunno… perhaps that over a year ago 63% of all American consumers across every demographic looked online first before making a brick and mortar buying decision. Most of the folks we’re talking to are targeting a higher end demographic, and it’s a year later, so that number has to be much higher………

BFF: I didn’t ask you why they should be online. I’m talking about how to convince them within their existing worldview why this is worth spending money on.

Me: The money is online.

BFF: But are they going to see value in spending money online?

Me: (insert scream of frustration)

It’s seriously this bad. In small businesses and restaurants and boutique hotels across America, folks have their heads stuck in the proverbial sand.

I hear things like the following:

“I know we’ve got to do it, but I just don’t have time.”

“I just don’t see the value in it.”

“Well, I just spent $90,000 on new merchandise, so that website upgrade to allow me to make my own frequent updates to my website…that sounds good, but it will have to wait until next year… I just don’t have the money for that right now.”

“Well, I’m in a contract with the local lifestyle magazine, and I’m running some cable advertisements and sales have been really down lately, so I just don’t have the money to invest in online. I know it would work, but I just can’t afford it right now.”

How about this, Mr. small business owner? What if you could spend half per month what you spend for an ad in the local lifestyle magazine, and you could track feedback, gain market intelligence – and oh yeah, sell more stuff and know that it was a direct result of this marketing effort? Would you do it?

Would you spend the same amount if you could get that kind of measurable results?

If you wouldn’t – then why are you in business? Because it seems like you’re only there to support the dinosaurs. As for me, I’m going to stay in business by selling more stuff. Online.

Photo Credit: blakeimeson

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About Marianna Chapman

For the past 15 years, Marianna Chapman has been creating game-changing big ideas resulting in big returns for dozens of businesses and communities across the U.S.

Today, Marianna and her team help business and non-profit clients at Big Idea Company, Inc., writes the Results Revolution blog, serves as Executive Editor for Eat Cities, LLC media outlets, and is a frequent speaker to national and regional conferences.

Marianna is a professional problem solver and rainmaker for hire.

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