Small Towns are NOT Small Potatoes
By Sharon Fling
When I first started developing websites, it was for a corporate
INTRANET -- a built-in audience waited with baited breath, hungry
for the information.
However, when I started freelancing for small business, everything
changed.
A small local business does NOT have a built in audience. Most live in
the cold cruel world of a billion websites, with no earthly way to
rise above the clutter.
My clients knew squat about marketing and promotion. So eventually,
like a bad penny, a website might come back to haunt me. Some
customers would call to complain that their sites weren't "working".
"In what way?" I'd wanted to know.
"Well, nobody's buying anything?" or "I'm not getting any traffic."
I'd recite the standard webmaster chapter and verse -- the site was
optimized, submitted to search engines, blah, blah. I told them that
having a website is the equivalent of having a phone number. That a
website is only 10%, the other 90% is marketing.
But nobody had ever told them that, so they didn't have a clue. They
thought when they got the website, they'd be set. Just sit back and
wait for the customers to arrive...and wait...and wait...
Even though they got exactly what they asked for, I felt bad. I didn't
want to have unhappy customers telling all their friends the Internet
"doesn't work", Since all my customers were local, I started looking
for resources specific to local online promotion.
Well, the pickings were slim. Very little had been written on the
subject. So...through a lot of trial and error I figured it out
myself. Then I wrote the book and the rest is, as they say, history.
Anyway, I'm happy to report that things have changed a lot in the past
couple years. Internet pros are becoming more attuned to the fact that
people live in the real "dirt" world, and have started to cater to
local businesses and their needs. If they haven't they should. Here
are a few reasons why:
STAND OUT FROM THE CROWD
Many online marketers and webmasters try to market to the world, when
some of their best customers could be right down the street. Why be a
little fish in the big crowded Internet OCEAN? In a local setting,
someone with the right expertise and attitude can position themselves
as the expert.
Truth is, most local business owners aren't likely to hire someone
they don't know and probably won't meet. They want to see who they're
doing business with, establish personal relationships, learn to trust.
The key words are "trust" and "relationships". It doesn't happen
overnight, but once you have it, they're likely to be customers for
life.
CONCERN FOR COMMUNITY
Someone wrote me recently, telling me all the reasons why online
marketers don't want to be bothered with local business. It's a tough
nut to crack, so why bother? Go after the low-hanging fruit. He talked
about it being a numbers game -- the bigger the pool of
would-be-buyers, the greater the likelihood of making a sale. It's
easier to sell to active seekers. We're cheap, lazy, impatient, and
besides, who wants to spend time trying to convince computer-phobes
what they're missing? It's their loss, right? Small towns are small
potatoes.
So everyone has jumped on the global bandwagon, leaving local business
to either get with the program or get lost. And money that could be
funneled back into the community is being sucked into the web, feeding
the international economy instead of the local economy. Then, he said,
"as prices continue to rise in the cities, businesses will be forced
to go global in some way, since the local economy will no longer be
able to completely support it."
Bingo! My point exactly.
Look, small local business cannot ignore the Internet forever, not if
they want to stay in business. For individuals with patience and
concern for their local community, local business can be a viable
target market for their services -- website design/hosting /SEO/link
building, email marketing, local portals, etc. It's not a get-rich-
quick opportunity...but how many people are really getting rich quick
online anyway?
MAKE MORE MONEY
Concern for community is great but at the end of the day, we need to
make money to stay in business. And there's lots of money to be made
in the local business space. Geocommerce -- local online advertising
-- is predicted to be a $50 BILLION market by 2006.
Local business needs the same marketing toolset that online business
needs, but with a narrower focus. Since so few people are paying any
attention to the local market, it's wide open for a variety of value
added services. Here's a niche just waiting to be filled, no matter
where you live. Specializing is the key, and what better market to
focus on than one that's growing daily AND can help better your local
community's economy?
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No, it's not get rich quick. No, you can't hide behind your monitor
and remain anonymous. Yes, you risk rejection. But it can be
financially rewarding as well as emotionally satisfying to help the
businesses in your local community to succeed... online and off.
Sharon Fling is the author of "How To Promote Your Local Business On
the Internet", and creator of the web's largest resource for using the
Internet to promote small local business online. Visit
http://www.geolocal.com and subscribe to GeoLocal's free Tip of
the Week.