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Internet Marketing for Local Small Businesses
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Once the site was completed and the switch was turned on there was a sense of pride and accomplishment with high hopes that the website would provide a marketing spark that would help to increase his client base.
After several months, with next to no traffic, my C.P.A. friend confided that he regretted investing so much money in something that brought so little value. After all, he mentioned, it’s not like he was selling his services to clients outside his local town.
After consulting with him I offered several strategies that he could use to increase the amount of local, hometown visitors to his website. If you are a small “offline” business you may find several of these innovative strategies useful to your local Internet marketing efforts.
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Lest you think these mini-vacations are a scam, I have used them myself and had a great time. Many (very nice) hotels would rather have a free occupant than no occupant because it introduces the visitor to their hotel. So they give away free mini-stays.
A similar technique was used just recently between Microsoft (to introduce the X-Box) and Taco Bell (to introduce their quesadilla), which netted hundreds of thousands of unique visitors to the X-Box website. Taco Bell gave a ticket with a code on it to everyone who purchased a quesadilla. The ticket holder then took the ticket home, went to the X-Box site and signed up for a free X-Box giveaway.
When you announce the winners (which cost you $10 a winner) they will be required to come to your office to pick up the certificate. So not only did you drive them to your website but you got a face-to-face visit with them and a little goodwill.
The restaurant, for example, would have a small bowl or box for business people to submit their business cards for the free giveaway. You commit to paying for the two free lunches and to converting the business cards into an electronic customer list for the restaurant. The restaurant commits to sponsoring the business card drop boxes and to an endorsed monthly emailing to their customers plugging your business.
Once you have the endorsed mailing you can continue to email market (or send an informative ezine) to those people again and again with the email addresses from the business cards.
Offer to pay the development and maintenance cost for a local high school sports website which can be maintained by a joint high school web team using volunteer high school students. You can call it “YourTownHighSchoolSports.com.” Of course you will have banners and links leading to your site because you are the sponsor.
I’ll bet other local businesses would be willing to help sponsor the site in exchange for a little traffic to their website as well. Not only do you get local website traffic, you’ll receive a lot of valuable goodwill as well.A second way to collect your customer’s email addresses is to send out a physical newsletter and extend a great offer to everyone who sends you an email within the next 48 hours.
Put a viral marketing spin on this strategy by emailing your customers an offer for a free gift if they forward your email offer to three local friends using a tell-a-friend or refer-it script.
Again, with this strategy you would simply send them to TheVacationMan.com to pick up their $10 mini-vacation certificate after entering in their special code on your website. Make sure you create a customized landing page with an offer on it for your free vacation visitors.
Now call the local newspaper (or write a press release) and let them know about your voting site. Recently a fellow in Alabama took advantage of the local college quarterback controversy and put up a site called WhichQuarterback.com, Wrote a press release and received over 3,000 visitors overnight
Make sure you get a lot of free publicity for the site. You might even ask your advertisers to giveaway handouts about the site to their customers. Have your FreeYourTown.com site sponsor local youth sports teams with the domain name on the back of their shirts.
The more local vendors you sign up, the more traffic everybody gets. Make sure you sign up vendors that only do business locally.
Another twist to this strategy is to develop an exit newsletter signup form. Once a local visitor exits the site, a newsletter signup form pops up offering the visitor the opportunity to sign up to newsletters generated by local merchants.Choose partners whose customers would benefit and potentially purchase your product and service. In email marketing, as well as direct post mail marketing, the list determines, in large part, the success of the offer.
Optimize your website for your product or service and the name of your town or city. Many times I have found suppliers in my own small town using the Internet that fulfilled my requirements.
Two examples of this recently were when I searched and found a local patent and trademark lawyer who drove right over to my house after I contacted him on the web. My search on Yahoo was “patent lawyer” and “Friendswood.” A second example was finding a great audio and video supplies and duplication service that was right down the road from my house. My search on Metacrawler was “audiocassette supplies” and “Houston.”
In fact, it doesn’t even have to be with local businesses. Local high schools and churches are always looking for different fundraising and promotional activities.
I purposely didn’t include the strategy of putting your website address on all your promotional materials. It’s not that I forgot it. I figure that strategy is just a given. If you’re going to have a website, put it everywhere you would normally have your business name.Some of these strategies are easier than others and produce better results than others, but they all are viable and absolutely doable. Your website can be a powerful marketing tool. Now that you’ve made an investment in your website, you might as well get the most out it.
Happy local Internet marketing.
David Frey is President of Marketing Best Practices Inc., a small business marketing consulting firm and the editor of the Marketing Best Practices Newsletter, the web's leading free small business marketing newsletter. Subscribe now at http://www.MarketingBestPractices.com.
David Frey is author of the Small Business Marketing Bible.
© Copyright 2001 David Frey, Marketing Best Practices Inc.
*Note from Web Site Marketing Plan .com publisher Bobette Kyle: When implementing a joint email endorsement or using email addresses from business cards, be sure email recipients have given permission for you to send commercial email. Without permission, most will consider the email spam.
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Copyright ©2001-2008 Website Marketing Plan .com (Web Marketing Place LLC) and Bobette Kyle. All rights reserved. |