What Does Your
Website Say About Your Business?
by Tim Knox
QUESTION:
My business is very small, just me and two employees, and our product
really can’t be sold online. Do I really need a website? --
Robin C.
ANSWER:
Congratulations, Robin, you are the one millionth person to ask
me that question. Smile for the cameras, brush the streamers and
confetti from your hair and listen closely, because I’m about
to answer for the millionth time what has become one of the most
important and often-asked questions of the digital business age.
Before I answer, however, let’s flash back to the very first
time I was asked this question. It was circa 1998, during the toddler
years of the Internet, just after Al Gore laid claim to having given
birth to the concept a few short years before.
I was giving a speech on the impact of the Internet on small business
at an association luncheon in Montgomery, Alabama. My motto then
was: Feed me and I will speak. I have the same motto today, but
I now expect dessert to be included in exchange for the sharing
of my vast wisdom.
In 1998, which was decades ago in Internet years, the future of
electronic commerce or “ecommerce” as it’s come
to be known, was anybody’s guess, but even the most negative
futurists agreed that all the signs indicated that a large portion
of future business revenues would be derived from online transactions,
or from offline transactions that were the result of online marketing
efforts.
So, Robin, should your business have a website, even if your business
is small and sells products or services that you don’t think
can be sold online? My answer in 1998 is the same as my answer today:
Yes, if you have a business, you should have a website. Period.
No question. Without a doubt. Thank you, drive through. Now serving
customer number one million and one…
Also, don’t be so quick to dismiss your product as one that
can’t be sold online. Nowadays there is very little that cannot
be sold over the Internet. More than 20 million shoppers are now
online, purchasing everything from books to computers to cars to
real estate to jet airplanes to natural gas to you name it. If you
can imagine it, someone will figure out how to sell it online.
Internet marketing research firms predict that online revenues
will range between $180 and $200 billion dollars in 2004. They also
predict that the number of online consumers will grow at a rate
of 30-50% over the next few years. These numbers alone should be
enough to convince you that your business should have a website.
Let me clarify one point: I am not saying that you should put all
your efforts into selling your wares over the Internet, though if
your product lends itself to easy online sales, you certainly should
be considering it.
The point to be made here is that you should at the very least
have a presence on the World Wide Web so that customers, potential
employees, business partners, and perhaps even investors can quickly
and easily find out more about your business and the products or
services you have to offer.
That said, it’s not enough that you just have a website.
You must have a professional looking website if you want to be taken
seriously. Since many consumers now search for information online
prior to making a purchase at a brick and mortar store, your website
may be the first chance you have at making a good impression on
a potential buyer. If your website looks like it was designed by
a barrel of colorblind monkeys, your chance at making a good first
impression will be lost.
One of the great things about the Internet is that it has leveled
the playing field when it comes to competing with the big boys.
As mentioned, you have one shot at making a good first impression
and with a well-designed website; your little operation can project
the image and professionalism of a much larger company.
The inverse is also true. I’ve seen many big company websites
that were so badly designed and hard to navigate that they completely
lacked professionalism and credibility. Good for you, too bad for
them. You also mention that yours is a small operation, but when
it comes to benefiting from a website, size does not matter. I don’t
care if you are a one-man show or a ten thousand employee corporate
giant; if you do not have a website you are losing business to other
companies that do.
Here’s the exception to my rule: It’s actually better
to have no website at all than to have one that makes your business
look bad.
Your website speaks volumes about your business. It either says,
“Hey, look, we take our business so seriously that we have
created this wonderful website for our customers!” or it says,
“Hey, look, I let my ten-year old nephew design my site! Good
luck finding anything!”
Small Business Q&A is written by veteran entrepreneur and syndicated
columnist, Tim Knox. Tim's latest books include "Small Business
Success Secrets" and "The 30 Day Blueprint For Success!"
Related Links: http://www.smallbusinessqa.com
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