If you're not marketing your local
business online, opportunity is passing you by. So
many people focus on the Internet's global reach that
its potential benefit to local business is often overlooked.
Global information is great, but people's day-to-day lives
are local. Now that so much information is available online,
more consumers see the Internet as something useful instead
of a passing fad.
Here are 5 ways that consumers are using
the Internet:
e-Mail
According to Messaging Online, there
were around 891 million email addresses at the beginning
of 2001. By now there are probably 1 billion or more.
Almost everyone has an email address, or knows someone
who does. It's fast becoming as common as the telephone,
and just as necessary. Even if you don't have a website,
you can use email to communicate with your customers.
Send them useful information, coupons, and special offers.
If you don't, someone else will.
Pre-Sales Research
For many consumers, the internet has
become the great equalizer. They no longer have to take
the word of a salesperson -- all the information they
need to make an intelligent decision is online. Consumers
can research everything from products to retail services,
and make sure they get the best deal. But unless your
business is online, it's unlikely they will find you.
Online Shopping
U.S. retail e-commerce sales for the
first quarter of 2002 were almost $10 billion, and will
top $44 billion by year's end. Clearly, plenty of Internet
users have gotten comfortable with spending money online.
Top picks include books, travel, music, clothing, Computers,
movies/videos, consumer electronics, and health products.
But if your business isn't online, you won't get any of
those e-commerce dollars.
Community & Local Information
Community information is like a
magnet -- it draws locals online. People care about
their communities and want to know what's going on
around them. They're also looking for weather forecasts,
local headlines, entertainment listings, and sporting
events info. Savvy business owners recognize this and
revamp their websites to include local information and
real-time content, available from companies like
www.moreover.com and www.yellowbrix.com. Content is the
#1 reason users return to websites.
Internet Auctions
An estimated 22 million people in
over 100 countries are flocking to auction sites such
as Yahoo, BidBay, uBid.com and the granddaddy of them
all, eBay. The listing fees are a small price to pay
for the kind of exposure businesses can get. About 1.4
million items are up for sale every day on eBay, in
every imaginable category, including services, cars,
and houses. Consumers can also search by region and
category at http://pages.ebay.com/regional/hub.html -
"eBay Local Trading", where major cities are setup as
regions. If you're selling anything at all, especially
consumer products, you should definitely check out eBay.
These are some of the ways consumers
are using the Net. For local business owners, the message
is clear: your customers are online...and so is your
competition. How much longer can YOU afford to wait?
Sharon Fling is the author of "How To
Promote Your Local Business On the Internet", and creator
of GeoLocal.com, 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.