Go Local!
Competing online for worldwide customers is fine, but don't forget about those who still see you as the shop around the corner.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2001/june/40576.html
Although most entrepreneurs think of their Web sites as vehicles
for getting new customers-from far corners of the world, no
less-many end up neglecting a market with even greater potential:
the one right around the corner. After all, local customers live
and shop near your business. Why not reach out to them, too?
At least the trend is starting to catch on. According to the
"Local Commerce Monitor," a survey of businesses in
Princeton, New Jersey, conducted by Constat Inc. and The Kelsey
Group, entrepreneurs who said the Internet would help their
businesses compete on a larger geographic scale dropped
considerably between 1999 and 2000.
65% of Web shoppers in the Middle East/Africa will
buy from foreign sites, compared to just 39 percent in Eastern
Europe. SOURCE: Accenture
|
"Businesses are realizing they don't want to compete
globally," explains Neal Polachek, a consultant and senior
vice president of research for The Kelsey Group. "They want to
be more effective and more efficient competing where they've
always competed, which is locally." In fact, the survey also
points out that 80 percent of small businesses do at least 75
percent of their business locally (within 50 miles of their
businesses)-whether it's selling directly to customers or
buying products and services their companies need.
Whether you emphasize community flavor or encourage patrons to
drop by your neighborhood store, localizing your site gives current
customers a better reason to choose you over larger online
competitors. Bud Matto, 37, is just one entrepreneur finding
success with the strategy: As founder of Matto Cycle, a Pottsville,
Pennsylvania, motorcycle and all-terrain vehicle parts vendor that
sells products online and off, Matto goes out of his way to use his
site to target local customers.
Although Matto's initial intention was to reach a global
audience, he also realized the importance of localization.
"[The site] gives our fairly large local clientele the option
to order a product online and have it shipped to them instead of
having to drive an hour to the shop and an hour back," Matto
explains.
To further enhance his local following, Matto recently began
advertising on Schuylkill.com, the online version
of his local newspaper, the Republican & Evening
Herald. The Herald placed on its Web site a banner ad
that went to Matto's own Web site, which the newspaper had
helped create. The move has paid off well: Since Matto began
advertising with the newspaper, online sales have more than
doubled.
| | | |
| RIP hundreds of dotcoms have kicked the
bucket, with more on the way. Here's a quick
look: |
 |
| | | Dotcom | Reason(s) for
failure | | APBnews.com | Offering free content
didn't draw in large audiences or big ad dollars; focus of
content was too narrow for its general audience. | | Beautyjungle.com | Couldn't raise funds.
Despite high margins and high demand, the sensory experience of
buying cosmetics at the beauty counter was lost online. | | Boo.com | Poor money management, heavy
perks, too much cash burned on technology development and
branding/marketing campaigns, and too many offices opened. | | CarOrder.com | Brokering cars online meant low
profit margins and high costs. | | Furniture.com | Few people buy home furnishings
online; competitors J.C. Penney and Sears already had home-delivery
networks in place. | | Miadora.com | Luxury jewelry is a hard sell
online-customers demand stellar service, which isn't available
online. | | Mortgage.com | Thin margins and high
customer-acquisition costs. | | Pets.com | Inability to compel customers
to buy pet food online. | | Quepasa.com | Ran out of money, decline in
Internet advertising rates, spent a lot on building its brand but
generated little revenue. |
| |
 |
One of the easiest ways to localize your site is by taking
advantage of the variety of local services available. For example,
aside from helping companies set up Web sites and offering to place
banner ads, many local newspapers now also feature online shopping
malls. StarNet, the Web
version of the Arizona Daily Star in Tucson, Arizona, for
example, offers this option. For an initial setup fee of $3,800 and
monthly fees starting at $99, entrepreneurs can establish their Web
sites and also be prominently featured on StarNet's shopping
mall, eshoptucson.com. The home page of each participator is linked
directly to the online mall, which is viewed by a whopping 248,000
visitors every month.
Koz, a Durham, North Carolina,
company that creates and empowers online communities and
marketplaces, also partners with newspapers to build local shopping
portals that in turn allow merchants to build co-branded Web sites.
Koz's paradigm, which is being used by more than 400 local
newspapers, works like this: Koz sets up an online marketplace or
mall for the local newspaper, and then the newspaper's
adverstising sales force resells Koz's Web-site-creation
services to local advertisers and companies. Koz then establishes a
Web site dedicated to local entrepreneurs. The cost to those
business owners? Less than $100 per month.
You can also reach local customers via local portal sites, which
consumers use to find community information. Ticketmaster's
Citysearch Inc.'s Citysearch site, for example,
offers local guides to major cites worldwide, focusing on
entertainment, restaurants, services and shopping. It also provides
companies a way to target local customers. For example,
entrepreneurs can be listed on Citysearch's Yellow Pages for
about $35 per month or work with the company to build their own
comprehensive Web sites-costs start at $1,000, plus a monthly fee
of $500. Other local portals include Yahoo! Get Local and Digital City, a unit of AOL.
"Intelligent entrepreneurs are doing everything they can to
meet the needs of their local customers," says Polachek.
"They're launching promotions on their Web sites to reach
local customers, doing e-mail marketing and even allowing their
customers to set up appointments for their services on their Web
sites." In other words, succeeding locally depends highly on
how effectively you get the word out to customers. No big surprise
there.
Melissa
Campanelli is a marketing and technology writer in Brooklyn,
New York.
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