3. To Make Business Information Available
What is basic business information? Think of a Yellow Pages ad. What are your hours? What do you do? How can someone contact you? What methods of payment do you take? Where are you located at? Now think of a Yellow Pages ad where you have instant communication. What is today’s special? Today’s interest rate? Next week’s parking lot sale information? If you could keep your customer informed of every reason why they should do business with you, don’t you think you could do more business? You can on the WWW.
5. To
Heighten Public Interest
You won’t get Newsweek magazine to write up your local
store opening, but you might get them to write up your Web
Page address if it is something new and interesting. Even
if Newsweek would write about your local store opening,
you wouldn’t benefit from someone in a distant city
reading about it, unless of course, they were coming to
your town sometime soon. With Web page information,
anybody anywhere who can access the Web and hears about
you is a potential visitor to your Web site and a
potential customer for your information there.
6. To Release Time
Sensitive Materials
What if your materials need to be released no earlier than
midnight? The quarterly earnings statement, the grand
prize winner, the press kit for the much anticipated film,
the merger news? Well, you sent out the materials to the
press with
"The-do-not-release-before-such-and-such-time"
statement and hope for the best. Now the information can
be made available at midnight or any time you specify,
with all related materials such as photographs, bios, etc.
released at exactly the same time. Imagine the
anticipation of "All materials will be made available
on our Web site at 12:01 AM". The scoop goes to those
that wait for the information to be posted, not the one
who releases your information early.
7. To Sell Things
Many people think that this is the number 1 thing to do
with the World Wide Web, but we made it number seven to
make it clear that we think you should consider selling
things on the Internet and the World Wide Web after you
have done all the things above and maybe even after doing
quite a few more things from this list. Why? Well, the
answer is complex but the best way to put it is, do you
consider the telephone the best place to sell things?
Probably not. You probably consider the telephone a tool
that allows you to communicate with your customer, which
in turn helps you sell things. Well, that’s how we think
you should consider the WWW. The technology is different,
of course, but before people decide to become customers,
they want to know about you, what you do and what you can
do for them. Which you can do easily and inexpensively on
the WWW. Then you might be able to turn them into
customers.
8. To make pictures,
sound and film files available
What if your widget is great, but people would really love
it if they could see it in action? The album is great but
with no airplay, nobody knows that it sounds great? A
picture is worth a thousand words, but you don’t have
the space for a thousand words? The WWW allows you to add
sound, pictures and short movie files to your company’s
info if that will serve your potential customers. No
brochure will do that.
9. To reach a highly
desirable demographic market
The demographic of the WWW user is probably the highest
mass-market demographic available. Usually
college-educated or being college educated, making a high
salary or soon to make a high salary, it’s no wonder
that Wired magazine, the magazine of choice to the
Internet community, has no problem getting Lexus and other
high-end marketer’s advertising. Even with the addition
of the commercial on-line community, the demographic will
remain high for many years to come.
10. To Answer Frequently
Asked questions
Whoever answers the phones in your organization can tell
you, their time is usually spent answering the same
questions over and over again. These are the questions
customers and potential customers want to know the answer
to before they deal with you. Post them on a WWW page and
you will have removed another barrier to doing business
with you and freed up some time for that harried phone
operator.
11. To Stay In Contact
With Salespeople
Your employees on the road may need up-to-the-minute
information that will help them make the sale or pull
together the deal. If you know what that information is,
you can keep it posted in complete privacy on the WWW. A
quick local phone call can keep your staff supplied with
the most detailed information, without long distance phone
bills and tying up the staff at the home office.
12. To Open International Markets
You may not be able to make sense of the mail, phone and
regulation systems in all your potential international
markets, but with a Web page, you can open up a dialogue
with international markets as easily as with the company
across the street. As a matter-of-fact, before you go onto
the Web, you should decide how you want to handle the
international business that will come your way, because
your postings are certain to bring international
opportunities your way, whether it is part of your plan or
not. Another added benefit; if your company has offices
overseas, they can access the home offices information for
the price of a local phone call.
13. To Create a 24 Hour Service
If you’ve ever remembered too late or too early to call
the opposite coast, you know the hassle. We’re not all
on the same schedule. Business is worldwide but your
office hours aren’t. Trying to reach Asia or Europe is
even more frustrating. But Web pages serve the client,
customer and partner 24 hours a day, seven days a week. No
overtime either. It can customize information to match
needs and collect important information that will put you
ahead of the competition, even before they get into the
office.
14. To Make Changing Information Available Quickly
Sometimes, information changes before it gets off the
press. Now you have a pile of expensive, worthless paper.
Electronic publishing changes with your needs. No paper,
no ink, no printer’s bill. You can even attach your web
page to a database which customizes the page’s output to
a database you can change as many times in a day as you
need. No printed piece can match that flexibility.
15. To Allow Feedback From Customers
You pass out the brochure, the catalog, the booklet. But
it doesn’t work. No sales, no calls, no leads. What went
wrong? Wrong color, wrong price, wrong market? Keep
testing, the marketing books say, and you’ll eventually
find out what went wrong. That’s great for the big boys
with deep pockets, but who is paying the bills? You are
and you don’t have the time nor the money to wait for
the answer. With a Web page, you can ask for feedback and
get it instantaneously with no extra cost. An instant
e-mail response can be built into Web pages and can get
the answer while its fresh in your customers mind, without
the cost and lack of response of business reply mail.
16. To Test Market New Services and Products
Tied into the reason above, we all know the cost of
rolling out a new product. Advertising, advertising,
advertising, PR and advertising. Expensive, expensive,
expensive. Once you have been on the Web and know what to
expect from those who are seeing your page, they are the
least expensive market for you to reach. They will also
let you know what they think of your product faster,
easier and much less expensively than any other market you
may reach. For the cost of a page or two of Web
programming, you can have a crystal ball into where to
position your product or service in the marketplace.
Amazing!
17. To Reach The Media
Every kind of business needs the exposure that the media
can bring, as we touched on in reason #5 "To Heighten
Public Interest", but what if your business is
reaching the media, as a newswire, a publicist or a public
policy group. The media is the most wired profession
today, since their main product is information and they
can get it more quickly, cheaply and easily on-line.
On-line press kits are becoming more and more common,
since they work with the digital environment of more and
more pressrooms. Digital images can be put in place
without the stripping and shooting of the old pressrooms
and digital text can be edited and outputted on tight
deadlines. All the these can be made available on a Web
page.
18. To Reach The Education and Youth Market
If your market is education, consider that most
universities already offer Internet access to their
students and most K-12’s will be on the Internet within
the next few years. Books, athletic shoes, study courses,
youth fashion and anything else that would want to reach
these overlapping markets needs to be on the Web. Even
with the coming of the commercial on-line services and
their somewhat older populations there will be nothing but
growth in the percentage of the under 25 market that will
be on-line.
19. To Reach The Specialized Market
Sell fish tanks, art reproductions, flying lessons? You
may think that the Internet is not a good place to be.
Well, think again. The Internet isn’t just computer
science students anymore. With the 70 million and growing
users of the WWW, even the most narrowly defined interest
group will be represented in large numbers. Since the Web
has several very good search programs, your interest group
will be able to find you, or your competitors.
20. To Serve Your Local Market
We’ve talked about the power to serve the world with a
Web page. How about your neighborhood? If you are located
in the Washington D. C. Metro Area, there is probably
enough local customers with Web access to make it worth
your while to consider Web marketing. For example, a local
restaurant could even take lunch orders through the
Internet! But no matter where you are, if the big client
has Web access, you should be there too.
************************************
© 1995 - 2003 by
Net 101
*********************************** |