Your potential customers have never had so many choices and so little time as they do today. Our lifestyles have changed, we have changed. But what has changed the most is the way we research and how we decide where to spend our money.
Consumers today, more than ever, rely on the Internet to find information about local businesses such as yours. As a result of this shift, other marketing avenues are becoming less effective and more expensive than most of us can tolerate. That’s the bad news.
The good news is – even though complex, local Internet marketing is definitely not rocket science and a small shift in how you think about marketing your business on the web and a little work can, in fact, double your business.
The Secret of Local Internet Marketing Success
This may come as a surprise, but the key in making the web work for your small business and not against it is to make the Internet, as a marketing channel, accountable. You wouldn’t run a newspaper ad twice if it didn’t make the phone ring, so why would you settle for a website that hardly pays for its hosting costs?
Treat your website as your most important salesperson and be on a constant quest to improve its performance.
Believe Nothing, Track Everything
I bet that you can’t say, with absolute confidence, how many sales leads or orders you got from your website last year. If that’s the case, you are certainly not alone. Most small business owners are not obsessed about marketing metrics.
You will spend more time, effort and money taking shots in the dark than you can afford if you don’t start measuring everything important for the success of your business.
What do you have to measure? Everything that provides you with insight necessary for growth.
In local Internet marketing, those metrics would be:
- number of conversions (orders, leads, phone calls, etc.)
- number of unique visitors
- conversion rates
- traffic from search
- direct traffic
- visitor loyalty
- traffic from social media sources
- traffic from email newsletters
- traffic from offline campaigns
- traffic generated for online advertising
The metrics you should obsess about are going to depend on your type of business, your current marketing campaigns and your brand.
For example, if your business is a restaurant, a metric called “visitor loyalty” (how often the same people visit your website) is much more important for your business than it is for a contractor business. Contractors would love to get the number of unique visitors up because unique visitors mean new business, not service calls.
If you are running local TV or radio ads, you should strongly consider creating a website just for that campaign and making sure you capture every bit of data you can – the number of visits the website got, how many people filled out the contact form, how many phone calls you got, etc.
This kind of information will help you negotiate pricing for your next campaign. It might even help you to convince your local media outlet to consider pay-per-performance advertising.
Learn to test everything that is important and you will quickly learn that not everything that is written out there works for your business.
ROI Is Everything
Beautiful websites, high rankings, lots of Facebook likes and Twitter followers don’t necessarily translate to high ROI.
As a person that owns a small business, you almost certainly have a shortage of either time or money. That’s why you need to set specific, measurable and attainable goals and project returns for every marketing campaign, no matter how small it seems. Track everything and take the feedback from the data you are measuring seriously. Rinse and repeat.
Thinking outside of the box with your feet firmly on the ground while implementing what’s working for your business will produce remarkable results over time. Guaranteed.
Double Your Money Photo via Shutterstock
Sarah
Great post, very insightful and interesting. Thank you
I would add that conversion metrics must be top priority. Business owners need to be able to attribute a sale, lead, etc. to the source so they know which sources are pulling their weight and where future marketing dollars should be allocated.
Joel Libava
Great post, Vedran.
I learned a lot…as usual.
You’re a really good teacher.
The Franchise King®
Ella Marie
I appreciate it that you included looking beyond Google to utilize the Internet. I suggest also adding metrics such as domain authority, social media popularity, and number of backlinks
I absolutely agree that most businesses don’t bother to measure the ROI of their marketing efforts. Part of it is an historical habit.
Measuring ROI from traditional marketing approaches like magazine advertising or tradeshow participation has always been difficult. It’s understandable to be hesitant when each campaign costs thousands of dollars.
However for online marketing, a marketing package might only cost a few hundred dollars to implement. This allows a business to try different approaches, and double down on the ones that deliver the highest ROI, but only if they measure. Which marketing efforts are delivering the best ROI for you: pay-per-click advertising, search engine optimization, press release distribution, social media marketing, email marketing, or blogging, for example? When you start to understand the answers to those questions, you’ll be well on your way to “Double Your Local Business Revenues Using Only The Web”.
ROI is at the foundation of all marketing and your website should be your best marketing tool, used as a hub for all other campaigns. I am a fan of tracking phone numbers or URLs to ensure you know just where your leads and conversions are coming from.