Building a lasting relationship with your customers
is a vital marketing strategy in ensuring the existence of your
business. Making your customers unhappy even once can impact their
likelihood of ever revisiting.
Small, local stores, retailers, and companies, can sometimes
offer more personable service because of their focus on the quality
and uniqueness of their products not sold anywhere else. Honoring
the customers' needs is what brings them back for more. The customers
who approach you will not necessarily be a part of the local
crowd—therefore it is important that you take the time
to make a good impression to improve business. Running a small
or local venture can be mixed with challenges all in its own,
but with effective marketing you can overcome all the odds. What
better place to promote that concept than on your web site?
Before you have your web site up and running, first develop
a marketing plan as to what you would like to achieve through
it. As an extension of your philosophies and style, you will
want a web site that reaches out to your customers and lets them
learn about you at the same time. Once you have that together,
then you can plot out the components of your site. Here are some
tried-and-true ways to offer optimum results:
* List sales dates, and offer deals, discounts, or coupons/vouchers
for customers to print off and use.
* Use your web site to offer email or postal mail updates to
all customers who choose to be on your mailing list to which
they can subscribe online.
* Offer free or discounted shipping on orders processed via your
specifications.
* Offer to include a small free gift as a thank you to customers
for their business.
* Suggested features to include on your web site for customers
to view are a pictorial catalogue, biographies of key contacts,
employees, or owners/managers, and map and pictures of your business.
* Include a Frequently-Asked-Questions (FAQ) section for self-help
in case customers are experiencing trouble browsing or shopping
online.
* Clearly explain your products or services, including all applicable
fees so customers are not unpleasantly surprised when they obtain
a quote or make a purchase with your business.
* State your policy of returns, damaged goods, or refunds where
applicable.
* Vary your selections by season, holiday, or event. Marketing
yourself as a novelty producer in your industry will help you
come out on top.
* Make sure your web site is well-maintained at all times, where
technical difficulties experienced on your web site are kept
to a minimum to avoid losing impatient customers. A small, local
business that is not prepared to handle an influx of customers
will lose to a larger competitor.
* Provide a feedback section for customers to offer suggestions
and rate their overall satisfaction. You can also opt to email
a survey to customers who shop online with you.
With careful planning, your small business can be well on its
way to surpassing local recognition and make its way to the top
of the list for successful ventures!
Copyright 2005 Jennifer McGroary
Jennifer McGroary is a WAHM who has been operating her own home-based
web design and consulting business since 1999. Jennifer helps local
small businesses, family-owned, & home-based businesses maximize
their profits without spending money on advertising. To learn more,
visit
http://www.cssites.com