In partnership with Simply Business
3rd in a series of articles exploring how to make 2019 your business’s best year yet.
By Rieva Lesonsky
Many small businesses are dependent on local customers to survive—retailers, restaurant owners, accountants, contractors, remodelers, home services providers, among many others. For these business owners, marketing has become a little more complicated.
In this article and a following one, we’re going to explore the “marketing musts” your business needs to employ to be successful in 2019.
Websites are a must
It should go without saying that every business, no matter its size, must have a website. But shockingly, an estimated 40%-50% of businesses still do not have a website. If you don’t have a business website, you must build one immediately. A website helps you build your brand and gives you a consistent online “home” for your business. (A social media platform is not a substitute for a website.) Businesses that actively engage online can expect to grow 40% faster than they would without an online presence, according to a report from BCG.
If you’re just starting out, don’t stress. Your first website does not need to be elaborate. Just make sure to include the basics: address, phone number, hours, prices, and services. If you want people to visit your physical business location (obviously vital to restaurants and retail store owners), be sure your website includes a map and directions.
You’ll need to find a domain name for your website (check out NameStudio), which should, if possible, be the same or similar to the name of your business. Figure out if you want to DIY your website or hire a web designer to create a site for you. And then decide what your site needs to include, such as:
Number of website pages
Amount of website storage (images & videos need more storage space)
Tools (for example, online forms, blogs, customer reviews, maps, slideshows)
Links to/integration with social media
Video and/or audio players
Shopping cart
Tech support
Ease of updating content
Check out this Checklist to Build a Website to learn more.
Make your site mobile-friendly
All websites must be optimized for mobile viewing. Google’s algorithms primarily use the mobile version of a site’s content to rank pages from that site, which impacts your placement in the search engines.
More important, consumers demand mobile-ready websites. In fact, as Eric Reynolds, the SVP and CMO of Clorox says, all “marketing essentially is mobile today.” On Thanksgiving, for the first time ever, according to Adobe Analytics and reported on CNBC, consumers rang up $1 billion in sales via their smartphones. And over $2 billion in sales on Black Friday came from smartphones.
Overall this year, nearly 40% of e-commerce sales came from mobile devices, which should soar to almost 54% by 2021, according to Statista. Studies show consumers prefer to complete their entire shopping journey on mobile devices; however, mobile conversions are still lower than desktop because the mobile user experience remains subpar.
You don’t want to lose customers, so make sure
Your site loads quickly—you can test the speed of your mobile site here
Photos are large enough for shoppers to see, but don’t slow down load time
Forms are short with drop-down options
Your site is secure. If it’s not https://, Google’s Chrome browser shows a “NOT SECURE” warning next to the URL
Getting found online
While it’s vital for all businesses to appear on the major search engines (Google, Bing, etc.), for local businesses it’s even more important to be discoverable on local search sites and directories. When consumers search on smartphones for businesses, products, and services (which about 70% of consumers do), Google considers the phone’s location before displaying search results, giving businesses using local SEO an edge.
To implement a local SEO strategy:
Claim your business listing on local search directories. Start by claiming your free listing on Google My Business. You may already have a listing, but if you haven’t “claimed” it, it’s likely not complete.
Make sure the information about your business that’s essential to potential customers—business name, address, phone number, and hours of operation—is correct.
Use your Google My Business information as the basis for creating listings on other local search directories and maps. It’s important your name, address, and phone (NAP) information is exactly the same on all local search directories. (According to Search Engine Bay, the top five local directories are Google, Bing, Yahoo, Yelp, and Facebook.)
Enhance your listings by adding details, including photos (“before and after” shots capture consumers’ attention), menus, current promotions, or seasonal hours.
Include your business address in the footer of your site’s home page, “Contact Us” page, and wherever else it’s appropriate. Add location-specific keywords (your city and neighborhood) in your site’s meta tags, title tags, descriptions, and content.
Your data needs to be kept up-to-date. This can be tedious and time-consuming, so consider farming it out to an agency or your webhost.
Voice: the new frontier
Voice search is the newest component of local marketing. Consumers are quickly embracing their digital voice assistants (Siri, Cortana, Alexa, Google Home, etc.). The statistics are compelling:
By 2020 there’ll be about 76.5 million smart speaker users in the United States, according to eMarketer. Already more than 17 million Americans buy products using smart speakers.
ComScore predicts that by 2020, 50% of all searches will be via voice.
Capgemini reports that 24% of consumers would rather use a voice assistant than visit a website.
Consumers search differently on voice, so you’ll need to change your search strategy. When using voice search, people speak naturally, in full sentences. This means targeting long-tail keywords is a must. To do this, think about what questions consumers would ask when searching for businesses like yours. Answer the Public has a great tool to help you with this. Check out, for instance, these questions for a lawn-care business.
While voice search is relatively new, consumers already have expectations:
52% want to learn about your deals, promotions, and sales.
48% want personalized tips and information that helps make their lives easier.
42% want to learn about upcoming events and activities.
39% use their devices to get more information about a business, such as hours of operation and location.
These are just a few of the strategies you need to embrace to better market your services and products. In the next article we’ll look at how you can get the most out of email marketing, social media, and ratings and review sites.
Be sure to read our other Countdown to 2019 posts:
How to Manage Your Business Cash Flow During the Slow Season
How to Manage, Schedule, and Track Time for Employees on Multiple Job Sites
About the Author
Rieva Lesonsky is CEO of GrowBiz Media, a media and custom content company focusing on small business and entrepreneurship. Email Rieva at rieva@smallbizdaily.com, follow her on Google+ and Twitter.com/Rieva, and visit her website, SmallBizDaily.com, to get the scoop on business trends and sign up for Rieva’s free TrendCast reports.
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