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Many small and medium business owners are confident of their ability to offer excellent products and services. However, in most cases, the same businesses don’t get the impact they want because of their inability to get their message across to potential consumers. In other words they fail to promote the business effectively.
That is a common problem for business owners regardless of whether they are B2C or B2B enterprises, and the only way to conquer that frustration is to exploit as many ways of promoting the business as possible. A decade ago that would have meant taking out a prominent ad in the Yellow Pages, but the widespread use of the Internet has changed all that, and businesses who don’t consider online business promotion may, in turn, find themselves struggling.
The latest figures from the Office of National Statistics show that 65% of UK households now have access to the Internet, representing 16.46 million homes. Of those, 84% use the web to find information on companies, products and services. That is 14.3 million UK households searching for things to buy online; quite a massive potential market! The implication is that it is now easier and quicker for the majority of web users to sit down in front of their PC and use a search engine to look for a type of business, product or service.
As a result, previously tried and tested ways of promoting a business may no longer be relevant, such as trawling through a printed version of the phone book or the local trade directory. Indeed, from a small business point of view, lead times to get publications into print take so long they could miss out on a substantial amount of business waiting for the next version containing their entry to be produced.
But, the good news for small business owners is that effective business promotion on the web needn’t be expensive. With free online directories available, both for trade and consumer, getting the business’ name ‘out there’ is only a matter of filling in a few online forms, and the more the better!
It is also often worthwhile to seek out business communities, where like-minded entrepreneurs tread the same path towards getting their business noticed. Such communities allow a business to tell others about their particular services in a dynamic environment where one can build direct relations with other business people; helping to find new customers, preferred suppliers and even staff in the long run. Many such communities are free to join, so incurred costs needn’t be an issue, making them ideal promotional tools.
Those with even more extensive promotional budgets could consider a full online marketing campaign which involves the active promotion of their business through a number of tried and tested techniques; but any business owner that disregards the impact of the Internet as a marketing tool does so at their own peril!
Article Source: http://www.theukarticledirectory.co.uk