Online Marketing for Small Business: Helping a Diverse, Ill-Defined Group
Because I write for this blog for small businesses – a very ill-defined segment –I’ve decided to talk today about who you are from my perspective. You’re a group that ‘s quite misunderstood in terms of your diverse human characteristics – everywhere from government statistics to media coverage. Truth is, you’re not a monolithic group, but you do face similar marketing issues.
Although I keep up with the latest advances in web technology on your behalf, as I speak with you, I know that’s not necessarily what’s top of mind for you. Most of the companies I’m working with – or who are calling me in to help them get to the next level online — are very savvy. They have an earlier generation website, they have social media channels going, they’ve set up an ecommerce store, they’re doing email campaigns, have attended LinkedIn seminars. They know that online is where the world is and will continue to go. They’ve done the best they can.
But they need help figuring out how to make it all pay off for their businesses and how to organize online marketing into a manageable system. Time and limited resources are the enemy.
I can also tell you that small businesses defy easy categorization. We all see references to SMSB – Small to Mid-Sized Businesses. But the definitions of who they are and how small/large these companies are is all over the map. Attempts are made to define them by revenue, number of employees and other metrics. But in my experience, that’s not enough. So who are they?
Here are some of the varied characteristics of small businesses I’ve worked with:
- Main Street mom-and-pop bricks-and-mortar stores marketing locally.
- Start-ups with great ideas or products and bootstrap budgets.
- Established businesses with a few employees that market nationally or even globally.
- Growing regional companies building infrastructure.
- Exciting businesses – and nonprofits, too — transitioning from the original entrepreneurial founders to management with next-stage experience.
- Established bricks-and-mortars launching ecommerce divisions.
- Start-ups with angel funding.
- Divisions of larger companies with Round ‘A’ venture funding.
- Entrepreneurships with varying levels of experience and previous success.
- Billion dollar enterprises with three employees looking for the right kind of strategic marketing help.
- Manufacturing and service companies with revenues up to 150 million dollars.
- Established innovators ripe for acquisition with the right positioning and visibility.
- Any and all of the above trying to gain recognition for any number of strategic and tactical reasons.
What you and the aforementioned small business types share is that you need scalable help making the web work for you. Regardless of revenues or budgets, you have limited time, staff and/or budget resources and need to get effective and efficient outside advice and/or implementation help.
The objective of this blog is to help you understand the current and emerging environment, for sure, but at a level that does not forsake the practical advice that will help you make the best use of what you have available.
Conversation is part of the equation, so please continue to send your comments, questions and ideas.
Image from deanmeyersnet under Creative Commons license.
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