works with you to find IT-driven ways of making your business run better. Our clients are small business owners who know that growth and value are held back if you depend on one or two key people being there all the time. Everything we do is about helping you improve the systems and processes on which you rely.
"The advice we received from Arbutus Ridge was invaluable and we are very pleased with their Jumpstart package.”
The owner of an Edinburgh glazing company
Want a copy of the case study? Email case-studies@arbutusridge.co.uk
Would you like to meet up for a chat over coffee about your business IT systems?
Perhaps you are struggling to get yours to work properly and could do with an IT advisor to help sort out some problems. Or are you thinking of upgrading your system, but would appreciate some advice on how to go about it and the pitfalls to avoid? We would be delighted to discuss these and other issues in an informal no-sales-pitch environment.
We are resident most Mondays between 5 and 6 pm at BeanScene opposite Haymarket Station in Edinburgh. Look out for the Arbutus Ridge sign. Please call 0131 527 6140 if you would like to confirm an appointment, or to make a different, more convenient arrangement.
Looking forward to meeting you soon.
Making a connection with your customers is crucial to the success of your business, no matter what you?re selling. It?s one thing to do that in person?in a store, for example?and quite another to do online.
Having a winning product and excellent customer service will take you a long way, even on a so-so Web site. But today's Internet experts will tell you that?s not enough. Connecting with customers online requires a different set of strategies that might not seem intuitive to the average small business.
Being aware of these connection-facilitating ideas can be as important to your company as the Internet itself. A 2007 survey by AMI-Partners found that more than 40 percent of U.S. small and midsize businesses are using Web 2.0 applications to connect with their customers through blogging, social networking, and other kinds of online interactivity. In other words, they?re reaching out to their customers in new, innovative ways more than ever.
With that in mind, here are five strategies for establishing a long-lasting relationship with Internet users.
What works? Write text that is easy to scan on the Web. "People don?t usually read long paragraphs of text online. Instead, they tend to scan the text to see if it has anything of interest," Dmitrieva says. That means simple language, lots of bullet points, and order forms that actually take orders.
What works? Contextually relevant content: anything from a chart depicting the growth in demand for a certain product to a short paragraph summarizing the benefits of a service. Barrett recalls one example of a custom publisher that launched a quarterly white-paper series. Most of the promotion was simple ?just a short Web site blurb and a few ads. The papers were only about eight pages each, but the information was relevant and valuable to the user. And it sold well.
What works? Creativity and passion for the customer, and a genuine interest in his or her point of view. These conversations are now happening in forum posts, wiki entries, and blog comments. Don?t limit yourself. But remember: Each medium has its own rules of etiquette that must be understood.
What works? Start small. Formatting an e-mail newsletter to greet a subscriber by name is pretty easy these days. But plan to expand your site beyond that. Large sites such as Amazon.com have taken customization to new levels, creating lists of book titles or CDs that they predict you might enjoy.
What works?Anything that can be used to set your site apart from the crowd will help you connect with customers?and win their business. For example, one service, SitePal, creates virtual characters that interact with your visitors, answering questions, and driving sales. The larger point, though, is that there are many applications that can give your site an edge, and many more that will be developed in the future. Be adventurous.
You can connect with customers by listening to their needs, saying something worthwhile, and having a creative dialogue. But sometimes, leaving your site is the best way to hook up with them. Marketing consultant Shel Horowitz likes to visit other Web sites and blogs and post comments that draw readers back to his site. "But it has to be genuine commentary that helps to position me as an expert and get my sites noticed in search engines," says Horowitz, the author of "Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World" (Chelsea Green, 2000).
Which is to say, your site is a terrific place to find customers. But don?t limit yourself.