:: Home
> Library
> Business
Ideas/Section-1
The popular news media has been glutted
with stories about the Internet, so glutted that many people are
skeptical about what the Internet can do for their businesses. This
is understandable. Everyone is saying that the Internet is the "market
of the future," that if you don't get your business on the
Internet, you'll be left behind. What none of them seem to want
to tell you are the real reasons you should do business on the Internet.
Before I do that, though, let me dispel some inaccuracies that I've
seen in many ads, flyers, and sales letters.
The most common piece of information quoted
about the Internet, particularly by people who are trying to sell
Internet "home pages" to business opportunists, is that
the Internet is the most expansive market in the world, with estimates
of 30,000,000 people or more currently using it, and tens of thousands
more joining in weekly. Well, this is partly true, but not really
100% true.
The first question you have to ask is where
the 30,000,000 number came from. Personally, I don't know. However,
I do know that studies are showing a truer estimate is closer to
12,000,000. Where are the missing people?
Well, a lot of hypesters count every single person who's on an online
service such as America Online or Compuserve as being on the Internet.
Unfortunately, not everyone on the online services uses the Internet.
Many of them are content to remain in the "enclosed" portion
of the online services, rather than venture out into the web. If
they're only interested in stock quotes, or downloading files, they
may never access the Internet (though they should - they'd find
more and better material!).
Also, many people try online services,
find they aren't interested, and drop the service after their "free
trial month." The hypesters count these people as being among
the fabled 30,000,000, as well as being part of the tens of thousands
signing up weekly. They shouldn't.
Another interesting tidbit I've seen frequently
is something along the lines of "you can easily sell anything
on the Internet." Well, I don't know about that. While I've
seen plenty of success stories about people selling tons of personalized
T-shirts, coffee mugs, books, cookies, vacuum cleaners, antiques,
and other "hard goods," I know that the percentage of
success stories on the Internet are still far lower than in the
"real world." The truth is, if you want to sell a product
on the Internet and be successful, you should be able to not only
sell the product, but also deliver the product on the Internet.
Thus, information products are the best items to sell over the Internet.
You can sell the other products I named above, as well as a myriad
of others, but it's tougher. Why? Because of the number of people
on the Internet, that's why.
Many hypesters make a point of the huge
numbers of people on the Internet. This can work against you, because
it makes it tough to target your market. Just because there's 12,000,000
people out there doesn't mean that all 12,000,000 are interested
in buying an antique chair from you. In fact, maybe only ¼%
would be interested. That's still a very respectable 30,000 people,
and if you could sell 30,000 antique chairs, I'm sure you'd make
a great deal of money. However, you need to reach those 30,000 people
with your message.
In the "real world," it might
be easy to reach those people wanting an antique chair by advertising
in antique-related publications. That's targeted marketing. However,
on the Internet, things work in reverse. In the real world, the
antique publication is delivered to the people. On the Internet,
those people need to seek you out. Thus, if you want to market on
the Internet, you'd better be willing to work the "publicity
machine," with entries in online databases, advertising, press
releases, etc. It's just like in the real world. Just because you
put a home page on the Internet, you aren't necessarily going to
get rich overnight.
So, now that I've probably discouraged
you, I'll again ask the question that's posed in the title of this
report: should you do business on the Internet?
YES!
How can I say that after sounding so much
doom and gloom? Well, even if there are only 12,000,000 people on
the Internet instead of 30,000,000, that's still a large group of
people, and thousands are joining their ranks all the time. There's
bound to be some people who are interested in what you have to sell.
Plus, it's the way of the future. Wal-Mart
has just announced that they plan to make all of the products you'd
find in a typical Wal-Mart store available for purchase over the
Internet. It might be awhile before that happens, but if it's ok
for Wal-Mart, it should be ok for you.
Another good reason is the equalizing factor
of the Internet. Even if you're just running a small business from
a single bedroom in your house, you can compete on even ground with
a large corporation. If your website is designed well, you can be
as impressive looking and as technologically advanced (maybe even
more - there are a lot of major corporations with crummy looking
websites out there).
If you're on the Internet, you're poised
to have instantaneous contact with your prospective and current
customers. Through the use of email and autoresponders, you can
deliver product information around the world for little or no cost
24 hours a day. You can't do that on the phone or through the mail.
If you're on the Internet, you can greatly
expand your market. If you're only marketing locally, you can now
market nationally. If you're currently marketing nationally, you're
now in the International market with the Internet. As long as you
have a product or service that is useful to people in other countries,
you have a chance at expanding your profit base.
Don't forget the publicity factor behind being on the Internet.
Having an Internet website for your business is still a status symbol,
if you will. Once you're online, put your email and website addresses
on your business cards, your letterhead, your envelopes, everything.
Also, send out press releases to your local press and any other
publications applicable to your line of work, letting them know
about your website. It might be deemed newsworthy, and you'll get
some free publicity for your website, as well as a bit of status
from being "technologically advanced."
Finally, if you are selling information
products, you can deliver the product immediately to your customer,
and you'll have no printing expense, no delivery expense, nothing.
That's a great profit margin.
You need to go into the Internet with a clear head. Forget those
overinflated promises and numbers that the hucksters are spouting.
If it sounds like hype, and it smells like hype, it's hype, pure
and simple. And very few things have generated the unadulterated
hype that the Internet has. However, there are a lot of good, solid
reasons to have your business on the Internet. You can be up in
a week... so start today!