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What Offline Business Owners Must Know About Online Storefronts
It's amazing and unfortunate that many website owners inadvertently put up barriers
that discourage site visitors from actually doing business with them. This is especially
true for people with brick-and-mortar businesses who are trying to build an online
presence and who do not yet understand the differences between online and offline
marketing.
If someone walks into your local storefront, especially if they've had
to drive to get to it and drop a few coins in the parking meter, they're at least
partly committed to spending some time in the store. They either want something specifically,
in which case you're nearly guaranteed to make a sale, or they think your store probably
offers what they want, so they're willing to spend the time to look around.
In either
case, your friendly staff, attractive promotional displays and compelling sale prices
can influence someone to make a purchase, even if it wasn't what they originally
came for.
This seldom happens online. Your nearest competitor is only a quick Google
search away, a new website visitor may have little or no solid reason to look around
your site, and it often happens that you lose a would-be customer in the click of
a mouse.
That's why it's important for web site owners to remember that you need
to put the most important, most compelling, most commonly-requested information right
up front, preferably on the home page.
This is the exact opposite of a physical storefront,
where you can put your sale items in the back of the store and count on people walking
past the new merchandise to get to the clearance racks. Online, a visitor to your
website will not spend any time looking around unless they can tell immediately that
you probably have what they're looking for, whether that's information or designer
handbags.
You must also consider the fact that website visitors need more overt assurance
as to your company's legitimacy and trustworthiness than visitors to a physical storefront.
Someone who walks into a local store is subtly and sub-consciously bombarded with
all sorts of sensory and intellectual cues that reassure them (or not) that it's
safe to do business with this particular merchant. A store that is clean, well lit,
intelligently laid out, with merchandise that fits the price being asked and helpful
salespeople is more likely to be profitable than one that is not.
These factors are
less visible online. Most would-be website owners realize that a site with blinking
fonts and inconsistent navigation is a visitor turn-off, but still miss the mark
by failing to reassure potential buyers. They neglect to include information on shipping,
returns, privacy, guarantees and other store policies in a prominent location, which
makes the customer uneasy and less likely to make a purchase.
One last tip for the
storefront-owner-turned-web site-owner, and that's to remember where and when site
visitors come to your website. Many of your site visitors log on from work, or late
at night, or when the kids are napping - and their first panicked impulse is to click
away from your site if they're immediately greeting by loud music or an audio message
from the company president. Those site add-ons can add value, but should be optional.
David Barlow
The Web Maverick