Bring
the Internet Home
©
Sharon Fling
A
funny thing has happened since we discovered the world at
our fingertips. Everywhere you look, it's global this, world-wide
that, national whatever. It's as if hometowns and cities are
small potatoes, not worth fooling with. As online marketers,
we're so busy prospecting far and wide that the gold in our
own backyards remains untouched.
So
here we are, all trying to scratch out a living online by
selling e-books, software, etc
to each other.
Everyone knows that's where the money is - selling products
and services to other aspiring "Internet marketers."
It's a vicious - some would say incestuous - circle.
But
wait!
there's another HUGE, virtually untapped,
pool of potential customers right under your nose. Look around.
They're everywhere. Local consumers and small business owners
in your neighborhood that don't have a clue about the Internet.
Oh
sure, they know about it, the same way we know about outer
space. It's a big black hole "out there"
somewhere. But really, most regular people have no idea of
the power of the Internet
But
little by little, the lines between the virtual and the dirt
worlds are blurring. "Website" and "email"
have been household words. Consumers are regularly going online
to do research before purchasing products and services. Online
sales are skyrocketing. All signs point to a successful marriage
of traditional and online media.
Yet,
the vast majority of online marketers are doing the same thing
brick-and- mortars are doing -- but in reverse. They're ignoring
the offline world the way that most local businesses ignore
the Internet.
It's
time for us to wake up and see what's right in front of us.
Look
at Ralph Wilson and Ken Evoy, unarguably two
of the smartest people online today. Ralph created www.netassisted.com
- combining traditional and internet marketing to "NetAssist"
local businesses and churches.
Ken's
Service Sellers Masters Course is "the complete resource
for building a client base for your service-oriented business,
whether your clients are around the world... or around the
block." (For more info:
localtsms@sitesell.net)
It's
time to bring the Internet home.
How?
Use the knowledge and skills you've gained from your online
travels to make a living
offline. Help small local businesses
in your community see what they're missing. Help local consumers
find local businesses so that all of your community's dollars
aren't sucked into the global vortex.
Here
are some ideas:
Local
Email Marketing
Here's
a valuable service that small businesses will pay good money
for because they don't want to do it themselves. This is a
business that's growing like wildfire, especially if you niche
yourself. For instance, Fishbowl - http://www.fishbowl.com
- specializes in managing email list management services for
restaurants.
If
this interests you, check out this ebook that tells you how
to set up a business to manage small business email marketing:
http://www.geolocal.com/localemail
Several LBT readers have written to tell me how they
started a local email marketing business after getting this
book --remember WendyBluEyez from Issue #20?And just
this week I got a note from a guy telling me how he started
his local email service in February, and now has 32
accounts at $77 a month.
SiteBuildIt!
Here's
a golden opportunity for you to help someone get online without
having to do the drudge work of creating the site yourself.
For mere pennies, a small business owner can get an all-in-one
site-building, site-hosting, and site-marketing product that
makes it easy for them to build a professional, popular, and
profitable business. If they don't want to build it, you can
build it for them. Either way, you get a hefty commission
when they buy SBI! on your recommendation. Not a SiteSell
affiliate yet? http://local.sitesell.com
Local
Portals
Create
your own local community portal, then use it to cross promote
your email marketing service, SBI!. and any other online business
or affiliate programs. Sell ads to local businesses who can't
afford to pay for print advertising. Build a relationship
with them and eventually you'll be able to introduce them
to SBI!, email marketing, etc.
But
don't just fill it up with ads -- create a real community
resource, a place where folks can get useful information along
- local events, important phone numbers, website listings
for city government, etc. Make it search engine friendly and
use both online and offline promotion to drive traffic. Here's
the system I'm using to create a local portal for my community:
http://www.geolocal.com/localportal
Coffee
News
All
business owners understand print. If you can afford it, you
might want to become a Coffee News publisher. Coffee News
is a local restaurant publication that you publish and distribute,
earning income by selling ads to local businesses. Of course
publishing isn't for everyone. It's a franchise, so you do
need a bit of money to get started and keep the papers flowing
while you build your client list. And someone has to get out
there and pound the pavement. But the cross promotion possibilities
are endless.
As
you probably know, we became Coffee News publishers a few
months ago, and the first thing we did was put up a website
that features our advertisers on every page. If they have
a website, we link to it. If they don't, we create a page
for them on www.coffeenewsfb.com.
Distributors are listed as well, along with their address
and phone number or URL. And you'd better believe there's
an ad for www.geolocal.com
and my book in every issue!
And
of course in every issue, we give readers a reason to go to
the website - for community information, to play the Coffee
News Word Search, input local happenings - and more exposure
to our advertisers. We're now working on a local portal for
Missouri City at www.mocitybusiness.com. It will be cross-linked
with www.coffeenewsfb.com,
which will generate even more local traffic for both sites
and
give our advertisers even more exposure. Plus it's
an option for local businesses who can't afford print advertising.
If we decide to offer email marketing, we can promote that
too. SBI! is a natural fit here too. Once you get that synergy
going, there's no stopping it!
The
point is, there are plenty of people who need your help and
expertise right in your own backyard. You and I both know
they cannot afford to ignore the Internet forever. Who better
to show them than you?
Become
a part of your business community. Join your chamber of commerce
and networking organizations such as BNI (www.bni.com)
and Le Tip (www.letip.com).
Get to know local business owners, form relationships.
I
won't lie to you, it's not going to be easy or quick. Small
business owners can be hard to reach. They're wary and suspicious.
Many were "burned" during the dot-bomb era and won't
listen to a word you say. Some of them can make a dollar cry,
they squeeze it so tight. Somebody's always trying to sell
them something, and more than one snake-oil salesman has tried
to "help them get on the Internet."
Like
anything worth having, it will take hard work. You'll have
to win their trust and truly have their best interests at
heart. If you're just trying to make a fast buck, they'll
smell it. Get out of the role of salesperson -- you're a consultant,
helping them build their business.
Remember,
they don't KNOW that they don't know
but you do.
If you stay the course, in the long run it will pay off, both
for you and for them.
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