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Tag Archives: competitors
Get Your Small Business Online Fast with a Website Builder
The post Get Your Small Business Online Fast with a Website Builder appeared first on HostGator Blog . For years, people have been saying your small business needs a website. You know it’s true, but you’ve been busy, you know, running a small business . Who has time to drop everything and throw a website together, especially when you know nothing about building or designing a website? Nearly a third of small businesses still don’t have a website. That makes sense if you think about how busy small business owners are and how overwhelming the skills required to build a website seem. But it makes no sense when you think about how much of our lives — and shopping habits — have moved online. 5 Reasons Your Small Business Needs a Website…Fast Maybe you’ve had good, understandable reasons for dragging your feet so far, but having a business website is no longer optional. Every day your business goes without one, you’re leaving money on the table. Still not convinced? Here are five important points that may sway you. 1. The majority of people in the U.S. shop online. And we don’t just mean a few over 50%, a full 96% of people do some of their shopping online. You probably do it yourself. It’s easy and it saves time. Shopping online means avoiding crowds, traffic, and parking. And if you’re not giving consumers that option, your competitors are winning that business. 2. Even when they shop in store, consumers like to use online tools. That doesn’t mean people are done with heading to a store to shop. In fact 79% of people still do at least as much of their shopping in person as they do online. But even for the customers willing to come to you, the internet plays a role. When they’re trying to figure out where to go to buy the item they need, where do you think they turn? They go online. If they want to compare the prices of similar items at a few different stores or check if the store has an item they need in stock, same thing. A lot of people now take some time to do online research before heading out to do their shopping. Without a website, you’re at a disadvantage during the research stage. 3. A website makes you more discoverable. Right now, the people who can find your business are those who already know about you, those that they tell, and the people who happen to drive by. Maybe that’s been enough for you to stay afloat, but think about how many people those three categories don’t cover. How many potential customers never become actual ones because they simply never learn your business exists? If you don’t show up when they search online for businesses in the area, you might as well be invisible to them. 4. A website gives you a way to alert customers to your hours and specials. Have you ever showed up at a business ready to spend money, only to find they were closed? It’s a frustrating feeling, especially if the drive to get there was at all long. You can save your customers from that frustration when you have a website that lists your hours. Even better, you can entice them to come in at times they wouldn’t have otherwise by using your site to advertise all your specials and sales. You get more business, your customers get a better experience. 5. A business website makes you look more legitimate. People expect legitimate businesses to have websites. In a world where scams abound, the first place people turn to make sure a business can be trusted is Google. If they don’t find a website, it makes you look suspicious at worst, behind the times at best. Either way, it doesn’t help your case. Obviously, you need to get your website up fast. But how? That’s easy: you need a website builder. What Is a Website Builder? A website builder is web design tool that makes it easy for anyone — even if you have no coding knowledge — to create your own website. Website builders typically come with a number of templates you can choose from so you don’t have to start from scratch and an intuitive website editor that makes it easy to make changes to the template. You can change out colors, add original text and images, and move elements of the page around, all without having to mess with html or learn complicated web design skills. How to Get Your Website Up Fast With a Website Builder Here are the steps to take when creating your business website using a website builder. 1. Choose your website builder. You’ve got options here. A number of different companies offer easy-to-use website builders. A few are free, but most use a subscription model where you pay every month or year for as long as you have your website. One way to save money and time on choosing your website builder is to go with one that includes something else you need to run a website, such as web hosting. HostGator’s web builder plans come with our website hosting included, so you can launch your website as soon as you’ve built it. 2. Establish your priorities. If your goal is to get a website up as fast as possible, then you don’t need your website to do everything right away. That doesn’t mean it’s okay to throw together a sloppy website — it’s still needs to look and be professional — but you can create a good website quickly by figuring out the most important things you need it to do right away. Ask yourself: what are the most important things your customers need to know? That’s what your website needs to communicate on day one. This likely includes: Your unique positioning – what your business does and why customers should choose you over your competitors Your contact information Your address Your hours You can work on adding more valuable information and marketing elements to your website later, if you want. For now, make sure you have a website that looks good and covers the basics. 3. Decide on your color scheme. You want every page of your website to visually communicate a cohesive brand identity. One of the best ways to do that is to use the same color scheme throughout the whole site. If your Home page is yellow and blue and your About page is black and green, confused visitors will wonder if they’ve navigated away from your website. Does your store or logo already have a clear color scheme? If so, go ahead and stick with those colors when building your website. If not, decide now what colors you want to represent your brand. Make sure they go well together and are pleasing to the eye. 4. Choose your theme. Go through the templates your website builder offers to find one that’s a good fit for your website. Remember that you can make as many changes to the details of the theme as you want. It’s only a starting point for you to work from. Don’t worry if the example website in the theme is for a business in a different industry or they use different colors than you want — you’ll be changing all that. Pay attention instead to the structure of the pages and the visual style of the theme, if those come close to what you want, you won’t have to make as many changes to get your website ready to go. 5. Decide what pages to include. Let the priorities you decided on guide you here. It’s standard for business websites to include a Home page, an About page, and a Contact page. Beyond that, you may want to create pages for all of the main categories of products or services you sell. Over time, you may want to add in product pages for each specific product you offer or even convert your website to an eCommerce store, but since the goal right now is to get your website up fast, those plans can be on the backburner. But do consider now what your long-term hopes are for the website. It will help you create a solid plan for how to organize your website so it stays intuitive as it grows. 6. Edit the theme with your chosen colors and style. With a good website editor, this should be pretty easy. You can select the colors you picked for your color scheme and fill in different parts of the page with a few clicks. Once you do this on one page, you can make a copy of the page when you’re ready to start on the next so you don’t have to re-do your color changes. 7. Load and position original images. Your theme probably includes some stock images. Replace those with original images that are relevant to your store. Add your logo to the top right corner of the page. Add photos of your store or products, or illustrations that communicate something about your brand. 8. Add original copy. Take time to make the words on your website purposeful. Use them to explain what your business does and make a case for why visitors should buy from you. Make your copy customer-focused. When describing what you do, make it less about how that work looks on your end and more about how it makes your customers’ lives better or easier. With time, you may want to hire a professional copywriter to improve upon what you write now. Good copy can be powerful in getting your visitors to choose you. But today the most important thing is that it’s clear, it tells your visitors what they need to know, and it’s free from embarrassing typos and errors. To achieve that last part, make sure you proofread every page twice and see if you can get a friend to read over it as well to confirm that it’s all clear and looks good. 9. Create a website plan for moving forward. All of the steps here are focused on getting your website out there to begin with. That’s a really important step to take and one that already makes a big difference in how visible and accessible your business will be to people. But to get the most out of a website once you have it, there’s more work to do. Make a plan now for how to improve your website over time. That could be as simple as doing regular website maintenance , updating your hours for holidays, and adding information on the website each time you have a sale. Or you could create a full plan to launch an eCommerce store and start doing online marketing. Either way, don’t publish your website once and forget about it. Your website will need some care to stay up to date and do its job for you in the months and years to come. What Are You Waiting For? Sounds easy enough, right? So no more excuses. Choose a website builder and get your website up and running fast. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged colors, competitors, customers, hosting, hours, internet, shopping, small-business, vodahost, web-design, website-builder
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5 Ideas To Create Social Media Content Your Customers Will Love
The post 5 Ideas To Create Social Media Content Your Customers Will Love appeared first on HostGator Blog . How to Create Social Media Content That Your Customers Actually Like Most businesses share content without thinking about whether it will resonate with their customers. They focus on promoting their products and get stuck in a rut of selling 24/7. Those companies miss an essential point of marketing— thinking of your customers, not yourself. You’ll want to be strategic about your content. Larry Alton , an Adweek contributor, says: “Sure, an attractive Facebook cover photo is great, but it’s not going to mean the difference between converting a follower into a customer. The content you publish and share could, though. Treat content like your currency and it’ll fundamentally change the way you approach social media.” It’s time for you to experiment. Here are a few ways to find the types of social media content your customers will love. 1. Identify Popular Blog Posts When it comes to selecting the right content, teams can get antsy. Rather than creating a focused strategy, they start posting any and everything online. As a result, your social media account looks like paint thrown onto a wall. A few of posts work well, but most of your content misses the mark. Then, you scramble to try again and get the same outcome. This time around, begin with what you know. And that’s your popular blog posts! You’ve already done the hard work, and you know customers benefit from the content. Now, it’s up to you to share it with the rest of your followers. If your website is connected to Google Analytics, you can locate your most popular posts in a few seconds. First, login to your account. On the left column, click Behavior , Site Content , and then All Pages . For primary dimension, click Page Title . Image Source Be sure to adapt each post to your desired social channel. You may have to tweak images, headlines, or even create a cool Twitter thread. Do what’s already working. Start with your greatest hits—your most popular blog posts. 2. Ask Customers Directly As small business owners, it’s easy to get stuck in your own head. Your team is pondering day and night to figure out what content will intrigue your fans. However, it’s important to realize that you don’t possess all the answers. And to reach a solution, sometimes the best option is to ask your customers directly. That’s right! If you want to know the types of content that really excite customers, get their feedback. “Can direct outreach really be beneficial in getting feedback from customers? Absolutely. Understanding your customers is often as easy as talking to them directly. This direct outreach can also help fill in the gaps that less personal forms of feedback tend to create, ” states Gregory Ciotti , a writer, marketing strategist and alum of Help Scout. Depending on your company’s resources, you have a few ways to collect customers’ feedback. You can try sending an email requesting responses to a few questions, connecting with them on social media via direct message, or if you really have time, pick up the phone and call customers. Inquire about their interests and what problems are plaguing them at the moment. That way, you can post social media content that fits their needs. 3. Listen on Social Media On social media, there’s a lot of noise. Brands can get trapped into talking about irrelevant topics and decide only to stick to what they know best—their products. To venture beyond the constant selling, you must be willing to do things differently. Rather than blasting out the same post every day at the same time, you’ll want to actually listen to your customers. Jump down the social media rabbit hole to learn more about your followers. Gather information on what they like and dislike about your brand and discover their interests. This is the art of social listening . To organize your search, you’ll probably want to invest in a tool like Sprout Social . You can monitor specific keywords, identify relevant hashtags, and engage with your brand advocates. Reports indicate that 71% of consumers who have had a good social media service experience with a brand are likely to recommend it to others. So take what you learn and apply it your customer service interactions. Moreover, user-generated content is helpful for providing your audience with social proof. Reach out to customers raving about your brand and ask them if you can use their content in your next campaign. 4. Spy on Your Competitors’ Content In the world of business, there’s a wise piece of advice for newcomers: don’t reinvent the wheel. Too many times, teams spend their precious resources building something from scratch, instead of revamping a mold that already exists. Some of the best content research is available for free and it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to locate. So, where is it? It’s your competitor’s social media content. Both of you are attracting and engaging similar audiences, so use their content as a barometer on what may or may not resonate on your channel. “You can also learn from your competitor’s mistakes—the Facebook posts that flop versus the posts people love, for instance—and hone your strategy to accommodate what appeals to your audience. With competitive intelligence in your marketing arsenal, you’re prepared to amp up your presence and increase traffic back to your website,” writes Sarah Bauer , content director at Navigator Multimedia Inc. Observe which content types get the most customer engagement. Look for questions asked by followers and never get answered. The goal is to find your competitor’s blind spot and fill the consumer’s need on your social media account. Of course, spying on the competition won’t give you everything you need. But it’s an effective process to get the content machine moving in the right direction. 5. Research Past Social Engagement People are creatures of habit. We take comfort in doing things the same old way. When people recognize something familiar, we move towards it. This principle holds true for ramping up your social media engagement. Analyzing past trends can offer insight on what customers may enjoy in the future. Too often, we skip the data available to us. Analytics dashboards make it easier than ever to review social behavior. For instance, below is a summary of Twitter analytics . It shows the top tweet, top media tweet, top mention, and top follower. You can find similar data on your brand’s account. Once you gather this data, what’s next? Use it as a guide to craft content with related topics or themes. It also may spark ideas to repurpose existing content. Share that funny meme on Facebook to your Twitter followers. Ask an influencer in your field to repost your top Instagram post. Social media is always evolving. So don’t focus on trends from three or five years ago. The past year is good enough to understand what your customers like. Data is useful for predicting future behavior. Learn how to leverage it to satisfy your customers. Must-See Social Media Content The first rule of social media is to make content your audience will enjoy. If you don’t, you risk losing people’s interest quickly. Promote popular blog posts to connect with your followers. Pay attention to what your fans post on their accounts. And give yourself a boost by taking a peek at your competitors. Speak to your customers. Create likeable content. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged audience, competitor, competitors, facebook, followers, ideas, media-content, small-business, social, social-media
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Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost, vps
Tagged best-specials, competitors, hosting, offer-the-best, our-competitors, rest, special, special-offer, vps, vps hosting offers, web hosting
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Tagged competitors, great-specials, hosting, our-competitors, php, rest, the-deals, vps hosting offers
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