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10 Ways to Get Your Website in Shape for the New Year in 2019
The post 10 Ways to Get Your Website in Shape for the New Year in 2019 appeared first on HostGator Blog . A New Year should come with new goals for your business . As you work through your end-of-year to do list – reevaluating your finances, hiring new employees, and deciding which tactics to embrace or toss aside in the year to come – it’s important that you make plans to maintain your website along with your larger business. Your website is the main way a lot of people interact with your brand, after all. “One of the most often overlooked components—yet one of the most critical—to any successful website strategy is ongoing maintenance. While the initial website project is critical to creating the right foundation, the ongoing maintenance and upkeep is where you’ll really see your website shine,” writes Don Cranford , principal and director of technology at Katalyst Solutions. If you’ve tended to let general maintenance of your website slide over the years, make it one of your goals moving into the New Year to correct that. Here are a few action items to add to your to-do list now to get your website in shape for 2019. 1. Evaluate your analytics. Analytics are the ultimate tool for examining the health of your website traffic . It’s vital for your team to understand how your visitors and qualified leads find your business. Knowing whether people come to your website from organic search, paid search, or Facebook tells you a lot about how your online marketing efforts are working. And keeping an eye on your analytics as part of regular website maintenance can save you trouble down the line. Kim Garst , founder and CEO of Boom! Social, offers the following suggestion, “Compile a bunch of blog posts on a particular topic, and promote them as a multi-day e-course. Each day, send one email (blog post) to your new subscribers to help them accomplish whatever goal you have promised to help them achieve.” Don’t be afraid to revisit your content archives and promote your old content anew. Your audience that’s been with you for a while may appreciate the refresher, and your new audience will get to see some of your old hits for the first time. 5. Revamp your homepage. Your website’s homepage will be the first impression you make on many visitors – you’d better make it a good one. Your homepage should accomplish a few main goals: Clearly communicate your brand’s positioning (why should a customer choose you?) Look professional (you don’t want to scare new visitors off by looking like you’re still in the 90s ) Answer the main questions people may have (where you’re located, contact information, etc.) Make it easy for people to know where to go next Update your design by tweaking the navigation of your site. Anticipate where consumers will click and provide clear calls-to-action to help them locate what they need. Eliminate any wording that doesn’t benefit the visitor. Too many words can distract customers from their intended reason for checking out your site. In the example below, HostGator customer Hiatus Spa + Retreat uses their site to say more with less. The website looks clean and professional, has a clear CTA, and provides an intuitive menu for those who want to find more information. A few words and vivid imagery can go a long way. Make the best first impression by showcasing a modern, uncluttered homepage. It’ll give clarity and accessibility to your visitors. 6. Review and improve your calls-to-action (CTAs). Every page on your website should be designed with a clear goal in mind. You should always know what you want your visitor to do next, and it should be obvious to them how to do it. The CTAs you include on each page have an important job to do , but you shouldn’t just assume they’re all doing that job. Check your analytics to see how often the people who visit your pages are taking the action you most want them to. Then do some experimenting. Work up different variations on your CTAs – try different visual designs, different wording, and different locations on the page. Try out different CTAs on different pages to see if some work better when paired with specific content. Do A/B testing to confirm which of the CTAs you try work best. The more data you have, the more you can refine your website so that people are more likely to take the steps you want them to. 7. Fix any checkout process issues. Everything else you design your website to accomplish leads back to the main end goal of sales. If you’re not driving revenue, you won’t last. To meet your sales goals, your checkout process must be frictionless. Jeremy Said . If you discover that customers hate creating member registrations, one solution is to try a social login. This one-click alternative will help consumers move through the checkout process faster. If you’ve noticed the checkout seems to stop at the moment the customer sees the cost of shipping , think about offering flat-rate shipping or free shipping for qualifying orders. Anything that stops the sale from happening is bad for business. Figure out what roadblocks are in your customer’s pathway and remove them. 8. Make sure your security’s up-to-date. Every time a story about a data breach makes waves, people get a little more nervous about handing their credit card information over to businesses. You can’t help what happens in the news, but you can take steps to keep your own website secure and ensure all the private information your customers give you is protected. Go through our web security checklist and make sure your security measures are up to date. There are some easy ways to reduce vulnerabilities in your website to make your customer data safer. You owe it to your customers to do your part in protecting them. 9. Check your domain registration. This is a simple step to take, but one you have to remember to do every year. Contact your hosting provider to learn when your registration will expire. If it’s due soon, go ahead and pay for the renewal, and consider signing up for auto-renewals for future registrations. And remember to update any contact information—business name, address, and phone number. It also may be time to purchase a new domain for upcoming brand changes . So, ask your provider for details about availability and prices. Sometimes the smallest things in your business are overlooked. Make sure your domain registration continues so you can offer uninterrupted service to your customers 10. Reinvest in your brand community. This is less something that you do to your website, and more something that you do for it. As your business grows, it’s essential to keep your brand community engaged. Make a plan this year to give your consumers the engagement they deserve. Respond promptly to comments left on your blog posts. Take time to say thanks in response to positive reviews and ensure that no complaint goes unanswered. Interact with users on social media – plan to be quick and polite at least, but if your social media manager is up to it, try to be clever or entertaining as well. Experiment with starting a new loyalty program or making improvements to the one you have. Brand ambassadors serve as an extension of your company. If they’re not satisfied, you may expose your business to unwanted negative publicity. Get reacquainted with your target audience. A dedicated community opens the door to business opportunities. A New Year, A Better Website It’s time to roll up your sleeves. The New Year is a time to reflect and reassess your business’s needs, and that includes your website. A better website is part of running a better business. A few tweaks now could garner you better results in the year to come and ensure your website can continue to do the important job it does for your business. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged credit, credit-card, design, desktop, facebook, hostgator, hosting, marketing, news, social-media, web hosting tips
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16 Tips for Promoting Your Small Business Website During the Holidays
The post 16 Tips for Promoting Your Small Business Website During the Holidays appeared first on HostGator Blog . If you’re reading this post, you already know that running a small business is hard work. And it only gets more difficult during the holiday season. As a small business owner, you may feel that each day with an “open” sign is a reason to celebrate. We get it. HostGator is turning 16 years old , but like so many other businesses, HostGator started as a small business with a single client. Our customer base grew quickly from dozens to hundreds, and hundreds to thousands, and so can you! We may be turning 16, but we’re celebrating you – small businesses – and helping you succeed with a birthday sale and 16 tips to promote your small business website during the holidays. Let’s get started! 1. Determine your holiday marketing budget. Hopefully you have a regular budget set aside for online marketing. If not, it’s likely time to think about a budget, even a small marketing budget, particularly since some social media channels require a small “pay to play” amount. Yes, your Facebook business page is still free, but the Facebook algorithm gives high preference to sponsored posts and ads. As such, it’s harder to be seen in the busy news feed. One solution is to work incredibly hard at organic posts – publishing your posts multiple times or offering giveaways if your fans will share your page. The quickest solution, however, may be to buy small ads or promoted posts to ensure that fans see your posts. If you already have a marketing budget, great! Think about how much additional money you can contribute to your marketing budget during the holiday season. 2. Make a “set it and forget it” plan for social media marketing. In the hustle and bustle of trying to work your business during the holiday season, give yourself a break by planning and pre-scheduling as much as you can. Social media may be the last thing on your mind when the holiday season ramps up, so create a social “set it and forget it” media promotion plan. Creating and scheduling social media posts in advance can save you a ton of time during the busy season, and it will free up your mind to be more creative in the moment. Make a list of at least three posts per week that you can pre schedule. Your scheduled post can be as simple as a reminder of your holiday hours or as detailed as a featured item of the day or a blog post you’ve already written. If social media content seems too overwhelming during the holiday season, consider hiring a freelance social media manager. You can find affordable freelancers on websites such as Fiverr . But hiring a freelancer doesn’t completely eliminate your need to be involved. A freelance social media manager will likely want to schedule a meeting with you to go over ideas, and may even request your approval of the content before posting to social media. A freelancer can certainly be helpful with on-demand needs such as if you expect to get more inbox messages on your page. If you have social media-savvy staff members, consider giving them access to post on your social media accounts during the holiday season. Ultimately, be smart about what will pose the least risk for your business and will also help maximize your time during the holiday season. 3. Be sure that your physical location and office hours are correct and consistent. Be sure that your physical location and office hours are correct and consistent across the internet. Don’t forget to check all mentions on your own website, all ‘about’ sections on social media, your Google My Business listings, and any other local listing websites. In the long run, consistent information will give you credibility with search engines which may, in turn, list your website higher in search results. Take a few minutes to be sure all your information is correct and consistent. If you have special holiday hours, be sure to list them and consider noting that they are, in fact, holiday hours. Customers are more likely to shop with you if they can trust that you’ll be open when your website says you will be open. 4. Offer a holiday coupon. According to a 2016 CouponBox survey , coupons can increase revenue for retailers up to 40 percent. But what type of coupon should you offer? First of all, determine your profit margin and create a coupon that brings revenue without cutting into your profit margin. Create a coupon that will be intriguing for your customers, and share the coupon as often as you want – on social media, in email marketing, or even a traditional printed coupon stuffed into shopping bags for future purchases. Create unique coupon codes for each coupon that you offer in order to track which coupons are most popular. For instance, have a coupon code such as “EMAIL” for email offers and a different code, such as “SHAREME,” to indicate coupons found via social media. At the end of the holiday season, count the coupon codes to know which coupons were most profitable for your business so that planning for next year will be easier. Online coupons are very shareable, which can be in your favor, but keep in mind that online coupons can also be picked up by sites like RetailMeNot. Be sure you are able to sustain a coupon (and orders) on a large scale. 5. Develop an email marketing campaign to promote your sales & holiday promotions. Email marketing is an efficient and cost-effective way to communicate with your customers. As social media feeds continue to limit timely exposure to your fanbase, email marketing allows your customers to see and open your emails on their own schedule. To make it easier on you, set up email automation by scheduling a series of emails to distribute throughout the holiday season. Use your email campaigns to promote the coupons, holiday gift guides, and other holiday sales you have going on during the holiday season. 6. Develop new ideas for your holiday campaigns by reviewing last year’s analytics. You know that statement about learning from your past? You can apply the same concept to your holiday marketing efforts by looking at last year’s data to find ideas you can apply or tweak this year . Create a list of all your data and analytics that could be helpful such as Google Analytics, analytics from your email marketing software, and social media analytics for paid and organic posts. Review your data from October to January, and look for trends such as what your audience reacted to, which posts received the most traffic, and what time of day your website received the most traffic. You can learn a lot from last year’s analytics that can help shape your holiday marketing strategy this year. 7. Build your following by co-sponsoring a giveaway with a complementary brand. Word of mouth still has a strong influence on shoppers. One way you can capitalize on word of mouth is to partner with other small businesses or brands. Look for small businesses that offer products or services that would be of interest to your customers. Consider small businesses with a strong social media following that is larger than yours or has customers that are similar to yours. To double your exposure, both companies should tag the social media promotion. 8. Ask current customers for reviews. Building on the word of mouth concept, customers are highly likely to read online reviews before purchasing. In fact, customers often read product reviews on multiple sites during their decision making process. According to research from BrightLocal, 88% of customers trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations. Online reviews are also important for search engine rankings. Websites may rank higher in search results if the company has reviews, especially positive reviews. If a customer has a positive experience with your business, encourage them to share it on one of the review sites. You can get started easily with reviews on Facebook, Google My Business, Yelp, or even reviews posted on your own website. One thing to note – search engines usually want these reviews to be and feel organic. If you were to run a contest and encourage people to complete a review in order to enter the contest, Google may see this flood of reviews as spammy. Bottom line, keep it organic and honest. 9. Make sure your website is ready to handle the holiday traffic boost. Many businesses start with a small, shared web hosting plan, but eventually reach the point where they need to upgrade. Small businesses may choose to upgrade their website hosting for more server space, more speed, or if they want a more secure server environment. But how do you know if it’s time to upgrade to a dedicated server ? If you’ve experienced slow website performance or if you keep highly sensitive information, it may be time to consider a dedicated server. During the holiday season, you’re likely to expect more traffic to your website, and upgrading to a dedicated server could the perfect solution to ensure your website is ready to handle the traffic spike. 10. Update your website to a mobile-friendly design template. The rise of website traffic from mobile devices , as compared to desktop computers, continues to grow. Some people who browse the web on their mobile devices don’t mind seeing the full website, but others want to find the information as quickly as possible. You can make your website responsive , meaning the layout adjusts based on the screen size of the user. As your customers are out on the road during the holiday season, they will certainly appreciate being able to access your website from their mobile phone or tablet. Added perk? Google will give higher search engine ranking preference to websites that are responsive. 11. Add social media links and feeds to your website. Social media is a channel that offers high return for sharing content with your fans, but did you know that you can make it easier for your fans to share your content across social media ? Add social share buttons to your website so fans can hit one button and quickly share your content without ever leaving your website. Consider adding a social media feed to your website, either on the sidebar or embedded in a page, so website visitors can easily see the sales or promotions you may have on social media. 12. Offer exclusive events for your members or top customers. Throw a holiday-themed party for your customers to encourage brand loyalty. If you can, time the event with a product preview, product launch, or a “sip and see” for your new product line. Promote the event on your website, in an email invitation, and even on social media. Try to host this party early in the season such as October or November when your customers begin to think about holiday shopping. 13. Create a holiday gift guide. As you know, shopping for everyone on your holiday gift list can be overwhelming. Make shopping easier for your customers by creating a holiday gift guide. A holiday gift guide organizes the best of your products and gifts into categories based on the gift recipient, dollar amount, or by theme. For example, sort products by gifts for her, gifts for him, gifts under $50, gifts for teens, gifts for the home, and more. A guide will highlight your products, make shopping easier for your customers, and will be easy for your customers to share with their friends.  14. Reorganize your website by gift categories or themes. Now that you’ve created a holiday gift guide, consider updating the main navigation of your website to match your holiday shopping categories. Many people visiting your website during November and December will likely be purchasing gifts. Make it easy for them to find your top recommended gifts so they will be more likely to purchase.  15. Bring customers back to your site by remarketing on social media. Have you ever searched for a product online and later saw an ad for the same product on social media? That’s a feature called remarketing that allows you to reconnect with people that have visited your website. You can use remarketing ads on social media platforms, on Google search, and in other websites that support display marketing ads. A remarketing campaign is an effective method to ensure customers keep thinking about your product and have easy access to the link when they are ready to buy. 16. Take website security seriously. Get an SSL certificate. Website security should be a top priority for you year-round, but especially during the holiday season. During the holidays, more people are shopping online, but so are hackers who are shopping for credit card information or personal data. If you haven’t heard, in July 2018, Google Chrome released a security update that will alert your website visitors if your website doesn’t have security measures in place. An SSL certification is meant to create a secure transaction of personal information such as contact information and credit card data. If you don’t have an SSL certificate, your website visitors will receive an alert message discouraging them from checking out on your website. What can you do about it? Many web hosting companies offer SSL certificates for purchase and they are usually a low-cost option to securing your website. If you don’t have an SSL certificate and aren’t sure if you can get one, switch to HostGator where a free SSL certificate comes with all web hosting packages . In conclusion… With 16 tips for how to promote your small business website during the holidays, there’s bound to be a few that would work for your business. Try them out and let us know your results ! What are your “must do” tips for other small businesses? Comment below with your best advice for how to promote a small business website during the holidays! Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged credit-card, holiday, holidays, hostgator, hosting, internet, sales, search-engines, traffic, vodahost, web hosting
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Selling Products on a Website: A Helpful Guide
The post Selling Products on a Website: A Helpful Guide appeared first on HostGator Blog . The way people shop today has largely moved online. Any business that sells products from a storefront now will benefit from selling products on a website as well. Selling through an online store is an easy way to increase your market and get more sales from customers who value convenience. And anyone starting a new business can save on upfront costs and work by making it an eCommerce store. The costs of building a website are much lower than what you’d spend to rent space and staff a physical store. Selling products online is a much easier and more affordable way to start down the path of entrepreneurship. Why You Should Sell Products On a Website For people to buy your items, they have to be able to access them. When you only sell them in one location (or even if you have a chain of specific locations), you’re limited to selling products to the people who are willing and able to come to you. That means there’s a huge market you miss out on. If you’ve been hesitant to do the work of building an eCommerce website to sell products, there are a few good reasons to move it up on your to-do list. 1. People spend money online. In 2017, people spent over $450 billion making purchases online and that number has been growing over the last few years. Any business owner that stays offline is missing out on their piece of those profits. While some shoppers certainly still make a routine out of heading to their local shopping district or mall, many now skip the trip and do a lot of their buying while sitting at home. If your competitors make their items available to them there and you don’t, you’ll lose that business. 2. An eCommerce website costs less than a storefront. Running a storefront requires paying: Rent for the space The paychecks of enough staff to be there during business hours Proper licensing and permits Utility bills Furniture and decorations Building maintenance Cleaning supplies Selling supplies like POS systems and cash registers All of that adds up to a lot of expenses – and most of them are ongoing. Selling products on a website, on the other hand, cuts out most of those costs. You will still need to pay for things like web hosting and marketing and may need to hire some staff, depending on the size of the eCommerce store you run, but the costs are overall more manageable and easy to plan for. 3. Online shopping provides convenience. When you’re tired, busy, sick, or just feeling a little lazy – you probably don’t want to spend time driving somewhere and browsing a store for the items you want to buy. People have a lot going on and sometimes there just isn’t room in their lives for a trip to the store. By comparison, browsing an eCommerce site online and making selections is easier, faster, and requires a lot less energy. People are more likely to spend their money when it doesn’t feel like work to do so. Online shopping isn’t 100% effortless – but it’s pretty close. When you sell your products through an online store, you remove a lot of the barriers to buying that exist with a physical store. 4. An online presence gets your products found in search. 85% of people turn to Google for product discovery and shopping. Without an eCommerce website, your products have no chance of showing up when potential customers start looking for what you sell online. But when every product you sell is listed on a page on your eCommerce site, all of them will be indexed by Google. That’s the first step to your products showing up in search results. If you want those product pages to show up on the first page of Google, that requires an investment in SEO best practices . But before you can even start thinking about that, you need an ecommerce website for your products. 5. The growth in mobile means people can buy from anywhere. Mobile shopping trends show that almost a third of all shopping people now do online is on mobile devices. Mobile shopping makes it possible for people to make purchases at the exact moment they decide they want something. Whether they’re at a dinner party, strolling through the park, or lounging on the beach – if they think of something they want, they can make the purchase right then. That creates more opportunities for sales. You don’t face the risk of a potential customer deciding they want an item you sell, only to forget about it by the time they get home to their computer. That’s good for your customers, and it’s good for your bottom line. How to Sell Products on a Website The reasons to start selling your products online should be clear at this point. If you’re convinced, here are the main features you need for an ecommerce site . 1. Choose your website hosting. For your website to live on the web, you need hosting. One of your first steps is therefore to research what type of web hosting you need and select the right plan and web hosting provider . Be sure to look for a provider that can support ecommerce options. You want a web hosting plan that provides the level of security you need to accept purchases. And it must be compatible with ecommerce software that supplies shopping cart and checkout functionality. 2. Pick and register your domain name. Your domain name is essentially your address on the web – it’s what people type in to reach your website. You want it to be something easy to remember that people will immediately know to associate with your business. If possible, a domain name that includes popular keywords people use when searching for your products is a nice plus since it helps with SEO. But that’s a lower priority than making sure it’s intuitive and clearly connected to your brand. Unless your business already has a unique name, the hardest part of this step will likely be finding a domain name that works and is available. A lot of options will already be taken – especially the .com options. Before you settle in on an idea, check the domain availability . You may have to do a little bit of brainstorming and searching before you find a domain that’s the right fit for your business. 3. Design your ecommerce website. Your website needs to look professional and have a design that guides your visitors toward making a purchase. You have a couple of options here: You can hire a professional designer. You can build it yourself. Hiring a designer will come with a bigger price tag and may not be necessary, even if your web design skills are limited (or nonexistent). But an intuitive website builder allows even beginners to become designers. You can work from pre-created templates that are optimized for search and mobile, and use a drag-and-drop editor to make changes to the design without knowing anything about coding. Make sure if you use a website builder that you choose one that makes it easy to include shopping features on your website. And definitely choose one that offers responsive website templates that work well on mobile. With how common mobile shopping is today, you don’t want to miss out on the consumers who prefer to make purchases from their mobile devices. 4. Get your SSL certificate. How many news stories have you seen about business data breaches? By now, most consumers have learned to take basic precautions when handing sensitive information over to a business. The main thing every conscious online shopper knows to look for is the little lock icon and https that show up in the browser when you’re on a secure website. As small and simple as it is, this lets your visitors know that they can safely provide their credit card information to you without it becoming easily accessible to hackers. Many consumers won’t consider buying anything from your website if you don’t have this as a way to secure a website from hackers . And as a business owner, it’s your responsibility to take this basic step to keep your customer’s data secure. As an added benefit, Google has a preference for https sites. Getting your SSL certificate will not only make you more trustworthy to your visitors, but also help your SEO efforts by increasing your authority in the eyes of the search engines. Some web hosting plans include a free SSL certificate , so this may be a step you can knock out at the same time as signing up for a hosting plan. 5. Set up a merchant account. To sell products online, you need a way to accept payments. A merchant account is a business bank account that enables the processing of credit card payments. Any merchant account you create will charge fees for the payments you process, but the specific fee structures they offer vary. In most cases, you can expect to pay a fee for each transaction as well as a percentage of the amount charged. You may also encounter monthly fees, setup fees, statement fees and others. This is one of the costs of doing business online and should be factored into any business budget. You have to spend something to accept payment, but do spend some time researching the different payment options available so you don’t end up spending more than necessary. 6. Figure out your pricing. Now that you know how to get paid, it’s time to figure out how much. Setting the pricing for your products is often one of the hardest parts of doing business. If you charge too much, consumers will go to your competitors. If you charge too little, you’ll leave money on the table and may not make enough profit to stay afloat. The first step here is to research what other businesses are charging for similar products. Look up a number of your top competitors and make a note of the prices you see on their website. Capture this information in a spreadsheet or database so you can more easily compare what you find. Make note of how your competitors handle shipping costs as well. Shipping is a significant part of the cost involved in online shopping. Passing the full shipping cost on to your customers can lose you sales, but swallowing too much of it can end up costing you big. Seeing how similar businesses handle shipping will help you stay competitive there as well. Next, figure out your own expenses. Tally up everything from the cost of buying or creating your products or to the fees you’ll pay to process orders to cost of maintaining your website. If you’ll be hiring help, that’s another big expense to factor in. Do the math to figure out how much profit you need to make for the business to be worth it. Pricing is notoriously difficult. The information you obtain by doing everything in this step will give you a starting point for now, but you should also do price testing over time to figure out if the initial prices you chose should change. 7. Take high-quality product photographs. Many people are image driven. And for many types of products, being able to see what you’ll get plays a big role in the decision to buy. So your product photography needs to be effective . If you can afford it, consider hiring a professional photographer. They’ll already have a good handle on the best lighting and angles to make your products look great. If not, at least invest in the right equipment to take the best photographs possible yourself. Use a good camera, a tripod, lights, and a background to set up the shot just right. Take a lot of different shots so you can choose the best one. The right photograph can make the difference in whether or not a customer decides to buy. 8. Write effective sales copy. The photos will tell consumers part of what they need to know, but you need the right words to fill in the rest. This is another area where you’d benefit from hiring a professional. Sales copywriters know the best strategies and techniques to get visitors to take action. If that’s not in your budget at this time, do the research yourself to get up to speed on copywriting best practices . Websites like Copyblogger and Copyhackers are good resources to educate yourself on writing copy that drives sales. 9. Create a plan for packing and shipping orders. Online shoppers expect to get their orders fast. You need to be ready to package them and ship them out soon after they come in. Make sure you have a system in place for this. Buy the packing materials you need. Create a system for storing your products that makes it easy to find the item you need at the moment you need it. Set up business accounts with the carriers you plan to use and figure out how you’ll be getting the packages out. Most carriers offer the option to schedule a pickup (sometimes for a fee), or you can get the packages to the carrier’s office yourself. The amount of time customers spend waiting on an order has a big effect on how satisfied they’ll be with their experience. Having a system in place for dealing with shipping will make you more efficient and prepared when you start getting those orders. 10. Promote your website. Building an ecommerce website isn’t enough to start selling products online. Now you need to help people find you. Online marketing is an important part of any business website’s success. Look into the tactics available to see which ones sound right for your business. Some of the main ecommerce promotion tactics to consider are: PPC advertising – Buying ads that show up on the search engine results page and other sites around the web that you only pay for when someone clicks to visit your site. Social media marketing – Developing a social media presence by starting accounts on different platforms, interacting with relevant people, and promoting your website to your followers. Content marketing – Creating quality content that’s helpful to your target audience to improve SEO and build trust with your readers. Email marketing – Building an email list and sending marketing emails and promotion offers to your subscribers. Affiliate marketing – Affiliate programs and p artnering with bloggers and other content creators around the web to have them promote your products in exchange for a cut of the profits when their followers make a purchase. You don’t have to do all of these, but commit to doing some marketing activities to start getting your website out there where people will find it. Online marketing is an ongoing process and a lot of the most effective tactics take time to pay off. But if you want people to find your website and buy your products, it needs to be a part of your business plan. Ready to Sell Products on Your Website? The option to sell products on a website has put entrepreneurship into the hands of many people who wouldn’t have been able to afford the costs of starting a business otherwise. While it does still require time and work – like any business does – the upfront costs are comparatively low, making it a less risky way to run a business. Whether you’re a long-term business owner that’s been dragging your feet on getting online or a hopeful entrepreneur-to-be trying to learn the ropes to get started, building an ecommerce website could be the path to higher profits and long-term business success. 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Credit Card Merchant Account Needed for US$200K Annual Turnover
Hello, We have a turnover of approximately $200K annually. We need a credit card payment processor which smoothly integrates with WHMCS and … | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1725506&goto=newpost Continue reading
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