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How to Write Your Small Business Case Study

The post How to Write Your Small Business Case Study appeared first on HostGator Blog . How to Write Your First Case Study for Your Small Business Website Case studies—business students analyze them, successful businesses feature them, and marketing experts say most businesses should have them. But how do you write them? The case study creation process is sometimes a big roadblock for small business owners, especially those who don’t have an MBA or marketing experience. In this post, we’ll walk you step by step down the road from deciding whether you need a case study to promoting your finished case study. What Is a Case Study? A case study is a story about how a business helped a customer solve a problem or achieve a goal. Case studies offer more detail than a bite-size testimonial. They also frame the story so readers who are similar to the customer see why that business is the one to solve their issue. People like stories, and marketers like case studies because they offer social proof, help businesses show their expertise, and help prospective customers understand complex or unusual products and services.   Does My Business Need Case Studies? Almost certainly. If your business sells something expensive, highly technical, or so innovative that most prospects won’t be familiar with it, case studies can overcome cost objections, educate prospects, and demonstrate value. For example, international smart home company Loxone sells its equipment and services to homeowners and builders. Loxone has a slew of case studies featuring smart houses from tiny modern to large Victorian, to show how individual homeowners use their products to make their home lives easier: Case studies can help you if your business offers simpler products and services, too. A well-written case study can anchor a marketing program that helps you compete on value rather than price. Dog groomers and cleaning companies can and sometimes do use case studies to show off their results and benefits to clients.   How Do I Write a Case Study? Follow these 7 steps to write your first small business case study. We followed these steps ourselves when writing this HostGator small business case study .   1. Find your story. Every good story starts with a challenge that the main character has to overcome, right? Think about the biggest challenges your customers expect your business to solve for them. Pick the most common one to build your first case study. Let’s say you’re a residential remodeling contractor who specializes in retrofitting homes to be accessible for people with mobility issues, so most of your customers come to you looking to redo their entrances, room transitions, bathrooms, and kitchens.   2. Next, find your keywords. Study the way your customers and would-be customers search for information on the problem you want to talk about in your case study. What do your customers ask about when they first call or email you? When you look at Google Analytics, which search terms are visitors using to find you? Which social media posts generate the most likes and shares? This is how you pick out the keywords and phrases that people use to connect to your business. Include them in your case study so prospects can find it, too.   3. Pick your case-study subject. Ideally, you’ve got customers who love your work and send you referrals. These are the folks who are most likely to agree to talk with you about their experience. Ask them if they have the time and interest. When you get a yes, set up an interview. Besides the time and date that works best for your interviewee, find these things out in advance: How much time they have to talk. An hour is more than enough time for most small business case study interviews. Whether they want to do the interview in person, by phone, via email, or another way. How much personal info they’re willing to share. First name only? Family name only? Full name? Ideally, you’ll get a first and last name and a city, but people have different privacy preferences. What photos will appear in the case study? In this example, before and after photos are the obvious choice, but photos of the client can add credibility, too.   4. Do the interview. Record audio or video and take basic notes. Keep the tone conversational so they’ll feel comfortable talking. Ask about their challenge, why they chose your company to help them, how you solved their problem, and what the result was for them. Focus on details that prospective customers can relate to: Were you able to widen a hallway that was too narrow to accommodate a wheelchair? Does your client enjoy cooking for friends now that the kitchen counter height has been changed? If your customer’s results include facts and figures, use them (with the customer’s permission). If your home remodel saved a customer the cost of moving to a new home, or if you did a remodel for a landlord that allowed her to expand her market and fill more units, the numbers can impress prospective clients.   5. Write the first draft of your case study. After the interview, use quotes from your customer, your chosen keywords, and any numbers that support your customer’s story. The simplest story structure is Your customer had a problem. Your customer chose your business because… You worked with your customer to deliver… You solved their problem by… You saved your customers X amount of time or money. Your customers’ lives are now better because of your product or service. Let that first draft sit for a couple of days, revise it, and then ask someone else to read the revised version and offer feedback. Add your photos and graphics. When you’re happy with it, ask the customer to look it over in case there are any errors.   6. Publish your case study. You can add it to your website’s About Us or Testimonials page or create a separate page for case studies. Thank your customer for working with you on a marketing tool to help your business grow.   7. Promote your case study. Share your case study with your email list and on social media. You can also blog about it, create a print version for in-person meetings and events, and even turn it into a video or podcast.   Congratulations! You’ve got your first case study. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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DataWagon Offline

Well over an hour my server is offline on the DataWagon. Someone else has this problem. This week I’m not lucky. Already the second DC that … | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1719046&goto=newpost Continue reading

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Onra/OneHost Woes

Definitely time to move on from these guys…. Support is non-responsive and closes tickets without fixing the problem. From my location… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1716252&goto=newpost Continue reading

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Web Hosting in Europe | LIMITED 50% DISCOUNT | FREE SSL Certificate, DDoS Protection and Pure SSD

Is Web Hosting price biggest problem for you? It’s not, right? Problem is stability and quality that you get for the price you pay. We are… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1715589&goto=newpost Continue reading

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About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way

The post About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way appeared first on HostGator Blog . About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way The About Us section of your website has the potential to draw in customers, establish trust, and make people want to do business with you. But choose a couple of dozen small-business sites at random and you’ll find that many have About Us pages with next to no information, or that overload visitors with full-page blocks of texts that go into far more detail than most people can absorb. Here’s how to write an About Us section that showcases your business story, demonstrates to customers that you’re the right choice, draws in people searching for what you sell, and sets the tone for your customer outreach. Show What You Can Do for Your Customers It’s about you only to the extent that you have something your customers want or need. So tell your story in a way that shows you understand the problem your visitors want to solve. Zappos does a great job by describing the founder’s failed, frustrating shoe-shopping experience at a mall. No one wants to waste an hour and go home without new shoes, so right away, Zappos shows it understands something about its customers : They want convenience and selection. What if you’re blogging? Blog and media site Scary Mommy uses some frank descriptive wording on its About Us page to show that they get the struggles and rewards of motherhood: “We’ve seen it all, heard it all, and smelled it all, but we wouldn’t have it any other way.” You don’t have to be that direct if it’s not your style or not on-brand, but there are many ways to show that you get what your audience needs.   Establish Your Trust and Expertise Besides looking for a solution to a problem, people who check out your About Us page want to see if you are the right person to solve their problem. An effective way to show your expertise and at the same time show that others trust you with their problems is with social proof . Your About Us page can include: positive customer reviews testimonials case studies from clients media mentions awards you, your employees, and your business have earned If you provide services, you can include well-known clients on your About Us page , as visual organizing tool Trello does. You can and should inject some personality into your About Us page, because site visitors want to know there’s a real person behind your site. That’s why popular toymakers Melissa & Doug come right out and say they’re real people on their About Us page, which is every bit as lighthearted as you’d expect for people who make toys. Your About Us page also needs to include: your name your location a photo or video of you that reflects your brand and personality contact details like a phone number, email address, and company social media accounts. Before they shop with you, customers also want to know that they can reach you if they need to. Consider this About Us excerpt from Round Rock Honey: “We believe in our honey so much that if you ever have a question, just look on the back of our bottle. You’ll find our names and phone number.”   Get Found by Your Audience A good About Us page helps prospects decide if your site is a good match for what they need. A great About Us page also helps more people find your site. To do this, you’ll need to use some SEO tools to help your site show up when people search for what you offer. Make sure your About Us page includes: Long-tail keyword phrases that help people zero in on what they need. If you sell school uniforms in Dallas, don’t rely on “school uniforms” to drive search traffic to your site. Include “school uniforms in Dallas” or “school uniforms for Dallas-area charter schools” or whatever is accurately describes in detail what your customers search for. On-site SEO titles, meta descriptions, and tags for your About Us page with your most important keywords. Your meta description will appear in search results, so make every word count: “Zippy’s is the fastest and best courier service in the greater Houston area. Call 703-555-1212.” Optimized images for the best possible search results. Tag and describe them in ways that help people find your site. That team photo on your About Us page can be titled “Bakers of Custom Birthday Cakes in Duluth” instead of “teamphoto,” for example. Fast load times. When you’re done with your About Us page, run it through Google’s PageSpeed test to make sure it loads quickly enough to avoid getting downranked in search results. Mobile-friendly display and navigation . While you’re testing your About Us page, use Google’s mobile-friendly test tool to see how it performs on mobile devices. Better performing pages tend to rank higher in search results. Schema.org markup tools to optimize search results displays. You can use a schema plugin for your WordPress site or delve into this step-by-step guide on schema and Google Rich Snippets to format your About Us page for good-looking search results. For more information on these and other SEO strategies for your About Us page, check out HostGator’s ABC’s of SEO e-book .   What’s Your Business Story? However you set up your About Us page—a serious rundown of your firm’s accomplishments or a set of whimsical videos about your handmade housewares shop—keep the tone, appearance, and language consistent with the rest of your site and with your brand. Consider your About Us page an ongoing project, keep it updated and focused on the goals above, and it can be a powerful marketing and customer relations tool. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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