Quickly Increase Your Small Business Website Sales
- By Jim Edwards
Most small business websites represent the online equivalent of a printed, tri-fold brochure. Everyone copies everyone else in their industry. They all say the same things, display similar pictures, and convey the same message. In fact, you could easily take the company name off most sites and interchange with others and nobody would notice. Most small business owners treat their website as an extension of offline advertising or worse, a marketing after-thought.
But with the Web’s importance in local marketing growing on a daily basis, this lazy attitude toward your company website means online marketing suicide!
If your small business website needs a boost, or you plan to put up a website for your business soon, the following tips increase your chances of success dramatically.
Use Effective Headlines
Imagine a newspaper with no headlines. It can’t work! Just like a newspaper, every page on your website or small business blog needs a headline. Headlines tell your visitors the topic of the page and quickly help them determine their interest level. The most effective headlines often center around specific offers, not general statements. My experience shows you only get 3-9 seconds to capture people’s attention before they click off your site and a good headline stacks the odds in your favor.
Make a Clear “Call To Action”
Most rookie sales people (and veterans too) fear asking for the sale. They beat around the bush with customers to avoid rejection. This same fear permeates most small business websites. You must tell peoplespecifically what you want them to do on your site: click here to make a reservation; click here to contact us; pick up the phone and call this number; get in your car and come into the store. Don’t make people guess and make it very clear what, when, and how you want them to do it.
Sell The Benefits
A famous drill salesman once said “People don’t buy the drill, they buy the holes!” He meant that people don’t buy the product or service, they buy a desired result. Yet, most small business websites talk only in terms of their company or product features. People don’t care about your company as much as they care about their own needs.
Talk in terms of how you fulfill those specific needs. Devote a large part of your sales message to the results people should expect and the benefits, tangible or otherwise, of dealing with you.
Make Specific Offers
Why do you think grocery stores run so many coupon ads?
Because those ads make specific offers that drive people into the store. They’re the equivalent of testing different bait on your fishhook to see what you can pull into the boat.
Most businesses don’t make specific offers of any kind. They assume people know what they offer (because they offer what everyone else offers) and customers will just “know” to contact them.
Special offers drive people to action. No matter what type of business you operate, get in the habit of making specific, unique offers. Most people default to offering a discount, but why not offer extra value instead?
Ask yourself:
- “How could I add massive REAL value to our customers without it costing us a ton of time, energy or effort?”
- “How can we get them MORE of what they already want?”
Make it so they don’t have to think (“no-brainer”) and it feels like a real deal.
Just these simple steps can massively increase sales on your small business website sales with very little effort.
For more Small Business Marketing tips from the
The Real World of Digital Marketing, log on to
“Small Business Marketing Weekly”
6 Responses
Ocha,
It’s great to be reminded… all of us can use it
Jim
Great advice Jim…I am a newbie just starting to learn what works and what does’nt…
So making notes…remembering I hope to put all of your golden nuggets to very good and profitable use….
thanks for sharing
Mary
Hi Mary,
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it… keep at it… everyone was a newbie at one time
Jim
Hi Jim,
I’ve been following your story, your products and articles, etc., for a few years now, and – as a DM Copywriter/Web creator & Editor myself – totally agree with all the points made in your article.
I used to be told, in my early days, to ‘Sell the Sizzle – not the Steak’ – but I like your ‘holes, not the drill’ scenario better.
I’m sure you’d agree it’s all common sense really: Headlines selling Benefits, Making Specific Offers, Strong Calls To Action, Describing, and then offering a Solution to a Problem – they all relate to Direct Marketing’s tried and tested strategies from years ago. And they’re as valid today, in the fantastic Online Marketing arena, as they were 20 years ago.
The only difference is, in the Internet age; we can now do everything more quickly, more efficiently, and more dynamically – than we ever could before! But the principles… they remain the same.
Keep up the great work Jim, and I’ll continue being a fan.
Thanks, Andy
Great article..loved it, especially for a new small business like mine…..
Lilieth





Hey Jim, You are right about the fact that people don’t buy drills, they do in fact by the holes. After being in sales for 28 years or so, that is one of the first things I learned when I was just starting out. But…as you mention, people, and even I lose sight of it, don’t always sell the holes. We tend to get caught up in the activities of the day that are pressing us for attention and, well the holes become secondary. This is a good reminder for all.