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Online Business

How to Make Your Small Business eCommerce Store Appeal to New Customers

Article Contributed By Alex Schnee

As businesses turn to more and more people online, being able to find your own niche and appealing to customers is an important part of succeeding on the internet. Having a small business makes it all the more imperative that you can reach customers online and that you know how to promote your product and your brand properly.

When you want to market correctly, the first thing you’ll want to do is figure out how your brand comes across online.

Think about who you are marketing to

While the term “buyer persona” gets thrown around a lot, many don’t realize what exactly it means and how important it is to making sure your brand hits the mark. You need to think about how your potential customers think and what makes them different from those who wouldn’t be interested in your products. Come up with a profile of an individual who will make the commitment to buy and that you can count on coming back again.

Come up with a strategy

Whether you have been in business for a while or you are planning on launching soon, you’ll need to take some time and develop a strategy that not only fits in with your buyer persona, but that also works with how you want to present your product and what will work with your budget. How do you see your store being viewed by customers in the future? How could you develop a strategy that works for your overall goal in the long run? These are questions you will definitely want to ask before you jump in.

Stay on brand

It might be tempting to deviate from your strategy at some points, but choose to forgo any organized plan that you might have can actually have adverse effects and can end up costing your company more money than you want it to. Try to make it through your campaign by being consistent. If you find yourself wishing that you had tried something else and that you would make changes, then you will want to wait until your next campaign to try things out.

Be available to clients

One of the biggest problems small businesses face is remaining available to their cliental. Social media and digital marketing has made it imperative that you keep in touch with your customers and that you answer any questions that they might have. Try to respond to any messages you might receive and make sure your customer service representatives know how to respond to questions that they receive. Good customer service can go a long way in helping you develop a name for your ecommerce site.

Track the success of the campaign

Social media also makes it easier to see what you are doing right in your marketing campaigns and what you can improve on. You’ll want to check to see how many people follow through and what tweaks you should make to your next campaign to make it even more successful. Knowing what you did right as well as what can be altered for the future can greatly make a difference for your company.

Taking some time to find ways to market your business means that you have to constantly be learning. However, this knowledge can your company to the next level and create some repeat clients devoted to your products.

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Online Business

Do You Know Who Owns That Card?: Online Verification Helps Businesses to Limit Their Liability by Verifying Their Customers Identity Quickly

Do you own an online Business and Commerce platform? Do you need to identify the authenticity of the documents your consumers use to make payments? If you ever find yourself in a position where you have to/want to verify whether customer’s documents are legit, then all you need is a secure verification platform such as Netverify.

These systems use real-time identification and verification technologies to scan through customer documents and relay feedback in real time. Stay with us and find how these revolutionary online services work.

How online verifications work

The services use advanced technology such as machine learning, facial recognition and verification experts to help businesses adhere to regulatory stipulations. These compliances include Know Your Customers (KYC) and Anti Money Laundering (AML). Harvard law school provides more insight on KYC requirements.

This reduces the cases of fraud that your business may experience while providing a safe and secure service for your customers. These services basically help your business organization in three ways if you decide to put one in place.

Verification of customer IDs

By using a mix of computer vision, artificial intelligence and ID experts, an online customer identification system can determine how authentic an identification document is. It also determines if it truly belongs to the user.

This ID verification can seamlessly integrate into the workflows that you have in place. A simple API call instantly verifies whether the docs are legit. This feature uses the Acquire, Extract and Verify principle.

All the customer has to do is place the ID or driving license in front of a camera/webcam, and the system acquires the image and then determines if it is a fake or not.

Identify customers

As an organization, you need to ensure that the person carrying out any transaction is actually a ‘person’ and is ‘present.’ If the person has been proven to be present, you then need to establish if they are who they say ‘they are.’

A biometric facial recognition, live verification experts, and liveness detection capabilities make customer identification possible. The selfie taken by the customer is compared with the ID earlier scanned and a comparison made if it is the same person.

Capturing and verifying customer documents

The Document Verification feature allows customers to perform high-quality scans of supporting documents using their smartphones and upload it to the system. These can be utilities or even bank statements.

The data from the documents, even when scrambled, can be acquired and verified. This further puts more proof of the true identity of the customer.

 Wrapping up

In conclusion, online verification systems offer you a secure platform that assures you of the authenticity of the customers you deal with in this digital market world. It reduces fraudulent transactions that taint your company’s image. Customers no longer have to manually send emails or drop copies of documents for verification purposes.

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Online Business

6 Things I Learnt From Successful Ecommerce Businesses

Think back to your Economics 101 class. Do you remember the four factors of production: Land, Labor Capital and Enterprise? When starting a business, an entrepreneur must be willing to sweat it out and take risks.

The land, labor and enterprise were not problems in wanting to be a proprietor, for most, the hurdle was always capital. Without capital, one cannot build an empire of factories and mills. One can, however, build a very successful online business. That’s what I did.

The keys to my success can be boiled down succinctly to simple points that I shall narrate with stories of businesses with humble beginnings that became great overtime.

The story of the treadmill – returning customer value

I had a treadmill. I bought it in a fit of passion, when I believed that I would start every morning with a rousing workout session, running on my treadmill. I bought one that was top of the line and planted it in my living room with a firm conviction that my lifestyle will incorporate running at least once if not twice a day.

My zeal lasted less than a week and over time, my treadmill became first, an eye sore and then, an eye sore draped with washed and unwashed laundry. Not only did I feel guilty every time I looked at it, I also found myself making up stories when guests came over, severely exaggerating the usage I got from it.

I recount this anecdote to explain why eBay was a blessing. Since it was my first time selling online, I perused the how to sell page and followed their instructions. In less than half an hour, my treadmill was on the market. In less than a week, I had found a buyer and had shipped it off, becoming a firm fan of eBay.

Founded in Pierre Omidyar’s San Jose living room in 1995, eBay is the modern version of the traditional garage sales, collectible shows and flea markets. A notable success story of the dot-com-bubble, eBay’s business model incorporates returning customer value, by offering seamless services for buyers and sellers. They have made buying and selling fun by making the process painless and easy.

A great example of returning customer value, eBay understands what their customers desire and what they perceive as good value, and so, eBay helps their sellers achieve it. In a business, any business, be it online or physical, returning customer value is the key to maintaining customer satisfaction and building a clientele that comes back for more.

From humble beginnings to a global household name – the power of unique products

Peggy Short and Jane Saunders made naturally scented soaps and lotions which they sold out of a car repairs garage. Eventually, Anita Roddick bought them out and went on to launch a brand known for its social and environmental campaigns.

In an industry of stereotypically slim women, it worked to raise self-esteem in females and highlighted issues of bulimia and anorexia, all the while selling their products. Starting as a small outfit selling only 25 products, today, it has more than 2500 stores worldwide.

The name of the store is The Body Shop, famous for its stance against animal testing and being environment friendly. It was one of the first cosmetic brands to prohibit testing on animals and the first company to introduce Fair Trade to the business industry. It made its name by caring for the planet and for people, in the superficial industry of beauty.

As per Roddick “whatever you do, be different … if you’re different, you will stand out”. And that is just what The Body Shop did to become popular.

Ironically, The Body Shop was bought by L’Oréal in 2006 for £652m and L’Oréal makes no promises of being environment and animal friendly. Yet, due to the unique positioning of The Body Shop as a brand that cares, it is still considered a symbol of “Enriching, Not Exploiting,” as its tagline states.

The Body Shop’s history is a wonderful example of setting your product apart from the market and reaping benefits from it. The moral of the story is that a product does not truly need to be unique, it just needs to be perceived as such.

The biggest river in the world leading to the biggest online marketplace

Jeff Bezos looked through the dictionary and learnt that the Amazon River, a place that was “exotic and different” was also the biggest river in the world. He felt that these attributes described the brand he wanted to build. Starting out as an online book store, Amazon became the largest internet-based retailer in the world.

Talking about Amazon, Bezos has said, “There’s nothing about our model that can’t be copied over time. But you know, McDonald’s got copied. And it still built a huge, multibillion-dollar company. A lot of it comes down to the brand name. Brand names are more important online than they are in the physical world”.

The great thing about Amazon is that it’s a marketplace, so it does not even need to own products to stay on top. They simply market products of other companies (though they also have their own line of low-end products, such as USB cables, under their in-house brand Amazon Basic and consumer electronics, of which the Amazon Kindle is the most widely known) and get a cut from its profits.

The completely customer centric approach of Amazon is the reason why the company is the largest giant in the industry. Their value statement starts with the words “Customer Obsession”, underlining the importance of catering to their clientele.

Along with innovation, bias for action, ownership, a high hiring bar, and frugality, their company value statement lists out the principles that any e-commerce store needs to follow to achieve wide-scale popularity.

Ali Baba and its unique pricing

Jack Ma, a man who flunked his college entrance exams and at one point could not get a job in KFC, was sitting in a coffee shop in Malaysia. Interestingly, he was thinking about Ali Baba and the 40 thieves. He asked the waitress what she thought of Ali Baba, and she said “Open Sesame”.

A light bulb went off in Ma’s head. He asked other people on the street what they thought of Ali Baba and got similar answers. Realizing the story’s universal appeal, he named his company Ali Baba in 1999.

Its IPO raised $21.8 billion in 2014. The world’s largest online B2B platform, Ali Baba’s unique pricing strategy was to offer small buyers small quantities of goods at wholesale prices.

Offering competitive pricing online is just one example of a pricing strategy that works. Starbucks identifies as a premium brand and up-sells its products through price hikes. Wells Fargo, USA’s third largest bank, is a master of cross-selling, which means offering existing customers multiple products. Then there is the age-old pricing technique of quoting products at $3.99 instead of $4.00 to psychologically convince your shoppers they are buying a product worth $3-something rather than $4.

Another unique strategy is pay-what-you-want in which customers decide what they want to pay. Not very popular for online retailers, it is still used to generate a lot of free marketing as in the case of Humble Bundle, a music and game store employing this tactic.

The point is, identify a pricing strategy that works for you and your target market, and master it to the point that you become known for it.

Story of the apple and its product value  

An apple is a humble fruit. It fell on Newton and gave him the epiphany of theory of gravity. Fast forward to many decades later, apples inspired the industry giant Steve Jobs. While on a fruitarian diet, Jobs visited an apple farm and thought the name “Apple” was “fun, spirited and not intimidating”.

The name aside, what gives Apple a product value so amazing that its fandom can be compared with Harry Potter mania? Its brand loyalty is so strong that Apple Store openings can draw crowds of thousands with many waiting in line as much as a day before the opening. The opening of New York’s Fifth Avenue “Cube” store had a line half a mile long. The line for the Ginza opening in Tokyo was estimated to include thousands of people and exceeded eight city blocks.

So why does the Apply fandom exist? The answer lies in Apple’s unsurpassed product value. Tech companies tend to create technologies first, regardless of whether people want to use them or not. But Apple’s engineers who make its products actually do so for themselves.

The most well-known user of Apple products was Steve Jobs himself. All of Apple’s products are based on the fact that Jobs was a real customer and hence could truly understand, appreciate and thus market the product value of Apple’s gadgets.

Jobs was a stickler for ensuring that Apple products were easy to use. Simplicity is and always has been Apple’s mantra. For example, Apple does not have ten different iPhone types to choose from, it has one. Not only does this significantly reduce the process of choosing a tech product, it also creates huge hype for when the next model of the iPhone is introduced.

By staying ahead of its competitors in reinvention, for example, Apple did not invent the MP3 player, it reinvented it as iPod and made it better, and offering great customer service and in-store experience, Apple provides a product value that has made the masses die-hard fans of its products.

A nice looking website does not a good SEO make

So we know the basics of what makes good companies great. Returning customer value, making your product unique, maximizing potential from the available marketplace, pricing strategies and providing product value are principles which apply to any and all businesses. E-commerce businesses however require an additional step and that is search engine optimization (SEO).

All your efforts are meaningless, if your customers cannot find your product. SEO enables your product to pop up when your potential customers do an online search. For example, type “how to sell a treadmill online” or type “best smartphone to buy” on Google, and eBay and Apple will at the very top. That is the power of SEO.

SEO is fairly simple and you can understand the basics by looking them up online. However, I cannot emphasize enough on the power and importance of strong SEO in making your online business successful.

Regardless of the strength of your offering, if your brand is buried on page 20 of Google’s search results, you may as well give it up right now. If you think your home grown SEO skills are enough, think again. You need an expert to make your business rank on top.

To recap, my story of ecommerce businesses of products perceived as unique, with right pricing strategies that return consumer value, have memorable names and strong SEO skills are the stories of success. Get out of your 9 to 5 rut, identify a niche, bring it online, and become the next Mark Zuckerberg. Others have done it, so can you.

Audrey Throne

Audrey Throne is a mother of a 2-year old and a professional blogger by choice. Throne is passionate about health, technology and management and blogs frequently on these topics. Find her on Twitter: @audrey_throne.

 

 

 

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Online Business

5 Ways to Make Your Blog Stand Out Without Breaking the Bank

Making it as a blogger sounds really aspirational. After all, there are millions of blogs out there, but few of them get the kind of following we all want. What are all those obscure blogs missing? It depends on the blog, but here are five things you can take care of now to make sure your blog has a fighting chance at getting noticed. Best part? Most are totally free!

  1. Keep Posting

Consistent posting is perhaps the most important part of building an audience. You may prefer to adhere to a “quality over quantity” philosophy, and that is certainly true in some aspects. Your content should always be good enough to warrant a post.

But if you don’t regularly update, two things will happen. One, the audience you were in the process of hooking will stop checking so often to see what you’re sharing. Two, your site will slip in search ranking, as Google is always checking to see how fresh your page is.

  1. Be Functional

Your site shouldn’t be clunky, one-dimensional, or slow to load. Before you even think about getting started, look into the best website builders to determine which one will be right for your goals and skill level.

You want social media links, bios, any special offers, and links to other content to be visible and easily accessible from your landing page. And you have to do all of this in a way that is (hopefully) clear and elegant. Fortunately, that’s easy, as many site builders are economical and modern.

  1. Engage

The actual creation and posting of content is just one facet of being a successful blogger. Once that’s taken care of, be sure to log back on and follow up with your audience.

Respond to comments, sure, but also visit and comment on other blogs, especially if you want a piece of their audience. Connect and collaborate with other people who do what you do; don’t isolate yourself from people you view as competition.

  1. Don’t Box Yourself In

“A blog about everything!” sounds great to the person writing it, but no one wants to read it. The range of content isn’t going to net the amount of people it takes to keep going. You need a niche, right?

Yes, but if it’s a pretty narrow niche, don’t be afraid to ever so slightly extend beyond your usual topics. Your content should vary in presentation and topic enough to keep people reading, without moving too far away from what you want to be known for. It’s a fine balance that pays off.

  1. Don’t Overextend

Getting clicks and comments is exciting when you start out. But if you’re rabid about making your blog big, it can easily become an obsession, and that increases your chances of getting burnt out on running it.

Be careful to let an hour or more elapse before responding to every single comment. Do not clog your social media with multiple links to your latest content. Resist the feeling that you’re not living unless you’re online working to boost your brand.

In the end, living a well-rounded life will make you an interesting blogger, so have fun and keep it interesting.

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Online Business

How to Take Your Small Business Online

If you’ve got a small business that’s been doing well, but you’ve been struggling to grow it into something bigger, it might be time to take things online. By turning your small brick-and-mortar boutique into an online business, you can reach a much larger audience. If you’re selling small goods, then you should be able to ship anywhere in the nation, or even globally depending on the sort of goods you’re selling. Meanwhile, if you’re offering a service, taking your business online can help to spread the word about your business and bring in new clients.

When potential customers are looking for a product or service, 81 percent of shoppers will research it online first. Creating a strong online presence can help to guide that search and lead those potential customers to your business. So what does taking your business online entail? Here are a few steps to follow that can get you started.

Start small.

While moving your business online is a big step, that doesn’t mean you should get overly ambitious straight out of the gate. Don’t expect to be the next Amazon before you’ve even started. Decide on a few products to sell online at the start just to test the waters. If you’re selling handmade crafts, you might even consider opening up a small shop on Etsy.com. If you’re ready to aim a little higher, though, you’ll want to build a solid website.

Reserve your domain name.

One of the first steps in making a website is registering a domain name. A domain name is important, because it creates a sort of identity that customers can associate with your business. Without a domain name, following the format www.[yourdomainname].com, your company’s web address would be an unintelligible series of numbers.

To reserve a domain name, find a domain name registrar online, such as GoDaddy or Dotster. On the registrar’s site, you can search to see if the domain name you want is available or if it’s already been taken. If it’s available, you’ll be able to pay to register it for your website. Once you’ve built your website, you can associate it with your domain so that customers will be able to find you easily. Make sure to pick something easy to remember and easy to communicate. If it’s difficult to spell, that means it will be difficult for your customers to find you. Keep it short, and keep it simple.

Build a quality website.

Remember, your website is the online equivalent of your business’s storefront. You want it to look professional and appealing. Make sure that it’s easy to navigate so customers can easily find their way from the homepage to any product descriptions or other pages they might be looking for. Make sure to optimize it for keywords that people will be searching for that apply to your business. Keep the website up to date, and post relevant content on a regular basis. Make sure that all information about your business is current as well, including business hours, phone numbers, email addresses, and address of your physical location.

Also, when you are first designing your website, keep growth in mind. Your business may be small now, but if you’re successful, it won’t always be. Make sure to build a framework that can handle bigger customer loads later on so that you won’t need to do a complete revamp of the system if business explodes.

Claim and update online profiles.

Make sure to claim all online profiles that point back to your business, both on review sites like Yelp and in business directories such as Google My Business. Make sure that all of those profiles have accurate, up-to-date information about your business. In order to improve local SEO, you’ll want to claim a physical location on Google My Business. Often, your local search results will improve based on the user’s proximity to that location, and it will give Google Maps something to work with. It’s particularly useful if you provide a service within a local radius, such as pool builders in Henderson, Nevada or lawn care in Jacksonville, Florida. For the people who are within a certain range of your headquarters, you will get prime placement in their local search results.

Encourage customers to leave positive reviews online.

Another way to boost your online search results is to consistently receive positive reviews from your customers on sites like Yelp and Google. If a customer seems particularly pleased with your product or service, don’t hesitate to ask them to go online and give you a 5-star review. It will improve your search rankings and direct more traffic to your site.

Make sure to monitor these sites and address each review as it comes in. If you get a positive review, be sure to thank them and let them know you appreciate their business. If the review is negative, attempt to address the problems they bring up. Make a point of avoiding any confrontation online, and if a customer does have a problem with your business, invite them to take the discussion offline to preserve their privacy and allow you to come to a solution together.

The internet is one of the most powerful tools small business owners have in their arsenal, so don’t delay in building your online presence. In the end, it will improve your relationships with your customers, as well as bring in new business.