Author: Paul Wallbank

  • Is Getting Australian Business Online right for your business?

    Is Getting Australian Business Online right for your business?

    The Getting Australian Business Online initiative is a great move from Google and MYOB to make it easier for the 50% of businesses who don’t currently have a website to get an Internet presence.

    MYOB’s Chief Executive Tim Reed identifies the three barriers to small business getting online as being fear, time and cost.

    All three barriers are addressed by this service; it’s free, simple and takes around half an hour to configure.

    The results are fairly basic, a business ends up with a template that shows their location, contact details, some links and a basic description of the enterprise. It won’t win awards, but it is a basic web presence.

    While GABO is a good idea, and strongly recommended for smaller businesses, it isn’t the right solution for all as it doesn’t include an email address, has few customisation features and most of the local search features have to be configured separately.

    There are other cheap options available, registering a domain name for around $20 year and then using Google’s free Blogger platform is a straightforward alternative and there are other options using hosted WordPress, Weebly and Squarespace.

    Given you get a free domain out Getting Australian Business Online, it’s worthwhile signing up if your business doesn’t have a website, however keep in mind there are cost effective alternatives that offer more flexibility and that all important email address.

    Our workshop, Web for Beginners, takes business owners and managers through the process of setting up a Getting Australian Business Online account as well as signing up with the key local search services. Places are still available for our March 24 workshop.

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  • The web’s cheeky scammers

    The web’s cheeky scammers

    Yesterday I received a note claiming to be a renewal letter for an Internet domain, the part of a web address that appears after the ‘www’ or behind the “@” in emails. The kind offer was a mere four times the price that I’ll be charged by my current domain registrar when the time to renew the address arrives.

    This little scam, which almost every Internet domain owner has encounterd, is one of the quaint but profitable rorts that make the online world so interesting. Just as the web has opened up massive opportunities to new businesses, it’s also given birth to a new generation of cyber-swindlers and con men.

    Part of the problem is the cult of free we’ve allowed to develop on the Internet, by giving away goods we’ve trained our customers not to pay for stuff they find on the web. Where we can get customers to hand over their credit cards, many businesses find thin margins as shoppers are buying on price.

    The domain registration business is good example, it’s a tough game being a domain registrar, the margins are tight and, being a transactional business, they offer a fairly generic service. Many tend to offer add ons, such as web hosting and design, to pad out the margins and for many registrars their domain registration service is a loss leader for more profitable products.

    As a consequence for domain holders it’s worthwhile shopping around as the prices vary dramatically, particularly if you choose not to take up the registrar’s offer to host your site or desigy your pages.

    Sadly you don’t always get what you pay for and before changing registrars I always make quality check on the Whirlpool website where I look in their Web Hosting forum to see what people have to say about the registrar’s service.

    One thing that often pops up is why the heck are local registrars so expensive? With the bigger Australian registrars a .com domain costs between $20 and $75 a year while the US providers are delivering the same for almost half the price. The .com.au domains are nearly double the price for the .com equivalent.

    I can understand it the .com.au being a bit more expensive given the charges imposed by AuDA, the Australian Domain Authority, but the discrepancy seems a bit on the high side.

    Every business should have their own Internet domain registered, partly to improve website search engine ranking but more importantly to protect their trading name, so all of this is relevant to almost every proprietor or entrepreneur.

    When you do register a domain, note who you’ve registered with and when the domain expires as even the legit registrars have a habit of invoicing very early for renewals.

    The domain registration business can be likened to a shark tank, fortunately for the business owners who are forced to swim in it, the sharks are the relatively harmless gummy types compared to some of the others like hackers and fraudsters prowling the net.

    With a bit of knowledge and attitude you can keep these predators from nibbling your toes.

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  • 12 rules for using the web

    12 rules for using the web

    I’m currently writing a book, provisionally titled Seven Steps to Online Success. One of the chapters looks at using social media for business and I included twelve rules to keep businesses out of online purgatory.

    On reviewing that chapter, the rules really apply to the web in general. So, with a little bit of editing, here are the 12 rules for using the web;

    1. Show respect to everyone. Even people you find disturbing, you’ll quickly learn the Internet is mankind’s gift to the disturbed, deluded and downright deranged.
    2. Listen. Once you’ve filtered out the crazies, you’ll find the collective intelligence of the web can be quite powerful.
    3. Converse. The big currency in social media is conversation, by joining in with constructive comments you enhance your reputation.
    4. Be constructive. Add value to the conversation
    5. Positivity. The web rewards the positive more than the negative, by all means post critical comments, but it’s best to for your posts to be more positive than negative.
    6. Be honest. Social media has a horrible way of catching people out, so don’t tell porkies.
    7. Associate with the smart kids. You’re judged by the company you keep, just like in the school ground.
    8. Don’t constantly plug your services. You’ll be branded a spammer and shunned.
    9. Social media is not a numbers game. Don’t obsess about the number of Twitter followers or Facebook friends. Quality beats quantity every time.
    10. Never post when drunk or emotional. You will regret it.
    11. Step away. If you find a social media channel is taking up too much of your time or passion, take a break.
    12. Learn. Use what you’ve learned.

    Seven Steps to Online Success is due out in Australian bookstores in June. In the meantime, my new business Netsmarts is running workshops helping businesses use Google and News Limited’s free local search services to grow their business.

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  • The Web for Free workshop

    The Web for Free workshop

    Your customers are going online. Can they find you?

    Our two hour hands on workshop makes sure you can be found on the web

    Our customers are going online. Today’s consumers – young and old – are turning to the web when looking for local businesses and services that were once listed in the phone directory or local newspaper classifieds.

    Your business needs to be there for them to find you when they go looking on their computers or mobile phones. The great thing is most of these listing services are free.

    Why Local Search?
    The websites, search engines, iPhone applications and even GPS systems that consumers are using to find tradesmen, services, restaurants and cafes in their neighbourhoods all rely on a small number of directories run by companies like Google and News Limited to provide details of local businesses.

    I already have a website
    Even if you have website, an effective entry on these directories is essential – the local plumber, baker, lawn mowing service or hairdresser is finding their local search listings is vital to capturing customers in their neighbourhoods. Local listings improve the performance of your site and help it go to the top of searches in your suburb or town.

    What will I learn?
    During the workshop participants will develop a cost effective online local search presence along with gaining insights on some strategies to be the most popular search result for their neighbourhood.

    At the end of the Web for Free workshop you’ll have full, effective listings in the Google Places, True Local and Facebook Pages services. This ensures your business is being found when customers go looking for you on the web.

    Participants cover;

    • how the local services work
    • the relevant local directories for Australian markets
    • how to list in the local services
    • maximising local coverage
    • using basic search optimisation strategies
    • optimising product descriptions
    • designing and creating a free web site
    • leveraging special offers and sales
    • adapting social media to local search

    Who should attend?
    The Web for Free is designed for entrepreneurs, business owners managers and staff of new or established businesses wanting to understand local search tools and how to use free web services.

    Duration and location
    Our first two hour workshop will be held at the Mosman Professional Centre on March 17 from 10.30am. Seats are limited to 15 so space is restricted. You will need to bring your own laptop computer along.

    Book now
    Seats at the workshop are $300 each. With restricted space you’ll have to book now to avoid disappointment.


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  • The rise of the connected consumer

    The rise of the connected consumer

    Last week in Sydney the Federal government’s Online Retail Forum, set up after the first round of big-retailer complaints about Internet shopping, was held to discuss the threats and opportunities that lie in the connected economy.

    The event’s location and timing, being held at the old Sydney Post Office the day after the Angus & Robertson book chain went into administration, was somewhat symbolic of the changes facing the retail industry.

    Australia Post itself is a good example of a business dealing with change, their traditional mail business is shrinking while the move to online commerce is driving and growing their parcels business. As traditional post offices selling stamps become less important, new opportunities open in the logistics of getting physical goods to Internet shoppers.

    The old post office itself is an example of that, as technology changed how mail is sorted and delivered the need for a big downtown building disappeared and today the mail service occupies a tiny corner of the massive building which is now a hotel and office complex.

    How post offices changed is a big lesson for commercial landlords, and our super funds that invest in them. COSBOA’s Peter Strong pointed out on the opening panel how the business model of ever increasing rents forcing out smaller retailers and replacing them with cookie cutter national chains and franchises is one that is already struggling to cater for the online consumer.

    Customer service is the opportunity missed by the big ‘bricks and mortar’ retailers, a physical store has the advantage of being able to deliver a personalised, friendly experience yet what we find when we visit a big department store or electronics ‘category killer’ superstore is service that often leaves much to be desired.

    The participants of the online retail forum’s panels covered how the online retail industry is filling the customer service void; Mike Knapp, the co-founder of Sdyney’s Shoes of Prey, explained how their consumer friendly return policies encourage sales while logistics companies like DHL, Temando and Australia Post described how tracking the delivery of Internet purchases was essential for customer confidence.

    Most importantly, much of the morning emphasised that e-commerce was only a small part of what the Internet has to offer the retail industry. The web has become a monitoring tool for both buyers and sellers as well as improving the supply chain and radically changing the marketing industry.

    Google’s Jason Pellegrino explained how many of the US electronics chain Best Buy stores now keeps floor stock for consumers to feel and touch but then places orders through the net for delivery to the buyer’s premises. Not keeping anything more than display stock dramatically improved the efficiency of Best Buy’s stores.

    Interestingly Dick Smith Electronics employs the opposite model, with their “click and collect” service customers can order online and nominate the store they want to pick up the product which gives the retailer an opportunity to cross or up sell.

    Both models illustrate how retail can adapt and take advantage of shoppers using the Internet and with some creative thinking can open up new opportunities which enhance their traditional sales models.

    The message from all the industry panellists at the retail forum was consistent; the net is giving power back to the consumer who is using it. For retailers to compete, they have to be dirt cheap or offer excellent customer service.

    What the event showed is the customer is more important than the technology – the point of going online is about improving the offer to customers be it by cheaper prices, faster delivery or better service. If the technology happens to improve our margins then that’s a pleasant benefit as well.

    Customer service is something our bigger corporations like the retail giants, banks and telcos have forgotten, it’s now turning around to bite them and that’s probably the biggest opportunity for the rest of us – to adapt technology to our business in ways that deliver a better product.

    It’s more than just having a website and online shopping cart, these changes are affecting almost every business. It’s important we all think about how our ventures are going to adapt to markets where our customers have more power than ever.

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