Should SME Companies Use Web 2.0?
Web 2.0 is the name given to the latest internet technologies
which enable interactivity and networking between users. There
has been a lot of hype about new networking sites like MySpace,
Facebook and Bebo and the result has been that many clients have
asked me how they should react.
I have been very sceptical of the value of Web 2.0 to small
businesses due to the cost of getting involved and the difficulty of
measuring results. So I went to a marketing conference last
week to learn a bit more and came away much more positive.
The growth of Web 2.0 has been the result of the new technology
and the positive reaction of many initial users - mostly young and
low-spenders. Major brands have become involved due to their
increasing difficulties in achieving adequate return on investment
through advertising in traditional media. They have seen where
more and more people are spending their time on the internet and it
is easy for them to divert a small part of their budget to test new
promotional channels.
SME companies start with an inherent advantage
over their big corporate competition. The bigger the company
the more difficult it is to be flexible. Yet the key to success in
this new environment is the quality of interaction with individual
customers.
The problem for the small business is the time
required for someone to participate in blogs, forums and networks.
The person most likely to achieve desired results is the Chief
Executive himself because he has the knowledge and is best able to
speak for the company. Yet he is also likely to be caught in
the classic trap of being unable to delegate to others and so
lacking the time to spend on interaction that has no immediate
priority in results.
So the first companies likely to make use of Web
2.0 are those run by people with the motivation to spend time on
online networking.
The next strategy for success requires a Web 2.0
PR strategy. The standard PR promotion involves the company in
sending out official news and promotions mainly to journalists or
media owners for republication. In the new internet world such
obvious direct promotion is unlikely to work. What does work
is 'word of mouth' or referrals from sources not identified directly
with the company concerned.
To achieve such referrals you must first identify
a core of key 'influencers' or 'advocates' who specialise in your
particular market niche and are recognised by potential customers.
Then you need to find a mechanism to involve them in your strategy
development so that they are aware of what you are doing and approve
of it.
This process of seeding the internet with suitable
information means you must also accept that its use is outside your
direct control. It is therefore vital not to make promises you
cannot keep and to ensure existing customers are happy. If not, you
can find you generate as much negative noise as positive.
That, though, comes back to the advantage of small companies who are
much closer to their customers than big ones. I would not
encourage a major bank, for example, to pursue active Web 2.0
promotion in the current climate.
Next month I will send you results of my annual
survey of the major Uk Search Engine Marketing companies.
Happy Christmas!
Stephen Orr
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