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By Paul Lang, Editor, Sell It!
March 8th, 2000
[This is the second part of a two part article. The first part can be read here].
Lang: Which methods have you used to try and promote your store? Which
were most / least effective?
Wason: When we launched our site we offered a free give away for each
1000th visitor that registered. We also offered the "original
electronic bookmark card". Basically, it was an early e-card.
The contests drew good traffic but I think a large percentage were
not interested in our products, just in the contest. We haven't
done one in over a year.
The e-cards are a great draw during holidays. Apparently there are
Netheads that try to send each other a card from every site. We've
been on some of their favorite lists for years. It's brings traffic,
and I imagine, some sales.
The first few years I did the free banner exchanges on the home
page. The response was so low, that when they went animated, I
decided they were not worth the bandwith they were sucking from
my customers.
I often sell items on Ebay, with a nice link to our site.
I'll sell discontinued items, products I'm considering adding or
even totally unrelated items. I consider it marketing and I'm
not upset if the auctioned item doesn't sell. The cost to list
is as low as 25 cents for 10 days on one of the most heavily
visited sites on the Net. Anyone who searchs for "lamp" or
"lamp kits" during those ten days will find my listing, since
I mention it in the description. Real traffic and sales increase
during Ebay auctions.
I've found webrings are another under-rated marketing tool.
In a previous version of the site, I had webring links for
almost every product page. There was a beaders ring for the
wire shades they use, a Yankee ring for the baseball lamp,
doll lovers ring for the doll lamp, etc. The traffic they
bring in can be so targeted, that even though the numbers were
low, the sales for that product increased. I do plan on
incorporating more webrings into the site again.
Since the Net is so Niche oriented, I've found it easier to
market individual products rather than the site as a whole.
We have lampshades made of artist quality watercolor paper.
I look for fine art supply sites and suggest links to our site,
stressing that we carry these shades as well as other lamp crafting
supplies. I go to beading sites and mention the wire frames that
they need. It's like a resume, you need to alter your description
slightly, if you want to look like a candidate.
The most effective advertising for LampLink has come in the form
of free, unsolicited mentions in craft books, magazines and
decorating shows. Writers and writer's assistants are on the
Web, looking for stories and products. Since LampLink is on the
Web too, they just find us. This has been the most surprising thing
for me. We were listed as a resource in a wonderful book,
called "Making Great Lamps", in 1997. I can not tell you how many
people continue to find us through that book. Some people read it
in a library and some at Barnes & Noble and some people, of course,
even buy it.
Our own printed catalog is also a great marketing tool.
I put off publishing a catalog for years. As the product list grew,
though, people started begging me for one. I put it off as long
as I could. Some people were hounding me! Then Better Homes and
Gardens wanted to use us a resource in one of their publications.
Without a printed catalog, we would lose sales, so that was the
final straw. It's in black and white and says color photos are
available on our website. It's very effective. I'm working
on a new Summer version now.
Lang: What are your plans to develop the store over the coming 6-12
months?
Wason: Somehow, I've gotten away without a shopping cart. I take
everything very slowly! I didn't see a need for one when they
first came out. Now, they are standard, and there's a nice
selection available. I'll add a cart soon.
I'm revising the product list for the Summer issue of our
print catalog. The website products will also be revised.
So, within the next month, products will get a major overhaul.
The site as a whole will be revised once or twice in the next
12 months.
I'm looking into pick, pack & shipping services. Actually,
I was really happy to find Netship, through your site.
I'm negotiating with them, now and it looks good.
My goal is to outsource as much as possible. That is becoming
easier and easier on the Net.
I'm also toying with the idea of selling the company.
I'm researching this new concept of selling an online business.
This is new for everyone, so once again, it's hard to know
exactly what to expect. Luckily, we had the foresight to
make this a corporation. I will just sell my shares and as
it's own entity, LampLink, Inc., will continue to own the
domain name, software licenses, etc. If it was not a
corporation, I can see that selling an online business would
be more complicated and riskier.
In my next on-line project, I'd like to go much further from
brick and mortar. I'd like to really push the envelope, go over
the edge. I like to write fiction and I like to create websites.
I look at Fingerhut's Andy's Garage (www.andysgarage.com), and
I am intrigued with the idea of creating a fictional crew,
a fictional place, that is a real business.
Lang: Finally, what are your top tips for anyone considering opening their own Web store?
Wason:
- Be careful what you wish for, it just might come true!
That's not said to inspire you, but to caution you.
It's very easy to open a website. It's not so easy to run a business.
- Plan on totally revising your site every 6-8 months. I can't
imagine spending hundreds of thousands of dollars for a website
that looks outdated 6 months later, but it will happen, whether
you spend the money or not. So, make sure there is someone on
your staff that can at least change the content on each page,
easily.
- From day one, have a form for visitor comments. Include
a "How did you find us?" question. Make email address an
option. (More people will fill it out.)
Ask for street address, too. You'll learn more about your
traffic than a log analysis can tell you. (This is how I know
how effective a mention in a book or magazine is.) You'll also
have a mailing list, when it's time to go to print.
- Be prepared for this question - "Do you sell wholesale?"
- Be prepared for many crazy questions.
- Be creative and have fun. This is a new frontier. No one can tell
you what the Net will look like one year from now. If you're on
the Net, you're defining it. So, don't be limited by definitions
that were made for a different world.
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