Bill Hartzer

Top 10 Mistakes Businesses Make Online

TruePresence, an internet marketing company headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland with fourteen “franchises” across the US, has come up with what they’re calling the “top 10 mistakes businesses make online”. It’s an interesting list, one that definitely covers most of the mistakes that companies make online.

I could probably come up with 100 mistakes that businesses make online, but starting with 10 of them is a good start. Here’s what TruePresence says are the top 10. Do you agree?

Here are the most common mistakes businesses make online, according to Joel Fisher, Vice President and Creative Director of national Internet marketing firm TruePresence.

10. Going with the Old “Slap Something Up There” Approach

Letting your 17-year-old computer whiz nephew build your site might save money in the short term, but the result is very unlikely to achieve any business goals. Think of it this way; if you wanted to build a house, would you let your nephew build it simply because he happens to own a nail gun?

There are numerous tools on the market that can be used to build websites, however leave the heavy lifting to a professional.

9. Companies Talk to Themselves Instead of Their Customers

Too many business sites are built from the inside out rather than from the outside-in. Every business needs to look at its website from the perspective of the customer or the potential employee, and talk to them, in their language. Cut down on industry jargon and talk about what you can do for the customer, not about yourself. You are not your target audience.

8. Failing to Optimize for Search

Everything about a business site — content, structure, links — should be built with search engine optimization in mind. If your site is invisible to search engines, it may as well have no content at all. With the help of web professionals, start by determining what keywords your audience is searching for, (which may include concepts beyond the obvious) and build content around them. Keep in mind that most people search for a business category, not a company name.

7. Cool for the Sake of Cool

In the rush to create a standout website, companies often make the mistake of loading it with bells and whistles that serve little purpose. Though they may look cool and seem impressive, in reality they only frustrate visitors with slow load times and poor navigation. With business sites, less is more.

6. “Latest News” Dates Back to the Clinton Administration

Stale content gives the impression of a stale business. If the customer arrives to see nothing’s been updated in a month, a year, or more, they may assume your company has been idle for the same amount of time. Fresh content, on the other hand, adds relevance and credibility.

5. Sloppy or Clumsy Navigation

With 80 million websites competing for increasingly short attention spans, your site must be user friendly. With navigation, the big word is intuitive — elements of a site should be located where a visitor would think they would be located. Everything should be clearly labeled and easy to find.

4. Missing the Point

Whether you are a local business or a global corporation, your website should help build and extend your brand. Be yourself online and remain true to your principles. Too many businesses forget this fact or try to be something they are not. If your brand is all about customer service, make it easy to contact and interact with support teams through the website. Although it seems simple and obvious, too many businesses have websites that don’t do anything to support their brand proposition.

3. Forgetting Step Two — Getting People to Visit

What’s the use of throwing a big party and forgetting to send invitations? That’s what most businesses do online. Gone are the days of “build it and they will come.” That worked in Field of Dreams, not online. A business must market its site and maximize ways to reach potential customers.

2. Not Starting with Clear Objectives in Mind

What are we doing here again? When you launch a site, you should do so with specific objectives in mind. Whether your business hopes to simply educate prospects or become an all-in-one commerce portal, you’d better know why you got started in the first place in order be successful.

1. No Call to Action

If your website is just a brochure, then you may as well print a brochure. The main goal of a good business website is to Find, Get, and Keep customers. Interaction is the name of the game. This doesn’t have to be complicated; it can be as simple as a printable coupon, a form to fill out, or a newsletter to sign up for. The Internet is a communication vehicle; make sure your site sparks an ongoing conversation.

TruePresence is a national Internet marketing firm dedicated to helping businesses of all types and sizes maximize their online potential. The company’s unique franchise approach lets clients work strategically with a local consultant, while a national team of web design, development, and online marketing experts builds, manages, and supports each client solution. Headquartered in Baltimore, TruePresence currently has 14 franchise offices operating across the country and is actively expanding to new markets. For more information, visit http://www.truepresence.com/.

Are you looking for marketing services such as social media optimization, search engine marketing, pay per click program management or consulting, or search engine optimization services? Feel free to contact me.

Bill Hartzer is the head search engine marketing, social media marketing, and website marketing expert at Vizion Interactive, Dallas / Fort Worth Texas based interactive marketing firm that offers search engine optimization, pay per click, and other online marketing services. Do you need online marketing services? Let's talk!
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7 total comments, leave your comment or trackback.
  1. Thanks for the great post Bill. Very true points. I run several businesses online and will take some of your points to heart and try to improve in those areas. Thank you!

  2. i think that the most two important mistakes are “Cool for the Sake of Cool” and Failing to “Optimize for Search” !

  3. Nice article. The only thing I miss is a way of Online Reputation Management. Companies should be aware of the fact that their employees can influence the reputation of the company. Nevertheless, keep up the good work!

  4. These are extremely spot-on points.

    Time and again, we see great brick and mortar business, going online, and failing miserably at it.

    Thankfully, they are able to sustain their presence; this is not on merit of its online value, rather the consolidated awareness of the brand offline.

    It seems businesses coming online view the online facet of their operation as an entirely different beast, and they lose of vision of what their business actually is. It is, in fact, a different matter, which warrants employing a multitude of diversified strategies, in order to complement the offline endeavours, but must still remain in line with the mission and vision of the business.

  5. This is some great advice. I will only comment on only two of these points to save time and space, lol. I agree that you need a call to action. If you don’t show that you have something to sell…you won’t get any sales! Be subtle about it, but recommend a product and tell the customer to buy it.

    I also agree that you shouldn’t be cool just to be cool. You need to make your site stand out from the rest, but you need to make it sell. Keep the content relevant and informative. A plain informative website will do better than an ultra cool looking, non-informative website. Add some flavor, but keep it simple.

  6. Great article! Definitely agree that some sites try and look too cool than necessary. Naviation links are extremely important. There are so many sterling examples out there that make browsing a pleasure, the stark contrast emphases how uncomfortable one feels when surfing a poorly designed and more to the point, a poor planned website.

  1. March 28th 2007

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