WHY INTERNET BUSINESS WILL STAY
STRONG EVEN IF THE ECONOMY GOES BAD.
And what you can do to make sure
you come out on top.
by Dr. Kevin Nunley
index
of articles
Day after day news media
warns us the world's economy may be in serious trouble.
Storm clouds are on our economic horizon. Japan, once the
most profitable nation in the world, is having deep money
troubles. Experts say Japan is now where the United States
was at the start of our Great Depression back in the 1930s.
Russia, Latin America, and Southeast Asia are also having
serious economic problems. Hunker down, a world depression
could be on the way.
Does this gloom and doom
apply to the Internet? Will thousands of small Internet
business be forced to close down? I don't think so. Here's
why.
Internet business is still
brand new. Even the old-timers have only been on-line for
three or four years. In many ways, we're just now figuring
out how Internet business works. And guess what? It appears
to be very different from regular business.
Small and versatile
is a big advantage. Big businesses dominate the traditional
business world. The Walmart's and MicroSoft's have steadily
forced smaller, family-owned businesses out of the way.
Not so on the Internet. Three out of four Internet businesses
are very small, often only one person working from home.
Some of the most successful web sites are run by a single
person still working a regular job. They take care of the
business before work, during lunch, and late into the evening.
Small businesses are
versatile. They can change directions at a moment's
notice. That's a big advantage when times are hard. A big
company has specialized employees and materials stockpiled
to fill a particular need. If the economy changes and that
need dries up, the big biz is stuck. Meanwhile, the one-person
Internet business can change its direction in an afternoon.
You can take down your big web site offering investment
advice and put up an equally impressive web site showing
people how to get out of debt. No employees to retrain.
No leases to get out of.
Internet business can
personalize. Every indicator of how the future will
be points to a much greater demand for personalized services.
Instead of buying a one-size-fits-all service from suppliers,
you will enjoy services and products that are closely tailored
to exactly what you want and need. Internet leaders, including
Bill Gates, have said they believe the future of the Internet
lies in personalized services supplied by small companies
and individuals.
The Internet may be
at odds with the Market. This idea is a tad complicated,
but I think it's important to understanding why the Internet
probably won't feel the pinch of a bad economy. Market economics,
the basic principles that govern business, doesn't seem
to fit the Internet. Market economics generally encourage
big companies to get bigger, buying up and out-maneuvering
smaller companies. The biggest companies dominate their
industry. Sometimes they grab a huge percentage of all sales
in their particular field. This is very hard to do on the
Internet. It may be impossible to build an Internet-based
monopoly. I may raise millions of dollars and create the
biggest, coolest web site business in history. That doesn't
keep you and 1,000 other aggressive folks from doing the
same thing tomorrow and taking my advantage away.
What can you do to profit
from coming hard times? Economic downturns can be scary
times. It's hard to know if you should start or expand a
business or keep your money in the bank. Don't spend money
you don't have to. Yet economic hard times can pose a terrific
opportunity for people working in a new area like the Internet.
While traditional business
models stall, Internet business surges ahead on the shoulders
of a very different way of doing business.
Make your Internet presence
BIG. Expand your web site. Jazz up the look. Add lots of
helpful articles, add links to useful sites, and create
alliances with other entrepreneurs. Keep your web site as
focused as you can. Let people know you specialize in an
area or line of products. When customers need a particular
thing, they'll know you're the specialist that can give
them personalized help.
Finally, remember the wise
old saying: When business is bad, advertise. The Internet
shows little honor to those who come in with lots of start-up
money. Instead, the Net rewards those who are popular. The
more visitors your web site and email box have, the more
power you have on the Internet. Publicize your web site,
your business, and your name. Distill your name and main
benefits down to a short, easy sentence and put that sentence
everywhere you can without spamming. Advertise in email
newsletters. Put banners on sites like your own. Send out
press releases to media. Participate in newsgroups.
Paint your promotional
efforts with big broad strokes. Spend as much as half your
time promoting. By looking big and providing tightly focused
products and services to a well defined group of customers,
you can ride the Internet wave into the future. It may well
be a future that gives the Internet new and greater prominence.
Kevin Nunley provides marketing
advice and copy writing for businesses and organizations.
Read all his money-saving marketing tips at http://DrNunley.com/.
Reach him from his site via email.