Small Service Providers and the Digital Age A white paper on the challenges and opportunity for the Small Service Providers within the digital age

Similar documents
Deliver a Better Digital Customer Experience Through Sonata s Digital Engagement Solutions

MOBILE MARKETING. A guide to how you can market your business to mobile phone users. 2 April 2012 Version 1.0

The Perfect Digital Marketing Recipe For Your Business Success

Paid, Earned and Owned Media

Supply Chains: From Inside-Out to Outside-In

CONTENTS WHAT IS ONLINE MARKETING? WHY IT'S IMPORTANT HOW TO GET STARTED // TRADITIONAL MARKETING // TYPES OF ONLINE MARKETING

Digital Marketing Services Product Overview

BUILDING LOYALTY AT HOTELS THROUGH DIGITAL CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

Quick Guide to Getting Started: Twitter for Small Businesses and Nonprofits

IBM Commerce by CrossView, Order Management Order management in the cloud. IBM Commerce by CrossView, Order Management 1

Social Media for Automotive Dealers. A Look at How Social Media Empowers Dealers Through Increased Exposure and Interaction With Consumers.

A shift in influence has occurred

THE EVOLUTION OF TV. Reaching Audiences Across Screens

THE CHANGING RETAIL WORLD The rise and challenges of omnichannel retailing

Sponsorship & Social/ Digital Media Brent Barootes May 28, WHITE PAPER Presented by Partnership Group Sponsorship Specialists

SWOT Analysis of E-Commerce

Session 4. The Internet: Evolution and Revolution Basics of doing business on Internet. The Internet: Evolution and Revolution

What is Text Message Marketing?

The Geisheker Group Marketing Firm Overview

Guide to Market Research and Analysis

Groupon s Business Model: Social and Local

SEARCH ENGINE MARKETING 101. A Beginners Guide to Search Engine Marketing

The Programmatic (R)evolution Causes, Effects & a Framework to thrive in it!

5 Quick Tips For Small Business Entrepreneurs In 2015

INTEGRATED MARKETING AUTOMATION

Six Secrets to Simply Sell More Wine. Texas Wine & Grape Growers Association 2013 Annual Conference & Trade Show

How To Market Your Website Online

Owning the Google Results Page...

Creating a Great Customer Experience. In Ten Easy Steps WineDirect.com

Mobile Marketing Trends and small businesses

B2C Compared to B2B Sites. development of the new business, i.e. e-commerce. The availability of the Internet made it

Four distribution strategies for extending ERP to boost business performance

Benefits of Implementing a B2B Social Media Strategy. Gianna Galle Top Shelf Digital & Social Media Marketing

C LOUD E RP: HELPING MANUFACTURERS KEEP UP WITH THE TIMES

Roundpeg 2012 All Rights Reserved. Page 1

Guide to Integrating Zendesk for Salesforce. January, 2011

The Enterprise Software Landscape

The Evolution of Online Travel. Angelo Rossini Euromonitor International

Social media has CHANGED THE WORLD as we know it by connecting people, ideas and products across the globe.

Your 3-ACT GUIDE. to Better Customer Acquisition & Retention with a CRM

Creating an Effective Online Member Acquisition Strategy

1) Medical Website Design ~ Medical Website Design would also be the main keyword phrase to target. 500 Words.

ABOUT US DOMAIN NAME AFTERMARKET

6 SECRETS TO OFFERING EXCEPTIONAL CUSTOMER SERVICE salesforce.com, inc. All rights reserved.

Best Practices for Maximizing Your Hotel s Online Revenue & ROI

CASE STUDY STAYING IN THE BLACK

The business value of changing consumer behaviors

Expanding the Conversation Leveraging Social Media for Brand Interaction. April Copyright 2013

Are You Part of the. modernhomes.org

webinars creating blog posts customer quotes CONTENT MARKETING for MINISTRIES video tutorials lead strategy inform sharing A publication of

Marketing s Four P s: First Steps for New Entrepreneurs

Field Service in the Cloud: Solving the 5 Biggest Challenges of Field Service Delivery

Managed Services. Your 10-Week Guide to Becoming an MSP

Customer Engagement Redefined. Take a Fresh Look at Loyalty and Referral Programs

ADAPTING ONLINE. Internet Consulting and Website Design

Social media importance in Businesses

View Point. Oracle Applications and the economics of Cloud Computing. Abstract

The Beginners Guide To DATA INTEGRATION. Everything you need to know about the process and benefits of data integration.

Push & Pull Marketing

An Epicor White Paper. Moving Beyond QuickBooks to Support Manufacturing Growth with Cloud-Based ERP

Online Marketing Channels

ECM 210 Chapter 6 - E-commerce Marketing Concepts: Social, Mobile, Local

for Retail One solution connects retail end-to-end, driving growth and fostering customer relationships.

Defining the Enterprise Cloud

Interactive Intelligence

Google Lead Generation for Attorneys

Moreketing. With great ease you can end up wasting a lot of time and money with online marketing. Causing

BUILDING OMNI-CHANNEL RETAIL FROM THE BACK END UP

The Evolution of Social Media Marketing: 9 trends to know now.

LUXURYHOMES.COM TM. Affiliate Kit

Content Marketing and the Future of Multi-Location Brand Marketing

Membership Management Software

Brochure Distribution Research Summer 2010

Profitable vs. Profit-Draining Local Business Websites

An RIS News Whitepaper

Nursing school help denver >>>CLICK HERE<<<

BUSINESS MANAGEMENT ICMS CURRICULUM SUMMARIES 2015 BBM CURRICULUM SUMMARY 2015 BACHELOR OF DEGREE DETAILS A SNAP SHOT OF YOUR FUTURE ALUMNI PROFILE

Notes from March 27 Visioning and Goal-Setting Session: Promotion, Marketing, Communications

2015 RedTroops Inc. - All rights reserved Investor Memo Page 1 INVESTOR MEMO

95% 79% 72% 64% 46% Search for local businesses using their mobile phones. Make weekly purchases from their tablets

Why it s time to move to online accounting software

Google Lead Generation For Attorneys - Leverage The Power Of Adwords To Grow Your Law Business FAST. The Foundation of Google AdWords

% Driving Return on Mobility with Managed Services. million billion. internet usage on mobile devices has increased.

Think Outside the Inbox

The Liaison ALLOY Platform

Better connections: What makes Australians stay with or switch providers? March 2015

Digital Advertising Report. Adobe Digital Index Q1 2015

**NEW CLIENTS MAY NEED AN INITIAL SET- UP and ANALYSIS

Investec India Digital Media & E-Commerce Building momentum in a rapidly evolving market

The Mobile Transformation of Restaurant Operations

Kaskaskia College IL Small Business Development Center April 2015 Newsletter

Online & Offline Correlation Conclusions I - Emerging Markets

THE DIGITAL DIRECTION: HOTEL MARKETING BUDGETS AND A DIGITAL 101 FOR HOTELS PART I OF A TWO- PART SERIES

Internet Marketing Mix White Paper What every company needs to know about Internet Marketing

Tourism Busines Portal. Tutorial ONLINEDISTRIBUTIONCHANNELS

Experience Is Everything

Mobile 360: Developing Your Comprehensive Digital Strategy

Marketing Thoughts for the Offsite Storage Business

THE CHANGING ROLE OF THE DENTAL OFFICE MANAGER

Top 4 Trends in Digital Marketing 2014

Transcription:

Small Service Providers and the Digital Age A white paper on the challenges and opportunity for the Small Service Providers within the digital age

Small Business Challenges Executive Summary: Small service providers 1 offer critical services, which are valuable for their customers, and are a significant part of the global economy. However, unlike large enterprises, it is exceedingly difficult for small service providers to excel in all the key aspects of business including business development, marketing, administrative operations, and customer support. The Internet has the potential to resolve many of these challenges, but to date; has only succeeded in overwhelming these small businesses. This white paper will describe the core challenges faced by small service providers, the current obstacles that stand between these businesses and their customers, and the structure of a potential solution for both the customer and the small service provider. 1.0 Business Development: Driving revenue through business development is a critical function for all businesses. However, unlike large businesses, small service providers face the challenge that business development tasks compete for bandwidth against the delivery of the product/service. Thus, the business development task has to be even more efficient for small service providers. Currently, the choices for business development and marketing for small service providers have limited effectiveness. The older forms of demand generation such as advertising (TV, Radio, Newspaper) are expensive and very inefficient. Physical forms of marketing such flyers are equally inefficient. The Internet offers the potential for an inexpensive marketing and distribution channel, but has its own issues. The most significant of these issues include building visibility for customers to find you, while tracking the pace of Internet marketing technology to stay relevant and trustworthy to potential customers. Case example: Business Development An outdoor guide in Florida may be focusing on targeting the booming Brazilian tourists. Although a standard website provides access to these potential costumers, how would this tour guide place his offering in a trusted ecommerce platform to make a sale? The guide would not only need to communicate in Portuguese, but needs to differentiate his/her self from the other guides in the area. By joining a trusted place for ecommerce and tourism that also participates in international marketing and targeted market reach, the guide now has the potential to tell the Brazilian community that he offers a service that is customized for them and allow them to book and buy 1 Small Service providers (SSP s): Typically any business <20 employees that offers a service as its main offering. Small Business White Paper Ocoos Inc

online for safety of travel. A large amount of sales in these industries are lost due to trust, which drives the consumer to work with large and established organizations instead. Visibility: Current solution for building effective online presence is to invest in building a website and drive traffic towards the website with a never- ending process of content generation/social engagement. The objective of all of this work is to be in the top ten of search rankings. Not only is the Top Ten seemingly impossible to reach, it is rarely linked to top ten in service quality. Top spots are typically reserved for those providers with the most resources. Issues with this approach are significant. From a small service provider s point- of- view, the costs of building/maintaining this structure are expensive. When everyone is employing the same strategy, the end result is an arms race where only the arms dealers (web consultants, internet advertising platforms) benefit. For the consumer this structure naturally creates a complex process and trust gap that creates a barrier for buying services online. All of this has the characteristics of a Turkish market: a disorganized marketplace, vendors spending a great deal of energy to gain attention, and the customer trying not to make eye contact. Internet Marketing Technology: While the basic search model is well established for Internet marketing, the rate of pace of online technologies is accelerating. At a high level, technology thrusts beyond search include social marketing 2, integrated mobile 3, Ecommerce, and various types of review sites. Within each category are a growing number of companies, and the number of categories itself is also increasing (Remember when social was just Facebook? This category has expanded to new widely popular concepts: Pinterest, Twitter, Instagram, Klout, etc.) Figure 1 shows the rate/pace of innovation in the Internet marketing world, and the picture is so complex that even experts have difficulty in tracking the state- of- art. 2 Social Marketing: The process of gaining website traffic or attention through social media sites. 3 Integrated Mobile: Providing mobile capabilities for your business in a society that is very quickly going mobile

Small Business Challenges Figure 1: Complexity of Internet Marketing 2.0 Marketing: Traditional marketing consists of a process of segmentation and then building attractive offerings for that segment. Most small service providers are very good at their craft, but are often not trained in the art of marketing. The Internet has the potential to significantly enable success and expand market reach (specially to non- local markets), but there is a complete lack of tools to help with this very important task. Specifically, there is very limited capability for: 1. Market Segmentation: As a marketer, who are my customers? What is the market size? How do I communicate with them? How can I offer a differentiated offering? How do I manage my clients? For foreign customers, what is the language of choice? 2. Partnerships: As a small service provider, the most compelling offering may be a combined offering which can often lead to a next level value statement. Small Business White Paper Ocoos Inc

Today, small service providers have few tools to build advanced offerings and partnerships efficiently. Case example: Marketing A: Market Segmentation: How does a Yoga instructor with amazing classes on the Beach in the Florida Keys achieve access to active individuals and let them know she has a unique and different experience? The instructor has an offering that is appreciated beyond the local market; fortunately the Internet provides large pools of these active individuals. The challenge is creating awareness of this experience. If the Yoga instructor could efficiently insert his/her offering in a domain where active individual participate, interact, and learn, his/her business could instantly grow exponentially. Currently this one-person business does not have the tools or bandwidth to perform this task. B: Partnership: To continue with the previous example, how does this Yoga instructor build partnerships with local day cares for participant s children or with local health restaurants, in a manner that is valuable and accessible to new customer whether they are coming from local areas or as far as Asia? This ability for small business to work together can add value and differentiation. Although achievable with today s technology, the tools for this interaction have not yet become accessible. Further, a nearby upscale resort can add value to its guests by educating them of such interesting things to do in the local area before they even decide to come visit. But a partnership between this large resort chain and a Yoga instructor is not feasible unless the resort is also integrated in the same platform with pools of active individuals and travelers. In this example alone, four businesses have seamlessly come together to provide value to a customer and themselves. Currently this experience could only be made possible by substantial effort by a customer research and plan. 3.0 Administrative Operations: Large companies invest heavily to automate the administrative aspect of their enterprise, which becomes rationalized with scale. For example, General and Administrative (G&A) expenses for a large public company are typically below 3%. Small service providers do not have the luxury of investment nor the scale to justify that investment. Thus, today s typical administrative operations range from paper/pencil to files stored on a local computer. These methods are quite fragile and inefficient. For internal operations such as finance, the consequence is outdated and inefficient process, and can greatly benefit if moved to the cloud. No longer do service providers need to be in the office or carry paper copies to access their customer information or financials. With use of the cloud, access to this information can be available from anywhere and on any device. Internal inefficiencies are only a matter of impact on profitability; issues with customer facing operations can be dire for the business. Word of Mouth advertising may be the most trusted and influential way of gaining awareness of your services

Small Business Challenges and the parallel to this online is review systems. However, because of the open nature of the Internet, a disgruntled individual (not always a customer) can cause a very large problem for a small service provider. Many sites promise creditable reviews, but often they are subscription based and placement may be driven by factors other than quality service. Service providers struggle to find a review system with good core values coupled with significant consumer traffic. Without an active strategy for operations, customer support, and quality improvement, small service providers are subject to the whims of the open Internet review marketplace. Figure 2 shows the impact of Internet customer reviews on buying behavior. Case example: Administrative Operations The owner of a local landscape business can automate booking so all his employees who are out on the field can be synced on day s jobs. Daily finances can be compiled in a simple system that connects to employees, customers, and date so that whether the owner is in the office, out on the field, or on vacation, can seamlessly manage his business through the Cloud 4. The benefits of these capabilities become greatly highlighted in a business such as landscape, where scheduling and payments are very logistical, hands on, and tend to absorb a full time employee. In this industry where word-of-mouth dominates marketing, the ability for the owner get away from the books to focus on providing quality service is highly important. Figure 2: Impact of Reviews 4.0 Anatomy of a Solution: All the issues detailed above are not only issues for small service providers, but also for customer who need to connect to these service providers. There are four key elements for a solution: 1. Intermediate Platforms 5 : 2. Cloud Based Infrastructure: 3. Business- to- Business Network: 4. Internet Marketing Technology Provider: 4 The Cloud: Cloud computing is Internet-based computing; Meaning resources, software, and information is provided computers and other devices on demand. Information is stored securely and privately on the Cloud so you can request and access it from anywhere on any device. 5 Intermediate Platforms: Industry consolidating platform, which aggregates businesses and provides a destination for consumers in order to provide a more efficient and effective marketplace. Small Business White Paper Ocoos Inc

Intermediate Platforms: For any consumer, the amount of content, trust issues, and search process is often so overwhelming that it becomes counter productive for businesses trying to reach the customer. The consumer needs an organized platform to make their engagement simple and effective. In retail, a large part of this organization has already taken place with intermediate platforms such as a supermarket or office super stores. The Internet is in its early stages when it comes to this front. Just as in the retail sector, all parties would benefit from a series of intermediate platforms, which provide a better match between consumers and service providers. Cloud Based Infrastructure: Cloud- based infrastructure is one of the key mega- trends driving the marketplace. Cloud based service allow the buyer to consume services without the headache of the management of electronic/software infrastructure. Small service providers would benefit from a cloud based infrastructure which can offer services around finance, operations, and client management seamlessly from anywhere on any device. Case example: The Cloud A locksmith with adequate online tools and presence, could be in the middle of a job and receive a text notification and a calendar update of his next job which has been input into a time slot opening on all his calendars automatically. The service has been paid online, and the locksmith can simply focus on providing good service and being efficient. When the locksmith has time later in the day he can access his full day of operations from anywhere on any device, see what tomorrow will be like, and interact with past, present, or potential customers accordingly. Current tools will allow these types of services to be that efficient and seamless. Business- to- Business network: The Internet has greatly enhanced the ability for individuals to engage with each other with a vast variety of products (Facebook, Meetup, Twitter, etc.) However, the ability for businesses to partner in a low friction fashion does not exist. Small service providers in particular would benefit from a capability to partner easily to build larger value statements for their customers. Internet Marketing Technology Provider: Much like cloud- based infrastructure companies such as Rackspace have removed the need to manage hardware resources for Internet companies. There is a need for an Internet marketing technology provider to offer small service provider state- of- art business tools and Internet marketing technology that is simple to use and low cost. The ability for small business to increase their web presence while making their operations accessible and integrated will facilitate and drive progression of small businesses.

Small Business Challenges 5.0 Thriving in The Digital Age 1. Online commerce and booking is increasing 2. Mobile booking is increasing 3. Adoption rate for online scheduling and transactions are on steep incline Effective access to all businesses is the end objective, but small service providers need to be willing to adapt. Once Small Service Providers are given the ability to catch up with the online revolution, there will be huge benefits to all who participate. The Internet provides access to the world s largest accessible market, in order to thrive in the digital age small business must have access to advanced and cost effective tools. Small Business White Paper Ocoos Inc