Business Alone: Seasons Greetings!

May each of you have a wonderful Christmas Day and a very prosperous new year in 2007!
Now turn off your computer and go spend some time with your family.


May each of you have a wonderful Christmas Day and a very prosperous new year in 2007!
Now turn off your computer and go spend some time with your family.


Happy Thanksgiving!

Was it tennis star Andre Agassi that proclaimed, "Image is everything!" in his popular commercials?
Your business image is an important tool for your success because it can either add to the overall perception your customers have about you or it can leave prospects wondering if they really want to take a chance on dealing with such an amateurish or careless business.
Image results from a lot of characteristics and visual clues about your business, but we're going to mention just two of the more important things you can do to portray your desired message in this post.
Continue reading "How to become a business professional even though you're solo - Part 11 - Image" »
Have you ever noticed an advertisement in a magazine, a brochure, a newspaper, or online that looked like it was produced on an old typewriter?
Chances are pretty good that the owner of the ad produced it himself using non-professional graphics tools. He sent the ad in "camera ready" to save a few bucks, and it gets published looking like child's play.
Is that the type of material you want associated with your business?
Occasionally you will find announcements, brochures, and web sites with frequent misspellings, incorrect grammar, and other structural problems that can only be construed as a lackadaisical attitude on the part of the owner.
More than anything else, marketing your business and your products effectively will make or break your company. Read that again.
If you are not able to attract prospects to your offerings, whatever they are, you won't be able to generate income and your business will die.
Too often I hear online business owners saying something like, "I don't like to sell, I just want to develop my products" or "My products are great and they will sell themselves."
It may be something you do as a matter of routine, but I've seen enough sales letters and web site catalogs that don't do this that I'm convinced some sellers just don't know what they are missing.
I've often spoken of the need to do everything within your power to garner the trust and confidence of your prospects in online selling.
Lots of people are still a little skeptical about doing business online.
And even though many have moved beyond the fear that credit card numbers will be stolen and used illegally, they still have a certain natural tendency to not give their full faith and trust to a new Internet company they have never dealt with in the past.
Continue reading "A little secret that sells more information products!" »
I got this question for an inquiring young lady that had been following my posts at a previous blog site.
It was really kind of interesting because she didn't leave me a comment on the blog; but rather she sent me an email and asked about several of the style elements I'd incorporated.
She is starting her own blog and I suppose wanted my opinion and wondered what the rhyme and reason was behind my style choices were.
Here are my feelings about the quotation marks around a title of the blog post.
Title preference: quotation marks or not and why?
Continue reading "Should you quotation marks in your titles?" »
I have not tried this strategy but I read about it and I think it would work extremely well in a solo home business application.
It's relatively inexpensive and easy to do, yet it brands your business in ways that you determine and it will make your direct mail stand out from the crowd.
I read about a lady that uses an inexpensive digital camera to snap photos of everything from her own portrait, to images of her products, to places she likes to visit that relate to her business.
The idea is to get pictures she can use legally in her advertising that relate to her products.
If you have visited some of the large stock photo stores on the Internet, you know that buying the rights to just one small image for use in a mail campaign can cost up to several hundred dollars.
Continue reading "Do-it-yourself postcard advertising that really stands out!" »
One of the greatest secrets to successful solo small business seems to escape many entrepreneurs.
If you are one that can't see the handwriting on the wall, I hope you'll take a lesson from this post.
Here is the secret: women drive most of the purchasing decisions these days, both online and off-line.
Now if you're a small business owner and are paying attention to the profiles of your buying customers, you will have recognized this trend a few years ago.
But it's still surprising to me that so many web site owners never seem to cater to ladies in their business or at their web site.
Continue reading "Are you welcoming ladies to your small business?" »
I mentioned in an earlier post that I thought press releases were one of the most effective yet misunderstood tools the business owner had at his disposal to market his business and drive targeted traffic to his products.
No one ever taught us how to write a good press release!
The single most important rule to remember is to focus on the wants of the reader. Write what the viewer wants, what will make him happy, save him time, or solve a problem he has.
Forget what you (the business owner) want. It's not about you.
In addition, here are some simple suggestions to boost your copywriting effectiveness and increase your chances of having the release published:
Continue reading "How to write an effective press release. - Part 1" »
We've all heard the "knock" about web surfers - they stay at a site long enough to quickly glance or skim the home page "above the fold" and they're gone in seconds.
Is it five seconds, seven seconds, twelve seconds? Who knows?
The point is, the web site owner is granted only so much of the surfer's time online and he'd better make a good impression during that time or the prospect will most likely never return.
Of course there are a lot of elements to making a good web site impression. I'm only going to talk about one small piece of that puzzle right now: page load time.
Continue reading "Ten very simple ways to make your web site pages load faster – Part 1" »
The web site owner is granted only so much of the surfer's time online and he'd better make a good impression during that short time or the prospect will most likely move on to the next site on his list never to return.
Of course there are a lot of elements to making a good web site impression. In this installment we're only talking about one small piece of that puzzle right now: page load time.
That's the length of time, usually measured in seconds, from the instant a viewer clicks on his mouse to head to a particular web site until the point at which that web page is fully loaded in the viewer's browser.
Continue reading "Ten very simple ways to make your web site pages load faster – Part 2" »
Online business in today's marketplace has many advantages that the small business has never had in the past.
The challenge for the business owner is to take advantage of these advances and use them to grow his business in ways that direct competitors either don't know about or are too lazy to set up.
The advances are only an advantage if they're put to good use. That's why they are so powerful to you - because you know the strategies and can implement them into your business and others in your niche won't.
Continue reading "Give your customers a free company brochure or product catalog" »
Here's a quick tip that I've used on several occasions to get me over the direct marketing hurdles of creating a winning headline, effective ad copy, layout questions, developing a good offer, finding the best sizes, etc.
As a solo business owner, it will be up to you to perform the direct selling and marketing tasks that larger companies usually hire professional agencies to handle for them - at a usually high cost.
You will have the choice of accomplishing your advertising campaigns either in-house (meaning you will do it yourself) or by out sourcing the job.
Continue reading "Printing companies as business resources" »
One of the most frustrating aspects of web business is trying to figure out problems to customer response rates on your web site. Why are my customers getting lost online? Why are they not responding to my ads? Why are my offers being ignored?
The challenge of this puzzle is figuring out what parts of the web site need to be fixed.
Is it the offer itself? Are my navigation signals unclear? Is my offering price too high? Is my offer language boring or uninspiring? Is there a problem with my ordering system?
You see, it seems that there are an endless number of little variables that could be hindering sales at the web site. Often, trying to figure out where the roadblocks are is a difficult and frustrating exercise.
One of the "tricks" of search engine optimization has to do with the way images are treated.
It might be a revelation to many site owners that are not familiar with the way the search bots work that images are not "read" like text on the page.
Images are not really "read" and therefore usually contribute nothing to the on-page SEO efforts of the webmaster.
Nevertheless, they can contribute to search engine ranking if they are optimized properly.
It's easy to find great detail on the subject if you simply go to Google and search on the phrase "optimize images."
There are several usability issues, methods, and procedures that you need to consider when designing and developing new business web sites, regardless if you hire a professional for the design or attempt to build the site yourself.
Most important are issues relating to ’upfront’ decisions such as setting clear and concise goals for your web site, determining a professional and smart set of user requirements, ensuring that the new site meets user’s expectations, setting usability goals, and providing useful content within the niche you've chosen.
To ensure the best possible outcome, designers should consider a full range of user interface issues, and work to create a site that enables the best possible user experience.
The latest research suggests that the best way to begin the construction of a web site is to have many different people propose design solutions (parallel design), and then to follow up using an iterative design approach.
This requires conducting the appropriate usability tests and using the findings to make changes to the Web site.

This page contains an archive of all entries posted to Business Alone in the Graphics - Design category. They are listed from oldest to newest.
Fulfillment - Download is the previous category.
Guarantees is the next category.
Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.