According to
Business Link, in a report recently published,
Britain’s small businesses are failing
to get the most out of their on-line presence.
Research by BT Openworld shows that a quarter
of small to medium size businesses are at risk
of losing customers by relying on out of date
web sites. The most common areas of neglect
being news, services information and up to date
contact details.
Many businesses
are concerned about the costs of investing in
their web site as they are unlikely to see a
quick return on their on-line investment. However
competitive companies are only a click away,
so you need to maintain a strong internet presence.
According to research,
businesses have to realise that time moves more
quickly online; a year in real time can equal
anywhere from four to twelve years in “web
time”. The content of your web site can
become outdated very quickly. Many businesses
think they can just put up a web site, forget
about it and then wonder why they don’t
get many web based enquires from clients and
prospective clients.
Research by the
DTI has found the following to be the 5 key
disadvantages to not keeping a web site up to
date:
1.
New visitors will recognise old content.
There is something about stale content, a savvy
web user can recognise it at first glance. If
visitors to your website perceive that the content
is not fresh they may look at it once, but are
unlikely to bookmark your site and even more
unlikely to return to your site. It’s
like the difference between a brochure and a
newspaper, a client may pick up a brochure and
read through it once, they may even save the
brochure, but they will not be pulling it out
once a month to read through it again and after
a period of time will even forget they have
it. A newspaper, no matter how small always
has fresh content so that if someone picks it
up and likes what they read, they will likely
pick up another copy at a later date. Web sites
are like that; visitors will quickly perceive
whether your site is a brochure or a newspaper
and will treat it as such.
2.
Returning visitors will not come back again.
When a potential client visits your site and
likes your content they may bookmark it and
return another time to see what’s new.
If after several months there is no new content,
it is likely they will assume the site is not
going to change and will stop checking your
site. It is returning visitors who usually like
what you have to say and are interested enough
to keep in touch. These visitors are likely
to convert to clients in the long run, or are
useful contacts to your business. Your web site
acts as a networking tool to business contacts
you may never have actually talked to.
3.
Other sites may not link to you.
Getting linked to other sites is a good way
to get visitors to your site, but a little known
fact is that links to your site can dramatically
improve your search engine ranking. Getting
good quality sites to link to you is difficult
when your site is not kept updated. A good webmaster
does not link to every site that comes along
and asks for a link only to those that will
offer valuable information to their customers.
4.
Search engines will not index you as often.
Google and other search engines may index your
site several times a month, if your content
changes regularly. This gives your site a definite
advantage because the changes you make may be
reflected in the next week instead of the next
month. This also makes your site seem fresher
and more up to date to web users who may notice
the new content in the search engine and visit
your site.
5.
The competition will have the advantage.
This point is very simple, by not updating your
site regularly you are giving the advantage
to your competition that do.
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