Small businesses in the United States are now more likely to use the Internet for
advertising and promotion than for selling their products and services online, a
survey released Wednesday found.
The report from SuperPages.com and
Gallup disclosed that the number of small
businesses using the Web for marketing purposes more than doubled since 1999, while
the number using the Internet for direct e-commerce dropped by 48 percent.
Patrick Marshall, a vice president at Verizon Information Services, which owns
SuperPages, said the result is not surprising considering how shoppers use the
Internet.
"Research shows that many consumers use the Internet to window shop," Marshall said.
"So while transactional e-commerce may not be right for all small businesses, even
the most local business can benefit from establishing a Web site to promote their
products and services."
Net Promotion on Rise
The report, based on a Gallup Poll survey of 800 businesses in the U.S. with 50 or
fewer employees, revealed that 21 percent of small businesses now use the Web to
advertise, up from 8 percent last year. Meanwhile, 13 percent use the Internet to
sell products, down from 25 percent a year ago.
Businesses also said the Web is a cost-effective way to market their products and
services. Fifty-five percent said their sites have broken even or paid for themselves
by attracting more customers, and 48 percent said their sites met or exceeded
expectations.
Ease of use also was a common theme, with 57 percent of online small businesses saying
their presence was "easy" to create.
Notably, small businesses with a Web site are enthusiastic about the future impact of the
Internet on their business. Sixty-five percent describe the Internet as important to
the future of their business, rating its importance 7 or higher on a scale of 1 to 10.
Expanding Range
One benefit of Web as an advertising platform is the ability to reach distant
customers. Nearly half the businesses with Web sites said they attract customers
from more than 50 miles away, while the same was true of only 20 percent of businesses
not online.
"Small businesses without a Web site may be at a disadvantage compared to their
competitors who are online," said Marshall. Advances in software that make it easier
and less expensive for businesses to move onto the Web should drive more small
companies into e-commerce and online advertising, he added.
The Small Biz Mystery
Small business has been something of a mystery when it comes to e-commerce. Several
high-profile efforts have been launched to lure some of the 20 million small U.S.
businesses onto the Web, with America Online (Nasdaq: AOL) and Netscape unveiling
small business portals earlier this fall.
However, studies have shown that owners of small enterprises are still not convinced that
the Web will change the way they do business. A report over the summer from the
National Small Business Union and consulting firm
Arthur Andersen found that more than 40 percent said e-commerce will have no impact
on their business.
More recently, Gartner reported in October that
half of all small and mid-sized companies could fall victim to cybercrime in the next
three years due a lack of knowledge about network security.
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