All week I’ve been blogging about the power of your online presence. And for the most part, every small business owner understands that they need to be online. What falls short is the follow through.

You may be thinking, "I want to have complete control over my image, and put up a site that is perfect."

Online, there is no such thing as perfect. I follow the 80-20 rule when it comes to being online. I get my new site/profile/page/salesletter etc to the 80 percent mark, and put it online and test it. Does it get signups? Are people buying what I’m offering? If not, I tweak it. And it works the other way too - even if they are signing up and buying, I still tweak it.

You may be thinking, "My advertising in the yellow pages and trade publication has always worked; I’ll stick with that."

Have you really been tracking where your clients come from? Keep a tracking sheet by your phone and your computer. Every time a client or prospect emails you or phones you, ask where they found you. I’m willing to bet you’ll find more and more people are finding you from online sources. (It is good to keep your name in many places - just track that you really are getting your money’s worth from expensive advertising sources.)

You may be thinking, "I just don’t have the time to spend getting connections online.

Too bad. Let me ask you a question. How long are you planning on being in business? Let’s say your goal is to retire 10 years from now. That means you must keep marketing for the next 10 years to sustain your lifestyle.

If you buy into a one year contract with a magazine, you’ll spend four or five figures over the course of that one year period. And then what? The magazine disappears, doing you no good. You either buy another year, or find another way to gain clients.

But let’s say you spend one hour creating a profile on a place like LinkedIn. LinkedIn is free (you can upgrade, but that’s another article) so any information you put out there today will still be there a year from now, two years from now, etc.

Now let’s say you move over to Facebook and create a profile there. Another hour of time. Another free resource. And the opportunity to connect with people for the next 10 years.

Of course you can’t just spend one hour putting up a profile and expecting it to work for 10 years. You have to add content, share your knowledge, and take the time to work the system. But you can get more than enough business by working this systems.

You just have to do it.

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