The Internet is still very much in its infancy as a method of communication with clients, but there is little doubt that usage of the internet by consumers is set to explode in the coming years. Why? Well, until recently, the only option for most people was a standard telephone connection. With these, it takes ages to log on and for pages to download, and as often as not the line drops before they have. Furthermore, the method of accessing the Internet has been through a computer, usually relegated to the spare bedroom or office.
All that is changing fast. 'Always on' broadband connections are changing the way that people use the Internet. Perhaps more importantly, we are now beginning to see the first pieces of hardware that bring the Internet into people's living rooms - so called 'media centres' that download music and pipe it straight to your hifi, and send films, webpages and e-mail straight to your TV.
This all means that the Internet will increasingly become THE source of information that consumers use to find out about local services, including their vets. And although it will be some time before the Internet is in every sitting room, there are already enough users, and it has become so cheap and easy to set up a practice website, that there is almost no reason not to have one.
BenefitsThe main benefits of a practice website are:
Who should have a website? Usage of the Internet can vary widely from area to area. People that live and work in urban areas are more likely to have high speed Internet connection, and are therefore more likely to use the Internet regularly, than people living in rural reas. For this reason, it's probable that practices with clients that live in an urban area, or clients that come from all over the country (they are a 'must have' for specialists), will stand to benefit most from a website. Having said that, it is now so cheap to have a basic presence on the Internet, that really every practice should have one.
Building a website.There are three main ways to build and deploy a practice website:
Design guidelinesThe finer points of design are beyond the scope of this training module. However, there are some golden rules that need to be observed when building a practice website, whether you do it yourself, or get an agency to do it for you:
Get yourself seenMany people don't realise that building a website and sticking it online is only half the job. Unless the most popular search engines have registered your presence, the chances of a potential client finding your website are probably in excess of about a billion to one. There are four steps for getting yourself seen on the Internet:
MeasureNearly all site hosts offer statistical analysis packages which will show you how many visitors you've had, when they came, where they came from, which pages they looked at, and whether they brushed their teeth that morning. OK, perhaps not the latter. Point is that websites are a very measurable form of marketing. You can see which pages people find most interesting, and which sites or search engines are giving you the most referrals. You can then tweak your site accordingly. It can be very rewarding, watching how your audience grows.
E-mail addressesFor the majority of practices that will have a long term relationship with their clients (years), 'e-mail harvesting' is a must. It's a great way of communicating at a cost of 5/10ths of nothing, and it's a real investment in the future. However, management of e-mail addresses really requires a database-driven website, which will almost certainly require building by a professional programmer. For the moment, there is still the problem that many clients only check e-mail sporadically (it comes in on that steam-driven computer in the study upstairs). Successful e-mail management is therefore something we'll cover in further depth in the future.