The International Website

Making your website work for you, not against you


Let's face it!  There are a lot of really bad websites on the World Wide Web.  As many as 75% (maybe more) of all existing websites need improvements.  These are some of the problems associated with websites in the international arena.

Really Bad Websites

You've spent, at the minimum, a lot of time and maybe a lot of money to establish your web presence.  You've heard about your competitors who've tapped foreign markets as a result of their website.  The following are some hints to make your web all that it can be.

No contact information - If I hadn't seen it myself, I wouldn't have believed it.  I had received an inquiry from an overseas importer and was trying to forward it to the appropriate US supplier, a "Fortune 50" corporation.  In visiting their website, there was a listing of the various divisions and responsibilities but no phone number for the person I needed to talk to or for anyone else for that matter.  I had to call information assistance.  The only contact mechanism was their information request form which really didn't lend itself to my need.

No corporate information - If a potential customer (whether in India or Idaho) wants to do business with you, they want to know as much about your company as you would want to know about them.  These are some of the essential elements of a good international website:

  • DUNS (Dunn and Bradstreet) Number
  • Bank Reference
  • Corporate History
  • Standard Payment Terms
  • Trademarks and Trade Names
  • Other names associated with your company
  • Links to outside information sources about your company; newspaper articles, magazine reviews, etc.
  • Telephone Numbers and Email addresses to the person responsible for international sales.  If a direct number can be listed as opposed to an automated switchboard, the direct number is preferred.  Your international customer doesn't have the time, patience or the language skills to successfully navigate you company's first line of defense, the automated switchboard.

Clutter - I've looked a few websites that make your skin crawl.  Don't get me wrong.  The tasteful use of animation in a website can be a good web-tool.  Two or more animations per page both dramatically slows your pages load time and makes your page look tacky.  The same holds true with too many images per page.

Load Time - Any web page that has a load time exceeding 30 seconds at 28.8 modem speed runs the risk of losing your potential customer.  Not everyone has broadband or a T1 capability.  Time is money and so it is with telecommunications costs.  In designing your site, use the K.I.S.S. method - Keep It Simple, Stupid.

Forms - The use of forms is common to many web pages.  The correct use of forms can make your website an effective marketing tool.  Using forms as the only way to send your company and email is both inconsiderate to your foreign customer and presumptuous that their language skills are adequate.  List at least one email address where all the viewer has to do is click on "send an email"  I had mentioned that the correct use of forms can help.  The primary reason that you have a website is to advertise your product and hopefully generate additional sales.  Are you looking for additional agents or distributors (either domestically or internationally)?  I don't know any exporter who isn't.  The steps to effective form use are simple:

  1. Tell your website visitor that you're seeking additional distributors by prominently displaying that fact on your homepage with a hyperlink to your questionnaire.

  2. Develop a questionnaire that will help you to assess the relative strengths and weaknesses of prospective agents or distributors.  The first rule in developing a questionnaire is "What makes my best agent/distributor successful?"  It might be technical skills, education, customer base, programming languages, number of sales people, etc.  Your questionnaire is probably something that you might want to do at the beach, the back yard or wherever.  Just get out of the interruption of the office to create the best questionnaire that you can.  The answers that you receive will have strong indicators as to whether or not you might want top consider this firm as a business partner.  You can find out more about questionnaire design by visiting: Package 39.

  3. Be responsive - don't delay in answering someone who has taken the time and effort to fill in your form.  If you already have a distributor, refer this contact to them.  If you're not interested in this contact as a possible distributor, tell them why.  If you are interested, that interest will be mirrored by your responsiveness.

Navigation - Experts in the field of web design will tell you that you should be able to navigate to all pages of any web by no more than three hyper-linked clicks.  The availability of a good search engine will help, but not all servers will support a search engine.  The same can be said for a "Table of Contents."  How well can you navigate your site?

Web Site Localization - This is a huge topic and very complex in nature.  It effects every site including many of the very best sites.  For more information on this topic, please visit: Web Site Localization.  Hint:  This site uses Google Translation to provide limited translation of this website.  Here's what it can do for you:

http://translate.google.com/

Numerous exporters will attest to the success of the WWW as a marketing tool.  Can you?

Related Sites

  • Building a Web Presence   - Even if you choose not to sell your goods or services on-line, a business Web site can be a virtual marketing brochure that you can update on demand with little or no cost.
  • Going On-line - E-Exporting  - The Internet's worldwide reach has made marketing products and services abroad a low-cost alternative to traditional international business. Today, corporate Web sites offer portals to the global marketplace previously unavailable or too expensive for a small or medium-sized firm. 
  • The Most Common Web Sins -  There are many flat-out "ugly" websites.  Some estimates are as high as 70% of the web.  This article attempts to identify some of the more common problems and give you some practical guidance to correct the problems.
  • Web Site Localization - The use of Web sites continues to grow in leaps and bounds. In business, these sites typically address marketing, sales, and information management for shared data across corporate Intranets.  What you say and how you say it may be crucial to your future success.

[ Up ] [ Building a Web Presence ] [ Going On-line - E-exporting ] [ The International Website ] [ The Most Common Web Sins ] [ Web Site Localization ]

Date Updated: November 26, 2010




image