How to Gain More Visibility Online During the Pandemic

The pandemic has taken its toll on businesses across the globe, particularly local businesses that rely on regular footfall. During this time, it’s been more important than ever to have a solid digital strategy and gain visibility online. Here, Jonathan Birch, Creative Director at Glass Digital, shares six ways local businesses can ensure they’re seen online and excel at marketing during Covid-19.

With Covid-19 driving businesses into online-only approaches, it’s vital for local businesses to use digital channels to keep their audiences in the know. But, as well as keeping the discussion open, it’s also important that local businesses prepare to make the changes needed to compete in this quickly changing new landscape. 

While for some that means making a totally new move to selling online, for others it may mean tweaking their SEO strategy to adapt to customers’ current needs and wants as driven by the pandemic.

In this article I will be sharing six of the top ways your local business can gain online visibility during uncertain times, including how to market during Covid-19, outside of the usual local SEO tactics.

1. React quickly to the changing landscape

The start of the pandemic saw businesses thrown into uncertainty, unsure of what would be the best action for their company and whether they would be able to tackle the obstacles to come.

Fast forward to a year of living with Covid-19 restrictions, at least to some extent, and businesses are still having to react quickly to the changing landscape in order to keep afloat. And, doing so is never simple. 

The lifecycle of the pandemic can be confusing, and with rules and regulations always shifting, it can be hard to keep up — but you need to! Thinking about what worked before Covid-19 won’t guarantee you success now, and even trying to replicate something that was successful at a different time within the pandemic might also fail. Instead, pay attention to the wants and needs of your existing and potential customers. 

For example, if your previous site was used to advertise products that you only sold in store, you might now want to make the move to selling them online instead. For example, Geppetto’s — a California-based toy store — tweaked their website to offer both online ordering and click and collect options for the first time ever in order to compete.  Although selling online hasn’t brought the company back to its original selling volume, they reported a click-and-collect service helped them a lot. The use of this service has doubled every month since rolling it out last August.

Keyword Planner Google Search Console

2. Partner with other local businesses

Times are tough for many local businesses right now, so why not show your support and team up with another local company? As well as lending a hand to a team that may be struggling, multiple minds mean an extended pool of ideas, access to more contacts, and more customers. So, both you and the other businesses can thrive. 

How you choose to form the partnership is totally up to you and what functions for your particular line of work. But you’ll want to make sure any business you partner with has values that align with yours. Otherwise you risk sending mixed messages to your customers or putting them off. For example, if you are a small shop specializing in selling eco-friendly gifts, partnering with brands that create a lot of waste and use harmful materials could land you with some online backlash, pushing your business success further away. Instead, you could partner with a like-minded local company to organize for your deliveries to go out together, halving your combined carbon footprint. 

Local Business Partnership

You might also want to join forces with local businesses that sell the same category of items as you do, whether that’s food, drinks, gifts, or something else. For example, if you own a local greengrocer, you could partner with the butchers round the corner to host a social media competition where the winner can receive the ingredients for a grand roast dinner. Whatever you do, make sure you’re taking your customers’ desires into account, whether that’s to treat them to a little luxury or help them with the essentials when times are hard. 

If you’re keen to partner with other businesses, here are some ways you can get started:

  • Run a competition online together: Make sure you both promote the competition on your socials and website to attract a richer pool of people.
  • Host a joint event: Introduce yourselves to each other’s audiences by holding a joint online event or masterclass where you can both show off your specialism and let others get to know you. For example, if you both specialize in organic produce, you could cook one element of a dish and they could do the other.
  • Offer product bundles and service packages together: Combining your products and services and offering them as a more comprehensive package is sure to attract more customers, especially if you’re able to offer a good discount for the bundle.
  • Create a collaborative product range: Take the time to think about how you can combine your expertise and products and use this to make a collaborative product range. For example, if you own a dress company and you’re wanting to join with another clothing business, you could come up with your own line that integrates the look of both companies. 
  • Generate an interesting social campaign together: Social media is the quickest and cheapest way of getting news out about your businesses. Perhaps you’ll conduct some research together around how the pandemic has affected certain aspects of life, or you’ll predict trends and create product launches around this.

This can pay dividends in terms of boosting conversion rates and increasing engagement online with your businesses, especially if you partner up around peak periods. For example, two local Charleston restaurants, Lewis Barbecue and Callie’s Hot Little Biscuit, joined forces around Labor Day last year to offer two curated packages of their best sellers at an affordable price. 

3. Focus on re-marketing

It often takes a change of circumstance to alter things for the better, and the pandemic has certainly turned many business processes on their heads and made owners rethink their online marketing strategy. In particular, remarketing has become much more helpful in identifying what customers are actually looking for during these uncertain times, and focusing on it can help you to make more conversions. 

This digital marketing strategy is a much savvier alternative to trying to target people who have no interest in or use for, the product or service you’re selling. Instead, maximizing your media spends to re-target a user who has already engaged with an advertisement or has at least left an indication that they were interested, is sure to be much more beneficial.

Plus, with the pandemic leaving so many businesses with a tight marketing budget, it’ll be a much more suitable technique rather than trying something completely new and not reaching the right people. 

Facebook Pixel Remarketing



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