Friday, December 29, 2017

Entrepreneur Success Story: Helping Small Businesses Build Better Website Landing Pages

Sometimes, as small business owners, we have too many choices. We know we’re supposed to invest in marketing and advertising, choose the best venues and platforms, measure our ROI, and then constantly test against “the winner.”

But, in reality, a lot of us are too busy running our businesses on a day-to-day basis to make the time to do all that. Plus, it takes time and costs money to constantly change your website to do all that testing.

What if I told you about a simpler way? One that’s fast and inexpensive as well.

Solving a need with a simpler solution

Last summer I attended the Unbounce Conference in Vancouver where I learned more in two days than I have in a long time.

First, some background. Eight years ago, Rick Perreault was looking for a solution—he wanted to build a webpage for advertising without hiring developers to create it. There were A/B testing companies—but they only provided enterprise-level solutions. “There was nothing in the SMB space,” Perreault explains. “I just needed drag-and-drop functionality, something as simple as MailChimp is for email.”

Perreault, a musician turned marketer, started talking to people he knew about the situation and found he wasn’t alone in his frustration. Still he wanted to “validate the market and make sure it wasn’t just me.” So, he created a survey, posted it to Facebook, and got an initial reaction from 42 people who clicked on his Facebook ad and said, “I need this.”

In June 2009, armed with that knowledge and some market research, Perreault put together a team, and less than two months later he and his five cofounders incorporated the company. Today Unbounce has three global offices (Vancouver, Montreal, and Berlin) and nearly 200 employees.

RELATED: 11 Best Practices for Optimizing Sign-Up and Landing Pages

The Unbounce landing page and conversion marketing platform enables businesses to build landing pages where they can test offers, pricing, design, content, and more without hiring a team of developers, designers, or marketers. Perreault says, “It’s hard to do a good A/B test. And most small businesses don’t have the resources to do that. It’s all about providing the customers with the insights and tools they need to grow their businesses.”

Landing pages are not meant to be a section of your website; they are stand-alone pages that address specific products or services. Unbounce cofounder Oli Gardner explains that landing pages help consumers focus on your message, since they can’t always navigate back to the home page.

When it launched, Perreault thought millennials would be a good market to target, and needed inexpensive ways to reach them. “We actually had a blog before we had a product, and started producing guides to attract attention,” Perreault recalls. The first product, a guide to online marketing (which is still available), included a printable poster that business owners could use to check off the steps as they proceeded through the process. To save money they used social platforms, particularly Twitter, to get the word out. And, Perreault says, “millennials absorbed it. [We learned] content marketing isn’t only inexpensive, it lasts so much longer.”

Six core company values

Perhaps due to his background as a musician, Perreault is a people person—and a natural collaborator. Of the six partners that founded the company, four are still involved today. When he was recruiting the startup team, Perreault looked for people with different skills that would complement one another. “We all have our strengths,” he says, “but the company is not run by the founders.” Instead, there’s a 15-person senior leadership team, which includes three of the founders.

One of Unbounce’s biggest challenges is competing for talent. They’re located in a section of Vancouver that’s also home to Microsoft, Hootsuite, Amazon, and other big tech companies. So, in order to get employees to join Unbounce, Perreault and his partners created a company built around six core values:

  1. Delight everyone. Create opportunities that bring unexpected joy to those around you.
  2. Be empowering. Give everyone around you the opportunity to do what they do best, to improve their abilities, and to exceed their own expectations.
  3. Be courageous. Speak up when you have something to say, give honest feedback, and be willing to make difficult decisions.
  4. Be transparent. Make your decisions with integrity. Be honest and open about everything you do.
  5. Be humble. Know that we can always improve, and that we’re where we are today thanks to our amazing community of customers and co-workers.
  6. Be generous. Always give more than you expect in return.

These are not just words; Unbounce lives these values. For instance, Perreault says he believes in empowering his employees. “We give them objectives and let them decide how they’re going to get there. I can’t hold people accountable if I tell them how to do their jobs.”

Winning over employees

Transparency is important at Unbounce. “We don’t hide anything from employees,” Perreault explains, “but we won’t share salaries. We hold monthly town halls where we tell our employees everything.”

But perhaps generosity is the chief reason for the company’s success. Perreault explains, “At our core, we’re generous. We look for ways to improve the lives of our employees.” The company offers paid parental leave for the first month at full salary and partners with care providers that offer employees access to emergency child care 15 days a month. Perreault says every year they try to do something else for the staff. “We invest in employee satisfaction.”

That generosity extends to its customers as well. When the company decided to hold an annual conference, they asked themselves, “How can we make a conference awesome, and make it as frugal as possible so people can come?”

Customers also get access to a lot of support, including nearly 24/7 phone support, live chat, email, and access to experts and the Unbounce community, who like to help one another.

Today the company is moving beyond landing pages and expanding its offerings. Perreault says, “We’re asking, ‘What pains can we solve for our current users?’ We want to help them drive traffic, help them convert better. How can we make it simpler for them? We’re looking at machine learning and using bots to do it for them.”

Perreault is a big believer in entrepreneurship. “It’s easier to start today,” he says, “it’s all in cloud, which means lower overhead or working from home. There are,” he adds, “so many free tools or low-cost subscriptions.”

The future is bright for small businesses in Perreault’s view. “The new generation of business will disrupt a lot of existing businesses. The new gig economy is easier to be part of.” But, he warns business owners who are lagging behind to get onboard: “Brick-and-mortars need to get online; they’ll be obsolete if they don’t.”

RELATED: Perfect Landing Pages: The Art of Creating High-Conversion Lead Generation Forms

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The post Entrepreneur Success Story: Helping Small Businesses Build Better Website Landing Pages appeared first on AllBusiness.com. Click for more information about Rieva Lesonsky.



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