If there are two
elements, which every business owner should have and every industry should
possess, few are more essential than design and data. Or: If a company is to
succeed online – if it seeks to make an impression with style and
substance, through a combination of intelligence and analysis – then
it must have a distinctive website, which gathers and mines data about current
and prospective clients.
To ignore or dismiss the importance of the
former is to squander the benefits of the latter; it is to divorce style from
substance, when, in fact, the two are inseparable. That is, a company cannot
have a generic website (and by “generic,” I believe most people know it when
they see it, with the unmistakable tabs, quartet of colors, boring text, and
graphs and pie charts) because the lack of an online identity – the
absence of personality – will fail to attract new visitors, and quickly
try the patience of existing consumers.
So, yes, style is substance. But it is also
the catalyst for generating traffic, increasing the amount of time people spend
reading content or using certain features, which yields the one commodity every
executive covets and every business wants to acquire: Data.
Analyzing that data by parsing it with a judicious
eye and dissecting the numbers with the exactitude of a
marketer-cum-mathematician reveals almost everything; its conversion into
intelligible, easy-to-follow reports can transform the way a business
communicates with consumers and expand a company’s influence into areas once
overlooked or purposefully neglected.
Offering these services (and more) at an
affordable price – democratizing design and data by leveling the playing
field between businesses large and small – is the next great milestone in
the history of the Web.
I write these words without an ounce of
hyperbole because, in my role as Founder of Ocoos, I give executives the freedom to build their own
websites, manage real-time traffic and better appreciate the analytics of the
Internet in general.
I present my case as a prime example of the
positive power of technology, where information is global, talent is
transcendent and automation is universal.
The practical benefits of this phenomenon
prove, on the one hand, that style is its own reward, while, on the other, that
visuals hone a company’s vision. Meaning: Where excellent design creates
attention – where the visual layout of a site matches a brand’s philosophy and
goals – that recognition results in a more direct vision about what a business
should do and where it should go.
Informed Leadership and Inspired Consumers:
The Dividends of Technology
The lesson for all business owners is a
simple reminder about embracing smart technology.
It is also a call to action, where executives
can enhance efficiency and lower administrative tasks by using a superior
solution, or choose an “online concierge” to handle these responsibilities.
Either way, the rewards are measurable and
undeniable: Improved operations, streamlined billing and accounting, heightened
responsiveness and strengthened consumer relations.
By championing design and data, a sort of
catchall for the many services that are part of the everyday affairs of running
a business, there can be a new era of informed leadership…for the good of a new
generation of inspired consumers.
The subsequent success for companies,
furthered by the renewed loyalty of their respective customers, is the ultimate
validation of technology.
The particular version of technology I refer
to, with its suite of resources, can inaugurate an exciting moment in the
history of the Web and online commerce.
With identity and resolution, each company
can seize this occasion.
Every business can prosper.