| Summary:
SuperPages.com/Gallup
Release Results
of National Small Business Internet-Use Survey
Highlights
DALLAS, TX (Nov. 22, 1999) - As the Internet grows at an astounding
rate, more small-to-medium size businesses are planning to take
the plunge by developing a Web site and offering e-commerce. Up
to this point, many smaller businesses have been reluctant to develop
Web sites and conduct e-commerce activities due to limited resources
and fear of the unknown. These and other interesting findings were
recently released in a national study conducted by GTE SuperPages.com
and the Gallup Organization.
"Our survey findings
indicate that small businesses are beginning to understand important
ways to grow their business through the Internet," stated Earl A.
Goode, president of GTE Directories Corporation, provider of SuperPages.com.
"We are seeing more small companies use the Internet to increase
sales, communicate with existing customers and market their business
to new consumers."
A leading online
Yellow Pages and shopping resource, GTE SuperPages.com provides
a variety of marketing services for small businesses interested
in establishing and promoting an Internet presence including Web
site development and hosting, online advertising, and Internet access.
SuperPages.com helps small businesses get connected on the Internet
and maximize their exposure, in turn, helping increase awareness
and growth.
Small Business
Internet Use Continues to Grow
The results of the random survey of 500 businesses indicate that
62 percent of small businesses are currently using the Internet
for some of their business needs including communicating with customers,
online sales and to provide product or service information. In addition,
25 percent of small businesses owners said that they currently have
a Web site.
These businesses
are reaping the benefits of being online; 68 percent of those surveyed
reported that their Web site has met most or exceeded their business
expectations.
According to the
small businesses who sell goods and services online, 15 percent
of their total sales volume comes from online sales and 66 percent
believe that sales volume will increase in the next 12 months. "Small
businesses that have embraced the Internet as a business tool will
continue to see the benefits of its use," explained Goode. "The
Internet provides endless opportunities for any size business to
market any type of product or service. Small and medium size businesses
are precisely the customers that we are targeting with SuperPages.com."
The SuperPages.com/Gallup
study indicates that an interactive and informative Web presence
is important to small businesses even if they are not ready or equipped
to conduct online transactions.
Why Small Businesses
are Not Using the Internet
Even with the overwhelming presence of the Internet in the business
world, many small businesses are opting not to use the Web. The
major reasons cited for not using the Internet were: 1) lack of
time, lack of staff, and lack of a suitable Web partner to develop
the site; and 2) the concern that the Internet does not reach local
customers.
"We've found with
our customers that no business is 'too local' to take advantage
of the Web as an effective way to reach customers. Consumers are
beginning to use the Internet more and more as a resource for local
information and small businesses need to be there," said Goode.
As more small
businesses discover the benefits of the Internet their desire to
establish a Web site increases. According to the small businesses
without a Web site surveyed, 44 percent indicated that they had
plans to develop an Internet site within the next 12 months. They
understand that with more consumers using the Internet, it is important
for them to develop an online presence to continue to grow.
Meeting Customer
Needs on the Internet
Small businesses believe the Web features most important to their
customers include: 1) Web sites that allow secure and private transactions;
2) the ability to correspond with the business via e-mail; and 3)
the convenience of being able to obtain online price quotes, conduct
price comparisons between competitors and purchase products online.
"Any business,
including a small business can develop a Web site that meets their
customers' needs," explains Goode. "The Internet is an essential
tool for businesses entering the new millennium."
About SuperPages.com
and GTE Directories Corporation
With more than 12 million businesses listed and tens of thousands
of advertisers, SuperPages.com, offered by GTE Directories Corporation,
is a rich, comprehensive shopping resource designed for people who
want the convenience of finding information and purchasing products
and services online. A leading Internet Yellow Pages and shopping
site, SuperPages.com has received 23.9 million cumulative unique
visitors from January through September, according to Media Metrix.
SuperPages.com conducts as many as 12.6 million Yellow Pages searches
per month. GTE Directories Corporation is a part of GTE Corporation,
one of the world's largest telecommunications companies and a leading
provider of integrated telecommunications services. In October,
GTE Corporation founded GTE Reads, a national, non-profit organization
dedicated to fighting illiteracy.
For a complete
copy of the survey findings, contact Stacey Lammot at (310) 288-5523
or slammot@ com.painepr.
Send SUGGESTIONS or FEEDBACK to public.affairs@gtedc.gte.com
Copyright (C) 1998 GTE Directories Corp.
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