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Chris Brogan on Ways to Cross-Promote Your Online and Offline Marketing From online to off, and the other way around. Why both worlds still matter.

By Chris Brogan

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

More than 40 percent of small businesses in the U.S. have no online presence whatsoever. This stat baffles me. Do they think consumers still pick up the yellow pages when we need to find a service or product? But the opposite happens often, too. I know plenty of web-based companies that believe there's no such thing as the physical world. To me, it's a matter of building better bridges.

Related: Brevity Rules

Let Them Eat URLs
If you're handing someone a printed surface of any kind and there's no website address attached to it, what are you thinking? Your coffee shop napkins could be pointing me toward your new loyalty points program. Your incredible book about business secrets had better be pointing me toward websites at every turn (Jeffrey Gitomer's sales books are loaded with links to sites where he continues his efforts). Put URLs on everything you offer, and use them as ways to engage your customers or potential customers, such as sign-ups for e-mail newsletters or other offers to extend their experience.

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The Art of the Physical World
We're going through a redesign at Human Business Works. My creative director, Josh Fisher, and I are talking about business cards, note cards and something you might not have thought about: paper renditions of our presentations. I don't mean that we're going to run over to the laser jet and print off a few PowerPoint decks. I mean that we're going to design visual accessories in a nice portfolio case with a piece of heavy string and a button to wrap it around that will portray our presentation in a very physical way. We'll print a few hundred of these at a time and hand them out at select events as solid product, suitable for hanging at one's cubicle.

Why? Because we web-based BIZ Experiencess have to remember that the physical world exists, and that there are times when we have to bridge out into that world. So, yes: Make printed materials. Consider opening a physical pop-up store for a month or two, adding something more than shiny screens to promote your interests. In October 2010, Blurb, a print-on-demand book publisher headquartered in San Francisco, built a pop-up store in Manhattan's SoHo district. They used the space to demonstrate that their products weren't scrapbooks or flimsy crafts, but actual self-published books. Even smarter, they held workshops for getting the process started. Taking an online experience and bringing it offline is very important to the cause.

Related: Virtually There

Bridges Matter
Whether you're an offline business that thinks figuring out the online world is tricky, or you're an online business that thinks all your customers are just a tweet and a Facebook ad away from buying, you've got some bridges to create. The benefit of figuring out how to move people back and forth across those bridges is more business from untapped areas. The risk? The only one I see is in not considering a strategy for bridging both worlds. With a healthy movement between online and off, your business can find people where they are, not just where you're most comfortable.

Chris Brogan is president of Human Business Works, a small-business education and growth company. He is also co-author of The New York Times bestselling book Trust Agents, and author of Social Media 101. He blogs at chrisbrogan.com.

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