It‘s not always easy
to think globally, yet many of our site‘s visitors
live
abroad. In fact, most of
them do. This has forced us to pack a lot of learning into
a short time.
We edit and publish a monthly e-zine from the tiny Greek
island of
Karpathos. Kafenio, which
premiered in March 2000, focuses on European life and culture.
The first
step in thinking globally
was to accept our classified ads in any language using Latin
letters, so
French, Spanish, German -
no problem for our software.
Not so hard, is it?
That was an important decision for us. Living on a remote
Aegean island as
we do, surrounded by
goats and cats, it would be easy to get tunnel vision and
forget about the
rest of the planet.
English is English, right?
The first major conflict that punched us right in the nose
was British vs.
American English. We
then had a contributing writer from Australia, another journalist
from
Canada.
What to do? We made it our
policy that each writer would stick to his/her native usage
of English. No way did I want to ruin an article by Americanizing
it. That‘s not global thinking. Savvy readers in Britain
or elsewhere would spot that style slip-up a mile away.
(I mean a kilometer away, no better make that kilometre.
See what I mean?)
There is a vast difference between editing something for
accuracy and acting
like the language
police. No, we cannot please everybody and we cannot spend
every waking
moment trying to. But
to reach out to a global audience, we have to willing to
widen our thinking.
Global excitement
Recently we decided to run banner ads in languages other
than English and
this kicks off in the
July issue with one German and one Russian banner. It‘s
a start of something
exciting and we
think we can expand on our idea as time goes on. Not every
improvement to a
site or e-zine has to
occur overnight.
Oops!
Do most sites truly think and act globally? No. I can‘t
count the times I
have tried to sign up for
free subscriptions to newsletters or zines, only to be rejected
because I
didn‘t fill in my state and
zip code correctly. Or that my phone number did not fit
the (American)
format. This oversight is
going to turn off not just me--with a Greek address and
phone number--but
other potential
customers around the world as well.
Another thing that urks me at many sites is when you see
a button where you
can click on your
weather. Most of these programs turn out to offer weather
for North America
and North America
only. What if your reader in Tokyo or Paris wants to know
the weather, too?
Ditto the news. For sites offering the top news reports,
I‘ll bet half offer
only American news.
What about visitors living in Asia or Europe, don‘t
we also want news? In a
news story, I find it
bothersome that every reference to “government“
has to refer to Washington.
Or that every stock
quote must be from the U.S.
Folks, there‘s a whole world out here ready to visit
your Website and maybe
buy your products.
Why shut us out?
Do you suppose I‘ll be going back to a Website that
offers only weather for
North America or
claims my address is incorrect because I did not select
a state from their
listing? No, I‘ve had the
door slammed in my face and once is enough. They won‘t
get my business
because they‘ve more or
less made it clear to me at first visit that I am unimportant
to them.
I‘m not suggesting we go out and hire sociologists
instead of Webmasters,
but let‘s not go out of
our way to turn off a potential customer base from all over
the planet
either. Examine your own
site and see what positive changes you might make in this
regard.
Once we all start thinking globally, we‘ll act it.
As we attract new
customers, our success rates are
bound to go up. After all, I can‘t think of a better
place to go global than
cyberspace.
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