Do you have a marketing and sales plan in place? I have started two companies, both in IT. One was quite successful and the other failed. The one which succeeded was opened when I discovered that I had people willing to pay me to do what I did (networks, custom web site development). I soon had sub contractors and several clients. Being young at the time and totally unaware of how rare it is to get a business actually running and pulling in a good profit, I closed that business...yes, closed, when I was 21 to go back to school and get my BA. Not a smart move.
The second had a better business plan than the first. It had all the financial calculations in line. I had a target market identified and had a unique offering. Didn't work. The price of gas ate my profit margin and I couldn't increase prices to compete. (Can't expect techs to uses motorcycles to get on site).
Anyway, the hardest part of business, if you are a technical expert in the field, is reaching your target market. I see that your target market is small business. From experience, small businesses operate on a tight budget and generally aren't going to willingly give you an audience if you are selling something they don't think they NEED. On the other hand, if they thought they needed it they would have it and you would have to compete either in a better capacity or at a lower price point. As you noted on your web site, most companies don't have a disaster recovery plan. It is a prospective market for you, but one which people may be reluctant to pay for. A good marketing plan will make sure you are successful.
Most of all, stick with it. Starting a business is not easy. However, there is nothing like owning your own business. I wish every day that I had not closed my first business. Now I'm stuck trying to form the plan for business #3. Good luck!
A point on the web site:
- People are lazy. They won't read all the text if they are just looking (unless you are on fjrforum.com, and then they still won't use the search option). We read it because we support you and want to read everything. Think of paraphrasing and putting important sale points up top. Think of your home page as the case for your company. You want them to call you so you can tell them the rest. Lots of that text may be useful in a FAQ or blog (if you are trying to get Google rankings)