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Resources:
Local Business Finally Figures Out the Internet - ( Newspapers,
Yellow Pages May Feel the Pinch)
(PRWEB via PR Web Direct) June 6, 2005 -- People have talked
forever, it seems, about how consumers are searching online
for local products and services, and how this will siphon
millions in advertising dollars away from print Yellow Pages,
newspapers, and other local media. If the story of one caterer,
who axed his $12,000 per year Yellow Pages advertising budget
in favor of local internet marketing, is anything to go by,
the worm may finally have turned.
As recently as 2004, clients of Small Business Online, located
in Norwalk, CT, were leery of spending anything in the online
sphere. Small Business Online's clients are, for the most
part, local businesses serving a local customer base: lawyers,
realtors, caterers, small retailers, sailing schools, chiropractors,
lumber yards, to give a sample. In 2004, most were happy to
get a search engine-optimized website online, and leave it
at that. By 2005, a marked change had occurred. Success in
the online sphere, for these local businesses, led to more
investment in Internet marketing, which led in turn to more
success. Examples: the caterer who received so much new business
from the Internet that he needed to hire a new employee. A
furniture retailer, with a bricks and mortar store, who now
gets about 90% of his new business via the Internet. A lumber
supplier who is selling $20,000 flooring jobs spurred by his
website.
The siphon effect? Two out of these three businesses have
already eliminated virtually all of their print Yellow Pages
spending in one case, representing a $12,000 a year
loss to the Yellow Pages industry. Their new Internet marketing
campaigns are costing these businesses less than their old
Yellow Pages or newspaper advertising. The caterer who added
a new employee is now spending about $500-600 a month on Internet
marketing the equivalent of a modest Yellow Pages ad
or a single newspaper ad. For this, he is getting a steady
stream of visitors to his website, with a successful conversion
rate into paying customers. For these small businesses, local
Internet marketing is proving both cheaper, and more successful,
than traditional local advertising.
| For
a growing number of small businesses, local Internet marketing
is proving cheaper, and more successful, than traditional
local advertising. |
A
new professional niche is emerging to support this growth:
the local Internet marketing consultant, or expert on local
search marketing, as it is sometimes called, who can put it
all together for the local businesses. Such an expert is essential.
The field is strewn with ill-advised offers and products from
companies promising to simplify the process and bring tons
of new customers to the local business. Some examples of "get
rich quick" schemes for internet marketing include mass
submissions to search engines (useless); affiliate linking
schemes that will boost search engine rankings (this one may
result in a website actually being dropped by a search engine);
"guaranteed" search engine placement (no-one can
guarantee this) to name just a few. Also questionable are
"packaged leads" whereby a vendor provides traffic
to a website for a flat fee. Successful Internet marketing
depends on an integrated approach, from lead acquisition to
sales conversion. It is useless to drive traffic to a poorly-designed,
single webpage. The business ends up paying for leads that
don't convert into customers. Contrary to what some marketers
may say, the online space can be complex, and a local business
must maximize its Internet marketing with a careful strategy.
Done properly, local Internet marketing views each business
as unique, and creates an affordable, ongoing marketing plan
that fits the business. Successful elements of the mix include
such things as optimization of the website both for search
engines and for customer conversion; carefully-planned pay-per-click
campaigns, that deliver quality, rather than quantity, of
leads; online publicity; appropriate linking campaigns; submission
to local and vertical directories; special website promotions;
customer email-marketing, and more. The secret is in getting
the mix just right for each business, and maintaining an ongoing
program to keep the business's website front and center before
the local audience. When carefully-planned and executed it
can bring big dividends to a small business.
For many local businesses, the question is no longer whether
they should begin to market in the local online space, but
when. Currently, as Neil Street, sales and marketing director
of Small Business Online sees it, incredible opportunities
are being missed, as consumers search online for local products
and services, but the businesses do not have an effective
online presence to serve those customers. But as success stories
such as the caterer's, or the furniture retailer's, begin
to spread, that gap will close, and significant advertising
dollars may soon shift to local online marketing.
http://www.smallbusinessonline.net/
Local
search marketing offers an opportunity not only for businesses
to be found easily using a search engine but it also opens
up doors for innovative mrketing options for businesses that
are located in a remote location. Exploiting local search
markting. Growth opportunities abound for businesses savvy
searching on the Internet, you probably figured out.
It's not perfect, yet. I have tried both Google and
Overture local searched and they both produce not-so-perfect
results but good enough to help me find what I need.
I am hoping that these will get better over time. The competition
will become intense in no time. While Overture does
not require a local business to even have a website, I see
no reason why even micro-businesses will not rush to get a
website, which now you can ask a high-school kid to design.
You will need to run your marketing campaign carefully and
monitor it closely to check if it is producing desired results
for you. If not, change your strategy or drop it.
www.iproceed.com/marketing/local-search-marketing.htm
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