Posts Tagged ‘Local Search’

SMBs and SEM Churn

Friday, June 19th, 2009

With High Churn, Local SEM at a Crossroads

Once upon a time in the world of advertising, life was simple. If you were a brand, the fastest way to reach the biggest consumer audience was through TV. That’s still true though TV is no longer as effective in getting consumers’ attention. If you were a local, small business (SMB), the parallel imperative was to buy print yellow pages. Though SMBs sometimes grumbled at pricing, the yellow pages indisputably delivered value.

Enter the New Digital Reality

Along came the Internet and broadband and the result is the messy fragmented media marketplace we have today – only getting more fragmented with mobile. It’s now very challenging to reach consumers and even harder to maintain their attention. Advertisers large and small are still trying to figure out and navigate this relatively new reality.

Traditional media still deliver value but not at the same level as before. The Internet offers theoretically precise audience targeting and broad reach, but also complexity not found in traditional media. This complexity and the related fragmentation confounds even sophisticated advertisers who, for example, have yet to master “social media” despite the enormous popularity of sites like Facebook and YouTube.

SMBs, for their part, are often confused and even terribly frustrated by the complexity of marketing in the digital era. According to an August 2008 Opus Research/AllBusiness.com small business survey, confusion, lack of budget and lack of time or personnel are among the reasons a clear majority of SMBs don’t advertise online:

Source: Opus/AllBusiness.com survey (survey base 1,000, question n=615)

SMBs have clearly been much slower than their customers to adopt online marketing. And some even maintain the fallacy that the Internet is “not relevant” to their business. Some of the answers in the graphic above reflect a lack of understanding of how the Internet is used by consumers.

The massive SMB market in the US has always been a very attractive target for online publishers and ad networks from the earliest days of the Internet. But the difficulty of reaching SMB advertisers has resulted in development of the current “local search ecosystem” – an awkward set of alliances between traditional (mostly yellow pages) publishers, local search marketing (SEM) vendors and search engines, among a few others. It all works “on paper” but in practice it may be breaking down.

BellSouth and “Local SEM”

In late 2003 or early 2004 BellSouth (now part of AT&T) introduced a product that offered to put SMBs on search engines in addition to the publisher’s own yellow pages site. It was in essence a simplified SEM offering geared specifically to SMBs who wanted to “be on Google,” but didn’t know how. That became the template going forward.

Search engines, unable to acquire large numbers of SMB advertisers directly through self service, turned to established “sales channels” such as yellow pages publishers that could use their “feet on the street” sales reps to reach local businesses. Yellow pages publishers, seeking more traffic than their sites were generating and to prevent potential advertiser defections, all developed similar products: local SEM offerings.

Rather than explaining keywords and bidding strategies, the sale to the SMB was simplified by offering “guaranteed clicks” for a fixed price. That original model has evolved in most cases. But what it permitted was an easy “close” by the sales rep. The complexity of search marketing — setting up and managing a paid-search campaign – was totally outsourced and hidden from the local business. The search engine got ad dollars it might not have otherwise and the publisher kept the advertiser. The publisher-partner/vendor got the headache of fulfillment and managing the campaign itself.

A Perfect Solution That’s Breaking Down

Though a theoretically perfect solution for all players, these local SEM offerings are starting to break down in some cases. There are lots of companies operating in the space and having varying degrees of success. Let’s be clear: what I’m saying doesn’t apply equally to all players in the segment. But in more than a few cases, Local SEM churn rates are between 50% and 100% on an annualized basis.

What that means as a practical matter is that half to all of the SMB advertisers signing up for these local SEM programs are leaving them before the year is out. In some cases, it happens after only a couple of months. In investigating what’s going on, I’ve been offered several explanations by a number of parties in the segment:

  • Local advertisers are not being properly educated about SEM and expectations are not being properly set accordingly

  • Not enough time is being allowed by the SMB to optimize campaigns

  • Sales reps are rewarded according to sales figures only and not retention numbers

  • Not enough of the advertiser spend is going directly to media (search) buying, which diminishes the performance of the campaign

Beyond this, the margins for publishers and vendors are thin and nothing like the 50%+ margins of traditional print media. Accordingly yellow pages and some online publishers such as Citysearch are forming direct alliances and trading traffic to start to minimize their direct dependence on search engines and SEM. More broadly publishers and sales channels are seeking to diversify qualified traffic sources to get more and better traffic for less money.

I see this and other related moves in the market as a partial breakdown of the local search ecosystem alliances that formed over the past few years around simple products (i.e., guaranteed clicks) as a way to bring more SMBs online and solve common problems.

The Next-Generation Products

Let’s assume for argument that many of these local SEM products now being sold are unsustainable, what will take their place? After all, the Internet isn’t going away and SMB advertisers can’t return to an all-print strategy.

The challenge for everyone focused on the local space is creating products that can scale, deliver healthy margins and, especially, provide real value to SMBs. But most of what’s in the market today fails in one or more of those areas.

More sophisticated versions of existing SEM offerings that reach broadly into more traffic sources are starting to emerge. And a growing number of SMBs may be able to manage their own marketing on places like Facebook and Twitter because of their relative simplicity. Yet the majority of SMB advertisers will still need help and want to outsource their online marketing to trusted third parties. Accordingly there’s still plenty of opportunity to get the products right and deliver better value to local advertisers.

The marketplace isn’t getting simpler; it’s only getting more complex.

The Downfall of Geo Modifiers

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Long before the Onebox and Yahoo! Shortcut came along; before all the geo targeting in Yahoo! Search Marketing and Google Adwords came along, searchers were already searching for local businesses and services. When performing the search, more often than not, they would simply leave out any kind of geographic modifier (i.e. zip code, city name, neighborhood, etc.) and receive sub par search results.

Since then geo targeting, browser location awareness, and other tools have helped searchers receive relevant results (mostly sponsored). Google has released a search update where it prompts the user for a city or zip whenever it detects a local search, then displays local results. This has increased overall local search traffic and increased Onebox traffic.

The above mentioned feature looks like this:

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searchbox

After the user enters the city or zip, instead of modifying the whole search result, Google simply adds a Onebox and keeps the natural results intact with the results from the original query.

searchafter

With a good amount of research I have been able to pin point the date when this update took place and gather enough information before and after the update to see the effect of this. For those of you that would like to know, my data set before the update was 300,000 keywords referrals from Google and 550,000 after.

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So what did I find? I found that there was a rise from 2.06% to 14.78% in referrals with no apparent geo modifier from Google.  Since Google simply displays a Onebox instead of appending the geo modifier entered by the user to query we know that this traffic is purely from the Onebox.

One can only wonder based on our previous research of Onebox vs. Natural traffic that if the entire result set was changed, how much would this effect truely local traffic to websites?  As more technology becomes available, such as browser location awareness, it is only logical to think that Google (and hopefully Yahoo!) will take advantage of this and automatically display local results to users. In addition with the thought that more people probably do not

enter a geo modifier when prompted, you would imagine a local search traffic would sky rocket.

Local Search News Podcast - Episode 2

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Mike Boland and Steve Espinosa discussed Mike’s latest column on Local Search News entitled “Mobile Local Search: Where to Begin?” and discussed mobile search trends and where the market is going. Among the topics in the discussion was how long will it be until the majority of phones consumers have full HTML browsers.

Twitter: The Local Monetization Strategy

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Over the last couple months we have heard many different ideas on how Twitter can successfully monetize their surge in popularity, growing user base, and overall traffic. The ideas range from charging for an account, charging for premium accounts, simply adding AdSense, and the list goes on. What we haven’t heard is how Twitter could add local search into their business model, monetize it successfully, and create more user generated content.

When you think about it almost everything that is on Twitter is inherently local. The simple question “What are you doing?” implies that because, unless you are at home watching TV, you are doing something that is local, whether that is local to you or to someone else. The obvious example of this is when you go out to a restaurant and write about that on Twitter, whether you say “Going out to [insert name here] with @stevemcstud” or “Just had a great dinner with @stevemcstud at [insert name here]“. If you simply perform a search on Twitter for “restaurant in”, the point being to see how many people tweet “I am going to restaurant in [insert city]” or “Anybody know of a good restaurant in [insert city name]?” you can see that with just that one phrasing there are tons of results of people talking about local restaurants.

With restaurants being one of the biggest categories in local search as far as traffic and advertisers, it would be easy to roll out a beta test for this to justify whether local would work for Twitter or no. So how do I propose Twitter take advantage of this? Create Business Twitter pages. Just like Facebook, where the page does not have as much functionality as a real Facebook but simply serves the purpose of people being able to connect and talk about a subject. Twitter can simply buy the data of all the restaurants in San Franscico and publish them with static pages so that people can actually say “I just ate @lunchbox with @stevemcstud and it was great!” instead of actual tweets like this:

tweet1

@dudeman718 could of actually told @SoulPSuperstar where he went rather than a “sushi restaurant in Maple Shade, NJ” and they could of actually clicked on @[restaurant name] and gone and looked at a Business Twitter page. What would a Business Twitter page look like you might say. Like this:

twitter-example

Traffic
With this type of page it requires absolutely no action by the restaurant owner or anyone at the restaurant. Twitter would easily be able to kill it in the SERPs if they structured the business pages into a well done SEO friendly directory which would help users find restaurants in their city. Sooner rather than later you would see twitter showing up for searches like “Restaurants in San Francisco” with all that link juice and fresh content it is no question. This would drive an amazing amount of traffic to Twitter, my guess would be about 4-6 million more visits via search engine traffic with this fully deployed.

Small Business Accounts

Besides the new traffic this would allow business owners who don’t know about Twitter to sign up for it. Business owners always at some point perform vanity searches for their business name, in which Twitter would show up in the results in Google and then they would sign up after seeing all the reviews people are writing about their business. Twitter then could charge for business accounts and then monetize the business account that are not claimed by featuring claimed businesses on other related business accounts that are not claimed, something like a “You Might Also Like” type feature.

User Experience and Advertising
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By implementing this you get a huge double benefit. You get to charge businesses for accounts which would generate revenue. Then you also get to rank the directory by Twitter buzz, allow users to tell other users what they are doing more accurately and with less characters, and create more user generated content overall. With people doing nothing but saying what is on there mind on Twitter, they can easily pass Yelp! as far as content is concerned while keeping their original model as a web app intact and not selling out but rather adding a needed feature, the website.

Partnerships
Partnerships will come flooding in with the likes of Superpages.com, City Search, and others. Twitter will not have to complicate their business with a sales force, but just partner with the giants in the local industry who already have the customers, their credit cards, and revenue coming from what exactly small businesses want, more customers. With traffic coming in from local searches, reviews, and buzz, companies with have to partner with Twitter just to keep up with the industry.

It’s All Bout The Dolla Bills
So how much money can this actually bring to Twitter? The current valuation has Twitter worth about $250,000,000, last time I checked, and that was based solely on the buzz and the amount of users they have on the site. With an estimated 6,000,000 visits a month coming from this program and a majority of them will no doubt be recovery searches (people or business owners searching for business names, phone numbers, addresses etc.) this will get Twitter in the public eye to consumers and businesses owners doing vanity searches. There is no doubt that a percentage of those new visits will end up signing up for the service.

With the current valuations, the actual worth of each Twitter user is debated to be between $73 and $42, so let’s just say $40 to be safe. If only 2% of my estimated 6,000,000 new hits per month actually sign up for the service that will total 120,000 new users every month. So what is 120,000 users worth at the current valuation? $4,800,000. And that number grows every month with new sign ups and new visits. Now I realize that not every single one of the 6,000,000 visits every month will be brand new every time, but without a doubt from my experience of working with Local Search Destination Sites the majority of them will be.

The number above does not even take into account the monthly residual they could make from small businesses that they sign up through partnerships. From pure revenue stand point they can easily get 50,000 small business clients spending $6 per month. So let’s assume that they have a 50/50 revenue split. They receive $150,000 per month and growing residual income from partnerships. Now if we apply the math we did above with each user worth $40 then these 50,000 new paying customers add a value of $2,000,000 to the company as well.

Conclusion
All and all this is what you get:

  • A better user experience where you will see tweets like “Just had lunch @LunchBox with @SteveMcStud” rather than “Just had lunch with @SteveMcstud at that one cafe at Google next to the main campus”
  • They will increase there traffic generated by search engines by at least 4-6 million per month.
  • Business owners will find there pre-made Twitter accounts, take them over, and interact with the Twitter community
  • Partnerships will follow with companies that already have the very businesses that people on Twitter are talking about actually paying them money. No sales force required.
  • Revenue. You actually have a profitable revenue source that may not be the end all be all model, but will be a huge chuck of revenue that does not interrupt the user experience but actually makes it better.
  • A big increase in valuation due to increased revenue, increased user base, and increased market share.

So that is my 2 cents. For all I know I could be completely wrong. Oh yeah, by the way, in the hour it took me to finish this article there have been 65 more people who had “restaurant in” in their tweets.

Local Search News Podcast - Episode 1

Monday, April 6th, 2009

So we finally got around to putting together a podcast for Local Search News! It has been in the works for some time but it finally is here. We will be trying to put one out every week from now on. In the first episode I had Mike Belasco join me to discuss recent happenings in the local search world and a couple seo tips as well.

Here is a brief overview of what we disucssed and some screen shots for you reference of what we are talking about in the podcast:

Google Onebox Change
Google no longer requires a geographic modifier inserted into the a users search for some broad phrases and will show a Onebox result based on the users location when the search is conducted. We had noticed an up tick in referrals from Google with no geographic modifiers and wrote an article on it here.

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Google Doesn’t Know How To Work Adwords

We then ventured a little off subject and discusses how Google is now placing Adwords for local searches as seen below:
picture-6
But when you click on the ad they take you to a search for “pizza” but it is for San Francisco. They probably should have a lower quality score because of this :)

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Microsoft’s New Onebox
After Google we discussed that Live.com now has a Map next to their local map and pretty much received no recognition for it as we talked about it here .
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Twitter Mobile
Mike Belasco pointed out that on the Twitter mobile profiles have dofollow links.
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We talked about much more. Listed to the podcast for much more. Have an idea you want talked about or an idea for the Podcast? Drop us a line in the comments and let us know.

Keep It Simple

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Ockham’s Razor is a scientific principle that basically states, in layman’s terms, that all other things being equal, the simplest solution is usually the best.

Local search is not complicated. We make it complicated. OK, the technology behind local search, and all of it’s various nuances and offerings, may be complicated, but the market itself, the opportunity, is not complicated. We only make it complicated.

Local search insiders, pundits, analysts, SEO and SEM gurus, entrepreneurs, vendors, and service providers are all contributing immense value to the local search sector. Innovative ideas are sprouting out of the ground every day. Some will stand the test of time, some will not. Those that seem to build the most momentum always seem to be the simplest ones.

It’s no mystery as to why there’s so much innovation too - it’s a huge market opportunity, big problems need to be solved! The earthquake is coming! The money is on the move. It’s just a matter of time until the tectonic plate ceases it’s tremors and finally starts the earthquake that we’re all holding our breath for. We’ve all got our instruments in hand, our gauges, measuring tools, sensors ready for the next tremor, anticipating the big one. It’s a comical vision, yes, and some of the naysayers think we’re all a little nuts, running in circles, waiting for the shift to finally happen.

However, and this shouldn’t come as news to anyone, the “local search market” is not a new market, the only thing that’s new is the delivery mechanism. It’s the same market that’s been under our noses for the last 20 years, 50 years, 100, even 300 years! It’s the same market that paid for advertising in the first American newspaper in 1704. It’s small businesses, it’s local merchants! It’s your neighborhood barber, the accountant down the street. They are the market.

Offerings like pay-per-click, SEM, SEO, call tracking, mobile search, etc, are all fantastic offerings that make complete sense to me and to you, the local search insider, and they work. But sometimes I think we all need to remember that those offerings are buzzwords to the typical advertiser and sounds like techno-speak to 98% of the market. National advertisers, ad agencies, CMRs, sure - they know what you mean, but the vast majority of the market has no idea what you’re talking about. It’s total gibberish - sort of like listening to Wall Street analysts talk about derivatives!

The only thing that these ~17 million local merchants are concerned with is how you can help them obtain and retain customers. Period. That’s it. That’s their only priority! Doing that solves all their problems. Doing that helps them pay their clerk, their rent, their electricity bill, make their inventory payment, their tax payments, and sometimes even themselves.

With every market there’s a need. With every need there’s a solution. It’s up to us to identify those solutions and build them. But selling them is the real test. It’s not a solution until you’ve sold it and proven that it works. So remember, keep it simple - the simplest solution is usually the best.