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Will Google Places make Yellow Pages Obsolete?

December 12, 2011 by Kenny Leave a Comment

Phone books have become a nuisance to many consumers as they pile up on the driveway or by the front door.  They fill the trash can (oops, I mean recycling bin), they waste paper, ink or toner, gas(from delivery), and time…yet some businesses continue to advertise.

Local Marketing Online is now more important than ever but the place to do it has changed.

National Yellow Pages and Consumer Choice Opt-Out Site

Some phone books added an online version which may be more beneficial than the printed versions.  However, in 2011 Google decided to place more relevance on local searches and they did a big push for Google Places.

Google Places was formerly known as Google Local.  I personally do not know why the name change but a good reason would be, people searching for a local business are searching for a place, not just information.

This makes appearing high in the search rankings even more important because someone looking for a Place instead of basic information, is ready to spend.  The decision to spend has already been made and now they are looking for a place to spend it!

Local listings attract people with high buyer intent.

Think about it…

If someone types Italian Food Recipes into Google they are probably looking for free online recipes, Youtube videos, or cookbooks.  The search results will show traditional websites, videos, and maybe a Facebook Fan Page of Italian Food Recipes.

If someone types Italian Restaurant into Google they are looking for a Place to eat Italian food…tonight or soon.

If someone types in 2004 Ford Explorer they may be looking at a vehicle they already found, they are researching, or even looking for pictures.

If someone types in Ford Dealership they are looking for a Place to visit because they may be ready to buy a car.  They already researched vehicles and now it is time to test drive or buy.

When typing the local types of searches you are not likely to see any yellow pages listings.  The online version of the phone book may be of some use because they do get some visitors but nowhere near what Google gets.

Google owns the #1 and #2 search engines in the world, Google and Youtube.

If you are tracking your phone book ads and they are making a profit you should continue using them.

If you want the most local exposure you can get learn about or hire someone to do your Google Places Marketing.

Filed Under: Local Online Marketing Tagged With: business optout yellow pages, local marketing, online local advertising

Online Reviews are the New Black – How to Get Online Reviews

December 7, 2011 by Kenny Leave a Comment

If a testimonial, a referral, and your best sales person could procreate they would have an online review.

Reviews are that important.

How you get those reviews can help you or destroy your online exposure.

The frustration of trying to get your customers to go online and comment about your business has led some owners to seek outside assistance.  Some companies have taken it to far. 

Lifestyle Lift will pay $300,000 in penalties to the NY state Attorney General.   Company Busted For Fake Reviews 

Other tactics that may be ethical but can still get you flagged include:

  • Writing reviews on behalf of customers and having them sign it, then posting it.
  • Posting reviews on behalf of customers from one account.
  • Posting from different accounts but only 1 IP address.
  • Paying a company that has IP addresses in several locations to post on behalf of your customers.

The serious business owner that wants to capitalize using online reviews and also wants to avoid big mistakes should start with the video series below then read on.
If you find yourself in a position to question whether your online review methods are going to work long-term, think like a consumer.

If your life was on the line and you had to find the right Doctor and you were reading the reviews, what would you want?

You would want every review to have been written by a customer/patient that was so happy they were inspired enough to take the time to go online, log in to their own account, and write a review from their own home with their own IP address.  No trickery, no extra push from the Doctor.

Understand that Google thinks like the consumer and does everything they can to fight the unethical people and the businesses collecting real reviews get caught in the middle. 

The highest level of reviews (Level 7) are the reviews that your customers write by going online, logging into their own accounts, and posting reviews, spread out over a period of time.  This is totally natural and that is one way to think like Google…as Google tries to think like the consumer.

This may be frustrating again to most business owners because it sounds like the answer is to DO NOTHING and hope for the reviews to flow. 
Not so…

You can still ask for reviews or encourage reviews and feedback from your customers on specific review sites.  You can make it easy for them by providing them a direct link or a QR code that takes them directly to the page where they can leave a review. 

Businesses that collect the most reviews are the businesses that have it as part of the system, sales cycle, or follow up. 

There may be a Level 8 and at the very least, even more power to your Online Review System.

Level 8 – More Powerful Online Reviews??

Filed Under: Local Online Marketing Tagged With: google places, internet review, local marketing, online reviews, testimonial

Case Study L`Auberge in Sedona

July 7, 2011 by Kenny Leave a Comment

Sedona Hotel LaubergeRecently my wife and I celebrated our 10th wedding anniversary in Sedona, Arizona.  A friend of my wife recommended it and said it was a beautiful place to stay with great service. 

She was right!

However, this is not a review of L`Auberge in Sedona.  It is a case study…so we will analyze what they did right and what they can do better.  You can learn from both. 

We will focus primarily on the communications/marketing.

The most important part of your business is your actual product and service.  If your product/service stinks there is no marketer that can save you.  If your service is as great as L`Auberge in Sedona, people will talk about you…in a good way.  However, as a business you should stimulate them to talk about you more and spread the word.  Social Media can stimulate that conversation…more on that in a moment.  Lets disect this in chronological order.

First Marketing Communication–

After we booked a room we received a Reservation Confirmation email.   In fact, that was in the subject line of the email.  This is a typical email that many hotels will send after you book a room.  The email content was also very typical.  This hotel/resort is anything but typical…it was above and beyond our expectations.

What Would Have Been Better–

All businesses can do better and lower return rates and cancellations by getting personal immediately after the purchase.  Rather than the Reservation Confirmation email it could have been a Welcome to the Most Beautiful Place In America or anything other than the typical message.

I realize the hotel probably needs to confirm everything but they could personalize the message a lot more and most importantly…

Remind us of the great decision we made by talking up your hotel, restaurant, spa, and the entire city.

Second Marketing/Communication-

Just prior to our arrival we received another email.  This time it mentioned the amenities and it really was the email I was talking about a moment ago.  It was well written and it was more of a reminder of how great the hotel and area is and it kept our excitement level up just prior to arriving at the hotel.  There was a things-to-do list and more.

What Would Have Been Better–

This particular email was well written and well timed.  The content of the email was good but the subject line could have been better.  This is pretty typical of most businesses.  They put so much emphasis into great content in the email, they just write a narration subject line.  Just like a sales letter, the headline is critically important.  With email it may be more important than in a sales letter because if the subject line is NOT enticing, the content won’t even be opened. 

Hire a copywriter or take a course on writing great headlines.  The content is irrelevant if does not get read.  The headline/subject line should make the reader feel compelled to open the email.  This is easy to test.  Most email software programs for business give you open rates.  Send 100 emails using one headline and 100 using a different headline then compare.  Use the better performing headline from now on…consider testing it again.

Final Communication-

The day we arrived home from our stay in Sedona we received an email from the hotel thanking us for our business.  They also asked us to complete a short survey and why it was important to them.  I applaud L`Auberge for sending a follow up email after they have our money but…

What Would Have Been Better–

The email did ask us to vote for them in a contest for Travel and Leisure Magazine but no mention to “Like” them on Facebook or mention them to our friends on Facebook or any other social platform. 

Doing it the old fashioned way I can tell my friends as I see them, “We had a great time in Sedona.  Next time you come over I will show you some pictures and here is a few on my cell phone.”

The new way, the Social Media way, I can log onto Facebook and share photos with ALL my friends immediately.  The average person on Facebook has 140 friends.  Sure I may do that anyway but it would be wise to always ask your customers to do so.  You can incentivize them to do so. 

As an example – L`Auberge could send an email after our stay and say, “Please share your favorite picture with us on our Facebook page”.  Or they could say, “Please share your favorite picture of your stay on our Facebook page.  Once a month we have a drawing for sharing fans.”

It could be something as simple as a glass of wine or a free upgrade next time your visit our hotel.

When I share my picture on their Facebook page it demonstrates proof to their Facebook visitors that people love it there.  It also notifies all 140 of my friends. 

Best of All-

When I first called to make the reservation I said something discreetly just once and I did it on purpose to see how the hotel would handle it.  In the middle of our conversation I said, “We are coming down for our 10th anniversary so we will just go ahead and get the Spa Cottage.” 

The way I said it was not to highlight our anniversary…rather to express that we wanted the Spa Cottage.  The average business would be looking for buying triggers and moving right into the sale of the Spa Cottage but not this hotel.  The reservationist said, “Happy Anniversary”.  Then she carried out our purchase.  It gets better…

When we arrived we walked into our cottage and right there on the corner of the desk was a note that said “Happy 10th Anniversary.”

I mentioned our anniversary exactly one time and the person at this hotel that took our reservation was listening.  She acknowledged our anniversary and then took it another step. 

The tip here is to LISTEN to your customers.  What they have to say is more important than what you have to say.  This is the case with social media and online reviews also.  Track and listen to the conversations online about your business, your competitors, your industry, and your local area.  It will serve you well because your customers will know you care and they are being heard…they love the sound of their own voice.

Overall Assessment-

Our stay was great so we are talking about L`Auberge to all our friends anyway using Social Media but not everyone does that.  Don’t assume that because you are great that your customers will recommend you.  Ask them to. 

Doing this case study I also found that this hotel is not listed in the top 7 on the first page of Google for the term Sedona Hotels.  That is a shame.  I can’t imagine 7 other hotels being better than this one.  For the term Sedona Resort they rank #2. 

With some tweaking to their local online marketing, reviews, and social media, they can do better.  

Hint–> if you are not in the first 7 local listings that means you are on page 2 or worse.  91% of the time the potential customers never get past page 1. 

Hint 2–> 89% of all the clicks after a particular search such as Sedona Hotel the potential customer clicks on one of the first 4 listings.

Hint 3–> the #1 listing gets 4 times as many clicks as the #2 listing.

*All statistics have been verified by credible resources and are available by request.  Ask below in the comment section or contact us.

Filed Under: Case Studies Tagged With: email marketing, local marketing, reputation, reviews, social media

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