Archive for October, 2009

Blog as Website with Online Booking

October 30, 2009

Bookfresh (formerly HourTown) has done an interesting deal with blogging platform Typepad that recognizes many small businesses are simply using blogs as a substitute for a conventional website (I do). According to the press release:

The integration allows small business owners using TypePad to put their schedule online, and their customers to book, and even prepay, for appointments. The integration is yet another step by TypePad to provide the tools that small businesses need to run their businesses online using a blog combined with partner functionality . . . 

TypePad customers can create a BookFresh widget by visiting the TypePad widget gallery, opening a BookFresh account and creating a custom widget, which is installed neatly in the side bar of the blog in one simple click. Customers can then sync their schedule, integrate their PayPal account and set contact preferences.

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While the inclination of some of the appointment platform vendors has been to use a performance-based model  (pay-per-booking), Bookfresh CEO Ryan Donahue long ago told me the he thought a flat fee, subscription model would be easier and more successful with SMBs. 

My previous post on Bookfresh: HourTown Rebrands, Now ‘BookFresh’

Mihm Counterpoint on Call Tracking

October 30, 2009

After reading Telmetrics’ response to his Search Engine Land article, which was highly critical of call tracking, David Mihm asked if he could respond to the Telmetrics post. The following is David Mihm’s unedited response (the opinions expressed are his exclusively):

As I said in last month’s Search Engine Land column, the idea of call-tracking in Local Search is terrific.  The fragmentation of the space and the ability to provide easy-to-understand, real metrics for small business owners should make call tracking a natural evolution in Local search marketing.  It’s just not a good idea yet.

In his response, Telmetrics president Bill Dinan strongly defended the use of call tracking, but personal experience with actual small businesses has left me unconvinced of his points. The local search ecosystem simply has not evolved as fast as Telmetrics’ (and other providers’) technology.

Dinan assets that “all of the Local Search feeds have room to accept both the main business number and the tracking number.”

First of all, I’m not sure this is true.  There’s certainly a place for an 800-number in the submission process for Localeze and infoUSA/Acxiom/Universal Business Listing, but I’ve not seen the column in these submission areas for a secondary local tracking number.  Perhaps there are special arrangements for providers as large as Telmetrics but my column was written from my perspective as the owner of a small SEO agency.

Some local listing aggregators may be “working feverishly” as Bill says to accommodate local tracking numbers, but the fact is not everyone is there yet, on either the aggregator or the call tracking provider side.  For instance, infoUSA’s phone verification process may not be compatible with all companies’ offerings, even if it works with Telmetrics.  And Localeze’s Gib Olander has stated at more than one industry conference that “listings are not the place for advertising.”

Secondly, and I think this is a key point, not all information in the Local ecosystem comes via a feed. Jonathan Cohn of Acxiom mentioned in August on a Search Marketing Now webinar (27:00 onwards) that YellowPages ads are “keyed and scanned every year” by Acxiom. He also showed this slide showing even more places from which Acxiom pulls business data.

From personal client experience—if you use a tracking number in the YellowPages, it’s highly likely to get picked up by Acxiom (or another aggregator) and into Google’s index as a unique listing.  And every time Google gets a fresh data feed, I have to help clients who use tracking numbers claim and attempt to consolidate each of those call-tracked listings.  It requires constant attention.

In fact, just this month, a “new” listing popped into Google Maps for a friend whose website I helped with over the summer.  Here is the search for his company in Tualatin, Oregon.  Note that even though both listings contain the word “Creekside” in the business title and use the exact same address, Google Maps has not merged the two.  Which, yes, is somewhat surprising—we’ve seen them merge with much less matching information in the past.

I asked my friend Brent via email earlier this week if he was still including that business name and phone number in any of his ads with AT&T, Verizon, or Dex; here was his response:

“[I] might have listed with all three (above), but no longer advertizing there…we do advertize on Nickel Ads locally …… but I can’t imagine that would reach to cyberspace.”

The ecosystem is amazingly complex, and as Brent’s example proves, you just never know where one number is going to end up, or how long it’s going to stay there. Not only does this situation affect visibility in Google Maps, but it significantly undermines the granularity of analytics data that call tracking is supposed to provide. If a phone book number or an Internet Yellow Pages number is getting picked up by Google, the supposed volume of calls from those destinations is going to be exaggerated.

Thus, consistency of business information throughout the Local ecosystem should still remain a best practice.

As far as which is more important to a small business owner, getting traffic to their business via Google, or knowing “which advertising is producing the highest-value calls,” I find it a stretch to think that any revenue-oriented SMB is going to opt for tracking.  Business owners call me every day asking “how do I rank my business next to the map,” not “can you help me figure out where my calls are coming from?”

Regardless of whether Google has explicitly confirmed that mentions of primary business information help with ranking in Google Maps, according to Google Maps’ patent, local search experts, and a quantitative study of Google Maps they do.

Yes, the algorithm will continue to evolve and take into account richer data signals like link graph data, reviews, and other user-generated content.  But for millions of small businesses without any website, or a poorly-optimized one, the phone number IS their identity.  Phone numbers (and addresses) are as fundamental for Google Maps’ business index as the link graph is to its organic index.  Google wants a direct representation of real-life business information, and a call-tracking number doesn’t satisfy that criterion.

As to the notion of number recycling, I agree with Bill that it might not occur “often.”  It sounds like Telmetrics  tries to act in its clients’ best interests if they end their contract, but that doesn’t prevent less scrupulous companies from switching numbers instantly.

It is a short-sighted strategy to counsel small business owners to “focus on what you can control, and that is paid advertising.”  What happens when prices skyrocket or inventory becomes limited?  Ignoring organic optimization and social media—neither of which you can control—is just as foolhardy as ignoring paid search options in a successful online campaign.

There may indeed be a double-standard with Google’s integration of Voice with Local Listing Ads—especially since I’ve seen a handful of examples of Made-for-Adsense sites getting indexed and counting as citations!  But I fully agree with Mike Blumenthal, who responded this week:

“[While] the goal is worthwhile, until such time as Google, working together with other industry leaders, develops a system not to penalize businesses using call tracking then it should not be used.”

Online-based call tracking is not the only method of tracking leads.  As I pointed out in my original article, traditional offline methods like Excel spreadsheets and post-it notes can work just fine—and they do, for my clients for whom tracking is of central importance.

Outside.in Becomes ‘Local Search’ Site

October 30, 2009

Local blog aggregator Outside.in has effectively become a local and neighborhood search engine. The site now features a search box on the home page:

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According to the Outside.in blog:

Our homepage now features a single search box that can tell you what’s happening wherever you are (in the U.S. of course!). This shiny new search engine intelligently combines a few types of searches we’ve offered for awhile (address, neighborhood, ZIP, and city search) and adds a new one (place search). Now we evaluate your query to determine what you’re searching for and show you different results based on your input.

Outside.in founder Steven Johnson further explains:

For the past six months, our team has been working incredibly hard on an entirely new platform for outside.in, one that allows true geographic search at lightning speed. It went live on the site late last week. Now every page at outside.in contains two search fields: “what” and “where.” This lets you do all kinds of queries that are impossible on other platforms that aren’t natively aware of geography. You can do Radar-style queries: show me everything related to “crime” or “playgrounds” within one mile of my home address. You can search an entire neighborhood: “music” or “condos” in Adams Morgan, DC. You can search an entire city for the latest mass transit developments. Or if you’re just looking for a nearby Italian restaurant, or a good pediatrician, you can do that as well.

The results were mixed in terms of quality for several searches I performed. However there were also discussions and information that I found that would have been buried on Google. The site will need to educate people on how to best use it, but this new look and feel is something that people broadly will understand better than they may have understood the previous version(s) of the site.

Google’s New (Local) Comparison Ads

October 30, 2009

Google tried a mortgage marketplace in the UK last year as a test drive for a range of things (Merchant Search). The theory at the time was that Google was trying to develop a separate marketplace for SMB advertisers. It then introduced (only in two markets so far) Local Listing Ads for SMBs (using call tracking with Google Voice). And now it’s launching AdWords Comparison Ads, starting with mortgages.

This is very interesting on several levels and it may appeal to both large and small advertisers. According to the Google AdWords Blog:

Comparison Ads is part of our continuing effort to make ads more relevant and useful to our users and to help you, our advertisers, reach the people who are most interested in your products and services.

AdWords uses a host of targeting and relevancy signals to determine the best ads for each query. However, sometimes a user’s query doesn’t provide enough information for us to confidently predict what they want. Take, for example, users who search for “mortgage.” Do they want a new home loan or a refinance? Do they want a fixed rate or an adjustable rate loan? Comparison Ads improves the ad experience on Google.com by letting users specify exactly what they are looking for and helping them quickly compare relevant offers side by side.

With Comparison Ads, you can also target your offers at a more granular level, leading to more valuable, qualified leads. To see how it works, let’s use our mortgage example. Users searching for “mortgage” on Google.com may see a promotion from Comparison Ads prompting them to select the type of loan they are looking for and to compare various rates.

So a search for “mortgage” triggers the ad at the top of search results. Users then click into a marketplace or screen of side-by-side offers, in this case mortgage rates and lenders:

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You fill out the fields in the left column and the data adjust according to the values (the lenders are locally relevant). If you click on one of the buttons to “request a quote” you see this form:

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You plug in your information and, viola, you receive this confirmation:

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Danny Sullivan has an explanation of how the lead delivery works:

Ads are sold on a cost-per-lead basis. When someone clicks to receive a quote, the advertiser is forwarded the information and billed. The advertiser also receives no personal information about the person. In fact, they don’t even get the person’s real phone number. Google provides a temporary bridging number that connects the advertiser to the customer. After that, it’s up to the customer to provide their own “real” number if they want follow-up, Fox said.

Indeed, the model is cost-per-action or cost-per-lead. Google has had CPA ads for some time but these ads are slightly different in that they’re delivering one-to-one leads. Certainly I can contact multiple lenders but Google isn’t selling leads to multiple lenders as some CPA marketplaces do. And the bids/prices that sellers will pay will be significantly more than what they’d pay for a click. 

As mentioned this begins with mortgages but will grow and extend to other verticals and segments. Think ServiceMagic advertisers, auto dealers and so on. The lead-gen businesses based verticals out there might have reason for concern. 

What do you think? How do you think this will play out and what categories do you think Google will move into?

Facebook: Growing Platform for SMBs

October 29, 2009

Picture 16I stumbled upon this story in the LATimes a few days ago on Facebook and small business marketing:

Charles Nelson, president of Sprinkles Cupcakes, the Beverly Hills baker to the stars, doesn’t have a Facebook profile. Nelson, who works seven days a week, has no time for chatting online with Facebook friends.

But Nelson is logged on to Facebook all the time. That’s because more than 70,000 people have declared themselves fans of Sprinkles’ Facebook page, Facebook is not just for friends anymore. The free social networking site — blocked in many workplaces as a potential time-waster — is increasingly becoming an inexpensive marketing tool for small businesses.

Sprinkles is among a growing number of mom-and-pop businesses taking advantage of a relatively new program on Facebook, one that allows them to claim their name, become visible even to folks who aren’t on the site, and stay in close contact with their customers. The business, in effect, can act like any other person on Facebook, posting status updates and seeing what its fans are doing.

Facebook doesn’t break out figures for small businesses but says it has 1.4 million business “pages,” with an average of 100 fans per page.

The story provides anecdotal evidence of the SMB Facebook adoption trend we tried to assert with the study (“engaged SMBs”) that I wrote about a couple of weeks ago.

CitySquares Begins to Syndicate Content

October 29, 2009

Picture 15CitySquares has added “local feeds” that syndicate its data and listings to local sites, through a widget embedded on the third party publisher or blogger’s site. Ben Saren, CEO, explains on his blog:

The lists of businesses in these feeds are set up to rotate quite regularly, basically whenever business content is updated on our site, it’ll update in the feeds. This way you get a fresh list of businesses on your site, as businesses are added or edited on CitySquares.com. And based on how you choose to integrate these feeds into your site, you can choose to only display a list of businesses, or a list with verbose information about them. It’s up to you! For an example, look on the right side of this page for a list of South End, Boston Restaurants, where CitySquares is headquartered.

Looks like there isn’t an affiliate or referral deal here; it’s just content for these third parties. From the press release that went out earlier this week:

CitySquares.com, a leading national hyper-local search website, has added “Local Feeds for Local Publishers” as a free subscription service for online publishers, such as local bloggers and newspaper websites. The Local Feeds service adds a consistently updated list of neighboring businesses to the subscriber`s website. This feature increases “fresh” content on the publisher’s site as well as improves the site’s search engine ranking and the amount of traffic driven from search engines.

Google Adds Rentals to Real Estate

October 29, 2009

Google has been gradually improving real estate search on Maps. It doesn’t have the features and is generally not a substitute for sites like Trulia and Zillow but it’s getting better.

From the LatLong Blog:

First of all, we’ve made it easier to find real estate listings. Now, you can simply select “Real Estate” from the ‘More’ button on the top right of any Google Map to discover listings.  From there, it’s a simple matter to refine your search using the left hand panel – price, bedrooms, bathrooms, and so on.  Of course, you can still pan the map to search for the perfect neighborhood and it’ll automatically update with more listings.

We’ve also added the ability to search for rental listings in the US.  You can now find places for rent in New York or one bedrooms in San Francisco for rent simply by turning on the Real Estate layer via the ‘More’ button and selecting some refinements.
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At issue: how comprehensive is the data that Google is showing? However, the functionality and features here are quite useful. For example, the ability to add listings to My Maps and then automatically access them on your Android 2.0 phone and build turn by turn directions to open houses is pretty compelling.

MapQuest Upgrades Maps’ Appearance

October 29, 2009

MapQuest has upgraded the look of its maps (“new styles”) and added a few new features. The MapQuest blog explains in full.

These changes include:

  • new terrain and vegetation imagery
  • the entire road network [has been upgraded] to improve readability and shape of the roads with the new colors and styling
  • more building footprints [show] how large a building is on the street. In addition, you’ll now see main subway stops shown on the map
  • [Upgraded] hybrid imagery view . . . . you’ll see that we have improved the look of the roads while not obscuring the imagery

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Recently Google did something quite similar. MapQuest is still the dominant mapping “brand,” however it has lost the top traffic spot to Google. As I said last week:

It’s not clear to me how much new AOL CEO Tim Armstrong values MapQuest. I’m sure he recognizes it as an important property and the “anchor” of the AOL local network. However if he were really smart, he’d invest in it, upgrade the technology and really make a significant effort to maintain and grow the brand. It has got to be one of the top two or three brands under the AOL umbrella. Because if/once that property fades through neglect it will be a wasting asset and a major opportunity will have been lost. We’ll see over the next year.

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Google is Green, MapQuest blue and Yahoo! Maps (once the innovation leader) is yellow/orange. Yahoo’s decline in maps is a very sad story in my mind.

Marchex Becomes YPG Ad-Platform Partner

October 29, 2009

Picture 27Many of you probably saw the release yesterday:

Yellow Pages Group, Canada’s leading local advertising company, and Marchex, Inc., a leading local search and performance advertising company, today announced a partnership to provide simple, local online performance-based advertising products and services to Canada’s small and medium-sized business (SMB) customers.

Under this agreement, Yellow Pages Group (YPG) will use the award-winning Marchex Connect product suite to power its performance-based advertising services. These new services include search- and call-based marketing and analytics, and are designed to drive new customers for Canadian businesses with a focus on measurable performance. The services will be in market on a national basis in January 2010.

Marchex’s VoiceStar can be used for PPCall online, in mobile or in the traditional print directory. Marchex’s major directory publisher partner in the US is AT&T/Yellowpages.com.

We’ll see more and more PPCall marketing being offered via the print directory (especially as a back up to “save the account” if the advertiser wants to cancel or reduce its YP spend). Telmetrics President Bill Dinan previously made a big pitch for print to move more aggressively into a performance-based/PPCall business model.

Amazon PayPhrase: Payment Revolution?

October 29, 2009

On one level this was what Google Checkout was originally intended to be: a trusted, simple way to pay for things across the Web. But Checkout has largely failed to gain consumer adoption to date, although Google is trying to revive it in several ways (including making it the payments platform for Android apps).

However the new Amazon “PayPhrase” system is really innovative and could be used in the real world for transactions, though that’s not part of the marketing. Here’s how it works:

PayPhrase links your Amazon.com payment and shipping information with a simple phrase that you choose. With PayPhrase, you no longer have to register or share credit card information with multiple web sites.

Use your Amazon PayPhrase to quickly checkout wherever you see the PayPhrase button – on Amazon.com and other sites across the web including DKNY, Jockey, Patagonia, Buy.com, J&R Electronics, and Car Toys to name a few.

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I just wrote about the real-world opportunity for mobile payment systems such as Zong. That exists equally for PayPhrase and perhaps there’s even a bigger opportunity because of Amazon’s reach, trusted brand status, etc.

Imagine if you could pay your restaurant bill by invoking your “pay phrase” and pin number. Very very interesting. Even if it’s limited to online payments it removes lots of friction from the system because you don’t have to get out a credit card and go through the pain of re-entering the information. This might also facilitate more e-commerce via the mobile phone —  you’re in a store but you find it cheaper online — because there are no credit card numbers to painfully enter on the tiny handset keyboard.

Zong Announces Zong+ (Credit Cards)

October 29, 2009

Picture 25The world of “mobile payments” is becoming increasingly competitive (i.e., Zong, Obopay, Boku, others) with many initiatives in the market and many set to happen over the next year.  (Facebook, Amazon, even Google have big opportunities here as well.)

While mobile payments are gaining steam in Europe, Asia and the developing world, in North America it’s a segment that’s somewhat elusive and not well understood. Does it mean, for example, accessing a credit card account stored somewhere online for an e-commerce transaction through your phone (e.g., Amazon); using your phone as a credit card itself with a special numeric code that triggers a payment; swiping your phone over a physical reader at the POS; transferring money via SMS to a merchant or another seller? All of the above?

Definitions aside one of the more visible competitors in the segment, Zong, has launched “Zong Plus” this morning. Essentially this adds credit card payments to its current system of carrier billing. It’s a good move by the company and indicative of where the industry will go. As with almost everything in mobile, the world is bypassing the carriers because they’re demanding, slow and typically don’t offer the best user experience. Zong wouldn’t necessarily say  any of that but I will.

Previously Zong was used almost exclusively for “virtual goods” on sites like Facebook. The company said that it continues to focus on that segment. It uses the mobile telephone number for security and authentication and the billing is actually done through the carriers. There is a per transaction limit of $9.99, which doesn’t apply if Zong Plus is invoked.

Here’s a demo of how Zong Plus works by David Marcus, CEO of Zong:

Zong Plus simply accesses a different payments back end with essentially the same user experience.

Micropayments for virtual goods is what everybody seems to get excited about (with the requisite hyperbole about Zong being a “PayPal killer”). What’s more interesting to me is the prospect of mobile PayPal or Zong Plus as a alternative payment system to credit cards in the real world.

The scenario I explored at some length with Zong’s Hill Ferguson was the prospect of a local cafe or service business (contractor, roofer) taking credit card payments via Zong without a merchant account. The per transaction fee would be higher via Zong than if the merchant were to directly accept the credit card, but overall it would be cheaper than setting up a merchant account and paying associated fees on an ongoing basis.

PayPal can be used like this now as well. Almost a year ago I spoke at some length to someone at PayPal about ambitious plans combining mobile payments and local advertising and promotion. It’s not clear what’s happening there or whether the plans have moved forward. But there is an opportunity.

Any merchant who would use a Zong Plus or PayPal (tied to a mobile phone) to accept payments would need to have an account with these companies. But it would be simpler and easier than dealing with banks, credit reviews and so on. I’m eager to see if mobile payments starts to make its way into the world at the local level in the manner I’ve described.

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Related: Bling Nation gets big funding for mobile->SMB credit card workaround (total raised almost $30M).

Missed the Mobile Marketing Summit?

October 29, 2009

Picture 23If you missed yesterday’s most excellent (and totally free) Mobile Marketing Summit and you’d like to watch/hear any of the presentations, you can do so at our webinar archive. There was a ton of great discussion about:

  • Mobile apps and app strategy (best practices)
  • How much it costs to develop mobile apps and who should not develop one
  • Mobile loyalty and couponing (opportunities and challenges)
  • Connecting traditional media and mobile
  • Using SMS to measure traditional media performance
  • Using SMS to build customer opt-in lists with over 90% response to subsequent offers
  • Effectiveness of mobile ad campaigns in general vs. onilne
  • Lots of stats on consumer behavior (search, mobile Internet, smartphones) and the size of the market

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The sessions were “chock a block” full of case studies and practical information.

Live Now: Mobile Couponing & Loyalty

October 28, 2009

Picture 24We’re live now: Mobile Marketing, Couponing, and Customer Loyalty

Featuring:

  • Tetherball360
  • SmartReply

Real case studies, practical and tactical advice for marketers trying to drive customer loyalty, with mobile couponing as an integral part of that strategy.

Please come if  you’re interested. Click here to attend.

Going on Now: Mobile App Opportunity

October 28, 2009

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Should you build an app? Maybe, maybe not.

The next panel today is going to be the “Mobile App Opportunity,” featuring Rachel Pasqua of iCrossing and Scott Dunlap of NearbyNow.

Both presentations are really strong and interesting.

We’ve heard already today in previous sessions about integrating SMS and traditional media, a little about video and case studies showing how mobile performs across the board vs. online.

This session (starting at 1P/4E) will be quite good — and for those in local, you’ll be interested in Scott’s presentation in particular. The Q&A discussions have also been very rich.

I would encourage you (if you’re intrigued by any of this) to attend.

Webinar: Mobile & Traditional Media Up Next

October 28, 2009

Picture 23Next up at the top of the hour (11 Pacific/2 Eastern): Integrating Mobile into Traditional Media Campaigns . . .

Featuring:

  • HipCricket
  • LSN Mobile

Using concrete examples and case studies, we’ll be talking about how companies can integrate their traditional marketing and mobile and how mobile can extend the reach of those traditional campaigns.

You can register and attend here.

Mobile Marketing Summit Starting

October 28, 2009

I’ll be blogging throughout the day but for much of the day I’ll be moderating or participating in discussions on the Internet2Go-BrightTalk Online Mobile Marketing Summit:

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Live Now: The Mobile Internet: How Effective a Marketing Medium?

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Google Adds Navigation to Android 2.0

October 28, 2009

Here’s my long story on SEL and here’s the video demo from Google:

Some additional thoughts on Internet2Go.

Great CTO Available for Hire

October 28, 2009

I was talking yesterday to a very entrepreneurial CTO, who has run his own startup (which was acquired). He’s got another very interesting startup idea but is also open to working with an existing company.

I don’t get anything out of promoting him; I’m just doing a bit of a favor. Let me know if you’d like an introduction.

Free Mobile Marketing Summit Tomorrow

October 27, 2009

Picture 7What are you doing tomorrow? Taking the day off? Relaxing (chillaxin’)? Spending the day at the beach, in the gym honing  your physique? It would be nice, wouldn’t it?

Instead you should come to our Online Mobile Marketing Summit. Everyone who reads this blog knows to varying degrees that mobile is becoming strategically more and more important. My Internet2Go program is co-hosting a Mobile Marketing Summit tomorrow.

It’s online, it’s free and you can attend one session or all the sessions:

Companies presenting:

  • Ad-Village
  • Brand Anywhere
  • DMA
  • HipCricket
  • iCrossing
  • InsightExpress
  • LSN Mobile
  • Opus Research/Internet2Go
  • NearbyNow
  • SmartReply
  • Tetherball
  • VerveWireless

I’m moderating or participating in the following sessions:

All the sessions will offer very practical and concrete information that will make you smarter in thinking about mobile. The mobile Internet is moving very fast and people need to start understanding it in a more tactical way.

If you can’t make it, the slides and presentations will also be available after-the-fact. I would encourage all those interested to attend. You just need to register first.

OK, Let’s Talk about Local Search

October 27, 2009

There was strong reaction to the “Local Search Is Solved” posts. This was a typical response:

Dominance and “solved problems” are two entirely different thoughts. Agree that The Google has achieved dominance. Have they solved the problem for consumers? Fork, no. I am pretty confident Google would admit they are 10% of the way to some elusive definition of “problem solved”.

Most people who responded to that post did not agree by any means that local search was “solved.”

So I want to challenge people . . . What does 50% solved or much better than we have today look like? Is it mobile only? What’s the content? How does it function? Where is community or word-of-mouth in the process?

I think it’s easy to say “we’ve got a long way to go” toward some vague future where local search is more fulfilling but what does that “look and feel” like in a concrete way in your view?

I’m also interested and willing to let people who want to articulate their visions more fully do so in guest blog posts.


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