Posts Tagged Local Search Marketing

Online Lead Generation Speaker’s Pitch to SMX East

SMX East

Search Marketing Expo - SMX East

Here is my pitch to the Search Marketing Expo (SMX) East for something that has been missing from both the SMX and SES conferences, Online Lead Generation for Small Services Companies.

Now it’s pretty much just called Local Search, and if you read SearchEngineLand, you will see that Local Search is pretty much all written by IYP employees.  Ya know, IYP was taboo to the search engines two-to-three years ago.  The thought was that why would a user search on an engine to receive a SERP, and then click to go to a directory’s SERP.  It made no sense then, and makes no sense now ( I do explain why search engines show IYP results here) — I’d love to see the bounce rates of the IYPs.

Enough of that, as SEO Rabbit says, I tend to rant rather than divulge information. So, below is my Speaker’s Pitch to SMX East.

The search engines have been changing the way in which small services businesses are found on the Web. This has been gradual, but obvious, as the engines try to figure out how they are going to replicate what the print yellow pages had previously done — that is to get 30-100 services companies that all do business in a particular area for a particular service to all be represented on a single SERP.

That’s right, it’s impossible.  And, unlike the yellow pages, where flipping pages was easy and actually made some sense that the first full-page ads were from larger companies that were typically more expensive, and the last few smaller ads were from the down-and-dirty cheaper companies; users don’t usually click deeper than page 1 for any search query, and the more-expensive-to-cheaper theory of print isn’t reflected.

In light of this, the search engines are favoring mega sites, such as the IYPs (Yellow Pages, Merchant Circle, and Super Pages] and the lead aggregators [Service Magic, Leads,com, and Bob Vila with Reliable Remodeler).

For the individual company that has to compete with the numerous IYPs, the lead aggregators, and, of course, other agencies who work with competing companies, it’s difficult for an in-house agency to not only be competitive, let alone to be dominant and highly lucrative.

At Basement Systems (which owns Total Basement Finishing, Inc.; Foundation Supportworks, Inc., and Relia-Serve Corp.) we have been dominant and highly lucrative.

Details of the Online Lead Generation Presentation

My presentation would be the above overview and then methods of how we do this, including SEO, PPC (which we do all in-house with PPC Panda who we recruited after many costly failures with running our PPC through agencies), link building, social media, micro blogging, email marketing, and using sophisticated tracking to make sure that our dollars are spent wisely and to ensure that we’re not missing anything that our competitors might be doing. I will show examples of our tracking methods and data analysis.

In 15 minutes it would be a quick overview, but would contain lots of real-life examples of what can be done to generate leads. This would be a meaty presentation that I’d love to attend if it were offered.  I’ve been to many conferences, and really, most presentations are thin, whispy little puffs of smoke. And this means one of two things: 1., that the speaker didn’t want to divulge anything important, or, more likely, 2., that the speaker had nothing important to divulge. ;-)

I haven’t seen a presentation like this, and in this mega-million dollar industry of lead generation, I would think that this might draw a fair amount of interest.

We’ll see what SMX East thinks, but through Relia-Serve, we are starting to take this show on the road and train companies in the home services industry how to generate leads.  We also offer this service as an agency would, but with a history of solid high-performance results, and a great performance-based fee structure.  For more information, you can contact me at richard (@) basementsystems.com.

-Richard Fencil
Internet Marketing Director
Basement Systems, Inc.

Home of the Treehouse

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Why Search Engines are Pushing More Traffic to Directories

Search engines are in a conundrum.  With more than 40% of all small retail and contractor businesses still without Web sites, the search engines need to figure out – before theses business do all get online – how to return meaningful results.

Is it possible?  Of course it is.  Print yellow pages have been doing it for decades using simple categorical listings. But can search-based queries deliver the results intended by the user.

Here’s an example search query: “Fairfield connecticut house painters”, with the intent being to find multiple painting companies from which to get three quotes to paint a house.

Let’s start with the One-box result.

10-pack-result-ct-painters

In this case I got the 10-pack, with two results for Lowes, one MerchantCircle, one wild-card-content-switching (is this the common term?) lead-selling site (paintingservicedeals.com), and six actual contractors (two without their own sites). So really I got four contractors, not bad since all I want is three quotes.

OK, let’s say that of the four, I felt comfortable enough with two to get quotes. So let’s look at the natural results.

CT-painter-natural-results

Uh-oh. I only picked up one more painter – rightcontractors.com. I did get two craigslist and two kijiji. The rest are all lead sellers.

Really, these results are ok, but not great. I could call a Craigslist or Kijiji ad, but in light of recent news, I think I’ll stick with a company with a Web site and real address.

Are there only 5 painting contractors that will service Fairfield CT? I’ll bet there are 10 in Fairfield, and at least another 30 that service this town. So what are they going to do to get leads? And what is Google going to do to help users find these contractors?

Directories.

The question then becomes, why would I start at Google if they’re just going to push me to a directory. Soon I’m going to have a favorite directory for services.

What does this mean for Google? It probably means less AdWords money. Google will still be a great tool for finding reference material, but that’s not going to pay the bills.

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Local Search Marketing and Directories

As an Internet marketing professional who has had success with getting small businesses to rank well and generate traffic from the SERPs, over the past half year I’ve seen that the face of competition is changing.

In the local contractor and retailer SERPs, Google has been rewarding large directory sites like Merchant Circle, SuperPages, CitySearch, many various yellow pages, many vertical sites like ServiceMagic and Yelp, and now even local.yahoo results are starting to show. This makes a guy like me worried.  I have no mega site like these that I can expect the engines to rank, and thus I am now considering that I may have to join the flat-rate-pay-model bastards on their directories.

I swear it wasn’t three years ago when I would chuckle that the print yellow-page people were so screwed up in their flat-fee model that they’d never be successful on the Internet — I went as far as to imagine sending them a resume and saving them from their horrible flat-rate plans. But a year, year and a half ago, I did start to express my thoughts that this $26 billion – or whatever it is – industry was just too big and was going to buy their way in.  That no matter how good the pay-per-click model seemed, these less-than-agile titanics  were going to outspend even Google and force feed us their traditional flat-fee yellow-page type advertising model on the Web.

And mark my words, it’s coming.

What does this mean for the PPC model?  Probably nothing, the search engines will just continue to push results from directories, smattering in a few local businesses that can afford to pay to play.

But the question still remains, why do the search engines seem so eager to push a their traffic to directories that now monetize the search at their end?

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