Local Search Tactics for Tough Economic Times

What tactics and best practices can improve our local search campaigns in these challenging times? Local search marketing efforts focus around ensuring you're the one chosen when the question of "where to buy" arises.

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Date published
February 06, 2009 Categories

In tough economic times, small business owners tend to be better at targeting their marketing and advertising expenditures to tangible sales results more so than the large brands. Size and scale of their trading area and local market expertise certainly plays an important role. However, small business owners skillfully micromanage budgets and are able to match dollars to opportunities better than their fortune 500 CMO brethren.

What tactics and best practices can we glean to improve our local search campaigns in these challenging times of credit crunching and receding sales opportunities? Before we get there, you should ask:

Allocating Expenditures

Small businesses tend to allocate their promotional dollars more heavily toward direct response and directional marketing, as branding is usually of secondary consideration. If you envision a sales funnel, these folks appear right at the purchase decision. It’s a lot easier to grab consumers who are in the “where do I buy” mode, rather than the “what do I buy” mode (which is harder to convert, as it is higher up on the sales funnel).

Branding/Direct Response Mix

OK, before you hit the comment button to ask if you should stop spending on branding, the answer is no. I only ask you to consider the priority of your spending based on the ability of that spend to produce a sales conversion.

Marketers should be able to scale back their brand awareness investments with little to no impact to their overall business, allowing marketing efforts to focus more around ensuring you’re the one chosen when that question of “where to buy” arises.

To yield these “bottom of the funnel” consumers, it’s all about being in the right place at the right time. Local search, and the arsenal of tools associated with local online marketing, can help deliver these prospects and customers.

In looking back through all my Search Engine Watch articles, I realized it might be helpful to organize the topics into a checklist of tactics in order of priority to help your firm weather today’s economic environment:

Our advertising and marketing efforts must be cost efficient and convert to desirable sales. In today’s atmosphere, it’s important to question everything. Make sure you measure and validate to ensure historic media efforts continue to deliver meaningful ROI from the investment allocated.

Taking a “business as usual” approach probably won’t deliver the magnitude of sales leads necessary to survive and prosper in this tough economic environment. If you have expenditures that you can’t value through measurement of actual business created, then reallocate those funds to media types that can provide you with proven results. Remember, that which can be measured can be optimized.

Join us for Search Engine Strategies London February 17-20 at the Business Design Centre in Islington. Don’t miss the definitive event for U.K. and European marketers, corporate decision makers, webmasters and search marketing specialists!

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