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Web
Marketing vs. Yellow Pages - A Comparison
With the fluctuating price of gas, more and
more people are doing their shopping and
research on the
Internet. Your website advertising can replace your
printed telephone book ad. A website is less expensive for you
than the book and can be updated when needed while your Yellow Pages' ad can be
changed only once a year.
Providing
an up-to-date, easy to navigate website for your customers is
essential to growing your business. You can provide more
info in a
one-page site than in an entire hard-copy Yellow Page ad.
Just think about
this: You're using an Internet marketing tool to read about
Yellow Page advertising! Why aren't you reading about it in the
printed telephone book?
Based on our
experience with Web marketing, and as Web searchers, here are a
few common answers to that question:
For Consumer
products:
It's convenient.
I don't know where my Yellow
book is, I
think I threw it out.
I'm looking for something very specific.
I like to research my needs before talking to a sales person.
I'm shopping from work - it's easier to use
the Internet than a phone from cube land.
I can't find out about the product/service I'm
interested in through the phone book, and
Nobody would help me if I called a company to
find out more about this product/service (phone-tree
black hole)
For Business to
Business products and services:
It's convenient.
I like to research my company's needs
before talking to a sales person.
I don't know where my yellow page book is, I
think I threw it out.
I'm looking for something very specific.
I'm putting together an RFP (request for proposal) list and
I'm researching who to send it out to, and
I can't find out about the product/service I'm
interested in through the phone book
While any
advertising source delivering a positive return on investment
for your business is worth pursuing, there is a definite trend
toward online research for both consumer and business to
business purchases. Here are a few things to consider when
deciding how your marketing budget should be divided:
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1.
Ease of Use - People
do what is easy. Access to the Internet via work, home, or
any library has made getting online easy. According to
Jupiter Media, over 64% of people who are looking for
information online, use search engines. If I can type my
problem or what I want into a search engine and find what
I need, I don't need to go through the 100 pages of ads in
the yellow pages. Search engines are getting more precise
down to an industry specialty and geographic focus, while
also continuing to be easier to use.
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2. Cost
Model of Yellow Pages vs. Search Engine
- In reviewing these two models we need to compare the
traits and cost basis of each media.
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Yellow pages
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Search Engine
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a. Printing Costs
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b.
Mailing/Distribution Costs
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c. Sales rep Cost
Model
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d. Per click or Per
Action Model
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e. Commitment level
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f. Flexibility of Ad
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Clearly, the Yellow Pages model is
more expensive while also being significantly less
flexible and scalable than online search engines.
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3. Differentiation vs. Directory
- As a business owner, the last thing I would do is give
my prospects a detailed list of my competitors, including
addresses and phone numbers. But that is exactly what the
Yellow Pages do. Using search engines, you can
differentiate yourself from everyone else. So when the
ideal client is looking for what you do, they find you,
not all your competitors.
The Yellow Pages industry is over
100 years old and according to the Direct Marketing
Association is a 12 Billion plus market. It is not going
away. Yellow Pages Online and many industry specific
directories are now being aggressively marketed. However, we
see very little traffic or lead
generation coming from these online directories. If you
are approached to be in an online directory, ask if you
can pay for it by the number of visitors and/or leads to
your site. You won't get many takers on that offer.
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4. The Future Big Winner in Search
... Brick & Mortar Stores!
- The
traditional success model for winning online has been the
ability to sell your product or service nationally or
internationally. However, local or regional firms could
not leverage the national and international traffic that
search engines brought because they were only licensed or
had services available in a specific city, state or
region.
The search engines
now have the ability to determine where the search is
coming from. What that means to you is you can target all
the way down to a city, zip, or area code. If you have a
business that has a defined geographic area, you have an
incredible opportunity to be the top website that comes up
when people use a search engine for services in your area.
Based on these
trends there are five things you need to do today to
differentiate you from your competition. We suggest that you
change your strategy and reallocate your budget as follows:
1. Look at
your Yellow Page investment
- What did it cost you last year and what business came
directly from it? If the numbers work, keep doing it. However
if the answer to this question is "I don't know", we have a
suggestion. Keep the yellow pages ad, just make it smaller.
Take the 50% you save on your budgeted yellow page fees and
use it to directly drive online prospects to your company. If you
are satisfied with your results with yellow pages, take 20-30%
of your current budget to be online. As phone books and
directories continue to diminish in value, you will be ahead
of the curve.
2. Have your
own website - If you are in
a directory and it has created a simple site for you, don't
worry about tracking traffic, you probably aren't getting any.
Make sure you have your site set up as your own, and that
people can find you through normal search engines, not just
through the directory. Also, remember that if clients find you
through directories, you are introducing them to all your
competitors. Be careful.
3. Measure
- Look at your website. You should install a counter to know how many people come to
your site. If you are signed up with an online or directory
service, get your numbers from them. You will probably be
surprised with the low amount of visitors and leads you get.
If the directory provider can't (or doesn't want to) get you
your performance numbers, fire them!
4. Add
Relevant Location Text to your Site
- People today are using search engines to find what you do in
your city. Make sure that the search engines can easily know
your address, city, state, zip, and even area code. If you have
products that you specialize in, make sure location info is on
those pages too.
Realize that yellow page books and yellow
page online directories do not differentiate you from everyone
else. Make sure your website tells what you do, where you are
located, and invites the customer to take action with your
firm. Search engines are the
future: the question is - are you are going to be a player or
a spectator?
Effective
advertising is largely based on getting your message in front of
your potential customers when they're willing to listen. Both
forms of advertising do that, but the Web clearly allows you
to say a lot more to those customers and to say it more
frequently.
We think the
anonymity of online shopping and research should not be ignored.
Consumers prefer being informed before talking to a sales
person, even if they plan on making their purchase off-line. For
example, car buyers are researching the fair price for the car
they're interested in purchasing/leasing before they go to a
dealership. If your website ranks high enough in search engines
to be found by your potential customers, then it proves to your
customer that you can handle their business, you'll generate
well-qualified and cost effective leads for your business.
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MONTHLY COST |
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Print Yellow Pages Ad |
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inBiz Website |
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Black & White* |
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~FULL COLOR~ |
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1/4
Page |
$354.15 |
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Full Page |
$25.00 |
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1/2
Page |
$710.35 |
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Full Page |
$25.00 |
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Full
Page |
$1,495.00 |
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Full Page |
$25.00 |
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Circulation |
400,000 |
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Millions |
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Changes |
Annually |
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As Needed |
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DUMP THE YELLOW BOOK! |
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*Note: this is based on a small Georgia community. |
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PRIVACY POLICY
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phone, eMail, etc. will not be sold or provided to any other person or
company.
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