If You Lost 70% of Your New Customers, Would You Notice?
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Title: If You Lost 70% of Your New Customers, Would You Notice?
Word Count: 697
Author: Lynella Grant
Email: grant@promotewitharticles.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=1639
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If You Lost 70% of Your New Customers, Would You Notice?
Copyright 2005 Off the Page
Buyers Don’t Rely on the Yellow Pages Like the Used to
Customers’ buying behavior has changed - for good. If your
business depends on most categories in the Yellow Pages to
attract new customers, you’ve probably seen a decline.
Traditionally, people headed to the Yellow Page directory
precisely when they were ready to buy. They’d check the
listings to find their options, or "let their finders do
the walking." Now they’ve got more choices.
New research by The Kelsey Group in March, 2005 found that
70% of US households now use the Internet as an information
source when shopping locally for products and services.
These buyers aren’t going to the Internet for online
purchases, nor to find distant providers. They intend to
spend their money in their own community.
The Kelsey Group also found that interviewed individuals
felt the search engines were a "better source of purchasing
information than Yellow Pages, newspapers and magazines."
The trend is being driven entirely by Internet users.
Related data from other sources show that consumers who
search online for purchases spend more than those using the
printed directory.
Demote the Yellow Page Ad to a Smaller Portion of Your
Budget
The Yellow Page industry is a Fifteen Billion Dollar
industry in the US. While there are more choices of printed
Yellow Page directories than ever, the buying habits of the
public have moved away from using them. Computer-savvy
buyers know the easiest way to find the information they
want is through search engines (and since May they can do
searches on the run, on their cell phones). But many small
or local businesses aren’t even listed.
The Kelsey Group’s data is consistent with other statistics
showing that the Internet has overtaken the newspaper for
cars and real estate (major purchases). And it’s becoming
the "go-to" place for information. A study by imedia
Connection found it’s "second only to spouses for finding
referrals."
To stay competitive, small and mid-sized businesses will be
compelled to make sure they’re included in search engine
data bases. While it’s not necessary to have a website, it
helps to be listed on someone’s (like a local portal or
professional group). Enterprises that can’t be found by
online searchers risk losing sales to businesses they find
instead.
Where did the Customers Go?
Many factors influence where and what a person decides to
buy. Although the Yellow Pages are no longer an automatic
part of the loop, many buyers consult both the Internet and
the directory, not relying on either one alone. However,
many shoppers only call Yellow Page ads that show a
website, even it they don’t intend to visit it. It goes to
the credibility issue.
What’s different?
- Buyers are less trusting and more willing to shop around
- Availability of Internet Yellow Pages (IYP)
- Expanded options and more ways to find them
- Aging population uses the Yellow Pages differently than
young people
- Development of unique, narrow niches and specialties
- More choices for a "better deal"
- Increased immigrants and those from other cultures,
unaccustomed
to Yellow Page use
- Larger cities with multiple directories, rather than one
large one
- Local search, whereby the search engines locate
suppliers by zip
code, state, city, region
Time for a Reality Check - Can You Find Yourself?
The next time you go online (or have a friend walk you
through it), see how you rate in some local searches.
Conduct a query in Google (then Yahoo, and MSN). Enter your
type of business + Your town (“Pet Stores” + Scottsdale,
Arizona).
Does your business show up? How many of your competitors
are on that list? How many are ahead of you? That list is
what your “missing customers” are likely to see when
they’re ready to spend their money. Does that experience
motivate you to make a better Local Search showing?
Next, check out whether your business appears in various
Internet Yellow Pages (IYP). Work your way down the list:
www.yellowpagesage.com/localsearch.html
Start noticing how visible you are to customers researching
their local options online.
You really can’t afford to miss the boat.
About the Author:
Dr. Lynella Grant Author, Yellow Page Smarts: Make more
money from your directory ad in tandem with your website
www.yellowpagesage.com Smarter ways to attract
more YP customers. Local Search resources Off the Page
Press (719) 395-9450
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