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The Internet as a marketing tool is still fairly rudimentary for small and medium businesses in the local market. The vast majority of businesses have developed web presences, but there is relatively little promotion of those web sites beyond integrating URL’s in off-line marketing, participating in online directories to varying degrees and investing in Google search marketing and other pay-per-click solutions, either directly or through intermediaries, to increase traffic.

Screen shot 2009-10-29 at 3.57.56 PM.jpgThe Kelsey Group has done extensive research on the media spending patterns of small and medium businesses (SMB’s), and has shown that the intent to spend online is higher than the actual amount spent online. The companies, which spend an average of about $1900 a year on their web sites, are cutting their spending on cost per click solutions and shifting their focus to applying Web 2.0 techniques to Internet marketing, Kelsey observed late last summer.

I believe that a basic problem for these SMB’s is the passive nature of their core web presence. The web site is typically a marketing brochure, with relatively static content, that is built on Web 1.0 protocols; this approach, which is a fairly lateral transition of offline marketing processes into the online world.

Recent research shows the potential value of a small business being able to create a web footprint that puts them more squarely in front of consumers on the web — and that means as a preferred resource, or a high-ranking source in natural search, not as a paid advertiser intersecting a search.

A  survey by TMP Directional Marketing, as reported in eMarketer, concluded searches for local businesses online are highly specific and largely focused on connecting with a business the consumer already knows. While 26% of the searches reviewed by TMP attempted to “find a business that had the products or service needed,” and 12% were focused on researching products and services, 57% of the searches were focused on getting specific information about a business they had already identified.

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In addition, the outcomes of these searches were highly active.

Nearly four in 10 US Internet users (37%) who conducted an online local business search in 2009 ended up visiting the store in person, according to TMP Directional Marketing and comScore.

The challenge for a SMB is very clear: How do I create a digital footprint that gives me prominence on the search results when a consumer is looking for information specifically about me? And, how do I leverage existing social connections online to increase my ability to drive usage and awareness of my web site, leading to more leads and more business?

Compete recently did some research on the activity of home improvement shoppers when they visited manufacturers’ web sites. These are largely national players, so the activity is more generally-focused than the activity of consumers doing local searches. However, Compete’s research shows that the more relevant content a business has on its site, the more likely a consumer is to adopt the product or service.

There is a race heating up as these manufacturers learn how to best capture the new consumer: The consumer who not only speaks with friends and family about the home project, but also goes online to help determine what he or she will do, buy, and build. When asked how likely they would be to return to the manufacturer’s site if the project could involve their product, a whopping 88% said they would either be “likely” or “very likely” to return, making the Internet an important, and growing, battlefield for creating product loyalty and enhancing your brand health.

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Those SMB’s that can integrate Web 2.0 techniques and technologies into their web marketing have an embedded advantage in expanding their web footprint and driving more traffic to their sites. The essence of a Web 2.0 strategy is developing a content-marketing program. While this can appear daunting at first, the essence of a good content-marketing program is taking the time to create and organize information that will be of interest to a customer or prospect. The benefit of Web 2.0 technologies is that the process of content-marketing doesn’t have to be done all at once; it can be built into a regular element of the marketing process.

What’s the justification for shifting your day-to-day approach to focus on content-sharing? The large pool of consumers who are on the web, searching for solutions and missing you every day.

Note: Our DesignSherpa and CommunitySherpa internet marketing services at NCI are designed to help businesses accomplish this transition seamlessly and at a low cost. Check them out here and here.

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The first quarter is closed and the results are in for the magazine industry. Step back and you realize that we are witnessing a conflagration.

From Folio:

Ad pages in consumer magazines dropped 25.9 percent while ad revenue fell 20.2 percent in the first quarter of 2009, according to figures released today by the MPA’s Publishers Information Bureau.

This comes one week after ABM’s Business Information Network reported that ad pages for b-to-b magazines fell 27 percent and revenue dropped 21 percent in January 2009 compared to January 2008.

Percentages can mask the true order of magnitude of change. Absolute numbers tell a better story — they are the currency we use to pay the bills, not percentages.

Picture 6.pngAt the current run rate, magazine revenues will drop $9.5 billion dollars from 2007 to 2009. Ad pages will decline by 400,000. That means editorial pages will decline by something close to 500,000.

It’s astounding.

As I thought about the implications of these numbers today, my attention was caught by a Twitterstream from Laurel Touby.

I first encountered Laurel seven or eight years ago, I think, at an industry event, where she was prowling about wrapped in a distinctive boa pigeonholing anyone that she thought had something useful to say. If you didn’t make the cut, she moved on, abruptly but with a distinctive intensity that helped you reconcile the sudden shift in direction.

She had founded a web service called MediaBistro. It was the original MeetUp for media mavens and she built the business into an energetic community focused around jobs, career and fun. She eventually sold the business to Alan Meckler.

I went down to her office to visit her soon after our first meeting. I wanted to understand what she had done. I asked questions, we talked, and I was struck at how elegant and simple the core of her business was. Give people a way to come together and they will do all kinds of interesting, useful, and, if you’re resourceful, ultimately profitable things.

So she’s got a big dose of WebCred with me and that’s why the Twitterstream today was so fascinating.

Picture 4.png[For those of you not familiar with Twitter conventions, you have to read the dialogue from bottom to top.]

There are a lot of magazine people on Twitter, and Laurel’s call for good news got one response:

Forget it. Brand loyalty (=market power) has officially and forever shifted from content producers to content indexers.

Her stream of Twitters innocently captures the sadness and misdirection of the magazine world. Money and Kiplinger’s announce new web tools and they hardly touch on the kind of interaction and community that people desire. “[People] want to activate advice online and in their lives,” Laurel says.

When an industry looses $10 billion of revenue, that almost all comes off the bottom line. And to right itself, that industry has to make radical changes to its two biggest assets: human capital and product. The process is wrenching and disruptive.

Look around the blogosphere and the battle big media is getting geared up for is around their content. It’s a valiant last stand at Thermopylae, against the overwhelming force of Google, the clever stealth of Huffington Post.

While that battle is grand and glorious, it doesn’t confront the root of the profound change. That change is captured in the way people are migrating into their social networks online, creating their own content, interacting with groups of their peers, embracing diverse communities that organize around each other.

Magazines at their best do two things. They project authority and they create community. Those two things, done well — and they still can be done well — create powerful environments for advertisers.

Authority and community have dissipated into the online world, lost to the Google web and the Social web.

In the magazine business, our core DNA  tells us that to protect our brand we need to control our authority and our community. When we engage our community, we filter and channel. We don’t reflect, we don’t mirror and we don’t embrace.

There are exceptions, the innovators who have moved their business into more diverse and innovative modes. Red7Media, publisher of Folio:, is one example that I’ve followed most closely.

We don’t have any choice, you know. That $10 billion of lost revenue isn’t going to come back, not when the entire economy has shrunk by $2+ trillion. The path to Prosperity will be trod through the current circumstances, as unlikely as it may seem today.  Some brands will survive.  But it will require reinvention.

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