Google Now Offering Free Trackable Phone Numbers to Advertisers

December 6th, 2007 by Sebastien Provencher

I’m at the Google Local Markets Symposium today, an invite-only local search event happening at the Googleplex. I spoke this morning on a local search industry blogger panel with my friends Greg Sterling, Perry Evans and Peter Krasilovsky.

Google Local Markets Symposium

In addition to our panel, we heard from Richard Holden, Google’s Director of Product Management, talking about the various Google products targeted to SMEs. One of the major insights (for me) that came out of his presentation was the fact Google now offers free call reporting with any US local business ad. According to Holden, advertisers can choose to replace their regular phone number with a new free “trackable” toll-free or local number. This new feature might be the results of the GrandCentral acquisition.

This is not to be confused with the click-to-call function Google recently removed from Google Maps.

What it means: Google could start assigning new permanent trackable numbers for any media the advertiser chooses to advertise in. This would give Google tons of information regarding the ROI of various local media, allowing them to become a centralized advertiser dashboard. Given that the directory business is all about calls, this is potentially very disruptive to that industry in particular. As this involves serious customer disintermediation, I would recommend local media start looking at offering this option at large as well.

Posted in Directories, Google, Greg Sterling, Local, Local Search, Perry Evans, Peter Krasilovsky, Richard Holden | No Comments »

Let me Chime In on Hyperlocal

July 6th, 2007 by Sebastien Provencher

The same week I receive my Wired magazine in the mail with a great hyperlocal short story by Bruce Sterling, BackFence.com shuts down its network of sites… What a bad timing!

Rafat Ali in PaidContent.org asks: “Is there a real business in this kind of business?”

American Journalism Review answers: “ So far–and admittedly it’s still very early –the answer is no. A few of the estimated 500 or so “local-local” news sites claim to show a profit, but the overwhelming majority lose money, according to the first comprehensive survey of the field”

Jeff Jarvis says “Hyperlocal will not, I firmly believe, happen at one site. It will work only via networks: content, commercial, social. It will work by gathering, not producing.”

Greg Sterling continues: “no one should dismiss the underlying phenomenon that Backfence is a part of because it didn’t succeed financially.” and adds “Nobody thinking about or currently operating a local consumer site – unless you’ve already done it or have tons of cash – should be building a sales force, although a sales force is what it takes to sell successfully in local. (Telephone sales channels might be something of an exception.) Site owners should think about tapping into existing ad networks or sales channels as part of broader, geotargeted Internet distribution networks.”

My friend Perry chimes in: “is a hyper-local destination site the right model? The world of social networking, blogging, portals and news scanning are being thrown into the blender of web 2.0. I think too many venture-backed models are living in the comfort zone of a “destination site” strategy ALONE. I am not knocking it, I just view this as “necessary but not sufficient”. There is a new world being created where users roll their own internet, and the notion of having ONE PLACE for their neighborhood conversation feels increasingly contrived.”

What it means: lots of great insights from great minds. I don’t think there’s any doubt in my mind. Hyperlocal represents the future of the web. I know, I know, it’s almost counter-intuitive to the power of the WORLD wide web but here’s how I explain it. I remember when I first discovered e-mail on CompuServe back in 1993. I was e-mailing people I met in various newsgroups, people from all over the world! How exciting it was to “talk to strangers”! Then, my friends/family/co-workers started to get connected and got e-mail addresses. My volume of e-mail slowly went from people I did not know to people I knew. And a lot of these people lived close by as well!

Now, fast forward to 2007. I don’t know if you’ve had the chance to explore Facebook but it is a fascinating social experiment that resembles CompuServe. Lots of groups/communities are created and people join them if it fits their interest. One trend that I’ve seen is the creation of local groups of interest when it makes sense (i.e. when the equivalent global or national group becomes too big and loses its relevancy). There is a Montreal Tech Entrepreneurs group, a Montreal SEO group, etc. From a purely geographical point of view, I’ve already seen a group for my neighborhood and I’ve seen a group for a street (!?!) in my neighborhood. Now, are there many conversations in those groups? Not a ton, but there’s life out there. As more and more people get the tools to engage in hyperlocal conversations, it will happen. And it will happen in your neighborhood.

Posted in BackFence, Bruce Sterling, FaceBook, Greg Sterling, Hyperlocal, Jeff Jarvis, Local, Local Search, Perry Evans, Rafat Ali | 2 Comments »

Praized-Worthy Today: LocalGuides.com, i411 & Publicar, Directories.ch

May 28th, 2007 by Sebastien Provencher

Lots of things I want to blog about today (the Facebook f8 Platform announcement, Christer Pettersson’s presentation at the EADP conference) but, as I’m just coming back from Barcelona, I have a lot of catching up to do and am still jet-lagged. So, here’s a grab bag of noteworthy news that happened while I was away:

  • Local Matters launched a beta version of LocalGuides.com, their Local-Social play (what I call Local 2.0). Perry Evans had shown me an alpha release a few weeks ago and I was very impressed with the concept and the site. They describe it as “a new approach to creating a “social-local” experience in the Local Search domain”. Perry adds: “The site empowers consumers with the tools to create, annotate, expand and share lists of local businesses
    and places – publishing their own personal local guides.” You can read more on Perry’s blog. I’ll get back to it in a few days once I’ve had the chance to play with it.
  • Publicar announced the re-launch of their local search engine for Latin America at www.PaginasAmarillas.com. The new site powered by i411 provides business and residential information for 14 countries in Latin America.

Posted in 3D Worlds, Christer Pettersson, Conferences, Directories.ch, EADP, FaceBook, Latin America, Local, Local Matters, Local Search, LocalGuides.com, Mapping, PaginasAmarillas.com, Perry Evans, Publicar, Search Engines, Social Media, Switzerland, i411 | No Comments »