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While search engine advertising has been a great advertising
medium for businesses capable of or interested in marketing their
products and services to a national or international audience,
the effectiveness of this type of advertising was limited for
businesses interested in advertising to a local market until very
recently.
For example, a realtor with a web site in Minneapolis is likely
interested in advertising on search terms such as “homes
for sale” and “sell my home.” The only problem
was the realtor would have to advertise to everyone in the country
who happened to type those terms into search engines. This was
wasteful and ineffective because the vast majority of visitors
clicking through to the site would not be qualified visitors since
they lived outside the realtor’s regional market.
At that time, the only work around to this was to include a regional
qualifying term next to each search phrase, so instead of advertising
on the term “homes for sale” the realtor would have
to advertise on “Minneapolis homes for sale.”
What about the prospective clients who live in Minneapolis, but
only type in “homes for sale?” They’re likely
just as qualified for the realtor, but it there wasn’t a
way to target this type of searcher. The gap between forcing advertisers
to use regional qualifying terms or advertising to a national
market was finally closed this spring by Google.
Local Targeting
Targeting a known geographic location of searchers became a reality
earlier this spring when Google launched their local targeting
program. So now the realtor in Minneapolis can advertise on the
more general terms, then specifying a geographic area they’d
like the ads to appear within.
The options for this include picking specific cities, metropolitan
areas, or even a distance radius from a specific point. For example,
maybe the realtor only wants to generate leads from within 30
miles of their home.
Does this work?
Yes, it works very well. There are very few types of advertising
online or offline where you have such detailed control over who
you are advertising to. Basically it’s pretty hard to beat
advertising to people who are searching for what you sell and
happen to live close to your business. And, since this is pay
per click advertising, you are only charged when searchers click
through to your web site.
Local Advertising Tips
Promote Your Location - You’ll definitely
see better conversion rates for your local advertising if you
include your physical address on your web site. We recommend including
this in the footer of every page of your site to reinforce that
you’re local to the prospects.
Track Performance - When you use local advertising
you will still have to compete against businesses willing to advertise
nationally on the same search phrases. This means search terms
can get expensive but your conversion rates should support this.
However, as with any form of advertising, it’s important
to track what’s working.
Ed Kohler is the president and founder of Haystack
In A Needle - a full service web marketing and search engine
positioning firm based in Minneapolis, MN. Click
here to find out more about Haystack In A Needle's local search
engine advertising programs.
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