Tuesday, December 23, 2008

RHD's new DexKnows site is in Beta

RH Donnelly has launched the beta version of their new yellow pages site, DexKnows. Lots of simple improvements and looks like a good first step in making more progress online.

Kelsey Group Blogs » RHD in Beta with New IYP Platform

Friday, December 12, 2008

MapQuest is really ramping up

MapQuest is doing a lot in the local portal space now... This article is about them adding Twitter, which I don't think is going to provide too much value, but the item to note here is that they say they've had 1 MM people register and personalize in the first 20 days since launch...

MapQuest Local Adds Twitter Feed « Screenwerk

Thursday, December 11, 2008

CitySearch vs. Yelp Apps

CitySearch launched their iPhone app today. On the surface, it has a lot of the same data as Yelp, although Yelp has better deeper reviews (it is their specialty after all). However, CitySearch did one-up Yelp in one area: While Yelp allows image uploads from their app, CitySearch allows reviews to be uploaded through their app as well...

Citysearch Vs. Yelp On The iPhone: Can You Tell Them Apart?

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Yelp's iPhone App gets even better (and smarter)

The Yelp iPhone App, which I already thought was the best in local, has now been updated with a bunch of new features. The most interesting, though, it that it allows users to upload pictures of the businesses straight to the site. With so many users running around with camera phones, this only makes sense. For the broader "local" business community, though, this doesn't necessarily provide a lot of content around the big revenue categories (most of which are services), but a cool feature for those categories Yelp specializes in...

Yelp Updates iPhone App « Screenwerk

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Oodle to Power Facebook Classifieds

Oodle continues to gain market share on classifieds, though I don't think they make any money off it. but now they'll be powering both MySpace and Facebook...

Confirmed: Oodle To Power Facebook Classifieds

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Demand in the Home Service Categories

Some anecdotal evidence about the big-revenue home services categories the local business depends on so much. During the Kelsey get-together in No Cal, some industry people have indicated that because the home services companies are now less busy (because of decreasing home equity withdrawals to fund improvements), they're looking for more lead sources (although they also mention those lead costs are decreasing)...

Kelsey Group Blogs » Insigthts from Home Services Heavyweights

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Yelp Stats

Some great stats from Yelp. 15MM users a month is nothing to sneeze at, and if they start to trust Yelp for Restaurants, etc, it's only a matter of time before they start using it for high-revenue categories too...

Kelsey Group Blogs » Yelp Traffic Stats Suggests Broad Local Usage

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Free Print Ad with Online?

It's only for jobs and only for a test period, but the NYTimes is offering their online job advertisers free print ads when they buy an online one. This is going to become more and more frequent as print advertising degrades to such a level (especially in classifieds categories) that, by itself, it wouldnt provide enough content for print readers. So, to fill in content in print and retain any readers it has, print publications will have to go in this direction. A first shot over the bow perhaps?

Print in Crisis: NYTimes Gives Ads Free Paper

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

MLS going direct to consumers

Trying to build a real estate site (a huge local category) one of the problems has always been where to get the data. Working with MLSs is the best way to get data, but they're all regional and not all that easy to work with. To get national coverage, you need to do a lot of deals, and as you can see from sites like Redfin, Trulia, etc, its just not that feasible. A new site called HomesDatabase has been created by an MLS in the mid-Atlantic part of the country and is one example of MLSs trying to expand their business model. Their goal is to go national, but we'll see if they have any more luck than the rest. At the very least, though, if local MLSs all over the country do this and allow sharing of their data, aggregator sites will have some good stuff to work with.

MLS Tired of Zillow, Trulia: Goes Direct To Consumers

Monday, November 10, 2008

Writeup of 15 Local iPhone Apps

Yelp is still the best in my view, though the Google Earth one is pretty sweet as well...

15+ FREE iPhone Apps to Navigate Your World

Financial Discussion of YP Companies

Interesting summary of a financial article on the state of the Yellow Pages business...

Dense ‘Deal’ Piece on YP « Screenwerk

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Google Maps Listing Quality Guidelines

Some good info from Google on how to submit good listings to their maps site and avoid being Map spam...

Google Maps Adds Business Listing Quality Guidelines

Local Video Spam!

Leave it to MerchantCircle to figure out how to game the system. They've done a big deal with Spotzer (similar to Spotrunner, etc - produce local videos) to produce thousands and thousands of video ads for local businesses. They'll use the businesses information to create the ads, but from the looks of the sample, they aren't doing any customization or adding any information, real value, or real images or video of the business. Here's the text from the sample ad (a home theater store in Tennessee):

"When it comes to shopping, it's not easy to find just the right thing. Well look no further. We've got what you're looking for" (business name, phone number, city state and zip shown at the end - no street address)

So, what's the point of these ads, since they don't really provide any information on the business. They don't even include the street address, just a phone number (most likely a tracking number) and City information? The point is to be taken in by Google as "video spam", hoping Google will index the city information and phone number. If a user looking for information does see this, they'll have to call the number or click through to get any real information. This is what makes it spam. No real value or information, just there to fool Google. Let's hope they're too smart for this. But that's MerchantCircle for you.

MerchantCircle and Spotzer Partner for SMB Vids « Screenwerk

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Phone Book Myth on Mythbusters This Week

For those of you who can't get enough of Local (and Yellow Pages specifically) at work, Mythbusters is doing an episode this week that includes a YP myth (there seems to be a myth that if you collate 2 phone books together, their pages will magically stick). I've never heard this myth before but apparently it exists. Tune in to the Discovery Channel Weds at 9PM Eastern/Pacific.

Mythbusters Phone Book Episode Schedule

The Worlds Oldest Phone Book



Time for the lighter side of local. Christie's auction house has just auctioned off the world's oldest phone book. It had a residential directory and a yellow pages. Here's the great part, though: There aren't any phone numbers in it, just a list of people who have phones (I guess you just asked the operator for the person you wanted). If you click through, there's a video of it too. No mention of what it sold for.

Video: the world's oldest telephone book - Boing Boing

Drop in Real Estate Newspaper Advertising

Adding to the earlier story about newspapers losing money, look at this chart, from the Trulia Blog, another of those sites I mentioned that's killing the papers' classifieds business.



Ouch! Trends in Newspapers and Real Estate Advertising

Monday, September 8, 2008

Can Newspapers Be Saved? Here Are Some Ideas...

Building on the Newspaper discussion begun the other day, Search Engine Land has an article asking the question Can Newspapers Be Saved and how? The gist of it is:
  1. This is the standard one we always hear. Advertiser relationships are the biggest asset for newspapers (just as they as for yellow pages), so they must defend those relationships and extend them, acting as trusted resources to provide a broad base of advertising products.
  2. Sell everything your advertisers want. Not just newspaper, but IYPs (YellowPages.com, SuperPages and Dexknows are mentioned) and other local Internet traffic sources like CitySearch.
  3. Focus on phone calls. As we've discussed here, most advertisers are not focused on directing clicks and traffic to their websites, except as it drives phone calls. Their sites are typically not optimized for conversion and they are not set up to do rapid responses to emails, so just skip the middle man and send the phone calls directly.
Everything else in here has to do with sales. Invest in your team, keep it easy to sell (this is a key - package products together rather than making it a complicated sale that seems like you're nickle and diming them), and make sure your sales comp is aligned with the new product set.

Sounds like pretty good advice. Will newspapers take it? That's another story...


Can Newspapers Be Saved? Part 2: Potential Solutions

Yelp 2.0 for iPhone on its Way



According to Greg Sterling, the next iteration of the Yelp iPhone app is coming. The first version is by far my favorite local app on the iPhone, and it sounds like this one will only improve on it, offering more information, more search options and some other fun things on top of it. These guys definitely get how to build an iPhone app.

Yelp 2.0 for the iPhone Coming Soon | LocalMobileSearch

Friday, September 5, 2008

Newspaper Ad Revenues Dropping Fast


I don't post too much about newspapers here, but they are a large (though shrinking) and important part of the local advertising ecosystem. I've argued for a while that, while yellow pages companies are in a tough position, newspapers are even worse off. Why is that? Because they face a lot more competition and on different factors compared to YPs. Any local blogger can cover local news (sometimes better than the big papers, especially when you're talking about a neighborhood or smaller area). They can go deeper on topics, have a better understanding of the day-to-day life in an area and, most importantly, they can be more timely with their news delivery. While newspapers publish once a day (and their online schedules are not that much more frequent), bloggers publish anytime. And via blog readers and other notification channels, interested people can know the news as soon as it happens. While this will impact other local players, like radio and TV, the biggest impact is in the newspaper industry. Yellow Pages obviously face significantly new media competition as well, but it's not as likely that one person in their house will provide the same competition for YPs that they provide for newspapers.

So what's the point of all this? According to the Newspaper Association of America (via Techcrunch), newspaper advertising revenues have been dropping off a cliff. Not only that, but their Internet revenues are decreasing as well. Most people I know think we're in a recession and advertising is bound to drop off as a whole. But it definitely looks like newspapers are taking the brunt of it (though the YPs are not exactly feeling good either). Classified ads, one of the big revenue areas for newspapers, have been eaten away for a while now, by Craigslist and vertical sites like Rent.com, Realtor.com, Monster.com and the like. But now it seems like display is following, and it's just going to keep going down from here.

Negative Momentum: Newspaper Ad Revenues Gaining Downhill Speed (Even Online Is Declining)

What does a New Zealand YP Company have to do with us?

Kelsey group had an interesting writeup today of Yellow Pages Group New Zealand's acquisition of a majority stake in a couple sites targeted at people over 50. On it's face, seems like it's not a big deal, but thinking about it further, I tend to think this is a really astute move and something we should think about when looking to expand our local (and YP specifically) businesses in the US.

The core Internet demographic (teen-40 years old) are getting pretty locked in to going to Google or Yahoo or other Internet pure-play sites to get their information. It's that activity that's hurting YP revenues with those types of users. However, print Yellow Pages still experience strong usage among people 40 and over, and haven't slowed too much in that age group. However, that slowdown is likely to come, and before it does, Yellow Pages companies should be looking to expand their brand equity with that demographic by providing them with Internet destinations and experiences that suit their needs and wants. Similar to the posting I wrote about women being a core demo of YP sites online, I'm going to argue that we need to focus our experiences towards those customers who still provide us good usage, that we have not yet lost to the Internet pure-play companies.

YPGNZ has shown us an example of that kind of forward thinking, and we need to start thinking that way here as well.

Kelsey Group Blogs » Yellow Pages Group New Zealand’s Boomer Acquisition

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Search Insider Recommends Yahoo! Buy RH Donnelly





What should Yahoo! do? How can they improve their business? How can they undo the major mistake they made in not selling to MSFT? Lots of people have their opinions, but according to the Search Insider column (via Greg Sterling), one of the recommendations is for them to buy a yellow pages company, specifically RHD. Why not Idearc? Not sure, any more than I'm sure why Barron's recommended RHD stock vs. Idearc.

But what this shows is that there are potential synergies between Search companies and Yellow Pages companies. Search, like many Internet businesses, has trouble getting a critical mass of small businesses. Yellow Pages companies have those relationships (and long-term established ones), but for the most part, don't have the Internet products to go with them. The question is going to be, does a Search company want to take a huge cut on their margins by acquiring a company that has a huge sales force in exchange for increasing their market share? I guess we'll see...

“Buy the Yellow Pages” Returns « Screenwerk

Friday, August 29, 2008

Taxonomy and Local Search

Kelsey references a piece from the head of BD at Localeze talking about Taxonomy and IYPs/Local sites. The gist of it is, we need to be designing these sites to be more than just category and geography driven and make them more focused around a search-based structure, where users can really search for what they need and not have to try to figure out what category to look for. This really gets back to that discussion that the last generation focused on browse by category and this generation is all about search.

Kelsey Group Blogs

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Verticals in the Local Space

A "consultant specializing in vertical development" talks about how the local space has been slow to really build out Vertical sites, focusing on areas like auto, wedding, legal, etc. This is definitely a direction local sites need to go in, and the first site that gets to become a one-stop-shop, with solid content in all the major verticals, along with their core business listings, should gain good traction with users as their default local site. And the good news for all of us who aren't Google is that this is not the kind of thing they do, so the door is open for someone else to step through.

Kelsey Group Blogs » Vertical Slowdown? Teresa Lawlor Discusses Challenges

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Medical Categories Slowly Moving Online



For traditional yellow pages companies, Doctors, Dentists and related categories are huge revenue generators. Online, though, they've been very slow to adopt (as with Real Estate, which we discussed yesterday). Several companies have tried different approaches to bring these categories online, like HealthGrades and several competitors, which offer reviews of medical professionals. Looks like there's another new site moving into this space, called ZocDoc, which has information on doctors, the insurance they accept and allows you to schedule appointments. Like many Local startups, I suspect this one is going to run into a Sales issue, with doctors being very busy people and their front offices not really being equipped to spend their marketing money. Like all categories, this one will eventually be fully engaged online, but for the time being, I think the YPs, IYPs and Google will be the primary resources they'll use.

ZocDoc Gets $3M to Help You Find a Doctor

Optimizing Google OneBox and Yahoo! Shortcut Local Listings

Good article talking about how to best optimize your business listings to get good Google and Yahoo! local placements.

Optimizing Google OneBox and Yahoo! Shortcut Local Listings

Monday, August 18, 2008

Barrons Promotes RH Donnelly as "Risky, But Attractive"



RHD's stock is up 14% at the moment based mostly on an article in Barron's which indicates that, despite the 97% drop in stock price in the last year, RHD's directories are still experiencing strong usage in some sectors and are "far from dead". The albatross, as they say, is the $9.7B of net debt the companies holds. But, as they say, if you're looking for a high-risk, potential high-return stock, RHD may be one to check out. This article made me wonder if they feel the same about Idearc, but they didn't really say here.

Flashing Yellow, With Lots of Green - Barrons.com

Zillow Launches Mobile Search for Real Estate



Certain categories have seen good mobile/iPhone applications developed and others have not. I would put Real Estate in the latter category. Real Estate as an industry is known as a late adopter of technology, and apparently the mobile space is no different. Zillow, however, has launched a web application (not downloadable) allowing users to search for properties by street address, city, state or zip. I haven't been able to try it out yet, but it sounds good.

It is surprising that none of the larger real estate sites had an application ready at the launch of iPhone apps because of the natural fit of RE for the mobile space. It's natural to be out taking a walk, see a For Sale sign and want to know the price/bedroom/bath/etc. Or to be able to find open houses near your location.

While Zillow is getting a start, there are limitations to a web app which would be overcome with a downloadable iPhone app (which I'm sure Zillow is working on). The ability to easily save properties to your phone is one, but the bigger one is the ability to tap into the GPS/location-aware features of your phone to reduce the need to type in an address. As I've said, I'm sure it's coming, but hopefully it'll be here soon.

Touch-Tap-Click-Push…Search Properties From Your Mobile Browser | Zillow® Blog

User-Generated Reviews and Their Impact on Local

We talked about reviews and the ability for businesses to respond to them last week. Today on Valleywag, there was some discussion of a company possibly offering to push negative reviews to the bottom if businesses bought a paid ad with them (I'm not mentioning the company's name here, because Valleywag thinks this was just a rogue salesperson, not a real policy of that company).

However, this brings up some of the complexities of reviews and serving two masters: users and businesses. For users to really find the reviews content useful, it has to be real information that cannot be "bought" by businesses. Of course, if this is the case and a business already has significant numbers of negative reviews on a given site, it will make it more difficult to sell paid products to that business.

On the other side of the coin, there have been stories about consumers/users threatening businesses with negative reviews if they don't get what they want (which many times includes them demanding free product or the like). This is the downside of user generated reviews. While they give users the ability to provide information to others, there will always be some that abuse them.

So how can businesses solve this problem? To me, the answer is twofold:
  1. Do the best you can to keep your customers happy. This may seem simple, but if you want good reviews, provide good service.
  2. Promote your customers' involvement on the sites where you advertise (and for sites, this means give businesses the means to promote you on-site). Put up stickers in your window letting consumers know where to post reviews. Tell your staff to promote this (especially to happy customers). Happy customers will go out of their way to send you more business, but you need to give them the means to do so.
Finally, as we talked about last week, it is important that sites provide businesses with the means to respond to negative reviews and even challenge their validity from time to time. The purer the review system the better, but as local Internet companies, we always have to balance the needs of all of our constitutents.

Commentards: Yelp protection racket alleged by anonymous cowards

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Yahoo Launches Fire Eagle



Yahoo's advanced research division, called Brickhouse, has released a highly anticipated platform called Fire Eagle. This platform allows developers to receive geo-location data from their users to easily integrate into their sites.

As GPS-enabled devices like the iPhone continue to proliferate and users start to see more value in providing their locations to websites, in order to get customized results, see who's nearby, etc, platforms like this will be key. This will allow the web to do some of its transition from a "pull" platform (ask for what you want and it will be shown to you) to a "push" platform (it will show you things you will be interested in without having to ask for them).

Yahoo Fire Eagle Launches Geo-Location Platform To The Public

iPhone Food Apps

Mashable has a writeup of 21 iPhone food apps, most of which are restaurant finders and reviews. Their review of the YPMobile App? "When worse comes to worse, hit up the Yellow Pages". They also had some good apps I haven't heard of, like one that includes the menus of many popular restaurants. A good read if you're looking for new apps for your iPhone or just want to see what your competitors are doing.

21 iPhone Food Apps to Eat Your Heart Out

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Local-20 - Review and Analysis of Local 2.0 Sites

A new blog has launched which is doing analysis of Local 2.0 sites from around the world. Could be a great place to do some competitive research or pick up some best practices from sites you wouldn't otherwise see.

Local-20

Advertiser feedback on negative reviews

Today, Greg Sterling asks if the ability for advertisers to provide feedback on negative reviews is the future of reviews. I tend to agree with him that it's the future of online reviews, but it's also the past of reviews. Why do I say that? Because this is what eBay has been doing for years. As we all know, feedback is the key to the success of eBay's marketplace. Without trust in the buyer/seller you're dealing with, their system will not work.

However, as with local sites, one negative review can really impact your business on eBay, so they needed ways to deal with that negative feedback. The first thing they do is that they have the ability for users (sellers especially) to dispute negative feedback, although this ability is used sparingly. The ability for the seller to respond to negative feedback is really the main tool they have to keey their rating solid.

As IYPs and other local sites prepare for the next stage in their evolution, content is going to be critical, and reviews are a big part of that content. Local sites implementing reviews need to make sure they're not just slapped into the site, but that they are built with thought behind them, processes to support them, and the ability to get the advertisers involved and engaged. As we've seen from Merchant Circle's infamous launch strategy, negative feedback on a website is always a strong impetus for advertisers to get involved.

Is This the Future of Online Reviews? « Screenwerk

Should consumers be able to opt out of phone book deliveries?



Don't know how I missed this yesterday and is was on one of my favorite blogs, The Consumerist. It discusses attempts by some local governments to allow their residents to opt out of receiving phone books and the difficulties that previous governments have had in passing such laws.

It really seems like allowing people to opt out shouldnt negatively impact business much if advertisers are looking at their ads based on performance instead of on circulation. In fact, it could reduce costs for yellow pages companies (though it would require them to keep a database of who has opted in/out). However, there may be more impact than we would think.

Are there a lot of people who would opt out but end up keeping the phone books they are delivered and using them? I have heard the argument that phone books have the benefit of being able to find things faster than you can online and perhaps, if a pipe has burst or you have to do something really quickly, where you aren't familiar with a vendor, people still grab for Old Faithful. In any case, if you look at the comments on this article (which is read by some of the more tech-savvy people around) there is still a fair amount of support for the books, and people still see value in them.

Phone Books: Should Consumers Be Able To Opt-Out Of Phone Book Deliveries?

Monday, August 11, 2008

Self-Storage Reports Strong Profits

This one may be a bit off-topic, but relevant. As we move forward on this blog, we are going to talk a bit more about big local (Print, IYP and Search) categories, as it is relevant.

Storage and Moving and two big categories for us, and they're categories that are undergoing some growth right now, if this story is any indication. In this case, Public Storage has had their profits increase by 500% this quarter (vs last year), mostly due to the housing market. Realtors and Loans are two other big categories for the local space, and ones that are undergoing drastic shifts with the changes in the housing markets. We can probably all look for their investments in advertising to decrease a bit (at least temporarily). However, it looks like storage (and likely moving as well) may pick up some of the slack. Time for local sites to shift focus a bit?

Amid 91201 Foreclosures, Public Storage Inc. Reports Strong Gains | Redfin Los Angeles Sweet Digs

Friday, August 8, 2008

How Google Ranks Local Businesses

Here's a really informative paper on how Google ranks local businesses for their maps site (and I'd assume for other local searches as well).

Local Search Ranking Factors « Screenwerk

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Why are hotels eliminating Yellow Pages

The Kelsey Group blog today has an interesting post about yellow pages in hotels. Some of the major chains, Hyatt, Omni and a few others, are discontinuing providing yellow pages in hotels. Seems a strange move, since people in a hotel are usually in an unfamiliar town and need to look up business information. But, the Kelsey blog thinks this is actually a move to get more people signing up to pay for the in-room Internet connection. Makes sense to me. That being said, I think hotel guests are probably a big enough traffic source for print YP usage to make it worthwhile for the YP companies to compenate the hotels to carry the books. That way, the hotels get their monetization either way...

Kelsey Group Blogs

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

MerchantCircle Launches Website Creation/Hosting



MerchantCircle has a new templated Website Creation product, which they're using to hook advertisers more deeply and offer a broader product set for those SMBs who don't have their own sites. Interesting quote for me here is that their next step is to move from impressions and clicks to calls. Seems a common theme that most local sites are moving to promoting calls as their key metric.

Kelsey Group Blogs » Merchant Circle Launches Web Site Creation/Hosting

Local Shopping on a Mobile Phone and What It Means

One area where there have been relatively few iPhone apps that have launched is the Shopping space. TheFind just launched what I believe to be the first shopping app, and while it's still in private Beta (which means I haven't gotten to test it yet), it got me thinking about what shopping on your phone will be about.

I'm sure sites like Amazon and others will have nice little apps you can use to buy products that are available on their websites (basically just extensions of their sites), but I think the real impact of these kinds of applications will be on brick and mortar prices. When shoppers go into stores and see prices now, they often don't have any basis for comparison (although many do check the price online before they go into the store). Some stores have kiosks in the store where you can browse their inventory, but a few (Best Buy comes to mind) have a different website for in-store purchases which may have prices that are different from their websites.

That's where mobile shopping could be really powerful. As a consumer, you can now enter a store with a mobile device that will show you prices for an item from all retailers. You will now have immediate transparency to whether you are getting a good deal from a retailer or not. As this gets more user penetration, if the prices at retailers are significantly different from online (taking into account things like sales tax and shipping), users will shift even more purchases online. So, this will force retailers to make their brick and mortar prices more competitive with online and should cause price parity across sources (of/when consumer penetration and usage is achieved). Could be the start of something big.

Local Shopping Coming To A Mobile Phone Near You

Women are more likely than men to be IYP users

I saw an interesting tool on another website today (it can be found at the link below). You activate this tool and it will go through your browser history, analyze the sites you've visited, and tell you if it thinks you're male or female. When I ran it, it said with 100% probability that I'm male (I am). But more interesting to me was the male/female ratios it displayed for various IYP/Local sites I've visited. Here they are:

  • Yellowpages.com - 0.72 male/female (1.38 women per man on that site)
  • Yelp - 0.77
  • Yellowbook - 0.8
  • ServiceMagic - 0.71
  • DexKnows - 0.79
  • Google - 0.98
As someone working in the local space online, this tells me that, across the board, 55-57% of our users are women. That's without any specific outreach effort to that group. Perhaps we should consider market more directly to them, or at least focus on the sites they're using, as they seem more predisposed to using us to start with.

Mike On Ads » Blog Archive » Using your browser URL history to estimate gender

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Business Networking - The Future of Local Business Relationships?



Kudzu is a site for users to submit recommendations for their favorite businesses (like a Yelp or the like). They've just introduced something new, though, which is quite interesting: business recommendations. Basically, businesses can recommend other businesses who they think do a good job. So, for example, you may want to ask the general contractor you used once who a good plumber would be for a small job. That contractor may have recommended plumbers, roofers, etc through Kudzu. Good extension to the site if they can get the businesses to submit recommendations.

For me, this brings up the concept of business social networking, which has not really been done anywhere yet (that I know of). Not Linked-in style social networking, but the ability for businesses to network and meet/discuss issues with other businesses. Are you a plumber in Denver who wants advice from other plumbers across the country? Are you a restaurant in Denver who wants to discuss business with other Denver merchants? As the next generation, who has embraced social networking, become business owners, this concept will catch on, but as of now, noone has tried to do it yet. The best bets will be existing business directories like Kudzu or Yelp, or the IYPs, who have the customer relationships in place.

Kudzu Introduces Business Networking « Screenwerk

Monday, August 4, 2008

Top 10 IYP Search Categories (from the YPA)



So according to the YPA, here are the top 10:
1.  Restaurants
2. Physicians & Surgeons
3. Hotels
4. Auto Repairing & Service
5. Florists-Retail
6. Auto Dealers-New & Used
7. Dentists
8. Auto Parts & Supplies - New & Used
9. Beauty Salons (tie)
10. Hospitals (tie)

What does this all mean? Not sure, though it shows that people are using IYPs for the same searches they're using print for. To me, though, while IYPs will have a tough time maintaining their print shares in some of these categories, their online positions should be more defensible, if they go the right direction. Some of these categories, like Physicians and Dentists, are ones where users want significant data to help them make a decision. Right now, levels of data on IYPs are low, but if investments are made into collecting more data (like specialties for doctors, or types of insurance accepted, etc), they can become trusted sources for information on these categories.

Yellow Pages Association Names Top 10 Internet Yellow Pages Searches Reflecting How Consumers Are Using Local Search Sites

Friday, August 1, 2008

Canada's Yellow Pages Group (YPG) Entering the US Market

YPG from Canada is coming to the US, through an acquisition of Volt Information Services. It sounds like it's mostly for their technology/Internet assets, although they do have a bit of print business as well. From what I've heard, YPG is usually pretty aggressive and on the frontlines when it comes to Online, so it will be interesting to see how this manifests itself in the US.

Kelsey Group Blogs » YPG Enters US Market with Volt Deal

Thursday, July 31, 2008

WSJ Discusses Borrell Local Report



The WSJ discussed the Borrell report I mentioned yesterday, although focusing on it from a newspaper perspective. The long and short of it is that they say newspapers are trying to train their sales forces to sell online ads, but when they do that, they cannibalize print (which as we know is higher priced and higher margin). Craigslist is eating their lunch on Classifieds, Google and others are taking share of local traffic and they are having a tough time. Doesn't sound good...

Newspapers Think Locally for Online Ads - WSJ.com

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Marchex Launches New, Improved Ad Platform

Marchex has updated its private-label ad platform, including a new focus on calls. Key quote "Calls are the currency that small businesses want"...

Kelsey Group Blogs » Marchex Launches New, Improved Ad Platform

Borrell says YPs to lose $5 Billion in Revenues in 5 Years

Not sure I believe this one, but that's the headline. If you look at the comments of the post I linked to on Screenwerk, Borrell indicates the changes in each category over the next 5 years:
Directories -38.9%
Direct Mail - 32.0%
Telemarketing -28.9%
Newspapers -11.0%
Radio -7.0%
Other Print -3.4%
Broadcast TV -2.1%
Online +22.7%
Out of Home +30.2%
Cable +54.8%
Cinema +313.8%

Not to nit-pick one number and use it to impugn the whole survey, but the newspaper number strikes me as being off. They are losing share every day in classified advertising and are talking about raising prices, which should reduce their reader bases (print at least) and hurt their ad revenues more. I think directionally, these numbers are correct, but not sure about their magnitudes.

Borrell: YPs to Lose $5 Billion in 5 Years « Screenwerk

iPhone Apps - 4 of Top 5 are Local

There are now over 1000 apps in the iPhone store and if you look at the top 5, 4 of them are local applications:
1. Google (the only non-local)
2. UrbanSpoon, with its cool "shake me and get a surprise result" feature
3. BoxOffice, with an easy to use local movie time application and Rotten Tomatoes critic ratings
4. WeatherBug
5. Yelp, which in my view has the nicest local implementation, with the ability to easily search near you, a map view, and the ability to read every review in detail (so many apps do shortcut reviews, including the iTunes store, which doesn't give you anything beyond the star rating

It really seems that the iPhone is the platform that will finally drive broad acceptance of mobile applications and mobile search. Approx 10MM iPhones are out there in the US right now and with their ease-of-use and full-time access to the Internet, they will become the local platform of choice. And they're just scratching the surface of what they can do.

» Local Mobile Search

RH Donnelly (RHD) Announces Earnings


(One-year chart shown, same as Idearc below)

RHD earnings came out today and, based on the response of the stock market today, look pretty much as expected. There was a one-time charge of approx $600MM which put it in negative territory on earnings by approx $300MM, but other than that, they were positive and are making progress on paying down the debt (approx 3% paid off in the period). One potential area for concern is that sales were down 8%, which is an indicator of future revenues. If you're interested in more than approx $s, click the link below.

One interesting point is that RHD stock has been moving in lockstep with Idearc for the last year, and while RHD stock was down 13% yesterday, Idearc was down 40%, so that effect has somewhat lessened (most likely because of the differing results seen from yesterday's report to today's).

Yahoo! Finance Charts

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Idearc's Earnings Were Not So Good


Idearc's earnings came in today and they weren't very good. Profit down 30%, revenue down 5.7%. And if you look earlier this month, you'll see a press release about them bringing in a former Private Equity person to be their CEO. That can't be good for the employees there. Any by the way, the stock is currently down about 35% on the news (RHD is down 20ish percent as well, and report earnings tomorrow).

IAR: 1.44 -0.76 (-34.55%) - Idearc Inc.

Oodle now powering MySpace Classifieds




This is Oodle's second major partner pickup, after Wal-Mart... Oodle really does have a fairly nice, simple platform to do classifieds... I'm not sure if Wal-Mart and MySpace are taking paid classifieds through their site or if Oodle is paying them, but out of all the classified aggregation sites, Oodle seems to be taking the lead...

Friday, July 25, 2008

YellowPages.com Buoys AT&T in First Half

Selling SEM: It's Complicated

Some people think SMBs are just too busy or too confused to buy SEM, or its just too complicated in general, which is why they keep buying the old media and will keep doing so for a while at least (until the younger generation, who has grown up with the Internet, are the business owners)...

Kelsey Group Blogs » Selling SEM: It’s Complicated

Friday, July 18, 2008

Local iPhone Apps



Local iPhone apps are among the top downloaded apps on iTunes, with the YellowPages.com, Yelp, Where and UrbanSpoon apps near the top. Also, local social networking is getting some traction, with Loopt, among others, making progress. In my book, Yelp is the best local app out there...

Kelsey Group Blogs » After One Week, Lots of Volatility for Local iPhone Apps

Thursday, July 17, 2008

What role will IYPs play in next generation mobile search?

They discuss mobile apps and how IYPs will integrate. One thing in here I don't agree with is that YellowPages.com launched with a nice app. There's no integrated maps in their app and its really kind of a subpar effort, in my estimation. Yelp has done a much better job and I think is going to be the local app to beat for some time.

Kelsey Group Blogs » What Role will IYPs Play in Next Generation Mobile Search?

Google Enables Local Reviews from Mobile Phones

Doesnt say anything about an iPhone app for this yet, though, which is where I would expect this kind of functionality to reside in the future. I'm actually kind of surprised no yellow pages or other local companies had a launch app with this included.

Google Enables Local Reviews From Mobile Phones

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Does Microsoft want Yell?

Microsoft may be looking to buy Yell, now that their Yahoo deal has fallen through...

Kelsey Group Blogs » Does Microsoft Want Yell?

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Yelp Lets Businesses Fight Back

Yelp has provided some tools to let businesses try to fix their feedback, contact people who have left negative feedback, etc...

http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/04/28/yelp-lets-businesses-fight-back/

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Marchex Syndicated Content Deals

Marchex has added a number of syndicated content deals (mostly in the restaurant area)...

Marchex Syndicated Content Deals

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Dave Swanson at the YPA Show

Key point: SMBs do not buy advertising. They have it sold to them...

Kelsey Group Blogs » YP Industry Pledges Counteroffensive

Monday, April 7, 2008

SuperPages adds PPCall to Mobile Sources

They have their own free 411 service thats using their pay per call customers, as well as distributing them to Jingle Networks (1-800-Free-411)...

Superpages ‘Replies,’ Adds Mobile Distribution « Screenwerk

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Must-Read - Products and Pricing for every major local Internet site

This is an amazing posting... Product types and pricing for every major local site on the Internet...

Internet Advertising Matrix

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Yahoo! Open Search Platform

Yahoo! will be creating an open search platform, which includes an API that lets people edit search listings, individually or in bulk. Could be useful for IYP companies...

Yahoo Announces Open Search Platform

MerchantCircle IYP Survey

Most interesting item here: 73% of advertisers who think IYPs are effective would not want to spend more than $100 per month (of course, that means 27% would)...

MerchantCircle Survey: $100 Monthly Spend Max « Screenwerk

Marchex and Citysearch in Distribution Deal

Thats a few deals CitySearch has announced in a few weeks to distribute their content...

Marchex and Citysearch in Distribution Deal « Screenwerk

YPA says print is "stable" and IYP is growing

Friday, February 15, 2008

Newspapers Create a Local Ad Network

Most of the biggest newspaper companies in the country have combined to create an ad network. According to the article, the combined network would come in just above Business.com in terms of reach.

Newspapers Create Another Ad Network « Screenwerk

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

YellowBook Redesigns Amid Traffic Surge

YellowBook did a redesign to their site and search box...

YellowBook Redesigns Amid Traffic Surge « Screenwerk

New-and Unfortunate-Changes to Google Local Search

Article about the impacts of Google modifying local search results to have 10 local listings at the top...

New—And Unfortunate—Changes To Google Local Search

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Google Street View

Definitely watch this video. It's worth seeing. About 2 mins long...

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Thursday, January 17, 2008

SuperPages signs deal with Parenthood.com

They've the yellow pages on this site, which targets Moms.

Superpages in Deal with Parenthood.com « Screenwerk

CitySearch Facebook Widget Launches

CitySearch has launched a widget for Facebook to help people find restaurants/see friends' recommendations/etc.

Citysearch ‘Eats It’ on Facebook « Screenwerk

Friday, January 11, 2008

MySpace courting small businesses

Will Print YP Suffer in Recessionary '08?

Discussing whether the recession that is beginning may be the tipping point for local online, and increase the downward trend for print IYP.

Will Print YP Suffer in Recessionary ‘08? « Screenwerk

Yahoo! Directory adds images to sponsored links

This looks like an attempt to get people to focus more on paid links on directory pages. Interesting input to our process.

Yahoo Directory Places Images On Sponsored Ads


Thursday, January 3, 2008

Google talking about Local

Local Classified Advertising/Oodle

There are really 2 parts of the local business. YP-type ads (permanent listings) and Classified Ads (temporary listings). Long term, if we decide to be a broad local site, teaming up with a company like Oodle coule make sense.

Kelsey Group Blogs » The ‘Radical Change’ in Classifieds (Per Oodle)