Click to Play

Shop.org: Kelly Mooney of...
WebProNews caught up with Kelly Mooney of Resource Interactive at the Shop.org Annual Summit in Las Vegas. Mooney discusses the importance of an open...

Recent Articles

FTC To Host Meeting On Behavioral Targeting And...
Federal Trade Commission is conducting a Town Hall meeting to discuss several topics on Behavioral Targeting and Online Privacy. This is your chance to participate in the panel and have your voice heard. This two-day...

Ad Campaigns And Quality Scores
An ad that suffers from a low quality score doesn’t do anyone much good, so speakers at SES San Jose 2007 addressed the matter in a session titled “Ads In A Quality Score World.” (Our on-scene WebProNews staff has passed along this latest news from SES San Jose...

Bubble Popping Time For Online Ads
Ad revenue dropped for every major Internet player but Google in the second quarter of this year. Whispers of the last dot-com crash have begun to surface again. The rapid fire purchasing of ad networks by Yahoo...

What Exactly Is An Ad Exchange Really?
An experience today made it blatantly clear to me that being in the ad exchange business I take it for granted that I know what actually is an ad exchange. I'm amazed, but it had never really occurred to me that most...

Affiliate Summit: Contextual Advertising Options
Pick something - a Web browser, toothpaste, whatever - that you’ve set against comparable products. Maybe you gave those alternatives a fair chance, and came back to Product #1 in the end, anyway. As Joel Comm weighed various contextual advertising options at Affiliate...


09.19.07


Testing Local Online Advertising

By Igor Mordkovich

Maybe it's because Google and others have demonstrated there's money to be made at the local level through self-serve, but it seems as if there are a lot of online opportunities that can work for local businesses.

The key to prioritizing these opportunities and making the call on which might be right for a specific business is what I call spill tolerance.

If I'm a restaurant within ZIP code 11792, and some of my media spills over into adjacent ZIP code 11786, giving me some customers from slightly outside my geography, it doesn't much matter to me. My business is fairly spill tolerant.

However, if I'm a plumber licensed only in the State of New York but my advertising spills into New Jersey, I could end up getting a number of phone calls or web leads with jobs I'd have to turn down. Such a business might be considered less spill tolerant. The point is that different businesses might have varying degrees of spill tolerance for various reasons. Franchisees might have corporate restrictions governing their ability to advertise within neighborhoods containing other franchises.

There might be state or local laws affecting a company's ability to do business in one town or county vs. another. Get a gauge on what these governing rules might be for an online campaign and use them to determine how tightly you will have to target your advertising.

Most local businesses are stuck advertising at the ZIP code level. However, if a business can tolerate spill to the point where they can move their targeting up to the city or DMA level, more opportunities will be open to them.

For example, many content sites can use IP databases to target with a reasonably high degree of confidence to top cities and DMAs. More spill tolerance means being able to take advantage of these opportunities.

Download Now!

Search is another opportunity. In the past, buying search terms that contained ZIP codes or place names would drive a fairly decent search buy. Now, search engines have a number of ways to target specific geographies, including profile-based targeting based on what a user specifies as a home location for things like driving directions, IP databases, geography-specific terms within the search and more.

Just like any other targeted advertising opportunity in emerging media, it's important to ask about how geo-targeting is executed from a technical perspective. The executional details should be compatible with your spill tolerance.

Approaching local ad opportunities is a question of spill tolerance and targeting methodology. Make sure every local advertiser's spill tolerance is measured and every targeting methodology is vetted, and you will do well.

IMediaConnection

Comments


About the Author:
Igor Mordkovich is an in-house marketing director for a NYC based online company. He also writes a personal blog on search marketing and advertising.

Igor's Blog: http://www.bizmord.com/Blog

About AdvertisingDay
AdvertisingDay is a collection of articles, news and commentary designed to help marketing professionals make informed decisions in their marketing efforts. Your guide to oniline marketing and advertising: AdvertisingDay.

AdvertisingDay is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
CareerNewz.com InvestNewz.com
SohoDay.com WebsiteNotes.com
SmallBusinessUpdate.com ManagerNewz.com
AdvertisingDay.com CRMNewz.com


-- AdvertisingDay is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
2007 iEntry, Inc.  All Rights Reserved  Privacy Policy  Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article



AdvertisingDay News Archives About Us Feedback AdvertisingDay Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums Jayde iEntry Advertise Contact