Everybody's doing a brand new dance now
As we speak, there are millions of mobile subscribers potentially looking for local businesses on smartphones with uniquely formatted
search applications. These users primarily will be driven to the organic listings that most local businesses are unsure or unaware of how to control.
Many marketers have no strategic plans for
the space, and few understand the importance of managing online local business-listings content for mobile. Knowing how to get online content extensively distributed across the exponentially growing
number of mobile local-search applications can make a big difference in the future of local businesses from all industries in this stressed economic environment.
For consumers, there are two
primary factors driving adoption in the smartphone and PDA market: handset cost and data-plan cost. A bleak economic outlook has given way to price-slashing measures across most industries, including
mobile - a benefit to those who have a few bucks in their pockets to spend.
With recession-conscious cell phone carriers like Boost Mobile offering unlimited plans with all-inclusive data
packages for as little as $50, and the iPhone now available for as low as $199, over half of all mobile users say that they plan to buy a smartphone within the next two years. This means that soon up
to 191 million on-the-go U.S. consumers could be searching for local products and services through an Internet-ready mobile device. These statistics will make mobile the primary driver of revenue
growth in the local search space for 2009, and the market's most rapidly burgeoning advertising medium.
This means that everyone - from software developers at major corporations to the recently
laid-off programmer who is now tinkering in his garage down the street - will be motivated to introduce mobile applications with local-search functionalities to the market. Analysts predict that the
mobile device will become the primary connection tool used to access the Internet in just over 10 years.
Local search engine diversification by industry vertical is as prevalent in the mobile
space as it is via the traditional Internet; in fact, more so as mobile search is inherently local. And while the local diner or Dunkin' Donuts franchise in Peoria may have submitted their businesses'
listing content to Google, MSN and Yahoo (and therefore their mobile applications), both local businesses and national brand managers may not be aware of niche sites like Where Do Kids Eat Free for
Apple's iPhone.
There are thousands of mobile applications - the majority of which do not have your business listings - and while some do, much of that content is outdated or inaccurate.
Currently less than 10 percent of small- to medium-sized businesses get mobile distribution by being included in local listings via search engines or yellow pages sites; those who want to compete in
the burgeoning mobile local search space must market with an aim to increase that statistic.
Whether in an effort to face the recession proactively by inexpensively generating business from
consumers who are ready-to-buy, or to prepare for the impact of unfolding trends, making use of online business content and learning how to manage it and where to send it, are key strategies. These
simple steps will result in foot traffic and new business for brick-and-mortar storefronts, directly attributable to mobile local search.