As the year winds down and we all begin to log-off for holiday celebrations on this, the shortest day of the year, the big news of the moment was first, Google's move to acquire Yelp, the
hyper-local business location and review service -- and now, the squashing of that deal, according to
recent reports. It's an apt way to wrap up a year dominated by the Great Recession
and Big Changes on the Web. 2009 will go down in history as the year the Web got hyper-local, thanks in large part to the massive rise of smart phones including iPhone, the Droid (and other
Android-enabled devices), Blackberry and the Palm Pre.
Google may not acquire Yelp. But the deal would have been great for both companies and good for the search ecosystem. For Yelp's part,
it has been embroiled in the controversy surrounding its tactics to favor businesses that pay fees to juice their presence on Yelp, alienating those who have loved the unadulterated crowd-sourced
nature of the service's recommendations. Yelp undertook these moves, presumably, to drive revenue, which is reported to be closing in on $50 million in 2010.
Google surely wants Yelp less
for its revenue-producing potential and more for its content, locally based employees and expert sales force. In other words, Yelp would help Google be a little less global and a little more local.
And it seems likely Google would have enabled Yelp to return to its crowd-sourcing roots, eliminating much of the controversy of the last couple years.
Which brings me to something I just
can't resist doing: some prognostication for the coming year. Clearly, "going local" will continue to be a huge focus for marketers and technologists in 2010.
If there's one
lesson marketers have learned, it's one that comes from search marketing: reach out and engage folks at the moment they have a need or declare an intention. The whole "spray-and-pray"
and "interrupt / disrupt" advertising strategies of the late 20th century will continue to draw their last dying breaths as extreme targeting and one-to-one engagement, enabled by really
great technology, will come to more decisively dominate marketing strategy.
As Google's local initiatives evolve and just-in-time "smart" data becomes increasingly available,
everyday people will be able to declare: "determine my location and tell me where X product is in stock and available now" or "determine my location and tell me where I can get a great
deal on a meal" or "determine my location and lead me to a hip, happening happy hour." Smart city initiatives in San Francisco and New York, moreover, will make it easier to: find out
where the greatest concentration of cabs are at any give moment; engage in scheduled street protests (if that's your thing); determine when the next bus or subway train is coming; and find parks
with the greatest number of shade trees. San Francisco's smart city data includes a plot showing the exact location of every tree in the city.
Similarly, as the content explosion
continues, and folks consume that content on their own terms via whichever medium is most convenient and available, advertisers will increasingly try to target their advertising based on past media
consumption behaviors and the apparent or declared interests of each individual audience member. This will, again, require increasingly excellent enabling technology that acts on immediately available
data and heuristics to target appropriate messages in a way that's welcomed by the audience.
Finally, marketers holding out hope that consumers will return to the profligate spending and
"Keeping Up with the Joneses" that defined the last 30 years will run headlong into the reality of what I'm calling parsimony permanence. If there's one thing the Great Recession has
achieved writ large, it's a permanent change in the ways in which Americans consume and their attitudes toward debt. The average American has been shaken to his or her core, and even now is still
learning the painful lessons of debt, overreaching and the putting on of airs (as my mom would put it).
The American consumer is still figuring out a new values system, which will come into
clearer focus in 2010, but one thing is sure: parsimony is the new order of the day. Marketers are going to have to come to terms with this new reality.
For those celebrating the Solstice
tonight, Christmas this week and/or Kwanzaa next week, I wish you much joy and peace. And I really, really hope you're about to log-off for a while. Light some candles and reflect on the exciting
year to come!