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Geographic-targeting features get your online message to customers right around the corner.
There's no point investing in a national marketing campaign
if your goal is to reach local prospects. Fortunately, there are
online advertising programs that include a geographic-targeting
feature, allowing business owners to spend a lot less money
communicating with the right audience. - Community
websites: Your first stop should be your own backyard. Is
your company a member of the chamber of commerce or the local
branch of an organization such as the American Bar Association or
the American Marketing Association? Your membership may include a
free link from their websites to yours, and some consumers use
these organizations to find friendly neighborhood
professionals.
Next, check out your local newspaper's website. Surf around
to find a local business directory, and look for content areas
where you can buy a link or banner ad or sponsor a how-to article.
Remember to ask the newspaper's advertising department about
special offline/online ad package deals. - Internet Yellow
Pages (IYP): You're probably familiar with the Yellow
Pages book that's delivered to your door. If you buy a print
ad, you could get a free listing on its website. Not a print
advertiser? Not to worry--you can buy a basic listing for as little
as $25 per month on Yahoo!, or pay on a per-click basis through
Verizon's SuperPages.com or InfoSpace's Switchboard.
Typically, IYPs include a business listing under one or more
cities, full contact information, an office location map and a link
to your site. IYP users can find your business by searching by
keyword, city or zip code, or by browsing category topics.
- Search engine
advertising: Two search engine power-players, Google and
Overture, now allow their pay-for-placement advertisers to bid on
keywords in specified regions. Google AdWords advertisers can
select a campaign within their accounts and then click "Edit
Settings" to change the locations where their ads will be
displayed. You can select individual states, cities or both.
Overture has a separate program, Local Match, in which
advertisers choose a geographic area for their ads to be seen (a
0.5- to 100-mile radius around your location). When Overture users
type in a keyword, they're given the option of entering a city
and state or ZIP code. Local Match advertisers' listings will
then be displayed, which take users to a Yellow Pages-type
page. Content Continues Below
Find out if other marketing venues offer geo-targeting. Perhaps
a magazine sells sponsorships in its online newsletter and can
segment the mailing list by ZIP code. You won't know unless you
ask. Local advertising won't yield the flood of site traffic that
a national campaign can, but you'll be able to communicate with
prospects in the regions of your choosing at a very reasonable
price.
Speaker and freelance writer Catherine Seda owns an internet
marketing agency (www.sedacommunication.com) and is author of Search
Engine Advertising.
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