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Where I Want To Be: How Marketers Screw Up Geotargeting

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Where I Want To Be: How Marketers Screw Up Geotargeting

  1. 1. Where I Want To Be: How Marketers 
 Screw Up Geotargeting
  2. 2. 2 There is an old Sales and Marketing tactic that used to be popular in business, but has lost favor because it can be prosecuted as… well… FRAUD
  3. 3. 3 It used to work like this: A company advertises a ridiculously enticing offer to lure customers into the store. 
 The customer comes in to purchase that product and, at the last minute, the store explains that – what do you know? - THAT product isn't available.
  4. 4. 4 Then the store offers the customer a DIFFERENT product, albeit at a higher price. Thus the customer was brought into the store under false pretenses and their expectations weren't met.
  5. 5. 5 Then the store offers the customer a DIFFERENT product, albeit at a higher price. Thus the customer was brought into the store under false pretenses and their expectations weren't met. Or, in the parlance of the tactic, they were  baited with one offer, and then switched to another.
  6. 6. 6 And while we would never accuse digital marketers of intentionally practicing marketing fraud, it has occurred to us that lately that there’s been a sort of  digital version  of the old bait-and- switch that’s becoming the default operating procedure for much online marketing.  Photo by LinkedIn Sales Navigator on Unsplash
  7. 7. 7 It works like this:
 You’re on a site and a digital ad catches your eye because it contextualizes whatever it is they’re selling – or whatever problem it is they’re solving – with your particular location. 
 You’re in Norwalk, CT, and it tells you that you could save on your mortgage based on what your neighbors are paying.
 Another ad tells you what the average insurance rates are for your area. Photo by Jude Beck on Unsplash
  8. 8. 8 So you click because, thank god, finally an ad targeted you and your local needs and context.
  9. 9. 9 But when you get to the site, it asks for all your personal information INCLUDING WHERE YOU ARE. Photo by Evan Dennis on Unsplash
  10. 10. 10 Wait, what? Didn’t the ad literally just tell you where you were?  Photo by Evan Dennis on Unsplash
  11. 11. 11 Isn’t that why you clicked?  Why doesn’t the landing page know that? Photo by Evan Dennis on Unsplash
  12. 12. 12 Why isn’t the landing page as smart as the ad that’s driving to it? Photo by Evan Dennis on Unsplash
  13. 13. 13 Why were you digitally bait-and- switched? Photo by Evan Dennis on Unsplash
  14. 14. 14 This is the disappointing geotargeting experience for most consumers. Marketers have smartly made their digital media more targeted to the physical location of their audience to increase relevance. Photo by Icons8 team on Unsplash
  15. 15. 15 Which is working; studies show that geotargeting and geofencing can double the performance of national ads. 0 40 80 120 160 April May June July National Ad Local Ad
  16. 16. 16 But here’s the problem: You don’t really care about clicks. You care about conversions. clicks
  17. 17. 17 And digital ads, no matter how much geotargeting you do, don’t convert.  Landing pages do. Photo by Kai Pilger on Unsplash
  18. 18. 18 And digital ads, no matter how much geotargeting you do, don’t convert.  Landing pages do. Or they’re supposed to. Photo by Kai Pilger on Unsplash
  19. 19. 19 And digital ads, no matter how much geotargeting you do, don’t convert.  Landing pages do. Or they’re supposed to. In most cases, they don’t. Photo by Kai Pilger on Unsplash
  20. 20. 20 Conversion rates languish at around 2.5%. 
 And remember, that’s 2.5% of the people who clicked on the ad (so, a pretty small number).
 People who ostensibly were interested enough in what your geotargeted marketing was offering to leave the page they went to of their own accord to follow your ad.
  21. 21. 21 Conversion rates languish at around 2.5%. 
 And remember, that’s 2.5% of the people who clicked on the ad (so, a pretty small number).
 People who ostensibly were interested enough in what your geotargeted marketing was offering to leave the page they went to of their own accord to follow your ad. a tiny part of a lot + a tiny amount of that tiny part = tiny results
  22. 22. 22 Conversion rates languish at around 2.5%. 
 And remember, that’s 2.5% of the people who clicked on the ad (so, a pretty small number).
 People who ostensibly were interested enough in what your geotargeted marketing was offering to leave the page they went to of their own accord to follow your ad. a tiny part of a lot + a tiny amount of that tiny part = tiny results
  23. 23. 23 Conversion rates languish at around 2.5%. 
 And remember, that’s 2.5% of the people who clicked on the ad (so, a pretty small number).
 People who ostensibly were interested enough in what your geotargeted marketing was offering to leave the page they went to of their own accord to follow your ad. a tiny part of a lot + a tiny amount of that tiny part = tiny results
  24. 24. 24 Your  media  did exactly what it was asked to do – intrigued the audience enough to take an action. 
 But your landing page just let them slip away. Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash
  25. 25. 25 Why? Because you bait-and-switched.
  26. 26. 26 Why? Because you bait-and-switched. 
 
 Because you set up the expectation that they were going to continue the conversation that the media – that you! – started, on a customized site, a site that was uniquely relevant to where they were and what they were interested in.
  27. 27. 27 And then you totally dropped the ball with a landing page that was little more than a glorified form. Photo by Austin Smith on Unsplash
  28. 28. 28 Why? Because technology has made it exceptionally easy to do local marketing when it comes to media, but not so easy when it comes to landing pages.
 And customers don’t know that. Photo by Nathan Dumlao on Unsplash
  29. 29. 29 From their perspective, if you can customize the ad, you should be able to customize the entire experience. 
 And when you can’t, they don’t blame technology. They blame you. Photo by Nathan Dumlao on Unsplash
  30. 30. 30 So what do you do? Forgo the effectiveness of ad localization because you can’t deliver effective local marketing on the landing page?
  31. 31. 31 So what do you do? Forgo the effectiveness of ad localization because you can’t deliver effective local marketing on the landing page?
 No, of course not.
  32. 32. Stop thinking of the landing page as just a contact-information-capture-device Tip #1
  33. 33. 33 Think of the landing page as a place where that conversation your potential customer clicked on expands. 
 Because that’s what they’re expecting. 
 A place for more details about what you were talking about.
  34. 34. 34 Not only does this keep them engaged – and educate them about why you have the solution they’re looking for – but it has the added benefit of freeing up the digital media that drove them there from having to deliver all that information within the confines of a 4 frame banner. 
 Leaving room for the creative to be that much more compelling.
  35. 35. Actually deliver an experience that is as local as the media implied it would be Tip #2
  36. 36. 36 There aren’t too many ways to deliver a local landing page experience and it can seem overwhelming, but we believe our landing page solution is the most efficient and effective way. We can deliver custom, localized landing pages on a mass scale across literally tens of thousands of communities.
  37. 37. 37 There aren’t too many ways to deliver a local landing page experience and it can seem overwhelming, but we believe our landing page solution is the most efficient and effective way. We can deliver custom, localized landing pages on a mass scale across literally tens of thousands of communities. 
 And we can do it efficiently and cost-effectively.
  38. 38. 38 So now imagine someone in Norwalk clicking on that geotargeted mortgage ad and landing on a geotargeted page that cites specific savings amounts based on their neighborhood. And then requests more information from the user to continue the conversation.
  39. 39. 39 Or imagine that homeowner who saw the geotargeted ad about crime in Norwalk.
  40. 40. 40 Landing on a geotargeted page for a home security system that compared  Norwalk to Stamford and Darien.
  41. 41. 41 That even broke down crime by neighborhood, and by category.
 And even had safety tips.
  42. 42. 42 No bait, no switch.
 You delivered what you promised – a truly localized conversation about something the customer is interested in. And that you want to sell them.
 And that’s important because the real problem with the old bait-and- switch was that it was bad for the customer.
 But this more recent and increasingly standard approach to geotargeting?
 It’s bad for you.
  43. 43. 17 Thank You!

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