What You Don’t Know About Location Targeting And Attribution Will Hurt You

Roughly 15 years since I started writing about digital marketing, I’m still amazed that large numbers of marketers still don’t fully understand the importance of location and location-based targeting. Over the past 18 months, chiefly because of mobile, things have started to change but location has historically been treated as a sideshow by marketers focused […]

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Roughly 15 years since I started writing about digital marketing, I’m still amazed that large numbers of marketers still don’t fully understand the importance of location and location-based targeting. Over the past 18 months, chiefly because of mobile, things have started to change but location has historically been treated as a sideshow by marketers focused on capturing clicks.

National and brand marketers have regarded location and local search as something primarily for small businesses to worry about. The reality is that everyone who sells anything in a physical store or in the real world should be laser-focused on local search and mobile-location — either in the form of targeting or from an attribution perspective.

Even in the most aggressive scenarios, ecommerce and m-commerce represent a small fraction of overall U.S. sales. Officially, ecommerce is just under 7 percent of total US retail sales, per the US Census Department.

Compared to the billions in ecommerce, there are trillions in offline product and services sales that are influenced by digital media (retail, restaurants, real estate, home services, etc.). Mobile, now the primary screen, has helped many agencies and brands start to recognize this long-existing “online-to-offline” connection.

This is the heart of the “local search” discussion.

Increasingly offline impact is becoming measurable (see Google Store Visits, Facebook Conversion Lift Measurement, Twitter and others). In a relatively short time, offline measurement will be mandatory. Just as online display marketers are increasingly demanding “real metrics” (rather than clicks or impressions), offline store visits and sales will become an expected metric for brands.

With mobile traffic now at 50 percent or more for some publishers and half or nearly half of mobile search queries carrying a local intent, getting location right is imperative.

Marketers that want a crash course in all aspects of location and local search — everything from SEO and social to mobile SEM, offline attribution, reputation management, local tools and video — should attend the Local Search Advantage Workshop at SMX West next week.

Here’s the agenda:

Google My Business: Everything You Need to Know Now
Joy Hawkins Product Consultant @Imprezzio Marketing and Google My Business Top Contributor

Local SEO Strategy & Key Tactics (Bonus: Apple Maps Clinic)
Adam Dorfman, SVP Product & Technology, SIM Partners
Andrew Shotland, LocalSEOGuide

Driving and Tracking Online-to-Offline Conversions
Michael Mire, Co-founder SweetIQ

Executing a Winning Local-Social Strategy
Kelley O. Williams, Director the Honey Bee Company

Building or Fixing Your Online Reputation
Chris Silver Smith, President Argent Media

Mobile SEO, SEM and Attribution
Jaclyn Jordan, Senior Paid Search Strategist at WordStream

New Rules for Local-Mobile Search
John Busby, SVP Marchex

Top Tools for Local Marketers
Conrad Saam, General Manager Atticus Marketing

Leveraging Video for Local Lead Generation
Mat Siltala, Founder & President Avalaunch Media

Managing Multiple Locations: the In-House Perspective
Derik Beck, VP of Digital Marketing, Cottman Transmission and Total Auto Care
Heath Bradbury, eBusiness Marketing Manager, Advance Auto Parts

Advanced Tips and Tactics and audience Q&A

We’ve also added a lunchtime Q&A with Yelp about reputation best practices and white hat tips.

The day is packed with best practices advice. Register today. You won’t want to miss it.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily MarTech. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Greg Sterling
Contributor
Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor to Search Engine Land, a member of the programming team for SMX events and the VP, Market Insights at Uberall.

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