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The Phone Directory is Dead – Long Live the Phone Directory!

January 20th, 2009 by patrick

While most readers of this blog do not work for local businesses, many of you know local ‘bricks and mortar’ business owners needing some guidance about advertising locally.  I am also assuming that most of you have a bulky yellow pages taking up room on a shelf in your home.  Mine has never been opened since it arrived at my front door, and it has stayed out of the recycle bin only because a day may come when my internet connection goes down.  So it was not surprising for me to read a recent article in SearchEngineLand.com that two thirds of people looking for information about local businesses are abandoning their print yellow pages for the internet.  A July 2008 study by TMP Directional Marketing shows that of the 90% of people looking for local business information, about a third use print yellow pages, a third use internet yellow pages and local search websites, and a third use search engines.  However, those using search engines are often directed to internet yellow pages and local search sites, making these directories very important for local businesses!  For example, of the top twenty organic results on Google for ‘austin tx party store,’ only two of these link to the websites of stores in Austin selling party supplies.  All the others comprise eleven different national yellow page directories, local search directories, and party specific directories.

So local businesses need to pay attention to directories – but which ones should they choose? It is important to do keyword research to know what terms people are using to find the products and services you offer.  If you then use these keywords to run searches through Google and Yahoo!, it will become clear which directories have visibility, and you should spend some time adding as much free information that is allowed on those directories. SearchEngineLand.com gives additional guidance here, showing the usefulness of Google Trends in determining the web search volume of particular sites. Google trends will also show regional distinctions between directories – Citysearch is by far the leader in Austin, but comes a distant third to Yellowpages.com and Superpages.com in Dallas. Google Analytics will also help businesses see how internet traffic is coming to their site.  A minimum amount of advertising can be done on a number of high ranking directories, and then the performance of those directories can be tracked over several months.  Directories in their ‘resurrected’ form can definitely help small businesses!

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