Wednesday, November 19, 2008
YP.com Sued for "Cramming" - LEC Billing
It is interesting this story hits the day MerchantCircle announced 400,000 of their 650,000 merchants have no other social networking presence. Reading into the MerchantCircle press release, I estimate that about 10% of the 650,000 merchants are active (5% added a photo to their profile in October).
MerchantCircle enticed 400,000 merchants to create their first social networking profile and perhaps ~40,000 are actively building their profiles. The profile is free with several options for a paid upgrade.
FastCall411 uses autodialing to verify local listings. With such high merchant turnover in local search, we want to insure that the merchant is still in business and we also want to verify that the merchant has a history of answering their phone (good customer service) with some indication that the merchant wishes to service searching consumers.
YP.com is apparently tricking merchants into verifying their listings then billing them with a misleading sales pitch.
I am all for pushing the envelop, but the accusations against YP.com are concerning. If too many local merchants get burned our industry will suffer.
Here's the story:
Chicago – Attorney General Lisa Madigan today filed a lawsuit against a Las Vegas-based corporation, alleging that, in offering Internet yellow pages listings, this company bilked small businesses in Illinois and across the country through a practice known as “cramming.” Cramming involves adding charges to a consumer’s telephone bill that the consumer never wanted or ordered.
WIFR.com
http://www.wifr.com/home/headlines/34347459.html
Monday, August 25, 2008
Left in the Dark: Mobile Local Search from Google, Yahoo, MSN
I’ll note that there are a few more Autozones – in each direction, a Kragen and Pep Boys (all national chains) as well as several BMW dealerships in the area who would all have the part. I also live near a Target and Sears. Any of these would have been good sources for auto parts and are better choices than the results I found from Google, Yahoo or MSN.
The problem starts with the base data that every mobile local search property licenses from an aggregator. Google Maps credits Navteq (now part of Nokia) and in the terms of service (TOS) credits local data to Acxiom or infoUSA. Yahoo credits InfoUSA. MSN credits Navteq for maps and Yellowpages.com for sponsored results (I don’t know if MSN uses Yellowpages.com for organic results too, but they credit Localeze and Acxiom for data). Either way, these are the aggregators who license out-of-date, poorly categorized data to the industry.
Why hasn’t a solution been found to deliver a better consumer experience? Surely mobile local search is a high priority at the big three (Google, Yahoo, MSN.) This problem could be solved by breaking down the top 50 or so categories and a few hundred neighborhoods to identify the best results for each combination. Surely, auto parts in LA qualifies. I’d note the national chains and retailers who are in many categories like Target, Sears, Walmart and other brands like BMW.
FastCall411 breaks this model with a completely new approach. We call all our merchants to 1) test that the number is in working order and 2) ask the merchant if they will categorize themselves. Then, we use the record of the connection of each phone call (call length, etc) and consumer reviews of the call to weight our listings. We identify disconnected numbers, penalize merchants with busy signals and unanswered phones and we allow users to rate if the merchant had what they were calling for. Users can add meta data to correct a listing (the Rolls Royce repair shop listed on MSN would be a great example – what supper data to collect.) Over a series of phone calls the data begins to identify which merchants are relevant based on our Quaility of Service score . The result is the quality of Yahoo’s listings, the favorable geography of MSN and a much better consumer experience.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Do Locals Give a Click? Negotiating the Buys to Make Local Advertising Work
Successful local advertisers and business owners know that to close a deal, they must ask for the sale. It’s a bold question at times, designed to push a hesitant buyer toward action.
Now, take this same principle — one that you’ve no doubt mastered — and apply it in the other direction: to your advertising buy.
What am I talking about? Here’s the thing: local advertisers often find themselves stuck in between the new and the old. Online local search brings lots of clicks and pay-for-performance economics, but doesn’t offer an understanding of each local market. Traditional media — primarily newspapers and Yellow Pages — are well-entrenched in their communities, but have yet to truly embrace the performance-based model that merchants can get online.
(continued)
Saturday, July 12, 2008
A Fitting Fix to Local Search: Why the “Less is More” Approach Provides Real Pay-Per-Call Benefit
There’s been a ton of news on the Google-eBay announcement around pay-per-call. The message is that pay-per-call is a way to apply pay-for-performance advertising to something small businesses actually want — phone calls. The publisher now has something else to package and sell to businesses —phone leads. But what no one is talking about yet is how pay-per-call can — and is — revolutionizing the search experience for the consumer.
Consider this familiar scenario: you need a plumber (or any service-oriented business). You search online for Los Angeles + plumber. More than 8,000,000 listings appear. You add the words residential + licensed + emergency. Still, there are more than 226,000 websites listed. Try local search and you’ll find 5,600+ plumbers in Los Angeles. From here, you start dialing, and probably make several calls before finding someone to fix your leaky pipe.
Local Search is a Poor State of Affairs for the Consumer
(continued)
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
I Need It NOW: Real Opportunity In Local Search
Local search carries all the earmarks of a gold rush in the making: tens of thousands — no, make that millions — of small businesses hungry for more customers. Even greater numbers of consumers with leaky faucets, dented fenders and crabgrass, all itching to connect with neighborhood service providers as we speak.
Everyone’s now vying for a chunk of the ad budgets of this legion of entrepreneurs — everyone from your local newspaper and yellow pages publisher to Web giants Microsoft, Yahoo and Google. Yet the opportunity is vast and, despite endless odes to the promise of local search, the market remains largely untapped.
(continued)
Monday, June 2, 2008
Don't Slam Your Virtual Door on Consumers
Marketers need to think of their sites as doors to their business and delight in ever visitor, phone call, email or chat. FastCall411's CEO tells how.
The customer is always right. Right?
Customer satisfaction with the goods and services that Americans buy reached an all-time high in the fourth quarter of 2006, according to a report by the University of Michigan's American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI). Online retail is one of the highest scoring industries in the ACSI, up this quarter by 2.5 percent to 83. Barnesandnoble.com (88) continues to lead the industry, followed closely by Amazon.com (87).
And yet, bad service thrives. The customer is right there, too.
(continued)
Friday, May 2, 2008
Turning Lead(s) into Gold: How to Prevent Your New Campaign’s Leads from Flying Away
You’ve done your homework, selected performance-based advertising (pay-per-click, pay-per-call), created your ads, and your marketing campaigns have begun. The performance marketing concept is solid, and the call-to-action is creative and inviting. With increasingly advanced performance-based advertising on your side, new customers are just a phone call away.
Your goal is to maximize those calls and turn them into sales and revenue. Knowing and understanding phone protocol — and preparing your staff — can mean the difference between ringing phones that lead to sales and those that don’t.
Preparation is Everything
(continued)
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Tech Coast Review: FastCall411 local search
On one hand, the concept almost feels gimmicky and I'm not sure actual consumers really will latch onto the service (I for one, am more interested in reading other peoples reviews of the merchant, which merchant answers the phone the fastest isn't really a relevant factor). Also despite their public beta release, you really can only demo their system, its not really all that usable yet (It's only available in Los Angeles and they don't have much in their system besides a few select merchants). Fastcall411, needs to get lots and lots of merchants in their system, sooner than later, if they want to have any impact.
On the otherhand, FastCall411 is working on a relatively hard problem of trying to identify local businesses that are no longer available. I have it on very good word that the big Local Search guys such as Google are having a hard time validating their huge local business databases, to certify whether or not a local listing is correct (basically is the business still there and if so, is the phone number they have on file accurate). While I think it is unlikely FastCall411 will succeed in the consumer space, if their technology really does deliver, they have a decent shot at doing well by shifting their focus to selling or licensing the software for something like GOOG411.
http://www.techcoastreview.com
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Repair local search with relevance: OP-ED from DMNews
From the December 17, 2007 Issue of DMNews
Local search is hopelessly broken. Its operating premise — that the proximity of the local business to the consumer is virtually all that matters — is fatally flawed. Let's face it: scouring the Yellow Pages in search of a plumber is the last thing consumers want to do when their house is flooded.
There is a serious disconnect between what consumers need and what some local service providers can — or cannot — deliver. Consumers want service, period.
According to a new nationwide survey of 1,000 consumers about what matters when an urgent need for local service arises, more than 80% cited an immediate phone response as either “important” or “most important” in deciding whether to give a merchant their business. And the flip side — the merchant side — underscores the point. A separate survey of 5,000 local businesses revealed that 64% didn't even answer the phone.
Local search needs to jettison proximity in favor of relevance — availability, responsiveness and friendliness. Relevance can be both quantitative (either the merchant responds or it doesn't) and qualitative (think Amazon-style reviews and ratings). Consumers need to be able to rate the experience with the merchant, providing a Web 2.0 feedback loop for future users.
Better still, relevance-driven local search can be automated, seamless and convenient — the perfect solution for stressed consumers who don't want to waste time frantically looking for help.
Organizing local search according to metrics like relevance and availability is not only a boon to consumers, but also to merchants and publishers as well. Merchants can connect with highly motivated consumers; publishers can deliver a markedly better product while boosting revenue — precisely because it works.
The relevance model rewards good customer service. Merchants who, in the proximity model, might have been buried in the search results, now have a real opportunity to make page one. And, because having a conventionally optimized Web site isn't necessarily in the cards for these local service providers, the playing field suddenly looks that much more hospitable. All of those left high and dry by the limitations of the local directory, online or offline — trash haulers, air conditioner repair outfits, painting contractors, etc. — are suddenly able to compete on their merits again.
A new local search paradigm built on relevance, automation, and customer feedback is long overdue — and it figures to benefit consumers, merchants, and publishers in a big way.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
FastCall411 to Present at TCVN Event February 28
Irvine, CA, February 21, 2008 --(PR.com)-- The Tech Coast Venture Network has invited a distinguished panel of angel and venture capital investors to attend its next monthly forum to discuss what entrepreneurs can do today to increase the odds of making a good impression before potential investors. This Forum will be held at the offices of Knobe Martens Olson & Bear LLP in Irvine, Calif. on February 28, 2008 from 6:00 to 9:00 PM.
The two presenting companies include FastCall411 and Universal Clean Air Technologies.
TCVN Press Release
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
PELORUS Group "Mobile Local Search '08"
My panels are: "Mobile Local Search Content" and "The Future Of Mobile Local Search: Stakeholders' Panel"
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
FastCall411 CEO Joins SES Chicago Panel, Discusses Need for Local Search to ‘Think Outside the Web’
Richard Rosen to Address ‘the Revenge of Brick and Mortar’ at Search Engine Strategies Chicago on Tuesday
WHO: | | Richard Rosen, founder and CEO of FastCall411 (www.fastcall411.com). FastCall411 is a new company offering improved local search options for consumers. |
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WHAT: | | Rosen will speak this week at Search Engine Strategies in Chicago, as part of a Kelsey Group panel. The session topic, "The Transformation of Local in a Search Driven World" (http://www.searchenginestrategies.com/chicago/agenda2.html), concerns the implications of offline transactions that originate online. |
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| | Rosen joins fellow panelists from ShopLocal, NearbyNow and Where2GetIt. The panel will consider the most effective ways to lead offline conversions with online search products, and analyze where consumers are most likely to turn to find things online before they buy them in "the real world." Kelsey Group analyst Michael Boland will moderate. Says Rosen: |
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| | "I'm a loyal eCommerce user, but there are certain purchases I want to make at local retail. Local search applications such as ShopLocal, NearbyNow and Where2GetIt help users find what's available and what's in stock at local retailers. FastCall411 is the first company to identify the availability of local service providers for searching consumers. For us, the phone plays a crucial role in bridging the last mile to the local merchant. It's all about thinking outside the Web." |
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| | Rosen is also available to discuss FastCall411 Mobile - a new wireless application protocol (WAP) version of the FastCall411 platform designed expressly for mobile devices. FastCall411 Mobile simultaneously calls multiple, highly-rated local merchants and connects the consumer with as many available providers as the consumer chooses. |
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WHEN: | | Tuesday, Dec. 4, from 10:15-11:15 CST, Chicago Hilton Hotel. |
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HOW: | | To speak with Richard Rosen, contact: |
| | Ken Greenberg |
| | Edge Communications, Inc. |
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| | 818.990.5001 |
About FastCall411
FastCall411 reinvents the local directory with the consumer in mind, integrating artificial intelligence, VoIP, and parallel dialing. The consumer requests a local provider using a phone, the Web, a mobile device, or directory assistance. Patent-pending technology finds the best provider, immediately places the call, and checks availability. Within seconds, the consumer is connected. No dialing busy, disconnected, or otherwise unavailable numbers, or hoping a message will be answered. The result? Satisfied consumers, a big break for local merchants, and a rich opportunity for publishers. For more information, visit www.fastcall411.com. To view the FastCall411 DEMOfall 07 presentation, visit http://link.brightcove.com/services /link/bcpid1185153705/bclid1202130136/bctid1205096316. (Due to its length, this URL may need to be copied/pasted into your Internet browser's address field. Remove the extra space if one exists.)