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Is Search Writing
the Yellow Pages Obituary?
Definitely Not.
WHILE THERE HAS BEEN MUCH recent speculation
that search engines are bringing the Yellow Pages industry
to its knees, naysayers should take another look at
the industry that founded local search more than 100
years ago with the first print Yellow Pages directory.
Search engines are not the only medium
reaching consumers online with local search services.
Most Yellow Pages publishers reach online audiences
through their Internet Yellow Pages (IYPs). Print Yellow
Pages directories offer electronic and online versions
that provide contact information, driving directions,
special promotions, links to advertiser Web sites, and
other Web-enabled features.
Meanwhile, there are "online-only"
directories such as YellowPages.com and others.
The Yellow Pages industry has a long
history of providing advertising services to local businesses
and a localized informational directory for consumers,
so it's no surprise that search engines have formed
strategic relationships with Yellow Pages publishers
in an effort to improve the online local search experience.
The Yellow Pages are a $26 billion
global industry that benefits from a "people-on-the-street"
sales force. According to The Kelsey Group, 22 million
small- and medium-sized businesses spend 46 percent
of their advertising budgets on Yellow Pages marketing,
and put only 3 percent into search engine keywords.
In addition, only 30 percent of small- and medium-sized
businesses have a Web site.
With the emerging trend of Internet
local search, Yellow Pages publishers have enhanced
their IYP Web sites to suit technologically savvy consumers
and advertisers by adding Internet-based advertising
models, such as pay-per-click.
Verizon SuperPages.com, which has been
selling online directory listings since 1996, this year
redesigned its Web site and business model to include
pay-per-click listings. SBC SmartPages.com recently
added a pay-per-call feature and additionally, both
SuperPages.com and SmartPages.com made local search
listings available via wireless devices.
While search engine attempts to localize
content are extremely impressive - and we embrace them
as part of our industry - the models are patterned after
the Yellow Pages. They offer Yellow Pages-type content/results
and often link to online Yellow Pages directories. In
other words, Yellow Pages content is still the gold
standard for local search.
Search engines still have a long way
to go to improve local search relevancy. For example,
when a consumer in New Jersey types "pizza Berkeley
Heights" into one search engine, almost 26,000
results appear - and the top returns are Domino's, two
online phone directories, MapQuest directions, the local
brewpub and a sponsored link for pizza in Berkeley,
Calif. Meanwhile, due to its more local nature and higher
relevancy, the print and online Yellow Pages offer listings
from which 86 percent of consumers ultimately make a
purchase.
To create a better local search experience,
many analysts believe local search will become a hybrid
of Yellow Pages and search engines, combining the strengths
of content and distribution. This trend is apparent
with the recent strategic partnerships between Verizon
SuperPages and FindWhat, Switchboard and InfoSpace,
and the Yellow Pages Group and Google.
These relationships prove that the
Yellow Pages industry is here to stay, and it will evolve
by continuing to partner with online services to provide
advertisers the most efficient tools to reach consumers.
So, while search engines are extremely
useful when conducting broad information searches, the
Yellow Pages, in any format, offer ready-to-buy consumers
a number of convenient search options and relevant results
-- at home, in the office, or on the go. Therefore,
the Yellow Pages will continue to be at the forefront
of helping consumers find a local business, product,
or service -- no matter where they are or what means
they use to do so.
Neg Norton is president of the
Yellow Pages Association, a trade organization representing
a $26 billion industry comprised of Yellow Pages publishers,
marketers, and advertisers worldwide. He can be reached
at neg.norton@ypassociation.org.
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