The euphoric rush toward deal-of-the day programs reminds me of a quote from Adolph Ochs of The New York Times: “Advertising in the final analysis should be news. If it is not news, it is worthless.”
While newspapers and TV stations rush to put more “news” online, I fear that they’re missing the bigger opportunity on the Internet – one that companies like Groupon and Living Social are stealing away. The more important local content in the lean-forward medium of the Internet is advertising, not “news” in the traditional sense. Perhaps that’s behind the latest rush of yellow pages companies to make their print directory business more “newsworthy.”
The latest is Yellowbook, the entrepreneurial yellow pages company that this week announced the launch of Weforia (www.weforia.com). Its initial deals are limited to Boston, Fort Myers and Phoenix, but the early sales results prior to the Sept. 25th launch portend a rapid rollout in other cities. While I was on the phone with Mike Wilson, vice president of digital media and general manager of Yellowbook.com, he kept receiving email notices of more sales for Weforia.
(We’ll explore these deals further during our Local Mobile Advertising Conference Sept. 27-29 in Dallas. Would love to see you there.)
The yellow pages have a natural advantage. Yellowbook has 1,000 directories and tentacles into hundreds of thousands of small businesses. So do companies like AT&T, Supermedia, Dex and others. The deal-of-the day program adds currency to the static offering of the printed directory and allows them to compete directly with the “news”.
“Yellowbook’s goal is to provide small businesses with multiple ways to reach local customers,” Wilson said. “A consumer-facing website like Weforia.com, built to showcase special, local limited-time deals from our clients, is a natural extension to our current portfolio.” In addition to Weforia.com, merchant group offers will be promoted on Yellowbook.com, Yellowbook’s suite of Mobile Apps (including Android, iPhone and iPad, among others) and across its wide network of partners.
At Borrell Associates, the phone has been ringing off the hook and emails have been rolling in from clients launching group-buying deals like Groupon and Living Social. We’ve heard amazing results – like one media company launching a program that, after three months, is already on a track to generate $1 million in net revenue this year. On very, very little expense.
It’s the new-new thing, and the results are certainly encouraging – even exciting. In the end, companies like Yellowbook, I think, will have learned the secret of “local media” that Adolph Ochs was talking about.
