9 Killer Tips for Location-Based Marketing
Social networking has finally become something valuable for brick-and-mortar businesses. Smartphones and location-based social networks allow users to interact, share, meet up, and recommend places based on their physical coordinates. This real-world connection to social media can mean more foot traffic and profits for business owners.
So-called "lo-so" networks like Foursquare, Loopt, andGowalla enable any business with a physical location to not only communicate with customers online, but actually get more of them to walk in the door — and that's exciting.
The question any brick-and-mortar business owner should be asking him or herself is no longer "Should I use lo-so networks?" It's "How do I do it?" The following tips are essential to getting started.
1. Learn the Platforms
First of all, you need to understand how the technology works. Generally, people use lo-so apps on their phones to "check in" whenever they go places. Global Positioning Satellites (GPS) locate the users and determine what "venue" they might be at, giving them options to select a location or create a new listing. These "check ins" allow their friends to know where they are now, or where they frequently go. Some services allow users to leave location-based tips for friends to discover later, and several involve social competitions, or the ability to unlock digital badges, stickers, and prizes. Businesses can announce specials or promotions through these apps, so when users "check in," they receive notifications of nearby deals.
Item one on your to-do list should be to become familiar with the prevailing platforms. Foursquare, Gowalla, Loopt, Brightkite, and Google Latitude are the most talked about in general, though others exist, and popularity varies by geography (e.g. Foursquare reigns supreme in New York City, and Loopt has a lot of clout in Silicon Valley). Other platforms to be aware of include Yelp and Facebook, which are just now dabbling in lo-so. Sign up for all of these, and download the apps to your phone if you can, so you can become familiar with how someone would use each one. Most of the networks have iPhone, Android, and BlackBerry apps, and all of them allow you to "check in" via desktop and mobile web browsers.
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