Google Local Search Spam
Google local search results have been hacked again…
Tonight I search “Seattle Restaurants” and woila, our good friend “24 Hour Emergency Locksmith” @ seattlelock.4×2.net is page #1. Congrats. I’m curious how the keyed pot pie is.

I’m curious how a business like this can “hack away” and not simply ‘be caught’ or penalized by Google. It’s not as if we don’t know who they are.
What do you think? What should / can Google do?
Tom Douglas - Where Are You?
Tom Douglas - where are you in the social media landscape? I’d love to see Tom Douglas go beyond his blog, which is good, and get involved with not only Twitter and Facebook, but also video blogging. Seeing Tom respond to user reviews via video, to see him talk about his next events, why his catering business is special, what he thought about hanging with the Fortune 50 wives during their cooking classes last summer, why he thinks organic is better than conventional food, etc, etc…this would be fantastic and he’d have a huge following:
And yet he sits on the sidelines. Why? Maybe it’s because he thinks he doesn’t have the time.
Tom Douglas, the most prominent restauranteur in Seattle, who has a huge personality, would do very, very well in this landscape and he’d have a huge audience, probably bigger than he realizes. And all it would take is some time and a simple camera / HD Flip. He has access to a mass amount of high quality content, primarily himself, his friends and his goings on that would generate a huge amount of traffic and truly be a game changer for him and his company.
http://www.tomdouglas.com/blog/
http://www.tomdouglas.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ngxpwrnt7bM
Tom, where are you?
Small Business Social Media: Get Going - You’ll Get “Good” as you Practice…
Small & local business owners - heck, Fortune 500 companies, etc - hesitate to start social media campaigns in part because they aren’t good at it yet. Or once they start they ‘go slow’ because it’s not quite up to their standards.
There are a myriad of reasons for this, one of which is the inability for people to realize that hey, this is going to take some time. We’re not going to be ‘great’ or even ‘good’ at this for awhile. We need to practice and contribute and build and learn - and than you’ll see…eventually you’ll get good at using Twitter, using Facebook and contributing to a blog, but it takes time. You just need to get started.
Effort & Time Question Addressed Using Social Media for Local Businesses
Some business owners contend: I / we don’t have time to “use Twitter” or Facebook, contribute to & maintain a blog, etc. We just don’t have the time!
With this contention come very real concerns that not only are small business owners currently over inundated with work, but there is an outstanding question as to the efficacy of using Twitter, Facebook, developing a blog, etc for their business. Does it really work? Is it in my demographic? “Do people actually watch / use this stuff - consume this information? And why???”
The answer is that 70% or more of the people - for most retail business - that come into your store, use your service or otherwise patronize your business came in contact with you or were some way influenced by your online presence. 70%. 50% is a very conservative number. Considering this, wouldn’t it be prudent to spend more time here developing your brand and making a very real contribution and connection with your customers online?
Cut something else out! Stop doing that direct mail campaign, stop doing whatever it is your doing where 50-70% of your customers are not being influenced. That is the real paradigm shift here. That is the real handle. Make the time to get involved with this medium. It takes time, both in terms of the day to day time it takes, and in the overall time it takes to build up an audience, but it will pay off.
User Reviews
It amazes me how many restaurant and retail business owners don’t actively engage with responding to user reviews online. “Don’t have time” or are otherwise not engaged. This is one of the single most effective ways to not only reach out to the “online community” but to make an impression about your business, one that says you care, you’re engaged and that you’re passionate about what you do, your business, your product and your service. Stick up for yourself, say thank you and make it personal: from you! It makes a huge impression online.
Unbelievable how many people miss the boat on this!
Starbucks! Quality v. Quanity
Starbucks announced today another round of huge layoffs: the closing of 400 additional stores in 2009 culminating in a loss of 6000 store jobs and 345 corporate / Seattle jobs.
A friend of mine who owns a prominent and multi unit restaurant in Seattle.Tacoma mentioned over a beer tonight: “Why did Starbucks have to concentrate on such massive expansion? Why couldn’t they have concentrated more on just becoming better - on improving what they already had?”
Good question. I don’t think it’s hindsight 20/20 either. I think this was a very real question when they were announcing ridiculously high store opening goal #’s that were, in hindsight, embarrasing. And now they are left with a product that is ok but hasn’t quite evolved with the velocity requisite with Starbucks track record.
Hopefully they can get back on track but they will have to weather this economic storm first. They will. But in what fashion and with how much strength they ascend is the real question. Maybe then they can conectrate more on quality vs. quanity.
Trust
People trust user reviews. In a recent study people ranked user reviews second only to suggestions from friends in terms of a source of information they trusted most about businesses.
Ranked lowest: Company blogs.
http://blogs.forrester.com/groundswell/2008/12/people-dont-tru.html

Flickr Ban
Flickr is a photo sharing site. A social site. It has recently banned certain accounts for “commercial use”, primarily retailers posting pictures of their products as an additional extension of their marketing and awareness online.
http://www.clickz.com/3632015
The Power of Story
Last night I was at Bartell Drug’s looking for bleach to clean my deck. There was a lot of grunge and grind out there and I needed something strong. As I walked in I noticed “Seventh Generation: free & clear” Chlorine Free Bleach. This particular bottle of bleach read “non-toxic * hypo-allergenic * degradable” - furthermore it pronounced, ever so humbly in the top right hand corner: “In our every deliberation, we must consider the impact of our decisions on the next seven generations. - From the Great Law of the Iroquois Confederacy” Read more…
Small is a Weapon!
I love this post by Seth Godin: The takeaway? Small is a weapon, not an excuse.
The web is a great equalizer. Use it to your advantage!

