News and Analysis
How Brands Can Refine Their Local Marketing Mix to Maximize Results
The right marketing mix can open up doors for an enterprise brand, as successful acquisition campaigns naturally funnel new customers into loyalty and retention strategies. We asked hyperlocal executives for their perspective on how brands can tweak the marketing mix to maximize high-yield results.
Street Fight Daily: Lyft Eyes Opportunity in Uber Turmoil, Creativity on Social Can Backfire for Brands
A roundup of today’s big stories in hyperlocal publishing, marketing, commerce, and technology… As Uber Stumbles, Lyft Sees an Opening and Bits Its Tongue… Some Brands Get Clever on Social Media (and Some Consumers Aren’t Feeling the Vibe)… Here’s How Brands Are Partnering with Waze to Reach Riders…
Latest Posts
Social Network Swidjit Develops Local Currency/Barter System
CEO Alex Colket hopes the hyperlocal social network will centralize many of the key functions of Facebook, Twitter, Craigslist, Meetup and Yelp, into one. Swidjit allows users to post “have its” or “want its” to facilitate an online bartering system. The website launched on May 1, and items exchanged thus far include baby strollers, mattresses and even rides to Syracuse, N.Y.
Street Fight Daily: Groupon, Patch, Signpost, Digital First
A roundup of today’s big stories in hyperlocal content, commerce, and technology...
Groupon Customers Might Not Get Any Cash From That $8.5 Million Settlement (Business Insider)…
Signpost Makes Deal With Newspaper Biggies (Portfolio)…
The Case Against AOL, In Numbers (Ad Age)…
Study: Political Campaigns Using Mobile Ads for Hyperlocal Targeting
Using hyperlocal-targeted mobile signup ads — interactive in-app ads that allow users to submit basic contact information — marketers are paying on average $0.85 -$1.00 per user signup across all swing states, and $1.33-$1.45 across key battleground states like Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, Colorado, Missouri, Michigan, Ohio and Florida, according to a study released yesterday by mobile ad platform Pontiflex.
Case Study: The Benefits of Running a POS System in the Cloud
When David Steingard began researching point-of-sale systems to use at Laughing Man, the New York City coffee shop he founded with the actor Hugh Jackman in 2011, he was surprised at how expensive checkout terminals had become. Rather than paying $15,000 to $30,000 for a traditional POS system, Steingard opted to go with ShopKeep, a mobile system that runs on the iPad…
Street Fight Daily: Target Taps Shopkick, Groupon Offers Settlement
A roundup of today’s big stories in hyperlocal content, commerce, and technology...
Target Rolls Out Shopkick Integration Nationwide (TechCrunch)…
Groupon Offers Settlement for Gift-Card Lawsuits (Chicago Sun-Times)…
Sonar Offers On-the-Go Messaging to Friend Groups Nearby (GigaOm)…
The New Local Delivery Systems
The consumer decision now becomes: do I spend my precious hour driving and dickering at the store, or do I spend $20 for somebody else to do this for me? As crowdsourced delivery services gain acceptance, it’s not hard to imagine big brands like Apple Store, Home Depot or any restaurant chain leveraging delivery as a competitive advantage…
Wielding Hyperlocal Brand Influence
It’s clear that for brands there is an ever-increasing array of tools available to help us find the true local advocate. We must remember, however, that influence is not only the ability to drive awareness and get recognition, but also a function of credibility, expertise and the ability to convince people to make decisions…
Streets Ahead: Google Chat, and Instagram Reels