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A Place for Pay per Call
September 28, 2006 |
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People who buy radiators online are unique. For one thing, they don’t
really research their purchases beforehand. When your radiator blows up,
you know you need a new one..fast! Secondly, when you’re shopping for a
new radiator, it’s not a click and buy type of item. You pretty much
need to talk to someone who knows their stuff, because every single make
and model of car may have two or three radiators that could fit. As John
Thys, President of Radiator.com says, it’s a different market. And for
this market, Pay per Call is just the right thing.
“Just Pick up the Phone!”
“Every lead for us ends in a phone call. It’s always what we’re driving
towards. We need to speak to our customers. So Pay per Call is by far
our most cost effective channel. The quality of these leads is way ahead
of Pay per Click.
Pay per Call is an alternative channel that’s growing rapidly. The
Kelsey Group estimates the Pay per Call market will more than double for
the next five years, with revenues topping 3.7 billion by 2010. That
makes it a revenue producing opportunity that more and more online
publishers are beginning to pay attention to. Ingenio really pioneered
the idea of the search based pay per call market, and I had a chance to
chat with Chief Marketing Officer Marc Barach on the phone.
“We seamlessly bridge the Internet and the Telephone.” Barach says, “And
for a lot of businesses, that’s a perfect match.” The pairing of old and
new communication technologies does open four distinct opportunities for
both Ingenio and advertisers.
Four Places for Pay per Call:
First of all, businesses that don’t have a website. Pay per Call allows
them to tap into search as a source of lead generation, yet field the
lead in an effective way (conversion rates in some categories are eight
times what are typical for Pay per Click ads). And for Ingenio and their
competitors, that’s a vast market. InfoUSA and the Kelsey Group estimate
there’s about 350,000 web based businesses, with another 4 million
businesses with so called “brochure-ware” sites. That leaves almost 10
million businesses with no website at all, many of them local
businesses.
The second opportunity takes advantage of the nature of longer buying
cycle. At certain points in that buying cycle, consumers appreciate
different options in contacting vendors. Early in a high consideration
purchase, consumers prefer to remain anonymous and quietly kick tires on
websites. But at some point, they may search online with the intention
of finding a way to contact a vendor, and in that case, a Pay per Call
ad provides them with exactly the right message at the right time.
The third opportunity is moving lead generation off the desktop to a
phone near you. Pay per Call adapts nicely to 411 directory assistance
platforms and mobile use. Other potential expansion markets include pod
casts, radio and TV.
The fourth opportunity is the one that John Thys at Radiator.com is
taking advantage of. There are certain items or services that are needed
suddenly, without advance warning. And by their nature, they require
interactive contact with a knowledgeable service representative. This is
prime yellow page territory, but increasingly, the bulkiness and
geographic limitations of the printed directory are being supplanted by
online versions. While Radiator.com acts like the local radiator
wholesaler, they do business around the country. Pay per Call is the
perfect match.
Calling All Search Engines!
While John still does Pay per Click because of the sheer volume of leads
it produces, he loves the effectiveness of Pay per Call. “There’s no
comparison. Pay per Call’s conversions and quality of lead blow Pay per
Click away. If I could get Pay per Call leads from where I’m getting Pay
per Click ones, I’d be in a much better place.”
And that’s the current challenge for Ingenio. As Thys says, “It’s all
about the networks.” You need to get these compelling calls to action in
front of a critical mass of motivated consumers. Currently, Ingenio’s
distribution network includes online yellow page directories and AOL.
The AOL deal was a major turning point for Pay per Call, especially
since AOL carved off the prime real estate of the search results page
for Ingenio, right at the top of the listings. But Barach has his sites
set on expanding that network substantially over the near future. He
won’t be alone. Google is quietly testing pay per call as well, and it
would make tremendous sense to incorporate it in their local listings.
Pay per call has its feet firmly set in both the new and old worlds of
marketing and that makes it very appealing for a large number of
consumers and marketers. For consumers, it gives them a quick way to
connect with a vendor and start an old fashioned dialogue. And for
marketers and sales professionals, it gives them a sense of control. I
can’t count how many times I’ve heard the comment from a traditional
sales person, “I just want them (the consumer) to call me. Once I get
them on the phone, I can sell them.” The balance of power on pay per
click ads is far too much on the side of the consumer to make these
sales professionals feel comfortable. With pay per call, the ball’s back
in their court. |
Gord Hotchkiss
President and CEO
Enquiro Full Service Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Positioning by Searchengineposition
Blog: www.outofmygord.com
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