IGC Show - Chicago

 Friday, August 22, 2008
Thank you Cheryl and Jeff Morey for hosting such a powerful event.
It was well attended by the GC's and vendors and full of educational seminars, good food, good music and good friends.

Chicago is such a beautiful city. The blue water of Lake Michigan and the cool breezes blowing across it. Nice.

I am already looking forward to IGC 2009.

See you there.

Steve


Local Search - What Does It Mean?

 Tuesday, August 05, 2008

'Local Search' is a term that is gaining a new perspective among today's businesses (even though the model is over 100 years old).
 Question is, what does 'Local Search' mean?

I am going to join Greg Sterling (Greg's blog) and agree that the defenition is: "Reaching particular people in particular places — who will typically buy something or do something in a physical location."

For you and me in the 'green industry' the term 'locally' drives the bus:
    ~ Contributing locally with people
    ~ Contributing locally with products in and products out
    ~ Contributing locally with services in and services out

It's not like most of our businesses are branded multi-location businesses. Most in this industry have a local flavor.

Reaching 'particluar people' in 'particular places' means you have to meet them where they are, when they are.

The Internet is where they are - locally, and they are looking for you.

This survey drives that point home:
"A Nielsen survey in May 2008 found that among a representative group of people who had recently made consumer electronics purchases in a brick and mortar store, 80 percent bought from a store whose Web site they visited first. Further, 53 percent purchased from the retailer on whose Web site they had spent the most time." (Here is the link)




Here is a table that shows the preferred source of Information gathering
Table 1: Information Sources ranked by Preference among Consumers
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Preferred Information Source Percent of Consumers
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Internet 58
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Visit to local stores 25
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reviews in newspapers/magazines 8
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Friends and family 8
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other 1
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Nielsen Online



There are lots of things happening in the 'green industry' that will make your web site 'more visible'.

Best bet is to have a professional web site and engage those who are visiting it in a professional manner.

Yes, it is The Information Age, and our businesses need to serve it up with a local flavor.


Steve




  

For about a year, an idea, 'Oxygen Footprint' has been stuck in my brain as a way to promote the green indsutry.

Now, more than ever, the 'green' movement is coming alive.

I read across the blogsphere about the movement slowing down. In my opinon, it is only going to get stronger and lounder, and the cream will rise to the top.

We as an industry have HUGE opportunity to get the message out to the kitchen table.

As of this date, I have posted a 'Summary' of "Oxygen Footprint' on www.OxygenFootprint.org for all to reveiw. There is a message board for discussion. There are logo's to download as you see fit.

Soon, the site will take on a consumer facing perspective that addresses the tagline "Fresh Air, Clean Water, Healthy Plants".

Comments appreciated. Preferred as discussion here.

Steve

Web Site Design Mistakes #2

Few Words - Wrong Words


One of the ingredients to great web site design is having great images. Having great words is even more important though. The words, or copy, or text on a site is a big part of what the search engines crawl and index.

The words on your pages should be keyword specific per page. Don't try to build pages where the words explain all the different things you do. That kind of approach will result in the search engines not knowing what you do....confused.

Gerry McGovern has an opinion about word usage:
"I have seen situations where sales have been doubled by changing a couple of words. (Nothing else on the website was changed.)"                  
Click here to see the full article.

One other thing about words .............. selection. When choosing keywords for your pages, don't choose the wrong words. Choose the keywords that get traffic.

For example, why build a page for 'Landscape Services'? Nobody searches for 'Landscape Services'. People search a bunch for 'Landscaping' though. Build your page around the word 'Landscaping' and do it thoroughly.

Click here for an article about Keyword Suggestion Tools.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Archive
Web Site Design Mistake # 1  -  Animation and Flash



Search Engine Optimization (SEO) (Definition)

URL Configuration

URL's, or Domain Names are a significant piece of the SEO puzzle.

It is important to choose URL's that are keyword sensitive.

For example: Landscape Services - I've seen many a web site that says they provide 'Landscape Services' such as pruning, mowing, etc. The URL for this page is typically in this format:

www.yourcompany.com/landscapeservices.html

The problem: people don't search for landscapeservices (or landscape services for that matter). It would be much better to optimize the page for 'landscaping' and have the url in this format:

www.yourcompany.com/landscaping.html

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Next, I want to explain how to configure two-word URL's.
When dealing with 'landscape design', flowering plants and red flowering shrubs, configure the URL's in the following format:

www.yourcompany.com/landscape-design.html
www.yourcompany.com/flowering-plants.html
www.yourcompany.com/red-flowering-shrubs.html

By separating the words with a dash tells the search engines that individual words are represented.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Database driven sites often create dynamic URL's. These dynamic URL's lack keywords. Consider masking the dynamic URL for SEO purposes.

Here is an example of a dynamic URL:
www.yourcompany.com/results.asp?cc=KGYH&b=30&catID=11

Here is the same web page using a masked URL:

www.yourcompany.com/The-Best-Products-Money-Can-Buy.htm

Observations

People Want To Buy Stuff


Data is pouring in from different places about how people use the Internet to do research before they buy.

It is going to be next to impossible to get real-time inventory data on live goods at the local garden center / nursery until RFID systems are ubiquitous.

Regardless, Internet users want to know what you have. Here is a chart that shows what they are doing:


What are they doing?

Click here to see the full size graph.


Yes, they are doing research on the Internet and going to the store to purchase ... in a combination of scenario's.

The chart below shows what they influence of the Internet and in-store combinations:


Instore Web Combo

Click here to see the full size graph.

ANLA Management Clinic Rocks

 Wednesday, February 13, 2008
http://whisperingcraneinstitute.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/anla_managementlogo08.gif


Having just returned from the ANLA Management Clinic 2008, I have to shout out that the event ROCKS !

Where else do you see 1,000 decision makers gathered to share, laugh and hoot-n-holler?

Hat's off to the ANLA MC 2008 Team for an outstanding job well done.

Already looking forward to the ANLA Management Clinic 2009.

See you there.

Steve


www.10-20media.com



10-20 Media, Inc. Summary

 Thursday, January 31, 2008

10-20 Media, Inc. is an Internet Publishing Company with specialized knowledge in Database Development and Search Engine Marketing (SEM). We have specialized knowledge in the green industry.

The 10-20 Media, Inc. mission is to be the authoritative aggregator of fragmented green industry data and utilize the Internet to deliver structured data to the trade and to consumers so that the industry may grow, and consumers may know, that we realize the full potential of the industry's environmentally beneficial and mentally stimulating products and services.

 

Internet Publishing Company - we publish several web sites serving the green industry

   ~ www.LawnandGardenSearch.com - a directory of Lawn and Garden consumer products and services

         ~ GardenViews - a blog network about lawn and garden topics for consumers and businesses

         ~ BrandMAX - a unique advertising that places brands in local search. Here is an example.

   ~ www.GreenIndustrySearch.com - a directory of Green Industry trade products and services

   ~ www.VirtualPlantTags.com - a searchable database of plants

 

Database Development

   ~ All of our web sites are database driven. That means that the pages are created on the fly by a computer.

   ~ Our databases are developed and published using the Microsoft platform.


Web Site Design – Our award winning web site design team has the creative knowledge to make your look good and deliver the message needed to develop relationships with customers.

 

Search Engine Marketing

   ~ We Search Engine Optimize (SEO) web sites using our graphic design department and our technical design department.

   ~ We act as a SEM agency on behalf our clients to give them visibility in the search engines. We are an authorized reseller of the Google Adwords program.

 

Specialized Knowledge of the Green Industry

Data Fragmentation - We have specialized knowledge in the green industry (lawn and garden). Our services aim to address a severe fragmentation issue found in the green industry. For example, each plant has a Latin name (Example; Acer rubrum 'Red Sunset'). The same plant has a common name (Example: Red Sunset Red Maple). Then the same plant has a trade name or patent name (Example: Franksred Maple). Fragmentation can be aggregated using computer databases by standardizing and structuring data.

Company Fragmentation - Companies in the green industry may have multiple profit centers under one roof. It is entirely possible that one company could do the following: Landscaping, Landscape Design, Landscape Construction, Nursery, Greenhouse, Garden Center, Lawn Maintenance and Arborist Services. Some might include paving and pool installation as part of their portfolio.

Missed Opportunities From Fragmentation - The Yellow Pages Association has 5,000+ categories that make up their Yellow Pages books. When a company advertises in the Yellow Pages, they have to select the categories that best define their company. The Lawn and Garden category (is not really a category in YPA data) is broken into 11 categories across 5,000. If you were to aggregate the 11 categories together and call them Lawn and Garden, Lawn and Garden would be the 7th most popular category with 296,000,000 (two hundred ninety six million) look-ups annually - ahead of the Automotive category. That is a huge number of eyeballs looking in just a few categories. Categories that are absent from YPA data are one's like Annuals, Perennials and Shrubs for starters. Then there's Hydroseeding, Lawn Renovation and Erosion Control too. Bottom line is the language of the industry is missing from the data structure.

10-20 Media, Inc. uses its industry knowledge to create and manage categories that truly represent the fabric of the green industry. This data is then stored in databases and blended smoothly into web sites that are user friendly and advertiser friendly.

 

Business Model

Our business model (revenue) is earned by advertising a company at the right time and the right place (when the Internet user asks for it). We do not charge a fee to those who want to use our site for information. There are no barriers to entry such as user names and passwords. Use our web sites all day long for FREE. Fees are paid by advertisers only.

We currently use a flat-fee subscription model on the trade web site and a performance-based model on the consumer web site.

 

Since 1998

We started this journey in 1998 as Green Industry Online, Inc. We then became Green Industry Yellow Pages, Inc. in 2001, and expanded into 10-20 Media, Inc. in 2007.

The changes we've made along the way (including our names) are many. However, the changes have been made with the sincere desire to provide products and services that are easy to use, affordable and effective.

 

Steve

 

 

Think Local First

 Wednesday, January 30, 2008

"The Increasing awareness about the personal, community and economic benefits of choosing local, independently owned businesses FIRST."
~~~~~~~~~~~

The combination of 'Big-Box Influence' and 'Organic Influence' is creating an awareness of the importance of buying local.

I think there is a real opportunity to sell landscapes where the plants are locally grown (and I don't mean locally distributed).

I have sat through a number of consumer focus groups that say they are willing to pay a higher price if their 'purchase power' positively influences the local economy and the environment.

The day is coming when the consumer will ask for (or we graciously offer) a 'Carbon Footprint' value on the products supplied.

We as an industry need to be able to provide the answer, as well as the 'Oxygen Footprint'value as an antidote.

Steve

The Carbon Footprint drum is beating louder and louder. Do we really hear it? I read an article this weekend in a green industry trade pub that makes me think that we are.

I think we need to have a consumer marketing campaign about our industry and call it Oxygen Footprint.

www.OxygenFootprint.org

Oxygen Footprint is the antidote to Carbon Footprint. It is about plants. Sure, but more.

It is about clean water. Abundant water. Water run-off. Recycling. Sustainability. And yes, plants.

Oxygen Footprint.org is a parking lot for an idea. Let's grow it out and make it a kitchen table term like Carbon Footprint is.

What'ya say?

Steve

I sit here in the Marriott Residence Inn in Mountain View CA tonight in preparation for a visit to Google Headquarters tomorrow.

10-20 Media is an Authorized Google Adwords Reseller. That means that 10-20 Media (me) is receiving 2 days of training from a team of Googlers on their home turf.

I feel like I am representing and industry tonight. I wonder how many other pure-bred green industry genentics have been in the door at the GooglePlex?

This is a big deal for this reason: The power of an aggregator.

You see, Home Depot and Lowes can build sophistecated web advertsing applications and deploy them across the enterprise at a low cost per location. Need a materials calculator? Sure, they have it on their home page. Use it and then contact your local store.

A message board - sure. Ask the Big Box expert, get the answer, and buy locally the solution.

One critical part is missing though. Relationship.

The web is interactive. The Big Boxes are not using the web to build relationships with their users (atleast not that I can tell). And I don't mean "Sign Up For This Newsletter". That is one directional.

So 10-20 Media and our Lawn and Garden Search site is an aggregator. An aggregator of many, many localized small businesses that have lots of knowledge and willing to share. They also have LOTS of products (how many plant names are there? Whew!).

There is no way that your local garden center and nursery is going to be able to build a page for every plant and product that is worth selling and search engine optimize it. Ain't happenin'.

So Lawn and Garden Search, as the aggregator of said information, can build content and commerce pages and send the searcher to the local business for the information. It is a practical reality and a need within our industry.

To tie this thought together, this visit to Google is going to fill my head with the means to bring the local searcher to the local enterprise to find exactly what they need, and build a relationship with the customer along the way. Great things ahead for this industry of ours.

This is no small task, but I'm up for it.

Starts tomorrow.

Steve

We finally got it right. It's only taken 7 years. (:P)   www.GreenIndustrySearch.com is working.

We've had 24 companies sign up today. They get it. The industry is supporting the notion that our industry needs ONE database that aggregates what is fragmented, at a "no brainer" cost of $99.00 per year to subscribe, and FREE to use (no passwords).

Here is how we got to this place:

In 2001 we launched a web product called Green Industry Yellow Pages (www.GIYP.com). It was way ahead of its time in regards to Internet Search. We had trade-only businesses on the site and could not keep the consumer out of it. Wholesale businesses being contacted by Harry and Henrietta Homeowner looking for a pretty tree. Yikes!

Then, in 2004 - 2005 we partnered with a magazine publisher in an effort to provide a web product that integrated content and commerce, at the same time closing off the search engines (consumers) from finding the site.

Well that didn't work either. The magazine sales team had no interest in selling interactive and couldn' speak the speak, so it sat on the shelf of the magazine. The Green Industry Yellow Pages customers suffered.

We decided that we owed our GIYP customers something, so we extended their listing through 2007 to make up for "our bad".

During 2007, we changed our corporate name to 10-20 Media, Inc. (from Green Industry Yellow Pages) because the Yellow Pages mindset was "I don't use it or need it, and it's too expensive". We were pigeon-holed into a yellow door stop.

So here we are kicking off 2008 with www.GreenIndustrySearch.com, a search engine for green industry trade products and services, at a low barrier to entry, in an effort to create a true resource for finding products and services on the Internet.

We have recently opened up an opportunity for trade shows to sponsor their exhibitors for FREE, as the shows are the existing marketplaces where a friendly smile and a handshake still counts.

For those exhibitors who want to add text and links (called a Standard Listing) to their listing, it is as simple as filling out a form.

Here is an example of what a Standard Listing can be.

I appreciate the words of encouragement you have given me along this journey. I want you to know that I listen to your praise and your constructive criticism and take both seriously.

Thank you green industry friend,

Steve

SMB Bliss? An Opportunity Like Never Before

 Wednesday, December 19, 2007

I had a fascinating 2 weeks in December as I traveled to Los Angeles for the Kelsey ILM:07 Conference and then to Chicago for the Search Engine Strategies Conference.

Without question, there is a growing movement of the SMB (Small-Medium Business) to the Internet. At ILM:07 one of the speakers (CitySearch) noted that they are finding that marketplaces with advertisers that traditionally spend little on advertising, are finding that Internet Advertising is an effective channel for them.

Well H-E-L-L-O.

For the first time ever, there is an affordable vehicle for getting your advertising message out to the "local masses". Every form of traditional media is invasive - it interrupts your mission. Watching TV ? - Interrupted by advertising. Reading a magazine ? - Interrupted by an ad.

Internet Search is totally different. So I go online and search for something to address my (immediate) need, and behold, there are potentially advertisers on the page that can address my need (at least that is how it should work).

Enter niche content, or vertical publishing or however you want to say it. Bottom line is that now there are web sites out there that address a theme, hobby, interest, business etc.

While the big search engines fragment into their "universal search" experience, the niche players refine - creating silo's of information that meets the very need of its users. Cool.

There is an unprecedented opportunity here for brands and local companies of all shapes and sizes (and budgets) to be heard.

What are you waiting for?

 

Steve

 

I recently attended the Search Engines Strategies Conference in Chicago and learned a ton.

One of the take-aways was the fact that consumers are increasing the number of searches they are doing at the rate of 17% a month.

One gentleman said that their web site had an 84% increase in product quieries on Black Friday over the same day last year.

In store transactions makes up 95% of retail sales (eCommerce is only 5 percent), and that number is holding steady.

This has huge implications for your lawn and garden business:

~ Is a garden center / nursery web site able to give the user the product information they are looking for? Or will the user have to search for the brand, only to be lead away to a store locator (possibly a dead end)?

~ Does the garden center / nursery have a means to communicate in a timely manner about the product or service they are looking for?

~ Does the garden center / nursery have a mechanism in place to take the online order and have it picked up in the store?

The answer needs to be yes to all the questions above in order to provide a satisfactory experience to that customer.

Garden Centers and Nursereis that do not embrace the new shopping paradigm will be struggling with one arm tied behind their backs.

What are you waitning for?

Steve

As I reflect on 2007, I can’t help but notice a sound - a sound that is growing louder by the day.

 

The sound is the beating drum of environmental awareness. In the last week I have heard of plans at the University of Maryland to engage ‘sustainability’: turning the campus into an arboretum, working on the rooftops with plants, recycling etc.

 

Also, our allies at Maryland Cooperative Extension are proposing a Green Building at the Central Maryland Research and Education Center. Howard County Executive Ken Ulman wrote a $250,000.00 dollar check to kick off Howard County’s support of this Green Building.

 

When completed, Stanton Gill and his team will have the “real deal” of an environmentally constructed facility. Here are some of the features (terms): a breeze funnel, rain collection, living roof, daylighting, earth sheltering, reflective paving, greenhouse, solar chimneys, bio-filtration, earth tubes, silo wind generator, wind blocks.

 

It is time for us, the green industry, the stewards of the environment, to join the beating drum with our instruments and make some music!

 

It is in this spirit that I offer a thought for your consideration: The excessive consumption of fossil fuels, the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and its negative effect on the environment has all been boiled down to one phrase: Carbon Footprint.

I know you’ve heard it before. It is a “kitchen table” term.

 

Our green industry has an opportunity to be a lead instrument in the environmental ensemble. In my opinion, we need a simple message. The consumer is not going to understand what a “green building” is, and certainly isn’t going to understand the “terms” listed above. I don’t understand the terms above, but I know they’re a good thing.

 

How do we say: plants, purification of water and air, water usage efficiency, energy efficiency, recycled waste, efficient use of natural resources?

What phrase makes it simple and a kitchen table term?

 

I submit for your consideration: Oxygen Footprint.

 

Oxygen Footprint is the antidote to Carbon Footprint. Might we develop an Oxygen Footprint calculator? Architects currently do an energy consumption calculation on buildings. Ideally, an Oxygen Footprint calculation on a building should offset the Carbon Footprint, and the excess sustains life. The thought of consumers being aware of the Oxygen Footprint of their properties would be a good thing.

 

In an effort to spark discussion, I built a web site: http://www.oxygenfootprint.org/ - my desire is that our green industry takes ownership of this idea and leads it to an encore performance at the kitchen table.

 

May God bless you, your family, and our green industry.

 

Steve

Have you looked for yourself lately. You may be lost.

You may be lost in the search engine world, while others are being found in your place.

Go to a major search engine and do a search for one of your high margin products or services and see if you show up. Add a geographic qualifier if / when necessary and see if it helps.

The more keywords you add to a search string the higher the odds are that you should show up.

If you don't show up, you're lost. Lost in on the web. To get out, or to be found, you need a plan, or a map of keywords and pages that are 100% relevant to what you are searching for, and the pages will have to be Search Engine Optimized.

First things first, make a list of words you want to be found for, then do some searching on the web for them. Take note of who is being found first for the query, and take a look at the pages to see "why" they are showing up first. Can you do the same. Can you beat them with some good creative?

Time to start learning how to do this now, as it takes a few months to get results.

Steve

I find it hard to understand the thinking of businesses these days when it comes to their web sites.

I have had this discussion with many a landscaper in a popular message board about it. These business owners are doing their best each and every day to portray a professional image, but when it comes to building a web site, they turn it over to their nephew in high school.

Imagine being a landscape design firm, and having a poorly designed web site. Happens all the time.

There is new data out today that has some real numbers on the influence of web sites on consumers. My friend Peter Krasilovsky summerized the Neilson Net Ratings study for WebVisible in his blog titled "Local Onliner".

Here is the part that stood out to me about web sites:

Website quality also played a significant factor in attracting local commerce. Eighty-five percent of respondents agreed that the quality of a business owner’s website is an important factor in earning the consumer’s trust. Over 75 percent of respondents said they were more likely to make a purchase from “an unfamiliar business with a quality website,” than “a poor website from a known business.”

We recently built a site that took the client from amateur to professional. It is pretty sharp.

If you have not hired a professional to build your web site, you need to do it, starting now, because your customers are making the "first impression" decision about you based on the quality of your web site.

Steve

GCA's Fashion In Bloom blog entry

 Thursday, October 04, 2007

I am assuming you are dropping in here because of the GCA newsletter. Well, come on in !

Actually, the GCA FIB thread is a few down, so I've given you a shortcut at the bottom of this blog entry.

On another note, I see the newsletter mentions the web award we received. Thanks for the acknowledgement.

Thank you GCA for giving us the free reign to push the edge of creative design for the event. There has been a lot of positive feedback on the mix of fashion and plants in the web design. Here is a link to the site if you haven't seen it.

And last, this blog is a place where I convey Internet advertising information and knowledge. There is SO MUCH information in the space that is not making its way to our industry. I'll do my best to put it here, so stop in again.

I'll leave the light on for ya.

Steve

 

PS - would really appreciate a comment or two as you're passing through. Thanks.

 

Shortcut: Click here for GCA's Fashion In Bloom blog entry.

 

A couple snippets from Website Magazine worth noting (and understanding).

"The Department of Commerce estimated total e-commerce sales for 2005 at $86.3 billion, an increase of 24.6 percent over 2004. Total retail sales in 2005 increased 7.2 percent over 2004, with e-commerce sales accounting for 2.3 percent of total sales. "

That means that 97.7 percent of retail sales in 2005 happened in stores or catalog's.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Most people don’t buy right away; they like to shop and compare. The study found that over half of online holiday buying activity occurred in subsequent Internet sessions. This shows a strong trend known as latent buying and the importance of search marketing."

This really tells the story of how people use the web to do research online and then go to the store to buy.

If you think about the perishable products of our green industry, I would estimate that MOST of the green products are sold in store because the buyer wants to physically touch what they are buying.

They'll ask: "Does it have any flower buds on it? Any broken branches? What kind of container is it in? Is it a bio-degradable container? Is it rootbound? What kinda bugs does it get?"

We need to serve the web audience the information they are looking for so that they WILL come to the store.

Otherwise, we'll lose out to those descretionary dollars to another category.

 

For the full article from Website Magazine, click here.

 

Steve

 

Profile Pages Work When You Let Them

 Friday, September 28, 2007

Brian Wool wrote an interesting article today at ClickZ.

It is titled: Is One Good Web Site Enough for a Local Business?

The thinking behind it is that there are many opportunites to list your business in different directories, and many have profile pages that showcase your business.

As a business person, you should make the profile page as robust as you can make them.

Here is a snippet from his article:

"I don't think these profile pages are meant to -- or can -- replace a well-built Web site. But for some business categories, where in-depth product details, services, or inventory are necessary, profile pages can help drive traffic."

Click here for the full article.

 

Steve

So what in the world does Brand Search is Category Driven mean?

It means that consumers don't normally start their search on a search engine with a brand name, they usually start it with a generic category-like term. Here is an example using the travel industry.

Search 1: Vacation

Search 2: Caribbean (search completed some time after search 1)

Search 3: Carribbean Cruise (search completed some time after search 2)

Search 4: Carnival Cruise (the brand)(search completed some time after search 3)

 

Here are some real examples using categories and keywords from our green industry using a popular search engine.

Plants - is a top tier "generic" category keyword

Searches done in January 2007
Count Search Term
 126007  plant
 40227  robert plant
 26073  house plant
 23194  plant nursery
 21887  power plant
 15913  plant cell
 11455  medicinal plant
 9511  tropical plant
 8760  bamboo plant
 7813  indoor plant

"Plant" got 126,007 searches and "Plant Nursery" got 23,194 searches. "Plant" wins.

 

Shrubs - Another category keyword, but would expect to fall under "Plants" in the scheme of things

Searches done in January 2007
Count Search Term
 10972  shrub service
 10789  shrub
 2508  tree and shrub
 1414  flowering shrub
 973  garden shrub
 871  evergreen shrub
 719  shrub roses
 695  tree and shrub field guide
 473  real estate shrub oak ny
 369  plant and shrub

"Shrub(s)" got 10,789 searches. The numbers are getting smaller. "Flowering Shrub" even smaller.

 

KnockOut Roses - Here is the brand. Currently the most popular rose in the marketplace.

Searches done in January 2007
Count Search Term
 2203  knockout rose
 287  double knockout rose
 148  knockout roses pruning
 94  knockout roses care
 49  knockout rose bush
 40  knockout shrub rose
 36  knockout rainbow rose
 31  knockout roses wholesale
 29  pink knockout rose
 26  companion knockout planting rose

"KnockOut Rose" scored a total of 2,203 searches at the same time "Plants" did 126,000

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Just for information purposes, here is the data on "Roses".

Searches done in January 2007
Count Search Term
 302248  roses
 190639  gun n roses
 53987  rose bowl
 41410  rose parade
 40435  red rose
 22122  sativa rose
 19256  black rose
 17718  rose mcgowan
 16285  picture of roses
 16230  rose tattoo
 15337  rose flower

Man there are a lot of "Lover's" out there searching for a handful of roses. It is almost IMPOSSIBLE for a local garden center or nursery to buy the keyword "Roses" in the search engines. WAY too expense a keyword.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

So here's my point.

If you are a brand, and you have a store locator. That is great. Keep doing it. There are those who will drill down far enough to find you. When they do, make sure your store locator is really good.

However.....

Don't rely soley on your store locator thinking it is THE answer. Invest in other web publications that move traffic through top tier keywords. They can drive traffic to the points at which your brand is sold, and in some instances, can introduce your brand.

 

Steve

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BTW, I understand this concept because our Lawn and Garden Search dot com site introduces brands at top tier category levels. We will be serving brands into the local businesses with the keyword "garden center" over 500,000 times this year. Not to blow my own horn here, but show me another web site that does that and I'll buy you a rose.

The Purchase Funnel

Above is the classic Purchase Funnel diagram that marketers have been using for years. It has been a tried and true model of the decision making process of the buying consumer.

Not any more.

The "old" purchase funnel diagram does not take into account the influence of the Internet.

The change to the model is happening in the middle tiers of Opinion and Consideration.

Search and the social aspects of the web are making the the center of the funnel bulge. Time to re-stack the funnel or maybe even throw it away, because when using search, the user gets to the tier that says "One make/One model intention" and the funnel comes apart.

Why?

Because brand search is category driven. (I'll address this in tomorrows blog)

What happens now is that when someone searches on the web, their consideration set goes from one to many, as many brands are introduced on the web search. So the funnel gets MUCH wider in the middle.

 

Maybe we need to start calling it something different:

The Purchase Droplet

 

See you tomorrow.

Steve

 

 Phil Adikes 

Phil Adikes and I spoke at Retail X in Cleveland the first week of September 2007.

A nicely run event from Ball Publishing.

Phils Blog, called Garden Center Blog, (along with Eric Wilder) bring blog commentary to us that makes a lot of sense to business owners, but even more so to garden center owners and managers.

Here is an entry from Garden Center Blog that needs to go in the Smart Marketing file:

 

Notes from Ball Publishing’s Retail Experience 

Posted September 8th, 2007 by Phil Adikes (click here for actual blog entry)

I had a great day today at the Retail Experience show in Cleveland. I told attendees that I would post notes on this page for them to refer to.

Keys to getting new customers:

Search Engine Optimization:

Page names that reflect search terms.

  • Places
  • Problems
  • Varieties
  • Vendor
  • Seasonal

Inbound Links:

  • Vendors
  • Charities
  • Newspaper Articles
  • Website Comments

 

Considerations for Maximum Lifetime Value from customers

For the full blog entry, click here.
 

GCA's Fashion In Bloom 2007

 Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Wednesday September 19, 2007

The fall plants showcase called GCA's "Fashion In Bloom" starts today.

It is a showcase of the new plant introductions from some of the largest growers in the world hosted at Conard-Pyle Nursery in Pennsylvania and Homestead Growers in Maryland.

The weather is cooperating for this event - blue skies - upper seventies.

I'm heading there today. I'll use this thread to report on what I see.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

My visit to Conard-Pyle was worth the trip. The colors and textures were outstanding. I would think that garden center managers and owners would come away with many display ideas.

I shot a little video footage while I was there.

Click here to see video of Conard-Pyle location.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Friday September 21st - Homestead Gardens 2 locations

A lot of energy and thought went into the displays at the Homestead locations.

At the Homestead Growers facility, the pathway that wound through the greenhouse was very inviting.

Had a long chat with Sharon Gravit-Warschauer and Doug Parkinson from Euro American Propigators. Their Retro Succulents line on display was really cool. I particularly liked the rooster (on the video).

Here is the video from the 2 Homestead locations.

 

 

Steve