Home Advisor X Five Fatal Flaws Killing Local Internet Plays

Five Fatal Flaws Killing Local Internet Plays

By Dave Chase

In my “lightning round” talk at the New Business Models for News, I spoke about some of the successes and lessons learned that we are having with the local sites (NewWest.Net & SunValleyOnline.com) in our new venture (NextNewsNet). Since a core purpose of NextNewsNet is to help other publishers succeed, it has given us the opportunity to talk with many other local publishers. Unfortunately, I have observed 5 fatal flaws that will lead local Internet plays to fail as many before them have. These are entirely avoidable but most are falling into these traps. Laid out below are the flaws and a high level summary of how to avoid those fatal flaws.

1. Farming Hunters.
I have blogged previously about Farming Hunters and Hunting Farmers which is a common mistake present in sales organizations. That is, people who are skilled at managing an existing customer base is a far different talent than “hunters” who know how to find new business. We strongly believe in having clear role definitions throughout the sales process with accompanying job descriptions and compensation models. We define 4 main types of reps — Lead Qualification, Acquisition, Development and Retention. In our experience, many of the newspaper organizations we’ve worked with only have “farmers” that have managed a book of business for a long-time. They not only are ignoring 80-90% of the advertising market that has been out of the reach of newspapers but they simply have a different skillset than those with skills to develop new business.

2. Expensive sales people and processes for low dollar advertisers
It’s a mistake to think that an advertiser still relatively new to online advertising will spend at the same level as an advertiser that has been in the newspaper the last 20 years. The aforementioned 80-90% of the local advertising market that didn’t advertise regularly in the paper is generally going to spend less per year. Nonetheless, traditional and expensive shoe-leather sales models are the rule rather than the exception. In my consulting business, I have seen technology and media companies closing business into the low six figures via phone-based sales models. With the dramatically lower cost of sale of a telesales organization, one can service a segment of advertiser previously out of reach of most local media organizations. Unfortunately, most media organizations have little experience building and managing a telesales organization which is fundamentally different than a field-based sales organization. I’m convinced that building or buying this competence is absolutely vital and should start tomorrow.

3. Inability to quantify the value of your audience and articulate a return-on-investment to a prospect.
For most local advertisers that are relatively small businesses, Internet-based advertising is still quite new. They have a hard time understanding online advertising. Consequently, they don’t know what to make of the numbers thrown at them by a typical sales reps. [Some reps further confuse the issue by not knowing the difference between “hits” and “pageviews” or “unique visits” and “unique visitors”.] They might ask themselves “is a million pageviews good or bad?” or “if they have millions of pageviews, should I expect hundreds of thousands of visitors from them when I advertise?” A successful online seller needs to not only know the basics of their site (e.g., quantity of visitors, demographic summaries, etc.), but they also need to have data specific to a typical advertiser’s business and be able to calibrate expectations of what they should expect out of an online campaign (hint: it’s probably closer to dozens of customers vs. hundreds of new customers). Taking this information and enabling the advertiser do a basic return on investment calculation is vital.

4. Cluttered sites with postage stamp sized ads
I’m not the first one to write about this but it is still the norm for most local media websites. They are extremely cluttered with tons of ads per page. One of experiences from my last role at Microsoft was being on the Executive Board of the IAB following the dotcom bust. I was integrally involved in forming the Universal Ad Package ad standard. In order to arrive at that standard, we did a boatload of ad effectiveness research about ad sizes, placement and quantity. The short version of the findings is that fewer, bigger ads not only perform better but also sell better.

5. Rate card as after thought vs. a strategic selling tool
The typical way an online seller deals with a rate card is just lobbing the rate card across the transom without explanation. To make it a strategic selling tool, there are two elements that are critical. First, it is important to recognize that a drawback to online advertising is you can’t tell the advertise to look at page A6 or watch the News between 5:30 & 6:00. Unless it’s a permanent sponsorship slot, it is likely that Murphy’s Law will rear its head and the advertiser will never be able to see their ad when they go to the site. One way to combat this is to sell your site at a more granular level than most sites. This increases the odds of the advertiser seeing their ads as well as gives your site a range of ad prices depending on the advertiser’s appetite. Second, creating scarcity by only allowing a certain number of advertisers in a particular section creates a sense of urgency that is often absent with online. The deadline of print creates urgency whereas online is viewed as having no deadline. Done right, this can also set the stage for improved advertiser retention as you should be able to overdeliver against the impression levels that the advertiser originally bought their campaign under.
Dave Chase works with the Venture Consulting firm, Altus Alliance. For ten years, the partners of Altus Alliance have refined a methodology that accelerates revenue and ensures healthy growth for new ventures. The combination of a proven track record, Fortune 100 experience and deep knowledge of the challenges faced by early stage companies enables Altus to help clients identify and execute against the best growth opportunities and optimize the sales process to maximize revenue traction. It has driven over $100MM in revenue for its clients and has an average 14x ROI for its clients.[24×7]

Dave Chase works with the Venture Consulting firm, Altus Alliance. For ten years, the partners of Altus Alliance have refined a methodology that accelerates revenue and ensures healthy growth for new ventures. The combination of a proven track record, Fortune 100 experience and deep knowledge of the challenges faced by early stage companies enables Altus to help clients identify and execute against the best growth opportunities and optimize the sales process to maximize revenue traction. It has driven over $100MM in revenue for its clients and has an average 14x ROI for its clients.

Reach Chase at [email protected]