A friend who is in retail marketing at a local bank asked the other day – “We only have $5,000 to spend, what should we do?” I really wanted to tell her to go to a tall building, and after alerting the local television stations, throw the money off the roof for passersby to pick. I’ll give the client her money back if some local station doesn’t run it.
But here is the right answer – she needs to fix some key pages on her bank’s retail website. She needs to make the World Wide Web the Local Wide Web. It isn’t a very old site, but really isn’t very well made for search engines and didn’t show up in any of the obvious searches by location that I or any prospective customer might have done. She didn’t have to do a lot to improve the site: page titles, meta information, some keyword-based html text would have gone a long way to correcting the problem. All told, a handful of pages could have been re-written, re-designed, and re-built for about $5,000 (it’s not a fancy site). And instead of 15-seconds of fame on the late news, her local brand would have a higher search return so that when people looked for a bank in their neighborhood, this lady’s bank might actually show up.
While we’re on this subject, a local retail brand with multiple locations has got to make sure each location is listed in text that the search engines can see. People that want tires in Glenview search “tires in Glenview,” not “tires.” So, if you have a location in Glenview, make sure the search engines know that. If you have a retail location in the town next to Glenview, you can also get your share of people looking for “tires in Glenview.” A simple way is – with each retail location, include a simple phrase that lists the communities around your location. So, if your location is in nearby Morton Grove, add: “Serving Morton Grove, Glenview, Niles, Skokie, Des Plaines.”
In retail branding, with a little effort, you can get a huge long-term return by making the World Wide Web the Local Wide Web.










