Reverse To-Do List

The Daily Hustle I am a list builder. I break projects down into their most granular tasks and write them down in a to-do list on an old school scrap of notebook paper. If you look around my desk, folded and tucked neatly reused as bookmarks into books on my shelf, and in my round file cabinet (aka the trash), you'll find them everywhere. Using to-do lists is reinforced everywhere on the web. The tech industry, in particular, is obsessed with the cult of productivity and to-do lists. There are posts on the 5 best to-do list managers, not-to-do lists, and there are apps for that. The Read more

Why Conferences Matter

A Cynical Conference Veteran's Perspective In the Internet Marketing industry you can go from newbie to conference veteran easily in a year. One, there are so many of them and two, internet years go twice the speed of dog years. Gearing up to Affiliate Summit West I told myself if it wasn't for the fact I had promised to speak on a panel, I wouldn't have gone at all. As a salty conference veteran of 3 or so years, I thought I knew everyone I needed to know and could garner the information provided just as easily by staying at home Read more

Local Lead Plan Review

What is Local Lead Gen? This review assumes you know the basics of Local Lead Gen. If you don't, the first few links in my Local SEO Resources post will get you started. Local Lead Generation How-To Earlier this year Chad Frederiksen (CDFNetworks.com) wrote "Local Lead Plan: A Comprehensive Guide to Running a Successful Local Lead Gen Business." I received the launch email, put it on the back burner while I was doing projects, and totally forgot about it until October. So, like you, I thought “if I can get a list of 83 niches and Adhustler's Local Online advertising series free, why would I Read more

DIY MBA Reading List

Drawing heavily from the Personal MBA and infusing books that are either 1) directly applicable to building a web-based business or 2) have been personally recommended, here is the list in subject-matter Read more

Scaling Local Lead Gen

Good Local Lead Gen info to be found in this game of twitter telephone. Read more

Local Lead Gen Presentation Slides

Posted on by Amanda in Business, Conferences, Local Lead Gen | 5 Comments

In Case You Missed It

Below you can find the Slideshare of my presentation with Adhustler (if you are interested in Local Lead Gen and aren’t following his blog, you’re missing out) from Affiliate Summit West 2011.

Local Lead Generation – Heaven & Hell

View more presentations from Affiliate Summit.

A Few Quick Notes

  • This was my first presentation at an industry conference and (I believe) also for Ad Hustler.  I felt slow at the start but as we became more comfortable with the audience and each other ideas started flowing better and I hope we were able to give the audience some good BTDT tips on local lead generation and clients. If you took any home and implemented them, I’d love to hear about it. Feel free to contact me anytime.
  • Check out my Local SEO Resources post if you haven’t seen it yet. I try to keep it updated regularly. Read more

Local Lead Plan Review

Posted on by Amanda in Business, Local Lead Gen | 6 Comments

What is Local Lead Gen?

This review assumes you know the basics of Local Lead Gen. If you don’t, the first few links in my Local SEO Resources post will get you started.

Local Lead Generation How-To

Earlier this year Chad Frederiksen (CDFNetworks.com) wrote “Local Lead Plan: A Comprehensive Guide to Running a Successful Local Lead Gen Business.” I received the launch email, put it on the back burner while I was doing projects, and totally forgot about it until October.

Local Lead Plan Review

So, like you, I thought “if I can get a list of 83 niches and Adhustler’s Local Online advertising series free, why would I pay $79 to buy an ebook?”

I would have had an immeasurably more profitable year if I’d done a couple things Chad mentions in his 115-page book, specifically with regard to handling leads, tracking and one really important lead negotiation tip in the first full sentence of page 18.

DOWNLOAD NOW

Read more

Scaling Local Lead Gen

Posted on by Amanda in Local Lead Gen | 7 Comments

An impromptu Twitter discussion from May still has me thinking.

@ppcbz: Has everyone given up on local seo yet? What’s the next big guru circle jerk gonna be about?

@smaxor:

@ppcbz local leadgen is a nightmare. Saw that coming a mile away. I’ve got “Barman’s Magic Inside Secrets” coming soon. Hope you don’t mind.

I reply

@smaxor @ppcbz IANAG (I am not a guru)- but I will say local SEO/ lead gen is a stable, consistent income stream. It’s just not scalable.

@adhustler replies to me

@phillian its scaleable but you need to form an entire company…look at reachlocal… I believe they are going public.

@smaxor replies to

@adhustler going public isn’t always what its cracked up to either. Have 2 partners that said its the worst thing they ever did. ;)

I reply to both of them

@smaxor @adhustler re local- even though it’s reliable (and thus hard to move away from) it’s still trading hours for dollars. Even if its not me doing the work, but an Odesker or an employee, overhead still walks around on 2 legs.

@smaxor responds

@phillian I’ll make a leadgen to create local clients for you. And everyone one else that wants to do it. Aggregate and post data then scale. I’ll sell you the lead then you can do all the work and deal with clients :P

Then he starts getting into the good stuff.

When it comes to local lead gen I think a way better way to go is niche specialty over many areas. Chiropractors for example. Then start local and keep adding more and more cities. Become a leadgen aggregator for the chiropractic niche.

That’s a very scalable business.

Look at something at 1-800-dentist. Working in 20 different niches in a local area really seems to be like starting from scratch each time with a whole new business to learn how to market and deliver a message people have to act on. Much easier to develop a message then grow to man markets.

It’s a whole new business to learn how to market and deliver a message people have to act on. Much easier to develop a message then grow to man markets.

The other nice part is to get 20 chiropractors in a zip and then have them bid up the lead price so you keep your cost the same and increase your return.

B2C is what I’d stick to if you’re making a margin as there will be more volume then B2B.

Pest control would probably be a good one to start. Realtors, mechanics… Who’s got other ideas? Gardeners?

Any real life continuity service would probably be good, house keepers. Or high cost service, remodels.

The mold, flood cleanup guys is a great niche. Talk about a scam it’s like 10k to have them dry your carpets. But its paid by insurance companies.

To which I add

Mold / asbestos remediation is becoming a hot-button certification issue in some states. Here in PA it’s still wide open though. but – you could upsell asbestos remediation lead gen on mesothelioma attorneys.

And @smaxor replies

All the better reason to be an aggregator :) sell the leads 3 times let the cleanup guys bid, then do the same to atty’s.

When people compete you win right? :P


I still believe there are tremendous barriers to entry to take a local lead generation business from comfortable (which I define by replicating the income I would have had if I were still working a job as an IP paralegal, somewhere between 85-95k with overtime) to seriously scalable profit (2-3x “comfortable” and growing).

What Jason Akatiff (Ads4Dough and @smaxor from above) was talking about, however, is the conglomeratization of effort by creating systems. Letting the work work for you rather than replicating that work in new industries or niches. I revisited this discussion recently because that is the direction I’ve decided to head with my local lead generation business.

I’ve worked and had clients in about a dozen different industries, mostly B2C in the blue collar trades. There are some big scaling problems with clients like this:

  1. More education. This client base is going to need a lot of bringing-up-to-speed to understand what you are talking about when you pitch them. That means you are frontloading a lot of effort in the pitch that may not result in profit.
  2. Rapid lead cap. You can only scale your business at the rate with which they can scale theirs. If you have a major Philadelphia plumber, no matter how many broken toilets you can find in the city for him to fix, his resources (trucks, employees) will only allow him to get to so many, at which point you have to turn off the valves on your traffic. And your profit.
  3. Squeaky wheels. Because your profit is limited per client, you have to engage with a much larger volume of clients to increase profit margins… and with an increase in volume comes the inevitable increase in squeaky wheel clients; the kind who will call you in the middle of the night to ask why your day-parted ads aren’t running.

So I am reorganizing this business to be more streamlined and effective going forward.

  1. Niche selection. I’m choosing industries that I already have a working knowledge of and sticking to no more than 3 at a time while I build out…
  2. Systems. Creating and testing best practices for lead generation within those niches that can be moved to a variety of locations. This minimizes the opportunity cost and effort I have to put out to be profitable. From there, I want to investigate…
  3. Data Sales. Specifically finding a way to multiply the monetization of every collected lead either through aggregate data sales or upsells (with highly-targeted, applicable affiliate marketing programs). There are some ethical questions involved here so I’m not yet 100% sold on this idea. (For more information, check out More Money, Same Traffic: List Building and Paths)

What do you think?

Is Local Lead Gen a scalable business, yes or no? Any recommendations for increasing profit per lead?

Local SEO Resources

Posted on by Amanda in Local Lead Gen | Leave a comment

Last updated: 10/16/10

I am not here to reinvent the wheel- simply to aggregate the resources that I used to learn how to rank small businesses locally… and how to make that a profitable portion of your internet marketing business plan.

Local SEO and Lead Gen First Steps

Tools

  • Raven Internet Marketing Tools | This tool will automatically research your competitors by examining the keywords it extracts from your site and track it’s SERP ranking for each word, determining your competitors on the fly and displaying your positions side by side. (Free 30 Day Trial then $19/mo.)
  • SEOBook Toolbar for Firefox | A bandwidth suck but amazing tool. Compare with:
  • SEO Professional Toolbar for Firefox | A late-comer to the game of free tools, but it is free… and it tracks Yahoo backlinks. Why not give it a go?
  • Alexa and Compete | Know your competition’s stats and traffic trends.
  • Inbound Link Analyzer | Just make sure you compare these stats with
  • Yahoo Link Search | Within Yahoo, you can search for inbound links by querying “link:http://www.sitename.com” and further distill these results by adding “-site:sitename.com” (which eliminates internal links).
    • “linkdomain:” This command finds all pages that link to any page within a domain.
    • Combining the “linkdomain:” and “link:” syntax command identifies what pages within the site that are being linked to. Ex: linkdomain:sitename.com -link:http://sitename.com -link:http://www.sitename.com -site:sitename.com
    • Remember to query with both ‘www’ and non-’www’ extensions. You’d be surprised what you’ll uncover if you (or your client) hasn’t enabled a 301.
  • Domaintools | Spammy sites cluttering your 10-Pack? Look up who’s behind them. Then reverse engineer their methods or turn them into the webspam team.

Local Directories

  • Google Local | Be listed or die.
  • Yahoo Local | Don’t ignore- especially since Yahoo Mobile is the default browser on Blackberries.
  • Best of the Web | The original directory. For above-the-board sites only. Nice backlink to have.
  • DMOZ | Ditto on the above. Hard to get a backlink from, but awesome one to have in your quiver.
  • Yelp Questionable business ethics, but a must-have if you are an actual business of any kind.
  • 4SquareGowalla | One or both, doesn’t matter… 4Square has greater marketshare and brand recognition (as of this writing) and has been integrated with Bing Maps. It’s also been mentioned that Google is crawling Foursquare- but not Gowalla. If you ignore these check-in social networks you are leaving money on the table.
  • Twibs | Twitter Business Directory

Tracking Leads and SEO Traffic