Category Archives: Local Online

How many helicopter seeds does it take…

Posted on Saturday, August 16, 2008 by No comments yet

Local college professors invite me to address their students occasionally about Front Porch Forum.  The classes range from social work to entrepreneur-ism to tech.  And I usually get a little positive feedback, but sometimes it’s hard to tell if the message is getting through.

So I was especially pleased to get this wonderful note from Jennifer today…

Hi Michael, you are amazing. All I can say is, your life changed mine, and I am ever grateful. After you spoke to my Community College of Vermont Business class, I signed up for my FPF Neighborhood Forum, it enhance my life in a way I can’t explain, but I feel at home now. Thanks for everything you do!

Also, she’s started her own business and is looking to advertise it on Front Porch Forum.

Which brings me back to this morning several states south of here… I was watching a maple tree drop  hundreds (thousands?) of its helicopter seeds on a Pennsylvania yard… and I’ve seen this same tree dump as many in the spring.  And from all these thousands of seeds… I’ve seen one or two saplings rise up and take root.  So it goes.

Online advertising status

Posted on Wednesday, August 13, 2008 by No comments yet

Lots and lots written about online advertising dollars.  Bottom line… it (online ad spend) is big and it’s growing.  Although, it’s not likely to grow as fast as some predictions previously suggested.

Lending a hand through Front Porch Forum pulls others into that way of thinking and living

Posted on Monday, August 11, 2008 by No comments yet

A Front Porch Forum subscriber to the Charlotte Shore Neighborhood Forum just posted this…

Do you have a recliner in your house that you are no longer using? I have a dear 77 year old friend in Burlington who has had serious circulation problems in her legs and is looking for relief by resting in a comfortable recliner. I will offer to pay for it (under $200) and deliver it to her.

So, not only is she going to great lengths to help a friend in need, but she’s offering dozens of nearby neighbors the opportunity to join that effort… and to bear witness to this act. And we’re all a little better for it.

Meatloaf memorabilia… didn’t know there was such a thing

Posted on Monday, August 11, 2008 by No comments yet

Favorite Front Porch Forum posting of the day (from my neighbor, Don)…

Neighbors – I am looking to buy a vinyl version of Meatloaf “Back Into Hell” (it’s the Bat out of Hell II), from around 1993, I think. The condition of the vinyl is not important, but my sister wants a cover in good condition to complete a full set of Meatloaf memorabilia. I guess there’s no accounting for taste, but she is my sister, so I said I’d help. Any aging head-bangers out there?

Now that’s a good brother.

Web success is slow coming

Posted on Sunday, August 10, 2008 by No comments yet

Seth Godin’s recent post rings true to our experience with Front Porch Forum to date…

The irony of the web is that the tactics work really quickly… But the strategy still takes forever. The strategy is the hard part, not the tactics.

… If you stick at stuff that bores them, it accrues. Drip, drip, drip you win.

It still takes ten years to become a success, web or no web.

The media wants overnight successes (so they have someone to tear down). Ignore them. Ignore the early adopter critics that never have enough to play with. Ignore your investors that want proven tactics and predictable instant results. Listen instead to your real customers, to your vision and make something for the long haul. Because that’s how long it’s going to take, guys.

In fact, I’ve often referred to FPF as the “tortoise” compared to lots of “hares” covered in the dot.com press.

Place Blog Data from New York Times

Posted on Sunday, August 10, 2008 by No comments yet

Bob Tedeschi wrote in the New York Times (Aug. 10, 2008) about local news blogs and included some interesting data…

Baristanet.com [Montclair, N.J., and surrounding towns]:

  • Posts about five or six videos, articles or photos every weekday.
  • Debuted in early 2004 and now attracts 18,000 readers on peak days… and more than 82,000 monthly readers, or roughly twice the population of Montclair, and about three times the number of readers it had early last year.
  • The site has a full-time editor, Annette Batson, a full-time designer, and four part-time workers, [and] now consistently generates more than $10,000 in monthly profits.

Red Bank Green (www.redbankgreen.com) [Newark, NJ], started in 2006… attracts about 45,000 readers a month.

Hoboken411.com [Hoboken, NJ]… attracts more than 250,000 monthly visitors… readers click on “several million” pages monthly on his blog, founded in 2006, and have added more than 100,000 comments.

WestportNow.com [Westport, CT] started in 2003, has more than 40,000 monthly readers.

NewHavenIndependent.com [New Haven, CT], begun in 2005… has three full-time reporters and one part-time reporter, all paid for by $185,000 in grants, corporate sponsorships and private donations.

The Loop (GetInLoop.com) [Long Island, NY], a new hyperlocal site started last year… attracts more than 10,000 monthly visitors.

Launched in 2006, Front Porch Forum is a different model, but shares some things in common with these efforts. Our 10,000 subscribing households are local to our pilot area (greater Burlington, VT) and are about 20% of total households. These good folks supply nearly all of the writing (FPF employs no writers) and partake of our service every other day on average.

Community and Engagement… MeetUp and more

Posted on Friday, August 8, 2008 by No comments yet

Scott Heiferman of MeetUp.com writes today

I’ve come to realize that the uphill battle Meetup faces isn’t just getting people away from the screen to go offline & face strangers — nor even having them embrace community or realize the power of self-organized groups. Perhaps the biggest challenge is getting people to see the value in institution, in organization, in structure… a “Meetup Everywhere about Most Everything” means there’s a grounded community organization in-place when you need it. When your social network can’t do what you need. The social graph is great for a lot of things (eg. relationships & help & events), but there’s a need for Organizations. Just-in-time organization is flimsy. It’s not there when you need it. Relationships aren’t in-place. Infrastructure isn’t there. Commitments are weak. Engagement begets durability — structure & relationships that weathers storms.

Based on our growing experience operating Front Porch Forum, I think he’s on to something.  People increasingly see FPF as part of the infrastructure around our pilot area.  And often the initially weak social connections that happen through FPF grow strong over time because they are made with clearly identified nearby neighbors.

And some folks want FPF to be more than it is… to become an “institution” as Scott describes above.  But it’s not that (yet)… FPF is best at introducing people and catalyzing connection and community among neighbors.  But they still need the bowling leagues, neighborhood associations, churches, scout troops, schools, etc., to be there over the long haul.

Ad spend data from Palore

Posted on Wednesday, August 6, 2008 by No comments yet

Mike Boland writes today about a nugget of data released by Palore

This set shows the monthly ad spends from a sample of 6000 advertisers in San Francisco and New York within the Yellow Pages headings of beauty & fitness, landscapers, photographers and limousine services.

Lots of places seeking enhanced sense of community

Posted on Tuesday, August 5, 2008 by No comments yet

Front Porch Forum is focused on its pilot area of Chittenden County, Vermont (greater Burlington).  We’re working on expansion plans too and we’re fielding lots of lovely requests from individuals and communities across North America.  One such note just came in from Michelle in Louisville, KY…

I feel like our neighborhood desperately needs this form of outreach. We need a block watch, a place to hold forums, and other necessary meetings. I believe developing a tight knit community, restoration, getting to know your neighbors, etc. will greatly reduce the amount of recorded and unrecorded crime in my area, as well as produce an atmosphere of ownership and respect.

I look forward to being able to work with all of these places in addressing their needs for neighbor-to-neighbor connection and community building.

Today’s news about local online advertising

Posted on Thursday, July 31, 2008 by No comments yet

Front Porch Forum offers advertising space to local businesses at bargain prices right now as we’re working to develop as a new kind of service. With 10,000 Chittenden County households subscribing already, including one-third of our pilot city, Burlington, we have a sizable audience available for local businesses. Several are reporting strong responses to their FPF ads.

So we’re interested in news such as the items below, such as the following from Peter Krasilovsky

The 32 company strong Yahoo Newspaper Consortium, which covers 41 percent of Sunday newspaper circulation, has 700-900 reps selling Yahoo inventory, with a couple of the newspapers selling over $1 million in annual inventory…

And Michael Learmonth at Silicon Alley Insider reports

It’s been a dismal year for ad-supported businesses, but not everyone is getting hurt. A look through recent public company statements on their ad businesses shows a trend: those worst off are (a) exposed primarily to the U.S. ad market, and (b) have the most print and TV in their portfolios…

Who’s not getting hurt? Those heavily weighted in growing, international regions. And industries benefiting from the shift of dollars away from traditional media — such as digital, search, marketing services, and PR. In other words, the global ad agencies — which have strained their balance sheets making acquisitions over the past several years. They’ve had a decidedly upbeat quarter, or at least what passes for an upbeat quarter in 2008.

And Borrell Associates released a new report. From the executive summary…

Over the next five years, we are predicting that 39 percent of the ad spending on print yellow pages revenues will vanish as small businesses shift marketing budgets online. After 12 years as an advertising medium, the Internet has reached small-business owners with viable marketing opportunities in the form of keyword advertising, interactive directories and low-priced online video commercials.

Until now, the key beneficiaries of this shift have been the search engines. But legacy media companies — yellow pages publishers included – have unleashed a newly trained army of local sales people to hunt down this migrating money. Directory publishers have cross-trained nearly all their print reps to sell interactive media, while newspaper publishers have launched their own interactive directories and have deployed cross-trained sales troops to sell them. All told, online products are being peddled by 34,100 trained local sales reps — more sales people than any other local medium. With all those reps hawking banners, paid search, interactive directory listings and online video, it is no wonder that local online advertising is increasing at a rate of 61 percent this year, to $14.1 billion.

Yellow pages publishers have spent the past three years transforming their massive on-the-ground sales forces into marketing consultants who can meet their customers’ demands both in print and online. Their combined print/online packages are simple, low-priced, one-stop solutions to small-business advertising needs. The proof of the industry’s rapid transformation is in the numbers: Of all local media companies, yellow pages publishers have been the most successful in moving toward digital sales, averaging about 14 percent of their gross revenues from online sales this year. By contrast, the online contribution for most local newspaper, radio, cable and TV competitors is less than 5 percent of gross revenues.

The main battle for the small business ad spending is between the pure-plays, on the one hand, and the two groups with the largest local sales forces: newspapers and directory publishers. Both have feverishly cross-trained their sales forces in the past three years and added “online only” reps to pursue the hottest-selling advertising product in local markets: interactive advertising, including the fastest-growing format of all, online video commercials.

Mark Potts adds

The Journal story lists several reasons for the newspapers’ local online advertising problems, unfortunately well-known to anybody who’s been around newspaper online ad sales operations:

  • It’s hard to get sales reps interested in selling less-lucrative local online ads.
  • Small local advertisers generally don’t buy banner ads favored by larger national advertisers (and still the standard ad on most newspaper Web sites).
  • Strategies of bundling print and online advertising may cause more cannibalization than added sales.
  • Local online ad growth is coming from small- and medium-sized business–which traditionally haven’t been significant advertising customers of most good-sized dailies.

That last point is particularly interesting. In print and online, most papers, by covering a broad metropolitan area, are more attractive to larger local advertisers like car dealers and banks. Smaller advertisers–the pizza parlors, nail salons, mom-and-pop stores–don’t want the broad geographic reach that papers offer, and can’t afford the high rates. And they’re harder to sell to (and the commissions aren’t as large).

So newspaper sales reps traditionally haven’t called on those smaller advertisers. But there are lots of them, and other media are moving in–community papers, local Web sites and blogs, even Google, Yahoo and specialty sites like Yelp. That’s what’s crowding the newspapers out of their own markets, online.