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Sensis CEO Update, February 2010

Bruce Akhurst | 1 March 2010

Bruce Akhurst-09481Hi. I hope you all had a great Christmas break. It seems like such a long time ago now, but I really appreciated the chance to get away and recharge the batteries with my family. Of course, we’re all well and truly back in full swing now and, as always, there’s a lot happening.

December half year financial results
On 11 February, Sensis’ financials for the six months to December (1H10) were reported as part of Telstra’s results announcement. You may have already seen the headlines. When adjusted for the transfer of Trading Post to Telstra Media, the sale of Universal Publishers and the rising Australian dollar, earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) was up 4.8% on flat (-0.1%) revenue.Sensis

This has been a challenging time for the advertising market. Our print directories revenue, for example, was earned at a time when the main media market (including online) declined by 8.5% and print advertising (including newspapers, magazines etc) declined by 12.5%i.

Sensis has delivered a good result in this uniquely challenged market. Underlying these results are two achievements I believe are worth highlighting. They say a lot about the progress Sensis has made in recent times:

  • the growth of digital media and the evolution of our revenue mix; and
  • the support we continue to receive from customers: the buyers and sellers who rely on our services.

Changing revenue mix: In recent years, we’ve broadened our horizons by expanding into both digital media and new markets, like China. In 1H07, 18% of revenue came from digital media. In 1H10 (just three years later) digital revenue has doubled to more than $300m and is now more than 30% of total revenue.

This is exciting progress. Our focus on diversity has dramatically improved the services we offer our customers and the underlying strength of our business for investors. As a result, Sensis today is the largest Australian-owned digital advertising business: a position further strengthened by our exciting investments in China, which now has the largest online audience in the worldii.

Continued strong support from our customers: A particularly pleasing aspect of this result is the enduring vote of confidence from our customers. Advertiser numbers remained largely intact despite the downturn. At the same time, advertiser satisfaction remained high. Advertisers gave the performance of our White Pages® and Yellow Pages® 222lonsdalestreetsales consultants a rating of more than 90% positiveiii, which is a tremendous ‘thumbs up’ for the work they’re doing. Finally, on the usage front, we continue to meet the needs of millions of potential buyers. The potential audience reach for Yellow Pages® advertisers grew to 11.5m unique users a monthiv, mobile usage grew by about 70%v and MediaSmart online usage grew by 7.4%vi.

Driving customer value with a commitment to innovation
Critical to achieving all of these objectives is our commitment to continually improve the quality of our services for both buyers and sellers. In just two months since my last update, we’ve been able to:

  • launch Yellow Pages® enhanced business search in Whereis.com. Now, when you search on Whereis® for the address of a Yellow Pages® advertiser, you’ll see the business details of the advertiser pop up. A simpler experience for buyers and more potential returns for advertisers. In just one month, this new service has resulted in almost half a million new views of Yellow Pages® advertiser listings; and,
  • launch the Yellow Pages® In the Car Book in a number of new markets following successful trials in Melbourne and Sydney. We’ve already seen ‘In the Car’ usage double year-on-year and there should be more growth to come as the books are distributed in these new markets;
  • begin trials of a new ‘midi’ Yellow Pages® Book in Sydney. This smaller sized book is designed to be easier and more appealing for apartment owners living in high density areas;
  • re-launch www.yellowadvertising.com.au – the Yellow Pages® advertiser site. This site gives advertisers ready access to the information they need to make the best advertising decision for them.

We’ve also seen positive activity in Location & Navigation. The Whereis® Navigator GPS service for mobile phones is growing rapidly and had a record month for subscriptions in December. There are also some early signs of a potential turnaround in the sat nav sector after a difficult 18 months or so.WhereisNavigator-1

And in MediaSmart, we’re working on phase 2 of our online targeting capability. When launched, advertisers will have the ability to target not just on the basis of user demographics but also online browsing behaviour (using purchase life cycle, life events and interest triggers across specific site categories, such as auto or small business). We’re also working to extend these capabilities to mobile. Ultimately, this will provide digital advertisers with the ability to deliver highly targeted cross platform advertising.

Behind the scenes, we’ve also switched Yellow Pages® over to the new iGen system. This is our largest ever technology innovation program and, after a few nervous weeks, the transition is now starting to show meaningful progress.

Its common knowledge major systems redevelopment projects are often difficult but, I must say, that’s pretty cold comfort when you’re going through one. While the program has been mostly successful, we are disappointed the upgrade didn’t go exactly to plan and we’re very conscious of the impact it has had in areas such as customer care levels.

Nevertheless, I’m pleased to say the biggest system challenges seem to be behind us and iGen is now stable and operating effectively. We have dedicated teams working through the backlog of change requests and service orders to bring us back to our usually high standards of customer service. And I’m also pleased to see our latest regional books – the first produced using iGen – are now being distributed.

Moving forward, we can look forward to delivering real customer benefits from iGen. These improvements will impact areas such as customer care, speed to market, search capabilities, product integration and content management – among many other capabilities.

Print and online directories certified carbon neutral
CarbonNeutralRecently, in a world’s first for a major directories company, we announced our print and online directories have been certified carbon neutral through the Australian Government’s Greenhouse Friendly™ program. We have committed to offset the carbon emissions of our directories through Greenhouse Friendly™ accredited providers and projects. At the same time, we have committed to reducing our operational greenhouse gas footprint by 5% year on year to 2012.

We also recently celebrated ten years of directory kerb-side recycling. This program has been an immense success. Recycling rates are up from 4% in 1999 to 96% recycled or re-used today. As a result, more than 175m directories have been recycled since 2000.
I’m incredibly proud of these achievements. Together, these two initiatives demonstrate not only our commitment to sustainability but our success in turning that commitment into positive action.

Federal Court copyright decision
Recently, a single judge (Justice Gordon) of the Federal Court found there was no copyright in the compilation of factual information in our White Pages® and Yellow Pages® print directories. ‘Factual information’ in this case refers to the names, numbers and addresses contained in the directories but, importantly, does not affect copyright in display ads. Not only is this outcome disappointing for Sensis and Telstra, it has far reaching implications for any business that invests in the development of compilations, such as customer lists, postcodes, TV guides, anthologies, racing information, and marketing lists.

We have been granted leave to appeal the Federal Court’s decision and are likely to do so. In the meantime, there is a critical assurance I want to make – particularly to our customers: our success as a business is not solely reliant on copyright protection.

For more than a decade now, Sensis has been operating in a competitive market in both print and online. In print, competitors have been copying our data for years in certain markets. And, in online, we’ve been operating in the same market as some of the world’s largest online businesses for the same period of time.

Despite this competition and the negative comments you occasionally read in the media, our business and, most importantly, the value we offer both buyers and sellers are stronger than ever.

It’s business as usual as far as we’re concerned. Continuing to build the returns for our customers, investors and the community is what matters.

All the best,

Bruce Akhurst

i CEASA, Main Media Report. June 2009. Note: 1H10 print directories results backdated six months to align sales cycles with the rest of the media market.
ii Clickz.com Web Worldwide http://www.clickz.com/stats/web_worldwide
iii TNS, Sensis KPI Report, December 2009. Average monthly satisfaction score – July 2009 to December 2009
iv Roy Morgan, Single Source Australia. September quarter 2009. Base: Australians14+
v Omniture, December quarter 2009 compared to 2008
vi Roy Morgan, Single Source Australia. September quarter 2009. Base: Australians14+

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Sensis CEO Update, December 2009

Bruce Akhurst | 17 December 2009

Bruce Akhurst-09481With the end of the year almost upon us, Sensis’ CEO, Bruce Akhurst, provides his first bi-monthly update.

Hi.

I thought it might be good to end the year by starting something… a regular report that I hope will give you a deeper insight into how Sensis is working to improve the value we offer all Australians.

New ways to help you find, buy and sell
iPhoneAppHomeSensis is committed to helping you find, buy and sell. Our services help you find the suppliers you need right when you need them. In doing this, we help thousands of local businesses find their lifeblood – customers.

Our innovation programs reflect this commitment. How can we make our services simpler and more informative for buyers? And how can we build the value and simplicity of our advertiser services?

On this front, we’ve been particularly busy in the last few weeks. We launched the White Pages® app for iPhone recently. I was very happy to see that it reached the #1 free app in Apple’s App Store very quickly. This caps off an exciting quarter for our mobile sites, with usage growing off the scale. We launched White Pages® Mobile four months ago and it’s already delivering over 400,000 visits a month1. At about the same time, we also launched the Yellow Pages® iPhone app. Since then, Yellow Pages® Mobile usage has more than doubled to over 650,000 visits a month2… in just a few months!  Clearly, Australians are connecting with these new generation mobile services and that’s great for advertisers. Our network strategy means that Yellow Pages® advertisers – print and online – can be searched through mobile and therefore can benefit from mobile usage growth.

YP_PG_ICON_GROUP_01_CMYK1We’ve also recently commenced delivery of the 2009 Yellow Pages®. This year’s book includes a more informative front cover and an expanded information section. Both of these enhancements were specific requests from Australians who participated in research we conducted earlier this year.

In Yellow Pages® Online, we’ve recently launched a new advertiser product – Purely Mobile Business, or PMB. PMB is designed for mobile businesses, like mobile mechanics, looking to reach out to customers in the areas they service.

We also recently launched Category Search, which is a new product that lets advertisers combine Voice, Whereis® and Citysearch® advertising into a single, easy to use product. Response has been strong, with hundreds of customers choosing Category Search in just a few weeks.

melbourne_3dThe Whereis® team has just released 3D City Maps for GPS to sat nav equipment manufacturers. 3D City Maps bring the Sydney and Melbourne CBD areas to life by providing a real-time 3D city-scape. 3D City Maps should be launched in popular GPS units shortly, and more cities will be ‘3D’d’ in the near future.

Finally, MediaSmart – our online and mobile display advertising business – has released new targeting capabilities. Working closely with Telstra, we’ve developed a segmentation capability that ensures mobile display advertising is more relevant and targeted for both mobile users and advertisers… like helping a major bank deliver specific branch manager contact details to customers mobile phones based on their location. This is a genuinely unique capability and I’m pleased to say the support from marketers has been fantastic.

In the field
Right now, our Yellow Pages® regional and local consultants are out talking to advertisers, as are our White Pages® consultants. We’ve been backing them up with new products, comprehensive training and a much stronger focus on engaging with local communities.

This local focus led to the opening of a new office in Penrith on November 10 (with offices in Ballina and Coffs Harbour also opening soon). We were really pleased to open Penrith by announcing a new community partnership with Great Community Transport. At the same time, we’ve been increasing our support for local businesses by regularly sponsoring and speaking at local events – over 80 in the last few months.

Network2

1.5 million calls… and counting
If you ever wanted proof of the value of Yellow Pages®, here it is. As you may know, we’ve been running a metered ad program for two years now. This program helps advertisers track the number of calls they receive from Yellow Pages® print.

In January, we began monitoring the phone calls delivered by Yellow Pages® print to a small cross-section of display ad customers (a sample of less than 1% of our total customer base). By early November, the number of calls delivered to these customers by Yellow Pages® print passed the 1.5 million threshold!

Imagine how many valuable phone calls Yellow Pages® is delivering to all our advertisers. Imagine how many more enquiries there are when you add people who are bypassing the phone and visiting the store or office. And imagine how that number could grow even further if you included all the other Sensis and third party online, mobile and voice services that form the Yellow Pages® network.

Interesting movements in the advertising market
Recently, we’ve seen some interesting movements in the media sector. The September quarter IAB report showed 3.3% growth in the online advertising market compared to the September quarter last year3. While this is a marked slowdown on last year, the results were really buoying for Sensis, as they show we are growing our share of the market.

Another interesting observation comes from our Adstream business. Adstream sits at the centre of the ad industry by helping marketers, agencies and media outlets, like TV, radio and newspaper publishers, manage and distribute their ad content. We’ve seen renewed growth in enquiries to Adstream recently. Could this mean the ad industry’s on its way back?

Our people have spoken
The other day, we received the results of our latest employee opinion survey. This is a global survey undertaken by Towers Perrin and it covers some of Australia’s, and the worlds, largest companies. In the latest survey, Sensis exceeded the Australian norm (the average of all Australian companies) in every category. Our results also benchmarked well among the world’s best employers, with results in a number of categories exceeding global norms. This is fantastic news. We work hard to ensure Sensis is a great place to work for our present and future employees. These results tell us we’re on the right track.

SSR front coverSensis Sustainability Report
Finally, if you’d like to know more about Sensis’ strategy, operations, performance and impacts, I’d recommend you check out the 2008/9 Sensis Sustainability Report, which has just been launched. You can download it today from our newly upgraded corporate site.

Until next time
So that’s it for now. Have a happy, relaxing and safe Christmas and New Year. I’ll be back to you with a further update in February. In the meantime, thanks for all your support. You can rest assured we’ll be pulling out all stops to keep improving our value to you.

1: Omiture Site Catalyst, November 2009;
2: ibid
3: PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Internet Advertising Bureau Online Advertising Expenditure Report, quarter ended September 2009.

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Whereis® putting Queensland on the map

Danielle | 16 December 2009

danA high-tech, high-powered mapping vehicle will be putting areas surrounding Cunnamulla and St George on the map this week…quite literally.

Little-known Queensland towns in this area will be some of the many new inclusions that Whereis® – Australia’s local mapping expert – will soon be adding to its extensive navigation map database of Australian cities, towns, landmarks and roads.

“The Whereis® four-wheel-drive has a large, round Trimble GPS receiver on the roof. It’s been causing a bit of a stir as it passes through towns in Queensland as people try to work out what’s going on,” Adrian Tout of Whereis® said.

“People get quite excited when they find out we’re mapping most of Queensland’s roads and landmarks so that locals, as well as visitors, have access to the most up-to-date map information on Queensland in their GPS device,” he said.

Cunnamulla

“While Queensland is one of Australia’s most popular tourist destinations you wouldn’t know how to get to a lot of areas unless you had local knowledge. With Whereis maps in your GPS device, it’s like taking someone who knows the lay-of-the-land with you – with useful details such as the condition of the road.”

“Our team on the road is making a big effort to mark points of interest for travelers – boat ramps, highway rest areas, spectacular look-outs, motels and van parks, public river access points are all detailed for travelers keen to go off the beaten track.”

The Whereis® car has logged more than 245,000 kilometres of mainland Australian roads to date this year, and is on-schedule to log a further 6,500 kilometres in Queensland during the next few months. The Whereis team will then convert the data into digital maps to be used in GPS units, the online mapping site whereis.com, various navigation apps for the iPhone and the Whereis® Navigator application, which is accessible on selected Telstra mobile phones.

Andrew Wood, part of the Whereis mapping team has been assigned to this important mission. He has mapped thousands of kilometers of road for Whereis and has teamed up with a skilled driver to map Queensland. “This is the best job in the world – I get paid to drive around one of Australia’s most beautiful states,” he said.

“Some of the maps people are using to navigate Queensland today are extremely old and many have simply been digitised from older printed maps – and large parts of back roads on maps are also inaccurate. We also taking into account the many changes that have been made over the years with the development of intersection upgrades on main roads and new estates,” Andrew said.

The two-man Whereis team has already mapped more than 30,000km in south-eastern Queensland including Wallangarra, Gatton, Esk, Kingaroy, Chinchilla and Gooniwindi.

Andrew counts seeing two kangaroos going head to head in the middle of the road as one of the most unusual things he’s seen during his travels to date and is looking forward to visiting the Gulf and Cape York to try his hand at Barramundi fishing.

The Whereis car began its Queensland adventure in Stanthorpe, mapping an old road that had been re-opened. Over the next few weeks, the car will be focusing on the areas surrounding Cunnamulla and St George with travelers and locals in mind.

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Citysearch.com.au and Whereis.com up the ante for advertisers

Danielle | 12 October 2009

danIn a bid to connect more advertisers with consumers who are looking for products and services online, Sensis announced a helpful new service last week. The launch of ‘category search’ on www.whereis.com and www.citysearch.com.au means Sensis advertisers can now access priority advertising across these two online sites.

So what does this actually mean for you or I? Well it means when the millions of people who use the Whereis.com or Citysearch.com.au sites each month and they search for a business either on a map or while they’re browsing entertainment information at Citysearch, a list of ‘priority advertisers’ relevant to what they are looking for will appear at the top of the search results. Top advertisers in whereis.com will also open up automatically on the map to create a seamless one-click experience for those looking for a business. Advertisers on citysearch.com.au receive richer profile pages and reviews from the public about their product or service.

If you want to check out an example of this on www.whereis.com search for ‘florist’ in ‘Camberwell’.

To view an example of this on www.citysearch.com.au type ‘restaurant’ in the search box on the home page.

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Whereis® offers Australians new ways to navigate

Danielle | 31 August 2009

danWhereis® is now offering Australians three new ways to find their way around town – Whereis® fuel savings, Whereis® Navigator turn by turn instructions from the 1234 voice service and Whereis® Traffic.

Whereis® fuel savings
When it goes live on 17 August, Whereis® Fuel will take the guesswork out of finding cheap fuel.

The simple, new mobile application uses GPS data to help find the cheapest fuel nearby from Australia’s best source of fuel price information, MotorMouth.com.au. The fuel service adds to the existing suite of rich content already available through Whereis® Navigator which includes weather forecasts, traffic incident alerts and business searches via Yellow Pages®.

Mario Davoli, General Manager, Telstra Mobile Applications, said the Whereis® Navigator functionality means users can then opt to receive turn-by-turn, spoken directions from any location to help find the nearest and cheapest fuel supplier listed.

Sign up for a free, 7-day trial of Whereis® Navigator on compatible handsets* to take advantage of the full suite of GPS functions.

Easy as 1234
Dial 1234 on a Whereis® Navigator enabled handset and you can now receive turn-by turn spoken directions to Yellow™ and White Pages® listings anywhere across Australia.

Whereis® Navigator customers can now enjoy all the benefits of an in-car GPS via the new integrated mobile service.

Whereis® Navigator, Commercial Manager, Fred Curtis regards 1234 integration as a significant step towards seamless mobile navigation technology.

“The fact that it now only takes a quick phone call and single click on an SMS link for a Whereis® Navigator customer to be guided via spoken directions to one of thousands of locations across the country is a really exciting development,” he said

An added ‘send to a friend’ function allows for simple sharing of direction data via SMS.

Whereis® Traffic
Avoiding serious traffic jams and finding your way around major traffic incidents just got easier, with launch of Whereis® Navigator Traffic in Adelaide, Canberra and Perth.

The new feature launched initially in March in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane helps drivers choose the best route to their destination by re-directing them around high-impact traffic incidents.

Whereis® Navigator is available on a range of mobile handsets including a selection of Blackberry, iMate, Palm Treo, Samsung, HTC, Nokia and Sony Ericsson devices. For further information, customers can visit their local Telstra shop or dealer, www.telstra.com/navigator or call 13 22 00.

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Sensis listens, learns, launches

Wayne Aspland | 15 July 2009

waThere’s a lot of improvement going on at Sensis. And our customers like what they’re seeing.

If there’s one thing this world definitely doesn’t want for, it’s business advice.

I mean, there’s more business books out there today than skivvies at a Trekkies convention. If you don’t believe me, try searching for “marketing” at Amazon.com’s book section… and be amazed by the mind-snapping 535,000 results you get .

The irony is that this torrent of advice all boils down to some pretty basic principles. And the most fundamental of them all is:

Give your customers what they want.

With that in mind, Sensis has been working closely with the buyers and sellers who rely on our services: listening to them, learning about their needs and launching the solutions to help them.

This approach has led to a stream of new innovations over the last couple of years. From info-rich advertising and metered ads to the Yellow™ in the car directory, to agreements with Ninemsn and Google Maps, to re-builds of our directory web sites to the new mobile sites that are now delivering 8% of our total digital traffic (1) .

More importantly, this customer-centric approach – which can be seen not just in our product development, but in our focus on effective sales and customer service – has contributed to a real spike in customer satisfaction. Between February 08 and May 09, for example, satisfaction among users of our directory sites increased by 10 percentage points (pp) for Yellow Pages® OnLine (2) and 14pp for White Pages® OnLine (3).

And we’re keeping the heat on the innovation front so we can deliver continuous improvement to our customers. In just the last fortnight, for example, we’ve launched the following upgrades to our digital local search sites.

Easy to access

Buyers are looking for more touchpoints, so they can access our services whenever and wherever they want to.

To assist this, we’ve just launched White Pages® Mobile. The new mobile version of White Pages® gives you access to residential, business or government contacts together with maps and directions and the ability to save listings to your contacts or share them with friends. And it’s all just one click away from the BigPond mobile menu.

We’ve also improved the popular send to mobile feature on Whereis.com. Send to mobile is a simple way to send your online search results to your mobile. That way, you can easily take the business details you found on your computer out on the road with you.

Easy to search

People are also looking for easier ways to search – less entry boxes and more relevant results. Over the last fortnight, we’ve continued to answer this call by launching:

  • Streamlined search in White Pages® OnLine. We’ve reduced the number of entry windows, which means less typing and faster results. For example, the number of business search windows has shrunk from four to two.
  • Auto-complete for White Pages® OnLine searches. By suggesting answers while you’re typing this new facility saves even more time and helps ensure more relevant results.
  • New user-friendly URLs for Yellow Pages® OnLine advertiser pages. This means site users can easily bookmark the results page for businesses they’re interested in. And, if you’re an advertiser, you can link straight from your web site to your Yellow Pages® OnLine ad.
  • The addition of business listing names to the Yellow Pages® OnLine search algorithm. This has the potential to greatly expand the relevant results site users will receive. For example, a search for Thai Restaurants on the Gold Coast currently returns 87 listings, instead of only 26 in the past.

Easy to find

And what about when you’ve found the business listing you want? What are we doing to make it easier for you to get in contact with that business?

If you’re hungry, Yellow Pages® OnLine has made it easier than ever to book a restaurant or order a meal. There are already over 500 registered Menulog restaurants across Australia that are now also listed with Yellow Pages® OnLine under headings like Restaurants and Cafes.  For example, you can search for Indian Restaurants in Melbourne VIC, and find restaurants like Nirankar Fine Indian Cuisine or Bombay Beat Restaurant that provide one click access to Menulog’s booking and ordering facilities.

We’ve also added landmark navigation to the Whereis.com web site. As a result, you’ll begin seeing turn by turn directions like “turn right at the Post Office” rather than just “turn right in 200m”. This enhancement is the result of research undertaken by Melbourne Uni’s Geomatics department and Whereis. The research clearly showed that people are able to navigate more easily and precisely using landmarks.

I hope you’ll agree that that’s not a bad haul for a fortnight. But it’s far from the end. Continuous improvement means continuous innovation, so keep your eye on Speaking Sensis for more listening, learning and launching in the future.

1. Omniture. June 2009
2. 2 Degrees Research, Yellow Pages® OnLine User Satisfaction Survey, Wave 15, May 2009
3. 2 Degrees Research, whitepages.com.au User Satisfaction Survey, May 2009

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iPhone and Whereis® tell Australians where to go

Danielle | 25 June 2009

daniPhone users who have been waiting for Apple to release a turn-by-turn navigation product needn’t wait any longer – this week the first Australian turn-by-turn, voice guided navigation application for the iPhone was launched and our very own Whereis® is the sole mapping provider for Australia and NZ maps.

The international navigation company Sygic, who launched the iPhone application, chose to partner with Whereis® to supply the navigational data.

Called Sygic Mobile Maps Australia, it’s available now via iTunes for AU$79.99. Sygic Mobile Maps Australia for the iPhone features all the usual ‘bells and whistles’ courtesy of the comprehensive Whereis® mapping data set, including turn-by-turn voice guidance, automatic re-routing, lane guidance and speed limit info, as well as red light and speed cameras.

sygic

The partnership between Sygic and Whereis® is an exciting announcement and a step in the right direction to ensuring more Australians have easy access to a quality navigation experience across a range of devices.

Both Whereis® and Sygic share the ambition of bringing the best navigation experience to Australian consumers, so the partnership was a no brainer for both parties.

In media news this week, Sygic said they were pleased to partner with Australia’s leading mapping provider, Whereis®, given their confidence in the ability of Whereis® to bring Australian customers the most accurate, rich and up to date map data and content in the country.

Check it out and read the reviews at iTunes by searching for ‘Sygic’.

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Sensis on local search 3: DIVERSE

Wayne Aspland | 17 June 2009

waOkay. So, hopefully my last article established that print isn’t a spent force in local search… it’s actually growing.

Having done that, however, I now need to change tack a bit and proffer a slightly different view: that this whole ‘print vs online’ debate is all a bit of a pointless exercise.

For the best part of a decade now, local search players of various persuasions have been running around with their chests puffed out, proclaiming to anyone who’ll listen that “my channel’s bigger than your channel”.

But the sad truth about this posturing is that it’s all pretty much irrelevant.

The bottom line is that buyers are exercising their right to choice and searching for local businesses across all sorts of different channels – like print, online, voice and mobile.

Here’s a case in point.

If we cut the print vs online usage of all the print and online services containing Yellow Pages® advertiser content, we find an interesting set of numbers(1) :

  • 41% of the audience use print only;
  • 32% use online only;
  • 26% use both.

venn1

Clearly, in this environment, you can’t truly optimise a local search strategy by choosing between print or online (or any of the other channels).

You can only do that by choosing them all.

Or course, that’s not such an easy thing. If you start toting up the number of vendors offering local search services across all these channels, you’ll quickly find they number into the hundreds.

If you tried to deal with all of them, you could end up spending so much time finding customers that you’d have no time to serve them.

So, the ideal solution in local search ends up looking a bit like this:

  1. Provide a wide range of services to buyers so they can choose the way they want to search. That can ultimately lead to a larger audience;
  2. Syndicate advertiser content across as many of those channels as possible so advertisers can optimise reach and still get some sleep.

That, in essence, is what we’ve tried to do with Yellow Pages®.

When you advertise in Yellow Pages® today, you’re not just advertising in the print directories. Your advertising is syndicated across a broad network of different services that spans not only different channels but different brands as well.

This includes not only the Yellow Pages® print directories, but the yellow.com.au and whereis.com.au web sites, the 1234 and Call Connect voice services and the Yellow™ Mobile and Whereis® Mobile sites as well.

And it also includes sites from other vendors. Today, Yellow Pages® advertiser content can be searched for in Google Maps, MyLocal, LiveLocal and the new Bing Maps site.

channels

The net result of this ‘one ad, many avenues’ strategy is that advertisers can reach out to a much larger base of potential buyers through the one campaign.

In short, the potential for more reach, more easily.

And the impact of this sort of multi-channel strategy is pretty significant. The bottom line is that syndication through a range of brands and channels leads to a total potential reach for advertisers that no single channel local search solution can come close to matching.

In online, for example, there are six local search sites that individually hold more than 2% share of online traffic in Hitwise’s business directories category(2). They are yellow.com.au, whereis.com.au, whitepages.com.au, Google Maps, TrueLocal and Hotfrog .

Because of Yellow’s syndication strategy (allowing Yellow Pages® content to be searched for through yellow.com.au, whereis.com.au Google Maps as well as Microsoft’s local search sites), Yellow Pages® advertising could appear on sites that generate 64.5% of this traffic. White Pages® Online accounts for 22.5% and the other sites 13%(3) .

In other words, the multi-brand online syndication leads to a massive share of the traffic generated by these major local search sites.

But then you have to figure in print, voice and mobile as well. These add something like 15 million searches to the potential reach of Yellow Pages® advertising every week(4) .

Clearly, being able to advertise across multiple brands and channels is a major advantage in local search.

Which, as I said before, kind of renders this whole ‘print vs online’ debate as moot.

The bottom line here is that people aren’t turning into online zealots, no matter how much some wish they were.

Instead, buyers are showing their preference for choice.

The local search providers and advertisers who recognise that are the ones most likely to win.

(1) Roy Morgan Single Source Australia. Average monthly unique users Jan – Dec 08. Base Australians 14+.
(2) Hitwise Business directories category. Average monthly shares of total Hitwise ‘business directories category, Jan – Mar 09.
(3) Hitwise Business directories category. Average monthly shares of total Hitwise ‘business directories category, Jan – Mar 09.
(4) Print and voice data sourced from Roy Morgan Single Source Australia. Average monthly references Jan – Dec 2008.

Related links

Sensis on local search 1 – BIG

Sensis on local search 2 – GROWING

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Sensis on local search 2: GROWING

Wayne Aspland | 10 June 2009

People pretending that online local search is replacing print directories are missing a far more exciting reality… that local search is growing rapidly.

For a long time now, I’ve marvelled at how online industry commentators seem fascinated with death.

As a child of the dot.com boom, I vividly recall claims of the imminent Internet-related death of many industries.

I remember having a debate with an employer in the late 90s who firmly believed that by 2005, bricks and mortar travel agents would be gone forever.

And I’ve listened for over a decade now to people saying that print media was going to go down the gurgler.

You read and hear these claims all over the place. And comments like “there is no doubt that the directory is dead” (which was recently trumpeted by an eager Australian industry identity) show that Yellow Pages® print directories are far from immune from these accusations.

You get a sense from all this doom and gloom that the local search market is static.

Not growing.

Like a pie that’s being voraciously chomped up by the new local search players.

But the reality is far more interesting… and exciting for the industry. The local search pie is actually growing – and pretty quickly by the look of things.

Take the Yellow Pages® network for example. This network includes all the different products and services that contain Yellow Pages® advertiser content.

In 2008 (1):

  • Last 7 day usage of Yellow Pages® print directories grew by 4.9%. Yes, you did read the word ‘grew’ correctly.
  • Online usage of local search sites carrying Yellow Pages® content (yellowpages.com.au, whereis.com.au, Google Maps and MyLocal) grew by 30%.
  • Voice usage, through services like Call Connect and 1234, grew by 10%.

And ‘MoLo’, or local search sites on your mobile phone (Yellow™ Mobile and Whereis® Mobile), grew by a whopping 190% from March quarter of 2008 to March quarter 2009. Yes, it’s growing from a small base, but, at this rate, it won’t be small for long.

Clearly this data suggests that the number of buyers using local search in all its forms is growing rapidly.

In fact, when I look at these trends, I can’t help thinking that there’s a real elasticity in local search. It seems like the more options you give local search users, the more they search… and the more services they use.

In other words, it looks like local search users aren’t trending from one channel to another. They’re tending to use both.

And there’s a statistic that demonstrates this.

Migration means people shifting away from print. The claim is that online users have no use for print directories anymore, so they don’t use them.

So, clearly, you’d expect to see heavy (at least daily) Internet users turning away from Yellow Pages® print directories. As a result, the percentage of them using print would be much lower than for the rest of the population.

But the data actually tells quite a different story. It shows that daily online users are just as likely to use Yellow Pages® print directories as people who don’t use the Internet as often or don’t use it at all (2).

local-search-5

I’d draw three conclusions from this data.

Firstly, that print directories aren’t declining in the way people claim.

Secondly, that the local search audience is actually growing pretty quickly. As I said, this is a far more exciting story than the doom and gloom claimed by many in the online industry.

And, thirdly (and most importantly), if you really want to make the most of local search, your advertising needs to be everywhere… across print, online, voice and mobile.

Which is a great segue into the final article in this series – DIVERSE.

Look out for it in the next few days. Or check out part 1 of the Sensis on local search series – BIG.

1. All data compares 2008 vs 2007 data except mobiles due to lack of earlier data.  Print and voice: Roy Morgan Single Source Australia. Average weekly unique users Jan – Dec 08 vs Jan – Dec 07. Base Australians 14+.   Online: Roy Morgan Single Source Australia. Average monthly unique users Jan – Dec 08 vs Jan – Dec 07. Sites measured include Yellow.com.au, Whereis.com.au, MyLocal, Google Maps   Mobile: Omniture Site Catalyst. Average monthly visits March qtr 09 vs March qtr 08. Sites measured Yellow™ Mobile and Whereis® Mobile.
2. Roy Morgan Single Source Australia. Average monthly unique users Jan – Dec 08. Base Australians 14+.

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Sensis on local search 1: BIG

Wayne Aspland | 4 June 2009

In answer to the flood of questions about local search (how big is it, where do people search and so on), here’s a three part series looking at local search in Australia and the role Yellow Pages® plays. To begin with… what is local search and how big is it?

So, you just got engaged. Congratulations.

And commiserations too.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not being some sort of mean-spirited marriage maligner here. I’ve been married for a decade and it’s a wonderful institution.

But I can tell you from bitter experience that between now and your wedding night you’re going to confront a world of pain.

And you’re going to need an army of people to help you through it. Like reception centres, cake makers, musicians, caterers, jewellers, insurers, removalists, party suppliers, travel agents, florists, car hire, dressmakers, formal wear.

And that’s just for the happy day. What about the real estate agents, conveyancers, removalists, insurers and goodness knows what else you’ll need as you start your life together?

One of the most common ways Australians find these products and services is through local search. The world of local search includes services like Yellow Pages® or White Pages® directories in print, online or mobile, voice services like 1234, online mapping / local search sites like Whereis.com.au, Google Maps, the local search section Microsoft’s newly launched Bing and so on.

Local search services are like giant buying guides. They help people search for suppliers of the products and services they need. They support purchase decisions by helping people find, assess, compare and contact the right supplier.

Often (but, admittedly, not always) in their local area: which, to state the obvious, is where the term local search comes from.

im-local

Now, local search is a seriously popular way of buying. About 60% of the Australian population (over 10 million people) use one of the more popular print or online local search services every month(1).

And this usage is often concentrated around significant life events, like the aforementioned marriage, leaving home, buying a house etc. To give you an idea of what I mean, over 78% of people who built or bought a new home or apartment in the last year use local search every month. That’s over 17 percentage points more than the general population(2).

And because local search users are basically looking to complete a sale, the likelihood that they’ll contact a business is very high. In fact, 90% of Yellow Pages® searches result in a call being made(3): a conversion rate (in advertising speak) that is virtually unmatched by any other form of advertising.

conversion

Given this level of performance, it’s not surprising that local search has an enormous advertiser base. There are, for example, over 300,000 Australian businesses advertising in the Yellow Pages® today.

Businesses just like these…

So, clearly, local search is big. Big usage. Big potential return on investment. Big advertiser base.

But it’s also different. Advertising in local search is a totally different experience to virtually all other forms of advertising.

And there’s a simple reason for that. While most other forms of advertising interrupt consumers, local search is a service they consciously access – an information service full of advertising that actually helps them make decisions.

This makes local search unique in four very distinct ways.

  1. Local search is very much a small and medium enterprise form of advertising. It’s about local businesses reaching out to local buyers. It is one of the most popular forms of advertising among Australian SMEs.
  2. Local search drives direct contact, not purely brand equity. It can convert to things like calls, visits… customers, rather than purely brand outcomes like awareness.
  3. Broadcast advertising – like TV, print display ads, outdoor etc – relies heavily on emotional appeal. Local search runs on informational appeal. The things that make local search campaigns work go beyond strong differentiators and calls to action. Simple pieces of information like phone numbers, opening hours, brands and products sold, credit cards taken, testimonials and so on can potential contribute massively to the impact of local search advertising.
  4. And local search is directly comparative. People look at competitive ads and compare them, which doesn’t generally occur in broadcast advertising. So you potentially need to think far more about competitors’ ads than you do in other forms of advertising.

So that’s a brief primer on local search. Keep an eye out for the next episode – GROWING – early next week.

UPDATE: Part 2 – GROWING – is now online. Check it out here.

(1) Roy Morgan Single Source Australia. Average monthly unique users Jan – Dec 08. Base Australians 14+. Includes Yellow Pages® print directories, Yellow Page® Online, Whereis.com.au, Google Maps, TrueLocal, MyLocal. Voice and mobile not included
(2) Roy Morgan Single Source Australia. Average monthly unique users Jan – Dec 08. Base Australians 14+. Includes Yellow Pages® print directories, Yellow Page® Online, Whereis.com.au, Google Maps, TrueLocal, MyLocal. Voice and mobile not included.
(3) Independent research conducted by TNS of Australians aged 18+ years (Jan 09 to Mar’09).

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