Welcome | Sign In
CRMBuyer.com
News

Google Maps Out Coupon Strategy

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Google Maps Out Coupon Strategy

Google this week announced a new service that allows users to print out discount coupons for local merchants via Google Maps. Coupons will be supplied by Cox Enterprises' ValPak Direct Marketing Systems. Google is opening the service to businesses of all types -- at no fee.


Considering CRM solutions?
You first need to understand CRM best practices. Before committing to a CRM purchase and implementation, it's good to know the experience of those who have already "been there, done that." It can save time and prevent costly missteps. Download Free Research.

In a move to attract more local businesses to its brand, Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) on Monday launched a service that allows customers to print out discount coupons for local merchants from Google Maps.

The new service targets value-conscious consumers with more than 20,000 coupons supplied by Cox Enterprises' ValPak Direct Marketing Systems. ValPak is best known for direct mailing light blue envelopes overflowing with discounts from local merchants such as pizza shops, laudromats and hardware stores.

Google is opening the service to businesses of all types -- at no fee. Companies may submit coupons directly to the search engine index. Links to the digital discounts will appear automatically when Google users search for local businesses on the mapping site.

Discount Strategy

Google's new strategy one-ups offerings from rivals Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and AOL as the big four strive to add tools and services that will attract more visitors. More visitors translates to more opportunities for click-through ad revenue, which is Google's bread and butter.

Google plans to give advertisers the option to promote a coupon offer in the coming months. That strategy offers a way for advertisers to track conversions more effectively by counting how many customers redeem the online coupons associated with their ad campaigns.

"This initiative brings together the online and offline worlds because you have to redeem the coupons in the store," Greg Sterling, Principal Analyst at Sterling Marketing Intelligence, told the E-Commerce Times. "Now local businesses can determine how Internet marketing Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales influences the transaction. That is very compelling."

Compelling Customers

Google has two challenges, though: compelling customers to visit Google Maps and download the coupons and compelling companies to create new coupons for them to download. Google seeded its new service with ValPak coupons, but that may not be enough to generate repeat visitors.

"Google has to publicize this," Sterling asserted. "If consumers don't show up and start using the coupons, then there won't be any incentive for the local businesses to create them. By the same token, if the local businesses don't create them, Google may not have enough content to keep customers coming back to search for more."

Google's Hope

Of course, Google hopes the new service will take on a life of its own to create a simplified advertising vehicle that becomes an attractive destination for coupon-clipping searchers. While it is a free service for businesses at launch, analysts said it could be a money-making proposition for Google long-term.

Sterling expects the market for local search to grow to US$9.9 billion in 2010, from $3.5 billion today. Google's coupon initiative could contribute to those numbers.

"Consumers love coupons," Sterling noted. "There are billions of dollars of coupons that are issued and redeemed in the offline world. Local businesses are familiar with coupons, so there's no education to be done here. It's just really a question of publicizing the opportunity to local businesses."

Google has not announced its plans for drawing visitors to Google Maps. The firm could not immediately be reached for comment.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Jennifer LeClaire


More by Jennifer LeClaire

The Digital Car: Cool Automotive Accessories, Part 2
January 16, 2007
Not all the latest high-tech automotive electronics are built to entertain. Many give the driver more information and more control. Vehicle tracking devices can tell where the car is at any time, software installed in a smartphone can turn off a vehicle's security system whenever the owner approaches, and diagnostic tools can tell what's wrong with the engine -- and how much it'll be to fix it.
'World of Warcraft' Wows 8 Million Subscribers
January 12, 2007
"World of Warcraft," the massively multiplayer online role-playing game, has reached the 8 million subscriber mark. Since debuting in North America in Nov. 2004, "World of Warcraft" has become the most popular MMORPG in the world. The franchise is available in seven different languages and is played on at least four continents.
AT&T Bids Goodbye to Cingular Brand
January 12, 2007
Starting Monday, AT&T will launch a multimedia campaign to transition the Cingular Wireless brand name into its advertising and customer communications. The campaign will integrate popular imagery, phrases and icons from Cingular's traditional advertising, including the "raising the bar" tagline, the "Jack" character and the color orange.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network