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Use Different Searches – Google Maps – To Drive Buyers to Your Retail Storefront: Better Business Listings, Local Focus and Free

Local Search Marketing drives ready-to-buy customers to a brick-and-mortar retail store. Listing your store on Google Maps Business Listings is a targeted way to attract regional customers very cost effectively … it’s free. And, Maps listings just got an upgrade, also free.

Here is a Guest Blog from Dale Knauss, producer of the Online Marketing Internet Radio Show RSS.Ray.com. Dale highlights new interactive features in Google Maps Business Listings. Below Dale’s post, we’ve listed Resources and Links to get your local business on the map for free. –Editor, TopTenWholesale Blog

Drive Local Traffic to Your Brick and Mortar Store for Free!
Dale Knauss, Show Producer
RSS Ray.com Online Marketing Internet Radio Show

We all know that the ability to attract visitors to your physical storefront is a vital part of making your business profitable. Since 2006, savvy marketers have been using the power of Google local business ads (see links below) to attract customers into their stores. Last week, Google announced a massive change to the Local Business system which provides far greater options for companies looking to entice people in their local markets.

When a Google user types a query into Google Maps, they are automatically shown a list of businesses which relate to that search, plus their location on the map. For instance, if you were to type in “Subs in VA,” you would get a list of submarine sandwich businesses around the Virginia area. For business owners, this is a great way to cheaply drive targeted local traffic into the store.

Previously, only your street address and web site information was given for a site; but thanks to Google’s Update announced in mid-January, a maps search for subs will now allow me the option to:

· Get directions to the store
· Search nearby locations
· Save the address to My Maps
· Send the address to my email or cell phone
· Get a street view (only in select locations)

Google also announced that it will soon offer a Reports and Tracking feature — the option for advertisers to track how users interacted with their Google Maps results. This interactive reporting feature would allow you to test and optimize listings to your heart’s content.

Google Local Business Ads are a great way to get your business some extra foot traffic; and with free local listings, the price is right!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Resources & Links for Google Maps Business Listings:

1. Do a Google Maps search. The Google Maps top page lists
“Browse Popular Maps” … in late January 2009 these most popular searches were:

· The Inauguration from the Sky
· Follow the Sundance Film Festival
· See more maps

2. To review news, info and tips on using AdWords (Google’s online search advertising network), see Inside AdWords Google’s Official Blog.

Scan a recent post to the Inside AdWords blog that details the new features and upgrade to Google Maps business listings at New Features for Your Local Business .

3. To put your business on Google Maps:

· See Add Local Business at Google Maps

· Get help on local business ads – guidelines and requirements, how local ads display, creating local ads, using your own map icon and headlines, etc. – from the AdWords Help Center on Local Business Ads
.

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“Integrated Media Solutions” Means: Trade Shows and Media (Online or Off) Should March to Same Drummer

In August of 2007 – eons ago – JPC’s Jason Prescott wrote an item here that could be tagged: Buy an Ad OR Rent Trade Show Booth: Not Both. And Industry Magazines + Trade Show Media Does Not Equal Zero Sum Game.

Jason’s idea was that “clients” (customers who pay good money and want good returns) don’t really care about turf battles between different media and channels. Especially when the media are only guarding their own turf and revenue.

If “integrated marketing” sells the most product (and it does), then savvy media companies offer the optimal Combo Plate – Printed Paid Ads + Trade Show Promotion + Online Marketing … with some Direct Marketing (Online or Offline) on the side. (See Jason’s post titled Service Provider Attendance at Trade Shows, August 2007, below.)

Service Provider Attendance at Trade Shows
Jason in Trade Shows, Sales and Marketing, The Presidents Lounge, What’s on your mind?
August 3rd, 2007

Back in the day, magazine publications and other service providers were perceived as the enemy of the trade show producer, and the publisher felt the same about trade shows. The belief was that clients — advertisers for magazines and exhibitors for trade shows — would choose either an ad or a booth. It was a zero sum game.

However, research conducted over the past few years has proven otherwise. The client wants an integrated marketing program that will sell the most product. The savvy media company provides the optimum combination of print ads, trade show exposure, direct mail, Internet ads and whatever else the client wants.

I can’t stress enough how important it is for service providers, such as magazine and website publishers, to man up and attend these trade shows. Do you hear that, service providers? When it comes to promoting a trade show-publication joint effort, you’ll find that your goals aren’t that different from those of your clients — attracting the attention of your combined client/prospect base.

In reality service providers (magazines, other pubs) and trade shows are ideal partners:

1. The magazine has credibility in the market and is in front of the audience (advertisers and readers) year-round. The editorial pages validate the show and, in some cases, can even create it.

2. The magazine can provide to the trade show all key elements for success: the attendees (subscribers), the exhibitors (advertisers), and the conference (editorial). The show is like a 3-D version of the magazine: The editorial is the conference; advertisers are the exhibitors, and readers are the attendees.

3. The magazine provides no-cost/low-cost attendance promotion via print ads and access to its subscriber database.

4. The trade show provides the magazine with a brand extension in the form of a live event.

5. The trade show gives the magazine a concrete location to gather its two customers readers and advertisers).

6. The pre-show, show and post-show issues of the magazine can be the largest of the year (in number of advertising pages) if the event is effectively integrated into the magazine’s editorial calendar.

7. A trade show can provide profit margins that are 50-to-100% higher than a magazine, when done correctly.

Additionally, it’s a smart move to attend the trade shows because it shows a real commitment to your customers. In fact, customers should be wary of service providers that don’t attend trade shows. (We won’t give any names, but you know who you are.) We’d like to see you at the next one, and so would your customers.

I’d like to personally thank all of the publishers that do attend the trade shows. Kudos to publishers like Top Ten Wholesale, Closeout News, Sumner Communications, Wholesale Source and Forum Publishing. See you in a couple of weeks.

That was 18 months ago.

Jason was invited to address an organization called SIPA – Specialized Information Publishers Association – last November. SIPA members are exactly the special-interest magazines and publications noted above: Born offline many years ago and standing off-road on the “information superhighway,” guarding their old ad revenue sources.

But that was all before. The reason SIPA put Jason – and other online search marketers like him – on their conference agenda in November 2008 was they want to catch up, fast. Keyword all unique specialized content. Make their content searchable and visible to search engines. Make it useful to information needs and to advertisers … like trade shows. So, a lot has changed the past 18 months.

And some good things remain the same. Scan Jason’s last point, above, listing “publishers that do attend trade shows.” Now, scan this list of Media Partners of upcoming mega-merchandise trade show ASD/AMD Las Vegas (March 15-18, 2009). Find the duplicates. Tally up the new players. Yes, there is progress.

ASD/AMD Show Media Partners 2009

ASD/AMD Show Media Partners

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Plus-Size Clothing Goes Designer, Celebrity and Comfortable

Plus Size Clothing for women and men has lost the stigma of simply large. Now, Plus-Size leans toward Designer Lines, Loose-fitting Apparel and Comfortable Work Clothes.

Wholesalers whose merchandise specialty is plus-size clothing have heard it all — a youth-obsessed culture whose ideal fashion models tend to be anorexic looks like hostile apparel territory. Until now.

Look now to TV reality shows, celebrity designers of women’s wear and lingerie, suburban aggie retail chains and an aging Baby Boomer population to hear market demands for plus-size clothing.

Plus Size Design Icons. Did you know about the UK-based plus-size store chain Evans? Or, that a singer for the band Gossip, Beth Ditto, markets her clothing designs in sizes 14 to 32 for the Evans chain? Bet you didn’t know that Gossip’s Ditto turned down another women’s clothing chain, even though the chain in question, Top Shop, works with celebrity fashion model Kate Moss. (Top Shop imposes size limits on the clothing lines it sells, which … cramped Ditto’s fashion style.)

Two U.S. cable TV programs run apparel and fashion competitions featuring atypical models: A bathing suit competition was limited to women over 35 and hosted by celebrity model Tyra Banks. A star search fashion model competition featured contestants on the other side of 50 years; many were mothers of several children. Anorexic child-like runway models need not apply!

BBW: Big Beautiful Women. You have to hand it to Queen Latifah, who leveraged fame as a female hip-hop singer into a film career. Now the Queen has moved on to designing lingerie and foundations for big beautiful women.

When you search on key words for sellers and suppliers of Top Ten Wholesale for plus size apparel and lingerie, don’t forget to check out products like Body Shapers and Full-body Leotards or Unitards. Demand is growing for underclothes and lingerie that slim down the silhouette, as well smooth out panty lines and bra bulges under clingy women’s clothing.

Cross Check Jeans and Work Clothes. Unless you are a wholesale buyer or distributor who specializes in plus sizes, you might not be aware of the number of plus-sized jeans designers for women. Check out: Lauren Ralph Lauren; Seven7; Baby Phat; Levis Plus-size; Venezia; and Main Street Blues. Just for starters.

Men look for plus-sized clothing, too, and not always in the Big & Tall chain stores. Search on Work Clothes for durable denim clothing, overalls, coveralls and plus-sized or loose-fitting clothing. We’re not sure whether to label it Aggie Chic or Rural Lifestyle, but you gotta love the TV ads airing for an agricultural and garden supply chain that locates in suburban/rural shopping centers. The ads we’ve seen proudly feature work boots that “…never heard of soft Italian leather…” and “…have been re-soled twice.” Plus-sized and loose-fit denim jeans, coveralls and leather or cloth work gloves also brag that they’ve never covered a manicured hand (or, we bet, a tummy tuck). Search on Work Clothes (above), Denim , Jeans and Plus Size Apparel to find wholesale product sources and distributors.

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Denim Clothing Never Goes Out of Style, Thank The French.

Sacre Bleu!! Does that homage to Denim owe anything to France?? Isn’t denim the most American of fabrics? It clothes gold miners and mall rats … Hippies and soccer moms … cowgirls, rail conductors, pub crawlers in SoHo … chic-casual fashionistas, sleek young Hog riders practicing James Dean, as well as the oiliest roughneck on a drilling rig and the smallest size 00000 newborn baby. Denim covers every Man, Woman, Teen, Child and Infant.

Yes. Thank the French (hold the fries, if you like) for this most American and versatile and enduring apparel. Merci beaucoup.

Denim was the rugged cloth loomed in Nimes, France. (From serge de Nimes, which morphed to denim.) The California Gold Rush of 1848 launched massive imports of this tough-as-nails cloth. Two San Francisco merchants to the miners, Mr. Levi and Mr. Strauss, reinforced their work overalls with metal rivets on seams and pockets.

Voila! Denim Clothing was born.

We heard that a stuffed denim cat named Bastaat survived over 4,000 years in an Egyptian tomb. That’s probably a false urban legend. But it does show how long lasting this fabric called Denim is in the world of everyday casual clothing.

Legend also says denim is always blue. That’s an honest mistake. A current trend is white and off-white denim jeans for women and men.

Successful wholesalers, resellers and off-price distributors of denim clothing for men and women, teens and tweens, toddlers and infants know a couple of things for sure:

1. Denim Clothing Trims and Styles Change and Recycle – Denim jeans, jackets, skirts and shirts come embroidered, sequined, bugle-beaded and rhinestoned; Plain, stone-washed or distressed. Popular cuts flip from straight-leg (hot now) to boot cut; from flared bottoms to cut-offs and Capris.

Also Current Hottie Wear: Fitted jean jackets, long-and-lean denim pants, paired with classic T-shirts, big-collar white cotton shirts and lacy satin camisoles for the Ladies; sleeveless scoop-necked “undershirts” worn over for the Gents.

Trends in denim do repeat and recycle. Attention Buyers: Pallets of close-out and liquidation denim jeans, no matter the cut or trim, is a game of Warehouse & Wait. Demand, fads, styles always return.

Hello, sailor? Let’s tip our hats to navy sailors, the fashionable folks who gave us that enduring symbol of Hippie Apparel: Bell Bottoms. And don’t bury your bell-bottom pants yet. Search our categories of Urban Wear, Used, Vintage and Work Clothes for denim clothing. They’re baaaaaaack!

2. Go Mr. Green Jeans – Another current trend, driven by customer demand, is for eco-aware clothing. Green Jeans refers not to a dye color, but to organic-grown cotton (no pesticides, no heavy metal dyes), fair-labor (seamstresses, sewers); light carbon footprints (shrinking shipping, transportation, warehousing energy use). Green Textiles and Apparel are all about sustainable clothing sources and designs. And, eternal denim clothes are no exception.

Merci, serge de Nimes. (Thank you, fabric of Nimes, France.)

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Survival Strategies for Discount Apparel Buyers: Off-Price Specialist Show

If you’re a retailer of fashionable apparel and accessories — but you’re not a big-box retailer with international brand name recognition – then no one has to convince you of razor-thin profits, challenging price point margins or lack of access to lowest-price manufacturer sourcing. In fact, the current global credit crunch is not all that recent to smaller discount apparel sellers.

But, like the song for the old sitcom Cheers says: Wouldn’t you like to go where everybody knows your name? That playing field leveler, where you don’t have to be a “name” Big Box Buyer, has been established for years. It’s the Off-Price Specialist Show, now in its 14th year, from February 15 to 18 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Off-Price Specialists Show

Off-Price Specialist is the premier trade show for discount apparel wholesalers of all sizes. From modest beginnings out of guest rooms at the Debbie Reynolds Hotel, circa 1995, today’s Off-Price show draws 10,000 buyers who will mix, match and mingle price points and orders with more than 450 exhibitors at the Hotel Venetian Grand Ballrooms this February 15-18.

What Off-Price veterans knew all along was that they can source men’s, women’s and children’s apparel at 20 to 70% below the original manufacturer’s wholesale price. Buyer size no barrier. Discount retailer buyers can also do their fashion, accessories and footwear product sourcing anytime, 24/7, through the Off-Price Specialists Exhibitor Showroom web site.

“Bottom line shopping, off price, has become an integral part of the buying process for apparel retailers. If you do your homework and enter the off-price arena armed with knowledge of the market and your stores, the buys you make can give you the margin points you need to compete successfully. And, it’s a lot of fun.”
– David Sacks / Off-Price Buyer and Consultant

Here are a few Off-Price Show buyer strategies from David Sacks’ The Art of Shopping Off-Price:

· Buy Right to Sell Right. A discount retailer has little control over rent, staff and other overhead expenses. However, building margin through sharp deals can be managed through Buyer Strategies.

· Match Knowledge of Your Customer Demands to Awareness of the Latest Trends. By staying informed of new apparel, accessories and footwear fashion trends – through industry sites and trend alerts – you can refresh your product mix with the right amount of trendy discount merchandise to remain both reliable and unique to your base. Further, the addition of deeply discounted product into your store’s regular inventory will link value pricing and perceived bargains in your most loyal customer base.

· Approach a big order-writing trade show, like Off-Price Specialist, with a strategy. On Day One, tour the entire show floor; scan all exhibitors for your desired products, styles, price points and customer service. Sacks advises not placing any orders before Day Two, waiting until you’ve evaluated the merchandise and negotiating potential.

· Know the difference between Intrinsic Value (quality, content, components) and Perceived Market Value (its value to your customers) of your desired products. Sacks cited an example of his failure to acknowledge how much Brand mattered to his customers’ perception of Market Value, when the synthetic fiber content lowered its Intrinsic Value … in his eyes. It was a costly non-competitive mistake he did not repeat with more experience in buying for his market.

· Small store Margin Call. Smaller stores need to realize a 40% to 50% margin after markdowns. Thus, carrying approximately 20% inventory sourced in discount, off-price product would produce significant bottom-line results for a smaller, regular-price merchandiser.

· Face-Time Premium. Sacks offers tips on Buyer negotiations for below-market-priced product. But most of the success in negotiating buys relies on personal interaction with exhibitors/sellers, developing a relationship. Something that can only be done face-to-face at trade shows.

See all of David Sacks’ Off-Price Show Buyer Tips here.

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