Friday, December 7, 2007

ZIP CODE PHONEBOOK THE NEW NEIGHBORHOOD PHONEBOOK

ZIP CODE PHONEBOOK THE NEW NEIGHBORHOOD PHONEBOOK

Yellow Pages, a California-based research company has been extensively

doing studies on U.S. ZIP (Zone Improvement Program) Codes. They can now

predict, with certain percentage of accuracy, what you ate for breakfast

based on your zip code.

ZIP Codes are the smallest, most organized accumulation of information by

which we can evaluate the demographic flavor of a given area.

From a marketing standpoint, most retail businesses use ZIP codes along with

the Perorate Principle that 80% of your customers reside within the ZIP

codes that connect to your collection. In theory, they live no more than

7 miles from where you are.

A CHANGING MARKETPLACE

The phonebook we have grown accustomed to was developed over 30 years ago.

The only way it has grown in terms of thickness, weight, and aesthetic

design. From a marketing perspective, except for its dominance and near monopoly,

it has been rendered useless by a more mobile and more efficient market.

When the Yellow Pages were first introduced, the world of "malls",

"strip malls", "executive centers", and "postal & mail box centers" were

unknown to American consumers. Today, it is easier for us to dial directory

assistance than to use the phonebook.

USE OLD PATTERNS

To make it easy for advertisers and consumers to swallow something new, make

it look like it's old. So, use simple patterns and designs borrowed from

old phonebooks, including rates charged for your territory. Establish your

advertising rates based on the number of homes and businesses your ZIP Code

phonebook is going to. You can have as many ZIP Codes covered, just make

sure you do not pile up a marketplace too large you are practically competing with the

phone company. The best rule of thumb is to break the phone companies general

distribution area into 7 phonebooks.

GTE used to have what they called "The Neighborhood Phonebook". I think the

reason it died is that it broke down its neighborhood either very

conceptually or too similarly to the way all other phonebooks do.

Advertisers want solid numbers. ZIP Codes are solid. Just ask the postal service.


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