Search Trumps Social For Local Business Information
Pew surveyed just over 1,000 US adults by telephone in January, 2011. What it found was that 55 percent of people “say they get news and information about local restaurants, bars, and clubs” and 60 percent “say they get news and information about local businesses other than restaurants and bars” (presumably everything else). Here is the list of sources used . . .
Restaurants, Bars & Clubs, Internet Rules
When it comes to finding information about bars, restaurants and clubs, 51 percent use the internet overall, with this breakdown:
search engines – 38 percent
specialty websites – 17 percent (e.g., Yelp, though that was not specifically identified)
social media – 3 percent (social networks and Twitter)
As for offline media, the breakdown is this way:
31 percent use newspapers (print [26 percent], online [5 percent])
23 percent word of mouth
8 percent rely upon local TV (traditional, online)
Internet Tops For Local Businesses, Too
When it comes to seeking information about other types of local businesses, 47 percent use the internet, with the breakdown this way:
search engines – 36 percent
specialty websites – 16 percent
social media – 1 percent
As for offline media, the breakdown is this way:
30 percent use newspapers (print [29 percent], online [2 percent])
22 percent word of mouth
8 percent rely upon local TV (traditional, online)
5 percent rely upon local radio
Multiple Sources Used
Pew also found people used roughly 14 different kinds of sources to get local information. A large percentage used or “relied upon” multiple sources. In addition, 47 percent of respondents said they got “local news and information” on their mobile phones.
Very strangely, online yellow pages or “local directory sites” were not among the choices given to survey respondents.
The finding that so few people use social media for local recommendations is somewhat surprising (given that it has been likened to “online word of mouth”). It shows that Facebook and Twitter have quite a distance to go to become useful local business discovery tools.
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