Something worth crowing about...
New media, Local Online Advertising, Search Engine Marketing and Optimization, Database & Direct mail Marketing, but mostly, what matters most – new roads to solid ROI.
Tele-Direct Call Centers is set to launch a new division and its fifth on-demand software application to help small businesses choose advertisements and track the results of their ad campaigns online.
The online advertising platform, Instant Ad Expert, is set to launch May 28 for chiropractors, and the company hopes to expand the service to between 10 and 15 additional industries, from auto dealers to dentists, this year. The platform eventually would serve 40 industries, Tele-Direct chief executive officer Tom Coshow said.
Tele-Direct licensed market research firm Claritas Inc. to research who is most likely to use the services of a chiropractor. The research was then used by companies to create pre-packaged advertising in different formats, including direct mail, online banners and radio spots.
Chiropractors and other advertisers will view or hear ads online and select the ones they want to purchase. Calls from each ad's unique 800 number will be routed to Tele-Direct Call Centers, where customer service representatives log lead results electronically.
"The doctor has to do nothing but sit back and book the appointments," said Jim Bonfield, who heads Instant Ad Expert for Tele-Direct.
The Instant Ad Expert software also enables chiropractors to see online, in real time, which leads are the most effective, Bonfield said. The system computes cost per lead and compares ad types.
"So at any given moment, they can know what's working for them and what's not," he said.
The historic average cost per lead will be listed with each ad for sale so advertisers know how well each ad has been working.
"For the first time, small businesses will be able to view and buy ads based on their historic cost-per-lead performance," Coshow said.
Prior to joining Tele-Direct as senior vice president in charge of Instant Ad Expert, Bonfield ran Sacramento Internet marketing firm EyeBallFarm, which grew to the "upper six figures" in annual revenue by helping companies gain greater visibility on the Web. EyeBallFarm is no longer in operation as Bonfield concentrates full time on Instant Ad Expert.
Tele-Direct does not make money on ads posted on InstantAdExpert.com. Instead, Tele-Direct charges advertisers $7 for each lead the company processes, or each time a caller is converted into a customer. The system provides an incentive for Tele-Direct to help make the ad campaigns work.
The company has 15 media partners, and is in "serious negotiations" with eight more, all of which are national in scope, Bonfield said.
Tele-Direct also is in talks with SpotRunner.com to add television spots to the site. SpotRunner.com has a similar concept for cable TV, he said.
Companies with ads on InstantAdExpert.com include WebbMason Inc., a direct mail company in New Jersey; Clear Channel Communications Inc. of San Antonio; and Seattle-based AdReady Inc., which was formed in June 2006 by Aaron Finn, a former executive of Classmates Online Inc.
"The Instant Ad Expert thing is very unique," said Jeff Holden, vice president and market manager for Clear Channel Radio in Sacramento. "We're not aware of it being done anywhere else in the country right now."
Holden said the platform has good potential. If an advertiser were to buy ads on Google, he said, they could only select a geographic area, not a radio station.
Clear Channel has a half-dozen radio spots available on the site for chiropractors.
"It allows the advertiser a very inexpensive way to connect to a variety of different media," Holden said.
Tele-Direct did $4 million in revenue in 2007, and expects to top $5 million this year. The company employs 220, up from 78 in 2006 and 150 last year.
melanieturner@bizjournals.com | 916-558-7859
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEIn the book, "Blue Ocean Strategy" it is written that Red Ocean companies are very military in alignment and strategy. They compete for market share within existing industries, almost always resulting in over saturated markets.
CONTACT: Jim Bonfield - Teledirect
I have been beating this drum for a long time. Attention local, online advertisers; Do not assume the Ad impressions you are buying from your local media are actually local.



ason Marrone handing out Jelly Belly samples and making friends...
Google Conversion University
I have a pretty good idea. It might be able to provide a high degree of industry-specific recommendations driven by the success of previous campaigns that actually worked, rather than the latest media audit or sales Rep. claims. It would be intuitive and take much of the homework and drudgery out of setting up local, lead generation campaigns. It would take advantage of a degree of artificial intelligence and learn with the advertiser, making "smarter" recommendations as the systems were used. The system would allow for cross-channel marketing buys (traditional media and interactive buys all purchased from the same dashboard)and measure it all in an apples-to-apples report, allowing an advertiser to see ALL media spent in common what-works and what-is-not-working, logic-based spreadsheet. Oh, yeah, it would also have a 24x7, US-based call center for processing incoming leads and a robust customer relationship management system that was integrated with Sales Force for lead disbursement, follow-up and sales forecasting.Ok so not to beat this to death - BUT - Today, the WSJ ran a great piece on the power of online behavioral targeting and how it can be a superior advertising method when compared to simple, contextual banner placement. (Behavioral puts an Ad in front of a user who has shown interest in a category through some number of qualifying online activities, like making multiple visits to travel sites over a short period of time, regardless of what in-network site they are on or what category of content they are they are viewing when the Ad unit is served. Contextual places a travel banner (for example) on a page containing travel content, making the assumption that readers there have an interest in that type of content based on that single visit. Both are usually sold on a CPM basis.)
On May 15, 2007, The Sacramento Bee wrote the piece shown below...Conclusion –
The main point here is that none of this is really new. None of this is particular to the Internet or online advertising and it is not wise to allow the ignorance of old-guard media to throw hypocritical stones at new media business models that might actually have a chance of making advertising more beneficial for all concerned, especially the consumer.
Its time that we reexamine old wife's tales about what is ok and what is not when publisher-advertiser-reader communications are examined. Yes, there need to be rules established and yes disclosure should play an important part in those guide lines, but equally important is the opportunity for consumers to receive information and offers that may actually carry some hope of relevancy not simply interruption based on assumption.
Vying For Eyes
Written for SearchIniatives.com by Jim Bonfield. Search Initiatives is fast becoming one of North America's premier providers of local search with enhanced listings on a self-service ad platform.
Labels: Local Online Advertising, Sacramento Advertising Agency
Has it really been over a month since I last posted? Sorry, but doers “do” and I have been doing a lot of "do" lately. (Perhaps too much frankly.)
October 02, 2006
The newspaper industry has another great idea... read the Yahoo story here
Big surprise. We have seen this coming for a long while. However, it is interesteing to see this piece in the daily newspaper industry's own publication...
I just got off the phone with a really pumped up guy. And for good reason...(his "pumpy-ness" not getting off the phone...) goggle has acquired, tweaked and repackaged another amazing tool that continues its march towards world wide disintermediation in the advertising and marketing space. Enter google Audio as hosted on today's call by Jogn Breen, sales executive formerly (I think) with dMark Broadcasting Inc. the creator of this technology.
Here is a great Blog dedicated to posting news and information on Sacramento Arco Arena Deal and The Maloofs Railyard Arena Proposal Downtown Sacramento.
Sacramento Arena Watch - Arco Arena Deal, Downtown?