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Garage40

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  • Business Name
    Garage40
  • Type of Business
    Other
  • Your Current Position
    Shop Owner
  • Automotive Franchise
    None
  • Website
  • Banner Program
    None
  • Participate in Training
    No

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  1. This might be something worth looking into: http://www.efi101.com/essentials-of-operating-a-shop/ Good luck with the journey!
  2. To add another option to the list for you guys/gals to research: https://myshopassist.com/ The guys who created this solution are shop owners themselves and have been known to create custom solutions for clients. They also put on an event in association with EFI University called "Essentials of Operating a Shop Seminar". Might be worth reaching out to them. I haven't used the software myself so I wouldn't have any info to share on it besides having heard about it from some other shop owners.
  3. I use Yext. What did you want to know? Yext is a service that enables you to manage all of your local directory listings from one control panel. It is very nice but it's considered by many in the local SEO world to be a quick stop gap - and you cannot manage your G+ listing with it. If you submit to the major local directory aggregators manually (or all of the most popular directories individually) you wouldn't have to pay a company like Yext monthly for their service. An alternative to Yext is Moz Local. One thing to be aware of with Yext - if you ever discontinue service with them all of your local listing profiles in all of the local directories will go back to what they were before you signed up with them. This is VERY important to keep in mind. They essentially pull all the data they submitted on your behalf. So if all of your profiles were empty before they took control, they will be empty after you cancel service. And as mentioned above, be consistent with NAP, keyword rich description for services you want to be found for, and add lots of photos (and videos where available). Solicit for reviews on your G+ page too. Make sure you've done general SEO work on your website for your geographical location as well. Keyword research is very important obviously.
  4. I would add in: - Local SEO/directory submissions and citations. Go through and claim all of your listings in local online directories and fill them in with consistent information and photos for your business. You can do this yourself if you know what you're doing. The main goal here is to show up in Google maps results when people search for services you provide in your area. Part of this work will include soliciting online reviews from your customers - the more reviews the better. - General SEO and keyword research for your website. Once you identify the bread and butter keyword terms that locals are looking for, start writing some articles on those topics and post them on your website. Write a few more related articles and ask other industry websites/blogs to post them on their site, giving you credit. There are a few more ways to generate some backlinks but it's not really free. - Social media is having more of an impact for local shops. It takes more effort than some realize, but it can certainly have solid ROI if you put together an effective strategy and remain consistent. And if you do it yourself, it will only cost you your time. Don't expect quick gains though. I always like pointing people to this article: http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/social-media-case-study-victory-auto/ - Familiarize yourself with online marketing strategies and how they can result in a positive ROI for your business. This will help you decide what makes sense for you. Once you can afford it, get the help of a professional to help take your shop to the next level so you don't end up in this position again. As mspecperformance said above, you should always be marketing. You shouldn't just look into doing it when times are bad, as chances are, anything you start today won't show you ROI for months anyway. Don't be reactionary.
  5. Most shop owners shouldn't be doing it themselves, at least not literally. They should hire someone to do it for them, assuming they don't have a good in-house designer/developer. Though I wouldn't use a one-stop-shop company like Dex, who is really just looking to keep you as a long term customer for their marketing programs, knowing that if they build your site you'll likely stay with them long term and keep paying them. It always seems easier to use a solution like that but it's usually not the effective way to do it. Crazy that your site is still down. This should be a good indication to anyone looking at Dex to consider other options.
  6. The easiest DIY way to do it would be to collect email addresses and throw them into a email marketing campaign using Mailchimp or Constant Contact, sending them a monthly newsletter with useful tips about maintenance and other related topics. You could also step up to an all in one service provider for automated life cycle communication. That gets a little pricey but it works well for some shops.
  7. Yelp will not filter your reviews because you're not paying them. They filter based on a lot of factors, but one of the big ones is whether or not a reviewer has more than just a few reviews. If someone signs up and writes one review and doesn't write any more, their review will likely be filtered. If you get reviewers leaving you good reviews and they're getting filtered, contact those reviewers through Yelp and ask them to write some reviews on other businesses so that their stuff isn't filtered.
  8. Wonder how many of those would have come to you if you simply had a well optimized "free" Yelp profile. Do you have a way of differentiating the free Yelp traffic from the paid, and the conversion rate for each group?
  9. My questions for you would be: - What is that "score" you mentioned, the 55 out of 100? Is that Dex's score? If so, disregard it. - How do you verify the stats they're giving you? Is that 1700 views for an entire year? 700 calls? What is the source of that traffic and how can you verify the validity of these numbers? Does the site have Google Analytics or some other known independent stats software installed so you can look at the data yourself and do some real world analysis? - Are you actually getting 3 more calls a day than before you started with Dex? Are you (or your staff) asking where they found you? - What was the conversion rate of those 700 calls they say you're getting? Were those quality leads or are you getting worthless calls from out of the area? 700 is a nice number, but what are the results of those calls? - Where is the traffic coming from? Is it search engines or is Dex feeding it to you? Essentially, are you getting organic traffic or is it part of what you're paying for with Dex? Google Analytics would help tell you this. - What are your goals for the website? Are you looking to get 10 jobs a month from it? - What is your competition doing? Do a search for a service in your area that you would like your website to be found for and see what your competitors are doing. If you looked for "Dansville brake service" what sites come up? Does your site come up for any of your other bread and butter services? "your service dansville" - if not, you should be looking to change that. I was going to look over your site to do a quick check but it's down. Let me know when it's back up and I'll take a look - the fact that it's down is an obvious red flag in itself, that should never happen. It's always best to build your own site and not have a company like Dex build it and manage it for you, but I know that sometimes it's easier for some business owners to do it that way. I'd still probably go in another direction, but that's me.
  10. Yes, for those who aren't aware, posting via your FB page is now a lot less effective for most of us due to FB's new changes. This means that you MUST post content on your FB page that people find interesting enough to engage with (Like, Comment, Share). If you don't, your content will be dropped to the bottom of all your followers' news feeds and nobody who likes your page will ever see it - it's the equivalent of having your website fall from the first page of the search results to the 20th page. Every status update you post should included a photo or video, and calls to action to get people to engage with the content are critical. This might scare some shop owners off, as many will automatically resign themselves to the idea that they have no chance of getting exposure on FB anymore. That's an understandable reaction. But if you're posting content that people care about it still works and you can still have some success. Keep in mind, this change that FB made affects everyone, including your competition. If you don't know what to post, take a look at what your competition is doing, and/or other shops who offer similar services as you. Pay close attention to those pages that are getting several Likes, Comments, and Shares on the content they post and take a moment to determine why they might be getting the engagement they're getting. I've found that mixing in some FB ads for certain promos works, even if it's just spending $10-20 for a boosted post. Liking and commenting on anyone who comments on your content now becomes really important too. Like with anything in business you just have to learn to adapt and find new ways to make the system work for you.
  11. You have to put a great deal of thought into who your ideal customer is and come up with creative ways to engage them. Create a few segments and engage with them differently. Nobody says you have to post the same content all the time on social media - it doesn't even always have to be car related. It has to be relevant to your demographic. Here's a great article that everyone here should read, which talks about a shop that started a campaign that targets female customers: http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/social-media-case-study-victory-auto/ Once you define your ideal customer and what they're interested in reading about you can create some marketing campaigns to educate them, entertain them, and build a relationship with them. One thing I would say everyone should do even if you haven't nailed down a solid overall marketing strategy is START BUILDING (or continue to build) YOUR EMAIL LIST. Get people to subscribe to an email list for news and updates from your shop. Even if you don't have anything to send out at the moment, start building that list yesterday. That is one of THE most effective forms of marketing these days, hands down. Think about it, those people want to hear from you. And when combined with social media and other forms online marketing it can be extremely powerful - far more powerful than any one form of online marketing on its own. Add a newsletter sign up to your website, to any electronic communications you send out, etc. Some services (like Constant Contact) even have a "text to subscribe" feature.
  12. I've found that forums are very much like Yelp - you can avoid them if you want to but the people you mention who will tear your name down will do so even if you're not there to defend yourself. That is the nature of any online community, whether it be a forum or a FB group, or any review directory, it doesn't matter. If you try to steer clear of the places where negative situations will come up, you wouldn't be posting online at all. And all you end up doing is ignoring the problem and letting it fester. It's better to address it and use it as an opportunity to win other customers over. In my experience the potential upside easily outweighs the potential negatives. The trick is to not engage publicly those who are trying to tear you down: http://www.garage40.com/dealing-with-forum-complaints/ Spend more time and energy engaging the people in the forums who are working on builds and are in the part of the buying process where it makes sense for you to interact with them (they've already done their research and know what they need). It's good to post some "how-to" articles every now and then too to help those who need help in the research phase but don't spend too much time trying to answer tech questions - you can do that all day every day and it won't always result in business.The people who are working on builds tend to be more in the buying phase. If your business is centered around local service, then look for the forums that have geographic sub-forums - FB groups are becoming popular for this too. The bigger opportunity in forums is going to be for non-local businesses. Should you advertise in the forums? Maybe. It depends on the market and the rules of the forums that are popular in your target market. I have some forums where you cannot say anything that will let people know you're a business. Others don't mind so long as you're not pushing products.
  13. KMS, do you do any forum marketing in markets you target? I only ask because I'm a forum owner (for an old Mitsubishi platform) and I know performance shops tend to do pretty well when they target forums. If you have any questions on the best ways to market in forums, feel free to ask. I have a pretty unique perspective on that obviously, having watched shops do it right and do it wrong over the past 15 years of managing forums. Social media marketing has cast a shadow over forums recently but there is still plenty of opportunity for using forums to generate business, grow your audience, and improve branding.
  14. By the way, how are you going about generating the reviews on your website? You're getting a great amount of reviews. Emails going out to your customers after service?
  15. I think you're on point for everything you've touched on. Though you never know with Google, I really feel the more reviews you have on Google+ the more it helps you with the local SEO rankings, which is HUGE. Yelp is big too, but your Yelp link listing is always going to get less exposure than your Google Maps marker. That's why I asked about where you felt you were getting the bigger benefit. But you're right, a complete marketing plan is always going to be more important than trying to focus on one specific effort. You have to focus on several efforts and prioritize them, and it all has to tie into an overall strategy. As for the FB boosted posts, the only reason I would disagree a little bit there on it being a bad marketing method is because with the recent FB page algorithm change (well, it's been a few months now), company pages have almost been forced to use boosted posts or FB ads to get their status updates seen in the news feed. Page updates have been relegated to the bottom of all news feeds. It's extremely difficult to get much engagement without at least a small monthly budget. And if you're not posting an update with a photo or video it's become almost pointless to even post an update at all. Spending time commenting on other pages and interacting with people in comments tends to be pretty effective too. I've always been fascinated with this stuff though, and it's always cool to see someone doing it well.
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