By Lauren Drell at Mashable:
Last week, Foursquare announced a slew of new merchant tools that give business owners more power than ever before to communicate with their customers through the location-based platform. Before, business owners could claim their venues, set up a special and let the platform take it from there — it was more of a passive marketing tool. The new additions make Foursquare‘s local updates far more dynamic, and they leverage location-based marketing in a more targeted way than Facebook and Twitter. The revamp has several parts:
Local updates let business owners who’ve claimed their venues send updates about their business to their “best customers” when they’re nearby. Your “best customers” are determined by how often they check in, how recently they’ve checked in and whether they’ve liked your venue on Foursquare. Whether someone is nearby is determined via GPS, and it might be one mile in a dense city, or up to 10 miles in more rural areas, where people have cars. Note that these updates target people who’ve already interacted with your brand on Foursquare, so it’s more of a tool to build loyalty and continue the conversation with existing customers than a way to acquire new ones. However, on Wednesday, Foursquare announced promoted updates, its first paid product. These ads target users whose friends frequently stop by, who have added your venue to one of their Foursquare lists or who are often visiting similar venues in that neighborhood, so that’s where brands can communicate directly with customers. Like regular updates, these ads won’t come through as push notifications; they’ll be found in the “Explore” tab.
Regardless of whether they’re paid or free updates, good update topics include: new menu items, upcoming events, specials, discounts and a fresh batch or new shipment of product. Think about the kind of things your frequent customers would want to know about, and use updates to lure them to your storefront.
So, here’s how you send an update.
Step 1. Log in to Foursquare; you’ll be logged in as an individual, but you need to use Foursquare as the business to have admin access. In the upper right hand corner, click your name, then in the dropdown, click “Use Foursquare as [business].” Then click “Updates” in the blue nav bar.
First, in the dropdown menu, decide which venues you’d like the update to target. You can do one venue or all venues. The beauty of using all venues is that you can use updates to cross-market. So if someone who frequents your New York shop happens to be near your Chicago shop, your updates will appear in his feed when he’s nearby (so long as the update applies to that shop), driving him to that location.
After you select your venue, type the update, select a photo and, if it makes sense, add a special. A few specs to keep in mind:
Updates don’t come through as push notifications. They will show when people view your location, in your loyal customers’ “friends” feed (alongside tips, check-ins and likes), and after people check in. Any photos that are part of a check-in will populate in your business’ Foursquare page. In the app, updates look like this:
Foursquare is paving the way for profile pages. The new feature, which can be seen at foursquare.com/businessname, has all the trappings of profile pages, hinting at future paid features. Each page has a bio, banner image, a collage of likers, photos, tips, recent updates and lists.
To optimize Foursquare, support local businesses by leaving tips around town — these tips populate sort of like a Facebook wall, and comprise much of the content users see, with hyperlinks to the tipster’s page, so you could actually drive traffic to your own page by being supportive of other businesses. It’s a win-win, and the same goes for lists.
Your banner image should be 860×130 pixels, less than 250KB and in GIF, JPG or PNG format. In your profile, you can also add up to three links, in addition to your Twitter handle.
The dashboard lets you view check-in statistic on a venue-by-venue
basir, or as a company. Spotting trends and lulls can help you optimize
your updates and specials to drive foot traffic to your business.
Business owners can see total check-ins, unique customers, people who
like your venue and people who like your updates. Clicking “View Report”
pulls up day-by-day stats for a deeper dive into the Foursquare — and
by proxy, buying habits — of your customers. You can see how many
check-ins get pushed to Twitter and Facebook, as well as the number of
first-time customers. CSV exports of this data will be available soon,
for the number crunchers out there. Foursquare also plans to roll out
news feeds of a business’ top visitors and demographics, helping
business owners establish richer relationships with their patrons.
Last week, Foursquare announced a slew of new merchant tools that give business owners more power than ever before to communicate with their customers through the location-based platform. Before, business owners could claim their venues, set up a special and let the platform take it from there — it was more of a passive marketing tool. The new additions make Foursquare‘s local updates far more dynamic, and they leverage location-based marketing in a more targeted way than Facebook and Twitter. The revamp has several parts:
- Updates — Share photos, specials and news to nearby customers, a la tweets or Facebook status updates
- Specials — Create and manage Foursquare specials (no change here, aside from a sleeker interface)
- Dashboard — See stats about who checked in, and how your venue traffic changes from month to month
- Tools — Manage your business’ presence on Foursquare, including adding new managers and editing your venues.
Creating an Update
Local updates let business owners who’ve claimed their venues send updates about their business to their “best customers” when they’re nearby. Your “best customers” are determined by how often they check in, how recently they’ve checked in and whether they’ve liked your venue on Foursquare. Whether someone is nearby is determined via GPS, and it might be one mile in a dense city, or up to 10 miles in more rural areas, where people have cars. Note that these updates target people who’ve already interacted with your brand on Foursquare, so it’s more of a tool to build loyalty and continue the conversation with existing customers than a way to acquire new ones. However, on Wednesday, Foursquare announced promoted updates, its first paid product. These ads target users whose friends frequently stop by, who have added your venue to one of their Foursquare lists or who are often visiting similar venues in that neighborhood, so that’s where brands can communicate directly with customers. Like regular updates, these ads won’t come through as push notifications; they’ll be found in the “Explore” tab.
Regardless of whether they’re paid or free updates, good update topics include: new menu items, upcoming events, specials, discounts and a fresh batch or new shipment of product. Think about the kind of things your frequent customers would want to know about, and use updates to lure them to your storefront.
So, here’s how you send an update.
Step 1. Log in to Foursquare; you’ll be logged in as an individual, but you need to use Foursquare as the business to have admin access. In the upper right hand corner, click your name, then in the dropdown, click “Use Foursquare as [business].” Then click “Updates” in the blue nav bar.
First, in the dropdown menu, decide which venues you’d like the update to target. You can do one venue or all venues. The beauty of using all venues is that you can use updates to cross-market. So if someone who frequents your New York shop happens to be near your Chicago shop, your updates will appear in his feed when he’s nearby (so long as the update applies to that shop), driving him to that location.
After you select your venue, type the update, select a photo and, if it makes sense, add a special. A few specs to keep in mind:
- Text can be up to 160 characters, including a clickable URL.
- Photos can be JPG, GIF or PNG and should be 720×540 pixels and less than 2 MB. Any narrower than 720 pixels, and the image will be grainy; pulling Instagrams, which are 612px, won’t work here.
- Landscape-oriented images work best
Updates don’t come through as push notifications. They will show when people view your location, in your loyal customers’ “friends” feed (alongside tips, check-ins and likes), and after people check in. Any photos that are part of a check-in will populate in your business’ Foursquare page. In the app, updates look like this:
Location Page
Foursquare is paving the way for profile pages. The new feature, which can be seen at foursquare.com/businessname, has all the trappings of profile pages, hinting at future paid features. Each page has a bio, banner image, a collage of likers, photos, tips, recent updates and lists.
To optimize Foursquare, support local businesses by leaving tips around town — these tips populate sort of like a Facebook wall, and comprise much of the content users see, with hyperlinks to the tipster’s page, so you could actually drive traffic to your own page by being supportive of other businesses. It’s a win-win, and the same goes for lists.
Your banner image should be 860×130 pixels, less than 250KB and in GIF, JPG or PNG format. In your profile, you can also add up to three links, in addition to your Twitter handle.
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