The Evolution of Search and Social: Marketing Predictions for 2025 (Part 2 of 3)
Your Guide to Localized Marketing for Financial Services Companies
Your Guide to Localized Marketing for Financial Services Companies
As a financial services company, you likely understand the importance of marketing, but implementing a strategy across all your agents or businesses is often easier said than done. Compliance issues are one of the main setbacks financial services companies face when developing a comprehensive marketing strategy. Within this blog, we’ll define localized marketing, break down its three components, and provide tips your financial services company can use when developing a strategy that takes compliance into account. Let’s get started!A Look Into Localized Marketing
If you’re not familiar, localized marketing is the process of creating and implementing a marketing strategy distributed at the local level. For financial services companies, corporate-level employees must work with local agents or branches to create a cohesive localized marketing strategy and deploy localized marketing tactics across all locations. Now, let’s get into the three main areas of localized marketing: local search, local social, and reputation management. In each section, we’ll explain how your financial services company can build a strong strategy for each.Local Search
Focusing on local search and SEO is an excellent way for your financial services company to stand out online and appear in relevant search results. The more you put into your SEO efforts, the better your chance of ranking higher on search engines like Google. Businesses in the Google 3-Pack receive 126 percent more traffic and 93 percent more actions (calls, website clicks, and driving directions) than businesses ranked 4-10, emphasizing the need for your company to rank high on Google through local search. Two critical components of local search are your local listings and local pages.Local Listings
A local listing is today’s digital version of a Yellow Pages listing. It’s when an online directory mentions your local business. These local listings often include basic business information, such as your local business’s name, address, phone number, and a link to your website. Some directories will include customer reviews or payment options that you accept. As a financial services company, claiming and optimizing your local listings across all major directories such as Google Maps and Search, Apple, and Facebook is crucial. Once you’ve claimed your local listings, you can begin optimizing them. The most important information each local listing should include is the location’s name, address, and phone number (NAP). Once you’ve updated your local listings with your NAP information, it’s time to add more details. Other details your business should include, if applicable, are:- Links to local social media pages
- Payment forms accepted
- A business description
- High-quality photos
- Attributes (identifies as veteran-led, wheelchair accessible entrance, dogs welcome, etc.)
- Additional media (videos, photos of your location, and more)
- A call to action (CTA)
Local Pages
Local pages are another way to improve local search visibility and drive more business for your agents or individual locations. A local page, often called a local landing page, is a specific web page for each business location. Typically, local pages are published from your website, giving you complete control over what you post on them. When creating local pages, they should include similar information to what is found in your local listings. You can also optimize your local pages by:- Incorporating keywords
- Including high-quality images
- Adding alt text or tags to images
- Creating clean URL structures
- Ensuring meta description is enticing and contains relevant keywords
- Having multiple calls to action (CTAs) to increase lead conversion
- Showcasing user-generated content (UGC) such as reviews or customer testimonials
Local Social
Local social is the social media arm of localized marketing. Local social uses social media platforms to connect local branches or agents with local consumers to create a sense of community, improve brand awareness, and generate more sales. As a financial services company, a solid local social strategy can differentiate your company from competitors. The data speaks for itself. Localized content receives 12x the engagement compared to content not considered localized. If a potential customer is using social media and finds one of your competitors’ local agents or businesses promoting their services and can’t find your company on social media, which do you think they’ll go with? If your financial services company is just getting started with local social media, the first step is to ensure your agents or businesses have created or claimed local social pages on relevant platforms. With 2.96 billion monthly users worldwide, Facebook is a must. You can also look at your target audience’s demographic data to help you determine which other platforms they’re spending time on. After your local social pages are claimed and ready to go, you can begin posting! Here are some local post ideas and examples for financial services companies:- Interactive calculators
- Post a short video or gif linking to your online local mortgage calculator.
- Quizzes
- Generate a quiz about insurance rates in different states or for different ages.
- Polls
- Start a poll asking followers about their favorite local places to visit or things to do in an area.
- Live Q&A session
- Start a live video or a Twitter thread letting your followers ask anything about the financial market or your industry.
- Giveaways and contests
- Create a contest for followers to like or follow another local agent or partner’s page for an entry into a giveaway.