Although only 22% of local merchants say they have used Facebook Ads, nearly two-thirds of those who have done so (64.9%) say they would use the service again, according to a report by MerchantCircle. Meanwhile, 65.7% of surveyed local merchants say they use Facebook for marketing.

Below, additional findings from MerchantCircle's quarterly Merchant Confidence Index, based on a survey of 4,942 small, local business owners in the US.

Asked why they would use Facebook Ads again, surveyed local merchants cite ease of use (66.5%), followed by the flexibility to pause and restart campaigns as needed (64.8%).

More than one-half of local merchants (53.7%) cite Facebook's targeted display ad offering as a reason for continuing with Facebook Ads and 49.3% cite new business. 

But not everyone has had success with Facebook Ads. Among the 35% of local merchants who say they would not advertise with Facebook again, 69.0% say Facebook Ads didn't help them to find new customers and 34.5% say the program was too expensive.

Top Digital Marketing Channels

Facebook is the top digital channel among local merchants (65.7%), followed by Google (53.3%), LinkedIn (45.7%), Google Places (38.8%), and Twitter (32.1%).

Meanwhile, adoption of location-based marketing dropped in the previous quarter: 22% of local businesses say they are now using Facebook Places to market their business, compared with the 32% who said so in in MerchantCircle's 1Q11 report; similarly, 7.3% are now using Foursquare, compared with 9% in 1Q11. 

Local merchants have been equally cautious about using top group-buying sites Groupon (4.3%) and Living Social (3.6%) for marketing.


Looking for real-world examples of businesses achieving their social media marketing goals? Our 47-page case-study collection, Facebook Success Stories, shows you how to increase brand awareness, target specific markets, promote new products, and create communities that engage users. Also check out The State of Social Media Marketing, a 240-page original research report from MarketingProfs.


Group-Buying Adoption Low, but Favorability High

Overall, fewer than one in ten local merchants (9.4%) say they have used some type of group-buying site; among them, 77% say they would offer a daily deal again:

Another 8.4% of local merchants plan to use group-buying sites in the next six months.

Among group-buying naysayers (those who wouldn't offer another daily deal), 42% say their efforts didn't produce new customers, 25% say the costs were too high, and 24% say group-buying is a losing proposition altogether. 

Group-Buying Market Evolving

In the rapidly changing group-buying space, familiarity with well-known brands Facebook and Google may give those brands a long-term advantage over current market leaders Groupon and LivingSocial: 52% of local merchants say such familiarity would lead them to choose Facebook Deals or Google Offers over competitive offerings. 

Other reasons for choosing Facebook Deals are bigger audience size (26%) and better local targeting (21%). Those more likely to use Google Offers cite Google's bigger audience (42%) and brand reputation (34%).

Mobile Marketing

Few local merchants are experimenting with mobile: 18% report doing any sort of mobile marketing or advertising.

Lack of understanding is a barrier to mobile adoption: 71% of merchants say they don't have a good idea of how to reach consumers via mobile marketing. 

Not surprisingly, local merchants say they are short on time and money for marketing:

  • 61% are spending less than $2,500 a year on marketing.
  • 73% have no plans to raise their budgets this year. 
  • 37% cite lack of time and resources as their top marketing challenge.

About the data: Findings are based on the sixth Merchant Confidence Index survey, fielded online from April 30 to June 6, 2011 among 4,942 local business owners across the US; 78% of respondents employ fewer than five people.

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