Share Your Business Location With BatchGeo

There’s a story, possibly apocryphal, that goes like this: When one of Albert Einstein’s colleagues asked the eminent physicist for his telephone number one day, Einstein reached for a telephone directory.

“You don’t remember your own number?” the man asked, understandably startled.

“No,” Einstein replied with a shrug. ”Why should I memorize something I can so easily get from a book?”

Today, I think Einstein would say, “Why should I memorize something I can so easily get from a phone?”

Location is something important you can get from your phone; most small business owners want customers to have that critical bit of information. If you want to map your retail locations, or provide driving directions for your restaurant, or embed a Google map on your website, the little-known, but super-useful BatchGeo is a site you’ll want to check out.

In about five minutes, I created this cool sample map highlighting some of the Small Business Trends contributors, based on their Twitter profile location. You can see the full size, Google-powered map here.

BatchGeo_SmallBizTrends_Contributors

You can reportedly do some of these same things in Google Maps, but they are not as easy to do. BatchGeo makes it easy, and even kind of fun.  Some of the uses that I’ve seen for BatchGeo include mapping real estate properties (agents and brokers), coordinating with mobile workers by sending map links to field crews, showing a distance calculator from prominent locations to a specific store (probably useful for tourist towns), and mapping out sales territories by rep.  The Seattle Times published a Holiday Lights 2010 feature using BatchGeo; see the map here. Finally, you can create an interactive store locator, so that when your customer uses a smartphone (which knows its own location), they will be given the nearest store location to them.

Here are a few more cool ways to use BatchGeo:

  • Create an interactive map – Copy directly from a spreadsheet app like Excel, Numbers or the free Google Docs or OpenOffice Calc.
  • Driving directions – Mapped addresses are linked to Google Maps for satellite photos and driving directions.
  • Easily map an address list, postal/ZIP codes, cities or any geography.
  • Save a map – Create a map with your locations and associated data to save to a Web page for later use.
  • Create a mobile optimized store locator - Map your store properties, and then link to them from your website.
  • Visualize many address data points plotted on a single map, separated into groups by color.

batchgeo mapping tool

One of the sweetest things about this service is you can take your data from any spreadsheet, dump it into BatchGeo and it will do the heavy lifting for you.  You just cut and paste your table into their entry form, and within minutes you have a map that you can embed, share or just marvel at.  BatchGeo also has a big brother called Maptive, which is a premium professional level service that may fit your needs better. Find it on their home page.

Overall, I found this tool to be easy to use and practical. With more and more opportunity to market your business via Google Maps and other location-based services, having a robust map of your stores or locations, or using maps to understand your customer base for geographic targeting, BatchGeo is worth a look.

Learn more about BatchGeo.

From Small Business Trends

Share Your Business Location With BatchGeo

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

Share Your 2011 Aspirations With Google

The Google Small Business team has started a conversation and they’re hoping you’ll help them finish it. As the holidays and New Year approach, Google wants to know your one wish for your small business in 2011. Now, I know you probably have a long list of goals for your small business and lots of stuff you plan to accomplish; that’s what makes you a savvy SMB owner. But that’s not the list Google is looking for.

Google wants to see your absolute, top, this-is-what-I-want goal. According to Google, it could be something that helps your business grow or just something you need to ease your personal peace of mind – big or small, it doesn’t matter. Maybe you’d like a new tool that would help your business make sense of X or a better way to do Y. Or, heck, maybe you’d like Google to slow down on the new local changes so you could catch up. (OK, it’s possible that’s just what I want this year from Google.)

Whatever your goal for 2011 is, I encourage you to share it with the guys and gals at Google. If Google is known for anything, it’s for helping small business owners better market their Web sites via free tools and easy-to-grasp services. Also cool is that Google promises they’ll share the information they aggregate to let people know the themes that bubble up. That’s a business poll I’d like to see the answers to. I imagine many other business owners would, as well.

If you want to pass your wish along to Google, they’re giving you a couple of ways to go about it. SMB owners can choose to complete the form on the Google blog post linked above, leave a comment on the Google for Small Business Facebook page, or send Google a tweet on Twitter using the hashtag #Wish2011. It’s that simple.

So, small business owners of the world, what’s your big wish for the upcoming year? I’ll tell you mine if you tell me yours. ;)

From Small Business Trends

Share Your 2011 Aspirations With Google

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

Facebook Apps Secretly Share User Info


Image: CNET’s Surveillance State

Another Facebook privacy gaffe has hit the fan, thanks to a Wall Street Journal investigation. A number of popular Facebook apps, including Farmville, have been sharing information with third-party advertisers and data companies. The Wall Street Journal’s investigative report has more:

The apps, ranked by research company Inside Network Inc. (based on monthly users), include Zynga Game Network Inc.’s FarmVille, with 59 million users, and Texas HoldEm Poker and FrontierVille. Three of the top 10 apps, including FarmVille, also have been transmitting personal information about a user’s friends to outside companies.

Most apps aren’t made by Facebook, but by independent software developers. Several apps became unavailable to Facebook users after the Journal informed Facebook that the apps were transmitting personal information; the specific reason for their unavailability remains unclear.

The information being transmitted is one of Facebook’s basic building blocks: the unique “Facebook ID” number assigned to every user on the site. Since a Facebook user ID is a public part of any Facebook profile, anyone can use an ID number to look up a person’s name, using a standard Web browser, even if that person has set all of his or her Facebook information to be private. For other users, the Facebook ID reveals information they have set to share with “everyone,” including age, residence, occupation and photos.

The apps reviewed by the Journal were sending Facebook ID numbers to at least 25 advertising and data firms, several of which build profiles of Internet users by tracking their online activities….one data-gathering firm, RapLeaf Inc., had linked Facebook user ID information obtained from apps to its own database of Internet users, which it sells. RapLeaf also transmitted the Facebook IDs it obtained to a dozen other firms, the Journal found.

The applications transmitting Facebook IDs may have breached their own privacy policies, as well as industry standards, which say sites shouldn’t share and advertisers shouldn’t collect personally identifiable information without users’ permission.

Facebook once again proves that your privacy is the price of connecting with people online for free. Thank you, WSJ, for uncovering this.


View full post on Business Pundit

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