Posts Tagged ‘Web Marketing Consultant’
Economic Outlook Retail vacancies still expected to increase by Mike Seemuth of “The Daily Business Review”
While business conditions may have improved for some retailers, few will dare to lease more space this year.
Commercial real estate brokerage Marcus & Millichap this week forecast that vacancy rates at retail buildings will increase this year throughout South Florida, especially in Broward and Palm Beach counties.
The firm forecast that countywide retail vacancy rates this year will average 12.9 percent this year in Broward and 12 percent in Palm Beach County, versus 8.9 percent in Miami-Dade County. The comparable vacancy rates last year were 11.4 percent in Broward, 10.5 percent in Palm Beach and 8.1 percent in Miami-Dade.
In a report released Wednesday, Marcus & Millichap also predicted that South Florida landlords will lower their average asking rates for retail space in all three counties this year, compared with last year. The firm expects average asking rates per square foot of retail space to fall by 2.7 percent to $22.59 in Miami-Dade, by 3.1 percent to $17.86 in Broward and by 3.3 percent to $20.21 in Palm Beach.
Marcus & Millichap forecast that new construction will add 1.35 million square feet of new retail space this year, including 750,000 square feet each in both Miami-Dade and Broward.
In Broward, “the start of a recovery in retail property fundamentals will not occur in 2010,” Marcus & Millichap reported. In Miami-Dade, “although retail spending increased in the first quarter, perhaps due in part to Super Bowl-related activity in January, it’s down nearly 6 percent on a year-over-year basis.”
Demand for retail space among operators of grocery stores and pharmacies is steady, but “if you’re talking about specialty retailers in malls, they have a much-reduced view of needed space,” said Rick McAllister, president of the Florida Retail Federation, a Tallahassee-based trade group.
Statewide, retail sales hovered close to 2009 levels in the January-April period but remained well below levels of comparable periods in 2007 and 2008, Florida sales tax data show.
“Most people have figured out they aren’t going to lose their job, and their income hasn’t dropped, so there’s pent-up demand, and I think that’s what we’re seeing,” McAllister said. “Consumer confidence is continuing to gain ground, and consumer confidence leads to spending. … But right now, we’re not seeing the uptick that we’d like to see.”
Online marketing could intensify as more companies make it pay off
More companies are likely to gain from online marketing as they integrate their Internet presence with broader marketing strategies.
“We’re finding if you just go online, it doesn’t work by itself,” said Roberta Backus Turner, chairwoman of South Florida-based advertising agency Backus Turner International. Her clients get better results if they “reinforce it with traditional media. … We find the combination works very well.”
Many companies are trying online marketing because of the low cost.
“People are still leery about the Internet as far as credibility,” said Sherrie Chastain, co-owner of Skunkworks Marketing Solutions, a 2-year-old business based in Palm Beach Gardens. But “traditional marketing is much more expensive than Internet marketing.” Chastain said one of her commercial clients, a seller of impact-resistant glass, formerly spent $13,000 a month on Yellow Pages print ads in South Florida and now gets a bigger response by paying her firm $2,500 a month for ongoing online marketing support.
The main goal of online marketing is to maximize so-called “SEO,” or search engine optimization, the widespread practice of crafting online content so the target audience can find it easily by using Google, Yahoo and other Internet search engines.
But unless the theme of online content is part of a consistent marketing message, the payoff from an Internet presence may be meager.
“That’s the fundamental mistake that everyone is making,” said Murray Izenwasser, owner of an online marketing agency in West Palm Beach called Biztegra. Many companies “are creating a Facebook page, or a Twitter account, or a blog, but they’re never taking a step back and asking, ‘How does this fit in with everything else we’re doing?’ … It’s not about interactive anymore. It’s about integration.”
However, conservation is the watchword at many companies that have decided to spend less on marketing, online or offline, until the economy improves.
“I see a little trepidation in the marketplace,” said Alec J. Rosen, managing partner of AJR Partners, a marketing agency in Coral Gables. “There was an expectation at the end of last year that we had turned a corner, and I think with the recent news in Europe and the markets and all of that, I think people have gotten a little jittery.”
Gambling industry poised for a new phase of expansion
The casino industry in South Florida is a good bet to expand this year despite the hard-luck economy.
Installation of slot machines may increase as a result of a new state law cutting the state tax that pari-mutuel operators pay on slot-machine revenue.
Effective July 1, the law also creates a 20-year compact between the state of Florida and the Seminole Tribe of Florida. The tribe will pay billions of dollars to the state government for the duration of the agreement while offering so-called Class III casino games, including blackjack and roulette, together with slot machines and poker at five of its casinos in Florida, including three in Broward County.
Under the law, the state tax that operators of pari-mutuel horse tracks, dog tracks and jai-alai frontons pay on slot machine income will drop to 35 percent from 50 percent, starting in July.
The profitability of the 4-month-old Calder Casino in northwest Miami-Dade County “will be considerably enhanced” by the lower state tax on slot machine revenue, said Robert L. Evans, chief executive of Churchill Downs Inc., owner of the casino and the adjacent pari-mutuel horse racing track, Calder Race Course.
Calder is the fifth pari-mutuel in Miami-Dade and Broward counties to introduce slot machines in recent years, “and we are now second largest in the market in terms of net gaming revenues,” Evans said on Churchill Downs’ May 6 conference call with stock analysts. “We have got a better mousetrap there, with the facility that we built, and I think if we just stay patient and do a good job of marketing, we will continue to build the revenue base.”
Florida Gaming Corp. hasn’t yet introduced slot machines at the Miami Jai-Alai Fronton but plans to do so. In a recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Florida Gaming said it intends to raise funds by refinancing debt or selling its jai-alai property in Fort Pierce “to initiate efforts to install slot machines” at the Miami fronton.
Las Vegas-based Boyd Gaming, the state-licensed operator of Dania Jai-Alai, has postponed plans to redevelop the pari-mutuel fronton, and hasn’t introduced slot machines there.
“But we are taking another look at it,” Keith Smith, president and chief executive officer of Boyd, said on the public company’s quarterly conference call May 4. “Now that the tax rate has been lowered, it certainly takes away one barrier.”
Beware of Social Media and Internet Marketing Consultants in West Palm Beach & Miami Florida
Many Social Media and Internet Marketing Consultants profess to be experts in their field, so why can’t they be readily found on the internet?
If they can’t properly market themselves, how can they successfully market a client?
Are they really experts with….click here to read the rest.







