Last winter, I developed a case of Foursquare fatigue.

It’s not because I lost the Mayorship of the Annex, where I live. (I have to say for a few months, it was a tightly contested race.)

And it’s not even because the whole concept of Mayor in Toronto has been tainted of late.

I’d simply grown tired of the game of checking in everywhere I go and not getting much value in return. 

I used to hold the venerable title of Mayor at numerous restaurants and small shops in my neighbourhood. And a review of my checkins was like a map of my anthropological footprint (i.e. you knew where I hung out).

But none of the locations knew I was Mayor – or, for that matter, could care less. They were small businesses and worried about the little things, like making money and customer service.

I still like the idea of location as a way to bridge the mobile-retail gap and see lots of potential there. But rather than creating a separate network, we need to figure out a way for businesses to be online where their customers are and offer a seamless experience.

Facebook has the mass right now and is worth watching because of the job they’re doing with Facebook places and graph search. The question to as is can they get away from their big brand focus and appeal to Mom and Pop shops in a way that builds awareness and drives revenue for those small, quirky, personality-driven businesses? That is, putting a focus on hyper-local sales.

The new Yellow Pages
No one has figured out how to do what the Yellow Pages did so well for so many years. As Jay Baer might say, they were the ultimate youtility to help people find and connect with businesses in their community. When I started my first agency, I was too late to get into one edition and lamented that it would take almost a year for people to discover me there.

Retail was always about location. It still is – whether it’s the location online (name/URL), bricks and mortar or a combination of the two.

Combining the desire we have to shop, socialize and go out with mobile, augmented reality, recommendations and reviews, relevant promoted content – there’s incredible potential for the proverbial killer app.

Only this time, let’s keep civic politics out of it…

Where do you think location is heading?

About Martin Waxman


Martin Waxman, MCM, is a digital communications strategist. He conducts AI research, leads Generative AI and digital and social media training workshops and speaks at events across North America. He's co-founder of two PR agencies, president of a consultancy and has worked in the industry for nearly 30 years. Martin is a LinkedIn Learning instructor, adjunct professor at the Schulich School of Business and associate director of the Future of Marketing Institute. He also teaches digital marketing strategy at McMaster University. He's a member of the Institute for Public Relations Digital Media Research Center and a past-chair of PRSA Counselors Academy. He has a Master of Communications Management (MCM) from McMaster-Syracuse Universities.