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How this Sydney business reached 500,000 users via a savvy media campaign

A Sydney startup that connects drivers looking for car parks to homeowners with empty garages or driveways has reached half a million users around Australia. And it was all thinks to a savvy media campaign, Parking Made Easy founder Daniel Battaglia says. Battaglia is now planning to expand the platform, which allows homeowners to make about $200 […]
Dinushi Dias
Dinushi Dias
Daniel-Battaglia-PARKING-MADE-EASY

A Sydney startup that connects drivers looking for car parks to homeowners with empty garages or driveways has reached half a million users around Australia.

And it was all thinks to a savvy media campaign, Parking Made Easy founder Daniel Battaglia says.

Battaglia is now planning to expand the platform, which allows homeowners to make about $200 to $400 per month on vacant car space.

“We are in the middle of a pivot,” Battaglia tells StartupSmart.

“We’re updating to include all types of parking, including airports, commercial, universities, shopping centres, hotels, hospitals and other areas.”

With more than 60% of its users based in Sydney and Melbourne, Battaglia is focusing efforts on developing Parking Made Easy into a sustainable Australian-based business before expanding into new markets overseas.

He has launched a sister site Parking Cupid to “test the waters” in Hong Kong, Canada and the US.

In its four years since launch, Parking Made Easy has enjoyed coverage across various media channels including 2GB radio and Channel Nine.

“The main driver for our growth was the SEO coverage, the ad words campaign with new positive return on investment in ad words spend and media coverage,” Battaglia says.

Looking back at his own startup’s growth, he says there are two key ways startups can boost brand awareness and online traffic to drive their success.

1. Contact individuals in the media

To increase his chances of getting picked up by the media, Battaglia says he avoids the press release approach.

“Press releases are not targeted to anyone,” he says.

“From my experience, a lot of journalists don’t read them.”

Instead, he prefers to spend time researching journalists and the type of stories they write before approaching them directly with a reference back to a recent story and how his new content relates and could add value to the audience.

“I pick journalists based on what they’ve written in the past,” Battaglia says.

To find direct contacts, Battaglia uses sites like SourceBottle, a platform founded in Australia by PR veteran Bec Derrington to connect journalists and sources.

He has also tried the international version HARO.

“It’s better if you can customise and tailor your pitch to each journalist or each company,” Battaglia says.

He has found this not only gives him a higher chance of success in being published but also increases audience engagement once the story is out.

When reaching out to journalists, Battaglia aims to send content that is concise with sufficient detail and entertainment value.

“You want to use something that’s both entertaining and informational,” he says.

2. Ensure content is optimised and updated

With Parking Made Easy, Battaglia uses a mix of key words to ensure relevant searches on Google land at his business.

“SEO needs to really target key words and long-tail key words,” he says.

This means including tags like “parking” as well as “car parking for rent in Sydney”.

Additionally, Battaglia uses descriptive tags to provide a detailed picture of what’s happening on the site to increase the chances of his page showing up in Google searches.

“Continually update your website with things like meta-tags and alt-attributes, creating backlinks to media and blogs,” Battaglia says.

“The more descriptive you are about a relevant topic, the more helpful it is.”

This article was first published by StartupSmart. Follow StartupSmart on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Soundcloud.