Posts Tagged ‘search engine marketing’

Search Advertising: A Look Back at 2009…And How to Prepare for 2010

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

It’s that time of year again when we start to see industry pundits and influencers thoughtfully reflect on the year in review. Overall, 2009 has been a tough and tumultuous year for the economy, and digital advertising, as a whole, has not been immune to that. A look back at the year in search, however, tells a slightly more promising story.

While some things continue to remain the same in search advertising—for example, the market dominance of Google, Microsoft and Yahoo—there were some major market shifts, which are going to impact the year ahead. From the introduction of Bing to the major search deal between Microsoft and Yahoo!, one thing is for certain: as we head in to 2010, these dynamic industry events have search marketers and advertisers on their toes.

There has been news to write home about, too. Just this past month, both Efficient Frontier and SearchIgnite issued reports based on search advertising industry data from the third quarter of 2009. Both reports indicate paid search spend was up during that time period, compared to Q2.

This latest industry data comes on the heels of the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) release of the IAB Internet Advertising Revenue Report for the first half of 2009, which indicates that search revenues were up slightly from that same period in 2008, amounting to more than $5.1 billion for the first six months of 2009.

While all of this recent market data certainly alludes to an underlying sense of cautious optimism, given the ups and downs of the past year, it’s certainly understandable that many search marketers are still hesitant, and unsure of how to move forward in 2010. Our tip? Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. One important thing advertisers can do right now is to diversify their efforts by complementing campaigns on major search sites like Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft, with alternate sources of traffic with less-competitive CPCs.

What’s the bottom line for 2010? Innovate, diversify, and think outside the de facto search standards. Your ROI will thank you for it.

Gill Brown is vice president of advertising network sales for LookSmart.

Billions Wasted on Paid Search Every Year

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

alex-yoder-headshot-color.jpg If you manage $50,000 or more per month on paid search advertising, evidence suggests that as much as one-third of it is wasted due to sub-optimized search marketing campaigns. Does this mean you are a bad search marketer? The answer is, unquestionably, no. However, the following statistics are sobering and suggest you may want to look at how you manage and optimize your campaigns:

· Paid search advertising is getting increasingly competitive. It makes up nearly 45 percent of all global online advertising expenditures, and JPMorgan forecasts that spend to reach $30 billion in 2008.

· Keyword inflation continues to rise due to competition and the market. Industry studies show Google has surpassed 70-percent share in searches for the first time, and a likely deal between Yahoo/Google may increase Yahoo’s pay-per-click search rate by 22 percent.

· Optimized campaigns can achieve the same results at 69 percent of the cost. WebTrends clients—who previously used a combination of manual methods and bid management tools—experienced an average return on advertising spending improvement of 44 percent only 90 days after switching to WebTrends’ new automated SEM optimization solution. In the past, they essentially wasted 31 percent of their paid search spend.

What’s a retail search marketer to do? In order to continue generating positive returns, today’s search marketers must be smarter, faster and more efficient than their competitors. They must continue to experiment with new campaign variables (ad text, landing pages, geotargets and many others), build a long-tail keyword inventory and stay on top of messaging. Search engines themselves are offering more sophisticated user segmentation and targeting options, resulting in the typical paid search program now having almost limitless possibilities for testing different variables. Each new variable exponentially adds to the number of factors and mathematical performance data that must be tracked. For example:

· 10 keywords, 10 positions, 1 creative = 10^2 combinations

· 1000 keywords, 10 positions, 5 creatives = 5 x 10^4 combinations

· 1000 keywords, 10 positions, 10 creatives, 2 landing pages = 2 x 10^5 combinations

· 1000 keywords, 10 positions, 10 creatives, 2 landing pages, 3 networks = 6 x 10^5 combinations

The real problem, and underlying opportunity, with search engine marketing optimization is that today’s methods and solutions rely on a human to do most of the heavy lifting, from a/b testing, reporting consolidation and results analysis to the seemingly never-ending bid rules creation and adjustments. The expansive keyword portfolios and the sheer number of campaigns that large advertisers manage require a new way of doing things. Forward-thinking marketers will need to discover the optimal balance between what machines do best—handling the constant cycle of analysis, testing and updates across an organization’s paid search portfolios—and the insight and perspective into external industry events and business drivers that humans can bring. In the future, automated SEM optimization solutions will help strike this balance.

Alex Yoder
is WebTrends’ president and CEO.