Archive for the ‘Search Engine Marketing’ Category

June 4th, 2009 by Richard Lee

Keynote Q&A: Dr. Qi Lu, President, Online Services Division, Microsoft

Speakers:
Danny Sullivan
Dr. Qi Lu
9:00 – 9:45AM on Wednesday, June 3 in International Promenade Room

Dr. Qi Lu took the helm of Microsoft’s search efforts in January. Now six months into his new role, during this keynote Q&A with Search Engine Land editor-in-chief Danny Sullivan, Lu shares in this some of the changes that have been made to Microsoft Live Search and where the company intends to head in the search space.

 


 

Dr. Qi Lu

Bing.com

  • To understand user intent – organized in a better way to meet the user intent
  • Paradigm shift from web links to web groups
  • Make more informed decisions faster
  • Have semantic meaning

Be objective, be brutally honest, look at the obstacles, and be clear where are you heading to. Be dedicated, determined and committed.

Bing = in Chinese bee-ying – being certain to respond or responsive

Quality of the search experience, the Internet is a viral media, it will become popular in itself if you do it right

Search engine technology

Some search queries tend to need fresh content to be relevant

June 3rd, 2009 by Richard Lee

You&A With Matt Cutts

Speakers
Danny Sullivan
Matt Cutts
5:00 – 5:45PM on Tuesday, June 2 in International Promenade Room

What’s a You&A? That’s where you, the audience, put your questions directly to the head of Google’s web spam team, Matt Cutts. As an engineer in search quality, Matt’s been dealing with webmaster issues for Google since 2000 and is well known to many advanced search marketers from his blog and public speaking.

 


 

How do you know if your website is in the penalty box?

  • Look for a sustained drop in rankings
  • Hidden Text, maybe hacked
  • You can find some data in the Webmaster console
  • Can contact them through the Google Forum

PageRank sculpting less effective

  • No penalty for “no follow” to change how page rank flows in your website, but less effective to do.
  • You can try, but it will not be as useful as before.
  • Spend your time in building new content.

Google Bowl?

Google tries to prevent competitors from buying bad links – bad links can’t hurt you.

AJAX

To be SEO safe, use common mouse over code when using AJAX.

Duplicate content

Private label their content
i.e. Job listings to multiple websites

To avoid duplicate content penalty for co-branded sites, ask yourself what is the value being added? If it doesn’t provide a good user experience, it may be penalized.

Javascript

Javascript is more likely to be crawled and executed now a days by search engines

June 3rd, 2009 by Richard Lee

Beyond The Usual Link Building

Speakers:
Chris Silver Smith
Danny Sullivan
Hamlet Batista

3:30 – 4:45PM on Tuesday, June 2 in Bay Auditorium

Links still rule as a major factor in helping pages rank well. You know all the obvious link building tips such as directories and forums. This session goes off-the-beaten path with ideas on how to find important, trusted, and relevant linking opportunities you might be overlooking.

 


 

Some Good Link Sources:

  • Audience Targeted Content
  • Useful Widgets/Tools
  • RSS/Atom/Feeds
  • SERP Listing Optimization

1. Audience Targeted Content:

Useful information for .EDU (i.e. businesses near schools)

Public Domain Content:

  • U.S. Gov
  • State Gov
  • Wikimedia Commons
  • Project Gutenberg (i.e. Wedding etiquette)

Private Domain Content:

  • Brief quote as fair use
  • Permitted partner content
  • Open APIs
  • Flickr, other media repositories

2. Useful Widgets/Tools:

  • i.e. Weather, Sayings of Confucius (silvery.com) for MySpace, etc.
  • Keep branding minimal
  • Provide easy to install code
  • Also see Patrick Sexton: SEOish.com

3. RSS

4. SERP Optimization

  • Search Monkey /cli.gs/searchmonkey
  • Google rich Snippets, embrace strutured Data: Micorformats & RDF to be prepared to integrate

 


 

Speaker: Hamlet Batista

4 Tactics for High Quality Links

Tactic #1: Goodbye pagerank, welcome google cache (when your website last crawled)

  • High page rank vs. real visitors
  • Google has to prioritize their time when crawling websites

Link value:
Discoverability
Frequency (if search engine crawl you freq. your website must be popular)

Tactic #2: Piggy back on current use

  • People write about what they see.
    In Twitter: #3wordsaftersex (in search, articles, etc.)

Tactic #3: Inform your subscribers

Tactic #4: Share interesting video

  • Video ranked, people link to your video, people link to your website

Bonus Tip:

  • Search engines can index links inside of different type of contents (PDF, Flash, etc.)

 


 

25% link building outsourced from Arnie Kuenn

4 different link building techniques

  1. Video
  2. Content or Profile Links
  3. Clients & Suppliers
  4. Contests & Promotions

1. Video

  • PPT
  • Moyea’s PPT to Video Converter
  • Voiceover
  • Get link

2. Content or profile links

Example:

  • Google’s Knol (knol.google.com)
  • Hubpages
  • Bule.com
  • American Chronicle
  • Squidoo, scribd, rateitall, spoke, abouus.org, hotfrog, linkedin

3. Your Clients & Suppliers

  • Offer shirts, gift cards, discounts, etc.
  • Send letters (US Mail)
  • Include an offer or request in your invoices
  • Use the phone! Set aside some tie for a telemarketing campaign
  • Also: your local & national associations – become a sponsor or make a donation

4. Contests & Promotions

  • What makes a good contest?
  • A great offer or prize, valuable to people you want to attract- Something reasonably innovative, not a “me too” contest
  • Proper time frame, enough time to enter but not so long they lose interest
  • Create a buzz, who will help you promote it and how?
  • Your panel of judges, PR, linkedin, twitter, facebook, etc.
  • Optimize every page!

Socialize:

Tweet = 1 entry
Blog about it = 5 entries

Age of links definitely have relevancy

June 3rd, 2009 by Richard Lee

SEO Ranking Factors In 2009

Moderator:
Danny Sullivan, Editor-in-Chief, Search Engine Land

Speakers:
Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOmoz
Laura Lippay, Dir. Technical Marketing, Yahoo
Marty Weintraub, President, aimClear

  • How much does that H1 tag really matter, versus the number of links pointing at a domain?
  • Do “authority” sites always have an advantage over other sites with less reputation?
  • Is brand recognition now a bigger issue?

This session looks at on-the-page and off-the-page factors that influence web search, to understand what remains useful and what new signals are growing in importance.


Speaker: Rand Fiskin

Rand presented data based on 70 top SEO survey respondents plus data correlations based on several hundred real search results (Feb-May 2009).

Keywords used in the title tag and root domain had the highest impact on SEO ranking

On page factors:

  • Header Tags (has a low correlation) – H1, H2, H3 less than 1% impact
  • Alt Text (higher correlation)
  • Keyword in URL (very high correlation)
  • Keyword Location (closer the better)

Top Factors:

  1. URL
  2. Title Tag
  3. Domain, path, query, sub-domain

Other Factors:

  • Number of linking domains
  • Link popularity
  • Page content

Speaker: Marty Weintraub

Is my page strength comparable for a specific keyword query in light of keywords, page, or domain attributes?

Page Strength & SERP competitiveness in charts takes hours

Brands are now ranking higher due to Google cranking up authority score

June 3rd, 2009 by Richard Lee

Mythbusting PPC Urban Legends

We’ve all heard them. Domain traffic is awful, DKI ads are great, DKI ads are horrible. Bid high at the beginning of your campaigns to juice your quality score, and so on and so forth. In this session, we take a look at the common perceptions and misperceptions about paid search advertising. So what really is true?

Moderator:
Jeffrey K. Rohrs, Vice President, Marketing, ExactTarget

Speakers:
Scott Brinker, President & Chief Technology Officer, ion interactive, inc.
Reid Spice, Director of Search Media Strategy, iCrossing
Frederick Vallaeys, AdWords Evangelist, Google Inc.

Myth#1: A landing page is a single page

  • A landing page is a bridge between ad and conversions.
  • Don’t use a short bridge for a long jump.
  • Other times a 2 or 3 page “path” is better
  • Segmentation landing page (40% lift)

When you want to segment respondents:

  • Ease someone into a process, lead them down a path.
  • Don’t think of it as a landing page, think of it as post-click marketing

Myth #2: Flash on landing pages is evil

Loading delays, lengthy, design over clarity, expensive to build
iRobot (43K in size, loads < 1 sec), writing is text not image, Google can index, images load asynchronously, sharp text rending

Why climb the flash mountain:

  • Higher conversion rate
  • Better branding
  • Easier engagement
  • Creative differentiation

Myth #3: MVT is better than A/B Testing?

Multivariable Testing vs. A/B Testing = Apples and oranges

MVT limited to one page, A/B can have multi page paths


Speaker: Frederick Vallaeys
Google Adwords Evangelist
fredrick@google.com

Myth: No value in the Google Content Network?

  • Is there any value in the Google Content Network?
  • 5% of people’s time is doing searching
  • 95% multiple touch points
  • 20% of conversions came from content network, CPA of content network is 2% cheaper than search on average.

Best Practices:

  • Separate campaigns for content vs. search
  • Use enhanced online campaigns
  • Use Placement Performance Reports to discover opportunity
  • Use Conversion Optimizer
  • Review Conversion rate/ position report

Myth: Should I lower my bid so I won’t be first? (Curious clicks?)

CTR drops as the position decreases

Total sales = Impression x CTR x Conversion Rate

Finding the sweet spot

Step 1: Determine your value per click

Conversion rate x Profit margin per product sold

5% conversion rate x $7 per item sold = $0.35 value per click

Step 2: Experience with different bids determine incremental cost per click

CPC = Cost/Clicks
ICC* = Difference in cost/Difference in clicks

*INCREMENTAL COST PER CLICK

Myth: Is Broad Match Worthless?

  • Broad Match is Very Useful
  • People can’t spell
  • Queries are getting longer (3 word to 8 words are gaining share)
  • Broad match accounts to 33% of conversions
  • Does not affect quality score

Tips:

Run search query reports on a regular basis
Lower your bid on broad match vs. exact match

Myth: Can I Juice My Quality Score by Bidding High?

Normalize for position (Top position must have high CTR may lower Quality Score if you don’t meet it and vice versa)


PPC GEO Targeting Myths

Myth: IP Addresses can reliably locate you

i.e. Reston VA = AOL servers
VPN server, ISP server, Legacy ISPs, etc.

The smaller the target, the less accurate it will be

i.e. Virginia Beach = 425,000 people

Search Engines could supplement IP data with other info like weather queries, news, movies, signed-in info, but they don’t. Most use IP data to geo-target PPC Ads.

Best approach for GEO targeting:
Hybrid approach: States & cities

General PPC Tips:

  • 7 to 15 keywords per Ad text / Ad group
  • Content Network: Figure a theme, but is difficult with less keywords
  • DKI = Dynamic Keyword Insertion (Be careful what keywords you use, not a great experience).
  • Use DKI for landing pages (Keyword inserted, bolded, etc.)
  • Broad match doesn’t impact Quality Score

June 3rd, 2009 by Richard Lee

Social Media & Search Marketing: Not The Same Old Stuff – SMX Advanced 2009

Moderator:
Rae Hoffman

Speakers:
Brent Csutoras, Social Media Marketing Consultant, Brent Csutoras, Inc
Jen Miller, Manager, Delta.com Onsite Marketing & Content, iProspect
Dave Snyder, Co-Founder, Search & Social

Think social media has nothing to do with search? Think again.

QDF = Query Deserved Freshness

Social Signals (What are the signals?)

  • Engagement
  • Methods and systems for personalized network searching
  • Relevancy Feedback Indicators
  • Upstream and Downstream data (where you go)
  • User Reviews (how people rate things)

Drive Early Traffic from Twitter

  • Plan out your campaign
  • Utilize well crafted DMs
  • Engage Top Users
  • Track via Query String Paramenters
  • Add Retweet Capabilities to the page (add retweet badges)
  • Control the bookmarking of your site (Delicious)
  • Increase use of site (javascript)
  • Add Engagement Points (i.e. video, voting, widgets, quizzes, review)

 

 


 

Speaker: Brent Csutoras

Using Stumble Upon!

Stumble Upon is a social aggregation site, showing users popular content based on votes.
Stumble Upon will only show a page once per person (category with 30 people, only 30 visits)

2 Ways To Add:

  • Browser Tool Bar
  • StumbleUpon.com/submit

Tagging:

  • StumbleUpon.com/ads
  • Be targeted, pick the right category or you will get negative reviews
  • Cross tagging
  • Look at what other people are tagging, edit yours

Add and make friends:

  • Subscribers, testimonials, votes
  • Post to your blog
  • Vote videos and photos
  • Tag and Review
  • Choose a niche

Tips:

  • Don’t review the same site multiple times, this looks like spam (by promoting yourself)
  • Avoid patterns in voting, discoveries, shares (i.e. It looks like spam if you only stumble friends, click on the same button too many times in a row, or discover too much from one section)
  • Choose and Use the Right Tags
  • Most importantly…Make Your Profile Rock!

 

 


 

Speaker: Dave Snyder

Creative Commons license:

  • Find pictures
  • Use their picture in your article (we liked your picture, featured in our article and gave you credit) – they may link to you. They are pro amateurs (but not pros – top professionals won’t let you use their photos).
  • Join flickr, start contributing, creative commons commercial reuse picture work the best

 

 


 

Speaker: Jen Miller, Delta.com

Integration is key to success

Interlinking tactics:

  • Target keyword list & link to main site
  • Blog links to YouTube & Flickr
  • Links back to specific blog post

Tracking & Listening Tactics:

  • Measure with a dashboard
  • Action on key metrics
  • Give ‘em more! They’ll talk and link

Other tactics:

  • Be flexible
  • Specify Goals
  • Cross promote
  • Give customers what they want

June 2nd, 2009 by Richard Lee

SMX Advanced 2009 – Seattle

SMX Advanced 2009 – Seattle
June 2-3, 2009

Attend SMX Advanced for:

  • Exceptional content so compelling, you’ll want to implement what you’ve learned before leaving the conference. Super-charged sessions on PPC, SEO, social media marketing and other hot button topics will help you flourish today, tomorrow and in the future.
  • Invaluable connections made possible by the ultimate mix of structured networking opportunities and social events. Meet new contacts, reconnect with colleagues – SMX makes it easy to interact and exchange ideas with other industry thought leaders.
  • Essential conveniences to help you juggle your every-day responsibilities while maximizing your conference time. Always available and free Wi-Fi; hot lunches, snacks and beverages all day; access to all presentations and tools to pre-plan your custom itinerary – SMX has got you covered.

April 22nd, 2009 by Richard Lee

SMX @ AD:TECH – Trends & Developments In Search Marketing

SMX @ AD:TECH – Trends & Developments In Search Marketing

MODERATOR:
Danny Sullivan, Editor-in-Chief, SearchEngineLand.com

PRESENTERS:
Dana Todd, CMO, Newsfoce, Inc.
Jeffrey Pruitt, Advisor, iCrossing
Sandor Marik, Direcor of Marketing, Conde Nast Digital
Jim McDonald, Senior Manager, Search and CRM, Match.com

  • Search is an Always-on Network
  • The Market Opportunity
  • Search (SEM) is a $13.5B market (88% paid search, 11% seo, 1% other)
  • 75% of Advertisers track performance, 25% track brand impact
  • Sempo + emarketer:  Online Advertising = $40B market
  • DAO = Digital Asset Optimization, not just SEO
  • Search = Social as well

Advertising Platforms:

Ad Platforms include APT, Google, etc.

Convergence of Search and Display:

  • Search wants more branding
  • Display wants more performance

Brand Model

Program management => Research -> Experience -> Planning -> Optimize -> Advertise

Creating connected brands: Aware, Active, Useful, Trusted

Search/SEM People = More Linear, Analytical

Search People = More Linear, Analytical.  Very analytically minded people

More data in needed, to define and hit target

Know the marginal cost of acquisition

Attribution modeling
Search drives the last click
Engagement mapping

Quote from Jim McDonald (Match.com) Display Advertising, Ad Networks have a hard time to do true A/B testing from cookie to conversion

Social Media and Social Search may be giving Google some competition (i.e. Facebook feed, twitter, etc.). Sandor Marik (Conde Nast Digital)

6% time on search, 94% of time online not utilized by Google

Yahoo APT = Display advertising exchange, has 800 newspapers in consortium.  Now being rebuilt to overcome issues.

How does new search companies differential themselves.

Social has impact on search and search results.

Danny Sullivan: Google not even in the game of Twitter.   Whole space out there.

April 21st, 2009 by Richard Lee

Location-Based Advertising: Innovative Business Models That Are Paying Off Today – Ad:tech 2009

Location-Based Advertising: Innovative Business Models That Are Paying Off Today

MODERATOR:
Josh Goldman, Partner, Norwest Venture Partners

PANELISTS:
Sam Altman, Co-Founder and CEO
Scott Dunlap, Chairman of the Board, Founder and CEO, NearbyNow
Gordon Whitten, Founder and CEO, Sojern
Alistair Goodman, COE, 1020 Placecast

3 ways to target advertising

Demographic:

  • What is this person like?

Behavioral:

  • what is he/she doing?
  • what has he/she done recently?

Geographic:

  • where is he/she right now?

3 ways to target geography

Solicited:

  • Asked user

Inferred:

  • Assume location based on user actions

Computed:

  • Compute or sense using reverse IP lookup or coordinates from gps of mobile device
  • A very limited and difficult way to compute user data for a App developer is from the WAP header

Infer the segment (i.e. business traveler, versus casual traveller with 3 friends)

Sojern.com = Advertises on airline boarding passes (location based) – inferred based location advertising

—-

NearByNow Case Study: Hallmark (On The Way Ad)

Goal:

Target nearby shoppers with limited time incentive to purchase

Campaign stats:

  • 21% click-through
  • 4.6% redemption
  • Hypertargeted

Ad and coupons

On the way Ads (on the way to Macy’s, buy Hallmark)

The more you focus, the lower the number

Concierge team?  Call store and available item.

Coupon expire in 2 hours, to buy from one store vs. another

——

1020 Placecast Case Study: Avis Web + Mobile Cmpaign

Client Goals:

  • Objectives & metrics
  • Geography & time

Identify audience segments

Targeting, cross-platform, dynamic messages, optimization, reporting

Created AccuWeather iPhone app

—-

Sojern Case Study: Boarding Pass with Desitnation- Specific Ads

Online boarding pass, printed boarding pass

Printed advertising on boarding pass which matches the location of the user’s destination.   i.e. Coupons for food or entertainment in that city they landed

—–

Loopt Case Study: Hyper-Targeted Advertising

Results: real foot traffic and $$$ into storefronts

Advertise to users before they reach their competition’s store i.e. serve up a coupon that expires in 2 hours, based on location from a certain store.

Misc:

Mozes.com = Used Text-to-Screen commenting at Ad Tech

April 21st, 2009 by Richard Lee

Ad Networks and Exchanges – Ad:tech 2009

Ad Networks and Exchanges

Ad Networks:

400+ Ad Networks currently, 18 trilliion pageviews a day, $7 Billion revenue for top 20%

Sloan/MediaCom:

70/30:  70% long tail buys, 30% general buys
$650 Billion market world wide

Google:

  • Platform (Ad serving/management)
  • Ad Network (Content network)
  • Ad Exchange (Ad networks are their customers)

Google has 23% of online display advertising market

Fox Interactive = owns hundreds of properties

During the Great Depression these brands spent more on Advertising and bounced back:  Twinkies, Purina, Converse, HP, Pittsburg Steelers, Coolwhip

$1 Billion spent in digital by Group M with 1300 publishers

You need to understand consumer behavior